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Guy Courchesne

Joined: 10 Mar 2003 Posts: 9650 Location: Mexico City
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Posted: Tue Sep 13, 2005 11:20 am Post subject: |
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| I wonder if either Andrew Dice Clay or Bob Saget ever did any TEFLing? |
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valley_girl

Joined: 22 Sep 2004 Posts: 272 Location: Somewhere in Canada
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Posted: Tue Sep 13, 2005 9:59 pm Post subject: |
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| Two words: class and professionalism. In my opinion, a teacher telling "dirty" jokes in class shows a complete lack of both. |
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dmb

Joined: 12 Feb 2003 Posts: 8397
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Posted: Tue Sep 13, 2005 10:06 pm Post subject: |
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Lawyers, politicians, doctors, accountants,bankers, etc don't tell 'dirty' jokes? As mentioned before it is all about knowing your audience.
Last week, one of my 1-1 students, president of one of the largest private banks in Turkey, told me a joke that can't be repeated here. Does he have no class or professionalism? Or just a sense of humour(between guys, of course) |
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valley_girl

Joined: 22 Sep 2004 Posts: 272 Location: Somewhere in Canada
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Posted: Tue Sep 13, 2005 10:11 pm Post subject: |
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| Jokes about women's "mammaries" don't belong in the classroom, nor in any workplace. 'Know your audience' is not nearly as important in this case as 'know your environment'. We're not talking about a nightclub or a private residence, we are talking about a classroom. |
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dmb

Joined: 12 Feb 2003 Posts: 8397
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Posted: Tue Sep 13, 2005 10:17 pm Post subject: |
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| You also need to know your student needs. I'm not saying right or wrong. Telling jokes is a skill. It is part of language. If a student is having lessons so that he can join in the banter at a gentlemen's club(read networking so he can fit in) who are we to do deny it. The student is paying in order to meet his expectations. Sad but in the private 1-1 sector, true. |
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Guy Courchesne

Joined: 10 Mar 2003 Posts: 9650 Location: Mexico City
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Posted: Tue Sep 13, 2005 10:22 pm Post subject: |
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I completely agree Dmb...for one-to-one classes. If anyone is familiar with the macho Mexican male, it seems doubly so with the executive types. It's sometimes hard to keep these guys from making jokes themselves, though they tend to be more tongue-in-cheek. Doble sentido they call it here.
Last edited by Guy Courchesne on Tue Sep 13, 2005 10:44 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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dmb

Joined: 12 Feb 2003 Posts: 8397
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Posted: Tue Sep 13, 2005 10:33 pm Post subject: |
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I don't want to go off topic here but it is related. Getting to know your student is probably one of the most important things in teaching. Yes/No? At the same time letting your students get to know you. Not only can you gear lessons towards things your students find interesting or suits their learning style it relaxes the mood of the class and if Krashen is to be believed the filter has been lowered. Anyway, I have a 90 minute class tomorrow at 8am and the student is on the board of Fenerbache FC, who lost 3-1 tonight in the champions league. So I am all too happy to talk about football for 90 minutes. Should be some interesting vocab. The referee is a what? |
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valley_girl

Joined: 22 Sep 2004 Posts: 272 Location: Somewhere in Canada
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Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 12:44 am Post subject: Re: Using rude jokes as a context for teaching. |
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| biffinbridge wrote: |
| One of the lessons is a joke about the size of a woman's mammaries |
| Justin Trullinger wrote: |
A man is talking to God, and he asks, "Why did you make women so beautiful?"
God pauses gravely, and responds, "So you would love them."
The man thinks about this, realizes the wisdom of this response, and asks his second question. "Why did you make them so stupid?"
And God pauses again, and says,
"So they would love you." |
Look at what was written above. We are talking about offensive, objectionable material. We are talking about sexist jokes. Perhaps some people feel that teaching in a foreign country gives them the right to demean the other sex through jokes.
NO class.
NO professionalism.
NO common sense. |
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Boy Wonder

Joined: 29 Mar 2004 Posts: 453 Location: Clacton on sea
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Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 1:59 am Post subject: |
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Valley girl......Do they not have humour in your part of the valley?
Jokes make the lessons more interesting and entertaining for the students as does winding up certain class members( but not too sarcastically).
My 1-2-1 in Italy told me some filthy jokes....he was head of sales for a large multinational.
I'd say a few jokes about the size of a ladies *beep* or picking fun at God(Irish comedian Dave Allen made a career out of it) to the right audience is no worse than some of the views i have heard sprouted seriously in classes around the world.
This includes my Greek students views in 1999 that ethnic cleansing in Kosova was acceptable because they were only muslims!
My Qatari students belief that all western women are ladies of the night (to put it politely).Oh and the joyous celebrations the day after 9/11 in class at the destruction of the WTC in NY.
The burning of the American flag in class and a poster of Bin Laden being put on the classroom wall.
Italian students referring to all coloured people as n***ers..... repeatedly!
My Thai students deriding one of the darker skinned members of the class as useless because his skin colour means he is stupid and therefore unable to learn anything!
Various students from all over the world laughing uncontrollably at any picture of anybody overweight....some of them screaming...'fat fat fat' as if they were afflicted with leprosy!
If you are going to get all politically correct and moralistic then you should maybe stay in the Valley because you will find that the world and many of your students are seriously sexist, racist, weightist, and religiously intolerant compared to todays Anglo saxon societies.
Oh and by the way do you think that the role of women isn't demeaned in countries across the Middle East, Latin America, Asia, Africa and parts of Europe in particular the mediterranean countries?
Don't think that your standards can be appreciated and acknowledged wherever you go........it's simple....they can't!!!! |
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ls650

Joined: 10 May 2003 Posts: 3484 Location: British Columbia
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Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 2:38 am Post subject: Re: Using rude jokes as a context for teaching. |
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| valley_girl wrote: |
| Look at what was written above. We are talking about offensive, objectionable material. We are talking about sexist jokes. |
Oh my goodness! Heaven forbid! |
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Cdaniels
Joined: 21 Mar 2005 Posts: 663 Location: Dunwich, Massachusetts
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Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 3:29 pm Post subject: Off-color |
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I think the United States is the most likely place for people to find offence. If you look carefully, the joke about God and "stupid" women is really a sharper jab at males than females. "Someone would have to be stupid to love a man" is the punchline, so the humor is darkly misanthropic rather than sexist.
Plus, I think a joke, especially an off-colour joke, is much more likely to be remembered (and repeated) than other material, so it is useful for the student. I know I appreciate learning Spanish jokes, even bad ones, for precisely this reason. http://www.donquijote.org/spanishlanguage/chistes/
Personally, I would love to hear any jokes valley_girl has to share. When she reads "dirty jokes" does she think of some ripping good blushers? |
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Justin Trullinger

Joined: 28 Jan 2005 Posts: 3110 Location: Seoul, South Korea and Myanmar for a bit
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Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 4:25 pm Post subject: |
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| Quote: |
| the humor is darkly misanthropic rather than sexist |
Thank you for understanding. It also a good jumping off place to talk about gender roles and assumptions related to it. I have happily told this joke, which I learned from a student, in women only classes. Their faces cloud over on the second question, then they bust a gut on the punchline. Then we lead in to questions about the differences between men and women, progress of feminism, why secretaries are always women in Latin America, etc.
The thing is, some people seem to see the classroom as a staid, moderate, always polite kind of place. But our students want to learn to use English in the real world. Which is not always so polite and moderate. And I believe that part of my job, particularly as I deal with a lot of foreign study programs, is to prepare people to be successful in a real, English speaking environment.
This means knowing when you're being insulted. It means knowing how to insult others. (Until you know what people in a culture find insulting, you might do it without meaning to. Once you know how, you can choose.) It means profanity. (People who know profanity, and know about register, can decide how offensive to be. People who don't can easily cross the line.)
I believe in sensitivity in teaching, and I don't set out to offend students. So far, I haven't found students to find the examination of "offensive" material to be offensive.
But to me, language is a living thing. And like most living things, it isn't always clean and polite. If you can't deal with that, honestly and openly, with your students, you aren't preparing them for the real world.
Regards,
Justin
PS- I don't know very many jokes about breast sizes. If I did, I probably wouldn't use them in class. But if I saw a legitimate educational use for them, that wasn't derrogatory, I might. And what's wrong with that? |
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Jyulee
Joined: 01 May 2005 Posts: 81
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Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 7:15 pm Post subject: |
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I suspect that male teachers might find it easier to use (and/or study) profanity in the class than females - it�s no surprise that the person on this thread who�s responded most negatively to the idea is called "valley girl"!
Even then, there is a big difference between simply using profanity in the class (through informal chat, jokes, whatever) and studying it, in a rather more bland technical context. Students have occasionally asked me about the F word, and I�ve told them. I wouldn�t feel comfortable going into the exact semantics of what prepositions to use when - but could imagine contexts where teachers and students would.
Yes, in the real world students will encounter profanity - and I can see the argument for including it in class material. But this has to be balanced against other factors of professionalism (which, in this case, means "What will the non-academic side of the staff think of this, will the students complain, is it appropriate?)
Just my two cents  |
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Cdaniels
Joined: 21 Mar 2005 Posts: 663 Location: Dunwich, Massachusetts
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Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 8:41 pm Post subject: Favourite quote |
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Not to mention that "The indiscriminate use of vulgar language is the linguistic crutch of the inarticulate m**********r." (author unknown)
How do people feel about the British vs. US use of "bloody?"
Worth teaching (or more like warning about) or would you only answer only if asked about it?
I learned what I know about Spanish curses (and differences between Spain, Mex. and other LA countries) from classmates and friends, but then again, I wasn't looking to immigrate, work or do business in Spanish when I took my college classes, unlike many EFL learners. |
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dmb

Joined: 12 Feb 2003 Posts: 8397
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Posted: Wed Sep 14, 2005 8:50 pm Post subject: |
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| If didn't know how to swear or understand rude street slang, I wouldn't know what some of my friends were talking about half the time. Restricting my language to textbook Turkish would be restricting my knowledge of living in Turkey and have fewer good friends. Swearing and jokes are intrinsically linked with language and culture. You cant separate a language from its culture. |
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