Linguistics Open Educational Resources
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Item Open Access 21st Century Skills and the "4Cs" in the English Language Classroom(American English Institute, University of Oregon, 2018) Halverson, AndyFor many language teachers around the world, the classrooms of today may look and feel very different to those that we remember from our own childhood. In teacher training workshops and professional development activities, you may have heard talk about 21st century skills and “new literacies.” Many of us have realized that our students today need new sets of skills to prepare them to be successful participants in the globalized society of the future. But for many busy teachers, these new skills and concepts may be unclear or you may be struggling with how to implement them in the actual classroom. In this text, we’ll be considering some of the fundamental changes that are currently taking place in 21st century education by looking at the 4Cs, and, importantly, we’ll also consider how these changes can and should be impacting English language teaching and learning around the globe.Item Open Access Handbook of Resources for English Camps 2017(American English Institute, University of Oregon, 2017) Opp-Beckman, LeslieThe purpose of this handbook is to provide English language teachers of students ages 10-15 with support for their summer camps.Item Open Access Building English Language Skills for Scientific Writing(University of Oregon, 2017) Halvorsen, Andy; Heitman, Char; Pashby, PatriciaThe following four modules are designed to help you improve your scientific writing skills in English. The modules cover a range of foundational skills such as sentence and paragraph structure as well as offer broader information on academic style, conciseness, vocabulary choices, quoting, paraphrasing, and providing accurate and complete citation information. This material was developed in coordination with the Introduction to Scientific Writing MOOC offered through the American English Institute at the University of Oregon during Winter 2017. If you participated in this MOOC, you will recognize the materials as a collection of the lessons and applied discussion activities conveniently bundled into one document. If you did not participate in the MOOC, the modules can still be beneficial to you as an introduction to fundamental knowledge about scientific and academic writing. Throughout our modules, we have used excerpts of authentic scientific articles in many of the examples. We think these authentic samples are important because they represent real scientific writing. If you find the language in these examples challenging, please don’t worry. They are included only to help you see real scientific writing in action, and you certainly don’t need to understand every word. Instead, focus on understanding the concepts being introduced rather than the meaning of the text itself. Before you begin working with this booklet, you are encouraged to locate scientific articles from your specific field to use as models. Then as you work through the materials, look through your model articles to see how each language or writing point is approached in your particular field. Note whether the concepts covered in the modules seem to be true in writing from your field as well. Comparing the examples in the lessons and the writing in your field, what similarities and differences can you find?Item Open Access Tell Your Story in English: Reading and Writing Skills for Language Learners(University of Oregon, 2017) Sheppard, Beth; Heitman, Char; Tasker, ThomasIn this packet you will find stories, vocabulary lessons, grammar lessons, and writing assignments. We suggest that you work on one unit at a time. First, read the example stories. If possible, talk about the stories with someone else who is doing this packet. What did you like in the story? What was hard to understand? Then read the language lessons and do the practice exercises (NOTE: An Answer Key for all practice exercises is at the end of the packet). If you are confused, find someone who knows English and ask them about it. Finally, work on writing your own story in English. The stories you read can be examples for your writing. You will learn more if you write a story yourself! This material was developed for a Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) created by the University of Oregon in 2016. It is designed for intermediate-level English language learners to improve their reading and writing skills. Students can use the materials independently, or teachers can use this packet in their classes. We have included the stories we wrote for the MOOC, as well as some excellent stories written by MOOC participants. The grammar lessons focus on the use of past tense forms and correct sentence structure. The vocabulary lessons focus on skills and important words for storytelling. The writing lessons help language learners through the steps of creating a story in English. We hope you will enjoy telling your story in English.