This slide show was created for a job interview to answer the question, what is your teaching philosophy? Not claiming it's at all profound, but it's my first PowerPoint and at least looks pretty.
(The white border did not exist in the original. It's an artifact of uploading the file in .pdf format so the fonts render correctly. The school's colors account for the teal / gold / magenta color theme.)
24. Ray was a phenomenally good teacher,
much better than me.
25. The SAT, the main college entrance exam,
is scored on a scale of 400–1600.
26. Ray was able to get his students’ scores to raise by 200 points,
or 300 points....
A 400-point increase was not unheard of.
He won awards for best teacher in our region.
27. And eventually got so many tutoring students
he opened his own business.
Why was Ray so good?
28. As you might expect,
I asked him this question more than once.
29. He claimed the secret was having a personal relationship with his students.
31. The are two kinds of reason
for pursuing an activity:
internal and external.
(I’m getting these terms from
Alasdair MacIntyre’s After Virtue [1984].)
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32. Studying to please your friend is an
especially good external motivation.
56. To be honest, I do not have a
ready-made solution to defuse
these challenges for university-aged,
beginning E.S.L. students.
But I do have some ideas....
57. A. Don’t be boring. Play games and show pictures as much as possible.
58. B. Guide students step by step.
An appropriate early writing task
might be to write a short letter,
or make a grocery list.
60. Part of my job is to find what motivates each student,
given proficiency level, age and personality.
61. Examples of other classroom
activities I’ve used, grouped by
language skill and proficiency level:
62. READING:
• Listing particular items or
information.
• Arranging illustrations / paragraphs
in order.
• Titling subsections.
• Mapping the plot.
• Paraphrasing / acting out the text.
63. LISTENING:
• Choosing the correct picture.
• Transcribing details (phone number,
address, messages)
• ‘Jigsaw’ tasks, e.g. listening to
different accounts of a crime.
• Transcribing a difficult recording as
a group.
• A guest speaker (students typically
ask more questions).
64. SPEAKING:
• Speaking following a formula written
on the board.
• Giving Instructions and directions.
• Completing others’ sentences in a
silly way.
• Structured discussion based on
illustrations.
• Pyramid discussion based on a
problem or mystery.
• Role-Play based on cards.
• Slide-Show Presentations.
• Formal Debate.
65. WRITING:
• Copying from the board.
• Writing a shopping list / postcard.
• Describing a good friend / keepsake
object.
• Relating a (happy, scary, etc.)
childhood memory.
• Writing jokes.
• Writing / acting a dialogue.
• Reviewing a favorite book / film /
restaurant.
• Arguing both for and against a
viewpoint.
• Writing a persuasive essay.
75. On the other hand, with enough words,
grammar is (of course) needed to sound
like a natural speaker, but is not strictly necessary.
(Above: enough words to survive in America.)
76. One reason I’m in Turkey is to live with my fiancé before we get married.
77. Here is my fiancé, Merry. As you can see, she’s Filipina.
78. She also spoke hardly any English when we met 4 years ago.
Essentially, she taught herself.
79. Her vocabulary is excellent.
(Partly because English is
an official language in the Philippines.)
80. But her grammar is awful.
Most of our tenses simply don’t exist in Tagalog!
91. Students need a lot of practice speaking,
so they must feel comfortable saying the wrong thing.
92. Here are some tasks conducive to learning vocabulary:
93. 1. MEMORIZATION.
Students should make a set of vocab flash cards,
and add to it every week.
94. (2) Speaking. Students should
speak / write / IM / text
in English as often as possible,
with whoever will listen to them.
95. (3) Reading. After a certain
minimum proficiency is gained,
students should jump into
reading, dictionary in hand.
Preferably original texts,
preferably slightly above their
level, preferably enjoyable.
96. (4) Word roots. Knowing the most common roots and
affixes helps both to recall meanings and (vaguely)
understand words not encountered before.
97. The literary critic and education theorist E.D. Hirsch famously championed
a core curriculum because, among other reasons, students learn better
when they have more prior knowledge to ‘peg’ new information to.
98. In other words, part of learning is building a thick mental context.
I believe something similar applies at the higher levels of E.S.L.
99. At upper levels, we should not
teach content in isolation,
as if English were a
language invented by machines.
100. Students should be introduced
to the connotations of lexis &
grammatical structures,
and
the
cultures
from
which
they
come.
101. If nothing else, it makes the class
more interesting for all concerned.
Learning should be
as engaging as possible.
Illustration of a student
not being as engaged as possible.
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102. Let me end with a quote from
Philip Sidney’s Defense of Poetry.
103. Sidney is discussing why poetry is
practically superior to moral philosophy,
but it applies to any good teacher:
104. “For he doth not only show the way, but giveth so sweet
a prospect into the way as will entice any man to enter into it.
Nay, he doth, as if your journey should lie through a
fair vineyard, at the very first give you a cluster of grapes,
that full of that taste you may long to pass further.”
105. A good deal of teaching is finding the right motive.
107. This slide show was created as a short talk for İstanbul
Şehir University, as part of a job interview. I’m putting it on
the web so friends and family can see, but perhaps you’ve
stumbled onto it. If we don’t know each other, and you want
to contact me, please write kmbush40@gmail.com.
(The color theme, by the way, is the school’s colors.)