What’s it like to teach English in Turkey?

Steffanie Zazulak
A teacher showing her students a globe, with her students looking at the globe, one with a magnifying glass in hand.
所要时间: 3 minutes

Alice Pilkington qualified as a CELTA (Certificate in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) certified teacher in October 2009. She started working in Rome before moving to Istanbul, where she’s spent the past three and a half years teaching English to “everyone from 8-year-olds to company executives; students to bored housewives”. Having taught in two very different countries to a diverse range of English learners, Alice shares with us the five lessons she’s learned:

1. Don't take things personally when you're teaching English

"I am probably not emotionally suited for this job. I take everything very personally and if a lesson goes wrong or an activity I have taken time and energy to plan doesn’t work, I feel like a complete failure. It’s a trial and error experience but when things go wrong, they can go very wrong, and it really makes you doubt your abilities as a teacher.

Having said that, the lessons that do go well can make up for these negative feelings. I shouldn’t take things personally; the majority of my colleagues don’t and it saves them a lot of sleepless nights"

2. Teaching English is incredibly rewarding

"There are very few feelings that I’ve experienced that compare to seeing a student use a word that you have taught them – it makes you feel like a proud parent. Equally, seeing a student improve over a series of months is so joyful.?I have been teaching English university preparation students for the past year.

In September, they could barely say what their name was and what they did over the weekend. Nine months on and they’re capable of reading academic texts and speaking at length about marketing strategies and environmental problems. It’s a wonderful thing to observe"

3. Teach more than just English

"Turkish students love hearing about how you appreciate their food and cultural traditions. Equally, they are genuinely interested in understanding how things operate in the UK and enjoy hearing personal anecdotes.?I tend to be very open with my students – even about my personal life.?I think it is partly because I have striven from the very beginning of my career to be seen as their equal.

Turkish students are used to having a huge respect for teachers, and there is a hierarchical system in schools here, which I can never go along with. In my first lesson with most students, I tell them that they must call me by my first name (usually you refer to teachers here as ‘hocam’ which means ‘my teacher’ and shows respect) and this can take a long while for them to get used to."

4. Failure to prepare is to prepare for failure... or is it?

"Lessons that you spend hours preparing for generally don’t go as well as you had hoped. There were several times when I’d spend hours cutting and sticking things on pieces of card and placing pictures all over the classroom, hoping it would get some vocabulary action going, only to start the class and receive no response from the students.

Conversely, lessons where you don’t feel very motivated or have no idea what you are going to do until you get into the classroom (which I call the ‘flying by the seat of your pants’ lessons) can turn out to be the best ones. I once had a lesson in which I was, admittedly, rather hungover. On the way to the lesson, I grabbed a book called ‘Taboos and Issues’, full of discussion topics, which I used as a basis for a rather impromptu lesson on addictions, which was very successful indeed."

5. Teaching English isn't easy

"Teaching English is a love/hate profession. There are weeks when you absolutely loathe it and want to quit, but then within the space of a lesson or two, you get inspired by something completely unexpected, rediscover your joy for it and love it again."

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    Horizontal Syllabusとは

    投稿者 Andy Lankshear
    所要时间: 5分间

    今回は私がここ数年、若い学习者の授業で実践してきたことを紹介したいと思います。私はこれをHorizontal Syllabusと呼んでいます。これは学習ユニットをデザインする方法であり、学习者の学習方法について私たちが知っていることでもあります。学习者には間隔を置いた反復学習が必要であり、簡単で管理しやすい課題から、より要求の高い自立した課題へと進んでいく必要があるのはご存じでしょう。まず、間隔をあけた反復学習とは、学習が定着するまでの間、間隔をあけて情報を見直し、思い出すという記憶術です。My Disney Stars and Heroesでは、ユニットを通して学習する言葉を繰り返し使用することでこれを実現していますが、Horizontal Syllabusの設計では、レッスン語彙やフレーズを復習することで、さらに強化することができます。つまり、ページからページに移動するのではなく(Vertical Syllabus)、ユニットを進めるごとに各ページを再確認し、積み重ねていきます。

    本记事では特に、私が「拡张インプット」と呼んでいるインプットの段阶に焦点を当てます。このインプットは、意味の伝达、セグメンテーション、発声、発音のチェック、语汇への批判的関与から构成されます。

    次回のウェビナー(2025年8月24日)とさらに2回のブログでは、アウトプットと評価、そしてMy Disney Stars and Heroesの特定のユニットのためのHorizontal Syllabusをどのようにまとめるかについても紹介していきます。では、拡張インプットの段階について見てみましょう。