FSL Conference: Engaging FSL Learners Through Task Design
Transcription
FSL Conference: Engaging FSL Learners Through Task Design
FSL Conference: Engaging FSL Learners Through Task Design Who Should Attend? K-12 French as a Second Language Teachers May 23, 2015 9:00 am – 9:30am Breakfast & Registration St. Paul Centre 124-24 Ave. NE, Calgary, AB 9:30 am – 11:45 am Keynote Address: Doing More with Second Language Tasks $110/person 11:45 am – 12:45 pm Lunch 12:45 pm – 1:45 pm Designing Tasks for the ActionOriented Classroom 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm Learning Technologies A to Z 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm Reception (continental breakfast & lunch included) Register online www.crcpd.ab.ca *** NOTE: This conference will be presented in English Doing More with Second Language Tasks with Dr. Bill Dunn This session will explore how task-based pedagogy offers second language teachers a useful framework for teaching language in engaging and authentic ways. It will begin with an overview of some fundamental aspects of task design. The session will then address how tasks can serve multiple aims including not only language learning, but also the development of cross-curricular competencies such as problem solving, critical thinking, personal growth, and intercultural understanding. Participants will look at concrete examples of classroom tasks and will also have the opportunity to create new ones. Designing Tasks for the Action-Oriented Classroom with Ruth Radetzky The action-oriented approach embraces and goes beyond the communicative approach. Communication is not viewed as an end in itself, but is used as a means of accomplishing a mission, a “task” that requires linguistic competencies. Cross-curricular competencies such as critical thinking, solving complex problems, managing information and applying multiple literacies are also involved in accomplishing the task. Learning a language according to the action-oriented approach signifies using the language in authentic and motivating contexts. Explore the action-oriented approach to language teaching and learning which prepares students to respond effectively in new and unfamiliar situations as they engage in a variety of communicative activities in French Learning Technologies A to Z with Stephanie Jackson-Basuyaux Integrating technology and digital citizenship into the language classroom can be a daunting task, for both techno-geeks and techno-phobes. Go beyond language games and apps; learn how to help your students become engaged thinkers in our digital world! In this hands-on session, you will explore 30+ online tools to increase student engagement with learning technologies, and collaborate with other educators to start planning a language task. You will come away with simple, easy to implement tools you can use on Monday, as well as a list of learning technologies to add to your Tech Try Bucket List. Please remember to bring your own device! Dr. Bill Dunn is an Associate Professor in the Department of Secondary Education at the University of Alberta. He works primarily in the areas of second language education, taskbased language teaching, and addressing language, literacy, and culture across the curriculum. He received his PhD from Cornell University in 2002, and began working at the University of Alberta in 2003. Ruth Radetzky is currently Senior Education Specialist in Global Learning for the Calgary Board of Education. Ruth possesses eighteen years of experience as a classroom teacher in elementary French Immersion. She also worked as an AISI Learning Leader where she supported K-12 educators in her district with the personalization of learning for all students in second-language programs. Her professional interests over the past three years have been focused on Intensive French: A Neurolinguistic Approach to second or foreign language learning and the ActionOriented Approach to teaching and learning in second languages. Stephanie Jackson-Basuyaux started working for Edmonton Public Schools after graduating in 2010, teaching FSL, FLA and ELA. Currently, Stephanie is the lead teacher of French at T.D. Baker Junior High, where she teaches FSL and Digital Publishing. Stephanie has been involved with creating resource kits and learning tasks for new second language teachers, and is also the current webmaster for the ATA Second Languages and Intercultural Council for the ATA.