LTSIG event in Morocco

The Learning Technologies Special Interest Group (SIG), the Moroccan Association of Teachers of English (MATE) and The British Council, Morocco are pleased to announce the 1st International Conference of ICT in Education in Marrakech, Morocco from 8th-11th February 2012.

The CALL for papers is available on the LTSIG website. The cut off date for proposals is 16th December.

This will be an exciting and interesting event, taking place in North Africa at a time of momentous change, make sure that you can say that you were there!

Gary Motteram
Event Organiser for the LTSIG.

NATESOL invite you to a Teacher’s Evening on…

‘Online context-related and critical thinking materials for the ESOL classroom’
by The British Council ESOL Nexus Team

‘Evaluating classroom materials is something we do everyday as ESOL tutors. However, with a shift from paper-based to internet resources there are new questions to ask of what we use and what will work with our learners. Presented by ESOL resource specialists from the British Council’s ESOL Nexus team, this workshop will take a critical look at the issues raised by the use of the internet in the ESOL classroom. In the workshop you will have the opportunity to apply what you learn to evaluating some selected web materials and relate this to the contexts within which you teach.  An online CPD Module will soon be available, which will allow you to explore some of the issues covered in the workshop in greater depth.’

Additional information with be posted on the NATESOL website at www.natesol.org

Thursday, 8th December, 2011
5.30pm – Registration.    6 -6.15pm – Start..

Venue:
The British Council
Bridgewater House
58 Whitworth Street
Manchester M1 6BB

Pre-registration is required with Jonathan Nicolson at jtnicolson@hotmail.co.uk or 0161 789 4970.
NATESOL’s programme consists of 6 sessions during the academic year.
* Individual membership per year: £10 – Free attendance at each session
* Institutional membership per year: £50.
* Non-members pay £4 per session, concession £3
To renew your membership, become a new member, or just receive information about future sessions, then please contact:
Jonathan Nicolson at 6 Stafford Rd. Eccles.  jtnicolson@hotmail.co.uk or 0161 789 4970.

edgeblog 20

Well, it does seem to be true what they say about pensioners being so busy. Or is it that we just move more slowly? Anyway, here we are, crept into November already with October a blog-free zone.

On the last day of that month, I was in Liverpool to examine a fine PhD thesis and, while there, managed to catch up with Michael Hoey for lunch. One reason I had been looking forward to this was that Michael had promised an analysis of The Golden Teeth. (Of course you remember The Golden Teeth. Or, if not, check edgeblogs 16 & 18.) For ease of reference, here’s the text again, this time without the priceless pictures:

The Golden Teeth

A toothless king commissioned a goblin to make him a set of magical golden teeth . . .

However, the two argued and the goblin threw the teeth into a deep well . . .

The teeth were found by a young frog, who proudly wore them to the palace ball . . .

The furious king took back his golden teeth and the frog was executed for his impudence.

The End

As best as I remember (it was a long and fine lunch), Michael’s version went like this:

‘Toothless’ signals a Problem to which ‘commissioned’ signals the Response, of which ‘a set of magical golden teeth’ is the intended positive outcome. ‘However’ signals some kind of interruption to this positive trajectory and ‘argued’ spells out what the Problem was. In Response to this Problem, the goblin ‘threw’ the teeth, creating a negative outcome and, therefore, a new Problem for the King. This same act, however, created an Opportunity for the frog, signalled by ‘found,’ an Opportunity that he Took, signalled by ‘proudly wore.’ At this point, Problem/Response and Opportunity/Take patterns come together, as the frog’s wearing of the teeth gives the king an Opportunity to Take that is also a Response to the Problem of his lost teeth. ‘Took back’ signals both of these, completing the discourse pattern for the king. For the frog, the outcome is terminal, an ‘irredeemably negative result’ in Hoey’s terms, thus completing the discourse pattern for the frog, too. Michael pointed out that it’s unusual to have ‘The End’ spelled out in this way, but we agreed that it fits the genre and adds an extra humorous touch, given the brevity of the tale.

So, that, as they say, in the nicest possible way, is as close to the horse’s mouth as we are likely to get in the world of discourse analysis!

Back in the discourse world of counselling, it is most intriguing to encounter again such issues as ‘the best method’ and ‘eclectic approaches’, now being approached against a different disciplinary backdrop. I can’t see that the argument leads anywhere else than it has led us in TESOL, to the primacy of the reflective practitioner in specific interactions, learning to theorise practice as part of the continuing development of emergent praxis.  And along with the strength of that argument, goes the fact that beginners need clear guidelines with which to start out.  It’s cool being a beginner. And it’s a great bunch of people I’m working with.

Last week, I had one of those great ‘fusion’ moments in which a diary note I was writing, a memory of something someone else had said in class, an idea I’ve been carrying around for years regarding a related topic, an interaction I had been involved in during skills training that day, and a thought I had not properly articulated in a personal development group all came together and helped me understand a little more about myself and what I’m trying to do. Only connect: E.M Forster, Fritjof Capra, Gregory Bateson. Strange attractors and open systems. Morewards!

Best,

Julian

 

New free online webinars

LT SIG Webinars

Online seminars for teachers interested in technology

The Learning Technologies SIG will be holding regular online workshops (or ‘webinars’) which are open to the general public. These webinars will take place in the online video conferencing platform (Adobe Connect) and last approximately one hour. The webinars feature well-known and experienced practitioners talking about technology  in English language teaching, and are of interest to all teachers.

More detail here: http://www.ltsig.org.uk/online-events.html

Gary Motteram

Reorganisation of the linked blogs

As more of our current and past students are keeping blogs, I have taken out some of the more general blog links that were there before. If you would like your blog included, please let me know.

Gary Motteram

edgeblog 19

Well, while contemplating the composition of edgeblog: the end, as promised in edgeblog 18 (and, therefore, while necessarily trying hard to hold back from the tempting parallelism of quoting Jim Morrison’s The End), I found myself battered by the number of events and incidents that seemed to demand a mention. And that is even allowing for the iron discipline that I insist on working to, that only issues directly relevant to TESOL and education more broadly should be included.

First, there were “the riots” in August, starting in London and then spreading across our major cities. The links to ‘firing public sector workers, scapegoating teachers, closing libraries, upping tuition fees, rolling back union contracts, creating rush privatisations of public assets and decreasing pensions’ will seem pretty clear to many people. Perhaps that is not where I ought to edgeblogging, when Naomi Klein has made the points so eloquently, even though, as John Harris points out, one looks around too often in vain for voices being raised against the moral and ethical backdrop that politicians and bankers have provided for the education of the next generation.

And anyway, I realized that there would be no time or space to go into any of that once I had come across a line in a political commentary that really did take my breath away. Let me not be drawn into commenting on the suitability of the governor of Texas, Rick Perry, to be the next president of the United States of America (I fear there will be time enough for that over the next year or so). The line that struck me was the chilling: “If you are explaining, you are losing.” From the way it is used in this text, this seems to have become such an obvious truism in USAmerican political discourse that it passes without comment. I managed to trace its origin back to a column by Chris Bowers from the 2008 election. The key paragraph goes like this:

McCain has a new, stupid, false ad out about Obama where he claims that Obama has passed a law to mandate sex education for kindergarten. However, just because it is stupid and false doesn’t mean it won’t be effective. In fact, it might demonstrate a truism about contemporary American politics: if you are explaining, then you are losing.

I find that so strong, so explanatory, so threatening. It explains why I so often find myself out of tune with the zeitgeist. All this effort expended on the proposition that awareness will arouse a sense of responsibility and the motivation to learn more and act differently. No, buddy, if you are explaining, you are losing.

I rallied after a while, reconciling myself to the fact that something like this stance has always been around and that the creation of a new aphoristic way of expressing it does not increase its power, but only restates it.  In the Roman imperial period, the reference to ‘bread and circuses’ as the way to keep the masses happy strikes a similar note. And public education remains democracy’s constant uphill battle against the contemptuous greed of the powerful. If I have frequently referred to my working life as ‘fighting the long defeat,’ that doesn’t mean that the struggle is not worthwhile. And so I thought, “Your new course, Julian, your Diploma in Counselling course, the way ahead, that should be the focus for edgeblog 19.”

Then, as I passed the university bookshop on the way to pick up my student card, I could not help but notice the proud slogan that it displays in each window: “The Knowledge Retailer.” My heart sank a little. On the university website, after having registered, I was invited to select the courses that I intended to take. Having identified them, I was instructed to place them in my Shopping Cart. Have these people not read, or even heard, of the power of ‘the metaphors we live by’ (Lakoff & Johnson 1990)? Bookshops sell paper and print; people construct knowledge. Students are not customers; they are certainly not always right and their fees only permit them to engage with a very different set of rights and responsibilities. Are these facts not important? On commenting to a colleague, “The enemy is within the gates,” I received her wise response: “The enemy has bought the gates and is dismantling them for future sale.

Not that it ends there. There has been much debate recently about the abuse of the internship idea in professional and political life. Young people agree to work for nothing because they hope that the experience (and contacts) they gather will help them get a good job later. This suits employers, as the number of well-qualified young people desperate for work is large and rising. It also suits graduates who can afford to work without pay while they establish the contacts and gain the experience that will give them further advantage in the future. So, as sure as eggs, while university staff are receiving reminders that the window of opportunity for them to take voluntary severance will soon close, we are also being alerted to:

The Manchester Graduate Internship Programme (MGIP)

along with an informative little article entitled:

Have you heard how MGIP can help your staffing needs?

Oh dear, I seem to have drifted back to my earlier theme, and gone on much too long, and I still haven’t told you about the counseling course.

I have also come round to thinking that perhaps there will be enough common ground between edgeblog-as-was and my new role as part-time postgraduate student to make it worthwhile to see if edgeblog can stand on it. Encouragement so to do has also been very welcome and gratifying.

So, edgeblog endures. This is the last one I shall write as an employee of Manchester University. I have already apologized individually to those doctoral students to whom my departure means re-arrangements in their supervisory team, and I do so again here. I am very happy to say the new arrangements themselves are very strong and in each case bring in new and highly relevant skills that I do not possess. My confident best wishes go with them.

edgeblog 20 will be my first as a postgraduate student. Goodness, it has only just struck me that I am starting my second postgraduate diploma at Manchester University exactly 40 years after I started my first: the Diploma in Teaching English Overseas, 1971/72.  Hmmm. We shall see.

Best,

Julian

Lakoff, G. & Johnson, M. 1990. Metaphors We Live By. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

 

 

Recent panel I took part in

Here is a link to a discussion that I took part in about the use of social media in teacher education. This was part of a conference that was happening at the time in Moscow: http://connectpro10829081.adobeconnect.com/p84tr9d2eyd/. This talk uses Adobe Connect Professional.
Gary Motteram

edgeblog 18

This is an edgeblog of distinct parts. First, thunderous congratulations to Achilleas for winning the Gold Teeth competition announced in edgeblog 16. It’s true that no one else entered, but I don’t see that one can blame the winner for that, and any fair-minded person referring back to Achilleas’ analysis of the text in question would have to admit, I believe, that he did not hold back in going for it.

The prize can now be revealed to be a signed copy of Edge (2006): (Re)-Locating TESOL in an Age of Empire. Achilleas, I hope you find it worth the effort.

Relocation also gives me a link into the second part of this edgeblog, to which a tiny bit of sociocultural background might be appropriate . . .

You may well not be familiar with an album by The Doors, released in 1967, called Strange Days. Along with Jefferson Airplane’s, After Bathing at Baxters, it was what made British discussions about the relative merits of the Beatles and the Stones seem so very parochial. I note that the current Amazon reviewer writes:

Even darker than their purple-hued debut, the Doors’ follow-up, Strange Days, closed 1967 with an ominous flourish. On it, Morrison railed at everything from organised religion to pollution, and his rallying cry, “We want the world, and we want it now!” became a call to arms for the counterculture rising up around the band.

Oh my. I didn’t come here to tell you about that, but it is true that the opening line of the title track did go through my mind this morning: ‘Strange days have found us, strange nights have tracked us down.

Or, to start this story somewhere else, my employer, strapped for cash following the government’s withdrawal of funding for the humanities in general, discovered in early summer the need to cut another £28m out of its budget. Now, the quickest way to save money is to get rid of staff, so it introduced a scheme of Voluntary Severance/Early Retirement. I thought the situation through and decided to apply for it.

I have just heard this week that my application has been accepted and I will leave the university’s employment on 30 September 2011. Apart from a few promises to keep here and there, and perhaps the odd occasional gig, that will be that as far as TESOL is concerned.  As I have been involved in TESOL one way or another (in fact, come to think of it, most ways), since 1969, there will doubtless be ramifications of this that I have yet to think of.  Overall, however, I am feeling very positive. I am, once again, in the lucky position of being able to do what I decided I want to do.

At the moment, my thoughts are beginning to turn towards the part-time Diploma in Counselling that I start in September. I remember years ago reading a book called, ‘Beginner’s Mind’ by Shunryu Suzuki. It was “about” the practice of Zen Buddhism, but/and what I brought away from it was one of those quotations that stays with you: ‘In beginner’s mind there are many possibilities, but in expert mind there are only few possibilities.’

Well, that quote may not be word perfect, but it’s close enough for jazz and captures the message that I understood. It’s an exciting message, I think, and exciting, too, that I hadn’t thought about it for years, not until I got into that last paragraph. And that, of course, is the connection with cooperative development — learning through articulation — and with counselling.

OK, enough for now. I’ll be back in September with edgeblog: The End.

Best,

Julian

 

IATEFL at Glasgow/ Speaker proposals/ Scholarships

IATEFL next year is in Glasgow, from Tuesday 20 to Friday 23 March 2012.

If you’re thinking of going, ask yourself:

  • Are you thinking of applying for a scholarship?
  • Are you considering giving a presentation at the conference? If so, click here.
  • Do you want to save money by securing your early bird registration? If so, you must book before 27 January 2012.

Adapted from an email from Herbert Puchta, Chair, Publications Committee, and Vice President, IATEFL

Posted by Gary Motteram

edgeblog 17

It seems a long time since edgeblog 16, the main reason for which is probably that the intervening period included a trip to Peru. I shall spare you the details of the wonderful traveling, awe-inspiring sights and sites, welcoming people and delicious food, even of the repeated headaches that moving around the high Andes brings about for some of us, but I must mention the Instituto Cultural Peruano Norteamericano that invited me to Lima in the first place to run some professional  development workshops. It is a very large institution, with five branches across Lima, tens of thousands of students and hundreds of teachers.

Working with my friend and long-term collaborator, Bob Oprandy, we ran sessions introducing Cooperative Development and associated skills/attitudes to the teachers and supervisors there. The sound level produced by over two hundred teachers seriously engaged in pair-work in an underground room is pretty impressive, but even more impressive was the effort and energy that they put into exploring such a new approach to peer interaction and professional development. The commitment, the  shrewdness of the questioning and the enthusiasm for the idea of seizing more personal autonomy in their teaching was, in a reflexive kind of a way, hugely inspiring and empowering for me.

Follow-up sessions with smaller groups of supervisors (around 20) were no less energising and allowed us to go more deeply and sensitively into procedures and potentials. It was all very satisfying. I came away hoping that some of this work might take root for some of the participants and that I might hear more about it.

Meanwhile, back here in Britain, a very successful BAAL Language Learning and Teaching SIG conference had taken place, organised by friends and ex-colleagues at Aston University, Birmingham. The theme was:

Theorising practice and practising theory: developing local pedagogies in language teaching

(There’s a back-story here about me making a mess over diary dates and commitments, but I have apologised a lot, still feel bad, and so I’ll just look the other way at this point.)

The organisers, Sue Garton and Nur Hooton, allowed me to send in a videoed presentation, entitled, ‘In search of the hybrid: Discourse analysis, TESOL methodology and cultural politics,’ which we have now posted on Manchester University’s server. I’m attaching to this edgeblog The Aston-BAAL_hout that accompanies the talk and the handout also includes the url for the video. My talk turns to a large extent around an analysis of the following article:

Zhang, X. & Head, K. (2010). Dealing with learner reticence in the speaking class. ELT Journal 64 (1), 1-9.

So, it would be even better if you could first read that article and think your own thoughts, or discuss them with colleagues, before going on to the talk.

Hey, I’ll tell you something else. While you’re out there in cyberspace, discovering new delights, I cannot recommend highly enough this recipe for Peach Pie. Peach Pie may not resonate for you the way it does for me, but all I can do is pass on my recommendation for this one as a high-summer treat. And when the weather is a little cooler, I may let you in to the source of last night’s Pork and Black Pudding Wellington, which was also magnificent in its own way.

I hope your summer (or winter, given my growing hemispherical sensitivity) is going well.

Best,

Julian