ELT-J Issue Archive
- ELT in Japan Issue #4 (October 2011) as online readable/downloadable documents
- ELT in Japan Issue #4 (October 2011)
- ELT in Japan Issue #3 (August - September 2010)
- ELT in Japan Issue #2 (March 2010) as online readable/downloadable documents
- ELT in Japan Issue #2 (March 2010)
- ELT in Japan Issue #1 (December 2009) bonus article
- ELT in Japan Issue #1 (December 2009) as online readable/downloadable documents
- ELT in Japan Issue #1 (December 2009)
26 July 2010
18 July 2010
Teaching English and Language Blogs
http://www.accreditedonlinecolleges.com/blog/2010/50-terrific-teaching-abroad-blogs/
Teaching English and Language Blogs
Find out what "teaching English abroad" really entails, and where to find the best opportunities, as well as how to reach out to foreign students.
Teaching English and Language Blogs
Find out what "teaching English abroad" really entails, and where to find the best opportunities, as well as how to reach out to foreign students.
- Aclipse.net: English teachers working in Asia blog here about their experiences.
- Footprints Recruiting Teacher Blogs: English teachers traveling around the world blog for this site.
- Abroad Languages Blog: This blog shares tips for learning languages while working or studying abroad, or when preparing to go.
- The TEFL Blog: This TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language) blog shares packing tips, and offers help for picking a country to teach in and inspiration and encouragement for those thinking about teaching abroad.
- Ted’s TEFLnewbie: Ted’s blog is a great resource for learning about teaching English to foreign language students, earning extra income, teaching business English, and more.
- ITTO Blog: Learn about getting TEFL certified, transitioning to your new home, and ITTO courses.
- Teaching English in Korea: Here you’ll find tips for and stories about teaching English in Korea, and what it’s like to live abroad.
- My Life! Teaching in a Korean University: This enthusiastic blogger teaches at a Korean University but includes good tips and insight about teaching abroad in general.
- Thailand Delights: This blog is maintained by a TEFL teacher in Thailand who’s embraced a more simple way of life.
- honor’s Blog: Honor’s posts like "5 Big Mistakes New TEFL Teachers Make" and "The Truth about Teaching English Abroad" provide real, practical tips for teachers abroad and those thinking about joining the community.
- You Can Teach English: This blog features interviews with English teachers working in Italy, Colombia, China, Thailand and elsewhere.
08 July 2010
Elementary school English: No quick fix for Japan's hapless EFL
This is still yet another educational and language reform doomed for failure.
First, the schools simply do not have enough well-trained experienced teachers to implement EFL even though the required English will be limited to grades 5 and 6. Another aspect of this issue is that the university-based teacher training programs do not turn out teachers capable of teaching a high level of oral English. So even if they meet quotas for hiring new English teachers, the teachers will prove incapable of realizing this reform. Even if they have a high level of English, they will be unskilled and inexperienced at teaching EFL to children. And even if they manage to master this sort of teaching, they will not fit in well with the already established institutional cultures of elementary schools.
Next, the ministry of education is going ahead with the reform without the required consensus of the people who will actually have to implement the reform--the teachers already teaching at and running the elementary schools.
Also, even amongt those who would appear to agree that the reform is necessary, there is actually very little expertise or agreement on guiding priniciples or objectives to such a reform. For example, some argue that students get enough reading and writing, but need more oral English, such as speaking and listening. But the abysmal TOEFL and TOEIC scores indicate most Japanese can't read EFL either. In fact, that is often the lowest area of proficiency.
And what does it mean to say that Japanese students need to LISTEN to more English? Listen to digital recordings of passages that they can not hope to comprehend?
Finally, I'm sure there are many Japanese who are satisfied with Japan's low standardized EFL exam scores, most notably the TOEFL and TOEIC results that are often cited as a national embarassment. Some of these people are 'educational experts' who are worried about perceptions of slipping standards in native language literacy. One reason for this, though, is that more and more young people are going on to university and the universities have not kept up with curriculum and instructional reforms for a 'massified' system.
However, what many Japanese fail to realize is that Japan isn't Finland or even France. It's the world's number two economy, and the economic powerhouse of Asia, an economic zone where English is used quite widely.
The Japan Times article here gives a good overview of the issues facing the reform. Most of the expert opinions its cites, however, are not that expert, but they are strikingly hostile to the reform.
url with excerpt:
-----------
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20100629i1.html
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
FYI
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL ENGLISH
Elementary schools to get English
By TAKAHIRO FUKADA
Staff writer
Starting next fiscal year, all elementary schools will be required to introduce compulsory English lessons for fifth- and sixth-graders.
....
Following are basic questions and answers about compulsory English education in elementary schools:
What will be the class frequency and who will teach the language?
From fiscal 2011, all fifth- and sixth-graders nationwide will have one lesson per week. Although the education ministry calls the lesson Gaikokugo Katsudo (Foreign Language Activities), English is the priority.
The goal of the new curriculum is to help children experience and understand other languages and cultures, and nurture an inclination to actively communicate with others by becoming familiar with the sounds and basic expressions of another language, according to the ministry.
However, many schools will not have experienced teachers with specialized skills in English education, and some homeroom teachers will have to teach English even if they lack a good understanding of the language.
Since fiscal 2007, the government has been directly or indirectly training all of the nation's approximately 400,000 elementary school teachers in teaching English, but surveys show many lack the confidence to lead such lessons.
end of excerpt
First, the schools simply do not have enough well-trained experienced teachers to implement EFL even though the required English will be limited to grades 5 and 6. Another aspect of this issue is that the university-based teacher training programs do not turn out teachers capable of teaching a high level of oral English. So even if they meet quotas for hiring new English teachers, the teachers will prove incapable of realizing this reform. Even if they have a high level of English, they will be unskilled and inexperienced at teaching EFL to children. And even if they manage to master this sort of teaching, they will not fit in well with the already established institutional cultures of elementary schools.
Next, the ministry of education is going ahead with the reform without the required consensus of the people who will actually have to implement the reform--the teachers already teaching at and running the elementary schools.
Also, even amongt those who would appear to agree that the reform is necessary, there is actually very little expertise or agreement on guiding priniciples or objectives to such a reform. For example, some argue that students get enough reading and writing, but need more oral English, such as speaking and listening. But the abysmal TOEFL and TOEIC scores indicate most Japanese can't read EFL either. In fact, that is often the lowest area of proficiency.
And what does it mean to say that Japanese students need to LISTEN to more English? Listen to digital recordings of passages that they can not hope to comprehend?
Finally, I'm sure there are many Japanese who are satisfied with Japan's low standardized EFL exam scores, most notably the TOEFL and TOEIC results that are often cited as a national embarassment. Some of these people are 'educational experts' who are worried about perceptions of slipping standards in native language literacy. One reason for this, though, is that more and more young people are going on to university and the universities have not kept up with curriculum and instructional reforms for a 'massified' system.
However, what many Japanese fail to realize is that Japan isn't Finland or even France. It's the world's number two economy, and the economic powerhouse of Asia, an economic zone where English is used quite widely.
The Japan Times article here gives a good overview of the issues facing the reform. Most of the expert opinions its cites, however, are not that expert, but they are strikingly hostile to the reform.
url with excerpt:
-----------
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20100629i1.html
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
FYI
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL ENGLISH
Elementary schools to get English
By TAKAHIRO FUKADA
Staff writer
Starting next fiscal year, all elementary schools will be required to introduce compulsory English lessons for fifth- and sixth-graders.
....
Following are basic questions and answers about compulsory English education in elementary schools:
What will be the class frequency and who will teach the language?
From fiscal 2011, all fifth- and sixth-graders nationwide will have one lesson per week. Although the education ministry calls the lesson Gaikokugo Katsudo (Foreign Language Activities), English is the priority.
The goal of the new curriculum is to help children experience and understand other languages and cultures, and nurture an inclination to actively communicate with others by becoming familiar with the sounds and basic expressions of another language, according to the ministry.
However, many schools will not have experienced teachers with specialized skills in English education, and some homeroom teachers will have to teach English even if they lack a good understanding of the language.
Since fiscal 2007, the government has been directly or indirectly training all of the nation's approximately 400,000 elementary school teachers in teaching English, but surveys show many lack the confidence to lead such lessons.
end of excerpt
ELT in Japan Issue #3 Publication Delay
Issue #3 will be published a bit behind schedule. Editing of content for final presentation is taking longer than expected, but the new issue should appear here before the end of the spring term (beginning of August).
Meanwhile, here are links to past issues and articles:
Meanwhile, here are links to past issues and articles:
ELT-J ISSUE ARCHIVE
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