Thursday, September 20, 2012

This week, one of my objectives was ASK MORE OPEN REFERENTIAL QUESTIONS---even with kindergartners!  And I've succeeded- to some extent. By beginning class with "talk time", something that a few of my kiddos still find intimidating, I've managed to allow them to discuss topics of interest dear to their six- and seven-year-old souls while still directing them toward productivity. Usually, one of the students will set the bar and tone by wanting to tell me something about his/her weekend or activities from the previous day or class period. We direct the rest of class' attention to the idea and allow raised-hand discussion on the topic. Sure, rabbit trails are often followed, and I do little error correction, but all of the students have now participated at least once in sharing information and I can see an increase in the confidence level and eagerness to talk from one or two more quiet class members.

"C", the quiet student I mentioned last week in ICC reading questions, had a bit of a meltdown yesterday  when she didn't want to participate in a rotating speaking exercise, but she responded well toward clearly stated expectations for interaction and being allowed to take time to gather her confidence before joining the game. Letting go of time deadlines when it relates to individuals' speaking participation may be something I need to do more often. It begs thought...

Friday, September 14, 2012

Lucy's interview was perplexing. My biggest problem was in getting her to talk. Most of her own difficulty lay in the confidence to express herself AT ALL; so mistakes were limited, as were opporuntities to make them. Like most of her class peers and those of her ability level, she struggles in use of auxilary verbs as well as verb tense, which results in   -s  omissions

In the wake of report cards and some relatively horrific classroom behavioral problems, I found myself both aware of making some of my my lessons too teacher-centric and making some strides in allowing constructive SILENCES. Pausing at appropriate moments allowed me to not only let my students have the opportunity to formulate speech but allowed me to gather my energies.

Looking at my classroom transcripts, practicing more active scaffolding and less direct error correction, and requiring more S-->S questions gave me a move well-rounded and less discouraged view of my own efforts.

Friday, September 7, 2012


This week has felt like a barrage of information. Somehow I must process, organize, and prioritize these thoughts and ideas. Otherwise, I'm afraid a lot of applicable information will be lost by the wayside in piles of wasted stress.

Second Language Acquisition class' readings about phonetics, phonology, and morphology and how it affects language acquisition have made me more sensitive to the way I encourage students' usage of vocabulary. My students currently seem to see English words as disconnected units of meaning. How much of that is due to age (my students are mostly under age 11) and how much is due to a somewhat rigid curriculum that teaches language mostly through themed units which don't give much extra time for expanding conversationally on material? I'm not sure how to encourage morphemic connection-making in students whose primary environment is not English. Even the kindergartners spend less than 20 hours a week in a mostly-English environment and don't read much English outside of school.

Our Methodology readings about constructive versus obstructive teaching practices offered a lot of food for thought. But such food --like kimchi -- is an acquired taste and a bit bitter on the offset. While reading, and especially while listening to myself on video and paying attention to my classroom style, I've noticed that my teacher talking time is MUCH higher than I previously thought. Now, I'm aware that as a kindergarten teacher, I will often have a teacher-dominated classroom, even in conversation class. But ----do I really love to hear myself talk THAT MUCH?


My classes tend to feature a lot of monologic discourse, which stems from kindergarten students' lack of ability to interact very dialogically in English ---but I noticed that even among my slightly older classes, there was a strong sense of manipulation running through the discourse. I'm so sensitive to TIME! Even my error-correction, while it tends to be more student-focused than error focused, tends to come too quickly without giving students time to think and self-correct. Teacher interruptions were high -  probably from my fears of "wasted" time.  Incongruent to this is a practice which shocked me in its frequency when I analyzed my teacher transcripts: I echo ALMOST EVERY CORRECT ANSWER. How much time does this waste per lesson, on average?  I'd venture to say much more than is wasted waiting for students to formulate answers or pay attention. Minimizing this could put me on the road to much better efficiency and increased opportunities for my students to SPEAK.