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Situated Cognition and Virtual Worlds

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People generally learn words in the context of ordinary communication. This process is startlingly fast and successful. Miller and Gildea note that by listening, talking, and reading, the average 17-year-old has learned vocabulary at a rate of 5,000 words per year (13 per day) for over 16 years. By contrast, learning words from abstract definitions and sentences taken out of the context of normal use, the way vocabulary has often been taught, is slow and generally unsuccessful. There is barely enough classroom time to teach more than 100 to 200 words per year. Moreover, much of what is taught turns out to be almost useless in practice. 
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Upcoming event: A chat with The Economist’s Alison Goddard

(Source: languagelab.com)

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The State of Digital Education [Infographic] 

“Over 90% of educators surveyed said that they believed online tools improve education for their students.”
via: ReadWriteWeb
“

The State of Digital Education [Infographic] 

“Over 90% of educators surveyed said that they believed online tools improve education for their students.”


via: ReadWriteWeb

(Source: knewton.com)

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"The Right Kind Of Education"

humanscaleschools:

CHAPTER 2 of ”Education And The Significance Of Life” by J Krishnamurti

THE ignorant man is not the unlearned, but he who does not know himself, and the learned man is stupid when he relies on books, on knowledge and on authority to give him understanding. Understanding comes only through self-knowledge, which is awareness of one’s total psychological process. Thus education, in the true sense, is the understanding of oneself, for it is within each one of us that the whole of existence is gathered.
     What we now call education is a matter of accumulating information and knowledge from books, which anyone can do who can read. Such education offers a subtle form of escape from ourselves and, like all escapes, it inevitably creates increasing misery. Conflict and confusion result from our own wrong relationship with people, things and ideas, and until we understand that relationship and alter it, mere learning, the gathering of facts and the acquiring of various skills, can only lead us to engulfing chaos and destruction.
     As society is now organized, we send our children to school to learn some technique by which they can eventually earn a livelihood. We want to make the child first and foremost a specialist, hoping thus to give him a secure economic position. But does the cultivation of a technique enable us to understand ourselves?      While it is obviously necessary to know how to read and write, and to learn engineering or some other profession, will technique give us the capacity to understand life? Surely, technique is secondary; and if technique is the only thing we are striving for, we are obviously denying what is by far the greater part of life.  Read More

(via adventuresinlearning)

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Is ANYONE listening to students? Students Speak Up About Education Technology

cooperativecatalyst:

(via Listen, Share, Repeat. « Cooperative Catalyst)

I invite you to watch this 5 minute clip from a student panel titled “Is ANYONE listening to students? Students Speak Up About Education Technology” – and think about what kind of real change listening to students could bring to change what “school” looks like.

(via adventuresinlearning)

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I believe the single skill that will, above all others, distinguish a literate person is programming literacy, the ability to make digital technology do whatever, within the possible one wants it to do — to bend digital technology to one’s needs, purposes, and will, just as in the present we bend words and images. Some call this skill human-machine interaction; some call it procedural literacy. Others just call it programming. 
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A Chat with BBC World Presenter Jamie Coomarasamy

(Source: languagelab.com)

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Business English in Virtual Worlds

My presentation from the BESIG summer symposium

Check out the BESIG site to see all the other talks. 

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I bet your staff meetings are just not this cool. 

Pictures from the our teacher development session last night - Experiential Education in a Virtual Environment by Lowri Mills .

(Source: languagelab.com )

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Language Acquisition [Teacher development Video]

Introduction to Language Acquisition

 
By Dr Atremis Huxley Pax aka Elizableth Schalchlin
 

Covering:

  • What is Language?
  • How is Language Acquired?
  • Learning Vs Acquisition
  • Is English the hardest language to learn?
  • Are mistakes indicative of ability or intelligence?
  • The ebb & flow of language acquisition 
  • Age & Language acquisition
  • Passive Language & Active Language
  • How is language acquired
  • Error Correction
  • Accuracy
  • Are mistakes indicative of ability or intelligence?

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Video: Students perform Mad Hatters Tea Party. 

(Source: languagelab.com)

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Video: Oil and Gas English @Languagelab

The English City Oil Rig provides a 3D platform for interactive learning where students can participate in authentic task-based activities which simulate a real working rig. The activities are designed to give students maximum exposure to English and develop their core skills of listening, speaking, reading and writing.

This course will benefit students who are seeking to improve their level of English within the Oil & Gas industry. The course structure allows students to have classes at the appropriate level for them, in their own time and from the comfort of their own home. 

Students can also take advantage of the unique student community where social events are held daily providing an opportunity to practice and make friends.

In designing the course, Language Lab have liaised with technical experts from the Oil & Gas industry to ensure that the course structure simulates a real working environment as closely as possible and that all the activities are designed to be both relevant and practical.

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Keeping it real - Legal English with a Legal Expert

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