Dec 14.

After my first attempts to introduce TA-like work with grammar, namely, the system of tasks to speak about the past, I came up to the following conclusions:

Comments  

# Kirsi Urmson 2011-12-19 21:48
Good to read your reflection Renata.

" The motto to keep in mind now is: Don’t teach – make them learn."
Some of our trainees find it difficult to understand this. They are mainly in the classroom to make the pupils to learn. What a waste if the teacher tries to do everything and thinks that it is the way the pupils will learn the best! The ways how we have been taught ourselves are so strongly inbuilt in us.
Thank you for sharing Renata!
# Larisa Sardiko 2012-01-22 10:07
Quote:
Good to read your reflection Renata.



" The motto to keep in mind now is: Don’t teach – make them learn."

Some of our trainees find it difficult to understand this. They are mainly in the classroom to make the pupils to learn. What a waste if the teacher tries to do everything and thinks that it is the way the pupils will learn the best! The ways how we have been taught ourselves are so strongly inbuilt in us.

Thank you for sharing Renata!
Thank you, Kirsi and Renata!
I am suffering from it all the time now - my 30 years' experience of teaching is dragging me back - I still try to get them to give the desirable answer which is impossible and does not work of course.
# Irina Buchinska 2011-12-19 22:34
Re -'Speak about education as such and your views on how things should be done and why. Then give a bigger picture of how you are going to work. '
This might be a good idea if they really bother about what education as such is :) , what also could be a good way to motivate them is to challenge their pre-learnt rules, to show that the rules often misinterpret or even contradict the 'real' language, like ' always ' is for present simple, 'never' for present perfect, etc. Of course, if the case is that their rules always bring them to a good result- correct answers in traditional 'grammar book' exercises then the students won't understand the point of changing them.
Suggestion - show the students that using a more systematic approach to describing, comparing and choosing a certain grammar structure guarantees a quicker and better result so that they themselves would like to build these systems.

Don’t teach – make them learn - what about 'help them enjoy learning"? :)

Renata, what do you mean by ENV-grammar?
# Renata Jonina 2011-12-20 23:17
Thank you for commenting. It's really very helpful to get feedback.

Susan, pity to say but I belong to that part of teacher/trainees who do not understand how to make students learn. So, unfortunately, pure teaching is deeply inbuilt in me.

'Help them enjoy learning' is of course an essential addition to the motto. Thank you, Irina. So instead of having one headache I will now have two:)

Re challenge, I tried to provide it but i think I do not cope with what follows, or more precisely, has to follow after.

By ENV-grammar I mean building ENV models for grammar (describe difference between the past/future/etc. via ENV)
# Larisa Sardiko 2012-01-22 10:20
Thank you Renata for this informal reflection. It made me think I can also join in and get out of the state of permanent shock in which I have been.
Enjoyment is the key thing here I think - nothing good comes out if we do not enjoy teaching.
Irina told me once, 'Choose what you like, do not try to reform all at once and do not expect results at once (in my case in working with texts). ' It helps a lot. This is what I am trying to do now. And it works. I have not succeeded in making them consciously build and use algorithms, but I have some result as the shyest students have opened and started to talk and create interesting texts.
I am proud of you, Renata!
# Kirsi Urmson 2012-02-05 17:36
This is comforting! My students take very small steps. Sometimes I'm glad about some little change even if they are still far away from the goal.
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