SPLIS Newsletter - September 2020 (Plain Text Version)
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STUDENT-LED DISCUSSION IN TEACHER TRAINING AND INTENSIVE ENGLISH PROGRAMS: ENHANCING LISTENING, SPEAKING, AND CONFIDENCE
Although there are a plethora of teaching strategies that target intrinsic motivation and higher order thinking, few are as effective as student-led discussions. Research shows a majority of students report feeling much more motivated to complete the task at hand when given the opportunity to freely discuss the ideas of the class in relation to the content being taught (Brisbin 2015). Through thematic units in an intensive English program (IEP) as well as culturally sustaining pedagogy courses in graduate level programs, I have successfully organized student-led discussions and projects. This results in enhanced confidence and motivation, leading to greatly improved listening and speaking skills. The following are examples of these successes. Jiangsu Education Department of China: Teacher Training In the summers of both 2017 and 2019, I had the opportunity to participate in 2 weeks of teacher training (mostly EFL) throughout Jiangsu province, China. In this program, approximately 200 teachers come from all over Canada, Australia, and the United States. Teachers are paired together to teach 5 hours a day, 5 days a week (30 students per class). Teachers prepare lessons, but an advanced curriculum is also given to the instructors by the Jiangsu Education Services for International Exchange. The focus is on both English improvement and teaching strategies for Chinese English teachers. As a 1-day project, I selected two topics: the origin and meaning of an important symbol/or item from the student’s culture and a Chinese fairy tale/fable. Students were told that it was then their responsibility to “educate” the class on one of these two topics. They had to
I found that this lent itself perfectly for use in an EFL classroom or a classroom with little to no country diversity, because students all share the same language/culture. The goal, however, is to speak and present in the target language, a challenge any EFL instructor can appreciate. An added bonus is that the foreign teacher learns more about the local culture and language. New York City Teaching Fellows: Teacher Training In the summer of 2018, I taught in the New York City Teaching Fellows program. These are graduate level courses leading to teacher certification and a master’s degree with courses offered at many universities. Students in this course seek an MS degree in special education or urban education. The specific course I taught was TAL 802: Language and Literacy (a second year course for students in this program). The primary texts in this course were Delpit and Kilgour Dowdy’s (2008) The Skin That We Speak, and Paris and Samy Alim’s (201 7) Culturally Sustaining Pedagogies, both superb texts with strong, engaging passages. Though I believe these texts are perfect for the course, I wanted students to engage with them, by not only reading and discussing them, but also by challenging their classmates to do so. In each session, students (pairs or groups) were responsible for facilitating a discussion on one of the required readings for that day. The goal was for them to help their classmates clarify the authors’ ideas, concepts, and terminology; facilitate a critical discussion; and use this discussion to build on experience and established theories in a way that helps inform their practice as educators. Students were put into groups or pairs and asked to share an outline of their class presentation with me at least 2 days in advance. Their outlines were supposed to include the following:
Rubric ___/2 Shared an outline with the professor at least 2 days before the scheduled
facilitation. The essential components of these discussions included both ample preparation time for student leaders and constant feedback from me during the preparation phase. The presenters emphasized the importance of knowledge and practice with relevant thematic terminology, dynamic and participatory group work, and connecting the topics to other course readings and everyday experience. Throughout these group presentations, I noticed that student leaders pulled out concrete, specific examples from previous classroom discussions. The class was consistently motivated during the whole semester and we shared many stimulating conversations related to these texts. Nassau Community College: Intensive Immersion Program I currently teach full time in an IEP at Nassau Community College. Within this context, I participated in a Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL) project with my advanced level class in the fall of 2016. The students collaborated with Universidad La Salle Noroeste in Sonora, Mexico to complete this “World Facts” project. Group work consisted of two students each from the United States and Mexico (four students total). The goals for this project were to increase speaking and listening competencies in English while preparing and delivering a project in two countries simultaneously. In this case, my IEP students (with varying first languages) partnered with Marketing 101 students from Universidad La Salle (all native Spanish speakers). Students chose a topic from the Marketing 101 syllabus (geography, religion, sustainability, etc.). Students then led a class discussion related to the topic and presented their background information. Finally, students were required to submit a written research paper to accompany their presentation. To complete this presentation and final paper, students had to
This project was completed over several weeks in the semester and at the conclusion of the semester, my students all scored highly on their final listening exam. In addition, many expressed to me their pride in the project and in their newly acquired communicative skills.
Concluding Thoughts Through my experiences in ESL, EFL, and teacher training, I have found student-generated and student-led projects and discussions to be incredibly meaningful to students and effective in increasing listening and speaking competency. References Brisbin, M. (2015). Using student-led discussion strategies to motivate, increase thinking, create ownership, and teach citizenship. Master of Education Action Research Projects. Paper 1. http://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/actionresearch/1 Delpit, L., & Kilgour Dowdy, J. (2008). The skin that we speak. The New Press. Paris, D., & Alim, H. S. (2017). Culturally sustaining pedagogies. Teachers College Press.
Ashley Fifer holds master’s degrees in both Spanish and TESOL from NYU. Currently, she teaches in an intensive language program at Nassau Community College, where she has been for 14 years. She has been a regular presenter at several New York State TESOL, Long Island ESOL, and international TESOL conferences. |