miércoles, 2 de octubre de 2013

First Cohort

In the first cohort of students (Aug-Dec 2013) we have the following:

HEBREW
Who is doing it? 8 students of Hebrew, ranging from fluent speakers to GCSE level speakers, all with Hebrew-speaking parents. They have hired a tutor between them. The tutor has split them into two groups of four according to ability. We have three lessons in the Elements course. The Hebrew students do prep work during period 1, set by the tutor. The higher level students have a lesson with the tutor in the second period while the lower level students complete a test. This situation then reverses for the third period

Is this working? To a certain extent, yes. They are by far the biggest group in the class, so they can dominate when they are all in the class. Splitting them into smaller groups and getting them out of the class for their lessons with the tutor is good. My concern is that the tutor's materials are very dry and purely grammatically based. There doesn't seem to be much room for creative or cultural work in what they do.

NORWEGIAN
Who is doing it? 1 student of Norwegian. Both parents are Norwegian. This student began the course by following the work set from the scheme of work we had prepared for native students. However, after three weeks of this she opted to follow instead the Norwegian governments online course for native Norwegian speakers living abroad, which she was already doing at home. In this she has an online tutor and is placed in a class of similar ability students located around the world.

Is this working? Yes. I think so. It is harder for me to monitor what she is doing on the government website, apart from looking at what she is doing in class and occasionally asking questions. However, on the face of it, the online course should be a very useful tool to help her with her language learning.

POLISH
Who is doing it? 1 student of Polish. This student is following the ILC scheme of work and producing a blog, on which he completes weekly tasks.

Is is working? Yes, he is doing the work and I hope he is improving. As a non-Polish speaker it is difficult for me to judge, and as yet we have had no parental input.

KOREAN
Who is doing it? 1 student of Korean. This student is following the ILC scheme of work and producing a blog. This is a very conscientious student. Her mother is very involved in what she is doing in this course. She sometimes phones her mother during the lesson to ask questions. Her mother has also suggested a site she can use to work on her Korean grammar.

Is it working? Definitely, with this hardworking and conscientious student the results seem to be good, she is practising her language and hopefully making an improvement.

JAPANESE
Who is doing it? 1 student of Japanese (native speaker) and 1 student of Japanese (GCSE level). The native speaker is following the ILC scheme of work and is doing well, there is parental input in the form of comments on the blog. The mother is very good at offering tips on what to do to improve. The GCSE student is a conscientious, hardworking student who has a tutor outside of school time. This tutor sets her work to do during the ILC session

Is it working? Yes for the native speaker. Yes, probably for the GCSE student, although it seems a shame she is one her own rather than in a larger GCSE class for Japanese in which she could interact with other students.

SPANISH
Who is doing it? 3 students of Spanish (GCSE level). Under my guidance they are following a GCSE Spanish course. This has already had to be differentiated, one of the students is weaker than the other two. Two of them may be able to take their Spanish in Year 10 as they are gifted and hardworking. 

Is it working? It is frustrating for me as I cannot teach them to the best of my ability, as I have to monitor the work of the other students and give every student equal attention. As with the Japanese GCSE student I feel they are missing out on something that the GCSE class provides. Self-studying a GCSE seems like a lonely task with little fun or enjoyment. However, none of them have complained. 

Links to all the students' blogs can be found here: ILC BLOG


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