domingo, 22 de enero de 2012

THE IMPORTANCE OF NEW TECHNOLOGY IN THE CLASSROOM

       The world is constantly changing and ways in which we function at home, work and school are also changing. The speed at which technology has developed plays a major role in these changes. From e-mail to on-line classes, computers are definitely influential in our lives, and can enhance the learning process in schools in various ways. With the increasing popularity of computer technology, it is essential for administrators to support and encourage computer technology in our education systems.

      Computers are important in education because they force us to reconsider how people learn, how they are empowered, and what the nature of learning and useful information is. We cannot avoid the presence of computers in our schools because they are forcing educators to re-evaluate the very nature of what and how we teach. In 1998, the Office of Technology Assessment reported there were approximately 5.8 million computers in schools across United State’s or approximately one machine for every nine students.

      An advantage of having computer-assisted instruction in the classroom is that the computer can serve as a tutor. Teachers can only aid students in the learning process so far. Computers can assist teachers and act as a tutor for the students who are falling behind. A report entitled Computer Advantages: Tutoring Individuals, states “with computers as tutors, no student will be overwhelmed because he or she is missing fundamentals the computer will repeat material until each lesson has been sufficiently mastered” (Bennett, 1999, p. 3). Teachers do not have the time to repeat lessons over and over again. The writer believes it is important to give all students in the classroom the opportunity to adequately learn the lessons, and with computers acting as tutors they can.

     One of the biggest problems in the world today is illiteracy. Each year thousands of students graduate from high school reading at the elementary school level, or not reading at all. Every student should have the opportunity to receive additional assistance when they need it. Teachers are doing the best they can with literacy issues in the classroom, and computers can reach the students that the teachers cannot. The article entitled “Computers as Tutors” discusses Annaben Thomas (Bennett, 1999) who was unable to read despite her years in the New York City school system. After leaving school, she was taught by tutors and had enrolled in library literacy programs and adult education classes trying to overcome her handicap. After doing everything she still had not learned to read, until she enrolled in a computer course program that taught her to read and write. Because of success stories like this it is crucial to support the use of computer technology in the classroom.

      Although the advantages of having computer technology in classrooms outweigh the disadvantages, the writer can respect the concerns of the people who are against computer technology in the classroom. Many people argue the computer does all the work for the students, not allowing them the opportunity to digest what they have learned. Boyle (1998) argues that information technology “may actually be making us stupid.” (p. 618). He argues that the computer takes more of the thinking process out of students.

      Many people who grew up in the pre-computer age worry that the use of computers will take the emotion and heart out of the classroom. Wehrle (1998) states “the pre-computer age generation envisions designing computer technologies that still take into account the emotional needs of the students” (p.5). Their main argument against computers in the classroom is that teachers need to take into account the importance of student emotions. They do not want the quick evolution of computer technology to interfere with the student’s need for human support that they receive from the teacher-based instruction. The implications of having computer technology in the schools are the belief that the computer will solve many of the problems that teachers cannot. These include helping students raise the standardized test scores, actually teaching students the basics such as reading and mathematics, and implying that the teachers have the skills and abilities needed to accurately aid students with their computer usage.

      Education serves as a window through which our imagination and curiosity can take flight into the unknown and enhance our creativity, and the use of computer technology in education plays an enormous role in helping students to achieve their full development potential. Given the role that education plays in preparing students to go into the world, it seems clear that there should be a connection between the world and the classroom. Unless education reflects the world in which it exists, it has no relevance for the students.

      In conclusion, the advantages discussed concerning computer technology in the classroom outweigh the disadvantages. Computer technology is a positive supplement to bridge the gap between education and the technological world in which we live. Computer-assisted technologies in schools offer students greater access to information, an eager motivation to learn, a jump-start on marketable job skills and an enhanced quality of class work.

sábado, 21 de enero de 2012

ACTIVIDAD: READING

Bill Gates


Microsoft


He's the most famous businessman in the world. Many pages have been written about how he has dominated the revolution in personal computing. But we know little about him as a person. Here's a familiar anecdote which may show his personality: when Bill Gates was in the sixth grade, his parents decided that he needed some kind of help. He was at war with his mother Mary, an extrovert woman who believed that he should do what she told him. She would call him to dinner from his bedroom, which she had given up trying to make him clean, but he wouldn't respond.

"What are you doing?" she once asked him.

"I'm thinking," Bill answered.

"You're thinking?"

"Yes, Mom, I’m thinking," he said aggressively. "Have you tried thinking?"

Finally, his parents decided to send him to a psychologist. The psychologist concluded that Bill was extremely intelligent. After a one year session and a large amount of tests, the psychologist told Bill’s parents: "You're going to lose. You had better adjust to it because there’s no use trying to punish him. It's useless to try to compete with him." A lot of computer companies have concluded the same
.

VIOLENCIA EN LAS AULAS


Increible pero cierto.
Cada dia nos encontramos más y más situaciones como esta en nuestras aulas. Una situación que sigue incrementandose y que por desgracia es ya bastante común.
Luchemos para erradicar la violencia en las aulas.

domingo, 15 de enero de 2012

Blog Educativo Extremeño

Hoy en dia la importancia de la nuevas tecnologias esta creciendo cada vez más. La creacion de paginas web, blog, etc es un elemnto fundamental en nuestras vidas y tambien en la educacion desde la implantación de ordenadores en las aulas. Por lo que el Blog Extremeño Educativo me parece una herramienta fundamental y util tanto  para los alumnos como profesores.


Blog Educativo Extremeño. Ir

sábado, 26 de noviembre de 2011

WEB 2.0 Y SU INTEGRACIÓN EN EL AULA

La Web 2.0 es la representación de la evolución de las aplicaciones tradicionales hacia aplicaciones web enfocadas al usuario final (con pocos conocimientos en el mundo de la informática). Hoy en día, nadie puede negar en esta sociedad de conocimiento que en el aula, además de poder hacer uso de herramientas educativas tradicionales (libros, cuadernos, exposiciones en la pizarra, etc.), podemos usar otros recursos digitales con los que elaborar materiales que se pueden emplear directamente en nuestras aulas, como soporte: documentos de texto, presentaciones online, podcast, blog, etc..
Cuando nació la web, sobre principios de la década de los 90, nos encontrábamos con un entorno estático, donde las páginas web eran diseñadas y actualizadas por personas con avanzados conocimientos en informática. A estas páginas, que se caracterizaban por contar con pocas actualizaciones y tener una nula interacción con el usuario, se las conoce con el término genérico Web 1.0. Por tanto, el término Web 2.0 engloba los siguientes principios:
La web es la plataforma
La información es lo que mueve internet
Web colaborativa
Los usuarios se transforman en productores de contenidos
Posibilidades de publicar las informaciones y realizar cambios en los datos sin necesidad de conocimientos tecnológicos avanzados
Facilita las interacciones
Facilita la publicación, la investigación y la consulta de contenidos Web
Software gratuito para el usuario.


Diferentes estudios consideran interesante la utilización de Internet en el ámbito docente (Prats, 2002) e incluso es posible destacar alguna buena propuesta para la preparación de actividades de aprendizaje en el aula. La web 2.0 ofrece nuevas funcionalidades que permiten hablar de Internet no sólo como gran fuente de recursos, sino también como la plataforma donde trabajar con esos recursos. Y es que el conjunto de mejoras de Internet que hay detrás del 2.0 hace que las posibilidades de uso de la Red sean mucho mayores que hace tan sólo tres años.
Las características propias de las web son la facilidad para buscar, crear, compartir e interactuar de forma no presencial (on line), permitiendo incrementar la eficacia de las actividades de enseñanza y aprendizaje.(+ info)

jueves, 5 de mayo de 2011

THE GROWTH AND EXPANSION OF ENGLISH

 English is part of the Germanic branch of the Indo-European family of languages. By year 1000, the English language consisted of approximately 40 000 words. Nowadays, the number has grown to more than 500 000. If we calculate the average of words created per century, this comes to 46 000. A great number of words found in the English vocabulary was borrowed from Latin, French, Low German, and the Scandinavian languages. We also know that some periods were more fertile than others: invasions, contact with other cultures, inventions, technological progress, music, fashion are some of the factors which have helped to enrich the language.
     British colonialism in the 19th century and American capitalism and technological progress in the 20th century were undoubtely the main causes for the spread of English throughout the world.
     From around 1750 to 1950 the British Empire covered about a quarter of the globe. It was one of the most powerful empires the world has ever known. The colonies gradually freed themselves but about fifty countries chose to keep a connection with Britain by belonging to the The British Commonwealth. English is spoken all over the Commonwealth either as a native or an official language, and the British monarch is the symbolic head of the association.
     The USA has played a leading role in most domains for the last hundred years. At the end of the 19th century and first quarter of the 20th, it welcomed millions of European immigrants who had fled their countries ravaged by war, poverty or famine. This labour force strenghtened American industries and development. The Hollywood film industry also attracted many foreign artists in quest of fame and fortune and the number of American films produced every year soon flooded the market. Before the Treaty of Versailles(1919), which ended the First World War between Germany and the Allies, diplomacy was conducted in French. However, President Wilson succeeded in having the treaty in English as well. Since then, English started being used in diplomacy and gradually in economic relations and the media. During the II World War, America intervened both militarily and economically to save Europe from chaos. From then onwards, the United States have consolidated their cultural, economical and technological power: inventions, rock and roll, the first man on the moon, the revolution of the Internet, the country's growing prosperity and commercial aggressiveness have contributed to the further expansion and importance of English in the world today. ( leer más)

ENGLISH AROUND THE WORLD

English is the world’s most important language. One criterion for this is the number of native speakers that it happens to have. A second criterion is the extent to which the language is geographically dispersed:  English is spoken in all continents except for South America. A third is its ‘vehicular load’: it is a lingua franca in science and scholarship and a vehicle for cultural manifestations such as music. A fourth criterion is the economic, cultural  and political influence and dominance of those who speak it as ‘their own’ language; considering the USA at this point will suffice.
    There has been an increasing demand for English, and it now occupies the role of chief foreign language in most countries. Spain has not escaped the influence exerted by the E. language over the last decades. In contemporary society the need to know and be able to use foreign languages –and especially English- whether it be for professional, social or purely personal reasons, has become a pressing one. Developments in communications, the increasing contact between countries and peoples and the integration of Spain into the European Union means that the knowledge of foreign languages, in particular English, is essential to facilitate communication between the members of this community.
    The aim of the teaching of English in secondary education is for pupils to acquire communicative competence. This implies not only the possibility of learning a new system of signs but also understanding other cultures, customs and social peculiarities, whilst at the same time encouraging interpersonal relationships. This fosters an integral education of the individual which leads to a better understanding of the language itself. (Leer más)

My first post

Este primer post servirá para daros la bienvenida a todos a este espacio en el que hablaremos de la importacia del inglés en el mundo.


Espero vuestros comentarios.