TEIS Newsletter - June 2014 (Plain Text Version)
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In this issue: |
Articles PEACE CORPS TEACHING OF ENGLISH AS A FOREIGN LANGUAGE (TEFL) CERTIFICATE PROGRAM PILOT
Peace Corps is currently engaged in a 30-month pilot of the training and professional development program that will lead to Peace Corps’ first-ever Teaching of English as a Foreign Language (TEFL) Certificate. The certificate consists of 120 hours of field-vetted training sessions and practice teaching, followed by 2 years of supervised teaching experience. Curriculum design, field-testing, creation of standards and learning assessments, and an online learning management system have been under way since July 2010. The certificate will prepare Volunteers to teach in a variety of English teaching contexts. The program is being piloted at one post in each of Peace Corps’ three regions beginning in spring of 2014: Armenia, Madagascar, and Nicaragua. The Center for Applied Linguistics (CAL) is the external validator for the program. During the pilot period, CAL will review the content, structure, and management of all aspects of the Peace Corps TEFL Certificate program, along with the effectiveness of training delivery and Volunteer growth as teachers. Later, CAL will provide periodic reviews to ensure that training is up-to-date and rigorous. The Need Two factors drive the need for a Peace Corps TEFL certificate. First, many countries see high-functioning English speaking citizens as a key to accessing the global economy. As a response to this demand, host country partners have increasingly requested “certified teachers.” Peace Corps’ response has been the TEFL Certificate. Second, as this demand for higher competency in English has grown, so has a plethora of private English teaching certificate programs, many of which are of questionable quality and value. A robust training and supervision program validated by a recognized external organization (i.e., CAL) ensures that Peace Corps Volunteers will earn a certificate with professional credibility. TEFL Certificate Goals
The Peace Corps TEFL Certificate Training curriculum is designed to be equal, or superior, to any of the preservice Teaching of English to Speakers of Other Languages/Teaching English as a Foreign Language (TESOL/TEFL) certificates. In addition, the 2 years of supervised teaching experience attests that Volunteers are seasoned, competent English language teachers. In EFL settings where there are no established, widely recognized certificates that validate training and teaching experience, many think that the Peace Corps TEFL Certificate will be perceived as a robust credential. The value of the Peace Corps TEFL Certificate in the United States will be determined when Volunteers in the first pilot programs return to the United States. However, some have suggested that the certificate could provide a minimum credential for entering the U.S. State Department’s English Language Fellows program, and others have suggested it could be seen as a potential credential for positions in university intensive English programs. The TEFL Certificate will bear no college credit, but some institutions may consider (as they do now for returned Volunteers) waiving practicum or student teaching experience. The certificate will be a solid credential to teach in many private English language schools. Training is Required of All TEFL Volunteers at Pilot Posts Participation in the training and supervised teaching experience leading to a Peace Corps TEFL Certificate is required regardless of a Volunteer’s previous credentials or experience. This is primarily because the training represents the professional development that the posts feel necessary and appropriate for TEFL Volunteers teaching in their countries; the training is, only secondarily, required to satisfy requirements for the certificate. The TEFL Certificate curriculum provides some flexibility for those who have already done English language teaching coursework. Because Volunteer success in training is based on meeting standards in a series of learning assessments related to training and not on participating in specific training sessions, those who already have had previous coursework may be able to demonstrate competency on learning assessments without sitting for every related training session. The Structure
Two major components: Training and Supervised Teaching Experience A. Training is approximately 110 hours in duration and includes the following: Predeparture Training
B. Supervised Teaching Experience: Volunteers learn from each other and TEFL project staff in an ongoing, online teacher Community of Practice (six quarterly, 2-hour events)
February 2014–September 2014
Brock Brady is currently education specialist and TEFL lead at Peace Corps headquarters in Washington, DC. A past president of TESOL International, Brady taught and codirected the TESOL program at American University in Washington, DC. A former Peace Corps Volunteer himself, Brady has taught, directed, or consulted for English language teaching programs in more than 40 countries. |