Frances McManus – Teach English in China – Current TEFL / ESL Teaching Jobs https://goldstarteachers.com Teach English in China to young learner and adults students. ESL teaching jobs in China. Thu, 16 Apr 2020 07:44:13 +0000 en hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2 https://goldstarteachers.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/star-copy-150x150.png Frances McManus – Teach English in China – Current TEFL / ESL Teaching Jobs https://goldstarteachers.com 32 32 Learning to Teach: Mistakes I’ve Made in TEFL https://goldstarteachers.com/learning-to-teach-mistakes-ive-made-in-tefl/ https://goldstarteachers.com/learning-to-teach-mistakes-ive-made-in-tefl/#respond Wed, 15 Apr 2020 08:53:33 +0000 https://goldstarteachers.com/?p=34241 For many of us, TEFL is our first time working as a teacher. This makes our experience exciting; while terrifying, invigorating; while exhausting, and above all, novel in every way. Sure, we complete a TEFL qualification prior to setting off, but there is a huge difference between teaching in theory, and teaching in practice. Mistake [...]

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For many of us, TEFL is our first time working as a teacher. This makes our experience exciting; while terrifying, invigorating; while exhausting, and above all, novel in every way. Sure, we complete a TEFL qualification prior to setting off, but there is a huge difference between teaching in theory, and teaching in practice.

Mistake 1: Not Choosing an Age Group

I made this mistake before I set foot in the classroom. While applying to become a teacher, I had the opportunity to select my preferred age group. Would I prefer adults? Or high schoolers?

Middle schoolers? Younger? Full of confidence and wanting my placement to be based only on my preferred location, I left this selection blank. My choice? No preference.

Boy, do I look back on that decision with some regret! Having chosen no preference I was selected to teach in a Primary School. This came as a surprise, as I had prepared lessons for a high school level. A notion I took based on the school I was told I was placed at. Little did I know that the school you are officially with may simply be the school in charge of your placement, not the actual location you’ll be teaching at!

I spent the first week in China replanning my lessons for my new age group. This was a challenge. How do you teach students who potentially have no English at all? How can you pass on information without that medium? Thankfully I have a good level of Chinese so I have the ability to ‘cheat’ in the classroom, using Mandarin to explain things. It’s worth noting that all of my TEFL training advises against the use of Chinese. The lesson is supposed to be a fully immersive English experience. You will find after you arrive that, at times, this is simply unachievable.

Mistake 2: Making Assumptions

A second mistake I made was assuming my students would have a basic level of English. Nothing major, I simply expected them to have learned the alphabet. It sounds simple, right? As a Spoken-English teacher, the main body of their education was up to their Chinese-English teacher, not me. After completing a few lessons I was told by one of these teachers that, in fact, not only had they not yet started the alphabet, they wouldn’t be learning it until second semester! This was due to potential confusion between learning the Chinese Pinyin system and the English Alphabet.

Another assumption I made, and still make, is that my students will be able to take notes. I have occasionally asked my students to write something down, or draw something, only to be told they do not have any paper! While for their main subjects they have dedicated notebooks, none have been provided for their spoken English classes! I believe this is due to the faculty’s expectation that in my class only speaking and listening are necessary. Thus I struggle to find ways for my students to retain the information I teach them.

Mistake 3: Letting Them Move

Following the advice I received in my TEFL training; that the English classroom should be a place of combined approaches, where the students work not just individually, but also in pairs and groups, where they are encouraged to move around the room during activities, in my first lesson I attempted to do a matching activity. I created flashcards with either a number (in numerals), a colour, or the written name for that number or colour. I gave these out to the students and explained that they should find their matching partner. Sounds simple on paper, but in reality it created chaos. My room was pandemonium as students moved around at speed, all talking (and not in English!). As soon as I realised my loss of control I attempted to get them back in their seats, to no avail! For the rest of the week I avoided this activity and to this date I have yet to recreate the

experiment.

Mistake 4: Accidentally Creating Catchphrases

For my final mistake, I give you a less problematic, but more embarrassing one. I teach Grades 1 and 2, but also have just two classes of Grade 6. These are my preteens, and they require a very different approach to my youngsters. Early on with one of these classes I was struggling to regain control. These students are louder than my youngsters, so at times it’s a constant struggle to keep their attention. In my attempt to get them to be quiet I tried to shame them by comparing them to my youngsters. I said to them (in what I thought was my best Chinese) ‘You are not small children!’. I was trying to make the point that they shouldn’t behave like my youngsters, because they are older and more mature. To my dismay, this phrase ‘You are not small children!’ became one student’s way of greeting me every time we met in the halls. Now several of them use it when I enter the classroom, and anytime we pass in the school. All I can do is smile, and let the shame wash over me as I continue with my day.

The Learning Experience

As you enter the world of TEFL, be aware that it is a constant learning experience. You will make mistakes, but they will not define your teaching. Be brave, be bold, and be prepared to be unprepared!

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Living Alongside the Coronavirus in China https://goldstarteachers.com/living-alongside-the-coronavirus/ https://goldstarteachers.com/living-alongside-the-coronavirus/#respond Wed, 11 Mar 2020 03:27:22 +0000 https://goldstarteachers.com/?p=34082 Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’ve probably heard about the Coronavirus. Known as Covid-19, this virus causes respiratory symptoms and in severe cases can lead to death. Originating in Wuhan, Hubei Province, in December 2019, it has since spread to 115 countries and infected more than 114,000 people. On [...]

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Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’ve probably heard about the Coronavirus. Known as Covid-19, this virus causes respiratory symptoms and in severe cases can lead to death. Originating in Wuhan, Hubei Province, in December 2019, it has since spread to 115 countries and infected more than 114,000 people.

On the news we hear about Wuhan; it’s transport shut down, it’s 11.9 million population closed off from the rest of China. In countries around the world people are panicking; racing to buy toilet paper, face masks and hand sanitizer. The experts remind us of the correct way to wash our hands. Meanwhile, in China, life goes on for more than 1.3 billion people. What is life like for them?

Life in My City

I live in Kunshan, Jiangsu Province. It’s a smaller city halfway between Shanghai and Suzhou.

Its population is 1.65 million. To date it has seen 19 cases of Coronavirus. Friends and family back home must imagine me locked in quarantine in my house, unable to go outside, but this is far from the case. In reality, I am free to move around; go to the shop, take the bus, visit the park, so long as I wear a mask.

That isn’t to say that precautions aren’t being taken. Since the outbreak life in China has most definitely changed. Restaurants that I used to frequent have yet to reopen. Shops that I used to go to remain closed. A café that I used to sit and read in no longer allows the customers to have their coffee on-site. When I take the bus the driver takes my temperature before letting me sit down. When I go to the supermarket two figures in white protective suits take my temperature before I can enter. When I return to my housing complex the security guards read my temperature before I can go home. There is also now a requirement for all the foreign teachers to record their own temperature twice a day and report it on an online form. If I were to spike a fever it would definitely be caught quickly, and I would be treated with haste.

Life without teaching

The main difference between my life before and after the outbreak is that school has remained closed. It is now March, school was supposed to reopen at the beginning of February but it has not. Instead of attending school, we foreign teachers have been asked to produce short video lessons each week for our students. This has proved to be a challenge, as I struggled to produce high quality videos that weren’t too big to send via email. Apart from these videos I have also been tutoring two of my students over video chat. This has allowed me to maintain some semblance of routine and to flex my teaching muscles during the prolonged vacation

.

Living alone

One of the problems I have to cope with during all this is loneliness. Before the virus I lived with two other foreign teachers, but both of them returned to their home countries due to the outbreak. This means that I am living alone, with my main source of company being regular phone calls with my boyfriend back home.

Another difference is that I am doing a lot more cooking. Before this I would frequently go out to eat (one of the many benefits of living in China – cheap food!) but as the restaurants near me have remained closed, I do not have the option anymore.

When I’m not tutoring or recording teaching videos, I like to read, watch tv or play videogames. All in all, the outbreak has granted me an extremely long vacation. For the most part I have actually enjoyed it. I hope and pray that all those infected can recover, and that global measures to contain the spread succeed. I look forward to the day that I can return to my students, refreshed and ready to teach.

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