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30 ways to use Wordle in your classroom & useful tips.

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1 30 ways to use Wordle in your classroom & useful tips

2 #1 – Use Wordle to write “All About Me” For our growing unit students spent classroom time writing about their strengths. They put these writing pieces in Wordle and made posters and displayed them on the wall.

3 #2 – Use Wordle to create a book quiz Use sights like Project Gutenberg or take the text from copyright free books Paste into Wordle Print and write a quiz – use the Wordle to answer the questions.

4 #3 – Use Wordle to share criteria Copy and paste learning intentions or success criteria for an activity into wordle to highlight the main areas students need to concentrate on to gain the best marks.

5 #4 Discuss reports with Wordle * Copy and paste reports into Wordle. * A good discussion point at the beginning or end of a lesson.

6 #5 – Using Wordle and Etherpad to share success criteria Groups of students use AOs from a unit of work. They work in small groups to identify keywords and terms. Use Etherpad http://etherpad.com/ to collaborate and put in keywords on shared pad. Students then copy their shared list of keywords into Wordle and produce their own Wordle cloud.http://etherpad.com/

7 #6 – Guess the fairytale Copy and paste a fairytale into Wordle Students guess which fairytale it is. – then use it to highlight keywords so students can write their own tales.

8 #7 – Make your unit plan look interesting! *Copy and paste an entire unit plan into Wordle, Print out as A3 (or larger) and use as part of your class display.

9 # 8 – Improve students’ writing... Copy and paste students’ writing into Wordle – compare the results and discuss what has/hasn’t been included.

10 #9 – Study an author’s writing in-depth Discuss what words have been used the most/least

11 #10 - Expectations Have each student write expectations they have of the classroom. Combine all lists in Wordle to create a Classroom Norms poster or class t-shirts

12 #11 – Find out what ideas are most important in a famous speech. Use Wordle to make the “word cloud” from the Prime Ministers speech. Choose a setting to display the 25 most frequently used words. by Hon John Key, Leader. 29 January 2008. 2008: A Fresh Start for New Zealand A State of the Nation Speech

13 #12 – Defining Skills using Wordle Before the dictionary comes out, give your students a new vocabulary word and ask them to brainstorm all the words they associate with it. Gather up all the brainstormed words for Wordle. After the term has been formally defined, repeat the process and compare the “pre- dictionary” Wordle. Source: Build Literacy Skills with Wordle

14 #13 – Summarizing Skills using Wordle As a pre reading exercise – copy/paste text of reading into a Wordle and ask students to predict what the main ideas of the reading will be. Another pre-reading option – give them a Wordle of a non-fiction reading and ask them to use the Wordle to generate a title or headline before they see the real article. Post reading – ask them to reflect on the reading based on a prompt (examples – main idea, what you’ve learned, funniest element, etc). Then collect all their reflections into a Wordle. Source: Build Literacy Skills with Wordle

15 #14 – Comparison Skill using Worlde Comparison skills – Give them two different accounts/essays on the same theme-event – let them compare the Wordles generated by each. Or you could generate Wordles for two different readings – then let the students see if they can match the Wordle to it’s corresponding reading. Two Wordle tips: Once you have created a Wordle right click a term to remove it from the results. Wordle will re-compute without it. Use ~ to connect two (or more) words into one term eg: literacy~strategy Source: Build Literacy Skills with Wordle

16 #15 – Using Wordle for Classroom Polls Very simple Junior school Example..... Talk about favourite colours. Each child then types their favourite colour into the text part of Wordle. The Wordle shows the most favourite colour. Other ideas – birthday month, fav. Animals, hardest spelling word, feeling etc. Could easily be adapted to higher tasks and polls.

17 #16 – Use Wordle to compare/contrast Use Wordle to compare/contrast themes in literature. For example, Romeo & Juliet vs. West Side Story. Copy and paste entire work into Wordle and get results.

18 #17 Act as archaeologists of a text’s vocabulary Wordle can be dynamic not just s t a t i c Paste in a text, then use ‘right click’ to remove words Start with the most prominent (character names and the most common words) See what happens as you ‘excavate’ text and sets of vocabulary. Discuss with them the words that should be removed next.

19 #18 – Analyze Your Presentation Notes Students (or teachers) create a slide presentation. The notes are written in the Notes section of the slide. Once the presentation is ready, all notes are copied and pasted into Wordle. Students can analyze where their words are repetitive (such as like, love, or also) and adjust their notes accordingly. It can be used as a teaser slide at the beginning of the presentation.

20 #19 – Create a Custom Image Header for your Blog Use your class blog url to create a Wordle and use the resulting image header for your blog. Change the header periodically to reflect your blog’s changing themes and content. Source: Michael Fawcett@teachernz

21 #Compare History to Historical Fiction Students often confuse the two. Have them make and compare Wordles – remind them to make the genre title bigger by typing several times. Post to discuss, then post in the library. Can also make Wordles to compare Science Fiction and Fantasy, or Folk Tales (Fairy Tale vs. Tall Tale; Myths vs Fables).

22 #21 – Character Traits Analysis Use Wordle to increase reading comprehension through Character Trait Identification. Write 5 most identifiable and important character traits for any character in text (assign different characters if done in a reading group) Rank Traits from 1-5 of importance/relevance to the text Go to WORDLE Type in Character 10x total then character trait Rank them in order of importance, most important of relevant would be five times and so on down to 1 Screen capture and share on wiki or blog. @mwacker Michael Wacker

23 #22 – Create Wordle Art The Earth Day 2009 Billboard winner - used Wordle! She chose environmental concepts, submitted them to Wordle, and found a style she liked. Once the Wordle was printed, she taped it onto a window & and traces an image of a tree. She drew on additional elements and used felts to colour the whole piece.

24 #23 – Character Description In reading groups have students choose a character and add as many words as they can. Compare results – why do we know more about some characters than others?

25 #24 - Define Characteristics Define what it means to be a New Zealander or a member of a school/class etc. Use Wordle Discuss as a class.

26 #25 Collect Maori vocabulary Write all the words the class knows in Maori at the beginning of the year. Do the same at the end of the year. Compare to see the increase in vocabulary.

27 #26 – Do a “Wordle Walk” Wordle the text of the book you are reading and instead of a “picture walk” do a Wordle walk.” You can introduce frequent vocabulary and let the kids predict the story form the combinations of words they see in the Wordle. Later, you can come back and compare predictions with what students actually read. Source:@fisher1000

28 #27 – Make a Unique Gift If students are preparing for a holiday like Christmas, Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, Valentine’s Day etc. They could Wordle family stories or favourite love songs of their parents or grandparents or just the names of people in their family to create a very personal, but creative and artistic gift that’s suitable for framing. (And its free!)

29 #28 – Compare for Bias/Social Studies Wordle news articles from several sources and compare to look at bias or to evaluate credible sources.

30 #29 – New Levels of Interactivity Wordle a collection of words that represent parts of writing. Change the colours to white on a black background. Screen capture. Get the kids to come and colour the nouns one colour, verbs a different colour, etc.

31 #30 – Power Writing Prompts To encourage writing fluency, incorporate power writing into your daily programme. Enter vocab, science text or poem into Wordle. Display for students as idea prompts. Give think time 30/60 seconds. Then write continuously for two minutes without stopping. Stop. Count words. Repeat two more times. For powerpoint of Power Writing info see http://cli.gs/gLUAJ6http://cli.gs/gLUAJ6

32 Now it’s your turn Put Wordle in your search engine. Click ‘create’ Get creating...

33 Wordle

34 Search Wordle

35 Create

36 Copy the code - CTRL C

37 Wikispaces

38 Go to wikispaces – sign in

39 Click the ‘tv’ – go to ‘other HTML’

40 Paste in the code – CTRL V

41 Wordle is inserted


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