The English Language Teaching Unit (ELTU) Conference was held
at The Chinese University of Hong Kong in 27–28 May 2019. The conference
attracted approximately 130 professionals in the language teaching
field from more than 16 countries. The conference theme, “Alternative
Approaches to English Language Learning and Teaching (ELLT),” included
the following subthemes:
- English across the curriculum, writing across the curriculum, content and language integrated learning;
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eLearning, blended learning, mobile learning;
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peer tutoring, experiential learning, service learning; and
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learner autonomy, independent learning, community of learners, and other alternative approaches to ELLT.
Although it was only a 2-day conference, it offered
participants rich content within regular sessions, poster presentations,
conference workshops, keynote plenaries, and postconference workshops.
During the first keynote session, Professor Richard Andrews
(University of East Anglia, United Kingdom), provided a review of
e-learning and social media approaches to ELLT and shared his
predictions on the future of the field. After analyzing the different
phrases of e-learning development in 1990s–2019, he noted the possible
decline of the English language by 2025, meaning that there will be more
digital resources available in other world languages, such as Chinese
and Arabic. The speaker also highlighted the changing nature of the
definition of literacy and suggested that the
creation of digital pages and resources by English language learners
(ELLs) is included in the modern definition of literacy in its highest
level. In contrast, the current understanding of the term is limited to
being able to read and understand resources, with digital resources
being among them. His book Multimodality, Poetry and
Poetics (2018) provides more details on multimodality of
literacy and composition and the ways it has been changing. This keynote
speech would be especially relevant to those who consider or already use e-learning (or some of its elements) in their
teaching.
The second keynote speaker, Professor Pamela Flash (University
of Minnesota, United States), discussed writing-enriched curricula—a
model that uses faculty perceptions on writing to promote pedagogic
changes across curriculum. Specifically, Flash explained how successful
writing projects differ across academic disciplines and how what is
considered “good” writing in the field of geography might contrast with
effective writing pieces in literature. As an example, she demonstrated
how faculty from different departments defined “the ability to analyze”
in different fields as one of the key outcomes of a writing project. In
physics, “to analyze” means “to report unanticipated or contradictory
findings,” whereas in philosophy it shows how students “explicate the
logic.” The speaker also outlined how undergraduate writing plans are
shaped by content faculty at the University of Minnesota and other
universities across Europe and the United States and how writing can be
weaved throughout every undergraduate degree. This kind of long-term
initiative enables faculty to interrogate, implement, and assess
field-specific writing practices, values, and expectations and, most
important, puts change in the hands of unit faculty. Writing-enriched
curricula can be applicable to any institution and department that is
striving to ensure an intentional integration of relevant writing
instruction into diverse educational programs.
The final keynote speaker, Professor David Little (Trinity
College Dublin, Ireland), discussed language learner autonomy. He
defined plurilingualism as “the ability of individuals to communicate in
two or more languages,” and contrasted it with multilingualism, which
is used to denote “the presence of two or more linguistic varieties in a
society.” As a chair of the National European Language Portfolio
Committee and a consultant and contributor to various aspects of the
Council of Europe’s Modern Languages Projects, Little explained the
centrality of plurilingualism to the Council of Europe’s work and argued
that it is likely to develop if ELLs are taught with dialogic target
language use, learner involvement, and learner reflection. Theoretical
framework, principles, and examples used in the presentation are
described in more detail in the book Language Learner Autonomy:
Theory, Practice, and Research (Little, Dam, &
Legenhausen, 2017). The keynote session and the book itself would be
relevant to all educators who aim to develop students’ plurilingual
repertoire so that their oral and written proficiency in English grows
together with their home language(s) and all languages in the individual
student’s repertoire are immediately available for use in speech and in
writing.
Other conference sessions offered theoretical frameworks with
practical suggestions for ELLT, intercultural communication with
multilingual and international students, examples of writing and
speaking prompts, and ways to promote writing and revision in class.
Some sessions also introduced digital ELT resources, such as the Ask Me
Why: Grammar Tutor website and the Language Learning With Netflix tool,
among others, and discussed their pros and cons. Sessions about
alternative approaches to ELT covered teaching English with manga (Japanese comic books and graphic novels) and
comics, multimodal projects, and self-assessment assignments. Overall,
ELTU 2019 allowed participants to meet not only successful TESOL
professionals, but also ELT practitioners who work at the crossroads of
different disciplines, curricula, and methods. Participation in ELTU
would benefit anyone who works with multilingual and international
students in the United States as well as English language learners of
all levels around the world.
At the conference, I attended presentations from colleagues
from other countries, as well as got inspiration for my own classroom
planning and future research projects conducted at the intersection of
different disciplines. The conference theme as well as subthemes were
closely related to my current position at Bowling Green State University
as an English Department assistant teaching professor and ESOL
specialist at the Learning Commons writing center, and the ELTU
Conference was of great help to me as I am balancing different projects,
roles, and teaching methods linked to writing across the curriculum, a
sequence of ESOL writing classes for graduate and undergraduate
students, and interaction with multilingual and international students.
At the ELTU Conference, I mostly attended writing-related sessions to
help me prepare for my new classes. I also got an insight into cultural
and educational background of Chinese and Japanese students, including
their writing conventions and how they are different from those of
English speakers. These sessions as well as the fact that the conference
was held in Hong Kong, where working and personal relationships have
conventions different from those in the United States, would be useful
to anyone interested in developing expertise in the field of
intercultural communication.
References
Andrews, R. (2018). Multimodality, poetry and poetics. New York, NY: Routledge.
Little, D., Dam, L., & Legenhausen, L. (2017). Language learner autonomy: Theory, practice and
research. Bristol, UK: Multilingual Matters.
Anastasiia
Kryzhanivska is an English Department assistant teaching professor and a
writing center ESOL specialist at Bowling Green State University, where
she teaches Introduction to Linguistics, English, and ESOL classes,
including Writing, Speaking, and Listening. |