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| What is the average high school class size you've taught? |
| 70 and over |
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11% |
[ 1 ] |
| 65 to 69 |
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0% |
[ 0 ] |
| 60 to 64 |
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11% |
[ 1 ] |
| 55 to 59 |
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0% |
[ 0 ] |
| 50 to 54 |
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11% |
[ 1 ] |
| 45 to 49 |
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11% |
[ 1 ] |
| 40 to 44 |
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22% |
[ 2 ] |
| 39 and below |
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33% |
[ 3 ] |
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| Total Votes : 9 |
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Message |
it'snotmyfault
Joined: 14 May 2012 Posts: 527
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Posted: Fri Mar 08, 2013 11:16 pm Post subject: |
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| Non Sequitur wrote: |
| it'snotmyfault wrote: |
| Non Sequitur wrote: |
Good stuff Itsnotmyfault.
What was class length?
2x45 mins or 1x45 mins? |
1 x45minute class. With all the classes I was supposed to complement what the Chinese teachers had done with them from their coursebook. So they should have already had a go at learning the new vocabulary.
In practice though most of the lower grade students in particular just stared at their desk for most of the lesson. 45 minutes used to feel like a lifetime  |
Mmmm..
I take it that your Chinese colleague was responsible for grading.
In a tertiary situation I would regard those disengaged kids as a challenge, but you really need 2x45 min classes to do that.
Also it sounds like you pretty much had to stick to the CT script.
I found English-language pop songs a good 'engager' for the reluctant ones.
I wonder what their written skills were like. They don't need oral to pass the university entrance, but they do need to read and write. |
I wasn't involved in any grading or exams (so I got quite a few extra days off). With the disengaged students I found myself giving the class to maybe a dozen or so kids who sat near the front and were interested. Sounds bad I know, but that was only for a couple of classes.
Their written skills were definitely better (because of the gao kao) and I'd use that to try and engage them.
Deliberately write something wrong on the board, hear murmurs and giggles behind me, and then have them correct me.
I didn't mind following the script, at least it gave me something to work on, better than just being told "go and talk to them" |
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Non Sequitur
Joined: 23 May 2010 Posts: 4724 Location: China
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Posted: Fri Mar 08, 2013 11:46 pm Post subject: |
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better than just being told "go and talk to them"
So true! |
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GreatApe
Joined: 11 Apr 2012 Posts: 582 Location: South of Heaven and East of Nowhere
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Posted: Tue Mar 12, 2013 12:28 am Post subject: |
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I agree with both posts above ... many teachers teach just to the "interested" section of their classes, rather than continually beat their heads repeatedly against the wall of disinterest. It's a sad fact, but on the other hands it's virtually impossible to teach a student who doesn't want to learn, especially when learning requires them to open their mouths and speak.
One of the problems we have at the school where I work is that our English classes don't really have the "teeth" that they need to have in terms of importance and grades. It's something that I'm trying to change. I mean, the students' English grade just doesn't hold the same importance to them (or their parents) as their other grades do (particularly, for example, their Chinese grade)! And this is depsite the fact that the students are enrolled in an International school and preparing to attend university overseas.
--GA |
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Non Sequitur
Joined: 23 May 2010 Posts: 4724 Location: China
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Posted: Tue Mar 12, 2013 2:07 am Post subject: |
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I know universities in receiving countries are expressing alarm at Chinese students who arrive with seeming English proficiency but don't have enough to survive in a 101 course beyond the first assignment.
I guard against just teaching the interested ones by making sure they all attempt a reading of the set dialogue and doing group things like singing and cocktail games and word races etc.
No one fails but 20 - 30 percent of students finish on 60 percent grade which is the minimum pass. |
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dakelei
Joined: 17 May 2009 Posts: 351 Location: USA
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Posted: Thu Mar 21, 2013 4:45 am Post subject: |
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| Taught at a high school for a full academic year before starting my current uni job. 65 to 67 students in a class. (I did a part time gig at another high school some years back and there around 80 students in a class.) Taught mostly Grade 2 but a little Grade 1. (Grade 3 students, who could really use the help getting ready for the oral part of the gao kao, were of course "too busy" to be taught by we foreigners.) I basically showed up at my classes once a week and tried to get students to speak, any way I could. Did a lot of pair work and tried to do "fun" things with songs, too. Some classes were really good, others awful. I didn't have to give a "grade," thankfully. I taught something like 700 students altogether. The school attempted to make what we FT's were doing more relevant by asking us to prepare students for the Oral English component of the gaokao and I tried my hardest to do that but the classes were too big. We were there basically because the school liked showing us off. It wanted desperately to be the "best" high school in my city. At one point the local TV station even made a short documentary with me as its centerpiece. It was more of a long ad for the school than anything else. Made the school look wonderful. |
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Non Sequitur
Joined: 23 May 2010 Posts: 4724 Location: China
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Posted: Thu Mar 21, 2013 6:21 am Post subject: |
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| dakelei wrote: |
| Taught at a high school for a full academic year before starting my current uni job. 65 to 67 students in a class. (I did a part time gig at another high school some years back and there around 80 students in a class.) Taught mostly Grade 2 but a little Grade 1. (Grade 3 students, who could really use the help getting ready for the oral part of the gao kao, were of course "too busy" to be taught by we foreigners.) I basically showed up at my classes once a week and tried to get students to speak, any way I could. Did a lot of pair work and tried to do "fun" things with songs, too. Some classes were really good, others awful. I didn't have to give a "grade," thankfully. I taught something like 700 students altogether. The school attempted to make what we FT's were doing more relevant by asking us to prepare students for the Oral English component of the gaokao and I tried my hardest to do that but the classes were too big. We were there basically because the school liked showing us off. It wanted desperately to be the "best" high school in my city. At one point the local TV station even made a short documentary with me as its centerpiece. It was more of a long ad for the school than anything else. Made the school look wonderful. |
Imagine meaningfully grading 80 students. OMG.
Did you enter a value in the poll?
Love the bit about the doco.
I've been put on show so many times in such ways as:
Have your English corner under the boss's window - she has high ranking visitors.
Make out you are teaching this class (which has never had an FT before) - the inspectors are here.
Sit at the front of the hall during a staff CPC rally - the cadres are here from the city. The FAO guy snuck off home part way through but I had to stay until the last bus.
Have a teachers' meeting in this cute little alcove we've set up in the main foyer - just where the visitors will arrive from the Ed Dept. |
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