el inglés como herramienta fundamental. - juan valdez
TRANSCRIPT
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Dominican Republic Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages
By: Prof. Juan Valdez
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In 1997, UNESCO ¨ predicted that by the year 2000,
someone who could not speak English and use a
computer, would be functionally illiterate.
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The Circles of English By: Braj Kachru
These circles represent the traditional bases of English.
The total number of English speakers in the inner circle is as high as 380 million,
of whom some 120 million are outside the United States.
The United Kingdom,
the United States,
Australia, New Zealand,
Ireland, Canada, and
some
of the Caribbean
territories.
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The outer circle and the expanding circle encompasses those countries where
English plays an important role as a foreign language or as a lingua franca.
The total number of English speakers as a foreign or second language
is as high as 1,100 million.
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28%
32% [China 23%]
40%
The “purple circle” countries, only
accounts for 28% of world
economic activity.
With the EU– the ‘old world’ just
40%
While BRIC countries are a
third– of which China is 23% of
BRIC
The need has to be met primarily
through teachers in schools.
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• 15 Million English
teachers Worldwide
(British Council)
• Lack of teachers who can teach English-in-English
• No scalable way to train teachers fast enough
Demand for
Improving the
Quality of English
Teaching
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Why now?
• This shift in the linguistic center of gravity has created a need and a demand.
• The need has to be met by public-sector education, primarily through teachers in schools.
• So how do you support school systems to improve the teaching of English?
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The argument.
• The classroom teacher is the key to student learning
• The lack of student progress casts as ‘the teacher’s problem’
• This problem is defined in terms of ‘deficits’--what the teacher doesn’t know and/or can’t do.
• So improvement is cast as a teacher quality [people] problem
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• A problem of people or a problem of practice?
• Is it a teacher problem or teaching problem?
Reframing the argument
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The landscape: Why now?
Crystallizing demands
• The role of English in schools.
– Expanding teaching force
• National/global standards
– Regional expectations
• Public perceptions
– ‘Teaching English in English’
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What Ministries of Education are aiming for…
• A way to ensure ‘quality’ that supports the status-quo
• To respond to public expectations – ‘Teaching English in English’
• To position national teaching force in terms of global reference points
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So, how are ministries looking to address this problem?
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Villa Mella
Zona Oriental
Boca Chica
San Isidro
Sabana Pedida
Regional 10 High Schools
250 Teachers
134 Schools
187,000 Students
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A research-based and experiential study
By: Prof. Juan Valdez
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The Dominican Public School English Program
BASIC SCHOOL (5th to 8th Grade) SINCE 1994.
HIGH SCHOOL (9th to 12th Grade) SINCE 1961.
4th grade
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How do we describe levels of attainment of a foreign language?
For the last 20 years, the Dominican School curriculum tried to reach a B2 level of communicative competence upon completion of high school. Can it be done?
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WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO KNOW ENGLISH?
Communicative Competence (CC):
This concept can be traced to Savignon (1972), who
initially defined CC as the “ability to function in a truly
communicative setting—that is, in a dynamic exchange in
which linguistic competence must adapt itself to the total
informational input, both linguistic and paralinguistic, of one
or more interlocutors” (p. 8). The literature on developing
CC in L2 contexts focuses on areas that are commonly
categorized under the generic headings of linguistic and pragmatic competencies.
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Hours of English class throughout Dominican school life:
BASIC SCHOOL (5th to 8th Grade): 2 class sessions week (45 minutes) = 228 hrs.
HIGH SCHOOL (9th to 12th Grade) 3 class sessions week (45 minutes) = 342 hrs.
TOTAL NUMBER OF HOURS OF ENGLISH CLASS IN SCHOOL LIFE = 570 hrs.
38-week School Year
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1. How can we improve the quality of ELT&L in public schools,
and make English for Specific Purposes a productive competence (Tourism, Telephoning, Nursing & Technology)?
2. What are the factors that interfere with or impede the
achievement of the expected level of language skills in the Dominican school curriculum?
THIS WORKSHOP IS ABOUT THE
FOLLOWING QUESTIONS:
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5 Factors. 1- Our Curriculum. 2- The Methodology. 3- Our Teachers. 4- Our students. 5- Our School System Policies and Context.
Dominican Republic Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages
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4- Our curriculum
Revisión Externa
Revisión Interna
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4- Our curriculum
Design Criteria
1. Curricular Philosophy. Objectives, Reach and sequence.
2. The Syllabus.
3. Students learning styles, preferences and cognitive profile.
4. Methodology.
5. Teaching resources.
6. Student assessment.
7. Teacher training.
8. Challenges in the school context.
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4- Our curriculum
1. The same curriculum at the national level. 2. Do teachers follow it? 3. What is teachers’ opinion on the curriculum?
- 80% think it is not an effective reference or guide.
- 95% believe that it does not help to reach the expected level of English.
- 90% think it is based purely on a grammatical approach.
These data are quite descriptive, since over 80 percent of teachers
believe that the curriculum has weaknesses and disagree with the
approach it has.
However, the ongoing curriculum reform is being done without
participation of the experiences and opinions of teachers who work in
system from around the country, and regardless of experiences and
teaching-learning programs recorded as successful by many teachers
and school directors.
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The Positivist Paradigm A way of thinking based only on
scientific facts.
FROM
objectivity
Top-down
order Cause-effect
linear dynamics
Focus primarily on accuracy
Teacher centeredness
PPP Objective testing
Chorus repetition
Appeals mostly to rational thought
Example: Grammar –Translation and Audio-Lingualism
Assessment of learning
A Paradigm Shift:
3. THE METHODOLOGY USED IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
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Connectivism
A Paradigm shift:
The Complex or Ecosystemic Paradigm
A way of thinking that recognizes the complexity and interrelatedness of all
phenomena.
TO
intersubjectivity
Self-organization
CLIL
indeterminacy
Non-linear dynamics
Focus on skill-building.
Bottom – Up Alternative Assessment
Process Writing
Learner/learning centeredness.
TBL-PBL
Cross-curricularity
Lexical Approach
Appeals to ‘feelthinking’
Example: Whole
Language
21st Century Skills.
Holistic and Connative
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3. THE METHODOLOGY USED IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
We approached this factor from six indicators:
(1) The use of English as the medium of communication and as an object of study.
(2) Methodology of teaching based on grammar and translation.
(3) Teaching techniques.
(4) Use of technological resources.
(5) Using the textbooks.
(6) Technical assessment for learning.
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(1)- Use of English as the medium of communication
and as an object of study.
In this regard, the sources and contextual limitation of this study show that in the second cycle of primary school (5th to 8th grade), 95% of the-teachers develop their class mostly in Spanish.
In high school, 50% percent of the teachers develop their class mostly in English, and the remaining 50% combines English and Spanish in class
3. THE METHODOLOGY USED IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
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(2)- An Orientation to Grammar Translation and Audio- Lingualism.
In general, more than 90% of the teachers in the second
cycle of primary school teach basically how to translate
vocabulary in English class and do choral repetition.
In high school, only 40% of the teachers use solely the
grammar translation method in their classes.
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(3)- Teaching Techniques.
According to our observations, the most frequently used teaching
techniques in Dominican public schools are:
- Reading and simultaneous choral repetition. 25%
- Grammar exercises. 25%
- Translation Exercises. 15%
- Dialogues. 10%
- Oral Exercises. 10%
- Dictations. 05%
- Reading comprehension exercises. 05%
- Role plays. 03%
- Writing exercises. 02%
Technique Percentile
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(4)- Use of Technological Resources.
- Our students cognitive profile.
- Learning styles and preferences.
In this regard, 80% of the teachers expressed that they did
not have access to resources like radios, television or the
internet in schools, or even electricity in the classrooms.
85% report to have never used the Internet to support
English class in school.
90% percent said that they had never been able to use the multimedia lab.
A Digital Generation in Analog schools.
D.F.L: Generations Y, Z and Alpha (1981-2010).
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(5)- TEXTBOOKS.
The usefulness of textbooks depends on a number of factors
that may include:
(1)Consistency with the curriculum, in terms of
content, objectives and approach;
(2)Consistency with the students, in terms of
format, presentation, learning styles and
preferences, the nature of the activities, their
level and their context;
(3)Consistency with the teachers, in terms of
teaching philosophy, their level of English
proficiency, etc..
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(6)- Assessment and Evaluation.
- 85% only use written exams.
- There is no oral assessment or
alternative assessment.
Reading, Writing, Listening and Speaking
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2. OUR ENGLISH TEACHERS
1. Professionalism and Academic Level.
2. Mastery of the English language.
3. Teaching skills.
Three key elements
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OUR ENGLISH TEACHERS
1. Professionalism.
Three key elements
50%
B.A. in Education or Modern Languages.
20%
have not completed a B. A. yet, but they are studying the career.
22%
teachers are from general education.
08% started studying
the career but eventually stopped and never completed it.
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OUR ENGLISH TEACHERS
2. Mastery of the English language.
Three key elements
In general, one would expect an English teacher to have an advanced
level of communicative competence (C1-C2 CUFL). The English teacher
becomes a model of communicative performance in terms of
pronunciation, fluency, intonation, vocabulary, grammar, etc..
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OUR ENGLISH TEACHERS
2. Mastery of the English language.
Three key elements
Based on the results of placement tests given on our training programs for
The National Teacher Training Institute (INAFOCAM-MINERD, 2008 - 2012), it
is estimated the level of language skills that high school public school
teachers have, ranges from Level B1 to C1:
It took us 4 years to take in-service teachers from an A1-A2 to a C1 level
of language proficiency.
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OUR ENGLISH TEACHERS
2. Mastery of the English language.
Three key elements
1.Television.
2.Computers and the internet.
3.The radio.
4.Cell phones, etc..
However, Are teachers the only model?
What can we do when teachers language proficiency is low?
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OUR ENGLISH TEACHERS
Three key elements
Teaching skills refer to the knowledge and skills that enable
teachers to develop effective learning processes, ie, skills that
generate significant learning, consistent with the nature and
purpose of EFL methodologies.
These skills are best assessed through a process of class observation on
in-service teacher performance, which we carried out through sessions of
pedagogical accompaniment for two school years, through a model of:
1. Pre-observation,
2. Observation and,
3. Post-observation. REFLECTIVE TEACHING
3. Teaching Skills.
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OUR ENGLISH TEACHERS
Three key elements
Teaching Skills.
These observation model showed that, in general, teachers
needed to continue improving their skills in:
- Techniques for effective classroom management.
- Strategies to provide a better understanding of the content.
- Appropriate use of technology resources.
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OUR STUDENTS
Based on the experiences and data collected from this study, our opinion regarding the student factor is that:
A. 90% of Dominican students are highly interested and motivated to learn English, the remaining 10% feel unmotivated because failed attempts at learning in school.
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OUR STUDENTS
Regarding the attitude that students have on learning the English
language, the data are similar:
A. 85% of students have a positive attitude, the other 15% have an
indifferent or rejecting attitude toward learning English.
B. Regarding how important students think the language is, in terms of its
usefulness, 95% of the students believe that learning English is very
important, and that it is a highly transferable academic competence.
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5- The System Policies and the School Context
1. Support from the system (Ideology, Policy & Planning).
2. Materials and resources. 3. Class size. 4. Technical support
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C.R.E.A.T.E
• Collaboration.
• Relevance.
• Evidence.
• Alignment.
• Transparency.
• Empowerment.
TESOL’s Principles-based approach to influencing and enhancing successful and
effective ELT practices and policies in the Dominican School System
Teachers as transformative intellectuals, not only as passive
technicians or reflective practitioners. B . K U M A R AVA D I V E L U
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Conclusions:
1. Teachers need more focused continuing education programs in
order to raise their level of language proficiency and pedagogical
skills.
2. The review of our national English curriculum must be done
through a process of national consensus and consultation.
3. The Ministry of Education English department must create a
system of support and follow-up to the development and
performance of the English program at a regional and district level.
4. The Ministry of Education must make new policies to Language
Learning and Teaching in the Dominican Republic and live up to
them. The biggest challenge is inconsistency and discontinuity.