TED-Ed provides creating lessons worth sharing. Within TED-Ed’s growing library of lessons, we might encounter carefully curated educational videos, many of which represent collaborations between talented educators and animators nominated through the TED-Ed platform. This platform also allows users to take any useful educational video, not just TED’s, and easily create a customized lesson around the video. Users can then distribute TED-Ed lessons, publicly or privately, and track their impact on the world, a class, or an individual student. TED-Ed lesson can be created by any website visitor, and involves adding questions, discussion topics and other supplementary materials to any educational video on YouTube. These lessons are used regularly in classrooms and homes to introduce new topics to learners in an exciting, curiosity-inspiring way.
The lesson I created is to introduce the tips of healthy life. This includes 2 multiple choices and 1 discussion question.
The objectives are:
1. Student will be able to find main 7 tips to keep healthy life by watching the video several times.
2. Student will be able to grasp the details of each tip from the video.
3. Student will be able to give an opinion about the most important tip with reasons as a group activity.
4. Student will be able to summarize the content of video and present the group discussion.
The class goes like:
With this lesson, I will start the class by asking the question like what the healthy life looks like to warm up. Students already watched the video with answering questions before coming to the class, so I will have them talk about main tips and details which they found to review the video. And then I will go through the questions with answers and make students share their ideas of the discussion question in a group. Finally, they will be asked to summarize the content and make a chart or table to determine the ranking about the tips in order importance from their opinions. I think that, while engaging in this group activity, students will be able to listen, take turns speaking, and learn from others' ideas.
The assessment will be:
Also, to assess their learning, I will make each group have an oral presentation to summarize what they learned from the video and report the result they got through the discussion with the chart(or the table) that they created.
My lesson in TedEd: Tips for starting a healthy lifestyle
※ Resources : http://ed.ted.com/about
Showing posts with label flipping the classroom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flipping the classroom. Show all posts
Monday, April 13, 2015
Friday, April 10, 2015
Flip Your Classroom!
Flipping the classroom is interesting. While
I attended the TESOL convention 2015 in Toronto, a woman, who stayed in a same
accommodation, told me about flipping the classroom and that she attended the
presentations focused on this topic. Although I did not have a chance to listen
to the presentation about flipping the classroom, these two articles reminded
me of having short talk with her. The flipped classroom is a reversal of
traditional teaching where students gain first exposure to new material outside
of class, usually via reading or lecture videos, and then class time is used to
do the harder work of assimilation that knowledge through strategies such as
problem-solving, discussion or debates. In my understanding, this has a kind of
3 steps like working at home, working in class and working after class, and, in
addition, this type of learning allows students to have better comprehension of
the material, interact with instructor and peers more, and develop the critical
thinking skill as a natural part of the learning process. From these two
articles, I learned that the technology with various online tools is the
decisive and indispensable factor to facilitate the flipped classroom. Moreover
I think that this strategy is not only an extension of learning, but also a way
of developing a high quality of lesson so teachers will not be able to overlook
acquiring the new technology to educate students effectively.
Flipped Learning Cycle
※ References:
Flipping Your EL Classroom: A Primer by John Graney
THREE REASONS TO FLIP YOUR CLASSROOM by Helaine Marshall
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