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English for Academics Book 2 Teacher’s Guide
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English for Academics Teachers Guide Book 2
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- 4, 5 Answers See Activity 6 for the answers to Activity 4. The answers to Activity 5 are underlined in the audioscript below. Audioscript
English for Academics Book 2 Teacher’s Guide
© Cambridge University Press and British Council Russia 2015 www.cambridge.org/elt/english-for-academics PHOTOCOPIABLE 40 Lesson 3 Module 3 Audioscript 29 Interviewer: Welcome to the programme. Woman: Thank you. Interviewer: I understand you have written a book about how technology is used in teaching and have interviewed a number of people about it. Woman: That’s right. I interviewed a number of teachers and I particularly needed to interview someone who teaches technology. I decided to ask a Facebook friend of mine, Professor Nellie Deutsch from Canada. She is an online teacher on the Atlantic University MA program in the USA and she also teaches English in a face-to-face traditional high school. I did a course on Moodle for teachers with her and we became Facebook friends. I sent her a message on Facebook asking if I could send her some questions about the impact of technology on education. And you know what? She immediately said yes. I emailed my questions to her, and very soon received an answer in a format I hadn’t known before. Even here she acted as a real teacher; she encouraged me to explore the program. Thank you, Nellie, for my learning experience. 4, 5 Answers See Activity 6 for the answers to Activity 4. The answers to Activity 5 are underlined in the audioscript below. Audioscript 30 Answer 1 Nellie: Well, the first thing that made me use it was that I found that in a class of 40 students and more, I didn’t really have a way of connecting with them individually. I would be talking to the whole class. And that kinda made me feel uncomfortable because I knew that talking to the whole class was like talking to another person but that person didn’t really exist. So I had to find a way to talk to each one of them and connect with each one for learning, and the way that I found in 1992 was the internet. I was able to use technology to reach each one of my students outside the classroom. 1 In other words, I connected with them from home, first with emails, then with Moodle, voice, audio, and then, eventually, video. Answer 2 I found web quests and started creating web quests for each of my literature topics. I started connecting my students with other teachers around the world, and that made it more exciting. 2 I mean, I took my students out of the classroom. It started just with regular, weekly computer classes. It was really scary at the beginning, but the transition was really fast because the students and I worked together as partners in learning. Answer 3 First of all, I was transformed as a person. I became more open to the world. As I learned about onine tools, I became an e-learner myself. I was transformed, I would say, as a teacher too because I was able to use lots of tools and my knowledge base just got larger and larger. I wasn’t really thinking about the content – I was thinking about how I was going to reach my students and they were going to reach each other. 3 In a word, it became a socially engaging endeavour. They were learning socially with others around the globe; they were also getting an idea that English was more than a language of communication. It was a way to really learn about yourself and others in a process. Download 2.06 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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