My first TEFL lesson - DONE!
I created my first lesson for my TEFL certificate course! Well, technically it's not my first lesson designed to teach English Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) students, considering I graduated with an ESOL endorsement and have been teaching in south Florida for the last two and a half years, but this was my first one geared towards students in CHINA!
It actually really made me recognize how difficult our job is going to be while we're in Shanghai. So far, I have only taught ESOL students who have a decent grasp of English and need help with fine tuning and some vocabulary building. For the most part, my students and I have been able to communicate effectively in English. And if not, there's typically been another student in the class who speaks English and the foreign language (usually Spanish or Creole) who can help us out. I'm not sure yet of the proficiency level of my students in Shanghai (still don't even know what grade level(s) we're teaching!), but I'm guessing that it's going to be quite a wide range. I believe it's going to be immensely more difficult trying to teach English as a foreign language than it is to teach language arts to someone with limited English proficiency.
The course we're taking is pretty neat because of the nature of the discussion board. All of our assignments are posted so that everyone taking the course can see what we wrote. That way, when an assignment asks us to design a lesson plan, we have access to all of the ideas of the members of the class. Most of the lessons can be tailored to any age and ability level, so we're building a repertoire of effective TEFL lessons that we can use when we're in China.
I'm wondering though, if any of you are fluent in a second language, how did you learn it? What methods/activities/lessons/etc. did your teachers or mentors use to help you become fluent? I know it's extremely difficult to look metacognitively at something that probably seemed to happen naturally, but if you've got any ideas or advice about what worked well for you, I'd love for you to leave me comments! :)
On a side note, I would really love it for any of you who are reading to click the "FOLLOW" button on the upper left side of the page. I can't tell who's reading unless you follow me, which isn't a big deal for the next two and a half months BUT when we make the leap across the ocean I won't have access to any of our beloved social networking sites and our cell phones won't work in China so it's going to be incredibly difficult to keep in touch and the only way I can communicate with you is through this blog or Skype, which I don't have yet, so please, click FOLLOW! (How's that for a run-on sentence? I hope it conveys my anxiety about losing touch with dear friends while I'm overseas...)

1 comments:
Ali, we'll talk soon about this on the phone. I took a second language acquisition course, and I think I may be able to help you. I'm looking forward to reading your blog!
<3 Brandy
Post a Comment