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Podcasts: Connections for students through listening and producing Lucius Von Joo Kanda University of International Studies, Japan Lucius Von Joo currently teaches at Kanda University of International Studies, Japan. He holds an Ed.M. in Comparative and International Education and has teaching experience in deaf education, elementary education and EFL/ESL in California, Japan and New York. His research interests include computer assisted learning, film and documentary content-based learning, student educational backgrounds and learning approaches, video-cued multi-vocal ethnography, and family and communities as educators. E-mail: lucius-v@kanda.kuis.ac.jp

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odcasts are a very enjoyable resource that . for this Tech Talk I will focus on something that brings delight to both me and my classes. Podcasts are an endless resource for hearing new ideas and thoughts, and can be both passively soothing and actively engaging. The world of podcats has grown to a point of collective thought and unlike videos or online articles we move through on a more linear pace following the host’s ideas. This Tech Talk will be separated into 5 sections on the topic of podcasts: 1) Podcast players; 2) Podcast producing; 3) Frequency and use of word; 4) Circumlocution for when you don’t know the word to express a concept; 5) Game applications that have vocabulary incorporated in them. Just as in the former Tech Talk, the sections can be read independently or as a set. For each section, I will be mentioning the best applications I have found and ways in which they could be incorporated for individual and classroom settings.

1) Flashcards There are many different types of flashcard applications with different strengths and weaknesses. As with most Tech Talks I have tried to focus on applications that are free so if the method does not work or the app is being used for an entire class there is no money lost in trying. The three aspects for flashcard apps that I focus on are premade flashcard libraries, apps that allow you to make your own cards, and apps that are test specific. A few of the applications have all three of these features so I have listed them in multiple areas. I did this so that the applications are seen as a tool for something you want to accomplish as opposed to a distracting platform to navigate. Flashcard libraries Some flashcard applications have their own premade flashcard libraries and others use a

Independence 67 IATEFL Learner Autonomy Special Interest Group Newsletter 1


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