Here are some tips to help you on your teaching
experience.
1. Dress right. Jeans, sneakers,
and just-out-of-bed hair may be okay for teachers in the U.S., but in
many parts of the world, a neat appearance counts far more than credentials. In
Korea
dark clothes lend an air of authority. Red is to be avoided at all costs. In Morocco female
teachers don’t wear pants, sleeveless blouses, or short skirts.
2. Behave appropriately. When it
asked 250 students at the Sichuan Institute of Foreign Languages in China what they
liked and disliked about native speaker English teachers, the students’ main
gripe was the informality of foreign teachers, who often seem to undermine
their own authority by acting in undignified ways. In the U.S. teachers
go on a first-name basis with students, sit on their desks, sip coffee, and
even bounce off the walls without causing student discomfort or losing
prestige. But these behaviors don’t export well.
3. Don’t worry if students seem
unresponsive at first. Americans are used to participatory classrooms
with plenty of teacher-student dialogue. Elsewhere, students are often trained
to be silent, good listeners, and memorizers. It’s disconcerting to stand in
front of a sea of blank faces, but expecting it reduces the shock. Introduce new
concepts, such as discussion and role-play gradually. You’ll be surprised at
how students will come to embrace the change.
4. Choose topics carefully.
There are still many countries in the world where people are hesitant to voice
opinions because of a fear of reprisal. If you’re conducting a classroom
debate, remember that there’s a distaste for Western-style argumentation in
Middle-Eastern societies, and in Japan it’s offensive for an
individual to urge others to accept his opinion.
Certain topics may be taboo for cultural reasons: Most Americans don’t want to discuss their salaries or religious beliefs; Japanese may be disinclined to talk about their inner feelings; the French think questions about their family life are rude.
Certain topics may be taboo for cultural reasons: Most Americans don’t want to discuss their salaries or religious beliefs; Japanese may be disinclined to talk about their inner feelings; the French think questions about their family life are rude.
5. Don’t ask, “Do you understand?”
In China and Japan, students
will nod yes, even if they’re totally lost, in an attempt to save face for the
teacher. Even in a country as far west as Turkey, yes often means no.
6. Avoid singling students out. Our
society fosters a competitive individualism which is clearly manifested in our
classrooms. American students are not shy about displaying their knowledge. In
classrooms outside the U.S.,
however, showing solidarity with classmates and conforming to the status quo is
often more important than looking good for the teacher. In Turkey and Montenegro students told me they
disliked volunteering answers too often because it made them look like
show-offs and attracted the evil eye of envy. If you want to play a game, make
the competition among groups rather than among individuals. If you need to
discipline a student, do so in private.
7. Be aware of cross-cultural
communication styles. French students appreciate wit. Venezuelan
students like boisterous rapid-fire exchanges. In Japan,
where debate is not as valued as in the U.S., students appreciate long
pauses in discussions and silent “think time” after you ask a question. “Hollow
drums make the most noise” goes a Japanese proverb, and Japanese students are
uncomfortable blurting out the first thing that comes to mind. American
teachers, who are uncomfortable with silence, tend to anticipate the student’s
words or repeat their original question—both irritating interruptions for the
Japanese student.
8. Present a rationale for what you do in
class. Your pedagogy is going to be very different from what students
are used to. They’ll conform much more eagerly to new classroom content and
procedures if they understand the benefits.
9. Expect the best of your students.
They’ll be serious about learning English because their economic advancement
often depends upon mastering it.
10. Relax and enjoy yourself.
Happiness in the classroom is contagious.
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