Look at WebQuest templates to learn more about its structure.
For the final design and publishing of your WebQuest, you may:
use questgarden or zunal:
http://questgarden.com/
http://www.zunal.com/
Read the registration and free use conditions first.
You can download and install phpwebquest generator:
http://eduforge.org/projects/phpwebquest/
Or download a template and use it:
http://www.educationaltechnology.ca/resources/webquest/templates.php
http://webquest.sdsu.edu/LessonTemplate.html
Do not forget that your finalised WebQuest MUST be available online!
Compulsory components of a WebQuest:
1. Target group (age, proficiency)
2. Objectives - what will the students learn? (in the fields of the language, realia, co-operation, creativity...)
3. Final product - what will be the result of the work? (a web page/site, a poster, a presentation, an essay, a dramatisation...)
4. Motivation (the background story, creativity, autonomy...)
5. Timing - how much time for the whole project, how much for each sub-task?
6. Organisation - suggest the ways of co-operation if necessary
7. Links - present valid, reliable, relavant sitesm written in good English.
8. Feedback - at certain phases the work should be checked by the teacher, or sub-tasks presented, to make sure that the group is on the right track.
9. Evaluation - inform your students at the beginning about the evaluation criteria;
Check your LANGUAGE carefully. The instructions should be correct, very clear and rather brief.
Include all the sources you used into the REFERENCES part.
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Komentáře k příspěvku (Atom)
Great web page!
OdpovědětVymazatI went through it and I found it really useful. Great ideas how to make a lesson catchy.
I attended an ICT course for English teachers. If you are interested in our work, just have a look.
https://sites.google.com/site/ict4eltboh/Home/about/participants
With greetings Veronika