October 27, 2008 by 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.
- Who do you currently teach? How would you describe the students?
- What are some of their personal interests?
- How can student interests be better incorporated into the curriculum?
- Which assignments do students currently choose? Which seems most successful? Why?
- What are some benefits of greater student participation?
- What are some risks of greater student participation?
- Do you want to increase the number of choices students make?
- What critical language skills can be taught by tapping into their interests?
- How can you tweak current material to better individualize instruction?
- What internet resources can you use to augment the current curriculum?
- Which exercises or activities do you find most successful in your classroom?
- What decisions do you keep as your prerogative as the instructor?
- Will your students become self-directed learners?
- How can you encourage that possibility?
- How can you create a more democratic classroom?
- What are some obstacles to a more democratic classroom?
- 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.
Ask more. Know more. Share more.
Create Compelling Conversations.
Category: academic matters, adult education, CATESOL, Compelling Conversations, conversation starters, democratic classroom, Teaching matters, teaching tipsTags: academic matters, Add new tag, adult education, adult ESL, autotelic, CATESOL, Compelling Conversations, creating autotelic students, democratic classroom, educational philosophy, ESL classrooms, ESL resources, ESL teachers, ESL teaching tips, questions for English teachers, questions for ESL teachers, Robert Hutchins, teaching ESL, teaching philosophy, teaching survey, teaching tips
September 27, 2008 by Eric Roth

Amazon lists over 5 million books on its website – and continues to overlook many fine self-published books. Naturally, as a self-publisher, Amazon represents an important outlet for my ESL conversation textbook, Compelling Conversations: Questions and Quotations on Timeless Topics. Besides, numbers add precision and ratings can become addictive.
Today Amazon has Compelling Conversations listed at 6,198! That’s my highest overall rating yet – and far better than my usual top 35,000 rating. The book is also rated #3 in the category “adult and continuing education”. Consider me satisfied and surprised.
For a small self-published author, selling a book around the world – and collecting favorable reviews from customers in Australia, Japan, and Spain is a simple pleasure. Amazon’s customer reviews have certainly helped promote the unusual conversation book aimed at sophisticated adults who want to bring their insights, wit and humor into more and deeper English language conversations. Besides my website, www.CompellingConversations.com that offers free sample chapters, Amazon remains my principal promotional tool. So the Amazon ratings and category rankings provide a way to measure success.
Of course, I remain curious about Compelling Conversations finding more success in adult education ESL programs than the flexible private language programs, university programs, and conversation clubs. Private schools, focusing on student desires and needs, usually provide smaller classes with more speaking opportunities. Further, the academic vocabulary appeals more to university bound or university trained adults. Compelling Conversations usually ranks higher in categories like “English as a Second Language”, “English as a Foreign Language”, “Teaching Methods”, “TOEIC”, and even “Quotes” than “Adult and Continuing Education.”
The popularity of Compelling Conversations also reflects an increasing awareness that adult education students want and need more speaking opportunities. Adult education programs, sometimes narrowly focused on a so-called life skills curriculum and preparing students for fill-in the blank mandated tests, offer few conversation classes. Why? Mostly because of the funding structure which doesn’t encourage specialized language classes. The large class sizes also limit the chances to speak – even in intermediate and advanced classes. Creative, dedicated adult education teachers have to make exceptional efforts to provide students with speaking skills – and many do so. Compelling Conversations helps busy adult education teachers supplement life skills lessons with energetic conversation activities.
Amazon updates their numbers every hour, and no doubt Compelling Conversations
will soon return to its usual ranking. Reaching the top 10,000 on Amazon may not sound like much to people who reduce all experiences to dollar signs. I made more money teaching Thursday than on my exceptionally successful Friday, but it provides a sense of being appreciated. Yet I’m counting this milestone as a personal victory, counting my blessings, and smiling.
Ask more. Know more. Share more.
Create Compelling Conversations.
Visit www.CompellingConversations.com .
Category: academic matters, adult education, California, Compelling Conversations, EFL English as a Foreign Language, ELL, English class, ESL, IEP, self-publishing, websiteTags: adult education, adult ESL, Amazon ranking, Amazon reviews, Compelling Conversations, conversation classes, conversation textbook, EFL books, EFL English as a Foreign Language, English tutors, ESL books, ESL resources, IEP programs, self-publishing, small personal victories, teaching ESL, TOEIC
June 27, 2008 by Eric Roth

Have you read English Teaching Forum magazine yet? It is another outstanding resource for English language teachers whether working with adults in Africa, Eastern Europe, Southeast Asia, South America, or teaching immigrants and future citizens inside the United States. Published by the U.S. State Department, the excellent quarterly magazine includes concise lesson plans, reflective essays, and reproducible exercises.
I’ve subscribed for a year, and consistently been impressed at the depth, range, and creativity of the articles. The practical articles offer classroom suggestions that can be immediately used, putting many more academic publications on teaching English to shame. I’m keeping all my past issues of English Teaching Forum. I also wish more government sponsored educational efforts attained this high-quality. Perhaps excellence in public education will become fashionable again.
Fortunately, older issues of English Teaching Forum are also available online. The archives go back several years. You can read the Winter 2007 issue online. Each article can be downloaded in a separate PDF file, allowing teachers to pick and choose their favorite articles. Unfortunately, the 2008 issues remain in print form only. You can also find other valuable teacher resources at
http://exchanges.state.gov/education/engteaching/ .
Ask more. Know more. Share more. Speak more.
Create Compelling Conversations.
Visit www.CompellingConversations.com
Category: academic matters, adult education, educational philosophy, EFL English as a Foreign Language, ELL, English class, ESL, resources, Teaching mattersTags: adult ESL, EFL English as a Foreign Language, ELL, English Teaching Forum, ESL, ESL resources, resources for English teachers, teaching English