Dragon Tales: Lessons Learnt from multiple COIL courses taught at a 4-year institution

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Dragon Tales: Lessons Learnt from multiple COIL courses taught at a 4-year institution

Maria del Rosario Escalada Ruiz, Director Language Center Isis Castellanos Sanchez, Head of English Program, Language Center Carol S. Dean, Associate Professor, Foreign Language Education

Improving Foreign Language Proficiency through Voicethread SUNY Spanish Methods Students and La Salle EFL Students Dr. Carol Dean, Foreign Language Education, SUNY Oneonta

Who COIL Faculty Partners Maria del Rosario Escalada Ruiz, Director, La Salle Language Center Isis Castellanos Sanchez, Head of English Program, La Salle Language Center Carol S. Dean, Associate Professor, Foreign Language Education, SUNY Oneonta COIL Student Partners 10 EFL students at La Salle 5 Spanish Methods students at SUNY Oneonta

What Asynchronous recorded interactions between students 5 weeks Two goals: Improved oral proficiency through Spanish/English practice Collection of authentic cultural resources through development of relationships among student partners

Dr. Yudis Contreras Martínez, General Coordinator of Foreign Languages Dr. Maria Montoya, Assistant Professor of Spanish, Foreign Languages & Literatures

Collaboration On-line Oneonta NY Cartagena-Colombia Fall 2014 1.Advanced Spanish Conversation with Servicelearning, 2.Spanish for Bilinguals and 1. English Advanced Conversation Spring 2015 1. Advanced Spanish Usage I and 1. Introduction to American Studies. 2. English Advanced Conversation Spring 2016 1. Advanced Spanish Usage I 2. Intermediate Spanish and 1. Intermediate English 2. Introduction to American Studies

Course Mechanics Task Assignment Limitations Google Docs Voice thread Facebook Presentations My Favorite Place My Campus Ice Breakers Snowball Trues and Lies Comparisons My campus My Family My country Weekly Skype Reading input and reflections. Short discussions in each class. Course curriculum develops as planned. Final reflection at the end of semester. Mutual Correction Feed back-peer Teaching Group project about the other country (gigantic map) Personalities Some need more guided questionnaire to follow conversations. Schedule Conflict Dead Lines Time Zone Difference Linguistic Insecurity (U.S) Technology in Colombia Skype group Exciting, Chaotic, and Challenging They invited each other to come visit their place A faculty Led-Off Course Develops Lessons Learned 1. Flexibility 2. Open mind about the other. 3. One assignment at a time. 4. Lessons developed in a cultural theme about the collaborating country. 5. Age and maturity matters 6. Graded assignments are needed. 7. Less ambitious plans results in better outcomes. 8. Relationships are organic/natural, after there is a good match learning comes easily. 9. Some relationships remain.

Dr. Víctor Zorrilla Garza, Professor of Philosophy Dr. Elizabeth Small, Associate Professor of Spanish, Foreign Languages & Literatures

Universidad de Monterrey, México - Filosofía de Latinoamérica COIL primavera 2015 y 2016 spring 2015 and 2016 SUNY Oneonta, New York - Civilization of Latin America

Icebreaker activity: Post a picture of yourself and a paragraph introducing yourself, your interests and whether you have travelled anywhere, in your native language. We kept the activity the same in both years, but in 2015 we used a shared Google doc - switched to a Facebook group in 2016 because students couldn't always access the document through our campus firewall.

Module 1 in 2015: Share an anecdote about cultural contact or conflict; then comment on others' anecdotes using VoiceThread; use the language that you are learning. Module 1 in 2016: In small groups, converse about the content of our two courses, how they are similar and different; try to use both languages. We changed the activity so that Module 1 would begin to foster a sense of cohesion in the small groups before Module 2, and to deepen the interpersonal communication.

Module 2 in 2015: Group presentation on course content, using voice annotation of Powerpoint, Prezi, etc.; students speak the language they're learning. Module 2 in 2016: Group presentation on course content, using Skype for synchronous presentation supported by Powerpoint, Prezi, etc.; students speak the language they're learning. We changed to synchronous presentations so all students could hear the others' presentations; not everyone in 2015 could access the shared presentations.

Dr. Olga Patricia Meza Morón, Head of Teaching Development Dr. Frank Thornton, Educational Psychology, Counseling, and Special Education

SUNY Oneonta and Universidad LaSalle Olga, Jenny and I decided early on to something a bit different We wanted to create an experience where students and teachers could collaborate on a meaningful exchange of classroom skills We wanted the La Salle professionals to examine Special Education in their practice We wanted to expose the SUNY teacher candidates to learn to collaborate across cultures to create a positive outcome for all stakeholders

From the Moodle pages working Methodologies The course: Intervention strategies for exceptional students has been designed on line and housed in the ULSA s Institutional Platform. It is intended to consider to kinds of communication process between all members of the group: synchronous and asynchronous supported by technological tools that encourage communication and therefore collaborative work. The course offered by SUNY Oneonta, Communication and Collaboration has a key course topic, aligned with Council for Exceptional Children standards, which call for students to examine multicultural variations in beliefs, traditions and values across and within cultures and their effect on relationships among individuals with exceptional learning needs, family, and schooling and Use assessment information in making eligibility, program, and placement decisions for individuals with exceptional learning needs, including those from culturally and/or linguistically diverse backgrounds and Demonstrate sensitivity for the culture, language, religion, gender, disability, socioeconomic status, and sexual orientation of individuals.

Learning objectives Participants will create collaboratively, strategies to identify and assess students with exceptional learning needs. Participants will develop collaboratively, strategies to meet the needs of students identified as having special learning needs.

Module Contents BEGINNING (two weeks) September 22 th October 5 th. Introduction of participants. Video Forum. Have you ever had an exceptional student? Synchronous conversation by teams. Getting to know each other. Talk about the questions of teaching experiences. DEVELOPMENT (two weeks) October 6 th October 19 th. Identification Intervention Measure Outcome

Module contents INTEGRATION (two weeks) October 20 th November 2 nd Final teaching sequence CLOSURE November 3 th Last session. Videoconference. Final results exhibition.

PREVIOUS Preparation Groups preparation for this online course The teacher you are today is not the teacher you ll be tomorrow LEARNING IS A LIFE EXPERIENCE WEEK 1 Icebreaker Get to know each other Online socialization Information exchange How do you change the life of your students? POWER OF ONE WEEK 2 Icebreaker Identitiy characteristics Knowledge construction Information Exchange Comparison & Analysis Concepts vs different realities Did you ever had a student who and how did you know meaning? OPERATIONAL DEFINITIONS WEEK 3, 4 & 5 Design Strategies Identitiy characteristics Knowledge construction What intervention strategies would you use for that student? DEVELOPMENT WEEK 6 Final Reflection characteristics Knowledge construction EVIDENCE What did I came with and what did I take out of this experience? DEVELOPMENT

Questions?