Sunday, November 27, 2016

Week #8: Connecting the dots.

I am on holiday with my family in Da Lat city when the deadline for the project draft is calling.

Surprisingly, the draft writing of the project flows smoothly. It still needs lots of improvement (thanks God it's still a draft), but let's just celebrate the submission  moment first!

(Family Trip to Da Lat City November 2016. Son jumping for joy. Staying at a mountain room)

 I think there are two contributing factors that make project draft writing much less daunting: the weekly project tasks and the project template. In retrospect, the first one is so useful: the big project is broken into more manageable chunks in which we have to fulfill on a weekly basis. Therefore, the final project writing can be utterly easy if we stick to the original plan. Otherwise, the workload can be overwhelming if we make substantial changes, say, the class or the tools implemented, at the last minute. In this sense the adjective final in the collocation final project should lose its meaning. If we wait until the very end to carry out the project, it'll be too late. We shouldn't expect any finals! Instead, the better approach is to connect the dots. 

In addition, the project template provides practical guidelines that clearly help shape our general project implementation. I'm not a huge fan of action research, but the questions in the template definitely revisit my thinking of doing action research as well as incorporating project-based learning.

These are important lessons learned when it comes to course design, and I feel grateful to the Webskills' course developers!

Here comes the last week. 
Just a little more patience to polish a better version.

Tien
Vietnam


Sunday, November 20, 2016

Week #7: The 21st Century Education Heroes

20/11/2016
Celebrating Vietnamese Teachers' Day

I always feel blessed to be working in the education factor. Firstly, I'm a keen learner, and there's no better profession which is better for learners than being a teacher when it comes to practitioners' development. And more importantly, I'm inspired by the childhood heroes who have paved the passion for teaching: my parents (who always trust that I can do whatever I want), the secondary teacher of Vietnamese literature (who is now regarded as the most outstanding Vietnamese teacher in Ho Chi Minh City despite his lack of qualifications) and the English teacher (who now is a priest serving parishes in Italy).

For the past few years, I'm  fortunate to meet (online) three heroes whose impact on primary, secondary and tertiary education is profound. Reflecting on this week's theme, I believe that they have put their complete trust in learner autonomy.

Sugata Mitra and the Younger Learners: Hole-in-the-Wall Education Project

He set up self-access areas where children in under-resourced villages can use the computers which are built in the walls (hence the name Hole-in-the-Wall). Students can learn, explore and discuss together.
Image Credit: https://performanceandlearning.ca/ipl/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Sugata-Mitra-hole-in-the-wall.jpg
In Vietnam, we do have similar hubs.
(Image Credit: http://www.baoangiang.com.vn/MBMCMS/files/24/24c4befe-5c65-495c-9f66-861cacd077db.jpg)
Those machines are literally translated as "Fishing Machine". But they are for gambling! Many families have gone bankrupt after members having been so addicted to this a social evil.

That said, hats off to Sugata Mitra! For creating a such wonder to occupy disadvantaged kids with meaningful self-organized learning.

Salman Khan and Secondary Learners: Khanacademy
Starting with producing tutorial videos to help his distant cousin to deal with math problems, Khan has built up a whole new online school which contains original, excellent instructional videos to explain different school subjects. I've also heard that Khan Academy is also endorsed by Gates and Melinda Foundation. The Youtubers generation will definitely take Khan Academy seriously as the videos are made with clarity and humor. An awe-inspiring work from Khan!
(Image Credit: https://cdn.kastatic.org/images/marketing/share-thumb-a.jpg)
You can learn anything.
For free.
For ever.
Sounds too good to be true? If you have teenage learners, have them check it to verify the claim.

Andrew Ng and the Undergraduates or Life-long Learners: Coursera
(Image Credit: https://i.ytimg.com/vi/DNRa70bd2nI/maxresdefault.jpg)
I myself have experienced massive open online courses since its very fist days back in 2011. Courses I've taken include Introduction to Sociology, Gamification, Coaching Teachers, English for Composition and Writing, etc.
My final say is that if you haven't tried a MOOC on Coursera (or other platforms like Edx), enroll in one today! They are gemstones, again, given for free!

Goodbye week 7.

One, two more!

Let's pray harder! :))


Monday, November 14, 2016

Week #6: 18 days left...

18 days left...
The countdown to the final project submission starts to get really frustrating. We don't actually have much time to ponder what's going to happen next. Instead, real actions should be taking place. Implementation should be observed.

As instructed, this week is reserved for project initiation. I actually feel a bit awkward to present my very first recorded presentation to flip my TKT training course. The main aim of my project is to help participants in the TKT course to view in-class presentations when they can't attend the session for several reasons. Based on the attendance issue, Celeste suggested considering the flipped learning model. Video lectures are recorded for learners' view at their own disposal.

Following Celeste's advice, I've produced 2 online presentations with Office Mix, The choice of platform appears to yield promising results: recording is made easy, uploading is made fast, and most importantly, the interactive assessment at the end of the recording engages viewers' instant feedback.
The hardest part in preparing such presentations might  not be technical matters. It's the re-constructing of knowledge, the logical slides designing and the difficulty of digital voice projection that has somehow discouraged first-time producer like me.


I believe that the recorded presentation processing is still left much to be desired, and participants' response has not arrived yet, but let's just celebrate this very first attempt!
I really hope that the flipped presentations will help teachers to prepare for the TKT successfully. Meanwhile, if you happen to check my Mixes, I'm very pleased to learn from your suggestions.

Warm regards,
Tien
Vietnam

Monday, November 7, 2016

Week #5: If I judge a judge...


It's November. Vietnamese Teachers' Day is approaching. 20 November. Such a great month to reflect on the profession. But let's talk about weekly digest first, and save career talk for upcoming posts.

The most interesting part week 5 involves Rubistar - an excellent tool to design assessment rubric for project-based learning. With Rubistar, the subjective scoring can be mitigated, and learning will be more product-oriented. Rubistar offers a wide variety of rubrics, ranging from oral projects like class debate, video talk show, research and writing to even a public awareness campaign. Brilliant!! For future updates, Rubistar should support the function of teachers picking different criteria in different rubrics to create a truly customized form.


Another week's 5 highlight is assessing our approaches to assessment. One-size-fits-all testing is clearly prevalent in many Asian cultures, with the wash-back effect exhausting learners’ motivations. Personalized testing might not be practical when the achievement test is administered to 1 million high school leavers in Vietnam. The real argument that needs addressing is not about how to design such a large-scale test, but about the existence of such tests. This thought reminds me of Prince Ea's I just sued the school system. Last month, the song went viral in not only English learning communities but also in mainstream Vietnamese media. His vivid, lyrical description is a powerful wake-up call:
"If you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it's stupid."

If I judge a tree...If I judge a dance...If I judge a judge...