
When Dr Smidt asked me to give a presentation on Picasa, I accepted without hesitation. I actually LIKE getting up in front of groups, and Picasa is a program I'm so familiar with that I knew I wouldn't get nervous as easily.
In preparation for class, I reviewed in my head what I would talk about, which features I would show, and how best I could show my class how to use it. But something didn't feel right about it. It seemed too bland. Too.... easy.
While I was thinking about other things a few nights before class, I began to imagine what it would be like to be a student with ZERO English skills in an ESL/ESOL setting, trying to learn whatever the teacher was trying to teach. Then it hit me. I could find out first hand, and in the process, I could teach the class how to use Picasa.
Would it be hard? Yes.
Would the students be very confused and wonder what I was doing? You bet.
Would rabid alien monkeys with rocket packs laser guns from outer space descend upon the classroom and hold us hostage for a ten-billion-dollar ransom? Most likely not. But they might.
I decided to do it anyway.
Esther told me it would have been a little bit more effective for me to tell the class what I was doing and why. While I was presenting, I briefly explained that I was trying to mimic an ESL classroom setting, except in Spanish, not in English. In hindsight, it probably would have been easier on the class if I had explained beforehand what I was doing. But it was a LOT of fun, at least for me. I hope the other students enjoyed it too.
After my presentation, I had a chance to discuss with Yosuke his experiences with technology in a classroom setting. I've never taught in a classroom before, so it was fascinating to hear his experiences in a setting and culture unfamiliar to me. In Japan, he was expected to monitor students while a computer "taught" them TOEFL techniques. He felt more like a babysitter than a teacher, which frustrates me a little. I don't think that computers should replace teachers, I think they should help teachers.
And that's all I have to say about that.