Task 1A: Read
Johnston Chapter 2: Answer Questions 1, 5, and 6.
Also- considering
pages 32-35 ‘The dilemma of Voice in the Classroom’, have you had any
experiences like Mary’s with a student or students who remind you of Young?
Does this chapter shed a new or brighter light on those experiences? If yes,
how?
1.) What rules for
attendance and participation do you have in the classroom? What values underlie
these rules? What oral messages might be sent by them? How else might the rules
be set up?
I don’t check the attendance of my students, nor do I follow
up with the parents why a student was absent. These tasks fall towards my
Korean co-teachers. If a student does walk into the classroom late, I prefer
that they just take their seat as quickly as possible and not interrupt the
lesson. On occasion I have had to discipline students who walked in late,
shouted a greeting to their friend, and then loudly made themselves at home
while interrupting my whiteboard explanation.
As to participation in the lesson, I will try and get as
many students to answer as possible. That said I won’t try and burst one of my
own gaskets by forcing an introvert to give a extrovert answer. I have one student
in my class who will not openly communicate in class other than to whisper in
another student’s ear and have them speak for him. I have another student that
refuses to speak English or Korean, but faithfully completes his written work.
He isn’t being contrary, he is just painfully shy.
5.) Take a look at
the course book you are currently using. How does it position the learners: to
what extent does it encourage their active participation, and to what extent
does it treat them merely as passive receivers of information?
The government text books used at my public school almost
exclusively treat the students as passive learners. They watch short badly
acted video clips of conversations and then repeat that dialogue. I am forced
by policy to design a lesson relating to whatever pages the Korean teachers are
in the textbook. That said, I never use the actual textbook itself.
My second job uses four different levels of the same brand
textbook. “Everybody Up”. It does a
better job of getting the students involved on different levels. It has listen
and point, vocabulary expansion, comprehensions, open questions, and structured
sentence building exercises.
e.g.

6.) Think about the
rules and regulations in force in your classroom that come from your
department, school or institution, school district, state, and so on. Do you
ever go against these rules? In what circumstances? Do you ever find your own
values at odds with the values implicit in the rules you are obliged to follow?
What happens in such situations?
As I previously mentioned in my blog, I’ve had school
management change students report card grades without consulting me. I was
expected to fall in line with vice-principals decision and not make waves. That
same school also had a massive discipline problem with students disrespecting
teachers. We were not allowed to hit, scold or raise our voices to students.
Extra homework was simply ignored. So I introduced a detention system where I
would (sometimes after physically fetching the student) detain the problem
students in my classroom for the majority of their break time.
I did this alone for a year, and the following year all the
other English teachers followed my example and we set up a schedule. In the
second year the students complained in their end year surveys that they did not
like detention. So management made a push to remove it. This combined with the
report card fixing, and a request to relocate my homeroom to a classroom in the
basement with no windows, prompted me to look for greener pastures.
More recently at my second job, I clashed head with the
co-ordinater / manager of the program. The job involves working in a culture
centre program that is made available to local neighborhood kids. They teach Spanish,
Persian, Chinese and English (English being the largest program). I taught my
beginner class (A Class) phonics in the first semester and most of those
students can now sound out sentences.
As is the nature of things some students quit the program
and management wanted to fill in the empty seats. So I was told to interview
four new students. None of them know the alphabet. I explained that putting
these kids in the second semester class now would leave them feeling frustrated
as the other kids are already reading. I also pointed out that having these
students attempt the new more advanced textbook would require the majority of
the teachers’ attention in class to support them. In short, that it was just a
dumb thing to do.
If you can’t sound out c-a-t, then reading “Do you like potatoes?
Yes, I like potatoes” from the textbook is going to be a stretch.
Nevertheless, the new additions were added to the roster. Three
girls and one boy. They take up all our time, often grind the lesson to a halt,
and the boy is prone to crying when he can’t understand something.
I thought of making a video of him weeping and emailing it
to the manager, but we just patched up our relationship since last having words
over this issue. I’m reluctant for us to start clawing at each other again.
I don’t blame the kids. They’re adorable. But I’m still
bitter about how often teachers’ input is asked for then summarily ignored.
Like comments on the
weather.
M: Nice weather today isn’t it?
T: Well the weatherman predicted showers in the…
M: Yeah yeah go get me coffee.
Task 2B: Consider the ACTFL
proficiency guidelines.
Choose two of the classes you teach with you feel have different
proficiency ranges. In other words one group is generally lower in all four
skills areas than the others. Read the guidelines, and identity the ranges of
each class in each skill, citing specific examples from both the guidelines and
your classroom data/ observations / anecdotes. Write up your conclusions here,
as briefly but completely as possible.
B class on Tuesdays and Thursdays 3:30pm to 5:00pm
D class on Tuesdays and Thursdays 5:00pm to 6:30pm.
B Class
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Speaking
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Novice mid
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“Teacha I dlink water?”
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Writing
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Novice high
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“Mr. M good teacha. Play run game.”
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Listening
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Intermediate low
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- students understand basic repetitive instruction
e.g. show me your homework.
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Reading
|
Intermediate low
|
Extract from their class textbook:
A camping trip. Hi everybody! I’m camping with my family. I like
canoeing and fishing in the river. We always wear life jackets and helmets. I’m
not good at canoeing, but it’s fun!
- students
understand the story if given some context.
|
D Class
|
||
Speaking
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Intermediate low
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“Mr.M may I have a drink for water?”
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Writing
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Intermediate mid
|
Extract from most recent test –
If your parents asked you to stay home and miss a party, so you could
help them, would you do it? Why?
S1 : I could help them because I have a two older sisters.
So my sisters will be help them.
S2 : I’ll stay home because I will play computer game in the home.
S3 : I will do it because I can go to the party next time.
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Listening
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Advanced low
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Students can listen to a proposed argument to engage in basic debate
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Reading
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Advanced low
|
Extract from their class text book
The water cycle has four parts. The first part is evaporation. When
water is hot, it evaporates. This means it changes from a liquid into a gas
called water vapor and moves into the air.
- On their most recent reading test most students were able to
complete this article relatively easily, only stumbling on words like ‘evaporation’,
‘condensation’ or ‘precipitation’.
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Reflect on your module 1 paper. What aspects will you focus on in your paper?
I will cover a broad range of classroom interactions in my paper. The CI's I will focus on will be monologic / dialogic ratio, scaffolding and shifting from closed type to open type questions.
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