Showing posts with label actvities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label actvities. Show all posts

Thursday, May 30, 2024

Education : Best of 2023 : semester 2






credit: Image generated by AI from a text prompt (Michael S. Helfenbein)
via YaleNews


Well, as you know artificial intelligence was the topic of 2024 and lot of students began to use it before schools. Teachers needed to think how schools would to adapt and prepare students for a future filled with all kinds of capable A.I. tools 

My usual readers remember that I introduced the theme on my publication Education: Best of 2023 : semester Education: Best of 2023 : semester 1.





illustration Nata Metlukh


ChatGPT, the buzzy chatbot developed by OpenAI is capable of writing essays, solving science and math problems and producing working computer code. Impossible to bam it from schools 

But there are legitimate questions about the ethics of A.I.-generated writing, and concerns about whether the answers ChatGPT gives are accurate. (Often, they’re not.) 

And teachers feel that they have enough to worry about, without adding A.I.-generated homework to the mix.

However they understood that ChatGPT in the classroom, with the right approach, it could be an effective teaching tool.







credit: Image courtesy of MidJourney
via Paul Cancelliari/ LinkeIn


Well, if you haven't take a decision why not read The Pros and Cons of Chat GPT for Students (May 2024) ? Or 3 ChatGPT Prompts for Extending Learning with Successful Students (August 2023). They could be very useful to you.


Looking back 2023 I've come up with a roundup of what's been the best posts of my blog The Digital Teacher G-Souto

Below you’ll find the top posts of 2nd semester 2023 containing different themes: science, human rights, French literature, children's literature, languages, science-fiction, environment, elimination of violence against women and girls, traditions and other themes.

As my usual readers know my posts can be written in English, French and Portuguese (my mother language).


The selection is based on page views but also based on pedagogical relevance of the most-read posts.

I kept the order of the most viewed, and eliminated the posts that seemed less relevant. The main reason? Sometimes some posts acquire too much visibility, not for their value but for the keywords that the search engines "like" indexing.


Here are the most popular posts 2nd semester 2023:


Le Top des billets 2e semestre 2023:










World Teacher's Day 2023


My special choice of the #2nd semester 2023 ? Teacher's Day ! The teachers we need for the education we want ! 


"The teachers we need for the education we want: The global imperative to reverse the teacher shortage". 


World Teachers’ Day theme 


The 2023 celebrations aimed to put the importance of stopping the decline in the number of teachers and would star to increase that number.







Through various activities, all the countries would advocate for a dignified and valued teaching profession, analysing their challenges, and showcase inspiring practices to attract, retain and motivate teachers and educators.

Without teachers, there is not education. Being a teacher provides a unique opportunity to make a transformative impact on the lives of students, and contribute to shaping sustainable futures. 

In different European countries. these last two years, there was a big lack of teachers.

Hoping to have inspire you, as my readers and teachers in your lessons all over the last year.

May 2024 be year of Peace for all the countries, Praying for the end of wars in the world, and all the big tragedy and dead  people and so many children due these terrible wars.

May the humanity continue to search for Peace.

Teachers and students fight for peace, development, and climate change. Countries need tranquility. Earth need help.

Teachers continue to teach with passion, inspiring your students to be better citizens in the future searching for humanity, to live in peace. Earth need young environmental defenders. 

Teachers continue preparing the new generations to this new world and a a different new future. Give them hope, joy, serenity. 

Your mission from the heart!


G-Souto

30.05.2024
Copyright © 2024G-Souto'sBlog, gsouto-digitalteacher.blogspot.com®




Education : Best of 2024 : Semester #2 bG-Souto is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.


 

Monday, September 7, 2020

Schools : Literature : Joan Aiken, the writer of supernatural thrillers and charmingly quirky children’s novels.

  



Joan Aiken
credits: Rod Delroy
via NYT
 “Stories are mysterious things; they have a life of their own. Animals don’t tell each other stories — so far as we know! Man is the only creature that has thought of telling stories, and, once a story has been written or told, it becomes independent of its creator and goes wandering off by itself. Think of Cinderella, or Beauty and the Beast —we don’t know where they came from, but they are known by people all over the world."
Joan Aiken, introduction to her stories

Google Doodle 91st anniversary of Joan Aiken
doodler : Kevin Laugh

Google Doodle: 
Google celebrated Joan Aiken 91st birthday 2015, with a Doodle paying tribute to The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, the novel that kicked off Joan’s most beloved series of children’s books. 
"Every so often an extraordinarily prolific author comes along to win the hearts of a generation. Writer Joan Aiken was one of those authors. At the age of 16, she finished her first full-length novel. She was destined for great things."
 Kevin Laughlin, doodler
The Wolves Chronicles include a dozen books published over a 43-year span, following the adventures of several children in an alternate history of England. 



The Wolves of Willoughby Chase 
Joan Aiken, 1st edition 1962
capa: Edward Gorey
Synopsis:

The novel is the first in the Wolves Chronicles, a series of books set during the fictional early-19th century reign of King James the third. A large number of wolves have migrated from the bitter cold of Europe and Russia into Britain via a new "channel tunnel", and terrorise the inhabitants of rural areas. 


illustration from The Wolves Chronicles
Joan Aiken
illustration: Pat Marriott

This a children's novel, first published in 1962. Set in an alternative history of England, it tells of the adventures of cousins Bonnie and Sylvia and their friend Simon the goose-boy as they thwart the evil schemes of their governess Miss Slighcarp, and their so-called "teacher" at boarding school, Mrs. Brisket.
Aiken wrote the book over a period of years, with a seven-year gap due to her full-time work; the success of this, her second novel, enabled her to quit her job and write full-time.



The  Wolves Chronicles
Joan Aiken

The Wolves Chronicles include a dozen books published over a 43-year span, following the adventures of several children in an alternate history of England.

The Wolves Of Willoughby Chase received immediate acclaim both in Britain and the United States, where Aiken also has a devoted following. She continued the series with other titles, including Black Hearts In Battersea (1964), The Whispering Mountain (1968), for which she won the Guardian children's book prize, and Dido And Pa (1986).


The Whispering Mountain
Joan Aiken
Aiken books are rich in atmosphere and intrigue. They also include memorable characters, such as the resourceful Cockney heroine Dido Twite and the wicked governess Miss Slighcarp, who is every bit as dangerous as the ever-lurking wolves themselves.



Joan Aiken
credits:  Joan Aiken Estate
via The Guardian/ Children's books

Some biographical notes:
Joan Aiken was born as I wrote, on 4 September 1924, em Rye, East Sussex. Daughter of the American poet Conrad Aiken and Jessie MacDonald, graduada pelo Radcliffe College.
Her father the poet Conrad Aiken, Pulitzer Prizewinning poet, and later her stepfather, the English novelist Martin Armstrong, surrounded her by conversations about the technique of crafting a short story, and what were the key ingredients of a good ghost story - both genres in which she came to excel.
She was encouraged to write by all the family, after all, but it was the latter who provided the particular starting point.
Julia Eccleshare, The Guardian, Books




Joan Aiken, at 9
credits: Joan Aiken Estate
Having completed her formal education, she turned to writing children’s novels and fiction stories at a young age. 
Joan didn’t go to school, she was taught at home by her mother and collected her stories in a notebook she bought at the village shop when she was five.



Joan Aiken, note book
credits: Joan Aiken Estate
via The Guardian, Children's Books
By the age of sixteen, she had already penned her first full-length novel and the following year, had her first short story for adults printed in a publication. It was in 1941 that her first children’s story was broadcasted on the BBC’s Children’s Hour.
From 1943 to 1949, she worked for United Nations Information Centre in London as a librarian.
In her lifetime, she had penned more than hundred books, which include a dozen collections of fantasy stories, plays, poems, historical novels and modern tales for adults and children.




The Shadow Guests
Joan Aiken

She is noted for penning spine-chilling thriller novels for children such as ‘The Windscreen Weepers’, The Shadow Guests, ‘A Whisper in the Night’, and ‘A Creepy Company’. In the same genre, she wrote an adult novel as well which was known by the name ‘The Haunting of Lamb House’.
In her lifetime, she wrote on various genres including magic, fantasy, adventure and thriller. In total, she came up with almost 92 novels including 27 novels for adults, as well as plays, short stories and poems.
She had an unusual ability to write for all ages with such a fine sense of the differences between her audiences that she could match the content and the style exactly to the reader. 


Joan Aiken at The Hermitage, her home, 1984
Joan Aiken produced more than a hundred books. Aiken wrote in all genres - poetry and plays - as well as having a particular gift for stunning short stories. Here, she was just as much at home with fairy stories, as in A Necklace Of Raindrops (1968) and folktales collected in The Kingdom Under The Sea (1971), as she was with such horror stories as A Bundle Of Nerves (1976).
Not many know that this established children’s short story writer and novelist who is credited for the novel, ‘The Wolves of Willoughby Chase’ was a lifelong fan of ghost stories, particularly those of M. R. James, Fitz James O'Brien and Nugent Barker.



A Necklace of Raindrops
Joan Aiken,1968

For her significant contribution to children and adult literature, she was conferred with two prestigious awards in her life, the Guardian Children’s Fiction Prize in 1969 and the Edgar Allan Poe Award Best Juvenile Mystery Fiction in 1972 with The Night Fall
She made it to the runner up position for the Carnegie Medal from the Library Association, after her book was recognized as the year's best children's book by a British subject.
She was bestowed with the honorary title of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire in 1999 for her service as a children’s short story writer and novelist.
Aiken died at home in Petworth, West Sussex, UK, at the age of 79 in 2004. 



credits: Cosia Herbia
via Quartz

Education:

"It therefore seems fitting that her writing life should be framed by two stories for the young. Her first was written as a 16-year-old for the fledging BBC Children's Hour; her last, Midwinter Nightingale, the long-awaited addition to her prize-winning series, which began with The Wolves Of Willoughby Chase, will be published in a couple of months' time."
Julia Eccleshare, The Guardian, Books



Midwinter Nightingale
Joan Aiken

Reading is for many of us and students a regular source of joy, perspective, and ideas, which enables us and them  to grow personally, to younger readers, to develop reading skills and grammar or vocabulary.

It occurred to me that there is a simple pedagogical principle that explains the appeal of very early learning, homeschooling: Reading began at home, with parents since childhood. 

Joan Aiken was passionate about the power of reading aloud, the shared experience of communication through stories, and often talked about memories of her own childhood and the many books that were read to her and her siblings. 

In one of her talks to writers and teachers she became quite fierce, saying if parents couldn’t spare an hour a day to read to their children, they didn’t deserve to have any!

But sometimes this is not possible. There are some poor readers among parents.

So educators are important references to students. We must valorise books and read a lot in the classroom. We can do a better job if we are rich readers.





Arabel and Mortimer stories
Joan Aiken
illustration: Quentin Blake

This act of pleasure of reading must start in kindergarten to be continued in primary, elementary and secondary education.






Arabel's Raven
Joan Aiken
illustration: Quentin Blake


"As she would sometimes say at the end of her stories:
‘There is no moral to this story I’m afraid.’
And nor need there be, what matters is  the voice."

Joaniken A


Reading out loud is a pleasant way that students love the most. Invite your youngest pupils to listen Arabel and Mortimer here

One important point: schools need more time for reading aloud, choosing and sharing the pleasure of reading books and not just extracts. However, teachers can make reading exciting all through the year



Joan Aiken website
Resources:
A website about Joan Aiken offer some interesting resources and activities. Ask your students to visit and explore all the staff.
  • Books by group: students can explore the different books and get interesting information.
  • There is a Letter Dear Reader for all students who love to read. Invite them to read the letter and discuss with students the comprehension of the text and ideas. A lovely letter!



Letters from you
  • If they like communicate with the author about her books, ideas, and different subjects, here Letters from YouThey can write. Here the send by post. Here the address
  1. Aiken and her illustrations - in her own words :  She present and hpnour all the illustrators of her books

Film:


The Wolves  of Willoughby Chase, film
Stuart Orme, 1989
The book The Wolves of Willoughby Chase was adapted to the cinema in 1989 by Stuart Orme.
Willoughby Chase is the grand but remote home of Sir Willoughby and Lady Green and their daughter Bonnie.

"Aiken was the most modest of authors, though she certainly knew her worth. She was one of the many professionals of her time who never courted publicity, though never shunned it either."

96th Birthday celebration of Joan Aiken by her daughter Lizza:




"May All Your Way Be Strewn With Flowers"

For Joan Aiken birthday celebration Lizza proposed a fun story, about the book All You’ve Ever Wanted
"Joan Aiken’s modern fairy tale, All You’ve Ever Wanted  is the title story of her first book published in 1953, and imagines an unfortunate orphan called Matilda, who is showered with magical wishes that will keep coming true. Think of the joys of spring – lovely at first when the garden is busting out all over, but what if it can’t be stopped…?"
Every year Matilda receives a birthday greeting in a pink and silver envelope from an absent Aunt (unfortunately also a witch) invariably couched in the usual poetic and flowery terms:
‘Each morning make another friend,
Who’ll be with you till light doth end…’
Ask your students to read All you've ever wanted - A Joan Aiken wish comes true! And let them discover the story of her wish.

Resources + 

Stories ought not to be just little bits of fantasy that are used to wile away an idle hour; from the beginning of the human race stories have been used - by priests, by bards, by medicine men - as magic instruments of healing, of teaching, as a means of helping people come to terms with the fact that they continually have to face insoluble problems and unbearable realities."
Joan Aiken
G-Souto

07.09.2020
Copyright © 2020G-Souto'sBlog, gsouto-digitalteacher.blogspot.com®

Creative Commons License
Schools : Literature : Joan Aiken, the writer of supernatural thrillers # charmingly quirky children's books by G-Souto is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.