Uses in the classroom and beyond
- Peer-to-peer interactions: students are able to leave messages
for and interact with other students registered within a class or
on the network, using text or uploading recordings
- Sharing resources such as photos/sound files: for a given
topic, such as 'Tourism where I live', students can upload a
PowerPoint presentation, a photo slideshow, an mp3 audio file or a
video recording that presents the topic in their own words and
style
- Collaborative project work: if a 'shared pages' project is
used, students can create work and leave it for response or
correction by their peers in the shared space, later refining it
further or responding to the suggestions of their peers. Tourism,
as a topic, for example, could benefit from English students being
able to see their area from the perspective of a French student via
French web materials. Tools such as 'brainstorm' and 'ask me
questions' can be used to elicit a range of opinions and project
materials
- Monitoring each other’s language performance: if students make
two or three suggestions for improvement to their counterpart’s
work (not so many that they change the piece of work completely or
damage the confidence of the writer) the reciprocity of the
arrangement can help students to refine their work in a supportive
and encouraging environment
- Developing writing skills: writing skills are enhanced by
interaction with other students, both class peers and foreign
school counterparts
- Building vocabulary banks: students can save the new words they
learn and create separate vocabulary files for them within a text
document which can be placed online for remote access
- Sharing grammar difficulties: within a specified shared area
students can help each other with grammar points by the use of
threaded discussions that enable them to ask their counterparts
whether their phrases are acceptable English or French
- Cultural projects: controlled social networking lends itself to
cultural projects where students have the ability to post web
links, and audio and video resources to illustrate their ideas and
to help their counterparts gain access to authentic materials for
their project
- One-to-one and group to group: e-mail exchanges can sometimes
be problematic in the case of student absence, where some partners
have nobody to respond to. The use of a social networking site with
easy access to all participants can help avoid this as can the
breaking down of classes into smaller work-groups of perhaps four
from each school
- Whole class teaching: use of an interactive whiteboard can
allow a teacher to show a class the overview of the project and
perhaps allow synchronous communication between classes if
timetabling permits. Additionally, the teacher can use examples of
work to develop target language competence, elaborate upon grammar
points, or, more ambitiously, explain texting conventions which may
have been used in inter-pupil communications online
- Access to resources from home: students can work in their own
time and explore shared areas and other areas of the networking
site from home and can copy their work from the school network to
access at home.
Author: John Hopwood: Languages/ICT consultant, Language
College, St Julie's Catholic High School for Girls, Woolton,
Liverpool.