A
Japanese businesswoman taking TOEFL preparation classes at a U.S. intensive English
program becomes gravely ill with stress over the test. A group of oral
communication students request that their obstinate Italian classmate be
removed from their project team. A new composition teacher is frustrated when a
colleague refuses to end his class on time or erase the blackboards before
leaving the room. These are among the 40 cases of professional dilemmas
described in this useful book for new teachers of adult second language
learners.
Business
and law students thrive on discussing case studies, brief stories that capture
a critical incident without an obvious solution. Now there is finally a book of
case studies for students of TESOL, reflecting the distinct concerns of
teaching adult learners of English in North American institutions. These
stories require readers to draw on their broader understanding of intercultural
communication, U.S. academic norms, and ethical practices in discussing
potential resolutions to the problems.
Each
case is told as a narrative, naming the student and teacher participants and relating
the incident in detail up to the point where it requires a resolution. A series
of discussion questions follows the story, asking readers to reflect on aspects
of the case and how it could be resolved. The next section of each chapter
briefly describes two or three different but related cases that present similar
dilemmas. Further discussion questions ask readers to reflect on broader issues
represented by the set of cases taken together. Next, several activities are proposed
to deepen novice teachers’ understanding of the chapter’s cultural or
professional issue focus, followed by several recommended book and article readings.
Each chapter concludes with a narrative possible resolution to the initial
case.
These
cases are appropriate for use in TESOL teacher preparation programs with
students at the undergraduate, graduate, or certificate level. They would make
good fodder for discussion at in-service workshops for more experienced
teachers as well. Individual teachers can also benefit from reflecting on the
discussion questions, particularly if they have had similar dilemmas in their
own work. One way to access the material in a group discussion would be through
role-playing the featured cases, taking on the parts of the participants and
dramatizing the scenarios to make the issues more immediate. Students could
also share their findings from further research activities through
presentations for the classmates or at local conferences.
As a
teacher educator, I was impressed by the book’s primary focus on the range of
real-world situations language teachers face, often in situations beyond the
North American university setting. The authors explain that the cases are based
on true stories that they have experienced or heard about during their
extensive teaching careers. The students and teachers seem like real people in
real classrooms. Though the settings represented vary from intensive English
programs to community college and universities to community adult schools, the
issues are often universal to adult newcomer language learners in any of these
settings in the United States or Canada—and are relevant to language programs
in other countries as well. Many cases show professional situations that usually
are not central to language teaching methodology courses in graduate school,
for example, grading students fairly whose parents have made financial
contributions to the university, or addressing uncooperative colleagues. The
discussion questions are carefully worded to ensure that novice teachers can
connect the specific cases to knowledge gained from observations and
coursework, regardless of prior teaching experience.
The
design of the chapters contributes to the value of this book in developing a
sense of the nuances inherent in ethical teaching. As mentioned before, each
scenario describes a specific case in detail and is followed by shorter
descriptions of related cases that may elicit different responses. For example,
Case 6 narrates the story of an advanced oral communications class where one
student refuses to participate. The extension scenarios present cases of a
husband and wife in the same class, an overly talkative student, and a student
who relies on his friend to translate. The reflection questions ask readers to
weigh the pros and cons of various aspects of class participation, including
cultural differences and nonverbal participation.
The
primary drawback of this book is that the focus is mainly on university-level
students in intensive English programs and college classes. Although many TESOL
students do plan careers in North American college settings, others want to
work internationally or teach other populations of learners. Future books of
case studies for TESOL teacher development could focus on other contexts where
new teachers may work: K–12 schools, adult community schools, or international
settings. Similarly, the focus is much more on cultural and personal issues
that teachers might face—what the authors call “issues that go beyond the curriculum”
(p. xi). It would be useful to have a companion book focused on the dilemmas of
teaching language and content, such as how to balance responding to student
writing with teaching students how to self-edit.
This
book would make a perfect supplement to any TESOL teacher education program and
also deserves a place on the reference shelf in all language program resource
rooms. I hope that the authors consider writing companion volumes addressing
the related issues and contexts noted above.
Betsy Gilliland is an
assistant professor in the Department of Second Language Studies at the
University of Hawaii, Manoa. She has taught English classes in the United
States and Central Asia since 1996. Her research interests are in second
language writing and adolescent literacy. |