Sunday, February 24, 2013

Week 7 Reflection: Learner Autonomy is Teacher Autonomy



http://www.goodlightscraps.com/funny-baby-3.php
“Walk your talk and talk your walk.” My own understanding of autonomous learning is independence and responsibility. Before a teacher adapts or uses learner autonomy, she should first go into introspection and retrospection. She should ask herself certain questions. Do I have an independent mind? Do I always take responsibility of all my actions? Do I know how to let loose and to let go. Is my mind open to every possibility? These and many questions only you as a person, as a teacher-learner can answer.


Learner autonomy is teacher autonomy. It spells independence, an independent mind and a confident soul. Before a teacher can produce an autonomous learner; he should first be his own autonomous teacher and learner.

I encourage my students to learn how to think for themselves and not to rely on anyone else for anything, not to believe in anything that they see, hear and read without analyzing and validating. Can somebody eat for you or go to the rest room for you? Can someone talk for you or think for you? Of course they will say NO. And that is where I begin to gauge their autonomy.
Learner autonomy is self-reliance. When one is responsible of himself and by himself; he can be responsible of others and to others as well.

For Rathbone (1971: 100, 104, cited in Candy, 1991: 271), the autonomous learner is a self-activated maker of meaning, an active agent in his own learning process. He is not one to whom things merely happen; he is the one who, by his own volition, causes things to happen. Learning is seen as the result of his own self-initiated interaction with the world.”

Learner autonomy is letting go and letting be. Learner autonomy is being an autodidact. Learner autonomy is being dependable and interdependent. 

Learner autonomy is letting people as they are and allowing them to grow as the beautiful people they are meant to be. It is accepting people as they are, not for what you want them to be.

“Cast in a new perspective and regarded as having the 'capacity for detachment, critical reflection, decision-making, and independent action' (Little, 1991: 4), learners, autonomous learners, that is, are expected to assume greater responsibility for, and take charge of, their own learning.” Thanasoulas

Learner autonomy is self-confidence, self-respect, and self-worth. Self-esteem is EQ and it matters a lot in autonomous learning.

"To be successful and survive in today’s world, individuals need to have the necessary communication and organizational skills to make sound decisions and interact with each other. Goleman argues that an individuals success at work is 80 percent dependent on EQ and only 20 percent dependent on IQ. This is because EQ components are useful in assisting employees with decision-making in areas like teamwork, inclusion, productivity and communication." 
http://appitive.com/slidershare/2012/03/04/emotional-intelligence-and-blue-ocean-strategy/
"It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change." - Charles Darwin

Donna in one of our discussions said, “You have all had some great ideas of how to promote learner autonomy in your classrooms, and there are some commonalities. Most everyone agrees that technology is a great tool to promote learner autonomy. Why? Because technology gives students millions of websites and other tools at their fingertips that they can explore, manipulate, and reconstruct to their hearts content. This is very motivating and encourages students to be autonomous learners. 
http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/photo/babies-on-floor-with-laptop-royalty-free-image/104821621





















As many of you have pointed out, students have to be taught to use the technology or it's useless. It's like sitting a student in a library and asking him/her to start using the books on his/her own.” Donna is perfectly right. Technology boosts learner autonomy and will produce more independent thinkers and productive people.


“Why do we want to help our students to be more autonomous? Why is learner autonomy a good thing?”  Donna again, posed another question….

“Is learner autonomy a good thing? As Ayman points out, it can be difficult to encourage learner autonomy when learners are accustomed to being spoon fed everything.”

My answer is---Learner autonomy is not just good but very good.


My happy autonomous learners (First Semester 2010)
In this age and time, self-reliance plays a very important role in survival. Learner autonomy will also produce self-contained people. It will help the students help themselves and become empowered people. 

Anyone who can be responsible of himself and by himself will also be responsible with others and for others. It will also be less work for the teacher but more satisfaction in seeing the positive result of such empowerment.

Look at us at Webskills class, are we not ourselves autonomous learners? The answer is obvious my friends. Just like Donna and the Webskills team, we can also be walking our talk and talking our walk without a blink of an eye, head up and focused. Here I am armed with skills from webskills, "freshly bathe" with new ideas and perspectives, and willing to share….

http://edudemic.com/2013/02/most-effective-edtech-tools/
http://edudemic.com/2013/01/how-technology-is-empowering-the-learners/
http://edudemic.com/2013/01/time-to-focus-on-skills/
http://edudemic.com/2013/02/6-technologies-that-will-change-higher-education/
http://edudemic.com/2013/02/how-to-secure-your-online-data/























Saturday, February 16, 2013

Week 6 Reflection: Persuasive, Powerful, and Interactive Powerpoint


A teacher should possess the creativity and cunning of a devil and the patience and understanding of an angel.”


http://24slides.com/blog/what-our-children-can-teach-us-about-presenting/

I always like using powerpoint in my classes, in seminar and in training and in any business presentation. It is one of the most useful tools for organizing, conveying information, eliciting intellectual discussion, presenting with power, and many more. Young and old alike love it. The usual powerpoint impressed me already, not until I learned this week that:
“Microsoft Powerpoint is an immensely powerful suite, and can be used for much more than straightforward presentations. It can be used to create website mockups, and even interactive learning tools.”  (http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/create-interactive-quiz-powerpoint-masters/)

Marvelous and splendid is how I describe my discovery and learning experience for week 6 at Webskills. The use of interactive powerpoint in the class is motivating, mood gauging, enlightening, fascinating, thought provoking, and spellbinding.

http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/better-than-powerpoint-3-online-tools-for-creating-gorgeous-presentations/ - From this site I learned other three online tools for creating gorgeous presentation which is a variation from powerpoint- Google presentation from the google drive suite, prezi and photosnack.
http://www.photosnack.com/-  or photoslideshow, this is good for catalog-website or when you run an e-commerce.
http://www.pollsnack.com/survey-examples/sample-survey#1- you can create survey questionnaires and integrate them into your website as flash widget.

I read the article from here----http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/avoid-murder-by-powerpoint-how-to-make-your-presentations-compelling-and-memorable/ ---- and it validates my assessment on the use of powerpoint—

DON’T Read your Powerpoint. Period!
It ALL LIES in YOU, the PRESENTER!

Yes, there are many things we can do to make our PowerPoint more enjoyable to read and simply understand. Accordingly, the other 50% of the weight is determined by how well we present the material.

“Both must be in unison to capture and retain the audience’s attention to ensure they fully comprehend the content you have worked so hard to prepare. But it does not stop there. You must focus the content to the audience’s needs and interests. If it is not in their particular interest, you can make up for it through the areas of presenting the content itself by using analogies to relate it to them as much as possible and your own personality. Those things combined with the confidence you gained through repetitively studying your presentation script will ensure your audience stays intrigued. Lastly, don’t forget about backing up. It can seem like a hassle, but just remember it is a whole lot more of one when you must recreate everything that you lost.”

More tips on powerpoint presentation from the following websites:

Absolutely true, magnificently beautiful, splendidly spellbinding, are just some of the powers of powerpoint play in the classroom, in the board room, in any learning, learner-centered environment.

Looking back, I remember how overwhelmed I was with all the learning tools Donna placed on the table for us. I was overly excited and bewildered. This time, I decided to just focus on a minimum of two and a maximum of 4 things to learn about, reflect on the things to unlearn and go on with the things to relearn. Now, I feel more at ease and relaxed.

Donna also told me to use one technology at a time which is blogging. http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/the-art-of-creating-a-successful-blog-tips-from-the-pros/

                                                      http://failkateedm310.blogspot.com/

Now I enjoy exploring interactive powerpoint and related tools because I shall be giving a seminar-workshop on business letter writing to a group of corporate and business professionals. I am exploring possibilities and will be incorporating technology in my upcoming lectures using my web skill from Webskills.

Ralph Waldo Emerson said, “The world makes the way for a man who knows where he is going”----we are going to the “7th week” and all is well. It is not what you know that counts so much as what you put to use.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Week 5 Reflection: Empowered and Engaged Learners


I would like to begin my reflective blog this week with this video entitled engage me. This one shows how truly effective Project Based Learning, Alternative Assessment and Rubrics are as engagement and empowerment tools for our students.

Now, I know why Donna said that week 5 topic is her favorite. It is truly a fascinating  and fabulous experience to be learning, unlearning and relearning.


I learned that the illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn and relearn. Alvin Toffler is right in saying this.

Susan Gaer's article on how PBL worked for her in the statement, "Less teaching and more learning" awakens us to truly develop a learner-centered environment where the students can "freely float and flow", carefree and free-spirited in their quest for learning.
Yes, we get the students more engaged and empowered as learners if we hit their passion, if they are given activities that will elicit enthusiasm, creativity, excitement, independence of thoughts and in activities, collaborative efforts, and strengthening of communication.

This week I found out that Project Based Learning is a dynamic approach to teaching in which students explore real world problems and challenges. It is practical teaching and active and engaged learning. PBL is also called constructivism. A constructivist teacher produce "expert learners" in the sense that she encourages students to constantly assess how the activity is helping them gain understanding by questioning their own thoughts and strategies. A learner really knows how to learn in a constructivist environment.

Alternative assessment gives more meaning and substance in the learning process because the students are taking charge of their own learning. They will also have fun and will enjoy being rated by their peers. While rubric helps the student visualizes her grade before she begins working for that grade. You know the criteria thus you work hard to achieve the assessment/desired result.

In its entirety, PBL Alternative Assessment and Rubrics will bring about the best in the learners and more satisfaction on the committed teacher. It will boost the self-confidence and self-esteem of the learners, effect independent thinking, and produce interdependent team players. It will create a harmonious, peaceful, free flowing, and dynamic learning community.

I am still savoring another fascinating and fabulous learning experience after groping from the dark. I believe that anyone who can read and can think will know anything and everyone along the way. I am learning a lot, thank you Donna, thank you Webskills and thank you all.




The pictures are from one of my travels in Japan.

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Week 4 Reflection: Amazing, Endless, Compelling, and Liberating Webskills


Amazing, Endless, Compelling, and Liberating Webskills!

You offer me amazing opportunities, endless possibilities and liberating perspectives. You give multi-dimensional tasks, multi-cultural collaborations, multi-faceted personalities, multi-magnitude of learning experiences. What more can I ask from you Webskills???

Webskills offers a world of endless possibilities. The week is compelling and liberating. It gives me confidence and plethora of ideas as a teacher, as a student, as a learner, and as a human being.


It compels us to be more attentive and focused in what we are doing. We are compelled to stick to the topic and to go direct to the point. We are all compelled to stand and to deliver straightforward problems and solutions. If our journey is a story we are now facing the conflict and the denouement.

It liberates in the sense that we have to really squeeze our brains and guts to come up with possibilities. The week answers my other questions on the many ways to integrate technology in the classroom setting.  The readings are meaningful and substantial. The cited references are equally useful in preparation for our reports come March.

I encountered the words omnishambles, wordle, mixbook, viewbix, vialogues, mindomo and a lot more.

From the articles given, I like these sites/topics in particular: http://iteslj.org/Articles/Belisle-Email.html     http://iteslj.org/Techniques/Belisle-Email/ ; http://iteslj.org/Articles/Kelly-MakePage/   gives a detailed account of the how to make a web page for teachers;
http://iteslj.org/Lessons/Muehleisen-Projects.html  using the internet in English classes.
http://www.englishclub.com/esl-articles/200204.htm  listening: a good way to learn English



From breakingnewsenglish.com I tried these lessons in my classes: Finland has the best world education system; Omnishambles is word of the year; Internet access is a human right. The lessons there are complete; you just have to really choose what is practical for your classes. The only thing I don’t like is the pop up, the ads, they are annoying. I also like Lauri’s ESL cafĂ©, it is simple and direct.

My most interesting find this week is from the Baltimore County Public Schools Office of Instructional Technology. Aside from reading the sample lesson plans I read almost all its links. I really like the web 2.0 tools and the 21st century skill building techniques and methodologies in teaching. Integration of reading, writing, speaking, listening and language is in their standards as well as higher-order thinking skills. Critical thinking, communication, collaboration ad information literacy are obviously embedded. Surely, I will use all of them in my teaching and training of trainers’ activities (one at a time). Thank you for guiding us through this Donna.





To sum it up- “Discovery is seeing what everybody else has seen, but nobody else has thought.” Albert Szent-Gyorgyi

And I swear to- “Not go where the path leads, but go where there is no path and leave a trail for everyone to follow.” Ralph Waldo Emerson

More importantly, Webskills you’re love is indeed amazing, endless, compelling and liberating!!!!

Light and love to all!



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_A-ZVCjfWf8