Friday, July 26, 2013

Week 5: I Love This Game!

This week I wrote my first webquest and I liked this experience very much.

What I like most is that students get involved in the project literally from the very start of it – from choosing the topic! Let’s do what we all like, what is close to our national tradition, what will bring the best fruit to all of us.

The topic being chosen, we move on to assigning roles. Here again, we can distribute tasks according to what a person likes – collecting information, analyzing it and making conclusions, writing essays, or working on the technological side of the project. Everyone can choose a task that corresponds to his / her abilities and level of knowledge. This aspect is very important since it allows all types of students (weak and strong, active and passive, with various learning styles) to participate in group work.

The results of the work can be presented in all sorts of ways and it will bring creativity into the classroom. Modern technology gives a chance to make all our ideas come true – with pictures, voice, animation, virtual, or real. So why don’t we create something educationally profound and beautiful and share it with our classmates and the whole world?

And last but not least. Projects and webquests teach real communication and collaboration. Students learn to work together and it resembles real life situations – they learn to obey authorities depending on their positions, solve conflicts, and contribute to achieving the mutual goal.


A project / webquest is like a game. We do not teach / learn, we play it. Here education becomes fun to our benefit and, first of all, to the benefit of our students.

2 comments:

  1. Dear Natalya,

    With pleasure, I have visited your blog, and this is an occasion for me, based on what you have posted, to reiterate that "the more the lesson is fun, the more students like it".

    Ok, let's try it always!

    We keep in touch!

    Sosthene

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Natalya,

    Thanks for sharing your successful experience of WebQuest in class. This gives me confidence to plan it into my class in the upcoming semester. It's summer vacation in Taiwan now. We still have some school lessons, but not very formal and long. I agree with your idea that it gives students opportunities to have their own decision making, cooperative leaning process, and creative learning outcome. In return, it can foster students' learning in autonomy. Moreover, it allows students to have a real communication and collaboration that make learning full of fun. I hope I can make it as successful as you did!

    Best,
    Yu-Zhen

    ReplyDelete