Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Breaking Language Barriers

I found a website called the International Children’s Digital Library. Their mission is to “support the world’s children in becoming effective members of the global community” (ICDL, year). They are going about this by compiling the cream of the crop in children’s literature around the world, and making it available online. The website is very user-friendly; menu choices are ever-present on a horizontal bar across the top of the page. You can make such choices as “Read Books,” “About Library,” and “How to Contribute.”

If you chose the “Read Books” menu choice, you can search for books by language, by location, by recently added, by award winning, and numerous other search methods. The ICDL isn’t lacking for visitors either. According to them, they have had more than 3 million “unique visitors” since the birth of their site in November of 2002 (ICDL, year). The ICDL contains 4,456 books in over 50 different languages. It’s no surprise, when you take our society’s diversity into consideration, that over half of the ICDL’s visitors are from the U.S.

This website would be a great tool to use if you have students who are struggling to find books in their native language, or who are having difficulty learning English. This site could also be used to promote cultural awareness within the classroom. Teachers could choose a book from a completely different culture, and do an entire unit on it. Literature is a great way to get a glimpse of a cultures customs, values, and more. The ICDL has made a huge impact so far, and there’s no stopping them.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Language Arts Fun

For this integration exercise, I visited a site called Primary Games. They had numerous games geared toward elementary-age kids that were supposed to make language arts fun and exciting. The site had games for other school subjects as well. The language arts games were pretty neat. There was a typing test to see how fast and accurate the students typed; there was a crossword puzzle game and a harder version called the Clueless Crossword Puzzle. There were so many games on the first page alone. Each game had a theme. One was barnyard, another was ghosts,  another was sharks. The games would clearly engage younger students. They were pretty fun. I excelled at the typing test J.

It can be difficult to know what websites are really appropriate for school, so the fact that this site had all these great, kid-friendly games in one place was really helpful. The games were very fun and creative, and I can see how they can get kids excited about learning. Being able to grant kids play time on the computer and knowing that they are still learning something is a really neat thing.