Sunday, March 22, 2009

Slang of Insider Groups: WebQuests

We are going to create a Lesson Plan again; this time focusing on the 6th big E, the E-Search. We will also have a big chunk of Engage and Explore in our Learning Cycle.
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Today, we are going to learn a new software tool: WebQuests.

These are meant to be online lesson plans that teachers can use in class, providing their students with links to do research about certain topics. (This is point 6 from our Learning Cycle, the "e-search.") The kids go on a "quest" on www and expand their previous knowledge.

The WebQuests have several different steps the kids have to follow, and they also offer a rubric at the end, so the kids know what they will be graded for. Also, they have a welcome page that explains the topic and what they are going to do.

Our task: WE ARE CREATING A WEBQUEST LESSON PLAN ABOUT THE TOPIC "SLANG."


PROMPT 1:

Read the following 1-page excerpt from the DIARY of a medical intern, written by Perri Klass. In it, she explains how she had to learn a "totally new language" in order to understand the slang of nurses and doctors. It is like a "secret language," so that the patients won't know what is wrong with them when the medical staff talks about them. Beware - some expressions are quite offensive!

PROMPT 2:

Choose a topic from the following list of slang dictionaries (or google your own topic) - it needs to be the special language/dictionary of ONE group of society.

1. soldiers' slang
2. prison slang
3. Cockney Rhyming Slang (London, England)
4. police slang
5. computer slang
6. railroad slang
7. 1920s slang
8. 1960s slang
9. Mountainbike slang
10. Australian slang
11. Death slang
12. Antarcic slang
13. drug slang

or ANY other slang dictionary you want to find on your own!!!
Last semester's students found such interesting slangs as Nadsat (from A Clockwork Orange), skateboarders' slang, etc....

(Attention: AAE is no SLANG! Dialects are no slang, either. Invented languages like Esperanto and Klingon are no forms of slang, either.)

When you have chosen your topic (and your dictionary of a certain slang), you have the FIRST COMPONENT of your WebQuest lesson plan. Here's an overview of all the components you need:

COMPONENTS of WEBQUEST lesson plan:

1. a link to your slang dictionary

2. a welcome page (Intro) that tells the kids (address them; let me know their grade level) what the topic of your lesson is (which group you're talking about)

3. a TASK page that tells the kids what the purpose of your lesson is (why they need to learn about it), and what they will do. This is your "table of content."

4. an assignment page (Process) with e-search assignments (working links!!!) for the kids. Here, you need to tell them how to present their findings (such as, to write down what they researched on a piece of paper, fill in a study guide that you prepare, do a ppt presentation, etc.).

4. a grading rubric



For task 4, the PROCESS, you should have the following components:

3.1 I expect you to define the word SLANG for your students, so they are able to tell the difference between LANGUAGE, SLANG, ACCENT, and DIALECT. If you want, you can define other key terms, such as LINGO or JARGON, too.

You can also make them write down their own definitions, and then let them click on a link to an online dictionary that defines those terms correctly.

3.2 Create a brief text using the slang you're talking about (either, write it yourself, or use the translation engine on your website). Let the kids translate it into Standard Written English without looking at the dictionary for help. Then, give them the solutions in a later section of your webquest, to check their responses.

3.3 Give them the link to your dictionary, and invent their first assignment (e.g., create a 10-item dictionary with words chosen from it on their own, etc.)

3.4 Give them some kind of writing assignment about YOUR insider group's slang that you will grade with your grading rubric (prompt examples: "Write a short story using this slang." or "Write an essay about why it is important to learn a certain slang if one wants to "belong" to a group of insiders." or "Is it better to remain true to one's origins and speak one's own language, or does one have to adapt when joining a different group?" or "Why can the use of metaphors be good/bad sometimes?" or "If you were a patient, would you prefer that the doctors speak clear text with you, or wouldn't you mind them talk in secret language?" or "Is a secret language ment to INCLUDE or EXCLUDE people?" or "Develop your own secret society. Write a short essay about what kind of language you would use." BE CREATIVE!!!)

3.5 Create your Grading Rubric with the online functions that WebQuest offers.


SOFTWARE: modeling how to create WebQuests

Go to the homepage of WebQuest. You need to sign up and register for a "30 day free trial." Then, we'll model together how to create the background template and colors, etc. The online builder is pretty easy and self-explanatory, and will guide you through all steps. Remember to ALWAYS SAVE what you typed before you click on another field; otherwise, you'll lose everything!!! You can also insert pictures (which you should do, depending on the grade level you instruct.) IF you insert pictures, you have to hyperlink them to the page where you got them from; otherwise, it is plagiarism, since most photos on the Internet are copyrighted, and their owners could sue you for using them without permission!!!


TIMELINE for this project:
We will have at least three in-class workshops about our WebQuests, and will do the different components (such as the IL Learning Standards) together in class. If you miss class, it is your responsibility to make up.

If you need to, but cannot work on the computer at home, use our classroom before/after class, during my lunch break (12-1 on M/W/F when it is open), the Faner computer labs, or come to my office hours.

DUE DATE: posted on Lifetext. On that day, We will all put the links to our WebQuests on a blog thread I will create, so that we can view each other's works. Your peers will select three WebQuests of their choice and test-take them, grading them with our WEBQUEST GRADING RUBRIC published on Lifetext.


Here are a few links to sample WebQuests from last semester:

1. Beatnik Slang
2. 1960s Slang
3. Cockney Rhyming Slang

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