Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Reflection of Week 10

 
http://www.jedakang.com/index.php?route=module/cvform

Thank God, all ran quite well from the beginning to the end. Everything went nicely from week 1 to week 10. We altogether swam across the sea of Webskills sciences. We altogether climbed the mountain of teaching technology knowledge. We altogether dug up the land of teaching practice lessons. All are very invaluable things and unforgettable experiences during our life. All are too important for our teaching future.
Nine weeks went away but they are still in my deep heart of teaching activities. 



On week 1, I started to do my first learning of Webskills by creating a blog. The blog I created was named "Building Teaching Skills through the Interactive Web that can be visited at http://e-teachingweb.blogspot.com/. This blog is for a weekly reflection that posted various information of my own activities and understanding on all tasks given by Mr. Sean and all comments from some of Webskills class friends. It is a very useful online tool for communication.

On Week 2, I studied the ABCD Learning Objectives Framework and Effective Web Searches that were very new important knowledge and science of technology of teaching. I learned more how to design a learning objective for my translation class based on the ABCD Model and browsed many valuable search engines. These facilities help me enhance the teaching and learning process in my classes.

On Week 3, I studied how to apply Skill-building Websites for Oral/Aural Skills and save Bookmarks with Delicious. The section of Skill-building Websites for Oral/Aural Skills was not too applicable in my classes because all classes I taught were translation studies classes. I rarely used oral/aural teaching tools. The second section was creating a Delicious link. This link is very important for bookmarking many online references. I created one link named https://delicious.com/erhamadina. My Delicious net now has 247 bookmarks. This is a bank of references that are very important for all. How a great tool Delicious.com is.

On Week 4, I studied more about Skill-building Websites for Reading/Writing Skills and Technology-enhanced Lesson Plans. This section was very important for me because what I taught had a close relevance to this part. Reading and writing skills were two skills that were developed in my translation classes. Students were asked to read some e-books for their theoretical bases of translation. They were also trained to understand the English texts by reading all carefully, then they had to translate all into Indonesian language accurately. That was an academic activity the students did from reading the text to writing the result of translation, because translation itself principally is rewriting process and product after reading activity. I also learned how to make a lesson planned enhanced with technology that can be seen at https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B-IlYgoe1g38MVVpbGJIUnBWSE0/edit?usp=drive_web.

On week 5, I did many things in relation to Project-based Learning, WebQuests, and rubrics. I learned more about Project-based Learning (PBL) as a method of teaching that allows students to gain a deeper understanding of the concepts and standards at the heart of a project (http://www.bie.org/about/what_is_pbl/). Talking about WebQuest, I read an explanation about it at (http://zunal.com/zunal-help/help-about-whatiswebquest.php). I tried to create Project-based learning and WebQuests though it is not good yet, but I was successful in applying this web application that can be seen at http://questgarden.com/164/08/7/131110091317/.

On week 6, I learned more about Creating Student-centered Classes and Interactive PowerPoint. On this week 6 I made tutor blog or web http://duniaterjemah.com/for managing my online teaching for my classes and asked students to create a learner blog. One of their learner blog can be seen at http://e-teachingweb.blogspot.com/p/the.html. I also made interactive PowerPoint slides for my translation classes that can be seen at https://sites.google.com/site/seanswebskillswikifall2013/powerpoints.

On week 7, I learned about Learner Autonomy, the One-computer Classroom, and Mobile Devices. This section was very invaluable for me to improve students' autonomous learning, applying one-computer classroom, and using mobile devices for enhancing teaching and learning process in or out the classroom with technology.

On Week 8, I did many things in relation to Teacher Resources Online that could be applied and practiced for online teaching and learning process and activities. On this week 8 I created Class Site of Translation Studies that can be visited on https://sites.google.com/site/translationclasssite/. This site is a sample for my translation class. This class site has some slots that are very valuable for managing and organizing my class administratively. I also made a handout of translation studies in the form of a compilation composed based on some articles from internet. I attached it on https://sites.google.com/site/translationclasssite/lesson-materials.

On week 9, I completed my activity of Webskills class and tasks by writing a final project that describes what I planned and did for and during the Webskills program. You can read my final project on https://sites.google.com/site/seanswebskillswikifall2013/final-projects. Beside that I also learned more about Learning styles and technology connections from some articles, taking the lesson of four models of learning style: 1) Myers-Briggs Type Indicator; 2) Kolb/McCarthy Learning Cycle; 3) Felder-Silverman Learning Styles Model; 4) Grasha-Riechmann Learning Styles. Those are very important and inspired me to manage my classes based students characteristics and learning capabilty.

Now on Week 10, it is time for me to wrap up. This is the week that makes me sad to do because I will leave my all extraordinary instructors of Webskills program, especially Mr. Sean McClelland who is very patient and smart to lead me to be a good learner of Webskill class and all lovely friend from many countries that accompany me week by week that make me warm in following this program. But I really believe that our friendship will be on forever, ever after this program finished. Let's be our brothers and sisters in the world of Education.

What should I give as my advice? It is very hard for me to give advice because all things run well and completely. However, I want to say for new participants who will take the same program of Webskills next year, you should:
1. Spend your time some hours for concentrating and focusing on all assignments and tasks given weekly, though you are very busy on your school jobs and activities.
2. Be a hard learner that has an inner motivation to run fast in your learning process because it needs extra energy, time, and thought.
3. Be patient to all duties given in this program because all will lead you to be a professional teacher.
4. Be creative on making and creating a product of technology of teaching and other tools or media for our classroom facilities, for examples, creating a blog, class site, WebQuest, and other online tools of teaching and learning.
5. Be a literate learner on technology by learning how to operate computer programs, applications, internet, and other technology in education.
That's all I can say on this week. I hope that what I learned will be useful for me, my students, and institution. A great deep thanks given to all instructors, committees, and University of Oregon staffs, and Department of Education under the United States Embassy. May God bless you all for your kindness and good deeds. Thanks.

Best regards,
Rudi Hartono
Semarang State University, Indonesia

Friday, December 6, 2013

Reflection of Week 9

Woow ... Extraordinary models of Learning style we learned this week.
I read some articles about learning styles and their implications for teaching, and Multiple Intelligences. 

1) Learning Styles
http://www.ian-bradbury.com/documents/

Montgomery and Groat (http://www.crlt.umich.edu/sites/default/files/resource_files/CRLT_no10.pdf) proposed many reasons why we need to incorporate learning styles in our teaching process. There are five reasons they stated: 1) Making Teaching and Learning a Dialog; 2) Responding to a More Diverse Student Body; 3) Communicating our message; 4) Making teaching more rewarding; and 5) Ensuring the future of Our Disciplines. In relation to my own teaching, those five reasons are very logic, particularly the reason of making teaching and learning a dialog. To avoid the boredom and boring activity, we are as teachers must be able to shift teaching methods from the boring method to the interesting one. Making dialog is one of the interesting method of teaching translation I did. This method does not create teaching situation passive, students do not only listen to me explaining translation theory and just sit on the chairs sleepily, but they are active answering and discussing problems and giving comments one another.This is one example way of incorporating learning styles based on the students' mood and interest. This way can make students active and reflective. It is in accordance with Felder and Soloman (http://www4.ncsu.edu/unity/lockers/users/f/felder/public/ILSdir/styles.htm) that have ideas in incorporating learning styles for active and reflective learners.
Then, talking about learning style models discussed by Montgomery and Groat (http://www.crlt.umich.edu/sites/default/files/resource_files/CRLT_no10.pdf) that introduced four models of learning style: 1) Myers-Briggs Type Indicator; 2) Kolb/McCarthy Learning Cycle; 3) Felder-Silverman Learning Styles Model; 4) Grasha-Riechmann Learning Styles, I do agree with all learning style models that can be incorporated in teaching, but not all models can be appropriate for teaching translation.
In my mind, the learning style model that is appropriate with my class of translation is Kolb's Learning Style that has for valuable aspects that can be matched to the teaching and learning process. In this model the teacher is as the assimilator, converger, accommodator, and diverger. Those roles can be played in some students' activities based on the concept of WHAT, HOW, WHAT IF, and WHY.

http://www.crlt.umich.edu/sites/default/files/resource_files/CRLT_no10.pdf
The students' activities can be derived and implemented through some activities based on the following model of activities. 
http://www.crlt.umich.edu/sites/default/files/resource_files/CRLT_no10.pdf
Practically I incorporated this Kolb's Learning Style in my classroom translation activities as follows:

A) WHAT (Teacher as an assimilator/expert in)
1) Lectures of translation theory;
2) Students' textbook reading activity;
3) Doing translation practice;
4) Student's independent research in translation;
5) Making objective exams of translation.

B) HOW (Teacher as a coach/converger in)
1) Doing and solving homework problems;
2) Using computer simulation for doing assignments (through blogs and class site);
3) Making individuals' reports by posting on learner blogs;
4) Demonstrating translation exercises.

C) WHAT IF (Teacher as an evaluator/remediator in)
1) Ending problems;
2) Student presentation;
2) Designing projects of translating;
3) Holding subjective exam;
4) Doing simulation.

D) WHY (Teacher as a diverger/motivator in)
1) Motivational stories;
2) Group discussion;
3) Group projects;
4) Subjective tests;
5) Doing field research.

2) Multiple Intelligences

http://greeneyezwinkin2.wordpress.com/2012/01/22/dr-howard-gardner-on-multiple-intelligences/

In relation to the Multiple Intelligences cited on http://www.thirteen.org/edonline/concept2class/mi/index.html, I have an opinion that translating activities in translation classes tend to:
1) Verbal-Linguistic Intelligence that leads students to be smart in understanding linguistic problems in translation;
2) Interpersonal Intelligence that makes students being responsive on all problems of translation;
3) Naturalist intelligence that forms students to be smart in classifying, analyzing, and categorizing translation problems based on the real facts in daily life.
That's all what I can summarize from what I read through some suggested articles.

Best regards,
Rudi Hartono

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Reflection of Week 8

Dear all lovely and friendly friends all over the world,

It's amazing, interesting, and important this week. Really many online tools as teacher resources we can develop to facilitate our students' learning activities and our own teaching process in the classroom. The followings are what I did in the Week 8.

1. Class Site

This is my class site I created for my translation students. I named it Translation Class Site. You can visit it at https://sites.google.com/site/translationclasssite/. This site is designed specially for Translation studies class. I provided some slots on this site: Home, Lesson Materials, Lesson Plan, Assignments, Exercises, and Teacher's Profile. The contents I made are very simple because they are only samples. Later I will manage this site as complete as possible. 


2. Handout
Other work I did in this Week 8 is a Handout of Translation Studies. This handout is  a very simple handout that discusses the Procedures, Strategies, and Methods of Translation. I composed it based on the article taken from http://www.accurapid.com/journal/41culture.htm. This handout was also attached on the class site Translation Class Site that can be visited at https://sites.google.com/site/translationclasssite/lesson-materials. This handout is very important for my students to study some theoretical bases of translation. It is a product that can be used for their learning autonomy. Really we can compose at least one handout per semester for our lesson material development activity. We can take some related materials from the internet and make a compilation.

2. Another Online Teacher Resource
https://it.uoregon.edu/itconnections/anvill
In relation to other online teacher resources, I read some articles about ANVILL. This is a new virtual language lab I know. ANVILL stands for A Natural Virtual Language Lab, and like other course management systems such as Blackboard—a popular course management system used by UO and many universities nation-wide—ANVILL allows teachers to create and organize their courses and receive assignments back from their students. But ANVILL, a project created by UO’s Yamada Language Center, has been designed apecifically for language instructors and their students. Yamada, the Language Center Director, says that ANVILL is focused on speech and the production of oral language. On the other hand ANVILL designer Jeff Magoto says that ANVILL is easier for teachers to get in and get oral lessons back from students than in other systems (https://it.uoregon.edu/itconnections/anvill).This "lab",however, like so many aspects of modern web based software is eminently portable: any teacher or student with web access (in class, at home, or in the office) can use ANVILL to listen to the news, watch video clips, or submit voice or video based assignments (http://babel-old.uoregon.edu/anvill/11-anvillOverview.pdf). Unfortunately, I could not use this program directly because my classes are written document-based course not audio-video-based course. I hope next time there will be a lab program that can facilitate my classes focusing on the translation theory and practice. Thanks for your attention.

Best regards,
Rudi Hartono

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Reflection of Week 7

Woow .... three interesting topics this week. We know the Learner Autonomy concept and models, One-Computer Class activity, and Mobile Devices for Students' Learning Tools and Media.

1) Learner Autonomy

http://schoolsonline.britishcouncil.org/
In my mind, learner autonomy is a learner's way of study that refers to self-study, independent learning or own study that a learner conducts to focus and concentrate on his or her analysis of something. This is accordance with some experts of learner autonomy that said various definitions of 'autonomy', such as 'independence' (Sheerin, 1991, 'language awareness' (Lier, 1996; James & Garret, 1991), and 'self-direction' (Candy, 1991).
This way of study is usually done by adult learners ('andragogy' according to Knowles, 1980) when they want to develop their understandings by reading books more, doing experiments deeply, self-evaluating on someone's works, so finally they will give their opinions and comments or put their criticism on one paper. This activity can build learner's responsibility on their own study, effective contemplation on the study, self-study awareness (http://iteslj.org/Articles/Thanasoulas-Autonomy.html). The learner autonomy activity is very good to do as the alternative study for learners, because sometimes the learners need to study alone, beside they usually study in their groups to discuss their problems and find out the solution. 

Learning autonomously is a natural way of learning. A student sometimes does his or her homework, answering some questions alone by reading a book to find out the answers, does an analysis and experiment in a laboratory. This way is almost done by many students around the world. In relation to this activity, we can encourage our students to do their learning autonomy by facilitating them with technology, for examples, asking them to browse some article through internet, answer the questions provided in the tutor blog, and search some other online references (e-books, etc.) individually. Many activities of learner autonomy that learners can do with technology.

Sometimes, we can encourage our students to do learning autonomy by reading books in the school library (silent reading) and making a written summary after that individually, doing their homework alone, and do their self-laboratory project in their own natural environment, such doing experiment in the garden (for biology students), doing conversational practice with foreigners in the tourism objects (for EFL students).


2) One-Computer Classroom
 

http://www.vforteachers.com/About_NetSupport.htm
Basically the one-computer classroom can be held in every school, especially in the school that has a very limited number of computers. However, nowadays every students almost has a personal computer (laptop, notebook, etc.) in their hand, so it may be not necessary for school to set a one-computer classroom. It is the same situation as in my classes of translation. Almost all of my students have their own laptop or notebook, only one or two of them do not have it, so I do not need to set my classroom with one-computer. However, if we want to try to give one for other students who do not have a computer, we can set or build one-computer room that can be used by the students by turns. We must provide the computer with some lesson materials, information, or test items that the students should keep. Practically one-computer classroom has some advantages to take, for examples, for keeping electronically the teacher's administrative applications (lesson materials, lesson plans, teaching media, handouts, test items, etc), students' applications (products or writing, Video, CD-ROM, internet, etc), online discussion between teachers and students, teacher's monitoring on students' activity, access information, and academic publication (http://eduscapes.com/tap/topic84.htm)


3) Mobile Devices as Learning Tools and Media

http://theeducatorsroom.com/

Modern technology era leads students to be smarter that their previous generation. Nowadays almost every student has a smart mobile phone, computer tablet, and other form of mobile devices. This make teachers easy to deliver their teaching duties. One of them is asking their students to study one lesson material or homework through their smart phone or computer tablet. 


There is a positive interconnection between one-computer classroom and learner autonomy. This case can be an example: One day a teacher asked students to do an online homework. However there were five students who did not have personal computers. This was a problem for them to do their online homework. The teacher initiated to ask the school management to set one computer in one room for the students who did not have computers. The school management provide the computer in the room as the station. Finally by turns each student was able to browse online homework and did it successfully. That's all what I can explain about three main important topics this week. 

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Reflection of Week 6


One of My Translation Classes
Wow..., It was a big job I did in this week. I did teaching and observing large classes, applying some technological tools for them, and making PowerPoint slides. What I did can be a away of anticipating my problems of teaching translation classes. It is very difficult to teach a translation class because it is different from teaching four language skills: listening, speaking, reading, or writing. It is teaching Applied Linguistics. However, all efforts I did may give solutions to my students. The followings are what I delivered in my own classrooms as efforts to create the teaching and learning process in the large classes better:

1) Preparing, designing and delivering teaching 
    by using PowerPoint Slides
I have two large classes of translation. They are the fifth semester students of English Department. As a way to anticipate the problem of teaching at large classes in relation to the lesson material demand, I managed my classes by providing some PowerPoint slides. I used them for teaching some theories of translation. 

2) Making tutor blog 
By making a tutor blog I could instruct and assign my students some materials and tasks to learn and to do. Through this blog I could teach the students more materials and give them assignments by posting all on it. One of my blogs or a personal web I have is http://duniaterjemah.com/. I uploaded a file on the assignments slot http://duniaterjemah.com/?page_id=8079, then I asked students to download it and do the assignment by posting it on their own blog.

3) Creating learners blog
Beside providing the tutor blog, I instructed my students to create their own blog. Now each of them has a learner blog. See some of them can be seen on http://e-teachingweb.blogspot.com/p/the.html at the learners blog slot. Through their blogs, the students can post their work and I can see their work and they also can see their works one another. Through their blog I can assess their translation product.

http://mazinubersahabat.blogspot.com
4) Using search engines
The next effort was I asked them to do Web searching by visiting some search engines of translation, such as http://www.freetranslation.com/, http://www.bing.com/translator, and http://translation-assistant.com/ for their translation practice. Through this way they could be familiar with some URLs of translation studies, such as theories and practices of translation. With this I hope my students can be literate and familiar on translation search engines.


http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rtrs20/current caption
5) Searching Online Journals
For enhancing and enriching their knowledge capacity of translation studies, I asked my students to search some online journals of translation studies, such as http://translationjournal.net/journal/, http://www.sil.org/resources/publications/jot, http://www.trans-int.org/index.php/transint, and http://www.erudit.org/revue/meta/2012/v57/n3/index.html. Through these online journals they can read more information about current issues of translation studies and theories.

http://translation.fusp.it/
6) Providing some offline and online e-books.
Beside four efforts above, I provided then some offline e-books of translation studies in the form of files. I shared those e-books to my students to have and read. On the other hand I also asked them to see and look up some online e-books on which they can read and take some information of translation theories. Some of them are http://books.google.com, http://scholar.google.com/, http://en.langueclub.com/, and http://www.scribd.com/.

7) Introducing some Webskills Products
The last was introducing the Webskills online products. Through this Webskills program, I got more information about Web tools are very important for my students. I introduced to them https://delicious.com/erhamadina, https://sites.google.com/site/seanswebskillswikifall2013/suggested-links/rwg-links that provide them some references to read.


That's all what I did to anticipate and solve my own problems of teaching translation in my large classes. Thanks.
 

Best regards,
Rudi Hartono

Thursday, November 7, 2013

The Reflection of Week 5

Ohhh... it's very exhausted, but don't give up! This week is more challenging because many difficult works to do. But I have tried to finish all happily. There are three very important lessons this week.


http://www.mentormob.com
1) Project-based Learning (PBL)
Project Based Learning (PBL) basically is a method of teaching that allows students to gain a deeper understanding of the concepts and standards at the heart of a project (http://www.bie.org/about/what_is_pbl/). This is a good way for teachers to train students to implement a theory in a real life. Through this method, students do practicing to what they learn theoretically in the classroom. Teachers and parents can do collaboration to monitor and lead their students/children doing their project, even solve their problems, beside they do their group works. This method, for example, was used by Susan Gaer when she taught her students Folktales. Through PBL she did not only teaching reading and writing Folktales but also she asked her students did a project. The project she designed changed a traditional teaching method to Project-based instruction. Through this PBL, her students were more active and creative in doing their project work. They made puppets for retelling the folktales orally, prepared costumes for performing role playing or mini drama that performed the Folktales on the stage. This is an alternative assessment that is more practical and directly observable (http://www.ncsall.net/index.html@id=385.html).
PBL can motivate students more in their study. The facts show that teaching one subject, for example teaching writing, theoretically makes students bored because it does not stimulate them to move their hands. The student will only listen to the teacher's explanation about a theory of writing. On the contrary, if the teacher applies PBL in teaching writing, for example, directly the students will move their hands to pick up their pens and paper, think the topic, draw an outline, start to write individually or in groups. This is one example of a PBL activity that is different from a traditional method. PBL here can change students from station to motion because it gives them motivation.

http://1brainsandwich.blogspot.com
2) Rubrics and Alternative Assessment
Basically a rubric is an easily applicable form of authentic assessment. A rubric simply lists a set of criteria, which defines and describes the important components of the work being planned or evaluated (http://us.iearn.org/professional_development/multimedia/assess/rubric.html). The role of rubrics within PBL is providing a measure of quality of performance on the basis of established criteria (http://www.nclrc.org/essentials/assessing/alternative.htm). With the rubric, teachers can measure the students' performance, capability, and mastery of one subject and students can refer to what level or score they are going to achieve because it can be a scale for students to measure their own achievement. See my rubric sample on https://sites.google.com/site/seanswebskillswikifall2013/rubrics.

http://webquest.org/index-2007a.html
3) Project WebQuests
PBL can be corporated with technology by using WebQuest. The facility of WebQuest that is available more and easy to take and to use can help students to do their projects given by the teacher. Suppose when the students are given a writing project by the teaching, they can acquire some knowledge of writing theories that can lead them how to write well. They can use resources on the World Wide Web for writing subject because WebQuest itself is an inquiry-oriented activity. WebQuests pull together the most effective instructional practices into one integrated student activity (http://zunal.com/zunal-help/help-about-whatiswebquest.php). However, sometimes PBL can be implemented if schools or classrooms do not have complete facilities that can support all activities in PBL. I have tried to create Project-based learning and WebQuests though it is not good yet, but I have been successful in applying this web application. See it on http://questgarden.com/164/08/7/131110091317/

Friday, November 1, 2013

The Reflection of Week 4

Wow..., Week 4 is harder than the previous week, isn't it? But I like it. I feel something growing up in my life week by week. All add my knowledge, improve my habits, and increase my creativity and activity. I knew the ground rules for discussion and had friends in Week 1, got new lesson the ABCD Model and Web Searching of many very valuable search engines in Week 2, had a new site that is very delicious because of having menus of bookmarks on Delicious Pages (See mine on https://delicious.com/erhamadina) and Oral/Aural Skill experiences from many experienced people in the world of teaching in Week 3. What happened in Week 4? Let me recount.
http://quirkygirlsread.wordpress.com/
1) Reading/Writing Skill Building
Through this task I got some extremely useful lessons because I knew how to organize my classes by using online references to enrich their knowledge on one topic of discussions or lectures, such as reading online journals, e-books, and other websites. Beside that I knew how to communicate with the students through blogs and send some materials to them via emails, like Liao did in using e-mail to improve her EFL learners' reading and writing, like Mikulecky did in using Internet-based children's literature to teach EFL, like Liang did in using three extensive reading activities for ESL/EFL Students using E-books in her class, and like Krajka did in using the Internet in ESL writing instruction. Through this section I am really happy because I have new Web Pages on Reading, Writing, Vocabulary, and Grammar Links (RWG Links Webskills Fall 2013). It is as interesting and important as the Delicious Pages.
2) Technology-enhanced Lesson Plans
http://www.nwlincs.org/comptech/TechRes.htm
This is a new brilliant idea of enhancing lesson plans with technology. It is a good step to escape from the traditional ways of constructing and designing the lesson plans. I really agree with this breakthrough. Involving and integrating online technologies to teaching plan is a very creative and innovative tunnel to fulfill our demands in the modern teaching era. Really this program provides us some training to be a professional teacher that use technology for our teaching and learning process in or out of the classroom. Now I know how create a technology-enhanced lesson plan. See the lesson plan I created on 
What I did from Week 1 to Week 4 improved my habit of teaching better, increased my creativity and activity more. Thanks.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Reflection of Week 3

I feel that the Week 3 is harder than the previous ones. But it is no problem because it is our struggle to do and a challenge to face. Do you agree? Let me check one by one. Firstly, I have done a discussion on Aural/Oral Skill Building. I can say that this skill building is very important to practice in our classroom in order our student can achieve their competence of listening or speaking. Listening is a receptive skill that everybody does every time while speaking is the next skill as the productive skill that someone produces every day. I read the article written by Juila Gong that explains how to employ CALL in teaching Second/Foreign Language Speaking Skills. It is very impressive and interesting when we are successful in integrating CALL to listening or speaking class. CALL as one of the Information and Communications Technology (ICT) is very useful for teachers and learners to learn a second/foreign language because this medium can facilitate them to learn the language independently. CALL is one of teachers' and learners' friends in teaching and learning a language.
http://ghettocooler.net/2011/08/29/delicious-chrome-extension/

The second job I did is creating a Delicious page. It is a very delicious web I know, because we can bookmark many important links as our daily academic menu. Now I have the URL of my Delicious.com, here it is: https://delicious.com/erhamadina. Please visit it. I bookmarked some links related to Translation Studies, based on my own major, such as Translator Service, Translate tools, and Journals.
http://www.open.ac.uk/

Thirdly, I have done Project Task 2 by doing a review of the project article written by Prem Bahadur Phyak from Department of English  Education, University Campus Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu, Nepal. He was successful in motivating his students to do their project of academic writing and research skills. Though his class was a very large class that contains 300 students in two sections, he managed his class successfully by using one-way lectures technique. He was also successful in facilitating his students to use websites, though it was a very low connection there. He asked his students to create a blog for interactive discussions and sent emails about some references and resources to his students. He also organized his class to like a group discussion as an effective technique to apply in a large class. What I like from him are his ways of formulating the learning objectives using the ABCD model, responding and reflecting what he had found in his study into some detail findings of usefulness of technology for learning and teaching, particularly teaching Academic Writing and Research skills in his classroom.
Finally I say that what I did in the Week 3 is more impressive but harder. Thank you for your attention. Best regards, Rudi Hartono.

Saturday, October 19, 2013

A Reflection of Week 2 (Webskills Class)

http://eghaeghooy.blogspot.com

As the reflection of Week 2 I can say that many things I did during this week. Firstly, I did Web Searching by trying many search engines suggested. It was a great experience for me to search many sites that I had not done before. Really a bunch of search engines, sites, and portals that I can visit to enrich my information related to my topics. I also asked my students to visit some and use them as their online references, because before this all of us usually visit Google or Yahoo as the familiar search engines. Now we have more and larger search engines (through noodletools) than before, after our instructor of Webskills UO AEI Fall 2013, Mr. Sean McClelland gave some information about the lists of valuable search engines). This can enhance our knowledge and enlarge our repertoires of websites. 
One of My Translation Classes
Secondly, I formulated some behavioral objectives of my Translation classes by using the ABCD model. It was a very impressive model I know, because it has a detail and systematic way of constructing one learning objective. Before knowing this model, I never made the learning objectives based on accurate steps. Now I know how to formulate a good learning objective by focusing on the students I teach (Audience), the students' capability as the expectation (Behavior), the teaching action given to the class whether it is a method, approach, or technique of teaching (Condition), and the students' mastery after the Condition (Degree). That was I did related to deriving the ABCD Model of Behavioral Objectives. It was a very interesting practice that I have known. Thirdly, I planned a Project Task for my Translation classes. I set a plan to teach Translation Studies through blogs. I designed a tutor blog for me to give my students an assignment to do and asked each of my students to have an academic blog as learner blogs. The tutor blog can be seen on http://duniaterjemah.com/ and the learner blogs can be visited on http://e-teachingweb.blogspot.com/ in the slot of the learner blogs. That is all I did related to the Project Task. Finally I say that the Week 2 assignment of Webskills program is very impressive, interesting, and important to keep and practice. Thanks.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

A Progress in Week 2



http://marketing4storage.com/search-engine-marketing/
    At the beginning of this week 2 I worked hard to do all assignments given by the Webskills Fall 2013 program. I did Web searching by reviewing the suggested different search engines (from noodletools), formulated the ABCD objective, and designed the Project Plan for my classes. Web searching through search engines was the first challenging assignment for me to do and made me busy to find out the appropriate sites for my topics "Translation studies". Some search engines provide the topics I search and some other do not. I tried to use 'bing site" (www.bing.com), it provides the facilities like "Google". I suggested my students to use that web. Other interesting and important search engines are http://www.freetranslation.com, http://www.translation-assistant.com, and http://betterworldbooks.com. I learned more from those search engines. I tried to apply all sites that are appropriate for my classess.The second challenging assignment I did this week was designing the ABCD objective for my translation classes. The ABCD model for behavioral objectives is very effective for designing the learning objectives for our classroom. I set the fifth-semester English translation students as the Audience (A), the interactive students' translation capability as the Behavior (B), the Blog-based teaching approach as the Condition (C), and the total daily assessment from the tutor as the Degree (D). That is all I did in the half of week 2. It was an interesting and challenging job.