mcer

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EDUCACION SECUNDARIA OBLIGATORIA Sergio Pérez [email protected]

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Primera sesión 05/04/2010

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Page 1: MCER

EDUCACION SECUNDARIA OBLIGATORIA

Sergio Pé[email protected]

Page 2: MCER

OBJETIVOS DEL MÓDULO

• Elementos clave MCER• El concepto de descriptor

MCER• Parámetros habilidades• Proyectos ELE• Tendencias TI• Rúbricas y portfolio

Page 3: MCER

¿QUÉ ES EL MER?

• ¿Posible objetivo?• ¿Elementos?• ¿Qué son las tablas de

referencia?• ¿Para qué podrías utilizarlas?• ¿Qué es una tarea y qué es una

actividad?

Page 4: MCER

Task, activity, strategy

Thus someone who has to move a wardrobe (task) may try to push it, take it to pieces so as to carry it more easily and then reassemble it, call on outside labour or give up and convince himself or herself that it can wait until tomorrow, etc. (all strategies). Depending on the strategy adopted, the performance (or avoidance, postponement or redefinition) of the task may or may not involve a language activity and text processing (reading instructions for dismantling, making a telephone call, etc.). [from CEFR]

Page 5: MCER

A strategy

• is any organised, purposeful and regulated line of action chosen by an individual to carry out a task which he or she sets for himself or herself or with which he or she is confronted.

Page 6: MCER

Strategy

• Planning Rehearsing; Locating resources; Considering audience; Task adjustment; Message adjustment.

• Execution: Compensating; Building on previous knowledge;Trying out.

• Evaluation: Monitoring success.

• Repair: Self-correction.

Page 7: MCER

A task

• is defined as any purposeful action considered by an individual as necessary in order to achieve a given result in the context of a problem to be solved, an obligation to fulfil or an objective to be achieved.

Page 8: MCER

Task

• moving a wardrobe, writing a book, obtaining certain conditions in the negotiation of a contract, playing a game of cards, ordering a meal in a restaurant, translating a foreign language text or preparing a class newspaper through group work.

Page 9: MCER

Language activities

• involve the exercise of one’s communicative language competence in a specific domain in processing (receptively and/or productively) one or more texts in order to carry out a task.

Page 10: MCER

Activities

• translation/mediation, verbal negotiation with a classmate, letter or verbal excuses to the teacher,

Page 11: MCER
Page 12: MCER

SPOKEN INTERACTION

Page 13: MCER

GIVING DIRECTIONS