As English language teaching professionals, regardless of what
role each of us plays in his or her institution, we are charged with
responsibilities to provide optimal learning conditions for our key
constituents, English language students. Ensuring that faculty members
have the relevant qualifications and experience in what they teach is
necessary. Also, making certain that faculty keep abreast of current
theories and best practices in second language acquisition is of crucial
importance for any language program to fully achieve its stated goals
and missions. Dufour and Marzano (2011) noted that if student learning
is directly related to instructional quality, it seems that the best way
to enhance student achievement is by emphasizing the development of
knowledge and skills of each teacher.
A professional learning community is defined by Dufour, Dufour,
Eaker, and Many (2006) as educators who are committed to working
together to achieve better results for their students. They also
indicated that continuous learning for educators is the key to improved
student learning. Daily teaching activities can be repetitive, tedious,
and boring if classroom teachers do not make a concerted effort to
deepen their professional knowledge and continuously hone their skills
to meet the needs of constantly changing student populations with
diverse linguistic, religious, and cultural backgrounds.
A common assumption among program administrators is that as
English language teaching professionals, faculty members have to take
charge of their own professional development activities and agendas. The
reality is actually far more complex—at least in the context of the
United States, where the vast majority of English language teachers in
most colleges, intensive English programs, and other English language
teaching institutions are part-timers, even if they wish to be full
time. They are mostly highly qualified, dedicated teachers and heartily
wish to be employed full time so they can fully contribute to their
respective institutions, but the harsh reality of working part time
seems to have robbed them of their deserved benefits and financial
stability, which in turn affects their active and full participation in a
wide range of available opportunities for professional development such
as attending regional and national conferences in teaching English to
speakers of other languages. Maintaining memberships with professional
organizations could also be a challenge for those who have to save every
dime for their living expenses.
The reason for mentioning the current adversities of most
adjunct or part-time teachers is to show that one of the
responsibilities of English language institutions is to offer its
faculty members, full and part time alike, affordable and doable
opportunities for continuously widening and deepening their professional
knowledge and skills. One of the most important roles of program
leaders is to initiate and sustain teacher learning in various ways.
Each program or institution has its own creative plans for its faculty
professional development that work best for its specific context,
situation, human resources, and financial capacity. What follows are
some activities we have adopted in our program to support our faculty
members.
Continuing professional development, for our program, is a must
for both faculty members and administrators in the program. Although
faculty members are responsible for their own professional development,
our program provides faculty with consistent assistance. Faculty members
are offered opportunities to attend regional and national professional
conferences depending on funding availability. Investing in part-time
faculty members by covering partial or full conference expenses could be
quite costly (and risky, as they may leave our program any time), so we
often give priority to those who have stayed with the program for a
relatively long time and are likely to stay with us for at least a few
semesters. Factors including sustained contribution to the program and
active engagement in program academic and extracurricular activities are
also considered when we make professional development funding
decisions. Moreover, those faculty members who are able to conduct
workshops and training sessions to share what they have learned from the
conferences they have attended are also given favorable consideration.
Administrators in our program share the idea that like faculty members
in the program, we have to lead by example. We commit time to
professional development in various ways similar to those in which
faculty members are involved. We write reports on the conferences we
have attended and orally share what we have learned with our faculty
during meetings to initiate discussions relevant for our classroom
situations.
In-service training sessions, professional reading discussion
sessions, and webinars are also available throughout each semester. Each
faculty and staff member is strongly encouraged to keep an annual
professional development log to allow supervisors to monitor faculty and
staff professional development. Those faculty members who show a high
level of commitment to continuing professional development are given
priority in class assignments, better opportunities to attend
professional conferences, and a possible annual merit pay increase.
In an ambitious effort to give faculty without an MA in TESOL
an opportunity to obtain a TESOL certificate, we received approval to
offer full coverage of the cost of the program to those who wished to
attend. Even those who already possessed the qualification wanted to
participate in the program to refresh their memories and explore some
new ideas from the program. The written and oral reports from the
teachers who have completed the program are highly positive in terms of
teacher professional development and their classroom instructional
quality. One teacher, who was particularly against the use of some
current textbooks available on the market, confessed that the course
enabled her to understand the theoretical underpinnings of current
textbooks. After participation in the program, she was, in fact, fond of
using the materials that she had at first not preferred. Another
teacher indicated that the program gave her a chance to understand the
rationale behind the way she taught. What was encouraging to
administrators was the fact that teachers were able to utilize what they
learned from the program to implement in their own classroom and
reflect on the success of such activities during faculty meetings and
discussion sessions in which each of the faculty members takes turns
leading the session by reviewing an article of relevance to our program
and initiating and facilitating the discussion.
Richards and Farrell (2005) offered 10 different ways for
teachers to develop professionally: self-monitoring, support groups,
journal writing, classroom observation, teaching portfolios, analysis of
critical incidents, case analysis, peer coaching, team teaching, and
action research. Each faculty member in our program may choose a
different method to continue his or her professional development. Some
professional development activities our faculty members have been doing
are peer observations; leading and/or participating in professional
reading discussions; leading and/or participating in in-service training
sessions; developing supplemental instructional materials (e.g.,
handouts, booklets, recordings); taking short courses (paid for by the
program); and attending webinars, workshops, and professional
conferences.
We have long encouraged mentoring in our program by asking new
faculty members to work closely with veteran faculty members to learn
from their wisdom and experience, but we have also seen novice faculty
members who possess better computer and other technical skills help
veteran faculty members use new software programs or improve their
computer skills. Mentoring, therefore, in our program has been a mutual
learning process for both new and veteran faculty members. Continuing
professional development activities are accepted if the faculty members
can offer convincing arguments that what they are involved in helps them
develop professionally to benefit themselves, their students, the
program, and the university. As a program, we strive to achieve our
mission by enabling students to achieve the learning outcomes desired
and by creating an environment where administrators, faculty members,
and students engage in learning. Just as students are responsible for
their own learning, faculty members and their supervisors are charged
with the task of keeping themselves informed of developments in second
language acquisition theories and best practices to create learning
conditions most conducive to student learning and sustained
motivation.
References
Dufour, R., Dufour, R., Eaker, R., & Many, T. (2006).
Learning by doing: A handbook for professional learning communities at
work. Bloomington, IN: Solution Tree Press.
Dufour, R., & Marzano, R. J. (2011). Leaders of
learning: how district, school, and classroom leaders improve student
achievement. Bloomington, IN: Solution Tree Press.
Richards, J. C., & Farrell, T. S. C. (2005).
Professional development for language teachers: strategies for teacher
learning. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
Thu Tran received his MA in TESOL from the
University of Canberra, Canberra, Australia and his doctorate in TESOL
from Alliant International University, San Diego, California. He is the
student program administrator of the Intensive English Program at
Missouri University of Science and Technology, Rolla, Missouri, USA. |