Friday, November 16, 2012

EDUC 6177 WEEK 3 Assignment 1


The two technologies om which I would like to report this week are Classroom 2.0 and EFL Classroom 2.0. These two educational technologies are SNSs that were created for the purpose of networking, exchanging instructional ideas and the continued training of educators around the world. The two sites are similar and owned by the same company. Classroom 2.0 and EFL Classroom 2.0 assist teachers in developing an online educational profile and presence in the education world.

As a member of these sites, you can create a private or public classroom or group where you can make pages, teach, and have your own mini-community (eflclassroom20, 2007).

These SNSs allow you to search other member pages and connect with like-minded teachers who are in your professional field of study.

EFL Classroom 2.0 has one of the world’s largest libraries for ESL instruction (eflclassroom20, 2007). The site keeps all of its members informed of all the latest resources and teaching trends. The site offers online seminars and training for teachers that does not cost their members a thing.

EFL Classroom 2.0 is also connected with other social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, and linked-in. This allows further networking within your field and allows you to broadcast news and content across the Web (classroom20, 2007).

These two sites assist educators by the availability of continued support from teachers in the field, forums, communities, blogs, latest educational trend updating, and so much more. These two sites are comparable to a Facebook account but is specifically designed for educators.


Jeremy

References


5 comments:

  1. After a while it seems it is just a matter of preference for which site to use for collaboration with peers and education of learners. In order to compete there must be a characteristic that stands out. For these “classrooms” it’s a matter of the access to ESL tools.

    Additionally, I like the ability Classroom 2.0 has to connect with Facebook and Twitter. Richardson eludes to the fact that if educators are going to reach their students they have to dive into their community and interact in their world first (2010). This is how was able to reach my students as a secondary educator in the 90’s. I found a way to incorporate videos and games shows.

    References:

    Richardson, W. (2010). Blogs, wikis, podcasts, and other powerful web tools for classrooms (3rd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.

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  2. Hello Jeremy,
    As an EFL instructor, these sites are new to me and thanks for introducing them. There are so many activities with instructions on various websties on teaching English;however, it is the first time I see videos of them. I believe, these are especially effective for novice teachers and for others who have trouble understanding the instructions. These are also great tools for a teacher trainer to use them in her/his workshops, discussions with trainees.
    Thank you again, Jeremy.
    Su

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  3. Hi Jeremy,
    I really appreciate your post as I am an EFL instructor, and I believe that both of these sites are really beneficial. I can benefit from other instructors' experiences all around the world and I can share my experiences hoping that someone else will benefit from them. The variety of activities in these sites can also add a lot to our lessons, which will benefit our learners.
    Thanks for introducing these sites,
    Seher

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  4. Jeremy,

    I enjoyed your post as always. I had no idea such specific social net working sites were available. This is quite impressive. Thank you for sharing some new resources I can explore.

    Respectfully,

    Shawn

    ReplyDelete