Three Tips for First-Time Convention Attendees

In 2014, I was able to attend the TESOL Convention for the first time in Portland, Oregon. I had been to quite a few national and local conferences and conventions, but being part of an international convention truly exceeded my expectations. Of course, in hindsight, I feel that I could’ve gotten more out of it if I had been better prepared. With the hope of helping you have the best possible first-time experience, here are my top three tips for first-time convention attendees.

Tatiana Gómez Ramírez headshot

Tatiana Gómez Ramírez

1. It’s All in the Planning
When attending your first TESOL Convention, seeing the schedule for the first time can be quite overwhelming. You’ll find many concurrent sessions and alternative activities to choose from, so how do you sort it all out? When I attended TESOL 2014, the first thing I did was download the app. If you’re more of a paper and pencil kind of person you can always get the program book, but trust me, you’ll want to at least give the app a try. It will for sure help you create the ideal itinerary to guarantee you don’t miss any of the sessions in your fields of interest. If you like to be an early planner, you can even start now directly on the website. Remember to also check out the ticketed events, which this year prove to be quite relevant for today’s ELT professionals, and don’t forget to watch the recorded sessions of the ones you missed.

2. Don’t Shy Away From Networking
Don’t waste this opportunity to network! When traveling to an international event, it’s likely to feel a bit intimidated, which is why you’ll feel the need to go everywhere with a co-worker or other acquaintances you already know, and which I did and later regretted. I know for some teachers, networking is usually not a priority when attending events, but don’t underestimate the power of getting yourself out there. These events are made to bring people together from all over the world, so don’t shy away from this opportunity.

3. Make Time to Go Out and About
Although the TESOL Convention will most likely keep you quite busy, don’t forget to make time to get to know the city. At the TESOL Convention you’ll also find some social events you can participate in, but you can also explore on your own. During my last TESOL, I was able to go see Cirque du Soleil, which was in town, making it an unforgettable trip. The fact of the matter is that many people take these conventions way too seriously, so don’t forget to relax and have a good time.

In TESOL 2018, I’ll be attending for the second time, and as an ambassador, I plan on not only making the most of this experience for me, but I’ll be sharing it with everyone on social media (#TESOL18). Be sure to follow along!

Author Bio
Tatiana Gómez Ramírez is a Colombian English language teacher with over 15 years of teaching experience, which includes young learners, English for specific purposes, and exam preparation. She also managed business English programs nationwide for influential companies in the country. In the last three years, she has dedicated herself to consulting and training teachers with Oxford University Press, British Council, and her startup, ELT Think Tank.

from TESOL Blog http://blog.tesol.org/three-tips-for-first-time-convention-attendees/

Four Must-Try Chicago Neighborhood Cuisines

If you are headed to Chicago for the TESOL 2018 International Convention, you are probably planning to try Chicago’s famous deep-dish pizza. For those who are curious about experiencing the other cuisines Chicago has to offer, here are some neighborhoods with authentic international flavors that you shouldn’t miss.

Chinatown

Dim Sum at MingHin Cuisine

Dim Sum at MingHin Cuisine

Chinatown is home to more than 65,000 Chinese residents who first settled in this area in 1912. Traveling through the Chinatown Gate on Wentworth Avenue you will find numerous shops, authentic restaurants, and traditional Chinese architecture.

MingHin Cuisine
2168 S. Archer Ave., Chicago, IL

 

Greektown

Sample Greek heritage outside of Athens in this small area of Chicago with Old World charm. This area is known for inventing saganaki (flaming cheese) in 1968, often seen in Greek restaurants today accompanied with an “Opa!” as the cheese bursts into flame. Visit Greektown for authentic restaurants, taverns, and pastry shops.

Saganaki at Greek Islands
200 S. Halsted St., Chicago, IL

 

 

Little Italy/University Village

Chicken Vesuvio at The Rosebud

Chicken Vesuvio at The Rosebud

The strong influence of Italian culture in Chicago created Little Italy, the best place for Italian food that goes far beyond traditional pizza and pasta. Here you can try Chicago Italian staples from a quick Italian beef sandwich at Al’s Beef, to a sit-down meal with traditional Italian plates at The Rosebud.

The Rosebud
1500 W. Taylor St, Chicago, IL

 

Pilsen

Table Starters at Cantón Regio

Table Starters at Cantón Regio

Pilsen was inhabited by Czech immigrants in the late 19th century who named the area after Plzeň, a large city in the now Czech Republic. In the early 1960s, Latinos from other parts of the city moved into this area, changing it into the Latin food hub of Chicago. It is now best known for its authentic Mexican food and colorful murals.

Cantón Regio
1510 W. 18th St, Chicago, IL


Centuries of immigration has built a city of diverse cultures and flavors that give Chicago its character and make it a lively place to visit. Other areas you might consider are Avondale for Polish food and Uptown for Vietnamese. Once you have checked deep-dish pizza off your Chicago convention to-do list, try some of these delicious international cuisines. Need some suggestions? Images featured are from some of the best!

If you try one of these restaurants or you have some other suggestions, please share in the comments.

Author Bio

Alana Natke headshot

Alana Natke

Alana Natke is the marketing coordinator at TESOL International Association and a native of Chicago. She is a new addition to the TESOL team with experience teaching English in Prague, Czech Republic, and a recent graduate of American University, Washington, DC. She works directly with TESOL Press publications and manages advertising at TESOL.

from TESOL Blog http://blog.tesol.org/four-must-try-chicago-neighborhood-cuisines/

💟Teachers Pay Teachers for Schools💟

Hello everyone!

I love 💟 teachers pay teachers and they are again breaking new ground.   TPT is making it even easier to get high quality resources.  

Here is some facts and figures about tpt:

  • Over 4 Million teachers from around the world used TpT in the last year alone.


  • More than two out of three teachers in the U.S. used TpT in the last year.


  • There are more than 3 million resources available on TpT today.


  • Over 1 billion resources have been downloaded from TpT.


  • There are more than  1,000 schools from around the world that have joined TpT for Schools.


  • There are 49 states from across the U.S. that have a school that’s using TpT for Schools.


  • Over 30 countries have a school that’s using TpT for Schools.


  • About TpT
TpT is the go-to place for educators to find the resources, knowledge, and inspiration 
they need to teach at their best. We offer more than 3 million free and paid resources, 
created by educators who understand what works in the classroom. Our marketplace is 
growing every day to meet the evolving needs of the PreK-12 classroom. When educators 
get the resources and support they need, they’re best equipped to inspire our next 
generation of learners.

Here is a quick video!

Happy Teaching! 

Lori
from Fun To Teach ESL – Teaching English as a Second Language http://esleld.blogspot.com/2018/01/teachers-pay-teachers-for-schools.html

Get Motivated: Inspirational Quotes for Students

At the beginning of the last year, I shared motivational quotes about teaching. With the coming of this New Year, I would like to share some quotes that we teachers can share with our students to motivate and encourage them. The ways you can implement these quotes in your classes are numerous: simply sharing them with students, asking them to write reflective responses on or share their opinion about these quotes, giving the quotes as topics for group discussions, asking students to illustrate the quotes with their life experiences, and many others. The quotes below are categorized into five thematic groups with ten quotes in each: power of education, power of learning, power of mistakes, power of reading, and power of perseverance. I hope you and your students will enjoy them.

Power of Education

  1. “Education is the key to unlock the golden door of freedom” (George Washington Carver).
  2. “You can never be overdressed or overeducated” (Oscar Wilde).
  3. “Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world” (Nelson Mandela).
  4. “Education is not preparation for life; education is life itself” (John Dewey).
  5. “Education is what remains after one has forgotten what one has learned in school” (Albert Einstein).
  6. “The roots of education are bitter, but the fruit is sweet” (Aristotle).
  7. “Education is the passport to the future, for tomorrow belongs to those who prepare for it today” (Malcolm X).
  8. “An investment in knowledge pays the best interest” (Benjamin Franklin).
  9. “Education is the movement from darkness to light” (Allan Bloom).
  10. “Education is the foundation upon we build our future” (Christine Gregoire).

Power of Learning

  1. “Develop a passion for learning. If you do, you will never cease to grow” (Anthony J. D’Angelo).
  2. “The purpose of learning is growth, and our minds, unlike our bodies, can continue growing as long as we live” (Mortimer Adler).
  3. “Learning is like rowing upstream, not to advance is to drop back” (Chinese Proverb).
  4. “Do not wait to strike till the iron is hot; but make it hot by striking” (William Butler Yeats).
  5. “Learning is not a spectator sport” (D. Blocher).
  6. “The best way to predict your future is to create it” (Abraham Lincoln).
  7. “It is wiser to find out than to suppose” (Mark Twain).
  8. “Learning never exhausts the mind” (Leonardo da Vinci).
  9. “Anyone who stops learning is old, whether at twenty or eighty. Anyone who keeps learning stays young. The greatest thing is life is to keep your mind young” (Henry Ford).
  10. “I am always doing that which I cannot do, in order that I may learn how to do it” (Pablo Picasso).

Power of Mistakes  

  1.  “The only real mistake is the one from which we learn nothing” (John Powell).
  2. “You will only fail to learn if you do not learn from failing” (Stella Adler).
  3. “You don’t learn to walk by following rules. You learn by doing, and by falling over” (Richard Branson).
  4. “Mistakes, obviously, show us what needs improving. Without mistakes, how would we know what we had to work on?” (Peter McWilliams).
  5. “It’s fine to celebrate success but it is more important to heed the lessons of failure” (Bill Gates).
  6. “Failure is the opportunity to begin again more intelligently” (Henry Ford).
  7. “A mistake should be your teacher, not your attacker. A mistake is a lesson, not a loss. It is a temporary, necessary detour, not a dead end” (Anonymous).
  8. “Mistakes are the usual bridge between inexperience and wisdom” (Phyllis Theroux).
  9. “An expert is a man who has made all the mistakes which can be made in a very narrow field” (Niels Bohr).
  10. “Good people are good because they have come to wisdom through failure. We get very little wisdom from success” (William Saroyan).

Power of Reading

  1.  “Literacy is a bridge from misery to hope” (Kofi Annan).
  2. “Once you learn to read, you will be forever free” (Frederick Douglass).
  3. “Whenever you read a good book, somewhere in the world a door opens to allow in more light” (Vera Nazarian).
  4. “Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body” (Richard Steele).
  5. “A parent or a teacher has only his lifetime; a good book can teach forever” (Louis L’Amour).
  6. “A book is a gift you can open again and again” (Garrison Keillor).
  7. “I have always imagined that paradise will be a kind of library” (Jorge Luis Borges).
  8. “It is not true that we have only one life to live; if we can read, we can live as many more lives and as many kinds of lives as we wish” (S.I. Hayakawa).
  9. “Wear the old coat and buy the new book” (Austin Phelps).
  10. “He that loves reading has everything within his reach” (William Godwin).

Power of Perseverance

  1. “It’s not that I’m so smart, it’s just that I stay with problems longer” (Albert Einstein).
  2. “You may encounter many defeats, but you must not be defeated. In fact, it may be necessary to encounter the defeats, so you can know who you are, what you can rise from, how you can still come out of it” (Maya Angelou).
  3. “I will persist until I succeed. Always will I take another step. If that is of no avail I will take another, and yet another. In truth, one step at a time is not too difficult. I know that small attempts, repeated, will complete any undertaking” (Og Mandino).
  4. “Making your mark on the world is hard. If it were easy, everybody would do it. But it’s not. It takes patience, it takes commitment, and it comes with plenty of failure along the way. The real test is not whether you avoid this failure, because you won’t. It’s whether you let it harden or shame you into inaction, or whether you learn from it; whether you choose to persevere” (Barack Obama).
  5. “Perseverance is failing 19 times and succeeding the 20th” (Julie Andrews).
  6. “I’ve failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed” (Michael Jordan).
  7. “If people only knew how hard I’ve worked to gain my mastery, it wouldn’t seem so wonderful at all” (Michelangelo).
  8. “Successful and unsuccessful people do not vary greatly in their abilities. They vary in their desires to reach their potential” (John Maxwell).
  9. “A failure is not always a mistake. It may simply be the best one can do under the circumstances. The real mistake is to stop trying” (B. F. Skinner).
  10. “If you can’t fly then run, if you can’t run then walk, if you can’t walk then crawl, but whatever you do you have to keep moving forward” (Martin Luther King, Jr.).

from TESOL Blog http://blog.tesol.org/get-motivated-inspirational-quotes-for-students/

💕Friday Freebie!💕

Hello everyone,

It is Friday and time for a freebie!

Are you ready for a fun and free Venn Diagram with a bit of a twist?  Well here you go!
Click here!

2 Square Venn Diagram – Graphic Organizer
https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/2-Square-Venn-Diagram-Graphic-Organizer-and-Lesson-Plan-88098Students use this 2 squared graphic organizer to respond to literature. Compare and contrast 2 characters in a story, 2 different settings, or 2 events. Use this great Venn Diagram before, during and after reading to solidify student comprehension

Graphic organizers are great group or individual work activities as a response to literature during independent reading, interactive
reading, or shared reading.

Graphic Organizers help students develop higher level thinking skills and promote creativity. They are handy tools for classroom use that guide students through the process of organizing information. Graphic organizers make logic out of language and help students summarize and interpret text. Graphic Organizers are excellent tools that promote high-level active thinking in the classroom.

Critical Thinking and Active Learning materials for:

-Reading Comprehension
-Math
-Social Studies
-Science
-Art
-Conflict Resolution

SECOND LANGUAGE LEARNERS:
Graphic organizers make content area information more accessible to second language learners. The Venn Diagram can change complex language into language that is comprehensible. This is a perfect visual tool that helps ELLs and all students understand and organize information.

Click here for your freebie!

Happy teaching!💕


from Fun To Teach ESL – Teaching English as a Second Language http://esleld.blogspot.com/2018/01/friday-freebie.html

An Insider’s Guide to Attending TESOL 2018

As I look forward to attending TESOL 2018 in Chicago, I thought I would share with you an insider’s guide to participating and getting the most out of the convention.

Denise Maduli-Williams Headshot

Denise Maduli-Williams

1. Comfortable shoes and layers are essential. Whether TESOL has been in New Orleans or Philadelphia, convention centers are big and most likely you will be walking from one end to the other to get to the sessions you want. Wearing walkable shoes cannot be overstated. So does wearing layers because one room may be chilly and the next may be standing room only and airless.

2. Get coffee outside of the convention center. Inside, the lines will be long, yet outside you’ll likely find a nice local café nearby to grab your cup of joe. You’ll get to enter the convention, breeze past the Starbucks line and head to your session.

3. Ditch that heavy program book. I admit I used to carry the tome around, highlight it carefully, and peruse it often to plan my day. Now I leave it in my hotel room, plan my day on the TESOL app (available in February), interact with the social media features, and access presenter’s slides and materials all at my fingertips (and my back doesn’t hurt from heavy lifting).

4. Put your name in the hat for all the raffles at the publisher’s booths in the Expo Hall. TESOL raffles off great books, and sometimes you can win technology and other equipment. You’ll know the drawings are happening when you see the crowds forming.

5. Don’t limit yourself to presentations that only match your students’ age, their level, or your interest. I teach college, but some of the best sessions I have attended were focused on elementary-level students. My passion is educational technology, but I got really excited about maker spaces and sketchnoting.

6. Don’t miss the Electronic Village. The Electronic Village is one of my favorite locations at the conference. Check it out early—follow the signage to find out where it’s been tucked away and sign up as needed. By the way, you get a big bang for your buck in the technology showcase because it offers multiple presenters at different stations at the same time.

7. Watch for some cool freebies. Last year I got a free professional headshot and some fun little Instagram photo printouts.

8. The poster sessions are a madhouse. I like to check out the poster sessions, but they’re not for the faint of heart. They are usually in the very back of the Expo Hall and yet all squished together. You’ll need to squeeze through the throng to get a good look, but many presenters now include a QR code or web link that you can refer to later for anything that catches your eye.

9. In sessions, be patient, but also be willing to leave. Are you in a session that doesn’t seem right for you in the first five minutes? Well, give it another five minutes before you bolt. However, if you realize that the topic really does not pertain to you, then don’t be afraid to discreetly exit. Just don’t be that annoying person who walks in, demands a handout (or two), takes it, and immediately leaves.

10. Have the books shipped. My first few years I was so excited that I grabbed as many teacher copies of textbooks as I could. The result? I ended up paying extra for the weight of my suitcase on the flight home. Publishers are happy to send them. Also, bring a stack of business cards and just staple them to the forms that all the publishers ask you to fill out. (Saves time and hand cramps!)

11. You can take a break. Sometimes the best learning and connections take place in the hallways and common areas. If you’re feeling overloaded, have a seat in the foyer or take a walk. You’ll likely find yourself striking up an interesting conversation, running into colleagues, or making a new connection.

12. Connect after the convention. Don’t be afraid to email a presenter after you get back to your campus. You’ll likely get more materials, examples, and helpful information than you could if you try to get a quick question answered right after they finish their presentation.

13. See something outside the convention. Even though we are in the city for the conference, don’t leave the city without doing at least one excursion, whether it’s to a tourist spot, a park nearby, a local restaurant, or flea market. If you’re not comfortable going alone, there are usually some TESOL-organized excursions.

Author Bio
Denise Maduli-Williams is an assistant professor at San Diego Miramar College. She has been teaching ESOL for the past two decades and attended her very first TESOL Convention in 2000. She has taught in a prison, the Peace Corps, New York City public high schools, and community colleges in Chicago, San Francisco, and San Diego. Her passion is educational technology.

from TESOL Blog http://blog.tesol.org/an-insiders-guide-to-attending-tesol-2018/

TESOL Educational Technology Blog: Welcome!

Welcome to the inaugural post for the new TESOL Educational Technology Blog! I am very excited to share some of my thoughts about enhancing our English teaching experiences through thoughtful innovation and computer-assisted language learning (CALL) integration. Each month we will explore new opportunities to improve our teaching and design of learning experiences. For this inaugural entry, I will preview some of the topics that I will address this year as well as a number of resources that can help you further explore and experiment with emerging technologies.

Topics that I intend to address this year include

  • Gathering, archiving, and curating multimedia materials
  • Using and designing robust video
  • Integrating polling software
  • Innovative approaches to teaching integrated skills
  • Engaging ways to use music and lyrics across skills
  • Integrating games into your lessons
  • Creating your own video games
  • Using augmented reality
  • Creating your own augmented reality experiences
  • Using voice-controlled devices as learning tools
  • Experimenting with artificial intelligence

I also welcome suggestions for other topics that you would like to explore for future episodes. Please share your suggestions in the comments.

TESOL Press has much to offer those curious about integrating technology in innovative ways. Some of the books currently available include

Each of these books provides guidance for teachers interested in exploring new ways to use and think about implementing technology. “The TESOL Technology Standards,” for example, provide an established set of benchmark expectations for technology knowledge and skills for teachers, students, and administrators, along with a theoretical and research foundation on which the benchmarks and performance indicators are constructed. Vignettes illustrate examples from low, medium, and high technology access classrooms. The standards also include a section devoted to program evaluation that can help instructors and administrators identify areas for improvement.

In 2018 TESOL will also release a volume titled “Online and Hybrid Classes” in the Voices from the TESOL Classroom series. This book includes thoughtful reflections on the teaching and learning experiences around the world in ESL, EFL, and TEFL teacher preparation programs. I was the volume editor of this collection and authored the introduction and conclusion.

Of course, TESOL offers other publications that address the integration of technology. Over the past few years, TESOL Journal has included at least one article involving technology in each issue. Some issues offer innovative practical studies that can help guide other teachers in their own creative use. In fact, the most recent issue (December, 2017) was focused exclusively on CALL. The editor, Joy Egbert, is a renowned expert in this area, so this is no surprise. The diversity of articles in this issue is impressive and can certainly provide practical guidance. The CALL Interest Section (IS) publishes the “On CALL” newsletter, which includes articles and current professional-development activities related to CALL and the CALL IS.

TESOL offers many opportunities for professional development throughout the year as well. The most useful events for those interested in educational technology are offered by the TESOL CALL IS. At the TESOL Annual Convention & English Language Expo, you can find the Electronic Village (EV), which functions like a CALL conference within the larger TESOL conference. The EV hosts numerous sessions, including fairs that allow visitors to learn about multiple projects in a single session. The CALL IS also hosts the Electronic Village Online (EVO). The EVO provides professional development online for interested toilers. These sessions begin on 14 January 2018 this year.

from TESOL Blog http://blog.tesol.org/tesol-educational-technology-blog-welcome/

Why you should use songs in your ELD lessons!

Hi everyone,
I love using songs and chants during my lessons.

Much of the input students receive during ELD is visual.  Songs and Chants offer another venue for students to learn the lesson objective through music and rhythm.

As an ANTICIPATORY SET, Songs and Chants hook the students.  They can set the stage for your lesson and emphasize your language objectives.

Songs and Chants provide the ENGAGEMENT AND MOTIVATION all within the context of learning.  Songs and Chants give meaning to students and they relax as they sing and play.

Songs and Chants can trigger emotions and lower AFFECTIVE FILTERS.  Students socialize through Songs/Chants.  They can listen to themselves sing, and practice the reproduction of English songs while enjoying the rhythm.  Finally, Songs and Chants help second language learners express their feelings.

Songs and Chants can be a perfect addition to any lesson!
Have fun!

Happy Teaching! Lori


ESL & ELD Songs and Chants Volume I SING IT LOUD! SING IT CLEAR!  This 51-page collection of ELD and ESL songs and black lines are perfect for every classroom with second language learners. Open every lesson with a song or chant from this rich collection of ELD based lyrics and watch your students' fluency grow. Volume I includes 22 songs/ chants, lesson ideas and activities that will raise the oral academic language of your students to new heights. The songs and chants are sung to familiar popular songs or the lyrics are used in call backs or chant style tunes. These lyrics provide a compelling way to begin your ELD lesson while targeting complex English Structures. You and your students will enjoy these engaging and memorable lyrics.  Songs and Chants for: Possessive Pronouns Reflexive Pronouns Present Tense Questions Regular Past Tense Verbs Past Tense Questions Present Perfect Prepositions  Language levels included: Beginning Intermediate Advanced

This 51-page collection of ELD and ESL songs and black lines are perfect for every classroom with second language learners. Open every lesson with a song or chant from this rich collection of ELD based lyrics and watch your students’ fluency grow. Volume I includes 22 songs/ chants, lesson ideas and activities that will raise the oral academic language of your students to new heights. The songs and chants are sung to familiar popular songs or the lyrics are used in call backs or chant style tunes. These lyrics provide a compelling way to begin your ELD lesson while targeting complex English Structures. You and your students will enjoy these engaging and memorable lyrics.

Songs and Chants for:
Possessive Pronouns
Reflexive Pronouns
Present Tense Questions
Regular Past Tense Verbs
Past Tense Questions
Present Perfect
Prepositions

Language levels included:
Beginning
Intermediate
Advanced




from Fun To Teach ESL – Teaching English as a Second Language http://esleld.blogspot.com/2018/01/why-you-should-use-songs-in-your-eld.html

ESP Project Leader Profile: Valia Spiliotopoulos

Hello, ESPers worldwide!

It is wonderful to be able to start the new year (2018) with the 39th ESP project leader profile! This profile features Valia Spiliotopoulos at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, Canada. Valia is the supervisor of the incoming ESPIS chair-elect, Ismaeil Fazel.

Please read Valia’s bio below:

Valia Spiliotopoulos completed her Ph.D. in Language and Literacy Education at the University of British Columbia (UBC), and has taught EAP and ESP for over 15 years across Canada in Quebec (Laval University), Ontario (University of Toronto), and British Columbia (UBC and SFU). She is currently the Director for the Centre for English Language Learning, Teaching, and Research (CELLTR), and an Associate Professor of Professional Practice at Simon Fraser University. Originally from Greece, Valia recognized the important role that language plays in terms of access to education and professional opportunities in Canada’s officially bilingual and multicultural context. She obtained degrees in both English and French as an additional language, and completed her teacher certification in second language education. She is currently teaching undergraduate and graduate courses in language teacher education and draws on her rich experiences of teaching English and French in various contexts. Her current research interests focus on how faculty/teacher development and curriculum innovation (i.e., content and language-integrated learning, intercultural competency development) can improve teaching and multilingual student learning, particularly in discipline-specific university environments. She has published in the Canadian Modern Language Review; presented at local, national, and international conferences; and received university and government grants in support of a range of educational initiatives. Given her current leadership role, she is also interested in broader questions of systemic educational change that supports inclusion and student success of multilingual learners, with a particular focus on the nature and impact of interdisciplinary collaborations.

In the following interview, Valia focuses on program development that includes strands of ESP training for undergraduate and graduate students in different fields.


Dr. Valia Spiliotopoulos
Associate Professor of Professional Practice, Faculty of Education
Director, Centre for English Language Learning, Teaching, and Research
Simon Fraser University

How would you define leadership?
Leadership is the ability to share your passion, vision, and values, and draw others in wholeheartedly.  A true leader models both practices and dispositions, takes action, and makes things happen based on research, analysis, and evaluation. A respected leader also demonstrates genuine caring about the professional and personal progress and well-being of team members. He or she focuses on showcasing individuals’ work, strengths, and talents, and supports them in moving forward in the face of inevitable challenges.  Effective leadership involves an awareness of the political environment in an organization, and engaging in ongoing communication, negotiation, and coordination with team members, as well internal and external stakeholders. Leading with integrity and fairness in the field of ESP is particularly important because we are ultimately advocating and supporting those who are in a position of vulnerability and who may not yet have professional power, language, and communication skills to achieve their goals.

Tell me an ESP project success story. Focus on your communication as a leader in the project. How did you communicate with stakeholders to make that project successful?

Project: Growing the Centre for English Language Learning, Teaching, and Research at Simon Fraser University

Project Description: Build capacity and develop a centre that coordinates language support across faculties and support units as well as engages in research and development projects that address English as an additional language (EAL) students’ needs across the disciplines.

Outcome: This project is still underway, but we have had small victories with limited resources:

  • We have gathered important data from postentry language assessments over the course of three years, developed a required second-year writing-intensive course for undergraduate students in business and in economics, as well as offered course-aligned support to undergraduate students in engineering.
  • We have partnered with faculties to provide support to graduate students in communications, as well as those in the international teaching assistant (TA) program.
  • Interest and attendance at our faculty development sessions has increased, and our co-curricular online and face-to-face programs, such as Tandem Language Exchange, Job Search Success, and Intercultural Communication, have supported inclusion, have helped develop confidence and skills and have celebrated linguistic and cultural diversity.

These small victories energize us and keep us moving forward in realizing the vision and goals of a multilingual campus community.

Stakeholder Communication
An overwhelming portion of the leadership role involves the coordination and ongoing communication with a variety of stakeholders across the university: students, program directors, student advisors, deans and associate deans, faculty, sessional instructors, TAs, staff. Five main strategies have supported the communication process:

  1. Faculty liaisons (lecturers) assigned to a faculty member within the university (i.e., applied science, business) that identify needs and issues, provide support, and report back to our centre
  2. Project agreement documentation shared with our partners that identify resource requirements, timelines, and the roles and responsibilities of various stakeholders
  3. Biweekly group meetings involving those internal to the centre where projects, lessons learned, and ideas are shared, as well as bimonthly meetings where we provide project updates to external partners and address university-wide governance, coordination, and strategic planning
  4. A website that shares details on projects and events, and offers important resources to students, faculty, and staff. A web-based, mail-out newsletter is also distributed every term.
  5. Participation and representation at faculty-level curriculum meetings, as well as regular one-on-one meetings with program directors, student advisors, associate deans, and deans to discuss needs, resources, and strategy.

The success of the project will depend in large part on ongoing communications, negotiations, and consensus-building around the most effective ways of providing EAL support across the disciplines.  In a research-intensive environment like Simon Fraser University, stakeholder buy-in will likely occur if decisions and supports are informed by previous and current research in the field, data-informed decisions, and developmental evaluation that help us understand the impact of various interventions.  It is hoped that these communication strategies will help develop a university-wide community of practice that supports and celebrates multilingual students across campus.


What I like most about Valia’s profile is that it provides us with a vision of managing multiple projects with a diverse group of stakeholders. From a leadership communication perspective, I was especially pleased to read Valia’s five strategies. I think that such communication strategies are a useful reference for ESP project leaders trying to obtain the support of various stakeholders. In her profile, I also see strands of ESP in the course-aligned support provided for engineering undergraduates and for graduate students in communications and in the international TA program.

I have learned from ESP project leader Margaret van Naerssen the importance of clarifying when we are actually ESP practitioners. For example, I was recently asked to teach three new courses in English, and the content will be business communication, small group communication, and language and culture. My undergraduate students will be from Europe, North America, and Asia (including Japan). I plan to use case studies and project-based learning to provide content-based instruction (CBI). In this case, I am not taking an ESP approach. For an introduction to ESP, please see the ESP PowerPoint on the ESPIS homepage.

Do you have any questions or comments for Valia? Please feel free to contact her directly!

All the best,
Kevin

from TESOL Blog http://blog.tesol.org/esp-project-leader-profile-valia-spiliotopoulos/