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Non Sequitur
Joined: 23 May 2010 Posts: 4724 Location: China
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Posted: Tue Jan 14, 2014 6:58 am Post subject: |
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Various reasons:
Low prep time and no marking - one lesson plan will do a whole week, although due to class size the smaller classes tend to draw ahead as the semester progresses.
Because I got started in the Oral E environment, my personal stash of teaching resources, is in that area and I know they work.
With our large class sizes I find Oral easier, than I would with say writing. This is because of the need for more one-on-one interaction in writing.
Although I'm quite reserved privately I like to sing and be extroverted in class. This provides entry points for reluctant students who may be failing in English unless we recover them.
None of this extroversion gets in the way of student talk time.
I've also devised a marking approach to Oral which seems to work. Students appreciate the effort I put in to awarding marks that are just and pass this on to other say freshers who come into my class in S2.
I'm also slightly subversive towards the college admin which the students appreciate. For example one speaking topic I put up in S1 for freshers is 'How are you settling in to college life?'
Long winded party official speeches are sent up. Also conversations about how to sleep standing up at flag raising ceremony. Phone calls home to talk about classes and teachers. |
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BlueBlood
Joined: 31 Aug 2013 Posts: 261
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Posted: Tue Jan 14, 2014 5:04 pm Post subject: |
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Great stuff, as always, NS.
Besides Oral and Writing English, what other types of ESL courses do FT's generally teach in China? |
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Non Sequitur
Joined: 23 May 2010 Posts: 4724 Location: China
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Posted: Tue Jan 14, 2014 8:53 pm Post subject: |
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| BlueBlood wrote: |
Great stuff, as always, NS.
Besides Oral and Writing English, what other types of ESL courses do FT's generally teach in China? |
There's English for Special Purposes, which you find in the vocationals.
English for Tourism, English for Hospitality Management ate two of these. Someone posted that they did English for Nursing, which was a new one to me.
English for Aviation - both ATC and flight crew is common and given the expansion in Chinese aviation will grow I'm sure.
What I find difficulty with, is the idea that a special vocational English can be separated from the everyday English we also teach.
If a student lacks basic English skills and vocab there is no way that learning English for Tourism is going to paper over the cracks.
As a marketing ploy it is excellent and that's what we should keep in mind.
In the higher status universities, you get English preparation for study overseas.
Lower status colleges including vocationals may do something similar to ready students to complete a qualification with a partner school in the West.
I've done units on Canada and Australia in this context. |
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