Sunday, June 23, 2019
Countable and Uncountable Nouns Presentation
Hi, so this is my presentation. Please open it full size on the online PowerPoint to enjoy a full enriching experience :)
Saturday, June 15, 2019
Now I see taxis everywhere
𝕐ou know when you cut your hair
and now everyone you see has short hair, or when you buy a new piece of
clothing and now everyone in the streets is wearing the same thing?
I used to see g-classes
everywhere after deciding they’re my favorite type of car because they’re not
very popular. They’re still not popular but they were the first thing my eyes
would lay at if I saw one. Now all I see is taxis. No, I don’t want to buy a
taxi. I don’t even want to use one when I’m in Albania. But it was that one
project that made me aware of their all around presence, and it was that specific
amount of time working on that project, that got me attached to said item.
The project we did wasn’t
anything big or special. After all it wasn’t even the group’s idea. But it was
its creation process that made it special. So it is not about the result, but
about the experience. Maybe the fact that I would be presenting in front of
some of my favorite teachers may count as the special thing. Or the fact that I
was trusted to present it in the first place, which is a thing I am very thankful
of. Yet, I learned a few very important
lessons during these days. I learned to trust in group work. I’m a late bloomer
in that direction. I believe it was the fact that all of my team were good
students and most importantly great individuals you could easily communicate
with, and I learned to let do. I am very possessive of my work, (not in a bad
way I swear) because of the curse of being a perfectionist up to some point. But
this time deciding to let everyone do their thing without interfering was
something that came naturally to me. So I am thankful of a great presentation partner
with killer presenting skills and a supportive team who were just as anxious as
us to get a decent presentation as well.
The only thing I might’ve been a
bit sad about, was the change of the name of the DictioTaxi, wishing it
remained the same, but I am sure there’s a good reason behind. In a conference
context, the good amount of work did pay off, so now I only hope that students
in the following years make it possible for the work to be out there in the
world.
Now even though my defensive mechanism
wouldn’t let me express my excitement in the day of the thing, I genuinely was exhilarated, and there
were a lot of sparks, so I am thankful of that too.
And as always, thanks for
reading.
Here are some pictures I wish I was
cropped out of xp

This is probably the last blog post, so no matter the sentiment, sorrowful or liberated, it will be nice having a thing as such to look back when nostalgia hits.
Monday, June 10, 2019
☀ LEARNING OUTDOORS FOR A CHANGE ☁
ꃼ
I am finally writing about a theme I am very fond of. My favoritest. And as the title implies, it is about outdoor learning. Learning outside the class environment has indeed been one of my favorite activities in elementary school. I remember almost everything about those classes. I even found a four-leaf clover once, my first four leaf-clover ever. It was indeed a biology class, and until late I used to think outdoor learning can only serve a biology, history or geography class. But no, I was totally proved wrong, and all the research that I have been doing has left me speechless about the infinite ways in which you can integrate the outdoors into your English teaching. Not long ago I had my first experience as an outdoors teacher. I was obviously skeptic about the fruitfulness of the method, yet day by day, I come to the conclusion that it is absolutely necessary for such method, if I may call it so, to take place as a learning environment. In order for my suggestion to resonate to you, so that you can use it in your future classes, in case you’re still curious about the benefits of it, let me tell you why.
⁂
I am finally writing about a theme I am very fond of. My favoritest. And as the title implies, it is about outdoor learning. Learning outside the class environment has indeed been one of my favorite activities in elementary school. I remember almost everything about those classes. I even found a four-leaf clover once, my first four leaf-clover ever. It was indeed a biology class, and until late I used to think outdoor learning can only serve a biology, history or geography class. But no, I was totally proved wrong, and all the research that I have been doing has left me speechless about the infinite ways in which you can integrate the outdoors into your English teaching. Not long ago I had my first experience as an outdoors teacher. I was obviously skeptic about the fruitfulness of the method, yet day by day, I come to the conclusion that it is absolutely necessary for such method, if I may call it so, to take place as a learning environment. In order for my suggestion to resonate to you, so that you can use it in your future classes, in case you’re still curious about the benefits of it, let me tell you why.
⁂
Outdoor learning has a positive impact for teachers and educators on
their practice, health and wellbeing, professional development, job satisfaction
and can support curriculum delivery.
Outdoor learning has positive impacts for children - it works
on their intrinsic motivation for learning, provides enjoyable lessons,
increases creativity, and activates thinking outside the box. It also
improves children’s social skills and behavior, and
furthermore has been proven to encourage better attendance, teamwork and to
reduce bullying. Studies have shown better grades, decreased stress level, increased motivation, better attitudes about the environment,
better overall behavior, increased communication skills and outdoor skills, increased self-dependence and improved memory because
moving the class outside opens up a world of fresh stimuli for the
senses that have an amazing power to lock into the brain and secure whatever
information was being learned at the time along with it. Outdoor education and
play support emotional, behavioral and intellectual development. Studies have
shown that students who learn outdoors develop: a sense of self, independence,
confidence, creativity, decision-making and problem-solving skills, empathy
towards others, motor skills, self-discipline and initiative. Often, the
outdoors provides a change of pace from the classroom, which students and
teachers enjoy. Studies have shown increased student enthusiasm for learning
outdoors – if the student loves doing something, they are more motivated to
lean hard and are more likely to learn from that thing, as long as teaching
outdoors is fun. It is also very inexpensive, can work with all ages and can be
adapted to each child’s learning goals and needs.
✻
Activities and games you can use.
Writing activities: ✒
- Ask your students to collect some items that interest
them. For example, a shell, a flower or a pebble. Ask them to create their
own exhibition and to write a caption for each item.
- Ask your child to shoot a short, silent video. For
example, my favorite places, or my favorite things to do outdoors. Then
ask them to write 10–20 English words to describe their video. If they
feel confident, they could then record a voiceover to their video, using
the words from their list.
- Outdoor adventures can be a great inspiration for
creative writing. Ask your students to take some photos of things that
interest them. Then ask them to use one or more of the pictures to write a
short story.
Reading activities:
- Ask your students to research an outdoor food recipe
- something that could be cooked on a barbeque/campfire, or something that
could be prepared for a picnic.
- Your students might like to create their own outdoor
reading den. Encourage your child to read storybooks outside, particularly
books about outdoor adventures and nature.
Speaking and listening
activities ☊
- Decide on an obstacle course, with objects that have
to be avoided (for example, trees, bushes, footballs). One student will
walk through the obstacle course while blindfolded. Another student will
guide them using English words (e.g. left, right, stop, take one
step back).
- Scavenger
Hunt. Give your children a list of things they need to find
outdoors. They can be a pebble, a leaf, a piece of wood, etc. If you want
to make it more challenging, ask them to find items from specific colors,
textures or in alphabetical order. You are also welcome to hide items
related to a specific set of vocabulary words that you want them to practice.
After a period of time, ask them to show you all the treasures they found
outdoors and tell you what they are for, or maybe take pictures of.
- Play guessing games such as I spy something
that starts with the letter … and 20 questions (ask your child to
think of something, then ask up to 20 questions to guess what it
is).
- Balloon War
Attack. This activity is great for reinforcing the vocabulary words
that they may be struggling with. What you need to do is fill balloons
with water. Then, give the kids a permanent marker and ask them to write a
vocabulary word on the surface of each balloon. (If they don’t know how to
write yet, you can do it, while shouting the vocabulary word out loud.)
After the task is done, the kids will need to review every vocabulary word
using them in a sentence or giving specific examples. They will get one balloon
for each correct answer. Therefore, the more balloons they get, the better
prepared they will be for the water balloon war that comes at the end of
the exercise.
- Simon Says.
This classic game of giving players a command starting with the phrase
“Simon Says” is a great teaching tool. It will entertain your children
while helping with their listening skills. Make sure the commands require
physical activity such as: “hop on your left leg” or “jump up five
times.” You can add props to make the activity even more fun!
- Talk Amongst Yourselves. Give students discussion questions or have them bring their group activities outside. Your students will find lots of space to get away from their classmates, and will have just as much to talk about when they are outside as when they are inside. If you are looking for a specific topic to bring outdoors, why not talk about being environmentally conscious? Challenge your students to find evidence of your school acting in earth friendly ways. At the same time, have them list any ways they think your school could be more environmentally conscious, and use those ideas to write letters of recommendation to the school board.
- Maybe take them on a school trip to someplace the
locals speak English so the students will be more exposed to the language
and have more opportunities to practice speaking.
So, when planned and implemented
well, learning outside the classroom contributed significantly to raising
standards and improving pupils ‟personal, social and emotional development‟
(Ofsted 2008)
Monday, June 3, 2019
Peer review - how to do it right (MUST READ)
...or not, because it's just a post like all the others.
If you made up your mind, then here you go. First things first – I am copy-pasting some parts of this post because this is what you do in the era of
technology – but the idea is original. Swear. That’s what matters right? At the end of
the day I am doing this for a good purpose. At the very very last end of the day
everything is a copy of a copy of a copy. Even this sentence is a copy.
So during these last few weeks, we
have dealt with a lot of presentations in class, be it our own or our friend’s.
Be it on this subject or on any other. In most of them we were invited by our
professors to comment on, praise them or suggest our friends how to do better. This
is why I am coming up with a list of attitudes we should get in order for our
comments to really be worth saying, and help the other.
1) Be professional. This
is a core part of your job as an academic. You help and want to be helped. During
all of your life you will have to deal with comments on your work. You might as
well learn to do yours like a pro. It shows both that you are part of the
academy and willing to engage in the interplay that makes the profession work.
2) Be pleasant. If
the presentation is truly awful, suggest a reject but don't engage in ad hominem
remarks. Rejection should be a positive experience for all. Don't say things in
a peer review that you would not say to the person's face in a presentation or
in a bar after a conference. I have done this before, and it really felt bad
afterwards, even though it was true that didn’t like the other presentations. Or
was I mad I didn’t get the validation in mine? Either way, experience talking
here.
3) Be helpful. Suggest
how to overcome the shortcomings you identify. It's the easiest thing in the
world to poke holes in something. It is usually much harder to suggest how to
fix them. A review is more than a suggestion to revise, reject or accept. It
should be meaningful. It should guide your colleagues on what is good and what
is not so good as you see it. If it's too short, then it probably isn't going
to do that. So be loquacious. Explain what is going on in your thinking.
Suggest alternative approaches.
4) Be scientific. Your
role is that of a scientific peer. It is not that of an editor in either the
proofreading or decision-making sense, even though grammatical mistakes
suffocate me it’s so hard to act blind. But I feel it is best to fall back on
making a review with editorial and typographic issues. Concentrate rather on
showing the added value of your scientific knowledge and not so much on missing
commas etc. If as part of your revision you think that the presentation should be
professionally proof edited, then say so. (btw if you know someone who needs an
editor, let them know about my existence, please) The presentation is not about
style but substance, unless the very bad style gets in the way. Sometimes it
hurts. Me. It’s the OCD.
5) Be realistic. Be
realistic about the work presented, changes you suggest and your role. You as a
reviewer are part of the process. You don't have final say on the determination
of the presentation. Sometimes this overriding is because the bar being set by you
is too high for that presentation, but keep your feet on the ground.
6) Be empathetic. Think
of the best review you have gotten in terms of guiding a presentation forward.
Then think of the worst. Which would you rather get on average? Then put
yourself into the shoes of the student whose presentation you are commenting on.
Where along the scale will your comment fall? What goes around comes around and
therefore ensuring that your reviews are scientific, helpful and courteous is a
good idea.
7) Be organised. To review
means communicating. It therefore requires structure and a logical flow. It is
not possible to critique a presentation for logical holes, grammatical howlers,
poor structure etc. if your critique is itself rife with these flaws. Think before
commenting, then rethink. At the start, give a brief one or two sentence
overview of your review. Then give feedback on the following: structure, the
quality of data sources and methods used, specific issues required by the
project theme, logical flow of argument (or lack thereof), and validity of
conclusions drawn. Then comment on style, voice and lexical concerns and
choices, giving suggestions on how to improve.
7.Stopping here because the coolest things in the universe are 7.
And as always, thanks for reading. Busy
lives we’re living! ♥
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Countable and Uncountable Nouns Presentation
Hi, so this is my presentation. Please open it full size on the online PowerPoint to enjoy a full enriching experience :)
-
Hi, so this is my presentation. Please open it full size on the online PowerPoint to enjoy a full enriching experience :)
-
Powerpoint has now become a method of teaching in itself. Scholars should put it in their science books and have it taught as part of glott...
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ꃼ I am finally writing about a theme I am very fond of. My favoritest. ...

