Google apps for the languages classroom

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Learn how to make a Google tour and also how to connect a video with a Google form to create an authentic listening activity.

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Google Apps for the Languages Classroom

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Contact Details

Fiona BougheySt Paul’s Grammar School@FionaR_BFiona.Boughey@stpauls.nsw.edu.aufrenchclassroom.wordpress.com

Why Google?

Multi-modalPersonalisedCollaborativeInteractiveFree

Google Earth Tours

Tours are a guided experience where you fly from one location to another, view terrain and content and look around as you wish. You can create tours that record your exact navigation in the 3D window and even add audio. You can then share these tours with other Google Earth users

http://support.google.com/earth/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=148174

Use the search box to find the starting point you want.

Zoom in or out and change the aspect until your are happy with how it looks.

Click on the yellow pin to add a placemark and name it.

Continue the above steps until you have the amount of places you want for the tour.

Double click on your first place to go back to the start.

Click on the record tour button

Start recording the tour, double click on each new place in the left-hand “Places” box to zoom to the next place.

Just record

Record with voice

Save the tour and right-click to email it for sharing.

Personalise, motivate, time-mange

Why use Google Apps?

Google Video + Forms = Authentic Listening/Viewing Activity

Use Google forms to make a comprehension quiz about an authentic video in the target language.

Students access everything online which means it can be done anywhere there is internet access.

Results are easily viewed in a spreadsheet generated by the Google form.

Search using Google video – you will find more results

Watch the video and write questions – multiple choice, short answer, gap-filling etc.

Optional – Find the embed code to paste into a wiki or blog.

Click to create a form in Google Drive

Enter in the questions you wrote for your video

Choose to share your form with a link (to email) or the embed code for blogs and wikis

Sharing with Students

The simplest way to share is to give students the link to the video and to the form, the idea is that they watch the video and answer the questions at their own pace.

Optionally, embedding both the video and the Google form into a wiki or blog make the activity more streamlined and easy to share. But this does require a deeper knowledge of how blogs and wikis work.

Here is an example of one I did with a class earlier.

What next?

Please contact me or speak to me during the conference and I would be happy to walk you through the ideas presented today.

I hope the handouts provide you with something to take home and investigate.

Fiona Boughey St Paul’s Grammar School

@FionaR_B

Fiona.Boughey@stpauls.nsw.edu.au

frenchclassroom.wordpress.com