My lifelong learning journey: Why learning English never stops
Why did I want to learn English? When I was 9 years old, I became sick of French at home and I decided to go for the "opposite": English. I fell in love with it the moment I started learning. Though I could not see the point in many activities we were asked to do, such as turning affirmative sentences into negative and questions, or transforming conditional statements, I was good at it and hoped that at some point, I would find the meaningfulness of those exercises.
Overcoming challenges in English language learning
I kept on learning English, but the benefits were nowhere to be seen. In my school, classes are monolingual and teachers and students all share the same mother tongue. However, translanguaging was not an option. I even remember being told to forget Spanish, my mother tongue, which was as ridiculous and impossible as asking me to forget I have two legs. Before I finished secondary school, I knew I wanted to take up a career that had English at its core.
From student to teacher: Finding purpose in teaching English
I started the translators programme, but soon I saw that it was teaching that I loved. I changed to that and I have never stopped teaching or learning. All the pieces fell into place as I was asked to use English meaningfully, as I started focusing on meaning rather than on grammar. And I made this big learning insight one of the principles and main pillars of teaching. Some heads of school wondered why I would not follow the coursebook. My answer, since then, has been: I teach students, not a book or a syllabus. Because I was focusing on using English with a purpose ¨C using it meaningfully ¨C the results were excellent, and my students were using the language. And they passed the tests they needed to take.
Teaching English with meaning: Moving beyond the coursebook
I used coursebooks, as every other teacher did, but continued to make changes that I thought would be beneficial to my learners. As I taught Didactics at university in the Teacher Education Programme, I was invited by some publishing houses to give feedback on new coursebooks. As I was told, the feedback proved to be useful, and I was asked to start modifying international coursebooks to fit the local context and design booklets to provide what was missing in these adaptations, until I was finally invited to write a series for Argentina.
In all the series I¡¯ve written, my first comment has always been:? ¡°This is the result of my experience in several different classrooms, with different students from various backgrounds. This is a series by a teacher and for teachers and their learners. The focus is not on teaching, but on what is necessary for students to learn."
Flexibility has always been at the core of these series and my teaching as well. Sometimes students need more work on something, and in the Teacher¡¯s book I included several suggestions for further activities, which I called ¡°building confidence activities¡±.
Flexible teaching strategies and confidence-building activities
As I got involved with the GSE, I saw how it can help students learn much better, and how it can support teachers as they help learners. How so? Because it starts with a focus on using English rather than on learning about it, that is, learning about its grammar. I¡¯ve shared my views on it with every colleague I can and it has been the topic of several presentations and national and international conferences. It¡¯s a fantastic resource for both teachers and learners, but also for the wider educational community. When the scales were finally published, I remember thinking, ¡°Oh my, I was born in the wrong century!¡±
I am still teaching English ¨C working at schools as a consultant, designing professional development projects and implementing them, and yes, actually working in classrooms, teaching learners. After many years of teaching English, and still loving it, the best advice I can give is this:
Advice for English teachers
Teachers, we¡¯re blessed in that we do what we love, and despite its challenges and hard times, teaching is absolutely rewarding. Nothing can compare to the expression on a student¡¯s face when they've "got it".
Remember to focus on meaning, help learners become aware of what they already know and set a clear learning path that will keep you and them motivated. The GSE is the best resource and companion for this.