Essentials
in TEYL for Indonesian Elementary School: An update for 2020 (Bachrudin Musthafa, MA,
PhD.)
Challenges
in teaching english as a foreign language to young learners in indonesia
- English in indonesia has the official status of a foreign language (EFL)
this FL status has consequences: lack of exposure, lack of engagement; and lack
of support
- Issues of teachers’ confidence and capabilities in teaching EFL to young
learners
- Issues of sponsorship
Learning
from excellent TEYL programs and responding to the challenges
1. TEYL comes in different forms and intensity of
practice
- Modest time (1 - 1.5 hours per week) ~ VERY WEAK
IMPACTS
- Significant time (20-30% using english to teach other
subjects) ~ STRONGER IMPACTS
- Substantial time (50-90% using english to teach other
content subjects) ~ STRONGEST IMPACTS
2. Effective teachers of english can fluently use english
for functional communicative purposes, including for instructional purposes.
(effective english teachers are disciplined in using english)
3. Excellent teachers of english know who children are and how these
children learn.
- Children learn from direct experiences;
- Children learn from hands-on physical activities;
- Children’s thinking is embedded in here-and-now
context of situation;
- Children learn holistically from whole to parts using
scripts
- And children have a short memory span
By referring to these principles, teachers help
increase children’s learning motivation because they can see for themselves
that english is useful.
4. Excellent english teachers to young learners know how
children acquire a language
A handy rule is as follows: exposure, engagement, and
supports. These three components represent a requirement for learning to
happen:
- Exposure to english (where children are exposed to
language in use which can serve as examples to learn from)
- Engagement (where children are provided with
opportunities to use and work with english)
- Consistent supports (where the learners see for
themselves that learning a language is useful and the language they learn is
recognized as prestigious)
5. Take a responsibility to ensure children’s english
learning
- Use english to provide exposure to functional language
use
- Provide print-rich environment in english (e.g.,
pictures with captions)
- Focus on functional english for vocabulary development
and immediate communicative needs fulfillment
- Reiterate often to ensure acquisition.
- Establish useful, acquisition-promoting routine
Can
indonesia handle the challenge?
1. Choose only excellent TEYL teachers to be assigned to
teach in class.
- The teachers should be proficient in English (both
spoken and written)
- The teachere should be conversant with the notion of
whe children are and how children learn.
2. Teachers of English should be disciplined in using
Englieh as much as possible during teaching-leaming process
3. Apply a merit-systam in managing teachers' work and
payment. Introduce contract-based assignment of teachers in the school system.
English
Language Teacher Education amidst the
COVID-19 Pandemic: A Malaysian Experience (Dr. Fatiha Senom, Ph.D.)
COVID 19
PANDEMIC & HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUITIONS
- As Covid-19 cases increased rapidly in Malaysia, the
Movement Control Order was imposed nationwide by the government
- Immediate closure of schools and universities
- Teaching and learning were instantaneously transformed
into distance and remote formats.
- The Ministry of Higher Education (MoHE) of Malaysia
made the decision to halt all face-to-face lectures and urged every higher
education provider to prepare for online learning.
- Online learning teaching and learning protocols were
developed
- Students began to return to their homes, where in some
areas there was little or no Internet coverage
- Lack of stable Internet access that impede synchronous
online learning
Online
Teaching & learning delivery:
To nuture academic and institutional leader through
provision of professional development opportunities and sharing of best
practices
Objectives
- To provide trainings for academic and leadership
development to UM academic community
- To offer advisory service and consultafion On
academic-related matters to UM academic communiy
- To promote and support innovative and scholarly
opproaches to educational development
- To facilitate a platform for sharing of good practices
in acodemic- related matters
- To create awareness of work-life balance in career
growth
Online
Teaching & learning delivery: Students' attendance
Strategies:
- SPeCTRUM attendance module (allowing students to
record their own attendance)
- Download the attendance list when using MS Teams for
online (live) classes:
- Screen capture students who are present during the
online (live) classes:
- Have students to register attendance using chat box in
the online (live) classes:
- Using electronic timestamp of students online
activities
- Using Google form with customized attendance code
Online
Teaching & learning assessment
Alternative
Assessment
- Formative / Continuous: Case study, Per review, Skills
demonstration, Performance, Essay, Online Quiz, Infographic, Short video,
Portfolio of works, Open book exam, Report, and
Simulation/Gamification/Animation Coding.
- Summative: Learning reflections, Interview,
Sketchbook, Poster, Oral presentation, Video presentation Online discussion,
Studio/lab/clinical works, Project work, Concept maps/mind maps/drawings,
Performance/demonstration, Drawing, and Debate
Dimensions
- Self-assessment
- Peer Assessment
- Group based Assessment
- Performance based Assess
- Portfolio based Assessment
Online
Teaching & learning assessment: continuous assessment
- Alignment to respective CLO must be retained.
- Continuous assessments are planned as online
assessments as much as possible.
- Deadlines for assesments are well planned and not
intensive towards the end of the semester.
- Number and complexity of tasks given commensurate with
the course credit load and student learning time.
- Prepare a marking scheme and/or rubric as a guide to
ensure uniformity and/or consistency in the online continuous assessment.
Online
Teaching & learning assessment: summative assessment
Course Learning Outcome (CLO) 1:
- Quiz: online quiz / randomised MCQ
- Mid semester test: written assignment
- Final examination: learning reflections (i.e. written
reflection on learnings throughout the course)
Course Learning Outcome (CLO) 2:
- Fieldwork: internet research
- In class presentation: video presentation
Course Learning Outcome (CLO) 3:
- Fieldwork: internet research
- Final examination: learning reflections (i.e. written
reflection on learnings throughout the course)
Online
Teaching & learning assessment: cheating & plagiarism
- higher order thinking skills (HOTS)
- unique questions/tasks
- various online tools (Turnitin)
- deter cheating
- strict time-limits on online assessments
- video face capture technology
- educate and warn about the penalties
- statement of authenticity
Community
of inquiry (CoI) framework
Social presence: The ablity of the onine commur (i.e.
instructors and learners) to communicate and develop interpersonal
relationships with each other and to feel they are being part of the community.
- lce-breaking activities e.g. self introduction session
using the discussion or forum feature
- Address students in the discussion by name
- Create online profile and share personal information
e,g hobbies, family, work, etc.
Teaching presence: The ability to design and
facilitate meaningful learning experiences in the online course, and to support
leaners throughout the course.
- Introduce the course structure e.g. CLOs, weekly class
meetings, etc.
- Communicate clear course expectations to the students
e.g. assignments to be completed, attude of students, etc.
- Be visible to the students by having vitual office
hours attending to students' inquiries facilitating students discussions, etc.
Cognitive presence: The ability for the online
community to construct meaning through sustained reflections and discourses
- Develop learning activities that are challenging,
engaging. and require higher-order thinking.
- Encourage learners to reflect on their learning
- Encourage learners to apply what they are learning to
other situations
- Encourage experimentation, divergent thinking and
diverse points af view in online discussions
Language
teacher education by distance (LTED)
Characteristics of distance learning (Mood, 1995):
- The physical separation of feacher and learner
- The influence of control of an organized educational
institution
- The involvement of "MEDIA"
- Two-way communication in some form
Other terms used include: online learning, e-learning,
virtual learning environments, flexible learning, individualized learning,
resource-based learning, supported self-study, independent learning,
student-centred learning, computer assisted learning, interactive learning, and
work-based learning (Race, 2005)
Technology
- For LTED, information and communication technologies
(ICTs) mean that the knowledge of the discourse community (e.g. in journal
articles, books, and teaching materials) can be distributed more cheaply and
efficiently.
- This is particularly useful in a field in which
practitioners are spread globally including in countries where are resource
poor). and are often transient (teaching and/or studying in countries other
than their own).
- ICTs also afford new forms of communication. through
media such as online discussions, synchronous chat, and Web-based feaching
materials.
- Nevertheless. due to rapid technological change.
successful basic technologies (such as pen & paper. word processor, white
board. OHP) are often associated with less effective learning method and,
invisible and not even recognized as technologies at all.
- The 'visibility' of new technologies encourages a
research focus on the ways they meditate learning and teaching
Online
discussion
Advantages of online discussions (Hammond, 2005;
Kamhi-Stein, 2000; Pachler and Daly, 2006):
- Allowing space for everyone's voice.
- Constructing an online identity.
- Exposure for both learners and teachers fo "more
voices".
- The provision of a forum for collaborative learning
and reflection, and peer feedback.
- Record of discussions and of learning.
- Flexibility
- Time for teachers to compose a considered response.
- Ease
- Patterns of interaction that vary from the classic
initiation-response feedback (IRF)
- The opportunity to explore new ideas
- Formafion of a learning community among learners
- Nevertheless, other scholars have expressed doubt
whether online discussions do/can result in a meaningful online community
exhibiting full collaboration (Henri 1995; Littleton & Whitelock, 2005:
Murphy, 2004; Pawan et. al., 2003; Pena- Shaff & Nicholls, 2003)
- Barak (2006) contends that online discussions
encourage contextual and active learning but not social or reflective learning.
- Gaps in liferature pertaining to online discussion in
LTED: discourse analysis of online discussion in LTED and assessments and
grading of online discussion in LTED.
Learner and
teacher challenges
Some commonly identified problems:
- Feeling of isolation
- Lack of immediate peer support
- High dropout rates
- Problems in communication
- Onerous time demands for teachers and learners
- Students suffer fatigue
Practicums
- Some scholars (McGrath, 1995: Haworth & Parker,
1995) argue that face-to face contact is reauired in order for trainee teachers
to develop classroom skills (as opposed to theoretical skills).
- Distance students can face considerable loaistic difficulties
in oraanizing observed practicums which meef the rules of their insfitutions.
- However, recent literature (Coyle, 2005: Kamhi-Stein,
2000; Salleh, 2002: Simpson, 2006) are more positive about benefits of
Computer-mediated-communication (CMC) when students are scattered at different
practicum sites.
- The practicum make use of multiple teacher development
activities such as classroom teaching, case study, observations, teaching
journals, action research and discussions.
Autonomy
& Independence
- Distance learning through the Internet is not about
doing traditional teaching with the technology, but about helping students
"enter into a new realm of collaborative inquiry and construction of
knowledge, viewing their expanding repertoire of identities and communication
strategies as resources in the process" (Kern, Ware, and Warschauer, 2004
p.254)
- It is necessary to ensure the use of technologies in
distance education does not deprive learners from constructivist and
collaborative approaches as well as problem-based learning.
Challenges
and directions in LTED
- Materials: Preparation of distance materials demands a
greater clarity of thought and explicitness.
- Administration & Research: Factors such as the
amount of teacher administrations, the demands on program administrators in
TED, and the strictures and inflexlibillty of existing higher level
administrative practices in many institutions can act as a burden on developing
and running LTED programs.
- The Status of Distance Education: The status of
distance programme is still problematic and some countries are more suspicious
of language-teaching qualifications obtained by distance and others.
- The Need for an Expanded Research base: There are many
areas of LTED which are under researched and nor researched at all.
Practical
implication: how technology course can be taught in an SLTE program?
Most frequently used strategies to introduce
technology (Kay, 2006):
- Integrating technology in all courses
- Using multimedia such as through the implementation of
online courses and electronic portfolios
- focusing on education faculty with the hope that over
time this would fiter down to preservice trainees
- Delivering a single technology course
- Modelling how to use technology
- Collaboration among preservice teachers, mentor teachers,
and faculty Practicing technology in the field
- Offering mini-workshop
- Improving access to software, hardware, and/or support
- Focusing on mentor teachers
Determining factors in ensuring the success of any
strategy:
- Good access to computers with ongoing technology
support
- Time, both during and after the course, for
participants to learn about and then implement what has been covered. as well
as achieve subsequent recognition for their work.
- The modeling and constructing of authentic tasks and
relating of theory to practice through practical examples and application- to
move beyond and understanding of technology to an understanding of how
technology is implemented in a language teaching situation.
- Experiencing technology from learners' perspectives.
- The availability of ongoing pedagogical support.
- Opportunities and encouragement to reflect on the
implications of technology at a boarder level.
The
Three-Period Lesson: a Key Part of the Montessori Method (Yuna
Tresna Wahyuna, S.S, M.Hum)
What is Montessori?
Maria Montessori, she was a true pioneer of child
centered education from Italy.
- Doctor, University of Rome medical school
- Became interested in education through her work as a
doctor for children with spesial need
She opened the first Montessori school-the Casa dei
Bambini, or Children's House-in Rome on January 6, 1907.
Montessori
Method
- The Montessori Method is founded on Maria Montessori's
educational philosophy.
- The teacher's role is to prepare the classroom, and
observe and guide their students in their learning. As a result, children
progress at their own pace, according to their own abilities.
The
montessori motto: “help
me to do it myself”
Principle
of Montessori
Follow the Child
Children are free to choose and work on acthitiesat
their own pace. Here, they experience a combination of freedom and
self-discipline, as guided by the environment and the teacher
*Through work in the Montessori emironment, children
learn to develop concentration, self- discipline, and a love of learning.
Montessori
Areas
- Exercise of practical life (EPL)
- Sensorial
- Language
- Math
- Cultural
"The
first essential for the child'¢ development is concentration." -Maria
Montessori
The three
period lesson (TPL)
Purpose: to introduce a concept or vocabulary and
demonstrate the purpose of a material.
1. Naming:
Teacher: "This is a cat."
Student: "Cat!"
2. Recognize:
Teacher: "show me a cat."
Student: "On your right side"
3. Recall:
Teacher: "what is this?"
Student: "Cat!"
"The
hands are the instruments of man's intelligence." -Maria Montessori