Faculty of Teacher Training
English Department
Course Title: Applied English Skills (Elective)
Instructor: Dr. Rod
E-mail: sjrod55@gmail.com
Teaching Strategies:
As a teacher working with students who are also not native English speakers you are likely to encounter many international students in your career. Their levels of English fluency will vary. Some may have spoken English in school from a young age, while others may be new to the language. English is relatively challenging to learn, and some students will have difficulty with it. I offer the following table as a teaching guide.
Teaching Strategies Chart
| EASIER | MODERATE | ADVANCED |
CRITERIA | Don’t assume lack of comprehension simply because a student’s spoken English is heavily accented, or assume high levels of comprehension simply because of oral fluency. Get to know the students. | Be aware of the difference between the student who makes a variety of grammatical or lexical errors and the one who makes the same kind of error often. | Point out the most prevalent error pattern and ask the student to concentrate on that pattern when editing. |
LECTURE | Highlight key points and articulate them in more than one way. | Provide written handouts for key ideas and instructions. | Build rhetorical and actual questions into lectures. |
READING | Check reading comprehension by giving short writing assignments – abstracts, brief summaries, and brief responses to text. | Help students understand how to use the dictionary strategically for field specific and frequently used academic terms. | Have students write about passages of text that don’t make sense or that seem contradictory to them. |
DISCUSSION | Periodically review and ask questions about main points. | Have students write and talk in small groups before asking them to articulate answers to interpretive and sophisticated questions in whole-class discussion. | Imagine the ways that students are likely to experience confusion and ask questions that will illustrate the potential for confusion in the material. |
PAPERS | Encourage students to share rough drafts with you and focus first on content, not grammatical error or stylistic weakness. | Suggest ways to improve drafts by separating issues of organization and content from issues of language error. Encourage language improvement by noting one or two most pervasive errors at the word or sentence level. | Address key problems with comprehensibility, pointing out the elements that create confusion for you as a reader. Encourage self-editing with a focus on pervasive patterns of error. |
STRUCTURE | Encourage students to come to office hours by bringing a sign-up sheet. | Allow students to do oral presentations (at least the first one) in groups or pairs, and build in practice time. | Offer a variety of group work opportunities. |
ASSESSMENT | When writing questions, express them in simple, clear language, avoiding confusing constructions such as double negatives. | Assess students’ comprehension early in the quarter and frequently. | Ask students to submit all drafts of work to you with editors’, tutors’, and your comments visible to assure work is their own. |