Sunday, May 26, 2013


       Busy, Busy week! This was one of my favorite weeks. Being able to make my own game, puzzle and online test was incredible. I made a Body Parts Board Game with many pictures in under three minutes! 

       While writing my Project plan I learn a lot more about my place of work. I also realized that my way of teaching goes along with my organization's mission and vision. It was great to discover that our lesson planning style came from a person called Pamela Shea. I made her my Facebook friend and chat with her about lesson planning, I learned a lot! 

       As you can see, busy always means good for a teacher.

Thanks for reading,

Rosmery from Bolivia.


Sunday, May 19, 2013


Good morning,

We are about to begin the 8th week!

       This week I really enjoyed Padlet, didn’t you? I think it is a great way to start a debate in our classrooms. Students could find articles and pictures, even cartoons and videos or just post their own opinions about certain issue. All the class could read it, and then, come to classes and debate! 

       My project Plan is going very well. I am now writing my first draft and how lucky I am, I have two partners ready to review it and give me their feedback. While building my Google Site I experienced some difficulties, even though I followed the instructions our professor kindly gave me. I failed to give my site a cool look, I really hope that I can change that later on… Nevertheless, as I built each page, I got to remember how I have taught that particular point and words just poured out. To my mind, my colleagues will find not only lesson plans but inspiration when they access the CBA’s Lesson Plan Pool. I need it to be that way because this endeavour  would mean nothing without the collaboration of my peers.

       Reading Tuula’s project was a great pleasure. I think she followed the assessment rubric word by word. Her paper sets the bar quite high. Well done, Tuula!

Rosmery from Bolivia.




Sunday, May 12, 2013


Hello,

       I am working on a Project Plan to build a Lesson Plan Pool for the Centro Cultural Boliviano Americano in Santa Cruz, Bolivia. I thought about using a Wiki, but I now realized that using Google Sites is my best option since I can easily emulate our course site and add text, images, links, pages, sub-pages, documents, attachments, comments and files. 

I am collecting references from:  

       With all these elements, my lesson plan sharing page will become a successes among my colleagues or anyone that could benefit with the plans posted there. My primary target is the teachers at my Bi-National institution my own. Nonetheless, any educator teaching Top Notch, Summit, Postcards and On your Marks may benefit from the use of the site as well.

       This week I plan to build my site and add the very first lessons plans. By the middle of the week I will be able to publish the link to the brand new site.
I hope you have a great week. 

Rosmery from Bolivia.


Saturday, May 4, 2013



When was the last time you did something for the first time?
This week I had two of those exciting moments when I got to create my very first Assessment Rubric and when I got to learn about WebQuests!

      I am pretty sure that almost every teacher has used check lists, at least mentally. On the other hand, the use of other alternative assessment like Rubrics is quite new to me. Considering that I crave knowledge, new means motivating in my dictionary.
After reading about Holistic Rubrics, which score student’ performance as a whole, and analytical Rubrics, where scales are divided into separate categories representing different dimensions of performance, I find them as very useful tools in order to evaluate in a more subjective way. Nonetheless, since I had never used them I imagined them difficult to create. Little I knew about rubistar.com. This website made my job so easy that I intent to use rubrics in the future. Other kind of rubrics is Primary Trait Rubrics. They allow teachers and students to focus on one aspect of language performance. This is why the author considers them as a relatively quick and easy way to score writing or speaking. The last alternative assessment tool is Multitrait Rubrics. They allow to rate performance on three or four dimensions and several aspects are scored individually.

      Susan Gaer’s "Less Teaching and More Learning" got my complete attention from the very beginning. I especially enjoyed the Folktales project. Project Based Instruction works because it appeals to students’ feelings. To my mind, learners will be motivated if we plan projects that are meaningful for them. Gare’s examples of PBL were very carefully planned and, as she points out, there are three crucial elements to design successful PBLs: the project must be geared to the population, the students must see value in a project and flexible timelines are necessary.

       Another first for me: WebQuests. It turns out that they are inquiry-oriented activities that use resources on the World Wide Web. As mentioned at zuna.com, these web based projects help students to develop critical thinking skills and they often include a cooperative learning component. As I read different WebQuests at questsgarden.com, I became more familiar with this interesting concept, I might as well go ahead and create one just for the fun of it…and it wouldn't hurt to get the extra points, don't you think?

Sources:






Thanks for reading!