Archive for the ‘speech’ Category

Special ed [heart] Jott

July 15, 2008

You may already know about Jott, a fantastic cell phone service that will convert your voice to text. You may have wondered, “how is this useful for me besides giving me another way to make a shopping or to-do list?”

I wanted to highlight a couple of uses that are especially suited for Special Education. When you see them, you may get some other ideas about how to use this tool. Please leave a comment below to share them.

Jott for documentation

If you are a administrator, resource specialist, or some other provider of services that demand you document your interactions and interventions with students, Jott can save you a lot of time. Here is an example: at my school, we have been implementing RTI (Response to Intervention) the new federal special education (IDEA) model. This involves a lot of documentation of interventions. I introduced my administrators to Jott. Now, after an intervention with a student, they step out to the hall, call Jott, leave a message, and voila - their message is converted to text, and sent to their email, leaving a paper record. I’ve heard of social workers, and others using it in a similar manner. It’s really great for field notes.

Jott for differentiation

One trick I recently learned is that the speech to text goes both ways on Jott. You can have RSS feeds from news sources, or your class blog to Jott, and it will turn it into an audio feed that students can phone in to Jott and hear. This is great for students who have an audio delivery accommodation on their IEP. Instructions for how to do this can be found by scrolling down to Step 6 Mobilecast. -ALICE MERCER

Slideshare on using Jott for RTI documentation

Cellphones in Learning blog

Cell phones in learning wiki

Related Stuff:

Note To Self: Make More Notes To Self

Say it Right the First Time with Pronounce Firefox Extension

June 5, 2008

Do your students need help pronouncing a tricky or unfamiliar word while doing research? Or are you an ESL teacher helping kids with their English pronunciation. If you use Firefox (and you definitely should), you should add the Pronounce extension. Just highlight the word that’s giving your kids trouble, right click and choose “Pronounce” from the menu. Firefox will then speak the word out loud with correct English pronunciation.

We’ve covered pronunciation tools before, such as howjsay. The Pronounce extension has a slight edge for two reasons: since it’s integrated into your browser, you don’t have to go to another website to look up the word, thereby saving you time. And second, the pronunciations come from Merriam-Webster OnLine, so you get the the definitive American pronunciation, as opposed to howjsay’s British pronunciation of words like “aluminum” or “blueberry.” -BILL FERRIS

Pronounce
Pronounce Tells You How to Say It via Lifehacker

Related Stuff:
Say it Like You Mean It–howjsay.com

Potato, Potahto? Before you call the whole thing off, consult Chuala

Can You Read the Words Coming Out of My Screen?

March 18, 2008

Read The WordsReadTheWords.com is a great text-to-speech site that allows users to upload or copy and paste just about any text and have it read aloud by one of several computery voices. You have to create a free account in order to access all the features this site has to offer, but its actually quite a simple process for what you get. You can upload any sort of file you’d like to have read, even HTML or PDFs. Simply wait for the audio to render, and you’ve got a neat little embeddable player that you can preview right then and there. Also, you can download the file as an mp3 for use in your iPod or other portable device.

This is a great resource for the visually impaired, but it has the potential to be a great learning tool as well. I’m not saying you should, but you could possibly make your own audio books, if you were so inclined. It could also be a great way to break into podcasting or be a great addition to any blog. Once your recordings are saved, they are then stored in an online file management system, appropriately titled “My Recordings.” Here, you can manage and download what you’ve done, or try out some more of the 15 available voices. Personally, I like Elizabeth. -JEREMY S. GRIFFIN

ReadTheWords.com 

Word Central is Awesometastic*

November 15, 2007

Word CentralWith all the shorthand OMG LOL business happening in children’s lives, sites like Merriam-Webster’s Word Central help to rectify the damage that has been done. Here, youngsters can get a leg up on building their own vocabulary while having fun. There are a couple of games, including Robo-Bee, which tests users’ language skills and word choice, and BIGbot where you feed the right vocabulary words to a hungry robot based on the definitions given. You’ll also find a Daily Buzzword with complete archive and an RSS feed to keep your students in the know. And as you might expect from Merriam-Webster, there is a searchable dictionary, thesaurus and rhyming dictionary.

One of the niftiest aspects of the site, though, is the Build Your Own Dictionary. In a pseudo-wiki format, this feature allows users to submit their own words and definitions. Some are hilarious:

juggleglug
Function: verb
Definition: to juggle and drink something at the same time. Example Sentence: That clown sure knows how to juggleglug.

and others are more hilarious, and even rather useful:

smorange
Function: adjective
Definition: extraordinary or special and different from other people but wanting to fit in at times. Word History: decided to make up a word that rhymes with orange

Example Sentence: She is very smorange.

There are some great resources for teachers here, too, including information that answers the question: How do words get in the dictionary? Check out the site to find out. –JEREMY S. GRIFFIN

Word Central

Defeat Poor Arguments with FallacyFiles.org

November 5, 2007

Are you still wasting your time reading Instructify?

The preceding question is an example of a logical fallacy called a loaded question. That is, no matter how you answer, it implies you either were or still are wasting your time here. That’s also not counting the question’s most obvious fallacy since, as we all know, reading Instructify is never a waste of time.

If you’re a speech or debate coach, or are assigning a position paper, send your students to FallacyFiles.org. It presents a veritable rogue’s gallery of logical missteps, red herrings and Argumentum ad Hominem attacks. FallacyFiles will help students identify common logical fallacies so they can avoid using them, and easily refute them when their debate opponent tries to slip one in. Only an idiot wouldn’t send their students to FallacyFiles.org. –BILL FERRIS

FallacyFiles.org

Potato, Potahto? Before you call the whole thing off, consult Chuala

October 23, 2007

My senior year of high school, my family hosted a Thai foreign exchange student. Some mornings I spent the entire ride to school modeling pronunciations for her. She was endlessly fascinated with the sequence of sounds in “oil” (and endlessly frustrated trying to produce them herself) and would have me toil through “boil, broil, coil” ‘til my tongue felt despoiled by the moil of it. I was not always the most patient instructor.

If only I could have offered my eager student the services of Chuala.com, where you can hear looped recordings of standard pronunciations: voila (which looks like it rhymes with “oil” but thankfully doesn’t), tireless tutor. My favorite part of the site is that you’re able to record yourself saying a word and listen to it in comparison to the site’s pronunciation in turn. Students who come across difficult new words in their readings could look them up here, or you could check on the pronunciations of words that have always given you trouble (I practiced with “accompanist”… I never say that right!).

The site offers pronunciations in 9 other languages, so it could potentially be of service in foreign language classrooms. My own searches in Spanish were disappointing, not even the days of the week were offered, but Chuala is a “language community,” so if you find words that are missing you can register to add them yourself.

One word of warning: the woman who speaks the samples is no computerized voice, she’s a total sweet-talker… monitor your time on the site, if you notice yourself looking up words like “cat” you may have fallen victim to her siren song. –MARIELLE PRINCE

Chuala.com

Related Stuff:
Say it Like You Mean It – howjsay.com

Vox Populi–Download Free Audiobooks from LibriVox

October 2, 2007

Whether you’re passing the time on a long commute or powering through a boring novel you have to write a paper on, nothing beats the audiobook. Except of course…wait for it…if it’s a free audiobook. And you can get dozens of those at LibriVox.

LibriVox is an open source project where volunteers record themselves reading books within the public domain. These are then made available for free to anybody with an Internet connection. The LibriVox catalog includes fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and dramatic works. You can find anything from Shakespeare to Shelley to the Sermon on the Mount, so long as it’s not copyrighted anymore. And the nice thing about literature is so much of the good stuff was written a long time ago.

You too can join these novice narrators with just a microphone, some free audio recording software like Audacity, and lots of free time (you can also take the wussy way out by only signing up to read a chapter or two). In addition to letting students catch up on their reading on their iPods, having each student tackle a chapter of The Count of Monte Cristo might be a fun class project.

You’d think LibriVox would have a hard time scrounging up volunteers to record entire books, often an investment of dozens of hours. But if Web 2.0 has taught us anything, it’s to never underestimate people’s desire to hear themselves talk. –BILL FERRIS

LibriVox

Inspire Your Class with the Top 100 Speeches of the 20th Century

September 26, 2007

Spice up your boring well-used history lectures with the most stirring speeches of the last hundred-odd years. American Rhetoric has assembled a list of the Top 100 Speeches of the 20th Century. Each speech includes the full text, and better yet, most have an accompanying .mp3 file.

Lend a sense of immediacy to your American history class by listening to FDR’s Pearl Harbor address. If you’re a speech teacher, having students recite King’s “I Have a Dream” or Faulkner’s Nobel Prize acceptance would be a nice change of pace if you’re sick of hearing them give oral interpretations of Fall Out Boy lyrics.

The list’s one drawback: since the list was compiled by American Rhetoric, we’ll have to look elsewhere for non-American gems by folks like Ghandi and Winston Churchill. Not to mention one of the most incisive commentaries on rhetoric itself, “De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da” by the Police. -BILL FERRIS

Top 100 Speeches of the 20th Century