Monday, October 1, 2012

SETESOL 2012 Session Notes - "Pinterest"

SATURDAY
9-9:45
Application of Web 2.0 Tools: Use Pinterest in Large EFL Classroom

Eight Effective Ways to Use Pinterest in Large EFL Classrooms
Before the Lesson
     1. Collect Students' Prior Knowledge
               -Create a board
                    "How to describe a person?"
                     Pin your favorite characters here, and use adjectives to describe him/her…. (invite students to pin to the board)
     2. Preview the Lesson
               -Create a board with several pins containing information about a particular topic… students should review board to know what they will need to know before the lesson

During the Lesson
     3. Using Pinterest as a Blackboard
               -Can serve as a substitute for powerpoint
               -a great way to organize materials for a lesson
     4. Students who the results of their group discussion using Pinterest
               -for a large class, use pinterest to collect discussion… 
                    -students must find the graphic they like most and pin it to board
               -teacher can review boards after class - can be used to assess success of activity

After the Lesson
     5. Groups of students take turns to identify the key words in a lesson, justify their choice, and give a presentation to the class using Pinterest
               -students pin images that represent key words from a lesson
     6. Students each create Pinterest word board for the vocabulary learned during the semester (words are grouped according to meaning)

Professional Development
     Facilitates teacher collaboration - teachers share ideas, lesson plans, students' work, as well as seek help from others
     An international platform: teachers can expose students to the authentic English ways of life

Drawbacks
     -invitation request
     -possible addiction
     -inappropriate postings
     -copyright risks
     -blocking in some countries

Other Ideas
     -use Pinterest to brainstorm for writing




2 comments:

  1. Professional development or professional learning has made and continues to make all the difference in the preparedness of educators in schools.

    professional learning

    ReplyDelete
  2. We generated a bit more interest than we had anticipated and some of the titles now have waitlists, but we are thrilled at the response to this initiative. We have seen teachers willing to engage in continuing their learning over the summer, even if it’s just to say, “I’m feeling burnt out and I’d like to borrow the book on how to deal with that.”

    education professional development

    ReplyDelete