Monday, March 29, 2010

Some example WebQuests from last year ;-)

Here's a link to WebQuests created by grammar300-1 students in spring 2009.
Here's a link to WebQuests created by grammar300-2 students in spring 2009.

Our Own WebQuest-URLs

1) Freddie Dickerson: 1960s Slang

2) Brittany Richmond: London Cockney Rhyming Slang

3) Broc Pachesa: Computer Slang

4) Nick Sellers: Aussie Slang

5) James Jones: Aussie Slang

6) Sydney Shelton: Aussie Slang

7) Michelle Donegan: Prison Slang

8) John Bastian: Prison Slang

9) Katia Salomon: Ebonics

10) Latia Hayes: Police Slang

11) Alexandria Snelius: 1960's Slang

12) Blake Reeves: Political Slang

13) Morgan Williams: Surfer Slang

14). Sarah Kessler: 1960s Slang

15). Kristyn Looper: prison slang

16.) Kiara Poole : Drug Slang


Friday, March 26, 2010

Intro to WebQuests

This is our second (and last) big project, next to the research essay:

We are going to create a Lesson Plan again; this time focusing on the 6th big E, the E-Search. We will also have a big chunk of Engage and Explore in our Learning Cycle.

Today, we are going to learn a new software tool: WebQuests.

These are meant to be online lesson plans that teachers can use in class, providing their students with links to do research about certain topics. (This is point 6 from our Learning Cycle, the "e-search.") The kids go on a "quest" on www and expand their previous knowledge.

The WebQuests have several different steps the kids have to follow, and they also offer a rubric at the end, so the kids know what they will be graded for. Also, they have a welcome page that explains the topic and what they are going to do.

Our task: WE ARE CREATING A WEBQUEST LESSON PLAN ABOUT THE TOPIC "SLANG."

PROMPT 1:

Read the following 1-page excerpt from the diary of a medical intern, written by Perri Klass. In it, she explains how she had to learn a "totally new language" in order to understand the slang of nurses and doctors. It is like a "secret language," so that the patients won't know what is wrong with them when the medical staff talks about them. Beware - some expressions are quite offensive!

PROMPT 2:

Choose a topic from the following list (or google your own topic) - it needs to be the special language/dictionary of ONE group of society.

soldiers' slang (Slang from Operation Iraqui Freedom)
prison slang
rhyming slang (England; Cockney)
police slang
computer slang
railroad slang
1920's slang
1960's slang
Mountain Bike Slang
Australian Slang
Death Slang
Antarctic slang
drug slang

You can also come up with a topic of your own for which you can find an online dictionary. Past semesters' studens have written WebQuests about skateboarder slang, fashion slang, Clockwork Orange slang, etc.....

When you have chosen your topic (and your dictionary of a certain slang), you have the FIRST COMPONENT of your WebQuest lesson plan. Here's an overview of all the components you need:

COMPONENTS of WEBQUEST lesson plan:

1. a link to your slang dictionary, and a definition of "SLANG"
2.1 a welcome page (Intro) that tells the kids (address them; let me know their grade level) what the topic of your lesson is (which group you're talking about)
2.2 a TASK page that tells the kids what the purpose of your lesson is (why they need to learn about it), and what they will do
2.2b your purpose: why it is important nowadays to know about this slang
3. an assignment page (Process) with e-search assignments (links) for the kids. Here, you need to tell them how to present their findings (such as, to write down what they researched on a piece of paper, fill in a study guide that you prepare, do a ppt presentation, etc.).
4. a grading rubric



For task 3, the PROCESS, you should have the following components:

3.1 I expect you to define the word SLANG for your students. Give them an example for a metaphor (taken from your dictionary). You can also make them write down their own definitions, and then let them click on a link to an online dictionary that defines those terms correctly.

3.2 Create a brief text using the slang you're talking about (either, write it yourself, or use the translation engine on your website). Let the kids translate it into Standard Written English without looking at the dictionary for help. Then, give them the solutions in a later section of your webquest, to check their responses.

3.3 Give them the link to your dictionary, and their first assignment (e.g., create a 10-item dictionary with words chosen from it on their own, etc.)

3.4 Give them some kind of writing assignment about YOUR insider group's slang that you will grade with your grading rubric (prompt examples: "Write a short story using this slang." or "Write an essay about why it is important to learn a certain slang if one wants to "belong" to a group of insiders." or "Is it better to remain true to one's origins and speak one's own language, or does one have to adapt when joining a different group?" or "Why can the use of metaphors be good/bad sometimes?" or "If you were a patient, would you prefer that the doctors speak clear text with you, or wouldn't you mind them talk in secret language?" or "Is a secret language ment to INCLUDE or EXCLUDE people?" or "Develop your own secret society. Write a short essay about what kind of language you would use." BE CREATIVE!!!)

3.5 Create your Grading Rubric with the online functions that WebQuest offers.


SOFTWARE: modeling how to create WebQuests

Go to the homepage of WebQuest. You need to sign up and register for a "30 day free trial." Then, we'll model together how to create the background template and colors, etc. The online builder is pretty easy and self-explanatory, and will guide you through all steps. Remember to ALWAYS SAVE what you typed before you click on another field; otherwise, you'll lose everything!!! You can also insert pictures (which you should do, depending on the grade level you instruct.)


To give you an idea of layout possibilities:

Here's an example WebQuest about Clockwork Orange "NADSAT SLANG" created by one of my former students: http://questgarden.com/69/77/4/080914190240/

TIMELINE for this project: We will work on it for two to three class periods; the rest will be homework. DUE DATE: to be agreed upon.

Grammar Instruction: What Teachers Say

This article focuses on the studies of Brenda Arnett Petruzella and the debate of teaching grammar in a school setting. Many people are torn on this idea and believe that teaching grammar to students is a waste of time. Brenda has supported research that teaching grammar to students has no positive effect of their writings. She claims that many teachers agree that ridding grammar from classroom criteria is a good idea. She states that many college students who received English degrees and became student teachers were ridiculed by the professors they taught for because they were told grammar was not important. these professors stated that their senior students in high school had a better understanding of grammar then their student teachers. With all this said and done, the article began to focus on what researchers believe about this topic and what actual teachers believe about this topic. The article stated that when researchers see this debate and find grammar useless they are talking about the memorization of vocabulary and in-depth material. Teachers believe that grammar is important but they focus more on the fundamentals. Teaches believe that grammar is a necessity in the form of sentence structure, punctuation, and spelling. Teachers say that without this core, fundamental training students would be lost in the grammar world. Teaching grammar in a school setting has been a debate for some time now. Many are torn on this idea and this article shows both sides of the argument. Now it's your time to decide.

Slang

Slang can be described as informal, nonstandard words or phrases (lexical innovations) which tend to originate in subcultures within a society. Slang often suggests that the person utilizing the words or phrases is familiar with the hearer's group or subgroup--it can be considered a distinguishing factor of in-group identity. Microsoft Encarta states: "slang expressions often embody attitudes and values of group members." In order for an expression to become slang, it must be widely accepted and adopted by members of the subculture or group. Slang has no societal boundaries or limitations as it can exist in all cultures and classes of society as well as in all languages. Slang expressions are created in basically the same way as standard speech. As stated in Microsoft Encarta, "expressions may take form as metaphors, similes, and other figures of speech." In addition, it is noted that the words used as slang may be new coinages, existing words may acquire new meanings, narrow meanings of words may become generalized, words may be abbreviated, etc. However, in order for the expression to survive, it must be widely adopted by the group who uses it. Slang is a way in which languages change and are renewed.


Tuesday, March 23, 2010

"Folk Linguistic Perceptions and the Mapping of Dialect Boundaries" by Broc Pachesa

When people are given a map and asked to map out different areas of dialect for a certain region, there is no doubt that there are many factors that can influence their responses. Erica Benson took twelve participants from different parts of Ohio (2 -Southern Ohio, 2 - North Eastern Ohio, 4 - South-Eastern Ohio, and 4 - Central Ohio) and used two survey instruments on each participant, exploring their beliefs about the dialect areas of Ohio. First, she gave each participant a map of Ohio and surrounding States (Michigan, Indiana, Pennsylvania, New York, Kentucky, and West Virginia) and asked them to circle and label areas where people speak differently or similarly. The second task, called “the-degree-of-difference task,” gave each participant an alphabetic list of 23 cities in and around Ohio (as well as a map with the cities labeled on it). Benson then asked the participants to rank each city one through four indicating the degree of difference in speech, one representing “exactly like you” and four representing “different.”

The results of the study showed that the participants from the South and Southern-central Ohio had similar responses and that the participants from the Northwest and Central Ohio had similar answers as well. The two participants from the South said that Ohio is divided in half approximately in the middle running east to west. The four participants from Southern-central Ohio answered that dialect is relatively the same and extends into bordering states. The four participants from Central Ohio answered that there appears to be several regions with varying degrees of differentiation while the two participants from Northeastern Ohio mapped out at least four different regions in Ohio that extend beyond Ohio into bordering states.

In conclusion, Erica Benson found that perceptions can be collected in a relatively small geographical region using a hand-drawn-map and/or the degree-of-difference tasks. Secondly, she found that perceptual dialectology and traditional dialectology can yield similar results.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

"What Makes Texting Distinctive?" by: Sydney Shelton

To begin with, textography is known as "the use of single letters, numerals, and tyographic symbols to represent words, part of words.." Examples of textography would be logograms or logographs which are, be = b, to = 2, at = @, and 'x' = kiss. Many of these logograms are found in text messaging. Other examples are "zzz" which means the person is sleepy or "2day" which is a shorter version of today.
Another shortened version of speaking through a text message is using emoticons. Examples of emoticons are :-) = smile, ;-) = wink, and (^_^) = cute. When a person is using visual images to represent the way he/she feels, this is called pictogram or pictographs.
The author argues that a emoticon and pictogram used in Egyptian hieroglyphs and often act at two completely separate meanings. For example, the @ can be used as "at" or used as ":-@" which means "screaming." A person can read this two different ways. The options for translating the symbols are listening to the sound or looking at the shape. Although the author points out the symbols are different, there is one similarity to the symbols. The similarity is known as rebus. "A rebus is a message which, in its original definition, consists entirely of pictures that are used to represent the sounds of words rather than the objects they refer to." An example of a rebus is a person looking at a picture of a bee followed by the letters "st" and then the person putting the two objects together therefore getting the word "beast."
The article then goes on to explain initials, which are better known as acronyms for texting. Examples of these would be: DK = I don't know, JK = just kidding, NP = no problem, or GF = girlfriend. Basically, each of these acronyms are created from the first letter of each word. A more complex acronym that shows a better example of using the first letter of each word is: SWDYT = So what do you think? There are other abbreviations that have been known all throughout history such as: ASAP = as soon as possible, RIP = rest in peace, or TTFN = ta ta for now.
Soon after the abbreviations came the omitting of the letters. When creating a text message, a person normally omits the vowels in a word allowing the word to be shorter and making the text message easier and faster to send. As for the omitting of the vowels comes the incorrect and shortening spelling of the words. Examples such as, been versus bin or going to versus gonna are only two of the many that are known.
To sum up the article, the author then asks the question: "Why do they do it?" "Why has distinctive language of texting arisen at all?"

Monday, March 15, 2010

in-class activity on first day after spring break

USING ADVERBS ABUNDANTLY: TOM SWIFTIES...

Today, we are going to talk about "adverbs." Instead of a mini lesson, we will start with a little grammar exercise, and then become creative ;-)


Here are some GUIDELINES about the order of adverbs in a sentence:
THE ROYAL ORDER OF ADVERBS
VerbMannerPlaceFrequencyTimePurpose
Beth swimsenthusiasticallyin the poolevery morningbefore dawnto keep in shape.
Dad walksimpatientlyinto townevery afternoonbefore supperto get a newspaper.
Tashonda napsin her roomevery morningbefore lunch.


First task:
Take a quick overview of what ADVERBS are.

Second task: take this short online quiz about adverbs.

Third task (everyone on his/her own):
This is what happens if one uses adverbs abundantly... ;-)
Go to the following website and learn what "Tom Swifties" are.


Task 2:


Get together in groups of 3-4. Go to the following webpage. Your group's task is to create a 5-item test for another group that this group has to solve. Get the emails of the one member of the other group (your partner group), and email this person your quiz. The group that solves most of the 5 items it gets from another group wins!! You need to retype the Tom Swifties that you find on the webpage, but you leave out the last word, i.e., the pun, for the other group to fill in the blank. Don't invent them yourself yet!!!

Examples:

1. How do you start a model-T Ford without a battery?" asked Tom _____________ .

(answer: CRANKILY)

2. "I have to wear this cast for another six weeks," said Tom _________________ .

(answer: DISJOINTEDLY)

3. "I'm shocked," said Tom _____________________ .

(answer: ELECTRICALLY)


You should select sentences that people are able to guess when they think hard.

EMAIL me your 5-item quiz (with solutions). Only one per group, please! Indicate your group members names in this email (because you'll all get participation points for the quiz).


Task 3:


Now, invent 1 Tom Swifty on your own!!! Publish it as a comment to this blog. If you work in groups, indicate all your names on your blog entry. You can also work by yourself. If you can't finish in class, do it as homework for Wednesday, March 17th.

If you missed class today, invent a Tom Swifty on your own, and post it on the blog by Wednesday, March 17th, for homework!