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Extending the Flipped Classroom into Literacy Classes

Extending the Flipped Classroom into Literacy Classes. Vicki Scullion John Unger Georgia Gwinnett College. Are These Your Students?. Real Genius. Grazer, B. (Producer), & Coolidge, M. (Director). (1985). Real Genius [Motion picture]. United States: TriStar Pictures .

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Extending the Flipped Classroom into Literacy Classes

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  1. Extending the Flipped Classroom into Literacy Classes Vicki Scullion John Unger Georgia Gwinnett College

  2. Are These Your Students? Real Genius Grazer, B. (Producer), & Coolidge, M. (Director). (1985). Real Genius [Motion picture]. United States: TriStar Pictures.

  3. What is a Flipped Classroom? • A Flipped Classroom is: • Watching Lecture Videos at Home AND • Working Problems in the Classroom • Works great for math and science because: • Concepts are introduced in lecture • Practice is assigned as homework

  4. But in English Classes… • English classes already have • Less Lecturing • More class discussion • More reading required • Long term writing required • However, some topics work great in a flipped classroom • grammar • citing sources • literary devices • plagiarism • rhetorical styles

  5. So for certain topics… • Students watch a lecture for homework • During class time, teachers facilitate active, engaging lessons that reinforce the curriculum concepts introduced in the homework

  6. ARE YOU KIDDING? You want me to tape a lecture for homework AND write an engaging lesson plan?

  7. OF Course not! • Many universities make lectures available to educators to use • The Khan Academy is a wonderful source of free lectures • Teachers all over the world post lectures and mini-lessons on YouTube • A cautionary note or two… • Watch the entire video before you assign it • Make sure that the video teaches the curriculum points you want students to learn.

  8. What topics are available? • In YouTube, use keywords to search for videos on whatever topic you plan to teach. In minutes, you can locate videos on anything from Alliteration, Citing Sources, Clichés, Emily Dickinson (both biographical and poem analysis), English Language Learner topics, Literary Concepts, Nonfiction Writing, Plagiarism, Punctuation to Vocabulary and Witticisms. • The Khan Academy offers over 4,000 free videos in a variety of subjects.

  9. Video H.W. AssignedNow what? • The FUN part! Now you have the opportunity to design a lesson that is ENGAGING, PERFORMANCE-BASED, COOPERATIVE, BASED ON REAL-WORLD TASKS, RELEVANT TO STUDENTS, and BASED ON YOUR CURRICULUM.

  10. An example that really worked in our classroom • EAP0082 Speaking and Listening • Objectives: Students will be able to identify pronunciation and intonation errors in their own speech. • Homework Video: Mister Duncan’s Lesson on Intonation Misterduncan England. (2010, Jan. 29). Learning English – Lesson Twenty Eight (Intonation) [Video File]. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GPcBJfBTlNo Identifying Pronunciation and Intonation in Speech • Evaluate your spontaneous video for pronunciation and intonation. Use the notes you took while watching the homework video on intonation to help you remember the differences between the two concepts. • Pronunciation: •  List 3 words or phrases that you pronounced correctly. • List 3 words or phrases that you pronounced incorrectly. Circle the part of the word where you noticed the error. • Intonation: •  List one sentence in which your intonation was perfect. Explain why your intonation was perfect for this sentence. •  List one sentence in which your intonation was incorrect. Explain why the intonation didn’t match what you were trying to say.

  11. Let’s brainstorm! • Let’s break up into groups of 4 or so, and brainstorm active teaching strategies that a professor might use to develop student understanding of a concept presented in a homework video. Remember, your goal is to engage and motivate your students to want to learn the content. Engaged students keep their cell phones in their pockets and their brains in focus.

  12. Did you think of these? • The Jigsaw Method (Divide and Conquer) • Writing Workshop (Watch homework videos about rhetorical styles and the writing process. When students write in class, you can catch mistakes such as not answering the prompt before the first draft is submitted.) • Literature Circles (In groups, analyze a reading based on the specific video homework. For example, analyze “Jabberwocky” for imagery and alliteration.) • Designing Graphic Organizers (Make sense of reading/writing by creating concrete visuals such as flowcharts, outlines, webs, matrices, etc.) • Presentations (Have groups of students produce the homework videos for next semester.) • Games that promote retention of vocabulary and literacy concepts (Password, Jeopardy, etc.)

  13. The Results? • The assigned homework is relevant to the objectives. • Students don’t do the active portion of the lesson by themselves at home. In class, they can get immediate feedback from you and their peers. This avoids student error and the need to re-teach important concepts. • You end up with a classroom full of students who are actively engaged in learning!

  14. Questions?

  15. Thank you! • If you would like more information, please contact: • Vicki Scullion at vscullio@ggc.edu • John Unger at junger@ggc.edu

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