Intercultural rhetoric (IR)—the study of written discourse between and among individuals with different cultural backgrounds (Connor, 2011)—in the teaching context described in this article deals with the treatment of poetry as written discourse for English for Academic Purposes (EAP) students. As readers of specific poems, the students were asked to interpret the poet’s rhetoric. This activity requires critical thinking (CT), which is challenging because students have to go “beyond the level of literal comprehension to a comprehension of the more complex and subtle features of a literary work’ (Lim & Tan, 1990, p. 1). In other words, the students may experience difficulties with this task if they do not think critically while reading poems.
2. Teaching Context and Reasons for Innovation
The context where this study took place suggests that university students in Indonesia are faced with the ideological values of Pancasila, or Five Principles (the Indonesian state philosophy), and their primary concern is to improve their CT. Critical thinking (CT) requires the ability to understand speaker or discursive (writer) meaning rather than language meaning. However, the focus on university-level English instruction on the literal meaning of a text and answering comprehension questions can obstruct critical thinking unless students are introduced to a reading challenge such as that provided by poetry. As a result, students may experience little progress despite effort and hard work in reading poems.
To help university students become critical thinkers, I introduced an innovative IR reading task to develop students' CT skill at an advanced EAP level. The task was geared towards helping students understand a poet’s ideas in an IR context. As the students made sense of the poet’s ideas, they were guided to question the basic assumptions of their society (Hashemia & Ghanizadeh, 2012), including who wrote the poem in the context of English as a foreign language (EFL), as in Indonesia (Collins, 2017), as well as in the context of English as a second language (ESL), as in, for example, Singapore. I conducted this intervention using text reading prompts (TRPs) for five poems—“The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,” “Meeting at Night,” “We’ll Go No More A-Roving,” “Fire and Ice,” and “Noise,” as well as a line from Shakespeare’s Macbeth.
3. IR Reading Task to Build Students' CT
The IR reading task is an intervention procedure introduced into the poetry section my Creative Writing class, poetry section in the second semester...
This article first appeared in TESOL Journal, 12(1), e00524. For permission to use text from this article, please go to Wiley-Blackwelland click on "Request Permission" under "Article Tools."
Meet the Teacher interviews spotlight teachers from all curriculum areas and levels who work toward supporting multilingual language learners. In this first interview, I chat with Rachel Lamb, a chemistry teacher from Auckland, New Zealand.
Rachel, who describes herself as a Welsh migrant to New Zealand, is also the refugee coordinator in her school, who supports the integration and needs of former refugee students. Because she had no previous background in language teaching, she wanted to learn how to best support the students she was responsible for and is currently undertaking a postgraduate qualification in teaching multilingual learners. Read more.
Hello again from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte! In July, I kicked off this teaching reading blog with some thoughts about the categories of “reading” and “literacy” and why they matter for a new school year. For this month’s entry, I’m writing about purpose.Read more.
Teachers of multilingual learners (MLLs) in the United States will be meeting new students from many countries this fall. Recently arrived students from Ukraine, Haiti, Russia, Afghanistan, and Central and South America, to name a few, will be welcomed to our schools by educators of MLLs. Literacy is a key component of how MLLs adapt to schools in the United States, and it is important for teachers to realize that not all newcomers come to us with the same background, especially when it comes to literacy.
Newcomers differ in their level of literacy and their comfort with reading and writing in both their home language and in English. In the United States, about two-thirds of MLLs come from nonliteracy-oriented homes (See Zacarian and Haynes’s book about beginning English learners). In this blog, we’ll look at literacy skills, which include oral reading fluency, reading comprehension, writing, spelling, and speaking. It is important for teachers of MLLs to visit or interview families so that they can discover what role literacy plays in the homes of their newcomers. The programs designed for MLLs from nonliteracy-oriented homes will need to be quite different from those for students from literacy-oriented homes. Read more.
While engaging and motivating students in the classroom has always been critical for student success, it is even more important and challenging in the online learning environment. This practical guide will provide English language educators with a number of strategies and ready-to-use activities to help them engage and motivate their students for improved learner outcomes. It also covers trends in online learning, engagement and motivation principles and competencies, as well as ways administrators can support teachers' professional development. As an additional resource, the book comes with a companion website. **This title also includes a companion website with online resources.
While SEL is becoming increasing critical for learners’ success, teachers often feel unprepared to incorporate or address it in their classrooms. This book serves as a practical, concise, and easy-to-follow reference that English language teachers in K-12 and adult education and English language teacher educators can use in their classrooms. It is one of the limited emerging SEL resources available that is tailored to the English language teaching field and contributes to filling the existing gap of SEL in English language education. Teachers will be equipped with the necessary knowledge and skills to practice self-care and be confident in implementing SEL in their learning spaces to support and benefit their learners.
This book guides educators in teaching young learners (2- to 12-year-olds) in an English as a foreign language setting by using The 6 Principles for Exemplary Teaching of English Learners® as a framework. A core set of principles for the exemplary teaching and learning of English as a new language, The 6 Principles and their recommended practices are targets of teaching excellence that provide teachers with the knowledge to improve instruction and assessment. Instructional techniques are illustrated throughout the book with numerous classroom examples, case studies, checklists, and vignettes.
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