On Sat Jul 10, 2010, Mark Swindell mdswindell at cruzio.com wrote:

Has anyone developed any vocabulary/ language learning stacks in Rev? Seems like an apt application for the tool, but I didn't see anything in revOnLine. Picture dictionary type things with rollovers for different languages? Remember those First Thousand Words books with contextualized drawings showing vocabulary for the kitchen, barnyard, garden, etc.?


We had been discussing such things on this list - and the "education-revolution" list <http://mail.runrev.com/pipermail/education-revolution/> (last entry Feb 2007) - when Marielle Lange was still with us.

At our institutution we are using a set of language exercises "Language Suite" developed with Metacard/Revolution. The format of the exercises is more "traditional" , having a distant similarity to the language programs of Wida Software <http://www.wida.co.uk/noframes/index.htm>.

Our "Language Suite" has until now not been released publicly. Maybe we should present some examples in the near future.

An overview of the "Language Suite" - although only in German - can be found here
<http://www.sanke.org/MetaMedia/LanguageSuite.htm>.

Among the exercises are such based on the "cloze" principle with "fill-in" and "drag.and-drop" variants, other types of "text reconstruction" (scrambled paragraphs, lines, words - along with the old "Sequitur" format (originally developed on the C 64) where a text is complemented by adding the next line being chosen from 4 multiple-choice lines), and a number of word-based exercises (words and definitions in the same language, bi-lingual word exercises, multiple-choice and memory formats).--

A number of language-learning related stacks - not belonging to the "Language Suite" - can be found and downloaded from my website <http://www.sanke.org/MetaMedia>, but I am not sure whether these stacks run flawlessly with the newer versions of Rev. There are meant as "sample stacks" for students who engage in educational programming. Other stacks were reactions to specific discussions on this list.

Examples.

- <http://www.sanke.org/Software/Animals-drag.zip>

Drag-and-drop exercise with animal pictures and translations of the corresponding names.

- <http://www.sanke.org/Software/ImageAndWords.zip>

Learning words through pictures in five different versions: Wordshow, Move and Click, Test and Learn, Test with Loop, Final Test. Basic part of the stack is an image with polygon overlays corresponding to the outlines of objects. Mode "Test with Loop" is an example for an instructional programs that allows the repetition of unsolved problems.

- <http://www.sanke.org/Software/MultipleChoice.zip>

This stacks contains 7 different formats of multiple-choice questions, arranged in "incremental" steps from a primitive version with fixed positions of solution and distractors (which should be avoided by all means) to a version with flexible positioning with the option to choose the number of problems from a repertoire and a "loop" for unsolved problems. After all problems have been worked on, the user gets the option to try the "wrong" problems once more etc. Thus the programs adapts to the individual needs of the user.

- <http://www.sanke.org/Software/SimpleWordScramble.zip>

A simple "word-scramble" exercise with various forms of learner support and the possibility to edit the "lexicon".


- <http://www.sanke.org/Software/HypertextAnnotations.zip>

Two versions of "annotations" using "linkclicked" or "clicktext". Clicking on words set to "bold" or "link" will display an "annotation" field near the word containing additional information (translation, definition etc.). The annotated words are defined in a glossary field.

- <http://www.sanke.org/Software/Wordmatch.zip>

The main purpose of this stack is to demonstrate how the findings of the discussion in thread "Dynamic labels for buttons with (oddshaped) icon images?" on the use-revolution list in Feb 2009 could be applied to a practical example. From the two "help" buttons:

"Drag a green button with mousedown to one of the yellow frames.

If the label of the red button to the right of the frame is the correct translation, the dragged button will move into the frame on mouseup.
If it is incorrect, then the dragged button will return to its former place.

Button "vocabulary" randomly selects six pairs of matching words from the hidden field "Lexicon".

Button "repeat" distributes the currently selected matching words differently to allow further training with the same words, thus eliminating the so-called "position effect"".-----

Kind regards,

Wilhelm Sanke, Prof. emeritus
University of Kassel, Germany
Educational Technology

<http://www.sanke.org/MetaMedia>

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