A blog by an English teacher: On teaching, learning, writing, and miscellaneous related topics
Sunday, February 28, 2021
Lebanon: Weathering the Storm
Sunday, February 7, 2021
From Pandemic to Infodemic
The term infodemic ( a blend of information
and epidemic) is not very new. However, it has become popular lately,
with the spread of Covid-19 related news. The Cambridge dictionary has
incorporated it.
The Merriam-Webster editors commented last spring that they were
“watching” this word although it had not yet entered their dictionary. In fact,
almost a year later, a search for it in Merriam-Webster still produces no
result. Where it is discussed, here is how they define it: “a rapid and
far-reaching spread of both accurate and inaccurate information about
something, such as a disease. As facts, rumors, and fears mix and disperse, it
becomes difficult to learn essential information about an issue” (“Words
We’re Watching: Infodemic”).
According to Merriam-Webster, the term was coined by Washington
Post journalist David Rothkopf in relation to SARS back in 2003:
What exactly do I mean by the
"infodemic"? A few facts, mixed with fear, speculation and
rumor, amplified and relayed swiftly worldwide by modern information
technologies, have affected national and international economies, politics and
even security in ways that are utterly disproportionate with the root
realities. It is a phenomenon we have seen with greater frequency in recent
years—not only in our reaction to SARS, for example, but also in our response
to terrorism and even to relatively minor occurrences such as shark sightings.
David Rothkopf, The Washington Post, 11 May 2003
Last spring, the World Health Organization warned about
misinformation and disinformation surrounding Covid-19 in “Let’s
Flatten the Infodemic Curve”. The site encourages information literacy,
from checking sources, authors, and dates, to examining evidence and biases. More
recently, The Guardian newspaper published an opinion piece by Oxford
Professor Melinda Mills entitled “We
Must Prevent a Vaccine 'Infodemic' from Fuelling the Covid Pandemic”. Mills
fears that researchers’ work on the vaccines will be wasted if anti-vaccination
campaigners’ misinformation is not counteracted using effective communication
with the public, including local dialogue rather than one-way information-heavy
communications.
Similarly, the World Economic Forum is concerned: “There's
No Vaccine for the Infodemic - So How Can We Combat the Virus of Misinformation?”.
Information literacy is the key, as opposed to – for example - “plandemic”
conspiracy theories.
Saturday, December 12, 2020
Is Online Learning “Virtual” or Real?
If we consider synonyms (or near synonyms) for VLEs, we will
come across the following:
- CBI (Computer Based
Instruction)
- CMC (Computer Mediated
Communication)
- CMS (Content Management
System)
- Distance Learning/ Remote
Learning
- E-Learning
- LCMS (Learning Content
Management System)
- LMS (Learning Management
System)
- LP (Learning Platform)
- MLE (Managed Learning
Environment)
- OLC (Online Learning
Centre)
Of course, there are multiple ways for teachers to use VLEs;
for example, focusing on one platform, such as the institutional Moodle or
Blackboard, or integrating several platforms for one course. An example would
be using Zoom or Webex along with one of these course management systems. Going
as far as allowing Facebook or Whatsapp as supplements may be considered extraneous
or peripheral, and probably unofficial by the institutions hosting the courses.
Still, this has become part of many students’ lives, along with their teachers'.
In fact, some educators may dislike using their institutions’ central VLE,
finding it restrictive, opting for “loosely coupled teaching” as noted by
Martin Weller back in 2007 in “The
VLE/LMS is Dead”.
This is all real life for large numbers of students and
educators these days, day in, day out. Should it continue to be referred to as
“virtual” teaching and learning? Give it a thought and let me know what you
think. It is a bit like wondering whether the novel coronavirus should continue
to be referred to as “novel” indefinitely.
Thursday, December 10, 2020
Word of the Year 2020
Unsurprisingly, the Merriam-Webster word of the year is pandemic, a word defining this era, as the dictionary editors put it. It earned this status not only due to an extreme number of lookups, but also based on increasing lookups year after year. There was a peak of interest in it in February 2020, after which there was no decline. By March 11, when the WHO confirmed that COVID-19 was a pandemic, searches had multiplied by over 115,000% compared with March 2019. The Greek origins of the word may be of interest: pan, meaning all, and demic, relating to demos, people. As one would expect, coronavirus was next on the list of Merriam-Webster, having multiplied more than 162,000% in the past year.
The Oxford English Dictionary could not settle on
just one word of the year this time, publishing a report entitled “Words of an
Unprecedented Year”. These include, besides terms such as coronavirus, COVID-19,
lockdown, superspreader and social distancing, entries such
as bushfire (mainly relating to Australia); impeachment and acquittal
(mostly surrounding Donald Trump), and black lives matter, which spiked
after the recent killing of African Americans.
Here are the words of the year of some other dictionaries:
Collins: lockdown
Dictionary.com: pandemic
Cambridge: quarantine, which – according to the
editors – has gained a slightly new sense, synonymous with lockdown.
Let’s hope that, with the vaccine around the corner, the
2021 words of the year will revolve around vaccination, recovery, and brighter
prospects for the world.
Monday, October 12, 2020
Brave New World of Online Teaching
This is the first academic year at AUB that has started completely online. Teaching online allows one some freedom, but is it fun teaching in semi self-isolation because of widespread corona measures? Isolation can help you focus on your work as a teacher, promoting productivity, but that is where the fun ends. You would hope that your students, too, are not going out too much or being distracted otherwise, but you feel sorry for them, just as you do for yourself. Often you can sense from their work that they do actually have time to read and write, possibly more than they did before corona. The quality of their work is not too bad either.
There are some weird aspects to teaching online though. You
feel let down when a student admits his aunt searched the web for him, for
example. You feel alarmed the first time you hear someone doing dishes in the
background while you converse with a student. A bit like parents walking into
your classroom with pots and pans. Your whole course is out there for families
and friends to see. They can hear your voice, see you, and watch your every
move in the course. It can feel creepy, but you get used to it, just as
everyone is getting used to living with this virus.
There are amusing incidents too. The other day, a young
child took over a pupil’s microphone while she was out of the room. Having
unmuted the microphone, the little girl addressed the class, almost hijacking
the lesson. At first, we wondered whether it was a hacker, but it turned out to
be a child playing. We smiled and continued with the lesson. This is what this
virus has done to our lives – to teaching and learning. Yet, life goes on. More
later.
Monday, May 25, 2020
Corona Times: War or Journey?
On this subject, Patrick Cox of The World radio program interviewed Seema Yasmin, who teaches medicine and journalism at Stanford University. According to Yasmin, war metaphors have been used in epidemics since at least the 1600s when Thomas Sydenham, a British physician, declared, “I attack the enemy within. A murderous array of disease has to be fought against, and the battle is not a battle for the sluggard.” Subsequently, Louis Pasteur spoke of “invading armies that lay siege to our bodies.” Then in the 1920s, cancer cells were referred to as anarchists or Bolsheviks, after which Richard Nixon waged his own “war on cancer” by signing the National Cancer Act of 1971.
Ian Buruma of The New York Times warns that there’s a long history of illness being used to inflame hatred and that we mustn’t let this happen with corona by calling it a “Chinese virus” or a “foreign virus”: “Nationalism should have no place in medical discourse. And medical language should never be applied to politics. Coronavirus isn’t Chinese or foreign; it is global. Blaming alien forces, whether in the name of God, or science or simple prejudice, is bound to make things a great deal worse.”
Wednesday, April 8, 2020
A Virus Gone Truly Viral!
When news spreads like wildfire on social media, we say it has gone viral. How many of us had ever reflected on the origin of the adjective “viral”: well now there’s no doubt about it since Covid-19 has illustrated the phenomenon perfectly to the world. One can already envision "Word of the Year 2020" in most dictionaries: corona, ventilator, epidemic, pandemic, PPE, self-isolation, social distancing, etcetera, etcetera! Words galore: Heaven for many English teachers and Hell for the majority on this planet!
One can envision google searches such as epidemic versus pandemic and social distancing versus physical distancing. Actually, the latter distinction is worth some reflection. When the World Health Organization adopted physical rather than social as the adjective, many - including psychologists and sociologists - lauded the decision, affirming the fact that while physical distance was "absolutely essential" during the global pandemic, "it does not mean that socially we have to disconnect from our loved ones, from our family."
The next time you listen to television news, try to observe which of the above expressions is used. At the time of writing this blog post, many channels are still using the older terminology. Perhaps they take it for granted that people understand – or perhaps they don’t consider that changing a word here and there will really make a difference. I wonder what my readers think. For example, do students feel socially dispersed or disconnected when they are physically remote from their teacher and classmates, or do they still feel united by common learning objectives and common online work areas and discussion forums? I look forward to hearing your views.
Sunday, January 26, 2020
Word of the Year 2019
The Oxford Word of the Year is climate emergency. According to the dictionary’s editors, the term was used a hundred times more frequently in 2019 than in the previous year. The Cambridge Word of the Year, chosen because it was the most popular Word of the Day once, is upcycling, meaning “the activity of making new furniture, objects, etc. out of old or used things or waste material”. According to the Cambridge Dictionary blog, while reversing climate change, or even stopping its progression, appears difficult, upcycling is a concrete step towards that which could be taken individually. Lookups of the word have risen 181% since 2011, when it was introduced into the dictionary. Other terms on the Cambridge shortlist for 2019 also reflect environmental concerns: carbon sink, compostable, and preservation. A new addition is plastic footprint, meaning the amount of plastic wasted rather than recycled, hence damaging the environment. Dictionary.com’s Word of the Year is existential, also due to frequent lookups. Among other things, the term has been used in relation to climate change as an “existential crisis” and an “existential emergency”. The Collins Dictionary’s Word of the Year is “climate strike”, first registered in 2015; lexicographers noted a one-hundred-fold increase in its lookups in 2019.
On a different note, the Merriam-Webster Word of the Year is they in its relatively new non-binary sense. The new sense entered the Webster Dictionary in September 2019 due to increased lookups, and the American Psychological Association blog endorsed the use of the pronoun in October in a post entitled “Welcome Singular They”. The use is now officially accepted in academic writing after gender experts updated the APA’s bias free language guidelines. “They” may be used as a generic pronoun to replace “he or she” or to refer to individuals who prefer not to be referred to as either.
Monday, October 21, 2019
Thou Shalt Not Bore Thy Readers
Saturday, July 6, 2019
Guest Bloggers Invited
Inviting guest bloggers with similar interests can add diversity to one’s blog. Guest postings are useful for both the host and the guest. Additionally, they could break the monotony for the audience.
If you would like your writing to be hosted on this blog, please get in touch. Submit a brief biography along with your topic proposal. Whether you prefer to post as an anonymous teacher or not, please don’t hesitate. In fact, The Guardian’s “Secret Teacher” blog has inspired me to encourage anonymous blogging. The Guardian promotes critical posts among frustrated teachers who prefer not to reveal their identities. While aimed mainly at school teachers, the idea of that blog could also be relevant to those at the tertiary level with its emphasis on “the trials, tribulations, and frustrations of school life”. Here are some topics tackled by the secret teachers, to give you an idea:
- Disappointment with school focus on structured learning and assessment rather than enjoyment. A believer in play based learning found that approach soul destroying.
- A teacher suffering physical violence at the hands of a school child.
- Dyslexic students not receiving sufficient support on exams.
- Mental health issues amongst pupils under pressure to perform.
- A teacher bullied by her superior.
University students with ideas worth sharing are also welcome. I look forward to hearing from you.
Sunday, June 16, 2019
Blogging After a Break
In any case, when you feel uninspired, in need of recharging, or simply too busy with other concerns, by all means take a break from blogging. I am not suggesting you stop altogether. Just press pause.
A teacher with interesting students and exciting work will naturally want to return to blogging when time allows. Don’t force it. Just let it flow. A blog is like a stream, uneven at times but flowing again when the time is right – a quiet stream that fades into the deep blue ocean.
Sunday, February 3, 2019
Word of the Year 2018
· Chemical
· Masculinity
· Substance
· Gas
· Environment
· Relationship
· Culture
· Waste
· Algae
· Air
The Collins Dictionary chose single-use as word of the year as it had seen a four-fold rise since 2013. The term refers to products, especially plastics, that are used only once rather than recycled, such as straws, bottles and bags. Images of plastic items floating in the oceans became popular on television this past year, with channels such as the BBC raising awareness on the issue. Another term that was high on the list for Collins also reflected environmental concerns: plogging, derived from Swedish, meaning picking up garbage while jogging.
Finally, the Cambridge Dictionary’s word of the year based on a public poll was nomophobia: “fear or worry at the idea of being without your mobile phone or unable to use it.” A runner-up was ecocide, emphasizing people’s environmental concerns. The dictionary editors had chosen the most popular new additions to the dictionary then asked their online readers to vote. The result was therefore referred to as the “People’s Word of 2018."
Wednesday, December 5, 2018
Are You a Perfectionist?
Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Seeking Advice on Your Writing
Sunday, June 3, 2018
Ghost Writing: Not Yet Dead and Buried
Reading student essays is usually a pleasure for writing teachers, especially when students research fresh topics, argue effectively, or share original points of view; occasionally, however, it is not so easy. Back in 2013 I blogged twice on ghost writing at universities, having been interviewed about it by a Daily Star reporter then. Now in 2018, despite greater awareness and heightened vigilance by teachers and other stakeholders, the spectre of ghost writing continues to rear its ugly head. The ghost writers have picked up on the fact that many teachers require “process” submissions rather than merely a satisfactory “product”, so they have adapted their work accordingly.
Tuesday, February 6, 2018
The Lebanese Blogosphere
- Activities, private thoughts and reflections
- Poetry, literature and art
- Social issues in country of origin
- Political issues in country of origin
- Local current affairs
- Religious and spiritual matters
- Human rights issues or development
- International political issues
Unfortunately, the early blogs, as reported by Taki, reflected the political divisions in the country. Many did not sound neutral. Also, there were more male than female bloggers, and the age distribution was mainly concentrated in the 20s and 30s. The vast majority of bloggers had university degrees, including a high proportion of postgraduate qualifications. Interestingly, nearly half the Lebanon bloggers had had some university education outside Lebanon, and the majority were single.
One hopes that blogs are now more inclusive in terms of who is blogging, what for, and what topics they tackle. Still, the microblogging site Twitter does not provide a topic category for teachers/teaching or education when one first registers one's profile, nor do some blog aggregators like a Lebanese one that currently exists. This would force teachers, initially at least, to identify their blogs under titles such as “lifestyle”, “personal/reflections”, etc., which may not be enough to distinguish the blogs. Tagging and hashtags for teaching etc. can help of course, but the options given upon registration reflect an older mentality where certain categories did not really exist on their own.
Teacher bloggers need to get their voices across as teachers. In any case, it is good to be part of a community of bloggers united by common interests and concerns.
Sunday, December 3, 2017
Information Pollution
Facebook is attempting to combat the viral spread of untrue stories in many ways, including alliances with various organizations such as FactCheck.org, yet the challenge is endless with myriads of sites encouraging pranksters and others to create their own genuine looking fake news stories. The list of such sites is long; here are just a few
- https://newspaper.jaguarpaw.co.uk/ (free newspaper generator)
· http://breakyourownnews.com/ (the breaking news generator)
· http://www.classtools.net/breakingnews/
· https://www.fodey.com/generators/newspaper/snippet.asp (the newspaper clipping generator)
Sunday, September 24, 2017
Class Attendance Miracle
On another note, the reputation of academic institutions can be tarnished by low student attendance. As long as institutions require attendance data, teachers will gather it. The hope is that classes will be engaging enough for students to attend of their own free will rather than due to fear of punishment.
Sunday, September 17, 2017
What a Mess!
Eight hundred years of tradition may soon end at Cambridge when typed exams replace handwritten ones. Academics there have complained about illegible handwriting influenced by reliance on computers in lectures and outside, and some departments have piloted computer-typed tests. Similarly, Harvard academic Eric Mazur encourages his students to use computers and smartphones in exams. Speaking at the Times Higher Education World Academic Summit, the physics professor admitted that he allows pupils to look up information during tests in order to promote creative, analytical thinking rather than content recall. There is no need to memorize, he believes, with all this technology at our fingertips.
On another note, poor handwriting can affect grades. A study commissioned by stationery firm BIC concluded back in 2014 that the majority of teachers had marked down A-level and GCSE papers with illegible handwriting; it also revealed that more than a third of teachers had seen emoticons in exam answers or coursework.
Should we all downgrade papers with illegible wriing? Or should we follow the new fashion? Let me know what you think.
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
Writers and Audiences, Including Mysterious Ones
When writing these blog posts I often wonder what goes on in readers’ minds when they see them. The Google stats engine indicates readers in various parts of the world, including North America and Europe, Ukraine and Russia, the Far East and Africa, even places like Vietnam and Turkmenistan. Do all these readers find these blog postings interesting, one wonders? There is always the question of how to connect with readers with specific interests without boring too many others. Whether the readers really need to know all this is a good question to ask oneself before publishing anything. Upon reflection, some of my posts appear duller and possibly less thought-provoking than others – yet for some mysterious reason Google reports that people are reading them all over the world. The world of online audiences is a world of mystery compared with that of more tangible, defined audiences such as those of face-to-face classrooms.
One wishes there were more interaction with these mysterious, far-flung audiences - more feedback so that one could improve or better adapt to readers’ needs. For some writers, it is a challenging, puzzling world out there!
Monday, May 1, 2017
The Story of Mascara
Most sources see eye to eye on all that.
Saturday, March 11, 2017
Telephone Arabe
- Admiral: Amir Al-Bahr
- Alchemy: Al-Kimia
- Alcohol: Al-Kuhul
- Alcove: Al-Qubba
- Algebra: Al-Jabr
- Coffee: Qahwah
- Cotton: Qutn
- Gazelle: Ghazal
- Ghoul: Ghoul
- Giraffe: Zarafa
- Sahara: Sahraa
- Sugar: Sukkar
- Sultana: Sultana
- Syrup: Sharab
- Zero: Sifr
Friday, January 13, 2017
More on Word of the Year
If I were to personally choose a word of the year for 2016, it would be sympathy. There have been many unfortunate events around the word this year, including serious human tragedies. The least one can do in such circumstances is sympathize – not in the sense of pity, but more in the form of empathy, putting oneself in the sufferers’ shoes as opposed to carrying on with one’s life as if nothing were wrong. Among the dictionary definitions of sympathy are the following:
- Webster: “the act or capacity of entering into or sharing the feelings or interests of another/ the feeling or mental state brought about by such sensitivity”
- Cambridge: “understanding and care for someone else’s suffering”
- Oxford: “understanding between people; common feeling”
Monday, December 12, 2016
Word of the Year 2016
The Cambridge Dictionary saw a fourfold increase in searches for its Word of the Year, paranoid: “feeling extremely nervous and worried because you believe that other people do not like you or are trying to harm you”. While the editors say they cannot be certain why readers were looking up the word, they assume it must be the uncertain times we are living in, where people no longer have faith in the institutions they have traditionally trusted. Similar words have shown similar increases: anxiety, chaos, breaking down, prejudice, bigotry, bullying, and nostalgic. On a brighter note, adorable has seen a high increase in searches as well. The editors believe readers must be trying to comfort themselves by watching videos of cute animals!
Sunday, October 9, 2016
Open Access Week
Sunday, August 14, 2016
The Challenge of Fairness in Student Assessment
The type of assessment given is also important. For example, “performance assessment” in the form of projects may be considered fairer than traditional testing because it is more individualized; students may choose their own topics and may receive formative feedback as projects take time.