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Compelling Conversations for English Teachers, Tutors, and Advanced English Language Learners

  1. How democratic is your ESL classroom?

    October 27, 2008 by Chimayo Press
    Chimayo Press

    Who gets to speak in class? Whose ideas count? Who chooses the assignments? How do students receive feedback? Do students have a chance to conference with their instructors? Can YouTube be a valuable source for homework assignment? Do you want your students to become self-directed – or autotelic – in their studies?

    Here’s a quick checklist that ESL teachers that I created for a recent CATESOL workshop called “Techniques for a More Democratic Classroom”. My core assumption remains that giving students more opportunities to literally speak, write, and share their insights leads to a more engaging, dynamic, and valuable classroom experience.  I will write more on this topic in a few days, but here are some questions to consider.

    1. Who do you currently teach? How would you describe the students?
    1. What are some of their personal interests?
    1. How can student interests be better incorporated into the curriculum?
    1. Which assignments do students currently choose? Which seems most successful? Why?
    2. What are some benefits of greater student participation?
    3. What are some risks of greater student participation?
    4. Do you want to increase the number of choices students make?
    5. What critical language skills can be taught by tapping into their interests?
    6. How can you tweak current material to better individualize instruction?
    7. What internet resources can you use to augment the current curriculum?
    8. Which exercises or activities do you find most successful in your classroom?
    9. What decisions do you keep as your prerogative as the instructor?
    10. Will your students become self-directed learners?
    11. How can you encourage that possibility?
    12. How can you create a more democratic classroom?
    13. What are some obstacles to a more democratic classroom?
    14. How does technology encourage a more democratic classroom?

    “Education is a kind of continuing dialogue and a dialogue assumes, in the nature of the case, different points of view.”   Robert Hutchins (1899-1977), former President of University of Chicago and educational philosopher

    Do you agree? Disagree? Why? Feel free to let me know.

    I’ll post an article in a few days outlining some of my thoughts and sharing some materials.

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  2. Why Teach About Solzhenitsyn in English Classrooms?

    August 3, 2008 by Eric Roth
    Eric Roth

    “Own only what you can always carry with you; know languages, know countries, know people. Let your memory be your travel bag.”

    Alexander Solzhenitsyn (1918-2008), Russian writer and Nobel Prize winner

    Alexander Solzhenitsyn, an exceptional writer of rare courage, died today. English teachers, lovers of literature, and people of conscience will find his long obituary in the International Herald Tribune worth reading. Solzhenitsyn, like so many other intellectual and artistic figures, found refuge in the United States when he was exiled from his homeland for his writings. ESL, especially EL/Civics students, will also find his biography of considerable interest.

    While far too many western leftists preferred to close their eyes to the nature and brutality of the Soviet slave labor system, Solzhenitsyn wrote novels that detailed the misery and repression created by the communists. His writings also made it impossible for even the most naïve leftist intellectuals to deny Stalin’s gulags – and how millions looked away. He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1970, but the Soviet authorities naturally prevented him from accepting his award. He spent 20 years in prison camps for his writings.

    Do you have English language students from Russia? Do you know immigrants and refugees who spent their youth under the Soviet system? How did living under a communist dictatorship distort human relationships? Solzhenitsyn’s writings, once censored, may help you better understand some of the historical and cultural factors that have influenced your students and their worldviews.

    Personally, I found working with Russian refugees and immigrants a very eye-opening experience. The more you learn about the old Soviet system, the more you appreciate the American tradition of individual rights and political freedom. Solzhenitsyn wrote in his 1967 novel, The Cancer Ward, about the consequences of silent conformity with Stalin’s crimes. “Suddenly all the professors and engineers turned out to be saboteurs — and they believed it? … Or all of Lenin’s old guard were vile renegades — and they believed it? Suddenly all their friends and acquaintances were enemies of the people — and they believed it?” Everyone, as in Nazi Germany, knew and didn’t want to know.

    Free speech and free press remain under siege – in the United States, often from self-righteous idealists. Solzhenitsyn’s writings serve as a powerful rebuke to coercive utopians, and illuminate the power of personal choices under the most severe stress. ESL teachers, especially EL/Civics teachers in adult education, need to emphasize the beauty, rarity, and wisdom of the first amendment guaranteeing free speech and a free press.

    English language learners might also find Solzhenitsyn’s strong nationalism of interest. He didn’t believe that western democracy worked everywhere, considered many parts of American culture to be corrupt, and advocated rebuilding a distinct Russian society. The tensions between universalism in American Bill of Rights and some versions of multiculturalism can and should be openly discussed in our English classrooms.

    I chose Solzhenitsyn’s quote for the dedication page of Compelling Conversations: Questions and Quotations on Timeless Topics to remind myself – and others – to look beyond material possessions. We need to stay awake and remain sane – even if our society begins to sprout social cancers and asking simple questions becomes dangerous. Solzhenitsyn provides a model of courage and resistance to tyranny.

    Ask more. Know more. Speak more.

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