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Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Reading text

Allowing a child to play piano

Piano is a large musical instrument played by pressing the black and white keys on the keyboard. Richard Claederman, Beethoven, Sabastian Bach, and David Poster are well known as a pianist. They show that paling piano is interesting and romantic. Some researcher also note that playing piano is important for a child. There are many beneficial effects of a child playing piano.
First of all, when a child hears a piano instrument, he is eager to play piano. He or she is attracted to learn. His or her parents can train their children by themselves or enter their children in a courses for making their child feels happy. They want do their best for their child. Beside that, they also want teach their about socialization when their child enter a piano course and learn it with the other friend.
They support and help their children to play piano. By supporting him, he can feel more confident. Their creativity also grow up as long as they play it. Sel confident and creativity are very important for a child. Some research show that playing piano can increase IQ of a child. Playing piano can stimulate a child’s cell brain. In addition, when a child play piano, they also learn how to be discipline because they have to learn regurarly.

Some people think that music is not important for children, but the researchers do not. They can prove that music is important for children, especially piano.A child should be learned piano because it supplies many beneficial effects. It can be increase IQ of a child,

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Teaching Reading with Technology



Teaching Reading with Technology

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Reading is the construction of meaning. Without understanding, there is no reading. When we read, we pick up information and our minds work continuously to connect that information to what we already know, remember what is important, adjust our funds of knowledge to incorporate new ideas or interpret them in a different way, read “between the lines” to get at deeper meaning, and evaluate information and ideas. When teaching reading, we teach students to develop phonological awareness, develop a strong phonics base, integrate phonics and structure, and read for comprehension.
ICT is affecting how reading is being taught in elementary schools. Teachers are integrating commercially available programs into the reading curriculum. Some such programs include The Learning Company’s Kid Pix and talking book versions of popular children’s stories. Linda Labbo (2000) introduced these programs in her kindergarten literacy curriculum. To use these programs, the teacher must first demonstrate keyboarding skills and the usefulness of the computer in whole class instruction, for those students who do not have sufficient experience with computers. In Labbo’s class, the Kid Pix program provided the kindergartners with the opportunity to express their emerging literacy abilities through electronic text. For example, with the software, they began to make the kinds of speech-to-text connections that young learners make when using more traditional writing materials such as paper and pencils, crayons, or markers (Labbo & Kuhn, 2000). These explorations had the advantage of being easily modified, so that if a child decided that her expression was not exactly what she had hoped for, she could easily change her work or even begin again. On the other hand, if another child found that what he had created captured what he was attempting to express, he could save it or print it out as a permanent, tangible artifact of the work he had done.
Kasper (2003) already talked about how important technology can be in the development of children’s literacy . It does not oly offers the teacher the opportunity to enhance their curriculum, but it provides learner ample opportunities to improve. Using ICT can help students with poor reading skills since they are more accesible and handy too. Implications in the classroom. It does not only affect the way children learn but, it also affects the way we teach . Children will be exposed to different things at a different time from when using more tradtitional materials ( speech -text conenctions and make the work he had done a tangible thing can be examples) As teachers, we also should develop the ability to ” edit” materials in order to avoid distractions or to extend them to higher levels.We should teach students to look for the best information and materials on line and to be more independent . We should be able to provide continuous support to learners and help them in the development of skimming and scanning strategies. Assesment is also greatly modified since it gives us the opportunity to create more personall and faster ways of assesment ; at the same time they can help us in the placement of students according to their reading levels and selct a specific area or sub skill we want to emphasize .

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Teaching Speaking with Technology



Teaching Speaking with Technology

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Here, in Indonesia, English becomes one of foreign language which has to be taught to the students. English is the universal language and the government put English in the curriculum to draw up the young generation for facing the global era.
Many students equate being able to speak a language as knowing the language and therefore view learning the language as learning how to speak the language, or as Nunan in Lawtie (2004) wrote, "success is measured in terms of the ability to carry out a conversation in the (target) language."
There are some benefits of utilizing ICT in teaching English speaking. They are:
1.      ICTs can give teachers access to great conceptualisers – inside or outside  their own ranks – to assist them in planning and programming cognitive development.
2.      the interactive capacity of ICTs provides more opportunities for student to engage as creators and manipulators in the learning process.
3.      ICT enables student to design in ways that demonstrate perspectives difficult to create in classroom spaces, that reveal new ways of seeing. “We can bring serious research more easily into creative speaking or we can incorporate story treatments into science using multi-media to enrich and stimulate better learning outcomes” (Williams in Widayanti, 2010).
ICT can support didactic or facilitative approaches, collaboration and interaction across time and distance, enquiry or interrogation, open or closed research, lock step or mind-map.
There are some functions of speaking
1.      Talk as interaction
Talk as interaction refers to what we normally mean by “conversation” and describes interaction that serves a primarily social function. When people meet, they exchange greetings, engage in small talk, recount recent experiences, and so, on because they wish to be friendly and to establish a comfortable zone of interaction with others. The focus is more on the speakers and how they wish to present themselves to each other than on the message.
2.      Talk as transaction
Talk as transaction refers to situations where the focus is on what is said or done. The message and making oneself understood clearly and accurately is the central focus, rather than the participants and how they interact socially with each other.
Burns (1998) distinguishes between two different types of talk as transaction. The first type involves situations where the focus is on giving and receiving information and where the participants focus primarily on what is said or achieved (e.g., asking someone for directions). Accuracy may not be a priority, as long as information is successfully communicated or understood. The second type is transactions that focus on obtaining goods or services, such as checking into a hotel or ordering food in a restaurant.
The main features of talk as transaction are:
a.       It has a primarily information focus.
b.      The main focus is on the message and not the participants.
c.       Participants employ communication strategies to make themselves understood.
d.      There may be frequent questions, repetitions, and comprehension checks, as in the example from the preceding classroom lesson.
e.       There may be negotiation and digression.
f.       Linguistic accuracy is not always important.
3.      Talk as performance
The third type of talk that can usefully be distinguished has been called talk as performance. This refers to public talk, that is, talk that transmits information before an audience, such as classroom presentations, public announcements,and speeches.
Talk as performance tends to be in the form of monolog rather than dialog, often follows a recognizable format (e.g., a speech of welcome), and is closer to written language than conversational language. Similarly, it is often evaluated according to its effectiveness or impact on the listener, something that is unlikely to happen with talk as interaction or transaction. Examples of talk as performance are:
a.       Giving a class report about a school trip
b.      Conducting a class debate
c.       Giving a speech of welcome
d.      Making a sales presentation
e.       Giving a lecture


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