Author Topic: What to do in March and April  (Read 1171 times)

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Offline wangsuda

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What to do in March and April
« on: March 01, 2007, 05:27:16 PM »
   Welcome to March!  School is definitely finished; grades are turned in and now all we, as teachers, have to do is relax, right?  Wrong!  This is the time to start getting yourself ready to face the trials and tribulations you will face in the next school year. If you are an EP teacher, let’s now delve into what newly hired EP teachers should do before that first day of school.

   Congratulations, new hire!  You have just landed one of the higher paying jobs in the TEFL industry! (ok, so I like to inject some sarcasm in my threads).Now what do you do?  First, organize your teaching supplies.  In a previous thread I wrote, I listed the necessary articles every teacher needs when setting foot into a classroom.  Read that list, and see what you need.  Find out how many of those items your school is providing and how many you have to provide. Once all the necessary supplies are gathered, assemble them in one place (either in your home or in your classroom).

   The second thing you should do is get hold of the material you will teach.  Become familiar with its contents.  Identify areas that might be difficult for you to teach and start learning it. Find out if the school uses pre-made worksheets along with the texts, or are you required to make your own?  Start blocking out a teaching time frame of the materials.  Estimate how long it will take you to teach the material and start forming units. In other words, start planning your lessons.  Nothing is worse than a teacher unprepared to teach, so be prepared.

   Many EPs have dedicated classrooms for EP students.  If you have a dedicated classroom, then this third item is for you. Visit your classroom before school starts, and organize it as you see fit. Arrange the desks as you want, put English language posters on the wall, and if you teach young students (M-2 and younger), add some color to your room.  Make it different.  Post your class rules at this time.  If you want, move all your teaching supplies into your room and place them in your desk. While at your desk, organize that as well.  Make sure your supplies are where you can easily get to them.  Place a couple of pictures on your desk.  Students love to see pictures.

   Finally, do a dry run to your school.  In other words, pick a weekday and go to your school during the morning rush hour. Find out how long the travel time is and what alternate routes are available to you. Make sure that you know exactly how to get to school and exactly how long it takes you to travel.

   Well new hires, that should keep you busy for a while.  Good luck to you in your new position.  Now let us look at what returning teachers should do before the first day of school.

   For returning teachers, the school break can be a time of self-assessment; that is, examining what you did last school year and finding ways to improve it. So how is this accomplished?

   First, examine what you taught.  Did you have extremely successful lessons?  If so, what made them successful?  Are the elements of a successful lesson transferable to all lessons? Did you have unsuccessful lessons?  What made them unsuccessful?  How can you improve them?  Speaking of lessons, now is the time to go over those old lesson plans (you did save them, right?).  What materials can you add or subtract to make your lessons even better? Can you re-organize your lessons into a more logical progression for better learning?  Are there educational game that you can add to further lesson understanding?  While refining your lessons, find out if your school is adding or changing the learning material you use.  If there are changes in the learning materials, change and adapt your lessons now, to be ready for the new school year.  In short, take what you prepared last school year and make it better.  Get your lessons written and perfected NOW, so that the school year is easier for you.

   For all teachers, the school break can be used for self-improvement. Self-improvement is easy and can be done from the comfort of your own home.  For those serious about teaching, here are some books that can help you become a better teacher.  These books are available from amazon.com.

1.   “The Structure of Schooling,” by Richard Arum and Irenee R. Beattie (ISBN 0-7674-1070-X).  An excellent source of various readings for those in the philosophical and sociological aspects of education.  A good read for those in secondary and university education.  Topics highlighted in this book include school stratification, class, race, and gender, student behavior, and adolescent subcultures.
2.   “Building Classroom Discipline,” by C.M. Charles (ISBN 0-321-07691-5). An excellent analysis of the most popular classroom management philosophies.  Included in this text are complete analyses of discipline philosophies and methods of practical applications for the classroom.
3.   “The First Days of School,” by Harry K. Wong and Rosemary T. Wong (ISBN 0-9629360-2-2).A collection of ideas, methodologies, and strategies for surviving the first week of school.
4.   “So Much to Say,” edited by Christian J. Faltis and Paula Wolfe (ISBN 0-8077-3796-8).  A collection of articles dealing with current research and applications in ESL/EFL education. Topics include curriculum planning, language literacy, and sheltered content teaching.
5.   “Teaching Writing in Middle and Secondary Schools,” by Margot Iris Soven (ISBN 0-205-18897-4). If you teach writing in your class, then this book is a must.  It covers the theory, research, and practice of teaching writing.  Topics include teaching the writing process (includes grammar and sentence structure education), evaluating and responding to student writing, and designing writing assignments.
6.   “Pathways to Understanding,” by Laura Lipton and Bruce Wellman (ISBN 0-9665022-0-5). This book explores the different methodologies of creating a learning-focused classroom through individual and group activities.  It includes learning models for all levels of students and includes activities for English language learners.

Offline anyonefortennis

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Re: What to do in March and April
« Reply #1 on: March 01, 2007, 06:01:08 PM »
Wangsuda, the original information station. :righton:

Only one thing to add, regarding traveling -

"Finally, do a dry run to your school.  In other words, pick a weekday and go to your school during the morning rush hour. Find out how long the travel time is and what alternate routes are available to you. Make sure that you know exactly how to get to school and exactly how long it takes you to travel."

Add 30 minutes plus onto the time it takes to travel during the school holidays, once the kids are back the roads grind to a halt........mom's doing the school run in their SUV's and the like !
« Last Edit: March 01, 2007, 06:04:44 PM by anyonefortennis »

Offline Speaksoftly

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Re: What to do in March and April
« Reply #2 on: March 02, 2007, 03:17:28 AM »
Ditto that last, and excellent contribution as usual, Wangsuda.

Offline Krungsri

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Re: What to do in March and April
« Reply #3 on: March 02, 2007, 09:55:46 AM »
Brilliant, Wangsuda, and thank you.

This is TEFLWatch at its best.

Just one point:  The term EP.  I think I know what you mean ... English Program, right?  Problem is that this term, though widely used and effectively mandated by MoE, masks a variety of different models and settings. 

Some teachers may be going in to "EP" settings where, for example, they might be sharing a classroom with a Thai teacher (the TT teaching the Thai part and the foreign teacher the English part of a bilingual program).

Not that this detracts at all from the value of your advice; it just means that the new teacher will need to ascertain just what the setting will actually be.

Some schools (e.g. the Sarasas bilingual schools) don't use the term "EP" except for external and official purposes.  They use the term "bilingual" school/program.  So some readers of your post may not know what EP means (though MoE applies the term EP to bilingual programs as well).

This posting is also helpful to administrators or mentors providing induction support to new teachers.   


Offline ajarnnormal

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Re: What to do in March and April
« Reply #4 on: March 02, 2007, 10:32:52 AM »
 :iagree: Good one mate.

Offline RobRoy

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Re: What to do in March and April
« Reply #5 on: March 02, 2007, 06:17:25 PM »
Have to agree...this is what Telfwatch should be about.

Offline ben

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Re: What to do in March and April
« Reply #6 on: March 04, 2007, 06:37:49 PM »
Sound advice lads, I thought I would offer my 2 pennies worth too, if that's ok?

We are currently trialing a new project through the ministry of education, british council and a University in Finland, please feel free to browse http:\\clilcom.stadia.fi I thought I would offer some resources onto you that have been suggested to us for further implementation into the Thai mainstream classrooms.

CLIL is an accronym for content language intergrated learning and actually has had a desireable effect on classrooms within the EU, the website is full of information and both Dr David Marsh (CLIL project manager) and Alan Mckenzie (British Council) are very knowledgeable blokes, not too mention a pelethora (have I spelt it correctly, apologies if not) of ERICs (area or regional school managers) and MOE top dogs who are working very hard on implementing it in its pilot form throughout 6 schools (government) in Thailand.

Anyway another very handy website is http:\\www.scienceacross.org registration for both websites is currently free and also an excellent way to organise projects with other schools, discussions on global issues such as climate change etc, also for lower levels basic stuff such as health etc.

I hope that helps and wish everybody good luck with the next semesters

p.s I forgot to mention Alan's critical thinking skills dvd which can be obtained from The British council, it is actually worth a watch too
« Last Edit: March 04, 2007, 06:44:55 PM by ben »

Offline Krungsri

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Re: What to do in March and April
« Reply #7 on: March 06, 2007, 11:20:22 AM »
Ben

Can you tell me if the CLIL trial at your school requires Thai subject teachers to teach in English, or if it’s expats doing the English medium content instruction.

I thought of PM-ing, but the question may be of interest to others, too.

The reason I ask is that I understand the assumption in European CLIL to be that the normal subject teacher will instruct in the FL.  Hence, it is immersion using already available teachers.  In immersion or bilingual programs in Thai schools, however, most of the FL (English) medium instruction is provided by expats.  Schools then have to decide if they’ll provide content instruction in Thai as well.

Thank you.

Offline ben

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Re: What to do in March and April
« Reply #8 on: March 10, 2007, 11:30:57 AM »
Hi Krungsri

Thai teachers will integrate foreign language teaching into their lessons too, English and Science are the two subject areas that we have decided to conduct the pilot on. Reinforcing the content and language within the two subjects thus Thai and foreign teachers are working together to implement it.

This project actually has had a lot of negative and positive comments but the results achieved in EU countries and one school in particular were quite surprising, all students who took part were ready for their foreign language GCSE examinations by grade 9, ofcourse the more you use a language the more fluent you will get and using a foreign language to teach in by a non native speaker of that language can be quite difficult and ultimately depends on the profficiency of English by the Thai teacher. I'm sure this is not a new idea anyway, if my memory serves me well, back when my mum was at high school a lot of subjects at her school were taught in Latin by profficient Latin/topic teachers even though her first language is English.   

Our school in particular is going to adopt or utilise our IDP drills (Intelligence development programme, the name doesn't quite fit the subject) to learn new vocabulary pre-content lesson, IDP is a programme which rote teaches new vocabulary through multimedia, it is quite effective in a Thai classroom actually and includes excercise books which tests understanding and spellings etc, it's quite a fun way for a child to learn otherwise boring content and keeps their attention throughout the duration of the lesson or most of it anyway. We will then offer research and project time to conduct a liason between two schools through the http:\\www.scienceacross.org website, we were considering using climate change as a topic but decided on water related topics.

Anyway http:\\www.scienceacross.org presently is free and is a brilliant resource to use and exchange ideas about the world of science, it includes speakers of many languages so if you wanted to find German, Russian etc speaking schools they are there, also the CLIL website has some interesting ideas too, anyway happy surfing.

Ben
 

Offline Krungsri

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Re: What to do in March and April
« Reply #9 on: March 10, 2007, 07:11:55 PM »
Thanks Ben

It sounds like there's some interesting stuff going on at your school.  I had a quick look at the Science website, but it requires the school to be registered, so I'll get our Science coordinators (Thai and English) to have a look at it.

I also looked at the other sites you mentioned in your earlier post.  It seems that CLIL has been successful in countries like Holland and Switzerland, but in Hong Kong, where either the teacher's or the students' English is not up to speed, students have not done as well as kids in the Chinese medium classes.  In a forum I attended last year, Hong Kong people were saying that now, if the teachers believe kids are not really grasping key subject matter in English, they simply switch to Cantonese.

I think CLIL is the way to go, but unless the Thai government gets serious about training Thai teachers to teach in English at a satisfactory standard, it's only going to happen here on a very selective basis.  In the meantime we have 200 or more bilingual/EP schools using expats to teach in English, which is a good interim model, but prices most families out of bilingual education.  This model has limited capacity to build up local language resources for use in CLIL or any bilingual approach.  Thai teachers capable of teaching content in English are just not available. 

The private sector took the initiative in introducing bilingual education, but cannot take responsibility for the large-scale teacher training strategy necessary to make bilingual education/EP/CLIL more widely accessible. 

   

Offline ben

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Re: What to do in March and April
« Reply #10 on: March 10, 2007, 08:13:17 PM »
No problems

I Absolutely agree with you, in fact actually the Thai teachers are a little nervous about it, hopefully with some aid from our IDP section and the English teachers we can get some positive results at least.

By the way science across the world is pretty good and has some fantastic projects available. Well worth looking into. Not to forget to mention Alan Mckenzie's (British Council) Critical thinking skills video.

Enjoy

Ben

Offline math_teacher

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Re: What to do in March and April
« Reply #11 on: July 24, 2007, 09:08:03 AM »
Nice book list, wangsuda! Harry Wong is the master!  {n<k>

Here is another book I have found very useful.
"Tools for Teaching" by Fredric H. Jones, Jo Lynne Jones, Patrick Jones

 

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