Starting my new adventure...

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GillianB

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Joined
Aug 30, 2012
Member Type
English Teacher
Native Language
English
Home Country
England
Current Location
France
Hi there,

I have successfully completed a TEFL course and am going to be teaching English to a variety of people in my village in France. There will be between five and ten students in my class, I assume of mixed ability, and I will be teaching them for one hour per week.

My intention is to begin with a simple assessment of their level in English and then begin from the beginning for the absolute beginners! I would imagine that a lot of you have been in this situation before and so I would greatly appreciate some advice on how to assess their level and where to start. My thoughts are to begin with greetings, hello, welcome, 'my name is...' etc swiftly moving on to 'to be', 'to have' and 'to go'. Am I on the right track?

I have read several posts on here and there seems to be a slight negativity to newbies jumping in at the deep end, I appreciate this may seem folly to experienced teachers but I guess we all have to start somewhere. Thanking you in anticipation..... :)
 

billmcd

Key Member
Joined
Mar 27, 2009
Member Type
English Teacher
Native Language
English
Home Country
United States
Current Location
United States
Hi there,

I have successfully completed a TEFL course and am going to be teaching English to a variety of people in my village in France. There will be between five and ten students in my class, I assume of mixed ability, and I will be teaching them for one hour per week.

My intention is to begin with a simple assessment of their level in English and then begin from the beginning for the absolute beginners! I would imagine that a lot of you have been in this situation before and so I would greatly appreciate some advice on how to assess their level and where to start. My thoughts are to begin with greetings, hello, welcome, 'my name is...' etc swiftly moving on to 'to be', 'to have' and 'to go'. Am I on the right track?

I have read several posts on here and there seems to be a slight negativity to newbies jumping in at the deep end, I appreciate this may seem folly to experienced teachers but I guess we all have to start somewhere. Thanking you in anticipation..... :)

You seem to be on the right track. I will provide more info/advice this weekend. I have a busy schedule at the moment.
 

billmcd

Key Member
Joined
Mar 27, 2009
Member Type
English Teacher
Native Language
English
Home Country
United States
Current Location
United States
You seem to be on the right track. I will provide more info/advice this weekend. I have a busy schedule at the moment.


First, it would be important to know what type of facilities/materials you have available. If you and your students will have access to computers, there are dozens of useful ESL websites including this one with source material, handouts, tutorials, quizzes etc. If your students do not have access to a computer but you have, you can print the material you find useful for handouts to students. But initially you need an assessment tool to determine the level of knowledge/understanding of your students. There are several available for purchase such as CASAS (Comprehensive Adult Student Assessment System) and TABE (Test for Adult Basic Education). Even though TABE is used primarily as an assessment for GED instruction, I prefer it over CASAS because of its separate sections for Vocabulary, Language, Reading Comprehension. If purchase of a tool such as these is not possible, then I would recommend that you develop your own.

Next, you need a lesson plan tailored to the level of proficiency of your students and finally, you need a series of tests to determine progress. I know that this is much easier for me to offer these suggestions than it will/would be to implement, but it is a complex process, especially if you have multi-level students in the same class.

I would also recommend two series of ESL publications. Exploring English (Pearson-Longman) and/or English In Action (Thomson-Heinle). Each has a Student Book and Workbook for Levels 1-4 and a Lesson Plan for each level.

 

GillianB

New member
Joined
Aug 30, 2012
Member Type
English Teacher
Native Language
English
Home Country
England
Current Location
France
Thank you for your comprehensive reply. I will look into the assessment tests and also the books you recommend. I am incredibly daunted at the moment but at the same time excited that I can hopefully 'make a difference'. Onwards and upwards...
 

MartinEnglish

Member
Joined
Sep 26, 2012
Member Type
English Teacher
Native Language
English
Home Country
UK
Current Location
UK
Hey Gillian, good luck with your new venture - I well remember how daunting it can feel at times to begin with but it's also a fantastically rewarding experience (when things go well!)

If you need any help about anything at all feel free to contact me on here - I'd be very happy to answer any questions about grammar and teaching ideas etc

All the best

Martin
 

Tdol

No Longer With Us (RIP)
Staff member
Joined
Nov 13, 2002
Native Language
British English
Home Country
UK
Current Location
Japan
I assume of mixed ability

As far as possible, try to group them according to ability- mixed ability groups are hard to manage because what one finds too easy the other finds too hard.

I have read several posts on here and there seems to be a slight negativity to newbies jumping in at the deep end, I appreciate this may seem folly to experienced teachers but I guess we all have to start somewhere.

There's nothing wrong with newbies jumping in- there is no shallow end when it comes to teaching. The negativity you have felt is not to people who have trained and are going for it, but to people who think they don't need to train because they are native speakers.

Good luck and please ask any questions as and when they arise.

And they will. :up:
 

I'm With Stupid

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 21, 2007
Member Type
English Teacher
Native Language
English
Home Country
England
Current Location
Vietnam
If you do end up with a mixed ability class, I'd suggest Teaching Unplugged, which is entirely activities that can be done at any level. It will be challenging for a beginner teacher though, because it requires quite a lot of on-the-spot language analysis.
 
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