Students can now record their classes

As an online English teacher, I am always looking for ways to make the learning process as effective as possible. One of my students, Ady, asked today if he could keep the audio from our lessons. I already give students the full notes that we make with screen sharing on Skype, but never considered recording the audio.

There are a couple of reasons for this. One, it would produce a huge file. 30 minutes of MP3 would run to several hundred megabytes. Two, this would be too big to send to the student by email. Most email services limit the size of the attachments you can send.

So I did a bit of research and found a very interesting program called CallGraph. This is a free download that allows you to record your Skype conversations on two channels. This is useful if you want to isolate the teacher or the student. It’s easy to download and install. I installed it to my system in minutes and was able to quickly make a test recording.

I am recommending all my online students to download the program from http://callgraph.biz/ and use if they want during our classes. Being able to relive a class as often as necessary will help students with particular points of grammar or pronunciation. By recording the audio themselves, they remove the need for me to send anything bigger than the PDF files I always send containing the class notes.

Posted under Writing

This post was written by Richard on August 4, 2010

Skype to allow conference video calls

Skype 5, currently in Beta, has the capability to allow up to 5 users to share a conference call. For me as a an online teacher, this is exciting news indeed. It means that I can offer group classes to students who may be separated from each other by thousands of miles.
Many students, especially in the Far East, cannot afford even my low prices for classes. A class shared between four students, however, would be affordable to most.
Students could arrange with their friends to take group conversation classes with me online. All would then join the class at the appointed time and would enjoy a classroom type environment.
It will be very interesting to see how this works in practice.
On my wish-list for Skype is two-way screen sharing. I use screen sharing in my online classes every day. It makes teaching easier and learning is faster. What I would like to see is the ability for the student to also interact with the screen at the same time as me. Currently, the student has to initiate a screen share of their own, and thus screen sharing goes from one to the other, but never both at the same time.

Posted under Writing

This post was written by Richard on July 26, 2010

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Happy Valentine’s Day

Valentine’s Day | Learn English | Love and Marriage

February 14th is Valentine’s Day.

Named after a 3rd Century Roman priest, Valentine’s Day is a celebration of romantic love. The day is an opportunity to show your feelings for someone you like. It is a day when flowers, and roses in particular, become move valuable than gold, and chocolates acquire bigger boxes and price tags.

Whether you intend to celebrate the day or not, this video will introduce you to some of the truths behind the fiction of St. Valentine’s Day. It will also provide you with lots of new vocabulary and the means to learn and practice your new found words.

Posted under Writing

This post was written by Richard on February 13, 2010

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Ultimate Streetview – 360 video of Haiti

This is very impressive technology. Check it out.

Google streetview looks tepid in comparison.

There are more of them from the company that made it here.

Posted under Writing

This post was written by Richard on January 24, 2010

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Aries | Learn English | Astrology

Aries | Learn English | Astrology

This is one of a series of English lessons based on the theme of astrology.

They are designed to teach you vocabulary, and especially personal descriptive adjectives.

If you were born between March 21st and April 19th, then your star sign is Aries.

The symbol of Aries is the ram. Aries’ element is fire. Aries’ modality is cardinal. Aries’ polarity is positive or masculine (yang). Aries’ ruling planet is Mars.

This English lesson will help you understand the vocabulary used to describe people in general and Aries in particular.

There is a Crossword Puzzle and Hangman Game to go with this lesson as well.

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Posted under Lifestyle, Society, Teaching, Writing

Taurus | Learn English | Astrology

Taurus | Learn English | Astrology

This is one of a series of English lessons based on the theme of astrology.

They are designed to teach you vocabulary, and especially personal descriptive adjectives.

If you were born between April 19th and May 20th, then your star sign is Taurus.

The symbol of Taurus is the bull. Taurus’ element is Earth. Taurus’ modality is fixed. Taurus’ polarity is negative or feminine (yin). Taurus’ ruling planet is Venus.

This English lesson will help you understand the vocabulary used to describe people in general and Taurus in particular.

There is a Crossword Puzzle and Hangman Game to go with this lesson as well.

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Taurus’ element is Earth.

Taurus’ modality is fixed.

Taurus’ polarity is negative or feminine (yin).

Taurus’ ruling planet is Venus.

The lucky stone for Taurus is the emerald.

This English lesson will help you understand the vocabulary used to describe people in general and Taurus in particular.

Posted under Lifestyle, Society, Writing

The Milkmaid | Learn English | Aesop’s Fables

The Milkmaid | Learn English | Aesop’s Fables

First in a long series of Aesop’s Fables that I am creating for my English students at Linguaspectrum.com

Have you ever heard of the expression, Don’t count your chickens until they are hatched?

This expression comes from the Ancient Greek writer, Aesop.

This video about the Maid and Her Pot of Milk tells the story in words and pictures to help you learn and remember vocabulary such as:

  • allowing for
  • ball
  • daydreaming
  • farmhouse
  • fetch a price
  • maid
  • market
  • mishaps
  • pail
  • poultry
  • propose
  • toss of the head
  • unison.

The extra activities that go with the video will help you to consolidate your learning through self-test exercises. The story illustrates the moral that we should not consider anything as definite until we have done the necessary work to make it a reality.

Posted under Teaching, Writing

An Introduction to Astrology – English Lesson

Introduction to Astrology | Learn English | Astrology

Life is uncertain. All of us would like to feel that there is a plan set out for us. Astrology has fascinated people for centuries because it claims to be able to provide us with a glimpse of this plan of our lives. Astrology has been rejected by the scientific community as superstition, but many people still believe in the claims of astrologers. People consult their daily horoscope in the newspapers. Romances are decided on the matching of star signs. Some people plan their lives around their horoscope. This lesson provides you with some of the English vocabulary you need if you want to debate the truth of astrology. It lays the foundation for the next twelve lessons that look at each of the signs of the Zodiac in great detail. Aries, Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn, Aquarius, Pisces.

Posted under Writing

Plain English for TEFL Please

plainenglish

Why is it that academics are so keen to use obscure jargon in their written works and in any presentations that they give? Don’t they realise that jargon is an exclusive language that excludes rather than includes the reader or listener? Use an obscure word that your audience is unfamiliar with and you immediately stop them listening to your message while they struggle to understand what you have said.

The use of obscure jargon is particularly prevalent in the TEFL world. It’s one aspect of TEFL that I have really detested since becoming a teacher. I have sat through numerous presentations by well-known and lesser-known people who have attempted to pass on their information to their listeners. Many have failed miserably, leaving the listeners bored at best and at worst downright angry at having had their time wasted. So many times the speaker has used current or timeworn buzzwords that, though they have specific meaning for the sadly initiated, are confusing for the majority.

The other day I received an e-mail from Sandy Mac at The TEFL Tradesman and within this I found a short paragraph which I will partly quote: “organisations expect teachers to be highly conscientious, always open to self improvement, and prepared to read up on or attend the gut-wrenchingly dull methodology seminars/literature (often apparently created by people on the autistic spectrum), while most companies /schools for are just in it for cash”. My eye was particularly drawn to the words “the gut-wrenchingly dull methodology seminars/literature” which indicated to me that I was not alone in feeling as I do.

Considering that the majority of TEFL teachers are young people who are taking a year or so out between university and the real world and whose training in teaching, its methodology, and it’s jargon is limited to a four-week teacher training course designed not so much to maximise the teachers capabilities as to maximise the training school’s profit margins, they should not be expected to have been exposed to such jargon. Is it any wonder then that teacher training conferences provoke during the sessions so many blank faces and fidgety feet and afterwards so many negative post-conference private discussions?

Many young people just out of University trying their hand at teaching English in an exotic location have an appalling grasp of the English language. They struggle with the grammar, terrified that their students will discover their complete lack of understanding of basic grammatical terminology. I have witnessed many teachers making basic errors that their students, even the most elementary, would not themselves make simply because they have never been taught the rudiments of grammar. There is a common misapprehension that a native English speaker is by their very nature an expert on their own language.

So you’re asking these people who are struggling to grasp the basics of their own grammar to assimilate a whole new world of unnecessary jargon. They can’t; they won’t; they shouldn’t have to. Those who purport to be teacher trainers ought to train themselves in expressing themselves coherently, simply, and in plain, easy to understand English.

Let’s have no more “phatic” when “social language” would serve. Let’s have no more “ludic” when “playful, undirected language” would do. Let’s leave the jargon to the academic books that sit gathering dust on the shelves. Let’s use instead the language that you find in popular fiction; language that is easy to understand and digest, and is enjoyable to read and listen to.

I heartily recommend all academic types to join the Plain English Campaign.

Posted under Teaching, Writing

This post was written by Richard on November 5, 2009

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Been Busy

It’s been a while since I wrote something here because I’ve been busy with my YouTube channel. I have had the channel since April 2009, but only started work on it in earnest at the end of August. In the past two weeks I have gone from zero subscribers and zero friends on YouTube to 168 subscribers and 720 friends at the writing of this post.

All it took was to discover the secret. It’s not much of a secret really. All you have to do is create something worth seeing, and then invite people to take a look. It’s working a treat for me now.

It’s had a knock-on effect with my website, www.linguaspectrum.com, too. The YouTube visitors are flocking to my site and appear to like what they find.

Having tried many different ways to attract visitors to my website, I have to report that having a lively, vibrant YouTube channel is one of the best ways. I’ll be concentrating on getting my first 1000 subscribers this month.

If anybody reading this would like to help me reach my goal, you’re warmly invited to subscribe to my channel. Tell your friends, too, via Facebook, or any of the other social networking sites.

All the best,

Richard.

Posted under Health, Teaching, Technology, Writing

This post was written by Richard on September 9, 2009

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