Search posterous

Search all posts and users. Type a name, type a favorite song title, whatever! See what comes up.
  

More posterous blogs











More recommended blogs »

Here are posterous posts filed under gestures...

aliceayel says...

This week, in Spanish, we worked on a conversation between a mum and his son about his new girlfriend. The mum wants to know about his son's new girlfriend and keeps asking him how she looks like (description vocabulary: hair, eyes, size...). And of course, the son doesn't want to say much to her mum. This conversation can be found on Gente Joven 1, a great Spanish textbook I mentioned in an earlier post.

First students listened to the conversation and answered questions about it. Then I gave them some key phrases and expressions from the conversation. Some key expressions applied to the mum "A ver, ¡cuentame!" "¿Como es?", "¿Es guapa?"..., others applied to the son "¡Pero mama!", "si, es muy, muy guapa", "Es morena, alta y delgada"...
Students worked in pairs and had to say the phrases with the correct pronunciation and gestures. I let them repeat and repeat the phrases to really get into their roles and pretend they were Spanish people (very loud and with lots of gestures!). Despite the fact the task was quite repetitive, the students really enjoyed repeating the phrases with the correct pronunciation.

Finally, once they got into their roles, I asked students to prepare their own conversations using some of the phrases they repeated as well I using their own. I told them they were going to be recorded and marked on their pronunciation, fluency and the correct use of feminine and masculine words. Students really got engaged and worked hard to prepare and rehearse their presentations.

The following lesson, I recorded students' conversations. Whilst, they were being recorded the other groups would mark them on pronunciation, fluency and the correct use of feminine and masculine words. At the end of each recording, we would discuss the performance. I noticed students would always remain positive in their comments but would also be sharp on incorrect sentences
.
I was extremely pleased with students' performances and I could really see they enjoyed doing the task. I posted their recordings on the school blog and I have asked them to post some comments.

What about you? have you experienced a fun and engaging speaking task?

Filed under: gestures

claw says...

LINK: Peek behind the curtain of Nokia's design studio in London

Great little videos giving us a glimpse of the design process at Nokia London as well as their approach into designing their iconic headsets.

I have embedded two of best videos below.

 "Interview with Nokia designer Mark Delaney" talks about how they evaluate and design form. The part where he places the phones on the mood boards as validation that it works is pretty cool. I am also a proud owner of the Nokia 6300 and I had no idea it sold over forty-seven million units!

"Exploring mobile gesture design at Nokia" is also quite interesting as we see Younghee Jung go around London talking to people about potential new gestures. The bit at the end is exciting and I'm glad Nokia is exploring interesting new interactions.




 

Filed under: gestures

Karthi says...

Along with Opera's new acid test 3 beating browser Opera 10 (beta) and Opera Unite webserver on a browser, there's some other nifty features too. While 'another beta browser' is not all that exciting, Opera are further developing their gesture based input options, enhancing their mouse gestures and now adding webcam 'facial gesture' as a browser control method.

Filed under: Gestures

rickwilliams says...

There's some great insight in this article and some genius interactions.

Well worth a read and a watch. With handsets being crammed full of sensors (the new iPhone will have a compass) it opens up tons of opportunities.

Filed under: gestures