"They're developing habits of engaging-- ways of becoming involved and invested in literate tasks that are significant to them, not because they were born to love reading and writing but because of the ways the literate activity connects to other things in life that matter to them." (Bomer, 3)
The portraits illustrated in Randy Bomer's Building Adolescent Literacy in Today's English Classroom show students using skills from the English classroom while doing tasks they care about. Through my Adolescent Literacy class, I've continued developing my philosophy of teaching, and this is one of the points of my philosophy: what we teach in the English classroom should be always be relevant in student lives.
I've started working on an ongoing project for my future students in my Conversational English (language) classroom related to this philosophy. I want my students to be able to analyze their own spoken conversational English over a period of time and have more opportunities to speak English than the average English classroom in South Korea allows for. The project will be open for students to make a vlog or podcast and possibly with a written blog component. Students will be able to choose their own themes for the blog and their own topics to write about, but should use the grammar and some relevant vocabulary in class. Because I'll know my students' blog themes, I can also gear my content towards those topics as much as the school's curriculum will allow.
Much of the English learned in Korean classrooms are not useful to students, or are outdated and irrelevant. I want to work hard to make the curriculum as significant to them as possible, because without relevancy, we'll all be wasting time and energy and my students won't be retaining what they're learning.
Kellie!
ReplyDeleteI're really enjoyed reading your take on teaching English abroad. This quote, particularly, excites me.
"I want my students to be able to analyze their own spoken conversational English over a period of time and have more opportunities to speak English than the average English classroom in South Korea allows for."
A lot of what you say about Korea can be extrapolated out to teaching English as whole, so thank you for that! If English isn't a students first language, making the curriculum "significant to them," as you mentioned, is of the utmost importance. Thank you for posting this and sharing your personal pedagogy!