Senin, 04 April 2016





Online Social Media Applications for Language Teaching & Learning


There are so many applications for teacher to support teaching and learning process by using internet. This method is very useful for both teacher and students. They can wisely use internet for educational purpose. Here are some examples of applications that we can use as a teacher to provide our classroom activities. First are the applications for teaching students how to present, create and code. TED-Ed is using by more than 250,000 teachers to spark student curiosity and explore presentation literacy skills. They are have given students the opportunities to help in the process of creating TED-Ed Lessons by choosing videos and creating questions to include. Haikudeck can make students create beautiful presentations with this app. Duolingo is also beneficial for students. Duolingo revolutionized the way people learn languages. Next is Draw and Tell. This app can increase creative confidence in kids of all ages. Just draw something, tell a story about it and share your creation. Animoto also can make students easily create and share their own beautiful videos with Animoto. For a great introduction to Animoto, with a built-in lesson in digital citizenship, have students create an ‘About Me’ or ‘Year in Review’ Animoto. iMovie is another teacher-recommended choice for student video creation. The students can enjoy using iMovie for group projects. From science experiments to merit badges, Instructables offers instructions for more than 100,000 DIY projects. Students can learn computer science fundamentals via game design using Hopscotch. Tinkercad is also a beneficial application for students. After students get inspired by the open-source wonderland at Thingaverse, turn them loose to start designing their own 3D objects with this app. Second, For everyday classroom needs, the students can use some applications such as Evernote. Evernote has allowed teachers to get rid of handouts. All of our projects are shared with our students through our shared notebooks, and all assignments are posted on the Assignment shared notebook that is available for parents too. Explain Everything is an interactive whiteboard. We can have it in our toolbox. Educreations makes us easy to create new videos for learning. For example, “it’s a great tool for explaining math strategies with voice, pen and screen recorder,” says TED-Ed community member Melissa Julian. ”It also lets students make learning resources for other children to use.”Oxford Dictionaries is also help students to help them solve their vocabulary problems. For Collaborating on school projects we can use Slack. Whether you’re collaborating with other teachers or assigning group project work to students, this app can make communication easier for teams in a variety of settings. Students used Google Hangouts on Air to have climate change conversations with friends and family members. Harnessing the power of two-way video has really opened up new pathways to learning opportunities. Schoology includes the needed security features for school use for example for a class page, so my students and can post assignments, videos, completed work and links. Mindmeister makes it easy to map out the relationships between ideas. For complex group projects, it can also provide a way to quickly visualize and create a project outline, together. Wikispaces sometimes what you really want is a wiki. For those moments, teachers recommend this app. For communicating with students (and their families) we can use Remind. This digital communication tool is in a league of its own. Edublogs is also very helpful. A WordPress blogging platform designed with teachers in mind. ClassDojo provides multiple ways to engage students and their families. For giving (and receiving) student feedback teacher can use Edmodo. Edmodo providing clear feedback, many teachers like this learning management system. It’s also easy for students to respond. Another application is Socrative. This learning assessment tool simplifies grading and reports. One recommendation: try out the quiz feature to enhance student understanding of classroom content, says TED-Ed community member Noor Alhoda. Moodle can also help teacher to give feedback. This open-source learning management platform has a questionnaire option that I really like. Many teachers recommend Google Form for gathering feedback from students. “It’s a great way to receive feedback from the whole class at the end of a semester,” says TED-Ed Innovative Educator Sharon Hadar. So, there are so many applications that we can use to provide to support our teaching process. We must use it wisely to give them assignments and also to assess them.

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