The English Teachers’
Association Israel (ETAI) has reached a significant milestone
this year. ETAI has been around for 40 years – not just been around,
but growing, improving and advancing. In 1979 the Chief Inspector for
English, Raphael Gefen, together with a group of enthusiastic teachers,
put forward the idea of an organization focusing on the professional
development of the country’s English teachers. And so, ETAI, the English
Teachers’ Association of Israel, was born. ETAI works in close
cooperation with the Inspectorate of the Ministry of Education in Israel
and holds joint professional development events.
ETAI is unique of its kind, embracing various ethnic groups and
connecting isolated teachers to their professional body in a
multi-linguistic context. Today, nearly 500 teachers from Christian,
Druze, Cercessian, Muslim, and Jewish background, from all over the
country make up the body of our members. Not only does ETAI unite
teachers cross-culturally, but enables an isolated teacher who is the
sole English professional at his/her school to exchange ideas and
network. Our teachers face daily challenges rooting in the multi-lingual
society that we live in. Let us not forget that a large percentage of
children in Israel are embarking on a journey of learning a third
language. They speak Arabic, Russian, Amharic, Spanish, and other
languages as their first language in their homes and Hebrew as the
language of the nation. ETAI is an essential support for our English
teachers.
ETAI is a grassroots, voluntary
organization concerned with the professional development of
English teachers who work in all sectors and at all levels of education –
elementary, junior high and secondary school, college and university.
ETAI is led by 15 enthusiastic National
Executive Committee members who give of their time and energy,
after school, to organize and speak at conferences and write for the
ETAI Forum (see a detailed description below).
ETAI has been a TESOL affiliate for 27 years, first as
ISRATESOL, and then later as ETAI. Our members presented at
International TESOL Conventions and are actively involved in special
interest groups. Some have even been members of the TESOL Board of
Directors and past Convention Chairs, while others are currently on the
organizing committee of the Doctoral Forum.
Our aim is three-pronged:
i) promoting professional excellence of the English teaching
profession in Israel, and hence the level of English learning by Israeli
students.
ii) ensuring a platform for professional learning communities
where English teachers can provide support for each other and practical
teaching ideas through study days and conferences.
iii) fostering universal humanistic values as an integral part
of teaching English in the Israeli educational system. ETAI sees the
teaching of English as an international language contributing to global
understanding and peace.
ETAI organizes mini-conferences, one, two or even three
day conferences, special events and speakers -
all for the benefit of Israel’s English teachers, and open to teachers
from other countries. The value of professional development cannot be
underestimated, as everyone – new teachers, veteran teachers, and those
in-between – can gain from listening to talks from experts, sharing
ideas with like-minded peers and making new acquaintances. Speakers at
conferences provide their services for free, the majority themselves
being practicing teachers. All of these combine to enable us to define
and improve our own teaching strategies and abilities.
In order to accommodate teachers in all geographical areas,
traditionally our back to school conference takes place in Akko, in the
North of Israel, our spring conference in the South of Israel, and we
hold one winter event in East Jerusalem.
To supplement these major conferences, ETAI holds a number of
‘mini-conferences’ at different times throughout the year. These are
local four-hour events, held after school hours to cater to the needs of
teachers in specific areas. They are free for ETAI members; non-members
pay a small entrance fee.
ETAI is proud to be holding a special 40th-anniversary
two-day summer conference, this year at the Ramat Rachel Hotel and Conference Center in
Jerusalem, July 3-4, 2019. We are especially honored to have raised
widespread international interest: this year we have presenters from
Greece, Poland, Hungary The Czech Republic Serbia, The United States,
and Canada.
In 2015, ETAI established a Special Interest Group
(SIG) dedicated to Teacher Training and Development (TT&D)
catering to college and university instructors, teacher trainers in the
pedagogical centers, inspectors and counselors. One of the aims of the
TT&D SIG is to generate ETAI conference sessions on a higher
academic level for the general teacher population and see more teacher
trainers and college instructors participate in the conference.
TT&D SIG holds two events yearly: one winter study day, in
collaboration with The
MOFET Institute, and one summer event either as a
pre-conference event or as a TT&D SIG strand integrated into our
summer national conference.
ETAI publishes a Newsletter,
called ETAI Forum, three times a year, which is distributed free to
members. This is a journal written by teachers for teachers which
includes a number of practical teaching ideas; photo-copiable classroom
material; ongoing discussions of professional issues; information on
ETAI events; suggestions for useful websites, and more. Its editors work
voluntarily, and contributing authors get no fee for
articles.
Like any other non-profit association, ETAI depends for its
survival chiefly on the membership fees of its members; contributions
from publishers who exhibit at conferences; and registration fees for
conferences from non-members. We do our best to keep both membership and
conference fees as low as possible, taking into account the modest
income of most English teachers.
Celebrating our 40th birthday this summer, we look forward to
the next 40 years to come in the hope of maintaining our close
collaboration with the TESOL International Organization!
Bridget Schvarcz is the vice-president-elect for ETAI
and a teacher educator for the Israeli Ministry of Education, Department
of Professional Development of Teaching Staff. As from Fall 2019,
Bridget holds a faculty position at the Afeka College of Engineering,
where she will serve as the head of the EAP unit. |