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Senin, 11 Agustus 2014

Characters of Good ESL/EFL Teachers


ESL/EFL learners are being increase time by time. They come with the same purpose, to learn a second language and being success with it. Connecting with this kind of situation, the teachers of ESL/EFL are demand to be a high quality of ESL/EFL teachers. Remember that a successful of learners born from a qualified teachers. I've search some site to know what are the characters for being a qualified ESL/EFL teachers. Here the result, I will share you some good characters of good ESL/EFL teachers. 

1.     A Genuine Relationship with Students
Researchers Deiro (1996) and Noddings (1992) found that teachers who genuinely care about their students have a significant impact on the students’ attitudes, motivation and behavior.  These students work harder and are more successful learners. They learn English faster and display stronger skills. Think of a teacher who you knew really cared about you as a person.  How did this affect your classroom performance and the success you had in that class, which in turn impacted your future success as a learner? The relationship between a student and teacher is the most important factor difference for ESL students. Being your student's friend in classroom is the effective way to get close with your student and it will help your teaching performance in classroom. The atmosphere in classroom will be fun.

2.     Understanding of a Student’s Cultural Background
A teacher who openly welcomes students and accepts the cultural differences can help with an easier acceptance by the school environment.  When a student feels valued, he/she is more apt to assimilate into the English-speaking culture, to make friends and increase opportunities to use English. Students who engage in more conversation and activities with native-born English speakers, acquire English skills quicker which help to boost more skills.

3.     Training in Second Language Education Techniques and Approaches
Quality professional training development opportunities need to be available to help these teachers and other staff members who teach culturally and linguistically diverse students. Instruction needs to be ongoing and offered in a whole array of learning formats from short workshops and one-time inservices to online classes and those that stretch over longer periods of time.  These educational opportunities should be available for free or low cost, possibly with added incentives to the teacher.  They should be available in the most convenient settings and at times to accommodate the “busy” teacher who is already pulled and stretched beyond what most careers expect.

4.     Understanding the Individual Needs of Students
It is helpful to assess the student’s language proficiency and educational history.  The design of the classroom lessons can then be individualized to focus on each student’s functional English level in the areas of listening, speaking, reading and writing. This ongoing student assessment helps the teacher obtain current functional levels so lessons can be targeted towards maximum growth. Ongoing assessment will support daily instruction and targeted learning needs of a student will help that child acquire language quicker and build self-confidence.

5.     Encouraging English Conversations & Involvement Outside the Classroom
Students who more actively engage outside the classroom in extracurricular or community activities cultivate friendships and interests which help with broadening language acquisition. When students feel more confident and have some degree of language skill, they can be encouraged to join other school- and community-related activities.  These can be based on the students’ interests.  Maybe a student enjoys the outdoors and scouting is a good option; sports, music and art might be other avenues; some students might be befriended by native speakers who invite them to participate in something they are engaged in.  Another suggestion is joining groups and clubs that build on an international focus like English clubs and etc.  Being active and also volunteering to help towards some larger purpose can also build relevancy to learning and involvement.

6.     A Willingness to Connect with Communities
Teachers need to analyze what skills are most important to learn at any given time, and then teach those.  As students progress through a hierarchy of skills and meet success, their learning will soar.  Lessons that are built on high interest and tied to the present needs of the students work well. 



References:
http://www.teachthought.com/teaching/6-qualities-of-successful-esl-teachers/

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