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Projects | |
A telematic project consists of a number of activities that a class does collaboratively with a partner class, and which are shared over the internet. The main objective is to foster cooperative work and communication between schools. This way, the activities contribute to the students' education and development by conveying knowledge and developing and strengthening positive attitudes, skills and values: group work, sharing responsibilities and information, learning from others, respecting opinions and cultures, just to mention a few. There are different kinds of projects:
The projects usually include the learning activities and materials, pedagogical guidelines to help teachers implement them in the classroom, and related teaching and learning on-line resources. They also have a facilitator, that is, the person who coordinates the project, pairs the groups and makes sure that it runs smoothly. He/she is the contact person if any problems arise. Most of the times the projects involve a final activity that shows or summarizes all the work done, such as a web page, a class magazine, a book or a poster. In this practice we are going to have a look at some projects and the ways they can be implemented in the foreign language classroom. |
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Practice it! | |
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One of their projects is Friends and Flags. It is a good example of a collaborative learning project which promotes multicultural awareness by connecting classrooms around the world. Participants interact with international classroom partners in a private Friends and Flags Forum, by email and by sending cultural packages to each member in their team in the post.
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2. In a first stage, teachers register (for free) and receive the teachers kit by email. They are also put in contact with one or more partner school. At this point, teachers should start to communicate with each other in order to set up the details of their exchange: dates when messages are to be sent, the type of activities, if messages will be written by individual students or by the whole group. |
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3. Once the project starts, the first activity is an introduction of the participating students. Then the rest of class activities follow. At certain times they contribute a message in a message board or in scheduled chat sessions. By the end of the term they send a cultural package to the partner school. The main component is a country guide book which is written, illustrated, designed and produced by students in every class, but any other items that the kids want to include are acceptable. |
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One of such projects is myEurope, with a variety of short activities: Local treasures, A symbol for the enlarged Europe, Discover Europe, Water tales, Christmas traditions. Participation in all these projects is very easy and requires just one or two sessions. As a class, students write a short text which is then published in the project's webpage with accompanying photos. Students learn from the others by reading their contributions. myEurope chat is another interesting activity, in which the students debate on a topic or interview a guest online. |
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5. Participation can be done at any time of the year. Schools must be registered in order to publish. The teachers will find more information in |
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Activity framework | |
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Additional info | |
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Some bibliography on project work: A teachers guide to collaborative projects Harnessing the Power of the Web. A Tutorial for Collaborative Project-Based Learning Reseña de proyectos, listos para utilizar en el aula More international projects:
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