OK, in the last post, I did nothing but whine and complain about things. It’s not all bad, it’s just a lot to deal with. In all honesty, the classes themselves been loads of fun and I actually have learned quite a bit. We covered quite a lot of material this week, as you can probably imagine:
Textbook Evaluations
Evaluating and adapting materials and lesson plans
Teacher’s beliefs and training
and of course a lot of theory concerning international culture
And that’s mostly just the book-learning and classroom stuff. We have a great deal of student contact as well. I was surprised to find that so much time is actually spent with real students, not just learning from books and lectures. That’s what I want to really talk about this time.
Monday: Breakfast tutoring in our”Workshop” class, LEAP students (again, they are the people here to learn English) come in for tutoring, help with homework, or just to talk. The teacher brings in breakfast, bagels and such, and they can eat and talk. This past Monday was the first time, and the turnout was poor, but I think it will pick up next time.
Tuesday: During the workshop class, from 8:30-10:00, the LEAPers come in as a full class and work on whatever our teacher has planned. This is a regular class for them, and we are there to help them through the assignments and just talk to them.
Wednesday: We don’t do students on Wednesday, that’s just our time for uninterrupted classroom stuff.
Thursday: Much like Tuesday, but this time WE do the teaching. The TEFLers (teachers in training) work in groups to develop lesson plans and do little ten minute mini-lessons. We are videotaped, and can watch ourselves on tape to improve. Everyone also evaluates everyone else, so there are LOTS of opinions on our lesson and teaching style. We’ve only done this once so far, but it will be a regular thing on Thursdays from now on. This time my partner and I did an activity concerning difficulties talking on the telephone. We acted out scripted phone calls and involved the students in talking about problems they have had with the phone. Since you cannot see the other person’s mouth or body language n the phone, many people learning English have trouble on the phone. It was fun, and I think we did pretty good for our first time.
Friday: This is our Practicum day, where we sit in on the LEAP classes and watch their regular teachers and how they deal with the classes. I watched two different writing classes this week. I’m not going to go into details, but it was interesting to see how these students are both quite advanced and very crude in their writing. It’s an interesting combination. At lunchtime on Fridays, we have “Lunch with the LEAPers,” where the TEFLers gather in the lobby of one building andmeet unofficially with LEAPers needing help. There was some kind of big test in one of the classes this Friday, and several of the students wanted some clarification and help on test material.

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