NATE means advanced methods of education. The National Association of Teachers of English is the
national professional body representing teachers of English throughout
Russia. NATE Russia promotes excellence in language learning, teaching,
and research by providing opportunities for those involved in language
education to meet, share, and collaborate. However, the educational
landscape is changing; the present day teacher faces more challenges
that he/she faced in earlier times. The rapid development of knowledge,
demands the creation of qualitative teacher who in turn, will help to
strengthen a knowledge society to meet the challenges of globalization
and mold the society keeping in view the values and traditions.
NATE Russia means new ways to learn other cultures
through learning the language. “Our job (as language teachers)
is challenging, confusing, and scary because we are leading our
students into an alien, strange world which is not only full of hidden
traps but also changing non-stop. And the world is alien and hostile to
both – the teacher and the student. In this case, nothing helps more
than well-educated, thoughtful teacher who loves both – what and whom he
teaches and is supported by professional association” (S.G.
Ter-Minasova).
NATE means the team is better for doing great things
than individuals. Every individual member of the professional
society gets access to unique teaching materials: author’s methods and
courses, teaching aids and real cases, all knowledge of NATE for
effective organization of educational process, conference materials such
as a set of articles, presentations, etc.
NATE Russia holds annual conferences for teachers of English in
Russia. English language teaching professionals and scholars from
around the world join the most significant and renowned event in the
sphere of EL teaching. NATE conference aims to explore new educational
approaches and current trends in ESL/EFL teaching and learning in a
dynamically changing environment.
It is a great tradition to arrange NATE conferences in
different parts of the country on different topics but with one main
goal to keep teachers up-to-date with new trends in TEFL, professional
development, provide unique opportunity to meet with colleagues and
native speakers and become a part of professional national and the
international community. Nineteen different cities hosted NATE
conferences, among them Moscow four times, Voronezh three times, Samara
two times, Kazan, Chelyabinsk, Smolensk, Vladivostok and so on and so
forth.
NATE jubilee convention was held in St. Petersburg on April
17-19, 2019. To celebrate NATE achievements, more than 400 participants
came to the conference. Outstanding foreign and Russian specialists
presented plenaries, reports, and workshops. Participants of the
milestone 25th NATE conference reviewed its
history and the role of the association in the development and sharing
of best practices and know-how in the sphere of English language
teaching.
We covered such topics as:
- CLIL & EMI: challenges and achievements
- ESP & EAP
- Teaching Soft Skills in the context of EL curriculum
- Teaching Russian as a foreign language
- Enhancement of EL level through extracurricular activities at school
- EL level assessment (OGE, EGE, Cambridge exams, TOEFL)
- Current trends in applied linguistics
“The daughter” of NATE conference – Umbrella started in 2000 in
Pskov and went on in Kolomna, Ryazan, Tula, Kursk, etc. Nizhny Novgorod
will host Umbrella conference on September 26 – 29, 2019. Leaders of
regional associations will come to present the results of their work on
current projects and discuss the ideas of coming ones. Generally,
leading foreign specialists and NATE Russia experts arrange professional
development workshops for local teachers of English and other educators
at Umbrella meeting. The association supports and encourages local
professional communities.
One of the main achievements of NATE Russia is the official
Journal Focus on Language Education and Research. This international forum is for both invited and contributed
peer-reviewed articles that advance language education at all levels and
current issues and challenges for educational research practice in the
teaching, learning, and assessment. The journal publishes a broad range
of papers covering best teaching practices, experimental results, and
contemporary teaching issues. Focus on Language Learning and
Research is directed to those concerned with the functioning
of language education, including universities, graduate, and
professional schools. It is of primary interest to institutional
researchers and planners, faculty, college and university
administrators.
Types of journal content:
- Relationships between policy, theory, and practice
- Pedagogical practices in classrooms and less formal settings
- English learning/teaching in all phases, from early learners to higher and adult education
- Policy and practice in Russia
- Classroom practice in all its aspects
- Classroom-based research
- Methodological questions in teaching and research
- Multilingualism and multiculturalism
- New technologies and foreign languages
In addition to original research articles, the journal
publishes case studies and reviews of books, media, software, and other
relevant products (http://languageedu.elpub.ru/jour/issue/view/2/showToc).
Teacher’s profession is paradoxical: we teach and learn at the
same time. As Joseph Hubert said to teach is to learn
twice. We have to increase our professional skills
in order to be on the same page with our students. Teaching is terribly
stimulating due to be new every day, and at the same time, “teaching is a
lonely profession. Each of us is a lonely hero or heroine, a fearless
knight fighting dragon-like obstacles, barriers, bureaucracy, and our
language lessons are invariably one-hero-battle, one-actor performance.
However, the best way out of this situation is – surprise, surprise:
professional associations! This is why our motto is “Professionals of
the world, unite!” This is the right way to solve our problems, to
respond to challenges, to clear up our confusions – with the help of
professional associations. This is the best way to overcome our
loneliness, to withstand some unacceptable ideas from numerous
bureaucrats who try to “improve” our work having neither knowledge nor
experience in this kind of activity” (S.G. Ter-Minasova).
References
S.G. Ter-Minasova (2019). Editor’s note. (http://languageedu.elpub.ru/jour/issue/view/2/showToc).
S.V. Sannikova (2019). Crossing into new frontiers by
making teaching a festival.- September 18, 2019, XXV NATE
Jubilee Convention and English Language Expo: 25 Years of Navigating
Through Challenges.
Svetlana Sannikova, is a chairperson of the
NATE Coordination Council and associate professor at South Ural State
Humanitarian Pedagogical University |