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Steppenwolf
Joined: 30 Jul 2006 Posts: 1769
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Posted: Thu Nov 23, 2006 11:31 am Post subject: |
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Gregor - great words, wise and true, thank you for your input!
What's the point about "motivating students" when they come to class totally demotivated from years and years (Malsol mentioned 12 years!) of mind-numbing rote-learning and unthinking absorbing of vocables without any practical use in students' immediate daily lives? Motivation is the "key" to learning English? Well, that sounds fashionable and fine and dandy PC-wise, but then I would say, there must be several "keys" acquiring English, and "motivation" on the part of the students is perhaps not the most important one.
Do they feel "motivated" to go to those silly tests and exams they have to pass as regularly as we have to pass water? Yes - they want to score! But they know full well (in most cases anyway) their studied English is of no practical use - see their own teachers!
Motivation can only grow up if one has an ideal role-model - here the Chinese English teacher. In most cases, these guys are the exact opposite what with their own problematic attitude to the usefulness of English.
And make your classes as engaging as you can - the more fun they are the more likely many students will find them "a waste of time...we are NOT LEARNING ANYTHING...".
You can experience that attitude when your class has once again been cancelled - "because our students have to take one of them exams, you know...".
While it is easy enough to make them "want" to take their exams (because of the "motivation" they have to pass) it's next to impssible to permanently motivate them to forget their first tongue at least during English practice classes; they are not grown up enough and constantly need their Chinese comfort zone. |
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Malsol
Joined: 06 Mar 2006 Posts: 1976 Location: Lanzhou
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Posted: Thu Nov 23, 2006 11:41 am Post subject: |
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Last edited by Malsol on Mon Feb 05, 2007 9:19 am; edited 1 time in total |
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vikdk
Joined: 25 Jun 2003 Posts: 1676
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Posted: Thu Nov 23, 2006 11:52 am Post subject: |
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| What's the point about "motivating students" when they come to class totally demotivated from years and years (Malsol mentioned 12 years!) of mind-numbing rote-learning and unthinking absorbing of vocables without any practical use in students' immediate daily lives? |
ohhh so we're talking about educational basket cases - students in a coma - well glad to see the positive side of Steppenwolf's posting shining bright as ever Do you really teach without any intention of motivating your students towards some academic goal � after all you can�t help motivating one or another issue in one or another way when working in the classroom � boring classes after all, among other things, can motivate students to sleep, play games on cell-phones and indeed skip the whole event. Mind you the defensive FT will blame that on the student.
But steppenwolf I�m interested in your concept of what you think motivation is, after all you wrote so much about it a while back � you know about how you used peer pressure in trying to motivate better performance out of your students by embarrassing badly performing students in front of the class. After reading your last - motivation is pointless post - I can assume that idea must have been scraped!!!! Sure it's kind of hard to rekindle the flame of wanting to learn after the effects of education Chinese style - but to try and do this without going through the process of motivating your students in some way - is logically impossible - unless you've invented an English language implant or maybe an English language drug - only motivation needed there was to ensure the student were motivated enough to undergo the prescribed treatment!!! |
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vikdk
Joined: 25 Jun 2003 Posts: 1676
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Posted: Thu Nov 23, 2006 12:07 pm Post subject: |
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| What are you doing about it? |
1. trying to form an elite unit of battle-hardened FT's who will patrol the haunts of youth - the language police
2. getting the greatest scientific minds to work in tandem to devise the English drug
3. realising that it aint the end of the world - and indeed quite normal - if there's a majority within a country who are quite happy with choosing to speak their L1 with fellow countrymen while in their own country rather than using an L2
4. realising that most Chinese will survive - and indeed may go on to lead a so-called normal life - even if they never learn to become English fluent. |
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Malsol
Joined: 06 Mar 2006 Posts: 1976 Location: Lanzhou
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Posted: Thu Nov 23, 2006 10:00 pm Post subject: |
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Last edited by Malsol on Mon Feb 05, 2007 9:19 am; edited 1 time in total |
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Steppenwolf
Joined: 30 Jul 2006 Posts: 1769
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Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 2:37 am Post subject: |
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[quote="vikdk"]
ohhh so we're talking about educational basket cases - students in a coma -
Do you really teach without any intention of motivating your students towards some academic goal �
...can motivate students to sleep, play games on cell-phones and indeed skip the whole event.
how you used peer pressure in trying to motivate better performance out of your students by embarrassing badly performing students in front of the class.
After reading your last - motivation is pointless post -
/quote]
I) Educational basket cases: Fine metaphor, Vik from DK! Now here is the rub: the vast majority of higher-education students falls into this category, get it? But for you to get it you would have to venture out of your cosy kindergarten environment and visit a primary, middle or college bootcamp! That is where we step in and try to lighten things up! Remember, kindies are just the footmat on the doorstep to real education! It's virtually dispensable! Not that I WOULD DISPARAGE IT - but a reality check that takes in societal perceptions would support this view!
But all is not lost among all those hopeless "basket cases". As an avid or maybe fanatical consumer of my posts you will have read that I find a couple or so students of great intellectual and learning potential in each and every class! They make teaching worthwhile - not the 50 or so drowsy, dopey, absent-minded daydreamers that sit in the same class! And believe it or not, it won't matter - sometimes you actually get a sizeable number of students in the same class to actually change their outlook and learning behaviour! You know, I once taught in a women's college where there was no entertainment venue outside, no Internet bar nearby, no karaok club, no public transport after 9 p.m., and no boys on the premises - and the girls told me how BORING LIFE OF A STUDENT WAS! They had too much spare time on their hands - and voila le resultat, mon cherie: they were, overall, my best classes ever! They worked and showed good results every time I came to class!
II) Do I really "teach without intention to motivate students"? A more self-defeating question has never been asked, I believe! LEt's move on! Or let's give you some hint: you suffer from an awful comprehension deficit!
III) Sleeping students: no one has ever blamed that entirely on students, has anyone, Vik from Denmark? Please, elaborate and corroborate! Dont make foolish comments that you cannot back up!
You should subscribe to the Education Post that is a supplement to the SCMP; in last Saturday's issue they published the letter of a teacher who complained about students making a big nuisance of themselves by taking the liberty of sleeping through entire classes.
Note that this was reported from a Hong Kong school - smaller classes (less than 40 students!), and far more professional than on the mainland!
Slackers there simply won't make it past the post in final exams! Get it? Well, then, let's discuss the implications:
The teacher discussed this with his colleagues who all observed the same problem in their own classes; and not just in that school...but it's a territory-wide phenomenon, indeed, a nationwide one (including the mainland).
We can only guess at the reasons, of course, because our Chinese colleagues take it in their stride (without making any fuss about it). There are, of course, obvious physiological explanations: the kids get too little physical exercise (and oxygenation) because of their largely sedate lifestyle. Unlike you in Denmark, they don't spend just a few hours behind their school desks; they spend at least half the day there, and they don't play as much as western kids do during recess times; at lunch it's a short trek to the canteen, then another short walk to the dorm for a 2 hour doze. And if they don't spend time in class in the evening, they spend it as passive couch potatoes.
That's one reason. A valid one but not the whole truth.
Another is the attitude of their parents. They virtually force-feed them on study! In other words, parents make sure their kids spend most of their waking hours "learning something" for their future. Do you think a child's intelligence can be boosted this way? Do you think a child's imagination can develop this way? Do you think a child's interests get helped this way?
When I have done 5 lessons in a day I feel passably tired; more is exhausting. But these kids have to put in ten or twelve hours a day passively consuming book fare! You tell me they don't want to fall asleep?
By the way, nowhere in the entire world have I seen so many people shutting off during periods of inactivity - in every public bus you find dozing, snoring, drowsy people. People who have no eyes for the scenery outside. Boredom is a defining life characteristic of Chinese people.
IV): Peer pressure and "badly performing students": Again I must point out you are not talking in your capacity as an English teacher but as a kindy "pedagogue". You don't know the situation in school classrooms!
Actually, since you challenge me, I put it to you that most teachers fail their students in not doing the right thing. They never let them speak up to an audience. They chorus with them so that the individual's voice gets drowned out. THis is a huge disservice to each of them. They never hear spoken English except from tapes - which they don't understand unless it's followed by a Chinese translation!
One of the more bizarre features of Chiense student behaviour is that they won't listen to anyone speaking to the whole class but singling out one person to answer a question; they are so inured to acting in unison with their peers and their teacher that it doesn't occur to them that they might have to act as individuals.
In fact, speaking up in front to their own peers is not a big deal for them, contrary to the received opinions of some. They can do that as well as we could recite our part in a Shakespeare piece. The problem is that the class will sit passively through such performances without paying attention to what is going on; ask them to repeat a sentence said by the student in front, or to say what he was talking about - and they stay mute! Why is that? You have to train them to listen and to participate fully! That's entirely new for them!
V) "...motivation is pointless..." - this is yet another counterfactual claim by you that I have made nowhere in any of my posts (less than 600 so far). And nowhere else or at no other time in my life haver I made it either. You just like to twist arguments to turn a discussion into a personal vendetta, right? You have lost this argument too! Motivation is not pointless but it's not all and everything. You can never motivate 50 students in one class. There is no objective criterion for what is "intersting" and what is "boring". It's what an individual brings with himself or herself that makes any topic "interesting" or "boring". |
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vikdk
Joined: 25 Jun 2003 Posts: 1676
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Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 4:54 am Post subject: |
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Steppenwolf - good to see that even you can learn a thing or two off a kindy teacher - after all when you write in one post -
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| What's the point about "motivating students" when they come to class totally demotivated |
and then in the next post support a concept of student motivation as a vitally important factor in the teacher/student relationship (well at least I assume you regard it as vital) - then I get that warm feeling of satisfaction that I'm helping along you along in your teacher training (a never ending process for all of us) in a positive manner  |
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yamahuh
Joined: 23 Apr 2004 Posts: 1033 Location: Karaoke Hell
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Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 5:01 am Post subject: |
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[quote="Malsol
Sadly, probably about 90% of the backpackers working as English "teachers" in China feel the same way, clueless about 2nd language acquisition theory. Enjoy your China vacation![/quote]
Aaaand he's off again!
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vikdk
Joined: 25 Jun 2003 Posts: 1676
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Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 5:24 am Post subject: |
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What language do your students speak during their class break?
What language do they speak as soon as they are out the door when class is over?
What language do they speak in their dormitory?
What language do they speak when asking questions of their Chinese English teachers?
What language do they speak when talking with their school admins?
What language do they speak at the various meals?
What language do they hear their role model Chinese teachers speaking in the teacher's office?
What language does the school admin use to give written messages and notices to the studnets?
Chinese, of course. That was easy! |
Malsol don�t you accept that what you write above (of course with the appropriate L1 replacing Chinese in each individual country) is the same situation that English language teachers find themselves having to cope with in every non-English speaking country? I think its something that you have to accept as being part of the job � otherwise what are you going to propose - we wage a war against the local L1 and try and get it to be replaced with the L2 we're teaching! Well that�s hard enough to do in our own classes, but also outside of them � If you think that�s possible and indeed justified, well, I for one, think you're taking a vacation from reality - have a nice holiday mate
Of course I�ve got faith in you Malsol � and know that you would never be barking up that crazy tree. So take a look at that steppenwolf post � he also seems support a method where we place great importance on motivating our students, but one that takes into account the special situation we face here � the local teaching method that sometimes seem so ineffective � indeed in some cases counter productive - to producing students who are openly confident in producing �fluent� oral English. So here�s another pointer for you � don�t think of this game as an all out language war where we have to go out on a full-frontal attack � but more in terms of � damage control � picking up the pieces � seeing what we can re-salvage � a more peaceful approach using a bit of fun while trying to rekindle student interest. One which tries to encourage classroom smiles rather than frowns seems to be best way forward in this particular campaign  |
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Malsol
Joined: 06 Mar 2006 Posts: 1976 Location: Lanzhou
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Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 5:42 am Post subject: |
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Last edited by Malsol on Mon Feb 05, 2007 9:20 am; edited 1 time in total |
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Steppenwolf
Joined: 30 Jul 2006 Posts: 1769
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Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 5:57 pm Post subject: |
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[quote="vikdk"]t you write above (of course with the appropriate L1 replacing Chinese in each individual country) is the same situation that English language teachers find themselves having to cope with in every non-English speaking country? I think its something that you have to accept as
blabhlahblahblah: Vikdk! /quote]
Listen to this Apostle of the Right Motivational Methodology: sputtering a few faddish buzzwords and voila notre empereur enseignant!
Let's face it differently: youknow kids like racing bikes, so you buy a dozen expensive racing bikes - you know titanium frames, ten speeds, the works - and hand them over to the kids and point them to a suitable track (maybe that 500 yard cul-de-sac next to your block of flats, a relatively safe road with no through traffic and no child molesters around) - now if your kids don't use their bikes won't you feel a tad let down?
Well, that is the situation here - special circumstances are created, special venues offered, and special resources used, yet hardly anyone makes the first move, shows any enthusiasm.
They act even as college students as though they couldn't use a potty the right way without you demonstrating it first thing; they will eventually do it after repeated demonstrations, but still reluctantly and many only because of their own peer pressure.
Even so, these kids often have enough energy to complain and to make suggestions: "COuld you find a more interesting topic?" "Please, speak more slowly!" "Please, say it in Chinese!"
Add to these childish ideas the sheer lack of discipline: coming to class for the first time without pen and notebook, perhaps even without any school materials though the bloody cell phone is not missing... it's really only ten percent dependent on what we are doing, and 90 percent of the failure is their own nonchalance, blase attitude, total lack of any interest and self-centredness.
They certainly don't confuse languages - they simply don't feel they owe it to the teacher to make a token effort although they take a pass grade from him for granted! I call this a massive attitudinal problem. Massive because if one such guy is in a body of 50, he will spread his mental inertia across at least 40 of them. |
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Hendahu
Joined: 27 Apr 2006 Posts: 69
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Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 6:35 pm Post subject: |
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The point of my classes is not to teache them to speak english instead of chinese in their free time or between classes, but rather to have a better understanding of the english language and be able to interpret it when needed. I live in China and speak Engish during breaks, but I am still trying to learn Chinese and use it when it is appropriate for me. In perfect world maybe you are right....but I teach in real world. I am proud of the work I do here. My students are able to speak better and understand better once my class is over. That is not a defeatest attitude, but reality. I am not training them to be English thinkers, but rather better english speakers...it does not happen in a semester, but like Confuscious once said, " even the journey of 1000 miles begins with the first step."
Last edited by Hendahu on Sat Nov 25, 2006 10:05 am; edited 1 time in total |
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prune
Joined: 30 Jul 2006 Posts: 16 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 6:36 pm Post subject: Re: ENGLISH LEARNING VS. ACQUISITION |
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| Malsol wrote: |
| Chinese students learn English for twelve years but most are unable to produce verbal or written English. . |
Do you think 'verbal' means 'oral'? It doesn't. All English is verbal.
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| Come on "teachers" - educate yourselves before you try to educate others. |
Quite. |
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Malsol
Joined: 06 Mar 2006 Posts: 1976 Location: Lanzhou
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Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 8:35 pm Post subject: |
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Last edited by Malsol on Mon Feb 05, 2007 9:20 am; edited 1 time in total |
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Malsol
Joined: 06 Mar 2006 Posts: 1976 Location: Lanzhou
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Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 8:42 pm Post subject: Re: ENGLISH LEARNING VS. ACQUISITION |
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Last edited by Malsol on Mon Feb 05, 2007 9:21 am; edited 1 time in total |
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