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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

A breath of fresh air. 

This morning two things greeted me. One was the sweet smell of dew on a day that promised to be warm as I walked to the nearest grocery store for some essentials. "AH.... FRESH AIR!" I thought. As soon as I got home, all the windows in the house were opened.

The other breath of fresh air was this article, found in my inbox, that justified many of my silent musings over the past two years.

You see, as my (former) district mandated, I've been teaching my subject from a "whole language" type approach. Basically, expose kids to the language in meaningful ways, with interesting activities, and they will learn.
Any time I've suggested in a lesson plan that I might explicitly teach a grammar point, it's been recieved with caution, much less than enthusiastically. "Do mini lessons on grammar if you must, but don't spend too much time on them" has been the message. Teaching them from the get-go explicitly what a noun or a verb is, and then reinforcing it is, well, dull. Pointless. Route. Spend more time just EXPOSING them to the language. Use the books and resources to explore the language together. People are wired for language, expose them enough and everything will fall into place.

Okay. So, I buy parts of this. Yes, grammar CAN be boring, but it ALSO can be interesting, engaging, and fun (as seen by the example in the article above). I'm never going to be one to push worksheet after worksheet in my students' faces, that's just bad teaching. And so I buy that it's goood to get authentic material that will interest the students, it's good to talk around a theme to reinforce vocabulary.

But I got frusturated, because although this method works very well for some, (and is probably more successful at the elementary ages, I would guess), it misses with a population of people. The logical, sequential learner is left a bit frusturated, not able to fully grasp what they've learned or mastered even while the teacher sees growth. They look for patterns and are frusturated when their patterns are proven false. They want to know how it works. In addition, the high school student who is new to the country may find that the "authentic texts" that best fit his or her language proficiency level are also written for first graders, with lots of colorful pictures. Trying to get a high schooler involved or engaged in that can be a bit difficult.

In addition, students moving from school to school never get major holes in their English acquisition filled in, thus not showing significant growth.

BUT -- NO TEXT BOOKS was the rallying cry. So, children's books it was. Or, I cheated and used this resource, which the kids enjoyed but which I felt slightly guilty about. Interesting stories written to the level of the students, that were engaging and not "dumbed-down" little kid stories. What could be better? What could be wrong with it?... Following the stories were a series of activities. Some of which could be seen as "worksheet-like." I feared that if my boss saw that she might not agree to the resource, and then, well, then I'd lose my most valuable "in case of a substitute" reference book. Granted, I tried not to use the follow up material as given, I usually made the reviews into games, but, still... worksheets=bad. Going to the library and spending hours and days trying to come up with SOMETHING that was written at a level appropriate to my students and then hand-writing lesson plans based on those materials = good. At times my prep took longer than the class I was to teach.

And the whole time I kept wondering, "what would be so bad about sequential grammar instruction as part of the class period?" No, not as the WHOLE class period. I'd get bored with that. But ten minutes out of an hour and a half every day would transform my students' writing and understanding of language. After all, (my philosophy is), language is part art form, part mathematics.

If you're still reading my rant, I applaud you. To reiterate:
Grammar teaching = bad. Worksheets = bad. Textbooks = horrible. Be creative, be authentic, teach to a theme. That's what I heard. And I bought into the positive statements, and felt very very constrained by the negative ones. How do I teach well without giving some rules, without reminding of rules, without playing games to reinforce grammar? How much grammar is allowed? Focus on vocabulary, not grammar. But how can I focus on words without teaching how those words string together, or morph to be placed in other parts of the sentence? How do students learn that one can live ON an island but IN Hawaii and must be AT (or IN, but not "on") the school AT 3 pm ON Saturday --- how do they learn preposition usage without rules? Those are tiny words. Easy to gloss over. Easy to miss the rules, especially when the rule is different in their L1. Easy to assume the rule is the same. And those are tiny things. Surely not what we should focus on in class. And yet essential things. Terribly important for their success.

In a conversation with my colleagues (including my boss) on this topic, my boss said something along the lines of "how many native English speakers really know when to use 'who' vs. 'whom,' and in the end, how much does it matter for communication?"

"Yes," I replied, "But you can get away with more if you have an English accent. The moment you have a foreign accent, people are listening for your mistakes. When a native English speaker makes a mistake, we assume it's because they were speaking too fast, or weren't paying attention, or that it's a dialect thing. When a non-native speaker makes a mistake, we assume it's because they don't know English well. It may not be fair, but to be seen as fluent, our students must speak English BETTER than their native-speaking peers." The one non-native English speaker in the meeting nodded her head vigorously. I struck a chord.

In the end, I think I've found my dissertation topic. It'll be long, it'll be hard, I'll probably never write it, but I have a direction I want to go. I have a theory. Students' brains are wired for the grammar of the language they know first. In order to learn another language fluently, some intentional re-wiring of grammar must take place. How does that rewiring take place? Some through exposure, no doubt. You quickly learn that in English you ARE hungry, you don't HAVE hunger. But how should a teacher encourage this rewiring? What works best? I like the whole language method for points. But I also see great weaknesses. How, then, should we teach?

A breath of fresh air, assuring me that I wasn't totally wrong to be somewhat frusturated by the constraints placed on me. Also spuring me on to more research and schooling. I'm very thankful my husband knows a little about statistics. :) Could come in handy in the future.

Oh, AND I found out this morning that we get to see our baby in less than two weeks!!!

Comments:
so do I get some of that applause? hehe! I completely agree with your evaluation of grammer/language. I can't believe they would say you shouldn't teach grammer extensively - my high school French class I took we recited verbs and I know English is less intuative than French (we have more irregular verbs).

I am glad you have found a good way to teach them - even without the article's insight. Just think about how much work you've saved for the future.

10lees
 
yeah...the whole language thing doesn't really work with elementary kids either, at least the ones who hadn't been exposed to literature at home and came to school not knowing how to spell their names.
Just my opinion...but based on a few years of experience.
Sarah
 
Wow. It's amazing that I learned anything at all, with all the mistakes my mother and my schoolteachers made. Phonics. Workbooks. 45-minute-long grammar lessons. Quizzes, for gosh sakes.

Boy, I just barely made it out with my life, didn't I?

And here I am, repeating the same mistakes with my poor, poor little boy.

He'll never learn anything, will he?
 
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