Category: Uncategorized

  • Why teachers and linguists must change our mindsets: Towards a trans-disciplinary and trans-lingual approach

    In Collaboration with SIETAR Kansai Osaka JALT is proud to present:

    Speaker:  Ahmar Mahboob, Sydney University

    Date:    September 26, 2021 (Sun.)  

    Time:    14:00-17:00

    Fee:      Free for all

    Language: English

    ZOOM Online presentation *registration required*

    Contact: fujimotodonna@gmail.com to get the Zoom link and for any questions.

    Description:

    Ahmar Mahboob is a linguistics professor who has gone well beyond the usual academic timeline. After teaching at various universities, publishing a long list of scholarly papers and books, organizing and presenting at many international conferences, Ahmar is making teachers rethink what we do in the classroom. According to Ahmar, there is no point in doing and teaching research if “it isn’t helping anybody.” He has developed the CREDIBLE approach, a teaching guideline that encourages students and teachers to create projects that address the real needs of people and communities where they live.

    We will be able to gain some new perspectives, not only for teaching, but, time permitting, we can also ask Ahmar about his work with: World Englishes, non native speakerism, multilingualism, language variation, identity management, spirituality, poetry, and living as an Indigenous Australian with his adopted family.

    Profile of the speaker:

    Ahmar Mahboob is Professor of Linguistics at Sydney University, Australia. What makes him distinctive from all other well-published academics is the fact that he is a ‘nomadic’ professor. Off and on for more than two years he has led this life style, which he states enables him to engage with everyday people in a one-to-one basis where he can experience firsthand the dialects and literacies that he would be unable to gain by staying at the university. He is an advocate of subaltern linguistics, which involves the study of social groups excluded from dominant power structures. Rather than outsiders study communities, it is the people themselves who carry out the work to enable their own well-being, prosperity, and empowerment. Recently, Mahboob is engaged with an Australian indigenous family on some new projects.

     

    なぜ教員や言語学者は考え方を変えなければならないのか:

    学際的で言語横断的なアプローチへ向かって

    発表者:  Ahmar Mahboob ( シドニー大学 )

    日程:    2021年9月26日(日)  

    時間:    14:00-17:00

    費用:    無料

    言語: 英語

    Zoomによるオンライン・プレゼンテーションですので事前登録が必要です。

    お問い合わせ先: Zoom参加のリンク取得、ご質問はfujimotodonna@gmail.com まで。

    プログラムの説明:

    Ahmar Mahboob氏は通常のアカデミックタイムラインをはるかに超える言語学の教授です。様々な大学で教え、学術論文や書籍を多数出版し、多くの国際会議を主催して、発表してきたMahboob氏は教員たちに対して教室で何をするかについて考え直させています。彼は、「誰の役にも立たない」のであれば、研究したり、教えても意味がないと言います。彼はCREDIBLEアプローチを開発しました。これは、学生と教員に地域で暮らす人々やコミュニティが真の需要に対処する研究課題を促進させるための学習ガイドラインです。

    私たちは、指導のためのいくつもの新たな視点を得るだけではなく、時間が許せば、Ahmar氏に世界共通語としての英語(World Englishes)ネイティブでない話者主義(non native speakerism)、多言語主義、言語の変化(language variation)、アイデンティティ管理、精神性 、詩 、そして養子先の家族とともにオーストラリアの先住民としての暮らしなどについても尋ねることが出来るでしょう。

    発表者のプロフィール:

    Ahmar Mahboob氏 はオーストラリアのシドニー大学言語学の教授です。彼が他の研究者と大きく異なる点は、彼が「遊牧民」のような教授であるということです。 2年以上にわたる断続的な暮らしは、彼が人や民族との日常的な関わりのなかで、方言や読み書きの能力を直接に体験することができるライフスタイルを導きだしました。これらの経験は、大学に留まり続けると得られないであろうと言います。彼は支配的なパワーストラクチャーから、排除された社会グループの研究を含むサブオルタナティブ言語学の提唱者です。部外者がコミュニティを学ぶのではなく、そのような社会集団の人々が中心となって、自分たちの幸福、繁栄、エンパワーメントを可能にするための研究を行うというものです。最近、Mahboob氏はオーストラリア先住民の家族と新しいプロジェクトに携わっています。

  • SIETAR Kansai – Online International Collaboration: “It’s Just a Click Away”

    In Collaboration with SIETAR Kansai Osaka JALT is proud to present:

    SIETAR Kansai – Online International Collaboration: “It’s Just a Click Away”

    The Corona virus pandemic has had a huge impact on education, and it has been particularly disastrous for study abroad programs. This presentation will be of particular interest to those who are responsible for organizing international exchange as well as for instructors of intercultural communication courses. The presenters, Wade Muncil and Scott Johnston, will share their work that began in 2007 when they first collaborated, where one was teaching in Japan and the other had a class in the United Arab Emirates. They continued this collaboration for eight years, and despite difficulties, such as time differences, technological glitches, and cultural gaps, it was worthwhile for not only the students but for the instructors themselves. Other positive developments took place as well: A university course in the U.S. was added to the UAE-Japan connection, students from the UAE visited Japan for a week, and Muncil and Johnston made international presentations in the U.S. and in Abu Dhabi. More recently they have organized a guest speaker program: in 2020 and 2021 where speakers from the UAE, Jordan, Brazil, and the U.S. addressed an audience in Japan through Zoom. Teachers are invited to join their Facebook group called Building Bridges in Education where educators can network and learn from each other (www.facebook.com/groups/buildingbridgesineducation)

    Wade Muncil holds a Master of Arts in Teaching from the School for International Training and presently teaches at Osaka Jogakuin University/College after spending nine years teaching in the Western Region of The United Arab Emirates. His interests are documenting and preserving the cultures of our planet and promoting community service in education, business, and government.

     

     

     

     

     

    Scott Johnston has a Ph.D. in Education from Michigan State University and has been a professor at Osaka Jogakuin University since 2004. He is also Dean of the Osaka Jogakuin Graduate School. He is interested in involving students with their learning and has held a LINE/ZOOM “journal class” with the semester/year abroad students to facilitate their learning while overseas. In addition, he taught the Educational Internship class at OJU in which students interned at local elementary and junior high schools while taking an OJU class to reflect on their learning.

    This presentation is an extended version of the talk that Wade Muncil gave at our Back to School 2021 mini-conference on May 9, and is co-sponsored with SIETAR Kansai.

    Registration is required to get the Zoom link by emailing Donna Fujimoto at fujimotodonna@gmail.com .

    Event Type: JALT Event
    Event Theme: International Collaboration
    Online Meeting: Yes
    Cost for Jalt Members: Free
    Cost for non-Jalt Members: Free

    2021年6月例会  SIETAR 関西 ・ JALT 大阪 合同例会

     

    「オンラインの国際協力:“クリックするだけです”」

     

    公演者: ウェイド・マンシル:氏、スコットジョンストン氏  共に大阪女学院

    開催日:    June 27, 2021 (Sunday)                        

    時間:        14:00-17:00             

    参加料:   無料

    言語:     英語

    ZOOM Online presentation *registration required*

    お問い合わせ先: お申込み、または、お問い合わせは、fujimotodonna@gmail.com まで

     

    概要:

    新型コロナウィルス感染症の世界的な大流行が教育に多大な影響をもたらせました。特に海外留学プログラムは、破滅的な被害を受けました。6月の定例会では、国際交流団体や異文化コミュニケーションコースの指導者に対して責任を持つ方々が、特に関心を示す事柄について講演します。発表者のマンシル氏とジョンストン氏は、2007年に第1回目の共同研究を始めます。研究では、一方が日本で、他方はUAE(アラブ首長国連邦)において教育指導を分担しました。二人は、時差、技術的な不具合、文化の違いなどの困難にもかかわらず、共同研究を8年間継続させました。それは、学生だけではなく指導者にとってもやりがいのある取り組みでした。

    その他の積極的な動きは、アメリカの大学コースがUAEと日本間の連結を追加したり、UAE出身の学生が日本を1週間訪問したり、マンシル氏とジョンストン氏がアメリカとアブダビで国際的な発表をしました。最近では、2020,2021年にゲストスピーカー・プログラムを体系づけて、UAE,ジョーダン、ブラジル、アメリカから、日本の聴衆者に向けたZOOMによる公演会を実施しました。教員は、教育者のネットワークや互いに学び合えるBuilding Bridges in Education と呼ばれるFacebookグループへの参加に招待されます。

     ( www.facebook.com/groups/buildingbridgesineducation)

     興味がある人は、この機会をお見逃しなく、是非ご参加​ください。

    発表者:

    ウェイド・マンシル:米国スクール・フォー・インターナショナル・トレーニング(SIT)で教育学の修士号を取得。現在は、UAE西部で9年間の教育活動を経て、大阪女学院/大阪女学院短期大学で教職に就く。地球の文化

    の記述と保存、さらに、教育、ビジネスと政治の地域奉仕活動に関心を持つ。

     

     


      スコットジョンストンミシガン州立大学で、教育学の博士号を取得し、2004年からは大阪女学院(OJU)の教授で大学院の学部長。学生を取り込んだ学びに関心を持つ。半期/1年の海外学生と共にLINE/ZOOM による“journal class”を開催し、学生の留学先での学びを促進している。さらに、学内の教育研修講座では、学生が地域の小学校や中学校で体験した教育実習の学びを講座の授業に反映させる指導を行っている。

  • Back to School 2021

    Thank you to everyone for making Back to School 2021 a great success. Click on the links in the block schedule to see recordings of sessions. More will be added later.

    Back to School 2021 is Osaka JALT’s 11th annual spring mini-conference which aims to share ideas on a wide range of language teaching and learning topics to help everyone in the new academic year. There is sure to be something for everyone, and all are very welcome to join us for all or any part of the day or evening.

    This year we’ll again hold the event online due to the ongoing Coronavirus pandemic. Last year’s event was our first online event and it went very well. Here’s last year’s schedule with links to recorded presentations, and abstracts.

    Many thanks to everyone who submitted presentation proposals this year! Below are this year’s conference presenters and presentation titles with some of the pre-recorded session links. You can find the list of presenters, their biographies, presentation titles and abstracts here.

    Back to School 2021 Schedule

    Room 1 Room 2
    9:30~ Coffee Time & Welcome
    10:00~ Neil Cowie Online assessment for language teaching
    10:30~ Lindy Ledohowski & Tamanna Patel Improving the Confidence of EFL Students Writing Skills Using Smart Templating Software Jason Pipe Timed-Pair-Practice to improve the Suprasegmental Features of Pronunciation
    11:00~ Gordon Carlson & Daniel H. Markarian Using Economics/ Financial Literacy Skills to Improve Cultural Dimension and Intercultural Competence Thi Minh Ngoc Phung Audiolingualism versus Task-based Language Teaching
    11:30~ Marieta Simeonova-Pissarro & Philip Riccobono Evaluation of Academic Word Acquisition: ESL vs. EFL Daniel Orozco How and When to Give Oral Corrective Feedback
    12:00
    ~13:00
    Networking / Lunch (1 hour)
    13:00~ Takaaki Hiratsuka Perceived, Projected, and Recognized Identities of Foreign Assistant Language Teachers (ALTs)
    13:30~ Paul Goldberg Xreading: What’s New and What’s Next Alison Kitzman Classroom Management: Tricks from Start to Finish
    14:00~ Laura Martinez Navigating Nearpod: Ways to utilize its activities to increase student engagement Claire Murray, Paul Mathieson, & Francesco Bolstad Foreign Language Learning as Professional Development
    14:30-
    15:00
    Networking / Break (30-min)
    15:00~ John Carle Using Humor to Create Engaging Materials Oliver Rose Providing Sentence-Level Practice with LingoLabOnline
    15:30~ Eric Martin Building and Measuring Second Language Listening Self-Efficacy Zoe Barber Supporting young learners with ASD in the EFL classroom
    16:00~
    Stuart McLean
    Self-marking online form-recall and meaning-recall vocabulary tests
    Wade Muncil International Collaboration: It’s just a click away
    Networking / Break (30-min)
    16:45~ Networking / Break (15-min)
    17:00~ Bethany Lacy Wonderstruck: Impacts of Multimodal Text and Think-Aloud Reading Techniques on L2 Reading Motivation Andrew Blaker & Timothy Ellsworth Adapting an Extensive Reading Program with Authentic Materials
    17:30~ Bertram Mullin Unique Pronunciation Method Guy Cihi & Aaron Campbell Motivate Your Students with a FREE Team Challenge Vocabulary Tournament
    18:00~ Laura Martinez Jamming with Jamboard: Investigating its uses in the hybrid classroom Gabriela Torregiani How to become a Successful teacherpreneur with the power of self marketing
    18:30
    ~19:30
    Networking / Dinner (1 hour)
    19:30~ Tomotaka Shiroyama Technology-Mediated Task-Based Language Teaching for College and University students.
    20:00~ Andrew Decker Speaking without Reading with PechaKucha 20×20-style Presentations
    20:15~ Gavin Young Create Interactive Projects in Hypertext with Twine, a Free Software
    20:30~ Christopher Prowant Fostering English competence to maintain intrinsic motivation
    20:45~
    21:30?
    Wrap-up, reflections, & cocktail social

     Supplementary Files & Links from the chat:

    John Carle’s “Who will take care of Mum?” Document.

    Free Trial Request for EssayJack

    https://www.essayjack.com/

    https://share.nearpod.com/ZhNMVdDfldb

    https://nearpod.com

    https://nflrc.hawaii.edu/rfl/item/399

    https://www.amazon.com/Simply-Wonderstruck-Innovative-Selznicks-Talented-ebook/dp/B009G4J5SO/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=wonderstruck+graphic+novel&qid=1620548916&sr=8-1

    https://www.thebrianselznick.com/

    https://youtu.be/0HeujZ45OZE?t=12

    https://rb.gy/mfnp7n

     

    This event is free for everyone, so please help spread the word and plan to join us on Sunday, May 9th, for part or all of what is sure to be a great day and evening!

    Contact or Queries:  Send Email
    Event Theme: Annual spring mini-conference

     

    Back to School 2021は、新年度に向けて言語教育や学びに関するさまざまなアイデアを参加者の皆さんと共有する、大阪JALTが年に一度開催する春のミニ会議です。今年の会議はコロナ感染拡大に伴い59日(日)にオンラインにて開催します。過去の会議もそうであるように、今年のミニ会議も参加者の皆さんにきっと何かをもたらすはずです。最後まであるいはその日のいくつかのセッションの参加でも歓迎いたします。

    どのような内容か興味がありましたら、去年のスケジュールと録音されたプレゼンテーションプレゼンテーションの要約をご覧ください。

    今年度のこのイベントも大阪女学院大学 国際共生研究所(RIICC)との共催です。開始時間および終了時間に変更が生じる可能性はありますが、日時が近づいてきましたら詳細はこのホームページ上でお伝えいたしますのでご確認ください。

    プレゼンテーションを現在募集中です!締め切りは44です。企画書提出の際にいただいた情報はこのイベントの目的のみで使われます。 何か質問がございましたら osakajalt@gmail.com までいつでもご連絡ください。

    参加費は無料です。皆さんのカレンダーの5月9日(日)(母の日ですね!)にしるしをつけてください。このイベントを宣伝して、企画書を提出して、そしていくつかのあるいは全部のセッションにご参加ください!きっと素敵な一日になりますよ!

    202159日(日)9:30a.m. 9:30p.m.

    大阪

    発表者:後日発表します。

    連絡先および質問:osakajalt@gmail.comまでメールをお願いします。

    イベントのテーマ:年に一度春に開催されるミニ会議です。

  • Osaka JALT Back to School 2021 Presenters

    Welcome to Osaka JALT’s Back to School Online Conference for 2021!

    Below are this year’s presenters along with their biographies, and their presentation titles and abstracts..

    Zoe Barber         

    Zoe Barber is from Australia, and currently attends Queensland University of Technology. She has taught at a variety of elementary and junior high schools in Osaka prefecture during her nine-year teaching career.   

    Supporting young learners with ASD in the EFL classroom           

    This presentation would give a brief introduction to Autism Spectrum Disorder and current research regarding L2 learners with ASD, an overview of Positive Behaviour Interventions and Supports (PBIS), and make recommendations for providing learning support for ES and JHS students with ASD in the English classroom using universal design for learning and PBIS.

    Andrew Blaker & Timothy Ellsworth       

    Adapting an Extensive Reading Program with Authentic Materials          

    This presentation describes a trial to introduce authentic Materials into an Extensive Reading (ER) program. This was to overcome low student engagement with ER in previous semesters. Twenty-one second year university students were introduced to authentic materials via the instructor, then shown how to self-select for level-appropriate materials of interest. Student & teacher feedback suggests that the assignment improved student engagement, and ultimately provided a meaningful learning experience.

     John Carle          

    John Carle is the author of The English Gym, written under the pen name, Jon Charles. He is currently working on his second book, The English Gym II. He teaches at Kansai University and Kindai University.    

    Using Humor to Create Engaging Materials        

    A lot of materials that we find in textbooks cover topics that may be of importance to our students but do so in a way that can be uninspiring, demotivating or simply boring. This can be especially true for complex societal issues such as: changes in Japan’s population, disaster preparedness, global warming and racial bias. In this presentation, participants will be exposed to ways in which to incorporate humor into materials creation.

     Gordon Carlson & Daniel H. Markarian

    Gordon Carlson is an associate professor at Otemae University, where he teaches EFL and Global Japan Studies. His research includes CLIL, service learning, intercultural competency, and language retention through interactive activities.     

    Daniel H. Markarian is a Social Studies teacher in Palm Beach County Schools, Adjunct Professor, and Dissertation Chair at Nova Southeastern University. He has expertise in cognition, neurodiversity, writing skills development, and financial literacy.

    Using Economics/ Financial Literacy Skills to Improve Cultural Dimension and Intercultural Competence     

    This presentation depicts a ten-week exchange between a Japanese university and an American high school through Internet-based mechanisms. Using technology such as online polls, video editing tools, social media, and webinars, learners from both sides used English as a medium to reflect on their own cultures and present them in creative ways. The presentation concludes by describing classroom experiences that can lead to meaningful collaboration, experiential learning, reflection on personal culture, and deeper intercultural understanding.

     Guy Cihi & Aaron Campbell          

    Guy Cihi of Lexxica. Graduate of Harvard. Co-founder Endeavour College of Natural Medicine. Founder of several EdTech companies. Producer of Disney’s World of English, WordEngine, Words & Monsters, and the FREE Team Challenge Tournaments.  

    Professor Aaron Campbell is the chair of Global Studies at Kyoto University of Foreign Studies. Aaron teaches digital communication, communication, academic writing, and extensive reading.

    Motivate Your Students with a FREE Team Challenge Vocabulary Tournament  

    Research shows that TGT Cooperative Learning fosters interpersonal relationships and lifelong social skills that motivate higher academic achievement regardless of the learners’ individual abilities and aptitudes. The presenters will introduce TGT Cooperative Learning and discuss the attributes and benefits of participating in a FREE Team Challenge Vocabulary Tournament. Invitations to the next free tournament will be available.

    Neil Cowie         

    Neil Cowie is an English teacher in the Department of Foreign Languages, Okayama University, Japan. His interests include teacher development, e-learning and making engaging online courses.               

    Online assessment for language teaching             

    Assessment is an integral part of language teaching. Traditional methods include various kinds of tests and exams, reports and the use of rubrics. The use of alternative types of assessment has been accelerated by the shift to online learning in 2020. In this presentation, various alternative options such as continuous and authentic assessment will be described and some of the online tools that can be used for such assessment will be introduced.

    Andrew Decker

    Andrew Decker is a specially appointed lecturer at Kansai University in Osaka. His research interests include project-based learning, student motivation and satisfaction, action research, teacher development, literature in language teaching, study abroad, and writing centers.              

    Speaking without Reading with PechaKucha 20×20-style Presentations 

    To change up presentations after midterm or next semester, PechaKucha, the karaoke of presentation styles, may be a welcome addition or alternative to more TED-style talks. Originating in Tokyo, PechaKucha presentations are limited to 20 slides, but more importantly, each slide advances automatically to the next every 20 seconds. Originally for chatty architects, this presentation will not only show how PechaKucha-style presentations can be used for English, but also include one for example.

    Paul Goldberg  

    Paul Goldberg has taught English for over 20 years, and is the founder of the online system, Xreading, which he developed to make extensive reading more accessible for students and easier for teachers to manage.  

    Xreading: What’s New and What’s Next              

    Xreading is an online library that gives students access to thousands of graded readers and allows instructors to track their students’ reading progress.  Since its launch in 2014, there have been many improvements, however, to help teachers deal effectively with remote teaching, more features than ever before were added over the past year. In this presentation, the founder of Xreading will explain the new features and improvements, and review what is planned for the future.

    Takaaki Hiratsuka           

    Takaaki Hiratsuka is an associate professor at Ryukoku University where he teaches a range of applied linguistics courses at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels. He received his PhD from the University of Auckland, New Zealand.  

    Perceived, Projected, and Recognized Identities of Foreign Assistant Language Teachers (ALTs)  

    This presentation introduces a study that explored, via narrative interviewing, the identities and their constructions of ALTs in the JET program. Findings revealed that ALT identity is comprised of two interconnected primary categories, foreigner identity and dabbler identity, as well as their accompanying sub-categories (e.g., sojourner identity and greenhorn identity). The presentation concludes with practical implications and empirical recommendations on teacher education and identity research.

    Alison Kitzman 

    Alison Kitzman has an MA TESOL from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. She is currently Professor at Kindai University in the Department of Business.   

    Classroom Management:Tricks from Start to Finish        

    A disorganized class makes teaching and learning difficult for both teachers and students. Even experienced teachers can have trouble with a large or lively class. Good classroom management is not just about controlling students. First, this presentation will explain the basics of classroom management. Then it will show fun and easy ways to control a class from the time students walk in until they walk out.

    Bethany Lacy    

    Bethany Lacy worked at Hankuk University in South Korea teaching multimedia classes before moving to Japan. Her specialties are multimodal instruction and visual literacy. She currently lives in Kanagawa with her husband and two cats.        

    Wonderstruck: An Analysis of the Impact of Think-Aloud Reading Strategies with Multimodal Text in an EFL Environment              

    Instead of implementing a traditional grammar-based approach, this study delves into the benefits that Think-Aloud reading techniques and multimodal texts have on reading motivation. The six participants spent approximately 25 in-class hours reading the children’s multimodal novel Wonderstruck: A Novel in Words and Pictures. The participants responded to English reading motivation surveys before and after the course. The results suggest that their confidence and motivation to read English text improved.

    Eric Martin        

    Eric Martin lives with his family in Amagasaki, and currently works at Shitennoji University. He is a PhD candidate at Temple University, where he is researching L2 listening development and classroom motivation growth.

    Building and Measuring Second Language (Listening) Self-Efficacy          

    When acquiring a new skill, such as using a second language, learners who have high self-efficacy—who believe that they can complete the tasks necessary to achieve growth—are more likely to work hard to advance and overcome obstacles (Bandura, 1977). In this presentation the researcher discusses how learners’ L2 self-efficacy can be promoted and measured, using ESL/EFL listening as an example.

    Laura Martinez 

    Laura Martinez is an assistant professor for the University of North Texas at Kansai Gaidai University. Her research interests include the use of CALL technology and its impact on student engagement.    

    Jamming with Jamboard: Investigating Jamboard’s uses in the hybrid classroom             

    In this presentation, viewers will be introduced to the basics of Jamboard, an interactive whiteboard designed by Google. Next, they will participate in three live demos that will illustrate how Jamboard can be used in icebreaker, pre-reading, and brainstorming activities. It is hoped that participants will come away with a greater awareness of how Jamboard can be used as an effective tool in the hybrid classroom. 

    Navigating Nearpod: Ways to utilize its activities to increase student engagement         

    As a result of the Corona pandemic, many teachers have been forced to find new methods of instruction. Nearpod, a synchronous, mobile- friendly learning platform, is one such solution. Attendees will come away from this presentation with a greater awareness of how Nearpod can be used to increase the interactive nature of lessons through a variety of activities including but not limited to interactive quizzes and games.

    Stuart McLean 

    Stuart McLean is interested in language assessment, research methods, reading, listening, and vocabulary. Recently, he is spending his time creating self-marking online form-recall and meaning-recall vocabulary tests available at vocableveltest.org.        

    Self-marking online form-recall and meaning-recall vocabulary tests:    

    At vocableveltest.org teachers can create online vocabulary tests based on various lists, word counting units, band sizes, and sampling ratios. Tests are form-recall (L2 to L1) or meaning-recall (L1 to L2) tests. Teachers can also create pre/post-tests from 7000 items. Learners receive feedback at the word and band level. Teachers can download automatically marked responses, typed responses, and the time taken to complete responses. A growing answer bank yields automatically-marked responses.

    Bertram Mullin

    Bertram Allan Mullin is a member of JALT, MLA, and ETJ. He has a master’s from the University of Southern California in TESOL and is a PhD candidate in applied linguistics at Temple University in Osaka.       

    Unique Pronunciation Method 

    A lot of EFL learners in Japan jump into the sound system of English without ever learning the sounds. There is a method to the sound system that is designed to help correct errors of pronunciation and I have noticed that although it is popular in western cultures that no one uses it in Japan. When I have used the pronunciation method, with students from k through adult age, pronunciation errors were corrected.

    Wade Muncil    

    Wade Muncil is presently teaching at Osaka Jogakuin University/College after spending nine years teaching in the Western Region of The United Arab Emirates. His interests are documenting and preserving the cultures of our planet. 

    International Collaboration: It’s just a click away            

    As our educational world turns more toward technology, usage of apps such as LINE and Zoom are becoming more prominent in education. This presentation shows how to utilize these apps to link students with institutions and guest speakers. Attendees will first learn about an eight-year collaboration between students in UAE and Japan, then follow a Guest Speaker Series in the Spring of 2020. Finally, a look back on what worked and suggestions for success.

    Claire Murray, Paul Mathieson, & Francesco Bolstad      

    Claire Murray has a French degree from McMaster University, Canada, and an MA in Applied Linguistics from the University of Birmingham, UK. She is currently an ESP lecturer at Nara Medical University.     

    Paul Mathieson is an associate professor at Nara Medical University, where he is the co-ordinator of the nursing English programme. He has an MA in Applied Linguistics and TESOL from the University of Leicester, UK.

    Francesco Bolstad is professor and head of the Department of Clinical English at Nara Medical University. He coordinates the CLIL clinical English courses and a diverse team of teachers dedicated to a collaborative teaching approach.

    Foreign Language Learning as Professional Development            

    Can learning a foreign language make you a better foreign language teacher? This presentation looks at the advantages and difficulties of EFL teachers learning beginner-level French as a foreign language (FFL) as a professional development opportunity. The presenters are the teacher, a student, and the class administrator. They examine the results of student questionnaires which highlight the successes and challenges the students reported from learning FFL, and they discuss how these challenges may be addressed.

    Daniel Orozco   

    Daniel Fernando Orozco is from the United States, graduated from Azusa Pacific University with a Master’s in TESOL, taught in Korea for 10 years and currently teaching in Nishinomiya.               

    How and When to Give Oral Corrective Feedback           

    In this presentation, I will go over the various types of oral corrective feedback, the different timings for such feedback, and consider about what would be the best method.

    Thi Minh Ngoc Phung   

    Thi Minh Ngoc Phung holds a MA degree in TESOL from University of Southampton (UK), and currently works as a lecturer in Faculty of Language Teacher Education, University of Languages and International Studies, Vietnam.   

    A comparison between two language teaching approaches: Audiolingualism versus Task-based Language Teaching           

    Throughout the history of research in language teaching, different approaches have been introduced to assist the process of learners’ language acquisition. Implied behind each approach are distinctive paradigms of language and learning which reflect different views on such issues. Those perceptions have  direct influences on how language should be taught. In this presentation, the investigation focuses on Audiolingualism and Task-based Language Teaching as two orientations of language education.

    Jason Pipe         

    As an experienced university lecturer, Jason researches sociolinguistics, task-based learning, metacognitive learning, motivation and phonology. Present research focuses on development of teaching pronunciation and the measurement and development of speech fluency in language learning.      

    The Application of Timed-Pair-Practice to improve the Suprasegmental Features of Pronunciation  

    To improve fluency and pronunciation of two Japanese cohorts, it was necessary to introduce the framework, Timed-Pair-practice-Practice (TPP), to re-orientate students to tasks. By incorporating this additional tool, students can become more confident in their English communicative ability, more fluent in their conversation and thus more focused on their prosody. It is hoped that students could also improve their pronunciation at the suprasegmental level by focusing on duration, stress intensity, pitch and rhythm.

    Christopher Prowant     

    Christopher Prowant is an assistant professor of English at National Institute of Technology, Anan College.  He has a Masters degree in Writing from Southern New Hampshire University.  He lives in Tokushima.           

    Classroom development with the aim of fostering English competence to maintain intrinsic motivation of freshmen students             

    Developing classes that enhance the intrinsic motivation of freshmen in “English Communication Basic” (course).  Surveys from 2019/20 and 2009-11 showed 90% of freshmen realize English is necessary in the future.  But, 4th year students have a negative attitude toward learning English.  Maintaining motivation is difficult.  The goal is to change learner’s attitudes early on, developing their self-determination for using English verbally, without pressure, and creating a course that fosters such English ability.

    Marieta Simeonova-Pissarro & Philip Riccobono             

    Dr. Marieta Simeonova-Pissarro is the ESL Director at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas and multilingual. Originally from Bulgaria, she holds a doctorate from the University of Cincinnati. Her research includes Teacher Talk and Teacher Attitudes.     

    Philip Riccobono teaches at Himeji Dokkyo University. He holds a Ph.D. from Kyung Hee University where he focused on corpus-based technical vocabulary in English for Baseball Purposes. Philip recently authored a textbook entitled Baseball English.

    Evaluation of Academic Word Acquisition: ESL vs. EFL   

    Academic vocabulary (AV) acquisition represents a concern of ETL; a gap in research exists in rationales for variances of AV acquisition between ESL and EFL. This research examines differences in AV size between and within university-setting ELLs in Kobe, Japan and Las Vegas, USA. Employing the New Academic Word List Test as a pre-posttest-instrument, results indicate differences (p < .05) between and within cohorts. This presentation examines relationships between and within ESL-EFL cohort’s AV acquisition.

    Oliver Rose        

    Oliver Rose teaches EFL at Kwansei Gakuin University in Hyogo. His main research interests are in CALL/MALL, having developed several sites/apps for language learning.      Providing Sentence-Level

    Practice with LingoLabOnline    

    The LingoLab activity is a free multi-platform web app which allows engaging practice of sentences and multi-word units, from audio/picture/text prompts. The three sites that host the activity offer the following functions:

    a) www.lingolab.co – for self-study with automated feedback & review, progress tracking & sharing.

    b) www.lingolab.online – the teacher’s site, for tracking student usage, making custom sets, and setting quizzes.

    c) www.lingolab.live – a multiplayer real-time quiz game

    Tomotaka Shiroyama    

    Tomotaka Shiroyama is a University of Exeter MPhil student from Nagoya, and is in charge of a publicity position at JALT Toyohashi. He is currently teaching English for the nursing school at Nagoya Women’s University.               

    Technology-Mediated Task-Based Language Teaching for College and University students.               

    Today, technology-mediated task-based language teaching (TBLT) is a popular tool for enhancing learners’ communicative competence. Ahn and Lee (2016) suggest that this approach has huge merits for language pedagogy. However, there are limited studies in this field (Stockwell, 2010). This study investigated how online chats and discussion forums contributed to university and college students’ language production. The findings suggested different modes of language learning have the potential to develop different aspects of second language learning.

    Gabriela Torregiani        

    Gabby Torregiani (ESL Specialist and Teacherpreneur in BA) has more than 24 years’ experience in TEFL, having worked as a classroom TEFL trainer for more than 16 years and as an online trainer for 14 years.    

    How to become a Successful teacherpreneur with the power of self marketing

    I will be sharing my story, offering tips and ideas. I will be talking about the benefits of becoming a freelancer, how to become one. I will also talk about social media and how to market ourselves. I will share key tips related to attitude.

    Lindy Ledohowski & Tamanna Patel

    Dr. Lindy Ledohowski (B.A., B.Ed., M.A., Ph.D.) was a former English teacher and then English professor in Canada before becoming an EdTech CEO for the academic writing software platform, EssayJack. She has won numerous awards.     

    Tamanna Patel has been with EssayJack Inc., an education technology start-up that focuses on teaching writing, since 2018, and currently fills the role of marketing and client support. She graduated with a Magna Cum Laude with Honours in Economics and a minor in Management from Clark University in Massachusetts, United States.

    Improving the Confidence of EFL Students Writing Skills Using Smart Templating Software              

    Learning English essay writing as an EFL student can be challenging especially if the conventions of essay writing in the student’s native language, such as Japanese are different. EssayJack’s smart writing templates provide structure and delineate the conventions for English academic essay writing with options for educators to customise the templates to provide levels of guidance and instructions including choice of transition sentences, interrogative prompts, video, and audio files. Studies show that it increased writing confidence and reduced writing anxiety.

    Gavin Young     

    Gavin Young is a lecturer/researcher at Onomichi City University.  He received his Master’s in TESOL from New York University.  In Japan, he’s also worked at JICA as a language trainer and at Iwate University.

    Create Interactive Projects in Hypertext with Twine, a Free Software     

    Twine is free, open-source software for telling interactive stories that can directly be published to HTML. Twine allows users to create interactive PC/Smartphone projects that can include questions, images, and audio. As a tool to create games, Twine is intuitive for educators and students to learn, and gives educators the opportunity to engage students in active learning and to rethink the way they deliver content and create educational materials. Examples: https://gpjapan.itch.io/scavenger-hunt-campus-orientation, https://gpjapan.itch.io/flying-cars-esl-news, and https://gpjapan.itch.io/kimono-vocabulary-in-english


  • Osaka JALT AGM and Bonenkai

    Osaka JALT AGM and Bonenkai, Saturday, Dec. 26

    It’s that time of year again for our Annual General Meeting (AGM) from 5:00 to 6:15 on Saturday, December 26th, to discuss our chapter operations and other JALT business in the past year and plans for the coming year, including chapter officer positions, followed by our annual end-of-year bonenkai social with b.y.o. dinner and drinks starting from 6:30 and going until about 8:30 or however late people want to hang out.

    RSVP to give us an idea of when to expect you, whether you might be interested in serving as a Chapter officer in the coming year, and to get the Zoom link. Feel free to join us for the whole time or to just drop by for a quick drink and hello. We hope to see you there!

  • October 2020 SIETAR Kansai

    October 2020 SIETAR Kansai
    Co-sponsored with Osaka and Kyoto JALT 

    Alzheimer’s disease prevention: through intercultural communication in an aging society

    Speaker:         Stephanie Ann Houghton (Saga University)

    Date:               October 18, 2020 (Sunday)                                  

    Time:               14:00-17:00

    Fee:                 Free for all

    Language:       English (Q & A in English and Japanese)

    ZOOM Online presentation *registration required*

    Contact: fujimotodonna@gmail.com to get the Zoom link; for any questions.

     

    Brief description: The aim of this session is to highlight various practical ways in which Alzheimer’s disease prevention can be approached through intercultural communication from within mainstream foreign language education. In this session, Alzheimer’s disease prevention will be explored through Houghton’s FURYU (風流) Educational Program (FEP), which is currently under development in the Faculty of Art and Regional Design at Saga University. Houghton’s research has traversed through intercultural dialogue and (post) native speakerism through to art (performing arts/dance) and regional design (fitness). These will be reviewed from various standpoints related to lifestyle management including heritage management, intercultural dialogue, health and fitness, technology, art generation and social business.

     

    Stephanie Ann Houghton PhD is an Associate Professor of Intercultural Communication at the Faculty of Art and Regional Design, Saga University. She has published multiple academic books and articles in peer-reviewed international journals. She is co-editor of the book series Intercultural Communication and Language Education with Melina Porto. Addressing the development of intercultural communicative competence, her main research areas include intercultural dialogue, native speakerism and citizenship education, with a special focus on the prevention of Alzheimer’s disease.

     

     

  • July 2020 – SIETAR Kansai

    SIETAR Kansai

    Co-Sponsored with Osaka JALT.

    Saturday, July 25, 2020 – 2:00pm to 5:00pm

    What Do the Sustainable Development Goals Mean for Indigenous ...
    Event Speaker: Liz Leigh (Osaka City University) & Kent Nakai (Suita City, Aoyamadai Junior High School, 2nd year)
    Fee for JALT members: Free
    Fee for non-JALT members: Free
    Email fujimotodonna@gmail.com for the Zoom link or for any questions.

    *Registration Required*

    Event Theme: 
    UN Sustainable Development Goals

    This event is co-sponsored by Osaka JALT & SIETAR Kansai.

    Presentations will be given in English with Q & A in English and Japanese via ZOOM.
    Contact Donna Fujimoto at fujimotodonna@gmail.com to preregister and get the Zoom link. 

    In 2015 the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) set 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), and countries around the world have pledged to achieve them by the year 2030. These goals address social, economic and environmental issues, such as eliminating poverty and hunger, working for gender equality, supporting education for all, and protecting our planet. Two speakers will address sustainability.

    ​Liz Leigh: Developing Education for Sustainable Development
    This session will introduce two university-level advanced English courses which focused specifically on Education for Sustainable Development (ESD). The visit by the Director of the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) in Osaka was especially effective in advancing student knowledge and raising the possibility of inviting more guest speakers in future. These courses will hopefully also inspire students to create and run a composting project on campus.

    Liz Leigh is a graduate of Aberystwyth University in North Wales, and has an M.Ed. in English Language Teaching (ELT) from Manchester University, UK. She first came to Japan in 1991, and has taught in Tokushima prefecture in Shikoku, Oita city in Kyushu, and Taichung in Taiwan. She is currently teaching full time at Osaka City University. Her hobbies are scuba diving, hiking and swimming.

    ​Kent Nakai: PET Bottle Eco Farming
    Kent Nakai has participated in many robotics competitions: in 2018 he placed 1st in Osaka, 3rd in the Japan finals, and went on to the World Robot Olympiad competition in Thailand. In 2019 he won more awards and went on to the World Robot Olympiad in Hungary. When he was competing in Thailand, he first got the idea for his presentation today–on eco farming. For 10 days in the summer of 2019, Kent received training in Sustainable Development Goals at the United Nations office in Geneva where he and other junior and senior high students visited different UN agencies and worked together in groups learning and making presentations on the SDGs. This experience helped Kent improve his work on eco farming, and in this session he will explain how his project is connected to the SDGs.

    Kent Nakai is a 2nd-year student in Suita City, Aoyamadai Junior High School. At age 10 he participated in several mathematics competitions, where he placed 4th and 2nd. In 2018 and 2019 he competed in many robotics tournaments where he received many awards, allowing him to travel to Thailand and Hungary. In 2019 he was selected by Innovator Project to be part of a youth program at the United Nations SDG Lab in Geneva along with a visit to Malmö, Sweden. A key concept he learned from this experience is: “There is no garbage in the world, everything can be a resource.” His main interest is in sustainable farming using robotics, and asked about his goal in life? “to improve the world and space environment in the future.”

  • Back to School 2020 – Online Conference

    Thank you to everyone involved in this year’s Back to School Conference. It was a great day with lots of interesting and informative presentations, and thought-proviking discussions.

    This year we held the conference online via Zoom, and presenters submitted videos of their presentations. You can view these presentaitons below in the schedule by clicking on the presentation title.

     Conference Schedule

    Start Time Finish Time Presenter Name Title
    10:00 AM 10:15 AM Welcome and Announcements
    10:15 11:00 AM Jason Tacker Culture and Technology: Cheating with Smartphones in Japanese EFL
    11:00 AM 11:30 AM Jason Gold Novel Brain Science-Backed Productivity Strategies for Students (and Teachers!)
    11:30 12:00 PM Morning Break
    12 noon 1:00 PM Plenary Speaker: Marieta Simeonova Pissarro Designing Master Courses in English Language Teaching: Online Instruction That Works
    1:00 PM 1:30 Lunch Break
    1:30 2:00 Paul Lyddon Helping Students Better Learn to Speak, Listen, Read, and Write in English
    2:00 2:30 Oliver Rose Setting Engaging and Effective Online Phrase Practice with LingoLab
    2:30 3:00 Break
    3:15 3:45 Neil Cowie & Keiko Sakui Emergency online teaching: Making effective videos
    3:45 4:15 Gordon Carlson Integrating Student and Teacher Perspectives on Curriculum and Textbook Selection
    4:15 4:30 Afternoon Break
    4:30 5:00 PM Af’idatul Husniyah On Machine Writing Feedback: How “Write and Improve” Website Helped My Students Write Better
    5:00 PM 5:30 Trevor Fernandes Inspiration from learners
    5:30 6:00 Min Ku Tell Me About TELL: Mental health and students
    6:00 7:00 Dinner Break
    7:00 7:30 Sean Gay Connecting Identity & Pedagogy
    7:30 8:00 Chien Chih Chen How Does a Tutoring Lesson Work for a Writer via Referencing Tools?
    8:00 8:30 Patrycja Indycka, Zofia Kupka, Gabriela Jeż, & Ewelina Cop Pain-free group work
    8:30 9:00 Nanami “Mimi” Yoshii CLIL for Young Children: Ballet School in Australia
    9:00 ??? Reflections on the day, closing, and cocktail social

     

     

  • Back to School 2020 – Registration Open

    Registration is now open for the Osaka JALT Back to School Conference.
    Due to Covid-19, the conference will be held online this year. Presentation videos will be available as the date approaches, and those who wish to participate in Q&A sessions will be emailed a link to a scheduled Zoom meeting. In order to achieve this, participants should register interest with the following form.

     

    Plenary Speaker:

    Marieta Simeonova Pissarro, MA, Ed.D.

    Marieta Simeonova Pissarro, MA, Ed.D.

    Designing Master Courses in English Language Teaching: Online Instruction That Works

    This presentation discusses the building blocks of online master courses in English language teaching. Setting student learning outcomes (SLOs) based on CEFR (“I can” statements), designing classroom activities, and creating formative and summative assessments are the backbone of effective face-to-face teaching. But how do we transfer these principles to online master courses in English language teaching? Using backward design engineering – the core of online course architecture – ensures that a master course sets a standard that can be effectively re-used by multiple instructors. Techniques such as multiple, reiterative written and oral learner-centered engagement opportunities with the course material, the instructor, and the classmates; doable weekly workload; consistent feedback, and formative assessments that lead into summative assessments evidencing that SLOs have been met are some of the discussed sub-topics. Ultimately, this presentation aims to illustrate how learning (competencies) online is achieved by doing (activities) in an online environment, and how to design a master course that works with any instructor every time.

    Dr. Marieta Simeonova-Pissarro is the ESL Director at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. She holds an MA in English Language Philology from the University of Veliko Turnovo, Bulgaria and a doctorate in Literacy/TESOL from the University of Cincinnati, OH, and has earned the prestigious ELT Leadership Management Certificate from the TESOL International Association and the Quality Matters: Applying the QM Rubric Certification. Dr. Simeonova-Pissarro has served as a member of the National Screening Committee for the English Teaching Assistantship Program (ETA) Awards from 2016-2019, offered by Fulbright and the Institute for International Education in New York City. In addition to Engish she speaks Bulgarian, Russian, and Serbo-Croat and has taken college classes in German, French, and Russian. Marieta values life-long learning and on-going professional development in English as a Second Language, Program Administration, and Computer Assisted Language Learning.
    For further details please see her UNLV web bio page.

     

     

    Other presentations (in alphabetical order):

     

    Gordon Carlson

    Integrating Student and Teacher Perspectives on Curriculum and Textbook Selection

    Although educator-selected texts are commonplace in tertiary education, student involvement in textbook selection can have favorable results. This presentation compares two analyses conducted one year apart that addressed textbook satisfaction and the balance of time spent on the skills of listening, speaking, reading, writing, vocabulary, and grammar. It concludes with the notion that closer alignment between student and teacher perspectives can result in improved curriculum modifications and positive learning outcomes.

    textbook selection, curriculum development

    Gordon Carlson is an associate professor at Otemae University where he teaches EFL and Global Japan Studies. His interests include teacher development, service learning, and designing interactive activities and games.

     

    Chien Chih Chen

    How Does a Tutoring Lesson Work for a Writer via Referencing Tools?

    The study examines how a tutoring lesson works for a writer. Specifically, the writer’s writing structure and lexical use via reference tools were looked into to see what changes he has made after the lesson. The findings suggest that the learner made progress in terms of his writing structure, though he manifested a progressive and regressive pattern in the process. 

    referencing tools; writing; tutoring lesson

    Chien Chih Chen, a Ph.D. candidate of National ChengChi University, currently teaches at SongShan Senior High School in Taipei. His research interest includes translingual practice and CALL.

     

    Neil Cowie and Keiko Sakui

    Emergency online teaching: Making effective videos

    As a result of the current emergency situation many language teachers will have suddenly started to make and upload videos for their students. This presentation will discuss three questions to help make such videos as effective as possible: 1) Why are videos an important online tool? 2) What are the most common ways that you can make videos? and, 3) What are the common features of effective videos? 

    online teaching; effective videos

    Neil Cowie teaches at Okayama University. As well as researching various aspects of online learning he has co-created (with Keiko Sakui) four wholly online courses. These are available on the Udemy online learning platform.

    Keiko Sakui teaches English and teacher trainer courses at Kobe Shoin Women’s University. Her research interests include the use of ICT in language classes, English education at elementary schools and effective teacher training. 

     

    Sean Gay

    Connecting Identity & Pedagogy

    As students learn a language, they develop an L2 identity. Understanding the role that identity plays in the language acquisition is fundamental to developing an effective language program. The most common critique of this assertion is that it is difficult to reflect this concept in pedagogy. In this presentation several methods for including or improving identity formation into pedagogy can improve student experiences and learning outcomes.

    Identity, EFL, CLIL

    Sean Gay has a PhD in Health Sciences and an MS in TESOL and is a lecturer at Kwansei Gakuin University. He has worked on the optimization of university programs through evidence-based pedagogy.

     

    Trevor Fernandes

    Inspiration from learners 

    This school year started off with the first topic being the coronavirus. From the answers learners gave the next few topics have been adapted to suit their needs. The next topic was family, then the mind and following that the body. These are all online for high school students with one session a week where the teacher is online to give guidance.

    learner-centred, adaptive, online

    Trevor Fernandes is from England and currently works as an ALT in a private high school in Osaka. He also works at an international school on Saturdays. Recently his classes are online whereas before the classes were blended.

     

    Jason Gold

    Novel Brain Science-Backed Productivity Strategies for Students (and Teachers!)

    In today’s fast-paced world, productivity is no longer about just how efficiently you work, it’s about how much you accomplish. This presentation will provide novel brain science-backed tips and strategies, focusing on the three key productivity facets of time, attention, and energy, in order to aid in accomplishing more in less time and freeing up more space in our lives to do the things we actually find meaningful and important. 

    Productivity, Brain

    Jason Gold currently teaches at Kobe University and is in a doctoral program at Indiana University. His research interests involve neuro-education applications for classroom teaching – particularly regarding academic tenacity, learner mindsets, and self-regulation/metacognitive strategies.

     

    Af’idatul Husniyah

    On Machine Writing Feedback: How “Write and Improve” Website Helped My Students Write Better

    During the pandemic, one of the key issues for teachers is giving online feedback to the students. In some contexts, for example, in Indonesian classrooms, teachers are responsible for a class consisting of at least 30 students. Such situation creates a huge pitfall for teachers who attempts to provide a good learning experience for students. This mini research reported how machine writing feedback can help teachers to provide writing feedbacks for the students. The research also revealed students’ opinions and experiences regarding their writing progress. 

    writing, machine writing feedback, digital learning

    Af’idatul Husniyah is an English lecturer in State Polytechnic of Malang, Indonesia. Her research interests include Second Language Teaching and Learning and Second Language Acquisition. 

     

    Patrycja Indycka, Zofia Kupka, Gabriela Jeż, & Ewelina Cop

    Pain-free group work

    As a popular meme reads, “What group projects are supposed to teach you: communication, responsibility, collaboration, teamwork. What group projects taught me: trust no one.” In this workshop, future teachers from the University of Rzeszów in Poland will use humor to share students’ perspectives of successful and unsuccessful collaborative work. The presentation will include ideas for facilitating group work in the classroom, useful for instructors in any context.

    group projects, collaborative work strategies

    Patrycja Indycka, Zofia Kupka, Gabriela Jeż and Ewelina Cop are third year students of English Philology from the University of Rzeszów in Poland eager to broaden their minds as prospective teachers.

     

    Min Ku

    Tell Me About TELL: Mental health and students

    I will explain the mental health services available from the non-profit organization TELL, and will give a few concrete tips for supporting your students’ mental health. 

    listening, well-being, support

    Min Ku is the Kansai Outreach Coordinator for the certified NPO TELL, which provides mental health services for the international community in Japan. She has a Ph.D. in molecular biology, and also has experience teaching and parenting Third Culture Kids.

     

    Paul Lyddon

    Helping Students Better Learn to Speak, Listen, Read, and Write in English

    Many students struggle not only to improve their basic English skills but also, ironically, even to talk about them, as it involves some of the most idiosyncratic verbs in the language. This presentation will demonstrate how explicit teaching of word properties and usage patterns can help learners overcome the difficulty of mastering these and other often frustrating English verbs.

    pedagogical grammar, word properties, co-occurrence

    Paul Lyddon is Associate Professor of Global Communication in the School of International Relations at the University of Shizuoka. He has a Ph.D. in Second Language Acquisition and Teaching from the University of Arizona.

     

    Oliver Rose

    Setting Engaging and Effective Online Phrase Practice with LingoLab

    The LingoLab activity is a free multi-platform web app for practicing words and phrases. It has several unique modes providing various kinds of practice at different levels of difficulty. There are three functionally different sites that host the activity, as follows:

    1.  www.lingolab.online – for setting a quiz which reports student results

    2. www.lingolab.co – for self-study with spaced repetition progress tracking & sharing

    3. www.lingolab.live  – a multiplayer real-time quiz game

    online, quiz, listening/reading

    Oliver Rose teaches EFL at Kwansei Gakuin University in Hyogo. His main research interests are in CALL/MALL, having developed several sites/apps for language learning.

     

    Jason Tacker

    Culture and Technology: Cheating with Smartphones in Japanese EFL 

    This presentation explores a reason why smartphones are used for cheating in Japanese EFL through understanding of the cultural dimension of uncertainty avoidance. Cheating behaviors can be understood with a combination of uncertainty avoidance and The Technology Acceptance Model (TAM). When uncertainty avoidance is used as the TAM’s external variable, an argument can made about why Japanese students use technology to deal with the unknown anxieties of the classroom.

    Technology, culture, education

    Jason Tacker is an Assistant Professor of EFL at Akita Prefectural University in the department of Research and Education Center for Comprehensive Science. His main interests are in education, technology, and culture.

     

     

    Nanami “Mimi” Yoshii

    CLIL for Young Children: Ballet School in Australia

    I have been teaching at a ballet school for young children in Australia and found how pre-school children learn the ballet terminology. This is an introduction for my further studies in the future.

    CLIL, PIE, TYL

    Nanami “Mimi” Yoshii had studied at Kansai Gaidai University and has currently been studying Applied Linguistics and Performing Arts at the University of South Australia. She has been teaching languages and dance as a freelancer.

  • Back to School 2020 – Osaka JALT’s 10th annual spring mini-conference (this year in Cyberspace!)

    Updated April 6, 2020:
     

    DUE to concerns about COVID-19 we will not be able to hold this year’s Back to School event in person at Osaka Jogakuin University as planned, but do plan to proceed in Cyberspace with pre-recorded presentations and hopefully with live online Q&A and discussions.

    NOTE the change of date from Sat. May 23rd to Sun, May 24th.


    Back to School 2020 
    Osaka JALT’s 10th annual spring mini-conference
    (in Cyberspace this year!)

    Saturday, May 24, 2020 – 10:00 am to 9:00 pm
    Event Speaker: Various
    Fee for JALT members:  Free
    Fee for non-JALT members: Free
    Contact or Queries:  Send Email
    Event Theme: Annual spring mini-conference

    Back to School 2020 is Osaka JALT’s 10th annual spring mini-conference which aims to share ideas on a wide range of language teaching and learning topics to help everyone in the new academic year. There is sure to be something for everyone. This year, due to the Coronavirus, will be our first time holiding an event in Cyberspace, so it’s sure to be a good learning opportunity all around.

    The DEADLINE to submit a presentation proposal has been extended to THURSDAY, APRIL 30, with recorded presentations due on Sunday, May 10.

    This year’s event will again be co-sponsored by Osaka Jogakuin University’s Research Institute of International Collaboration and Coexistence Research on Language Learning (RIICC).

    In past years we’ve had two to three dozen presentations on many topics, from students, teachers, researchers, and publishers alike. To get a better sense of what to expect, here’s last year’s schedule, and abstracts.

    Start and finish times are subject to change, and more information will be made available here as the date approaches, so please do check back later. We look forward to receiving your abstracts by April 30th and to seeing you there (actually _here_ in Cyberspace this year!) on May 24th!