Assignment 3


   Professional Development


      Felix Barría Montoya


      Diego Ulloa Iglesias


English Methodology (DID0412-1)


          Mss. Correa


      December 22nd, 2011
Professional Development | 1


Index




                                                             Page

Introduction       …………………………………………………………………….                 2



Research Question    ………………………………………………………………                  3



Theoretical Framework   ………………………………………………………..                3



Data: Chart*        …………………………………………………………………...               7



Data: Discussion     ……………………………………...……………………….               8




Conclusion         …………………………………………………………...………..              10



References     ……………………………………………….……………………..                   12



Appendix       …………………………………………………………………….....                 13
Professional Development | 2


Introduction




Professional development is seen as long-term learning opportunities which depends

basically on the own person in question—the teacher in this case. Hence, we interviewed a

teacher that finished University last year and is currently taking a master degree at the

Universidad Católica de la Santísima Concepción.


To what we consider from the information taken from the corresponding interview, was

also considered different views from different authors about what professional development

is, what are the main characteristics of it are, how a teacher can be professionally developed

and what is the purpose of reaching this “status”.


At the end of the following analysis, there is a comparison between what theory says and

what the teacher interviewed told us about what she thinks of professional development

which would be helpful for other teachers in their process of seeking a professional

development status.
Professional Development | 3


Research Question




Is professional development relevant for teaching English as a foreign language?




Theoretical framework




Professional development is a very important topic for everyone who really cares about

their profession and intends to have a successful career. It calls for autonomy and

commitment to be developed within a certain community, which in the case of teachers‟ is

constantly moving. According to Ur (2002) we do not just teach: we also learn,

continually—about our subject matter, about teaching methods and about many other things

that make us better educated and therefore better educators (p. 391) Because, from

experience we know that teaching does not involve only teaching, but also learning from

the environment that surrounds us and why not, our own students. For the same reason we

cannot permit ourselves to teach because we want to try something new; Ur (2002) states

that the professional cannot allow himself or herself „to have a go‟ at teaching or to do it

badly (p. 389). From this we can infer teaching is more of a lifestyle if you will, rather than

just a profession. We have to adequate ourselves to this profession and not the other way

around.
Professional Development | 4


Brown (2000) uses the term “peak performer” as that person who is reaching his/her fullest

potential and therefore who reap success. Among others, this type of person is

characterized by taking risks; this is a person who is not afraid to try new things. Brown

adds that it is not a matter of simply taking risks because it should be in learning from our

own „failures‟. So, according to what Brown suggests, teachers should reach their fullest

potential through risks which should be taken from the moment you start being a teacher

and this should also be based on their own errors—„failures‟ as he considers it. Being

successful involves continually improving our practice, but reflective teaching goes beyond

the level of acquiring new techniques. As Barlett (1990) points out, “As teachers we have

to transcend the technicalities of teaching and think beyond the need to improve our

instructional techniques” (p. 205). Teachers who are ill prepared for the demands of

teaching are those who has to be more aware of being well-prepared through acquiring

instructional techniques—as Barlett suggests or, as Brown suggests, taking risks in order to

be a peak performer to make a success of their failures.


On another front, “Becoming reflective forces us to adopt a critical attitude to ourselves as

individual second language teachers—to challenge our espoused personal beliefs about

teaching” (ibid., 213). Richards (2002) and Nunan (2001) note that “experience alone is

insufficient for professional growth, and that experience coupled with reflection is a much

more powerful impetus for development” (p. 201), that is to say teachers should never feel

fully developed simply because it is an ongoing process—as Bailey, Curtis and Nunan

(2001) also points out that teachers never stop learning because they have to improve their

teaching skills throughout their life in order to become better professionals, and by
Professional Development | 5


incorporating a reflection into their professional growth would result in a proper

combination for obtaining good results.


Ur (2002) makes some comparisons between the profession of being a teacher and some

other categories which are the following:


       Teacher vs. Lay


       Teacher vs. Amateur


       Teacher vs. Technician


       Teacher vs. Academic


Now each of these comparisons made us think that teachers should have a bit of each in

order to be more complete.


For example in the first case it is good that like the lay population, we try to communicate

each other as colleagues and shape a strong community which will be in constant contact,

sharing discoveries and experiences.


Secondly, it is never bad to be passionate about doing something and as we previously

mentioned we have to really take a commitment in teaching but it is good to keep that

amateur we all have inside because as Ur (2002) states, an amateur does things for fun, for

the love of it (p. 389) We already know that it is very important to take our profession of

teaching very seriously but having fun teaching and loving the fact of doing it is just as

important.
Professional Development | 6


In the case of the third comparison, we are both technicians and teachers. Technicians

practice constantly in order to develop skills and be more competent using them. Though

teachers develop their skills through practice and the use of knowledge patterns that will

allow them to reflect—as was mentioned before on how they should be developed. (Ur

2002)


Finally, we considered this comparison to be the most important because is a must that

teachers gradually become a mix between an academic and a professional. The professional

is always an active participant who focuses on real time experiences and learning, while the

academic is more of a passive character who is more focused on research (Ur 2002). We

make the distinction of passive and active just to make a contrast between the two for none

of them can be considered better than the other one. As a matter of fact teachers should

always focus on real time action as well as backing it up with constant research and

contextualization.
Professional Development | 7


Data: Chart.


Note: Due to a format issue the corresponding chart cannot be

displayed here. Please check the document showed below “Data:

Chart Professional Development”.
Professional Development | 8


Data: Discussion




To be fully developed is, as we know, a very important aspect in any professional‟s career.

We mentioned a few comparisons that should be mixed together as much as possible in

order to be a good professional and also to make a contribution to the big community all

teachers conform.


Our interviewee, in question number 2 of the “importance” category answered:


   1. Do you think it is important to be fully developed professionally? Why?

       Of course, I think that it‟s very important to be fully developed professionally

       because that‟s the way in which a teacher contributes to education and the task

       becomes easier since the teacher knows exactly how to perform in different

       situations.




In this answer we can see she clearly takes into account professional development as

something important for a teacher because it contributes to the community as well as

enhancing the way you face each class making it easier to come up with different and better

ideas each time.


By mixing each of these comparisons mentioned beforehand into your way of developing

your career will help you to be a more competent teacher and as the interviewee mentions

“professional development is what a professional do to be better at what he or she does”. It

occurs when professional people—teachers in this case, become more skillful”. By skillful
Professional Development | 9


we can recall the characteristics of either a technician or the academic and why not, both. A

teacher with these characteristics is more active and at the same time more careful; always

paying attention to research labour and methodology enhancing.


Again the importance of working within a community is mentioned in the answers the

interviewee gave by affirming teachers “should attend seminars” and interacting with other

teachers”. It is clearly stated that teachers should have both a wide range of skills and also

learn to work within a community in order to experiment and create a body of knowledge

that will be useful for the community.
Professional Development | 10


Conclusion




What our interviewee believes is not far away from what theory suggests. In general terms,

the teacher in question thinks that professional development is a must all teachers should

have because it would help him/her to improve his/her performance in the classroom.


According to what our interviewee told us, teachers who do not have a post degree are not

that professional as they think they are because not having it means that they are not

interested in improving their knowledge in both pedagogical and linguistic terms;

consequently there is no reflection as it was suggested by the authors. What the interviewee

adds to this, was that teachers that just finished Universities can be hired by a certain school

in order to get more experience—to be exposed to empirical situations in the classroom.


On another front, both interviewee and theory agree that by expanding and sharing one‟s

knowledge with other teachers there would be a more fruitful input which would be helpful

for them in terms of acquiring another point of view about a same situation.


After reading what different authors suggest in their theories and considering what our

interviewee contributed to our research, the answer we were seeking to the question “Is

professional development relevant for teaching English as a foreign language?” cannot be

clearer. Of course, professional development is actually relevant for teaching English as a

foreign language because:


       It is an ongoing process, so teaching is not the final goal of a professional teacher,

       but keeping on learning continually.
Professional Development | 11


It would be fruitful for teachers when knowledge is shared with colleagues.

It promotes to be a better teacher by accepting challenges and considering his/her

failures as opportunities to make a success of them.

It also promotes a deep reflection about teacher‟s attitude towards trying new

things, because experience alone is not sufficient for professional growth.

It means that teachers still have that amateur inside; that personal character which

push them to do things for fun because they passionately love what they do—

teaching in this case.

It aspires to be an impact on educational reforms because the more opportunities

teachers acquire, the more successful and effective those reforms and the work of

the teacher is.

It provides teacher with contextualized materials, tools and methods.
Professional Development | 12


References



             Bailey, K.M, Curtis, A & Nunan, D. (2001). Pursuing professional

                  development: the self as source. Heinly & Heinly.


             Brown, H.D (2000). Teaching by principles: an interactive approach to

                  language pedagogy. Pearson Education.


             Richards, J. C. & Renandya, W. A. (2002). Methodology in Language

                  Teaching. An Anthology of Current Practice. Cambridge: Cambridge

                  University Press.
Professional Development | 13


Appendix




Importance




   2. What do you think methodology is, considering the type of methodology you use in

      class?

      Methodology is the way in which I teach the content. It involves the resources I

      decide to use in order to teach English or the resources I want my students to use to

      learn English. It‟s the way in which I carry out the goal within the classroom.




   3. Do you think it is important to be fully developed professionally? Why?

      Of course, I think that it‟s very important to be fully developed professionally

      because that‟s the way in which a teacher contributes to education and the task

      becomes easier since the teacher knows exactly how to perform in different

      situations.




   4. Would you hire a teacher that has just finished university without a master degree?

      Why?

      If the teacher finished university recently, I would hire him or her because the

      teacher can gain experience in a couple of years and then decide to study again. I
Professional Development | 14


       can encourage teachers to continue studying. But if the teacher has been teaching

       for many years and hasn‟t taken on any master degree, I wouldn‟t hire him or her

       since it means that he or she doesn‟t care about education.




Activities




   1. Have you taken on courses or obtained master’s degrees once you finished

       university? How long did it take you?

       Once I finished university I decided to take on a master degree of applied linguistics

       at UCSC, it lasts two years and I‟m about to finish the first one.




   2. Have you had the opportunity of teaching abroad? If so, did it change your form of

       seeing professional development?

       I haven‟t been abroad.




   3. Did you take on courses outside the country? If so, do you think there is a big

       difference between those and the ones imparted here?

       As I said before, I haven‟t been abroad.
Professional Development | 15


Professional Development




   1. From what you have seen through your career, would you give me a vision of what

      professional development is?

      Professional development is what a professional do to be better at what he or she

      does. It occurs when professional people, teachers in this case, become more

      skillful. Professional development involves being aware of the community of

      education, in the case of teachers, and they should participate in seminars.




   2. To what extent do you think professional development impacts the way any

      teacher’s career develops? Has it affected yours?

      As I have been studying most of the time and I have participated in reflection

      seminars, I have been learning a lot of things that make me a better teacher and a

      better person, too. That issue makes me think that the impact that professional

      development has is very important for anyone‟s career because a professional can

      be better by expanding and sharing knowledge.




   3. Do you think teachers in Chile are fully developed professionally? Do you consider

      it important? Why?

      University teachers are fully developed professionally and it is reflected on the way

      they interact with other teachers at seminars and they research a lot. Maybe, school
Professional Development | 16


teachers aren‟t very developed professionally but the ones that are fully developed

professionally stand out above the rest.

Professional Development

  • 1.
    Assignment 3 Professional Development Felix Barría Montoya Diego Ulloa Iglesias English Methodology (DID0412-1) Mss. Correa December 22nd, 2011
  • 2.
    Professional Development |1 Index Page Introduction ……………………………………………………………………. 2 Research Question ……………………………………………………………… 3 Theoretical Framework ……………………………………………………….. 3 Data: Chart* …………………………………………………………………... 7 Data: Discussion ……………………………………...………………………. 8 Conclusion …………………………………………………………...……….. 10 References ……………………………………………….…………………….. 12 Appendix ……………………………………………………………………..... 13
  • 3.
    Professional Development |2 Introduction Professional development is seen as long-term learning opportunities which depends basically on the own person in question—the teacher in this case. Hence, we interviewed a teacher that finished University last year and is currently taking a master degree at the Universidad Católica de la Santísima Concepción. To what we consider from the information taken from the corresponding interview, was also considered different views from different authors about what professional development is, what are the main characteristics of it are, how a teacher can be professionally developed and what is the purpose of reaching this “status”. At the end of the following analysis, there is a comparison between what theory says and what the teacher interviewed told us about what she thinks of professional development which would be helpful for other teachers in their process of seeking a professional development status.
  • 4.
    Professional Development |3 Research Question Is professional development relevant for teaching English as a foreign language? Theoretical framework Professional development is a very important topic for everyone who really cares about their profession and intends to have a successful career. It calls for autonomy and commitment to be developed within a certain community, which in the case of teachers‟ is constantly moving. According to Ur (2002) we do not just teach: we also learn, continually—about our subject matter, about teaching methods and about many other things that make us better educated and therefore better educators (p. 391) Because, from experience we know that teaching does not involve only teaching, but also learning from the environment that surrounds us and why not, our own students. For the same reason we cannot permit ourselves to teach because we want to try something new; Ur (2002) states that the professional cannot allow himself or herself „to have a go‟ at teaching or to do it badly (p. 389). From this we can infer teaching is more of a lifestyle if you will, rather than just a profession. We have to adequate ourselves to this profession and not the other way around.
  • 5.
    Professional Development |4 Brown (2000) uses the term “peak performer” as that person who is reaching his/her fullest potential and therefore who reap success. Among others, this type of person is characterized by taking risks; this is a person who is not afraid to try new things. Brown adds that it is not a matter of simply taking risks because it should be in learning from our own „failures‟. So, according to what Brown suggests, teachers should reach their fullest potential through risks which should be taken from the moment you start being a teacher and this should also be based on their own errors—„failures‟ as he considers it. Being successful involves continually improving our practice, but reflective teaching goes beyond the level of acquiring new techniques. As Barlett (1990) points out, “As teachers we have to transcend the technicalities of teaching and think beyond the need to improve our instructional techniques” (p. 205). Teachers who are ill prepared for the demands of teaching are those who has to be more aware of being well-prepared through acquiring instructional techniques—as Barlett suggests or, as Brown suggests, taking risks in order to be a peak performer to make a success of their failures. On another front, “Becoming reflective forces us to adopt a critical attitude to ourselves as individual second language teachers—to challenge our espoused personal beliefs about teaching” (ibid., 213). Richards (2002) and Nunan (2001) note that “experience alone is insufficient for professional growth, and that experience coupled with reflection is a much more powerful impetus for development” (p. 201), that is to say teachers should never feel fully developed simply because it is an ongoing process—as Bailey, Curtis and Nunan (2001) also points out that teachers never stop learning because they have to improve their teaching skills throughout their life in order to become better professionals, and by
  • 6.
    Professional Development |5 incorporating a reflection into their professional growth would result in a proper combination for obtaining good results. Ur (2002) makes some comparisons between the profession of being a teacher and some other categories which are the following: Teacher vs. Lay Teacher vs. Amateur Teacher vs. Technician Teacher vs. Academic Now each of these comparisons made us think that teachers should have a bit of each in order to be more complete. For example in the first case it is good that like the lay population, we try to communicate each other as colleagues and shape a strong community which will be in constant contact, sharing discoveries and experiences. Secondly, it is never bad to be passionate about doing something and as we previously mentioned we have to really take a commitment in teaching but it is good to keep that amateur we all have inside because as Ur (2002) states, an amateur does things for fun, for the love of it (p. 389) We already know that it is very important to take our profession of teaching very seriously but having fun teaching and loving the fact of doing it is just as important.
  • 7.
    Professional Development |6 In the case of the third comparison, we are both technicians and teachers. Technicians practice constantly in order to develop skills and be more competent using them. Though teachers develop their skills through practice and the use of knowledge patterns that will allow them to reflect—as was mentioned before on how they should be developed. (Ur 2002) Finally, we considered this comparison to be the most important because is a must that teachers gradually become a mix between an academic and a professional. The professional is always an active participant who focuses on real time experiences and learning, while the academic is more of a passive character who is more focused on research (Ur 2002). We make the distinction of passive and active just to make a contrast between the two for none of them can be considered better than the other one. As a matter of fact teachers should always focus on real time action as well as backing it up with constant research and contextualization.
  • 8.
    Professional Development |7 Data: Chart. Note: Due to a format issue the corresponding chart cannot be displayed here. Please check the document showed below “Data: Chart Professional Development”.
  • 9.
    Professional Development |8 Data: Discussion To be fully developed is, as we know, a very important aspect in any professional‟s career. We mentioned a few comparisons that should be mixed together as much as possible in order to be a good professional and also to make a contribution to the big community all teachers conform. Our interviewee, in question number 2 of the “importance” category answered: 1. Do you think it is important to be fully developed professionally? Why? Of course, I think that it‟s very important to be fully developed professionally because that‟s the way in which a teacher contributes to education and the task becomes easier since the teacher knows exactly how to perform in different situations. In this answer we can see she clearly takes into account professional development as something important for a teacher because it contributes to the community as well as enhancing the way you face each class making it easier to come up with different and better ideas each time. By mixing each of these comparisons mentioned beforehand into your way of developing your career will help you to be a more competent teacher and as the interviewee mentions “professional development is what a professional do to be better at what he or she does”. It occurs when professional people—teachers in this case, become more skillful”. By skillful
  • 10.
    Professional Development |9 we can recall the characteristics of either a technician or the academic and why not, both. A teacher with these characteristics is more active and at the same time more careful; always paying attention to research labour and methodology enhancing. Again the importance of working within a community is mentioned in the answers the interviewee gave by affirming teachers “should attend seminars” and interacting with other teachers”. It is clearly stated that teachers should have both a wide range of skills and also learn to work within a community in order to experiment and create a body of knowledge that will be useful for the community.
  • 11.
    Professional Development |10 Conclusion What our interviewee believes is not far away from what theory suggests. In general terms, the teacher in question thinks that professional development is a must all teachers should have because it would help him/her to improve his/her performance in the classroom. According to what our interviewee told us, teachers who do not have a post degree are not that professional as they think they are because not having it means that they are not interested in improving their knowledge in both pedagogical and linguistic terms; consequently there is no reflection as it was suggested by the authors. What the interviewee adds to this, was that teachers that just finished Universities can be hired by a certain school in order to get more experience—to be exposed to empirical situations in the classroom. On another front, both interviewee and theory agree that by expanding and sharing one‟s knowledge with other teachers there would be a more fruitful input which would be helpful for them in terms of acquiring another point of view about a same situation. After reading what different authors suggest in their theories and considering what our interviewee contributed to our research, the answer we were seeking to the question “Is professional development relevant for teaching English as a foreign language?” cannot be clearer. Of course, professional development is actually relevant for teaching English as a foreign language because: It is an ongoing process, so teaching is not the final goal of a professional teacher, but keeping on learning continually.
  • 12.
    Professional Development |11 It would be fruitful for teachers when knowledge is shared with colleagues. It promotes to be a better teacher by accepting challenges and considering his/her failures as opportunities to make a success of them. It also promotes a deep reflection about teacher‟s attitude towards trying new things, because experience alone is not sufficient for professional growth. It means that teachers still have that amateur inside; that personal character which push them to do things for fun because they passionately love what they do— teaching in this case. It aspires to be an impact on educational reforms because the more opportunities teachers acquire, the more successful and effective those reforms and the work of the teacher is. It provides teacher with contextualized materials, tools and methods.
  • 13.
    Professional Development |12 References Bailey, K.M, Curtis, A & Nunan, D. (2001). Pursuing professional development: the self as source. Heinly & Heinly. Brown, H.D (2000). Teaching by principles: an interactive approach to language pedagogy. Pearson Education. Richards, J. C. & Renandya, W. A. (2002). Methodology in Language Teaching. An Anthology of Current Practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • 14.
    Professional Development |13 Appendix Importance 2. What do you think methodology is, considering the type of methodology you use in class? Methodology is the way in which I teach the content. It involves the resources I decide to use in order to teach English or the resources I want my students to use to learn English. It‟s the way in which I carry out the goal within the classroom. 3. Do you think it is important to be fully developed professionally? Why? Of course, I think that it‟s very important to be fully developed professionally because that‟s the way in which a teacher contributes to education and the task becomes easier since the teacher knows exactly how to perform in different situations. 4. Would you hire a teacher that has just finished university without a master degree? Why? If the teacher finished university recently, I would hire him or her because the teacher can gain experience in a couple of years and then decide to study again. I
  • 15.
    Professional Development |14 can encourage teachers to continue studying. But if the teacher has been teaching for many years and hasn‟t taken on any master degree, I wouldn‟t hire him or her since it means that he or she doesn‟t care about education. Activities 1. Have you taken on courses or obtained master’s degrees once you finished university? How long did it take you? Once I finished university I decided to take on a master degree of applied linguistics at UCSC, it lasts two years and I‟m about to finish the first one. 2. Have you had the opportunity of teaching abroad? If so, did it change your form of seeing professional development? I haven‟t been abroad. 3. Did you take on courses outside the country? If so, do you think there is a big difference between those and the ones imparted here? As I said before, I haven‟t been abroad.
  • 16.
    Professional Development |15 Professional Development 1. From what you have seen through your career, would you give me a vision of what professional development is? Professional development is what a professional do to be better at what he or she does. It occurs when professional people, teachers in this case, become more skillful. Professional development involves being aware of the community of education, in the case of teachers, and they should participate in seminars. 2. To what extent do you think professional development impacts the way any teacher’s career develops? Has it affected yours? As I have been studying most of the time and I have participated in reflection seminars, I have been learning a lot of things that make me a better teacher and a better person, too. That issue makes me think that the impact that professional development has is very important for anyone‟s career because a professional can be better by expanding and sharing knowledge. 3. Do you think teachers in Chile are fully developed professionally? Do you consider it important? Why? University teachers are fully developed professionally and it is reflected on the way they interact with other teachers at seminars and they research a lot. Maybe, school
  • 17.
    Professional Development |16 teachers aren‟t very developed professionally but the ones that are fully developed professionally stand out above the rest.