![]() ![]() Our students are consumers, distributors, remixers, and creators of content from and to the Internet. Please feel free to add more Web 2.0 tools you know and love, or to share any Web 2.0 projects made with students, in the Comment sections below.Technology is transforming the way we are interacting, communicating and collaborating. And many more teachers who are doing excellent work using them with their students. If you don´t know the Webheads, and are a language teaching wanting to start using technology with your students – join them right now!īut there are many more excellent Web 2.0 tools out there. The examples above are of just a very few Web 2.0 tools, produced by teachers, many of whom belong to the excellent Webheads group. Here´s an example of Barb Sakamoto´s young learners´ Halloween Party in Japan, using animoto. Slideshows: Take photos of your students and collate them into a slideshow/movie with or without subtitles.Here´s an example from Cristina Costa´s students in Portugal made with Podomatic. Podcasts: Get students (individually or in pairs) to create a series of podcasts or audio recordings on a topic/theme.Here´s an example from students in Brazil and Argentina using dvolver. Animated cartoon movies: Have students create short cartoons/animated movies in pairs, then review each other´s movies.Here are examples from students around the world. Multimedia posters: Get students to produce a multimedia online poster on any topic, using a tool like Glogster.Here´s an example from Sonja Tack´s university students in Turkey. The task is carried out by students in the comments section. ![]() Blogs: Set students a weekly reading/writing task in a blog entry, using a tool like Blogger.Here´s an example by Carl Dowse of a wiki used with Business English students, made with Wikispaces. Or use a wiki as a materials repository and as a space for different classes to work in collaboratively. Pairs or small groups are each responsible for one area (food, events, tourist sites, customs, history etc). Wikis: Get students to prepare a guide book to their city or country in a wiki. ![]() Here are some ideas (with examples) of how teachers around the world have very successfully used Web 2.0 with their language learners: Or a significant change in already sound practice. If teachers are already using projects and group work in their normal teaching, then integrating Web 2.0 tools does not require a great leap of faith. If teachers are favouring a transmission approach to learning, then inevitably they will tend towards a Web 1.0 use of technology. Web 2.0 fits in well with a communicative, collaborative approach to teaching and learning. Using technology with students is 10% about the technology (how it works) and 90% about pedagogy (how to use it in a meaningful, effective and useful way). Even if teachers are using some of these tools themselves they may still not see how exactly they can be integrated into their normal practice. But how much of this makes it into the average language classroom? In my experience of training language teachers to teach with technologies over the past decade, it´s still a minority of teachers who know where to start. They too are likely to be Internet users. Your students are probably using some Web 2.0 tools already. What do they have in common? They enable students to produce and share content on the web, and allow comments from others. There are hundreds of Web 2.0 tools out there, and you can find a good collage of them here. Key concepts in Web 2.0 are those of user-generated content, and the Internet user as ´prosumer´ (producer and consumer). In my first post in this series we looked at some of the features of Web 2.0 as contrasted with Web 1.0. What is it, and what does it mean for teachers? The first of the series looked at Web 1.0, in case you missed it.Īnswer: You make all the content. In this second of a 4-part Beginner´s Guide series I take a look at Web 2.0. ![]()
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