Wednesday 5 December 2007

Your first podcast online - limited period only!

Hi,

go to PODOMATIC and listen to your work - but hurry before it melts...

Search the archives for IT in ELT links.

Cheers,

Anthony

Wednesday 28 November 2007

How was it for you?

Hello!
By the time this post gets online, all of you will have taught at the new level.  Some of you will have started working with students much less capable than those you worked with last week; this will present you with certain challenges, such as grading your language, clear and obvious class management and the ability to decipher less grammatical output.  The rest of you will have started working with more proficient students; you may have been intimidated by their level and the fact that you find it difficult to hear anything that you feel you could improve.

This is all normal and is nothing to be concerned about.  New conditions require getting used to and this is OK.  We (your tutors) are all aware that this week's first lessons need to be viewed in similar ways to your first lessons: much is new and a certain amount of "back-pedalling" is to be expected.

So however you feel you have done in your first encounter with your new group of students, the important thing is to look forward.  Think about what you have learnt from watching your colleagues working with the class, and consider the lessons you have taken away from your first lesson.  Look over the notes you have made for your focus on the learner assignment: what do they tell you?  take all these lessons and act on them in your next class.

By the end of this week, all being well, you will have got the measure of your new teaching environment and will be in a position to keep moving forward.

We all have the utmost faith in every one of you.

Best wishes,

Anthony, Dominic & Dee-Dee


Friday 16 November 2007

END OF WEEK ONE GUIDANCE

Complete Language Related Tasks Assignments part one and two - Remember that the school is open on Saturday 10:00 – 13:00 but is not open on Sunday. If you want to make use of reference books in the resource room to help you with the assignments, you will need to come in on Saturday morning.

People A and B (Fiona, Alyssa, Mairead, Matthew, Anne, Heather), who are teaching on Monday, can sumbit Part Two of the assignment on Tuesday.

Work on lessons for Monday or Tuesday - Remember you need to submit formal lesson plans

Do some background reading

Extracts provided on receptive skills (Harmer), activating lexis (Thornbury) and using your voice and teacher talk.

Take some time off and do something physical!

You are strongly advised to take either one day or two half days off and to do something physical: Here are some suggestions (dependent on the weather, of course).

Go for a long walk or a run in the forest (easy to reach on the S-bahn)
Go swimming
Go dancing
Go skiing at Potsdamer Platz (check it out)

Go to the gym

DO NOT go out carousing on Sunday night!


Enjoy the weekend,

Dominic, Dee Dee and Anthony

Tuesday 6 November 2007

Information to help non-EU course participants

We often have requests from American and other non-EU passport holders for information about the realities of working in Germany, particularly about the process of applying for a work visa.

We would be very grateful if any non-EU passport holders who have done the course with us, posted information here about their experience.

In particular, the following information would be appreciated:
  1. How long did the process of obtaining a work permit take you?
  2. What information and/or documentation were you required to provide?
  3. What kind of teaching work have you obtained?
  4. Did you receive any negative responses from schools you contacted because you were not an EU passport holder?
You can use the comment feature at the end of this post to reply to these questions or to provide any other information you feel may be helpful to a prospective course participant.

Thanks a lot

Dominic

Welcome, Class of November 2007!

Hello!

We are very happy to be able to welcome you all to the Cambridge ESOL CELTA course at the BERLIN SCHOOL OF ENGLISH. The next four weeks will be a very busy time for us all but we hope that we at the school can make your time with us as enjoyable and educational as possible. Because the course is very intensive, it really is a good idea to prepare properly for the course. There are several things you can do to make your entry into the world of EFL teaching as comfortable as possible:

Do the pre-course reading
You should all have received or obtained a copy of the pre-course reading. Make sure that you have worked through the Grammar Development Course as thoroughly as you can before arriving on the first day.

The CELTA course focuses on developing your skills as a language teacher, not your language knowledge per se. During the course, we have to be able to assume a certain degree of knowledge about how the language works in order to have enough time to focus on the core skills of teaching. This is why the pre-course reading is so important.

To prepare for the first week's input you could read chapters 8, 10, 11 and 12 of Learning Teaching.

You do not need to bring the Grammar Development Course or Learning Teaching with you to the school every day. You will need these at home for consolidatory reading.

Do some shopping
You shouldn't need to buy any materials for your lessons during the course but make sure that you have all the personal stationary that you need for study purposes. We recommend the following:

- a large A4 arch lever file (binder) for your notes
- pad of A4 paper
- pens
- pencils
- highlighters
- eraser
- sharpener

If you are travelling over from the United States or another part of the world which does not use DIN A4 as a stationary standard, then wait until arriving in Germany before buying a file and paper. Otherwise, the course notes you will receive probably won't fit properly into your file.

You will need to bring €13 with you on the first day, €10 for a locker key deposit and €3 to buy whiteboard markers.

Get teched up
Your life will be easier on the course if you have access to a computer or a laptop. The school has up to eight PCs for your use but if you have your own laptop you will find preparing lesson plans etc far less stressful.

It is also very handy to have a USB memory stick to transfer files and back up your documents. Wireless access is available in the school. If you wish to make use of this, you should let us know on the first day. A memory stick will enable you to prepare your lesson plans and assignments in comfort on your own laptop or at home before simply printing them out at the school.

Go Open Office
The school computers use Open Office software, which is an MS Office-style suite of programs by Sun Microsystems. It is freeware and it runs on all current platforms (PC, Mac, Linux etc). You may find it convenient to download Open Office for free from

http://www.openoffice.org/ and install it on your computer/laptop.

Spend time with your friends
During the course (even at the weekends) you will have very little time to relax and so it is a good idea to catch up with anyone you want to see before the course starts.

You can expect to be working 2-3 hours per evening during the week plus the equivalent of one full day at the weekend on course-related work apart from any time you find during the "working day" at the school, so don't make the mistake of thinking "I'll surely have time to go to that party/pop over to Krakow for the weekend" etc: you probably won't.

Look at the CELTA syllabus
If you are interested, go to
http://www.cambridgeesol.org/teaching/celta8_251103.pdf and familiarise yourself a little with the CELTA course syllabus. You should not worry if you don't understand everything you read; much of it makes more sense once you are actually participating in the course. But it may be interesting for you to see the broad principles behind the course you are about to undertake.

Start a reflective journal
One of the central skills that we will be trying to help you develop is the ability to reflect on your teaching. This means we want you to be able to think critically and evaluatively about what happened in your lessons so that you can identify areas which were central to lesson's success or failure. It is crucial that you develop this skill because it is this that will enable you to survive and continue developing your skills after the course.

Writing a personal journal where you explore your motives for taking the course, your expectations of how you will manage and (as the course progresses) your feelings about your lessons and what you are learning as a result of them could be very beneficial for you.

Do your own work
While the CELTA is not a particularly academic course, it is important that the work you submit for assessment is your own. If you submit work which is later discovered not to be your own, you will be seen as having committed plagiary.

Co-operation with your colleagues and exploiting the ideas of others are good things but plagiarism is not tolerated by Cambridge ESOL and penalties range from reduction of marks to disqualification from the award. In your written assignments the easiest way of avoiding this is by referencing any ideas or quotations you have taken from another's work. The assignment rubrics will show you how to do this if you are not sure.

That's probably enough for now. The main thing is to relax as much as possible and enjoy the thought of starting the journey towards becoming a language teacher. It is a wonderful career and it is certain to be a rewarding experience but it will require organisation, discipline, honesty with yourself and openness to change.

Feel free to get in touch with us either by commenting here or sending us an email at
info@berlin.school-of-english.de

I look forward to meeting you all next week.

Best wishes,

Dominic Braham, Anthony Gaughan and Dee Dee Lovering

Thursday 13 September 2007

Technology in ELT - Weblinks

Hi!

Following up on our whistle-stop tour of cyberspace, here's a list of the sites we visited:

The BBC Learning English website:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/

Breaking News English:
http://www.breakingnewsenglish.com/

Hot Potatoes software:
http://hotpot.uvic.ca/

Edunation:
http://www.theconsultants-e.com/edunation/edunation.asp

A good introduction to WebQuests:
http://www.e4b.de/WebQuests/WebQuests.html

The BBC/British Council Teachers' site:
http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/index.shtml

Podcasts for learners (functional language dialogues):
http://www.eltpodcast.com/

The Macmillan OneStopEnglish site:
http://www.onestopenglish.com/

English for Professional Communication:
http://ec.hku.hk/epc/

Pete Sharma's website (Tech in ELT guru):
http://www.te4be.com/index.htm

A very helpful Blog from an experienced teacher:
http://www.eltnotebook.blogspot.com/

An example of how schools are providing services via their websites - worth a browse:
http://www.target-english.de/

A useful, free podcatcher (sourceforge is worth browsing in its own right):
http://juicereceiver.sourceforge.net/

Podcast player software to embed in your website:
http://v2.bigcontact.com/about-feedplayers.php

A few tips in conclusion:
  1. get a blog - it has lots of learning potential and acts as advertising for you at the same time
  2. get a teaching site email address so you can subscribe to all those "FREE LESSON PLANS!" mailing lists without clogging your regular inbox
  3. play around with whatever technology you have - you will be surprised what potential there is
  4. don't be technophobic - the pen was a scandalous invention in its day!

Cheers,

Anthony

Friday 24 August 2007

Tips for the week-end

Long Night of the Museums

On Saturday night this week-end nearly all the museums in Berlin are open late. This Long Night of the Museums takes place twice a year and there is always a great atmosphere in the city. More details on www.lange-nacht-der-museen.de

Open Day

This week-end a lot of government buildings (including the chanceller's office) are open to the public. More details on www.bundesregierung.de/Webs/Breg/DE/Bundesregierung/TagderoffenenTuer/tag-der-offenen-tuer.html

Dominic