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Call for Paper 19 November 2008

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International Seminar in Assessment in Language Learning and Teaching

(complete brochure fbsltc-2009-brochure | 6 Mb) 

Submit your abstract online here.

22-23 January 2009

Faculty of Language and Literature & Language Training Center

Satya Wacana Christian University

Salatiga, Indonesia

 

CALL for Paper/Workshop Proposals

 A 250-300 word abstract with a title not exceeding twelve words and a fifty-word bio-data

Deadline : 19 December 2008                                                                                

Notification: 26 December 2008

Selected full paper deadline: 15 January 2009 (for inclusion in the Proceedings)

 

Topics

·         Faculty in Language Program Assessment

·         Students in Language Program Assessment

·         Technology in Language Program Assessment

·         Appropriate Ways to Assess the Mastery of Language Skills

·         How to Align Learning Objectives and Learning Outcomes

·         Evaluation Models for Data from Testing

·         Other related subtopics

Criteria for Acceptance

All abstracts will be evaluated by the Seminar Planning Committee. Relevance to the theme of the Seminar and freshness and originality of approach are among the major considerations in the acceptance of papers. The Committee reserves the right to decline paper/workshop proposals without assigning reasons.

Proposals are encouraged within the sub-themes, but are not limited to the topic areas.

 

Invited Speakers

Prof. Lyle Bachman, UCLA, California, USA

Prof. Hiromi Otaka, Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan

RELO  Jakarta, Indonesia

 

Conference Fee

Public : Rp 550.000,-

Local Teachers : Rp 300.000,- (for Salatiga primary and secondary school teachers with a letter from the schools) 

The fee includes a certificate of attendance, conference materials, refreshments, lunches, and a conference dinner.

More info and brochure download:

email: fbsltc@gmail.com

web : www.uksw.edu/ltc/events  or http://neny.edublogs.org (temporary)

Contact persons:

ANISIA BUDI PRABAWANI

Phone & Fax: +62 298 313859

TRI SUNARTI

Phone & Fax: +62 298 312120

Registration closes on Monday, 19 January 2009

Listening to Many 16 July 2008

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So, I went to SoE for two weeks, shared a house with 4 guys who knew how to cook so I didn’t have to cook myself *yay!*, taught two courses (Listening and Reading), and at my free time, struggled to write materials for COTIM program. Not bad at all. I think I got some new experiences about teaching during my travel and my stay.

me and the students of class 2006

One thing that supports my research proposal for PhD application is that it is extremely difficult to teach English when the students do not have enough exposure to the culture of English speaking country.

I was using Cambridge materials for Listening which is highly British. Once, the students were required to listen to a guy leaving a phone message for a girl. He was in a call box and he said he would call again. The comprehension question was “why can’t the girl phone him back?”. If the students could infer what a call box was, it would be no problem at all for them to answer the comprehension question. By the way, a call box is a public telephone booth according to Merriam-Webster dictionary, and one who has seen or read about a call box (either in person, in movies, in novels) knows that a call box usually can’t be called back.

Got it? Well, it’s easy if you have seen or read about it. Even if you don’t know the words, you usually can infer what is a call box from the words call and box: it’s a box to call!

Another aspect of listening skills that I notice is that in order to successfully comprehend what s/he listens, s/he has to have the ability to adjust his/her ‘ears’ to accommodate different accents, dialects and styles. I personally believe that exposure to different accents, dialects, and styles will be beneficial to train one’s ears to adjust his/her hearing. Again, in SoE, where the environment tends to be homogeneous in terms of ethnic groups, media, references, etc., my students struggled to listen to even a sentence because I think they didn’t get used to listening and adjusting to different styles of speech.

So, the keyword is exposure to the culture. The more varied the exposure is, the better adjustment one makes with one’s hearing. The better the adjustment, the better the listening comprehension. What do you think?

Yacapaca Indonesian skin done! 1 June 2008

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Yup. One project done. Did 1000 something lines translated for yacapaca Indonesian skin in one day. I guess my adrenaline was just traveling faster in my system. Maybe, partly because I felt guilty to Ian, the guy behind yacapaca, who must have given me the project like years ago *hyperbolic mode ON*

Another exciting thing is looking for Ph.D. program, so I’ve been online a lot searching for schools. Unfortunately, I’m not that excited in writing up a research proposal for application. After all, you can’t get excited in many things at once. Or maybe this is my excuse for not reading oh-so-difficult academic journal articles for the reference part in my proposal. Oh, well…

Cross my fingers so I’ve got the spirit to write it…

Going around and around 22 May 2008

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Just to let you know that the semester was over last two weeks, but it didn’t mean that I was out of work. In addition to the usual correction (mountain piles of them!), I was invited to speak again this year in Indonesian Fulbright Grantee pre-departure orientation in Jakarta. Plus, I was traveling to Cirebon to speak about material development using ICT in SMA Negeri 1 Cirebon (Cirebon Public Senior High School) with some professors from the Faculty of Education.

Tired? Yes. I was supposed to be relaxing at home for two weeks before summer semester begins on June 2. But I found my travel to be insightful, especially the one to Cirebon. I met some teachers and learnt first hand about how it goes in the real life of school, particularly in terms of the use of ICT.

If you miss me, sorry, for not writing for such a long time. Believe me, I miss you too! I will write again about my stuffs, hopefully very soon!

Got it! 1 March 2008

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Announcing the WorldCALL 2008 Scholarship Awardees

The scholarship committee has reached its final decisions. We had an extremely difficult time deciding the awardees. Many highly qualified applicants had to be turned down purely because of budgetary constraints. Our goal was to decide on individuals who met these criteria:

Congratulations to those who have been selected. At the same time, we thank those who applied and sincerely regret that they, too, could not be included.

Thomas Robb, Ph.D., Chair, WorldCALL 2008 Scholarship Committee

The Awardees

Cruvinel Teixeira Alves, Erika Brazil
Elramady, Asem Aly Elsaid Egypt
Fang, Ying China
Fawzi, Hala Sudan

Isharyanti, Neny

Indonesia

Izquierdo Mujica, Evelyn de Los Angeles Venezuela
Kilickaya, Ferit Turkey
Lyulkun, Nina Russia
Marandi, Susan Iran
Mo, Jinguo China
Quintana, Nelba Argentina
Verschoor, Jennifer Argentina
Viswanathan, Revathi India

Happy!!!!!! I’m looking forward for a fruitful conference and experiencing Japan…:)

Plans of 2008 8 February 2008

Posted by neny in ESL/EFL Info, Internet/Blogging/Computer, My events.
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Conferences to attend:

WorldCALL 2008 (Fukuoka, Japan; 5-9 August)

I’ve been shortlisted to become the recipient of a scholarship to attend this conference. It will be super duper exciting as there are some possibilities to meet interesting CALL practitioners to make a network and to learn what has been going on in different continents. I might meet my former professors and some of my old classmates as this is the ‘Olympic’ of CALL. I’ve sent my abstracts too and I hope that they can be accepted to be presented.

GloCALL 2008 (Jakarta & Yogyakarta, Indonesia; November)

This year, Indonesia becomes the host for GloCALL conference. As one of few CALL practitioners in Indonesia, I serve as a committee member. I’m still not sure what will my responsibilities be, but from what I discussed with Indra Charismiadji of Higher Learning, it seems that I will deal with PR-ing especially among the universities. I still don’t know whether I will submit abstracts or not (since the call for paper is not circulated yet), but well, I can always pull something at the very last minute (so typical of me!).

Projects to do:

Yacapaca.com

The website provides a service for teachers if they want to do online assessments through tests or portfolios. A week ago, the director sent me an email, asking if my students and I will be interested in developing the ‘Indonesian skin’ for the website. Basically, the skin will be a version of yacapaca in Indonesian. There is no money involved in this project, but nevertheless I’m so excited because it will give my students some experiences in translating. We will receive full credits of the translation (another reason: simply narcissistic of me!) and I manage to secure my students reference letters for their future employment.

Fun English with YSKI students

YSKI is a private Christian school in Semarang and they develop a cooperation with my faculty to improve the quality of the English teachers and to provide a fun English learning club for their students. As the words ‘fun’ and ‘technology’ are dubbed by the school, the faculty turned into the one and only Neny whose reputation of being fun lover and technogeek is widely known (ha!). So, I created a blog site, which will be used along the semester and hope the students will like it. Along with me, Andrew and Rudi are going to teach too, so let’s see how it goes next week when it starts.

*long-ignored* sustainable CALL project with Van Deventer Maas Stichting

Hmmm, I still don’t know what to do with this and thus, I have not had the guts to email the director. Need to send him email!!!!

Publications to spread:

July 2008 has been decided by IGI Global as the time for launching the “Handbook of Research on E-Learning Methodologies for Language Acquisition” and one of the chapters in the book about Interaction Modifications in Internet Chatting was contributed by yours truly. I’m so excited to get my hands on the book!

souvenir from Vietnam 28 November 2007

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I’ve been swarmed by many unfinished business as soon as I returned to Salatiga from Vietnam. In Vietnam, I was attending and presenting in GloCALL 2007 International Conference with funding from Van Deventer Maas Stichting and Bakti-Support Office for Eastern Indonesia from 2-7 November 2007. So, here is the long due posting of what I experienced during the conference.

In general, I should say that attending conferences is a good way of developing networks, particularly if you’re attending a conference in your field of interest. That was exactly how I feel about GloCALL 2007. I met some CALL practitioners whose names I’ve only read or found in the Internet (like Tom Robb, Jeong-Bae Soon, Deb Healey, Charles Kelly, Vance Stevens) , some colleagues who use CALL in their courses (like George MacLean, James Elwood, Jacqui Cyrus, Anthony Robbins, Andrew Ross, Stephane Charitos, and others) and a virtual friend like Howard Martyn. It’s good to develop and renew contacts with people who have similar interests with you!


me with some presenters including Jacqui Cyrus, Scott Windeatt, Tom Robb,Jeong-Bae Son.

Although it’s quite tiring to present five presentations (some other presenters thought that I was crazy presenting three different topics!), I think I was doing alright. In Hanoi, which was the first city for the conference, the participant attendance was low and they were not very responsive to my presentations. Maybe because almost all presenters were still around, so there were quite a number of sessions that the participants could attend. Some presenters were not attending the Ho Chin Minh City one, so the sessions selected were limited. Hence, I got more audience and more responses. However, I appreciate all comments that I received because in many ways they gave me more insights and ideas of how to further develop my research. If you need the PowerPoint files of my presentation, please email me.

On a more personal note, Vietnam was in a way similar to Indonesia. The weather between Hanoi and Ho Chin Minh City were different. Hanoi was colder because it was in the north and Ho Chin Minh was hot and humid. I was lucky (and I guess just being thoughtful) because I brought a jacket that helped me survived the chill of Hanoi. I stayed at Hanoi University Guest House and I really liked the architecture of the buildings in the campus. They have these colonial style buildings that I just adored! The funny thing was, when I arrived at the Guest House, it was dark already and looking at the hall I thought that it would be a perfect shooting location for an Indonesian horror movie! It looked creepy, but I didn’t sense any spirits (I will tell you about this sixth sense of mine in another post) and the room was new and very clean, with good mattress, a TV set, and a shower. Just like a two star hotel. The feeling of the campus was pretty similar to my campus in Salatiga. Students were everywhere (the dorms were on campus, nearby my guest house) and Internet cafes were just two minutes walk! Hallelujah!

Ho Chin Minh City was another version of Jakarta, Indonesia’s capitol city. The hot weather, the hell-crazy traffic, the way the buildings were located and built reminded me of Jakarta. Maybe that’s the reason why I’m fonder of Hanoi than of Ho Chin Minh City. Hanoi, although the main street near HANU campus was terribly crowded, I still could have a peaceful walk in the campus and people looked similar to Indonesians. I, of course, love the architecture of the buildings in downtown Ho Chin Minh, which again, in colonial style. Remembering home, during those walks to and fro the conference place at SEAMEO RETRACT in Ho Chin Minh, I was sad with the fact that many old buildings in Salatiga (which many are in the Dutch colonial style) was being destroyed everyday, for being replaced with more modern, yet less elegant buildings. Growing up in Salatiga, which used to be the relaxing city for the Dutch living in Semarang during their occupation, I have this soft spot for any old colonial buildings. While travelling, I like to observe the architecture along the way, looking fondly to charming old houses.

Another thing that I learned in Vietnam is how similar they look with Indonesians. There were countless times in Vietnam where people immediately started talking to me in Vietnamese, which I of course replied with a puzzled look on my face and an apology in English that I didn’t know how to speak in Vietnamese. It turned out that my appearance was pretty much similar to those living in villages of Vietnam. When I told this to my students here, they jokingly said that maybe I had the qualities of being ‘villagish’ and backward! :) ) Well, I don’t mind being a villager and once I lived for five weeks in a village near Boyolali. Even my grandparents were originally not from big cities. Still about appearance, I had this unpleasant experience of getting unpleasant look from a taxi driver because I was sharing a cab with two Caucasian men (they were George and Jim, presenters from Japan, who stayed in the same hotel with me) and looking like Vietnamese but didn’t address him in Vietnamese. Maybe the driver thought that I was some cheap Vietnamese girl, trying to hook up with male westerners, and being so stucked up by not using my own language. Gosh! First, of course I didn’t know how to speak in Vietnamese because I was not a Vietnamese. Secondly, if you can tell a ‘lady escort’ from the way she dresses, my outfit was not even close to being revealing. I remember I was wearing long black pants and a simple silk shirt, carrying the conference bag (which looked like a laptop bag and indeed it carried my laptop). In short, I looked like an office girl. Well, maybe it was my face. People often mistakenly guess that I am a university student or something, age of early 20s. Sometimes I took it as a compliment (being early 20s as opposed to my real age of 33 means that my face is still fresh like those youngsters!), but sometimes it gets annoying too.  

For the souvenir to you, I will post some more pictures when I get the chance. For the time being, please enjoy this video of me presenting in one of the sessions in GloCALL 2007. Thanks to Howard Martyn for taking this video.

*Back to life*