Showing posts with label Methodology 2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Methodology 2. Show all posts
Monday, November 26, 2012
Thursday, November 8, 2012
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Sunday, October 7, 2012
Sunday, September 23, 2012
SUMMARY
HOME THEY BROUGHT HER WARRIOR DEAD
The
poem refers the suppressed grief of a woman when his husband is brought died at
home, he was a warrior. She was shocked and she couldn’t show any emotion.
The
maidens thought that she would have to cry otherwise she would die of grief.
First they began to praise the warrior calling him a true fried and noble foe,
but she did not react. Then the maids lifted the cloth covering his face but
she also continued in the same state of shock.
Finally
an old nurse takes her son and puts him in her lap and she began to cry and
said her son “sweet my child, I live for thee” showing how much she loved her
husband and how much she loves his son.
TO THE QUEEN
The
poem seems to be like an allocution to the land of England and the importance
of loyalty to the Queen whose defense has cost so many lives, prayers, all
coming from the living love of the British people through generations ( “loyal to their crown are loyal to their own
far sons, who love our ocean-empire with her boundless homes for ever –
broadening England”).
Later
on the poet seems to refer to a kind of struggle within each man’s soul,
between the ideal and the real man. He finally expresses his reject to anti
values such as cowardice ( “the child of lust for gold”), for example.
AN ECOLOGY
OF HOUSES
The
exact image about nature probably varies from person to person. Some of them
bring to mind a landscape without being adulterated by human presence. The
image doesn’t include people in either make-shift encampment or permanent
residence. Nature, it is thought, is not our houses, nor does it exist in our
backyards.
We
have inherited an image of nature invented by 19th century American
romantics, after Native Americans were forcefully removed from the landscape
and put onto reservation. This is one way in which nature has been constructed
in our imagination. However, nature is and always has been everywhere humans
have ever lived or at least partially constructed by human activity. This
process has and has had implications for human evolution by altering the
process of natural selection; this process is called ecological niche construction.
The
principal cause of the changing landscape in the United States has been
suburban sprawl, i.e. the construction of strip malls, roads, especially
housing along the outskirts of cities.
In
1950 many cities lost residents, they moved to the newly constructed houses
outside of the city. Land that was previously used for farming or was covered
with forest was converted to residential neighborhoods, which had a principal
impact on the local and global environment.
Global
environment: this expansion contributed
to global warming due to increase emissions from cars being the primary mode of
transportation outside of urban areas, increasing energy consumption for the
heating and cooling of suburban houses.
Local
environment: consequence of resource extraction (oil drilling, natural gas, coal
mining) the water is contaminated. Beside sprawl is directly linked to water
depletion.
Actually
we are facing enormous environmental problems therefore the construction should
not only be for short term economic growth, we simultaneously construct and are
constructed by the environment and we envelop and are enveloped by it.
TECHNOLOGY / ROBOTS
This
article refers at the Biologist Robert Full’s lab in the University of
California, Berkeley, where he has different animals such as crabs, centipedes,
geckos. These animals serve as inspirations for his colleagues and him in building
robots that are fast, steady and agile.
Full
analyzed the lizards to designing a resistant robot, he observed African agama
lizards which have ability to stick a perfect landing after vaulting through
the air and they keep their balance during flight moving their tails up and
down to counteract the motion of their bodies, then he thought how he could
apply that technique to search and rescue robots in precarious terrain. In this
way Full and his team built a four wheeled, foot long vehicle with a stiff tail
section and it was named “Tailbot”
The
analysis of the lizards also led him into unfamiliar territory: paleontology.
Full made a mathematical model of how the velociraptor moved, based on its bone
structure and he discovered that the raptors were probably as good or better
than lizards, but he can never confirm his theory.
He
able to assess the motion of the computer-generated raptors in the film
Jurassic Park. He says that it moves its tail perfectly.
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
LESSON PLAN CATEDRA I
CONCLUSION
The teaching-learning process has been
described as a whole element which is close related to the components of
Metacognition, these are metacognitive awareness, metacognitive regulation and
metacognitive experiences. This means that metacognition includes knowledge
about when and how to use particular strategies for learning or solving
problems. Therefore, to plan every class is essential and very necessary for
teachers and learners. The Lesson Plan is the tool the teacher focuses his/her
knowledge to be given to the students. The content is organized to save time
and optimize the teaching process according to the sources and the students’
interest.
The lesson plan is created for the
student of Second grade of Secondary school. Students will be able to achieve
objectives proposed in this project, because all the activities are adapted and
designed according to their reality. The textbook that the teacher uses for
this level is a little bit difficult for them, so it is crucial to adapt and
omit constantly activities which most of them are in an upper level. We
considered that students can be engaged by showing some videos according to the
grammatical content that they have to learn as an interesting way of learning.
As future teachers, we must model the
class in order to monitor the students what they are learning. We could use
some tricks to help students learn when teaching lessons. These tools might be games,
songs, online pages, videos, several worksheets, crossword puzzles, etc. This
will help them remember during more time when information is connected to
something else.
Methodology’s classes have been very
useful to achieve this difficult task. Through this subject we can analyze the
textbooks and decide on the activities that are suitable for students.
Moreover, we can apply some criteria in order to recognize when omitting,
adapting, replacing and adding.
To conclude, we are concerned how
important is to have clear the concept of metacognition to our careers, because
this concept is immersed in the teaching-learning process. With Metacognition
the students learn through self regulation to know what way is the best to
study for them. Therefore, they know what kind of intelligence accommodates to
them. These intelligences or learning styles are: visual, auditory and
kinesthetic. To teach in public schools is not as easy as someone could think.
This is a real challenge for us, and we will do our best to achieve this.
https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B8CI22jdT8ghSzNCTUhDYnpubHM
http://prezi.com/khxz8bswkm5r/presentation-1/
http://prezi.com/cbjrhy6oxt0a/presentation-2/
VIDEOS
1) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DGlkG4QDeSA
2) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AOVNicsZ0qQ&feature=youtu.be
3) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SD-xOY9abXY&feature=plcp
4) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3q-JrLL_skM&feature=youtu.be
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
HOW TO DESCRIBE LEARNING AND TEACHING
HOW TO DESCRIBE LEARNING AND TEACHING
All
children who are in contact with a language will in normal circumstances learn
it. They do this unconsciously.
Most
adults can learn a language without studying it when they are in contact with a
language. However, not all adults who are in contact with a foreign language
learn it, and they may have more trouble with the pronunciation and grammar
than younger learners, although they may be able to communicate fluently.
The
language learners need to be motivated, be exposed to language, and given
chances to use it. Therefore there are three elements need to be present in a
language classroom to help students learn effectively:
Engage: This is the point in a teaching
sequence where teachers try to arouse the students’ interest, thus involving
their emotions.
Children
need to be amused, moved, stimulated and challenged with the activities
prepared by the teacher. When students are Engaged, they learn better than when
they are partly or wholly disengaged.
Study: Study activities are those where the students are asked to focus in
on language (or information) and how it is constructed.
Students
can study in a variety of different styles: the teacher can explain grammar,
they can study language evidence to discover grammar for themselves, they can
work in groups studying a reading text or vocabulary, but whatever the style, study means any stage at which the
construction of language is the main focus.
Activate: this element describes exercises
and activities which are designed to get students using language as freely and
communicatively as they can.
The
objective for the students is not to focus on language construction and/or
practice specific bits of language (grammar patterns, particular vocabulary
items or functions) but for them to use all and any language which may be
appropriate for a given situation or topic. Thus, Activate exercises offer students a chance to try out real language
use with little or no restriction- a kind of rehearsal for the real world.
Typical Activate exercises include role-plays
(where students act out, as realistically as possible, an exchange between a
travel agent and a client, for example), advertisement design, debates and
discussions.
One type
of teaching sequence takes students in a straight line “Straight Arrows” : first
the teacher gets the class interested and Engaged,
then they Study something and they
then try to Activate it by putting it
into production.
Straight
Arrows can be used in the lower levels for straightforward language, but it
might not be so appropriate for more advanced learners with more complex
language.
Another
type of teaching sequence of the ESA elements is a “Boomerang’ procedure”: In this sequence the teacher is answering
the needs of the students.
Boomerang procedure may be more appropriate for students at intermediate and advanced levels since they have quite a lot of language available for them ate the Activate stage.
Boomerang procedure may be more appropriate for students at intermediate and advanced levels since they have quite a lot of language available for them ate the Activate stage.
In
straight arrows sequences the teacher knows what the students need and takes
them logically to the point where they can Activate
the knowledge which he or she has helped them to acquire. For the boomerang
sequence, however, the teacher selects the task the students need to perform,
but then waits for the boomerang to come back before deciding what they need to
Study.
https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B8CI22jdT8ghdzQwSGNKWmg5dGM
ACTIVITY
1
Reflection
about a lesson plan
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