http://dx.doi.org/10.19183/how.23.1.297
EFL in Public Schools in Mexico:
Dancing Around the Ring?
Inglés en las escuelas públicas en México:
¿bailando en el cuadrilátero?*
Nora M. Basurto Santos
[email protected]
Jolene R. Gregory Weathers
[email protected]
Universidad Veracruzana, Veracruz, Mexico
The teaching and learning of English as a foreign language has a long tradition within the Mexican
public education system. Unfortunately, this endeavor has been unsuccessful for the most part
throughout the country. In this paper, we share and compare the results of two studies, ten years apart,
whose data collections were carried out in very similar contexts. Both studies looked at what is
happening in practice from the teachers’ perspectives. Class observation, interviews, and official
documents were important sources of information. We conclude that even though there has been ten
years between these two studies there seem to be no changes that could enhance the teaching and
learning of English as a foreign language in public schools.
Key words: English as a foreign language, Mexico, public schools.
La enseñanza y el aprendizaje del inglés como lengua extranjera tienen una larga tradición en el Sistema de Educación Pública de México. Infortunadamente, esta actividad no ha sido exitosa la mayor
*
Received: July 1, 2015. Accepted: December 4, 2015.
How to cite this article (APA 6th ed.):
Basurto Santos, N. M., & Gregory Weathers, J. R. (2016). EFL in public schools in Mexico: Dancing around the
ring? HOW, 23(1), 68-84. http://dx.doi.org/10.19183/how.23.1.297.
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0
International License. License Deed can be consulted at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.
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EFL in Public Schools in Mexico: Dancing Around the Ring?
parte del tiempo en todo el país. En este artículo compartimos y comparamos los resultados de dos estudios que se llevaron a cabo en contextos muy similares pero con un período de 10 años entre ellos en
cuanto a la recolección de los datos. Ambos estudios se concentraron en descubrir qué sucede en la
práctica de la enseñanza del inglés desde la perspectiva de los profesores. Observaciones de clases, entrevistas y documentos oficiales fueron importantes fuentes de información. Se pudo concluir que, a pesar
de que han pasado diez años entre estos dos estudios, pareciera que no ha habido cambios que pudieran
contribuir a una mejor enseñanza-aprendizaje del inglés en las escuelas públicas.
Palabras clave: escuelas públicas, inglés como lengua extranjera, México.
Introduction
Although English as a foreign language (EFL) has been present in Mexican public
education for many years, a lot of problems have prevailed (see Basurto Santos, 2010).
However, since 1993, when secondary education became officially obligatory, it seems that
the problems in EFL classrooms have increased. It is not difficult to assume that if there were
longstanding problems in the teaching and learning of EFL in the public sector before 1993,
these seem to have grown due to the fact that the government has committed itself to
providing EFL instruction to all Mexican children. To mention one example, if before 1993 it
was common to find around 40 students in EFL classrooms which limited foreign language
practice, then with the increase of enrollment, providing adequate practice could be even
more difficult.
In this paper, we will present and discuss two studies carried out in public secondary
schools in the same area in Mexico. It is worth pointing out that these two studies were
conducted at different times. The data for the first study were collected by Nora between
2003 and 2005 while the data for the second study were obtained by Jolene in 2015. That is,
there is more than a 10-year time difference between these two studies. What struck us as
interesting was the fact that even though the primary researcher of the second study was
completely unaware of the results of the first study when we came together to talk and discuss
Jolene’s findings, Nora realized that these were very similar to her study carried out at least ten
years before. Therefore, we would like to share the changes or lack thereof during the last ten
years regarding EFL in public schools in Mexico. In order to do this, we will begin by
providing a review of relevant literature. Both studies adopted very similar approaches to
research which we will present in the Method section. Having done this, we will share the
findings and implications to finally draw some conclusions.
Literature Review
Policy and planning are commonly interchanged in literature, however Baldauf (2005)
describes policy as “the plan” and planning as “the implementation of the plan” (p. 958). This
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distinction is essential in understanding that the plan and the implementation are separate
and, as such, an established policy may or may not be implemented as intended. Therefore,
there is increasing research being done into how policies are being interpreted and negotiated,
reflecting local limitations and possibilities or policies that focus on classroom teachers as
central agents of implementation (Basurto Santos, 2010; Li, 1998; Nunan, 2003; Silver &
Skuja Steele, 2005; Wedell, 2008; Zappa-Hollman, 2007). Therefore, a basic recognition of
language policy and planning changes in the Mexican education system in 1993 can provide a
key understanding as to why EFL instruction in Mexico has not been successful.
In the case of EFL in public secondary schools in Mexico, the policy changed from a focus
on grammar and translation to adopting a communicative language teaching (CLT) approach
(Secretaría de Educación Pública [SEP], 2006). However, in 2001 an exploratory study
revealed that little change had occurred in practice and therefore learning objectives were not
achieved (SEP, 2006). In a quantitative study in Mexico City, González Robles, Vivaldo Lima,
and Castillo Morales (2004) also found that 95.9% of students who had attended public
schools failed a linguistic competence test upon entering higher education. This seems to
demonstrate a gap between rhetoric and reality (Nunan, 2003). The lack of change or
improvements in educational practices, more often than not, has been attributed to teachers’
perceptions of the feasibility of innovation in a particular context which are crucial in
determining the ultimate success or failure of that innovation (Kelly; Markee as cited in Li,
1998). In addition, the meso (institutional) and macro (school system) contexts have been
found to have a significant influence on teacher practices, both enabling and constraining
teachers (Opfer & Pedder, 2011). Therefore, changes in teachers’ “declarative knowledge or
espoused knowledge may not lead to changes in their practices, due to a range of personal or
system influences” (Askell-Williams & Murray-Harvey, 2013, p. 204). González (2009) adds
that a certain methodology may not be implemented as designed because “language policies
often ignore their connection to actual language learning because they do not have a basis in
reality, and thus, remain as good intentions on paper” (p. 186).
It has been highlighted that the success of the implementation of policy is influenced by
many aspects. For example, Zappa-Hollman (2007) in a study carried out in Argentina,
identified the following aspects: large classes (35 students per class), lack of adequate teaching
and learning resources (e.g., textbooks, authentic materials, audiovisual materials, and
equipment), and reduced length and frequency of EFL teaching periods. As a result of all the
problems encountered in their classrooms, teachers acknowledged that they concentrated
more on literacy-based activities rather than on developing the learners’ spoken
communicative ability or developing the four skills as required by the program (Basurto
Santos, 2010). More recently, researchers conducted a study with Colombian EFL teachers
and identified the following aspects: number of students per group, time aspects, human and
material resources, physical conditions of schools’ classrooms, the role of administrators,
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opportunities for professional development, meetings and curricular planning in the area, and
the status of English in the institution, and methodology (Cárdenas Ramos & Hernández
Gaviria, 2012).
How these constraints are addressed has been identified as key in improving teaching and
learning. In their study, Haque and Cray (2007) concluded that offering teachers ad hoc
solutions (workshops, new teaching materials and resources, or even new versions of the
curricula) to deal with the constraints posed by their contextual realities was to provide them
with limited assistance. Similar results were found in other studies (Baldauf & Kaplan, 2005;
Prapaisit de Segovia & Hardison, 2009). In her study, conducted in Argentina,
Zappa-Hollman (2007) concluded that to provide quality in EFL instruction, the state policy
should be re-examined in order to determine more plausible objectives considering the actual
teaching context. It is important to keep in mind that as policy is being re-examined, the EFL
teachers should play a major role in reform as they are an “untapped resource in the decision
making process” (Prapaisit de Segovia & Hardison, 2009, p. 14). Zappa-Hollman also
proposes that teachers should be equipped with adequate professional training and resources
identified as necessary for their contexts. Otherwise, access to quality public education will
not go beyond policy rhetoric.
Method
The main aim of both research projects described in this paper was to develop a picture of
the EFL teachers’ experiences in public secondary school classrooms from their own
perspectives and the effect of their experiences on learning outcomes. Therefore, a qualitative
research approach was adopted for both studies as this type of research has the goal of
“understanding the underlying reasons” for what we observe, which is necessary in order to
lead to an “understanding of what needs to be done to change things” (Denzin & Lincoln,
2003, pp. 4-5; Gillham, 2000). Qualitative research is ideal for this situation because as
Bourgeault (2012) states:
Qualitative research has improved our understanding of certain dimensions of individuals, groups,
organizations and societies such as how we organize our social relationships, communicate with
each other, and make sense of the situation in which we find ourselves. (p. 2)
Both studies were conducted as case studies. They were descriptive in nature as they were
undertaken to present a detailed account of the phenomenon under study (Merriam, 2009). In
addition, they were instrumental case studies since they were carried out mainly to provide
insight into an issue or to draw a generalization because case study “provides evidence of
uniqueness and commonality” (Stake, 1995, pp. 3-4).
Case study research has been criticized as being limited in its ability to make
generalizations based on a single case. However, research in the interpretive or constructivist
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paradigm has recognized the concept of generalizability which aligns with qualitative inquiry
(Gomm, Hammersley, & Foster, 2000). Stake (2003) argues for the value of case study
research stating that:
It is reasonable to conclude that one of the more effective means of adding to understanding for all
readers will be by approximating, through the words and illustrations of our reports, the natural
experiences acquired in ordinary personal involvement. (p. 19)
Therefore, we desire to share the findings derived from these studies with the hope that
they will resonate in the broader context of TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other
Languages). In summary, both studies were instrumental, descriptive case studies carried out
in an attempt to better understand teachers’ experiences in Mexican public secondary EFL
classrooms from their own perspective. From this, we hope to be able to identify some key
factors that may be limiting the learning outcomes.
Context
In both studies, contact with each context was originally made through personal contacts
of the researchers. This is because personal contact is very important in Mexico, and the most
productive way of sampling tends to be a combination of snowball sampling, where one
person puts you in touch with another, together with opportunistic or emergent sampling
when fieldwork is involved (Basurto Santos, 2010). However, because of the variety of
contexts of each of the schools in our studies, we feel that they are a fair representation of
secondary schools in our area and in the rest of the country.
The fieldwork for the first study was carried out in two phases during 2004 and 2005. The
fieldwork was conducted in three secondary schools in a city in southeastern Mexico.
Although the schools are located in distinct contexts in the city, they have a common
organizational structure: two shifts (morning and afternoon), same number of groups (18,
three for each grade), and more or less same number of students in each group, between 40
and 47.
One of the schools is situated on the border of a highly desirable neighborhood.
However, not all the students that attend the school live in the area, but according to the
academic coordinator most students are from middle class families. This is important to bear
in mind since students in this school are very likely to have had previous EFL knowledge. The
second secondary school is located close to two of the main arteries that run along the city
near downtown. The population in this area ranges from low-middle class to upper-middle
class. Comparatively, this is a bigger school with more spacious classrooms and more open
spaces for the students to play in. Finally, the third one is situated in an area of the city where
most people are low-middle class or poor. The socio-economic background of the students
and the location of the school have an important bearing on the teaching/learning of EFL.
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For example, many students who attend this school have to study and work simultaneously to
support their home living expenses. This has implications for learning in general and for EFL
in particular.
The fieldwork for the second study was carried out in 2015 with teachers that worked in a
public secondary school in a small town located approximately 40 minutes from the city
where the first study was carried out. This town has only one secondary school, where over
500 students attend in the morning shift. The students had 50-minute English classes three
times a week. There were five groups of approximately 35 to 40 students in each group, for
each of the three grades.
The classrooms contain desks and a whiteboard. There is one CD player available for all
the teachers to share, but the teachers reported that it did not always work. The school also
has one projector available for all the teachers to use. There is limited space in the classroom,
approximately 1.5 feet between each row of desks with a three-foot wide area at the front of
the classroom. The students each have a copy of the textbook: Cool Time by Richmond
publishers for first grade students, and English Corner by Macmillan Publishers for second and
third grade students. The teachers do not have their own classroom, but change classrooms
for each group. Also, the teachers do not have any personal workspace provided in the
school.
Participants
In the first study the teachers’ ages ranged from 24 to 55. All had completed a BA in EFL at
Universidad Veracruzana. Two of them had also studied the Especialización (Diploma) in EFL
teaching many years after completing their BAs. Their experience in teaching on those
educational levels ranged from three years to over 30 years. All of them were female. Two of
the teachers in the secondary schools were teaching both shifts. The rest of the teachers were
also teaching English in other institutions. Most of them were teaching 40 hours per week.
In the school where the second study was conducted, there were five teachers who taught
English. One teacher taught seven groups, another teacher taught five groups, and the
remaining three teachers taught only one group each. The study involved three teachers from
the same school. Their pseudonyms are Agnes, Fernando, and Javier.
Agnes is a 36-year-old female. She has a BA in teaching English and a master’s in applied
linguistics. She has worked in private and public universities, secondary schools, and
kindergartens. She had 14 years of teaching experience at the time of the study. In this
particular school she had taught for two years. She taught first and third grades in the school
where the study was carried out during 2014 and 2015, and had a total of 280 students divided
into seven groups.
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Fernando is 43 years old. He has a BA in teaching English. He had two years of teaching
experience, one of those years at the school where the study was conducted. He taught five
second grade groups during 2014 and 2015 with a total of 210 students.
Javier is 32 years old. He has a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering and another in foreign
languages. He had been teaching for one and a half years at the school where the study was
conducted. He taught one third grade group during 2014 and 2015 that had 36 students in
attendance on the day of the class observation. He also taught mathematics at the school.
Data Collection
The data collection involved multiple sources of information in order to generate a more
comprehensive perspective. It included classroom observations (in the case of the second
study), interviews, and document analysis. Having multiple sources of data collection allowed
us to validate and crosscheck findings (Patton, 2002).
Instruments
Classroom observations. For the classroom observations in Jolene’s study, a naturalistic
observation approach was used since there were no clearly identified categories and coding
worked out in advance (Cohen, Manion, & Morrison, 2013). The objective of the observation
was to obtain a descriptive observation (Flick, 2014) regarding the physical setting, the human
setting, the interactional setting, and the program setting.
A classroom observation sheet and expanded field notes were designed and used to
collect data. The classroom observation sheet was adapted from the William and Mary classroom
observation scales (VanTassel-Baska et al., 2003) and from research based classroom strategies in
Fox (2014).
Interviews. In both studies, semi-structured interviews were used because they allow
participants to “discuss their interpretations of the world in which they live, and to express
how they regard situations from their own point of view” (Cohen et al., 2013, p. 409).
Therefore, as Brinkman and Kvale (2009) affirm, an interview allows the researcher to obtain
information that goes beyond what she/he is expecting to discover. Also, Cohen et al. (2013)
mention that interviews identify a range of factors in human behavior such as emotions,
interpersonal influences, unconscious needs, preferences, values, attitudes, and beliefs.
In order to do so, a brief interview guide was used with open questions to initiate a topic
and then the teacher was probed to share more information in areas of interest (Rubin &
Rubin, 1995). The interviews were also carried out in Spanish at the teachers’ requests. The
interviews were recorded and later transcribed verbatim using a three-column template for all
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the transcripts (Basurto Santos, 2010). The researchers then translated the extracts from the
interviews appearing in this text.
Document analysis. An analysis of relevant documents provides an understanding of
the historical origins which “explain current structures, relationships and behaviors in the
context of recent and longer term trends” (Cohen et al., 2013, p. 248). However, given that
documentary sources have been criticized for failing to engage with the classroom and the
interface between teachers and learners (Goodson, 1988); the affirmations made in the
documents were compared and contrasted with the data that emerged from the classroom
observations and interviews and vice versa. Therefore, the study of documents is thus of
importance for qualitative researchers who wish to explore multiple and conflicting voices,
differing and interacting interpretations (Hodder, 2000; Prior, 2003).
The documents that were analyzed in the first study included: Secondary and Preparatory
EFL syllabi, EFL textbooks, World Wide Web pages: SEP, SEC (Secretaría de Educación y
Cultura), CENEVAL (Centro Nacional de Evaluación para la Educación Superior), national
and local newspapers, and EFL teachers’ documents such as official timetables and students’
attendance lists. The second study included an analysis of SEP documents including syllabi;
guides regarding the Consejo Técnico (Technical Council), school supervision, and teacher
hiring and contracts; and the catalog of professional development. In addition, the second
study included an analysis of the undergraduate program study plans for the three universities
which the teachers attended.
Data Analysis
The process of analysis in qualitative research is a complex and a laborious one. The
challenge of qualitative analysis, Patton (2002) argues, is to make sense of an impressive
amount of data. In both studies this was carried out manually. The approach adopted for the
initial coding of the interviews was mainly the one proposed by Richards (2003). That is, each
data set was coded individually and then compared and consolidated with the coding of the
other data sets. The categories that emerged were evaluated based on the characteristics
found in literature in order to gain greater understanding of the factors influencing learning
outcomes.
Findings
In this section, we present and discuss some of the categories that emerged from the
process of data analysis. We decided to focus on those themes that we found were remarkably
similar in both studies even though there is a gap of over ten years between the processes of
data collection and analysis.
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Typical EFL Lessons in Mexican Public Schools
It was really surprising to find out that what was described by participants in Nora’s study
was very similar to that observed by Jolene in EFL lessons. Nora’s study (Basurto Santos,
2010, p. 135) described a typical day as the following:
The bell rings. The EFL teachers arrive at the classroom a few minutes later. They go straight to their
desk which is on a wooden platform while they greet the class in English: “good morning” or “good
afternoon.” From the elevated platform, teachers, most of the time, can keep an eye on the 40 or 45
students sitting in rows. The students, on the other hand, cannot see, let alone work with, their
classmates except for the ones next to them on each side. The students’ chair-desks are hardly ever
moved around since there is not enough room. Lessons start with the calling of the roll. By this time
around 10 minutes have been used up. This is immediately followed by one of two activities: teachers
either put a lámina (wall chart) on the board for students to copy its contents in their notebooks or
teachers explain a grammar point and then ask students to do exercises from page x to z: “now you do
from page 90 to 97.” Twenty or 25 minutes have passed. Homework checking begins. One at a time,
students are called to approach the teachers’ desk while the rest of the group remains on the set
activity. The teachers tick each page where students have written the tasks assigned and sign the final
page. According to the students, EFL teachers hardly ever have the time to write any feedback or
point out if there is something wrong. Nor do they explain why anything is wrong. The teachers’
signatures are proof that students have done the assignments and testimony of one the forms of
student “participations” that are part of their grades. While this activity is being carried out, the
teachers are also constantly silencing the students or reminding them to keep on the activity assigned.
If not, they threaten, points can be deducted from grades. Thirty-five minutes have gone by. The next
activity is class participation. Teachers ask at random—using their student lists—or if students are
“lucky”, the exercises are “chain” answered thus allowing the students to predict which question they
have to answer. If the answer is correct, they get an extra point for class participation. Fifty minutes
have passed. The lesson is over. The next class will follow a very similar pattern.
The following field note from Jolene’s research diary shows that the CLT approach does
not seem to be implemented in the classrooms:
Oral practice is basically reading out loud not actual production; no English is used to
communicate within the classroom (Field note 5, 2015).
The description from Nora’s study and the observation from Jolene’s study seem to
confirm that little change in practice has occurred in EFL teaching as identified by the SEP
(2006).
In 2004 and 2005, EFL teachers and school authorities in Nora’s study, mentioned that
the lack of change was largely due to the mismatch between what the system states should
happen and what in reality could be done due to contextual constraints, an aspect which those
responsible for designing and planning EFL curricula did not seem to take into consideration.
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The following quote from one of the school authorities expresses a common frustration that
already existed over ten years ago:
There is no congruity…I’m telling you this because of the poor interest they’ve shown to improve,
to update, to make the EFL teaching more relevant, come on! It’s supposed that as they give you the
topics then the teacher has to make it relevant, YEAH RIGHT but as long as they provided the
necessary conditions AS WELL! Imagine, I’m complaining and I live in a city, what would teachers in
rural areas think if they have no support? (Academic co-coordinator)
The demands imposed by the system on the EFL teachers, given the characteristics of the
Mexican context, made the academic co-coordinator suspect that the people in charge of the
EFL planning and policy did not consider the realities of teaching EFL. It seems that since she
was a former EFL teacher this made her aware that there was a mismatch between the rhetoric
of the educational authorities and what is feasible and realistic in the state secondary school.
Interestingly, she acknowledged that it was unfair of the system to ask EFL teachers to do
what is stipulated in the program since the people in charge of EFL planning did not provide
the sort of working conditions that are considered indispensable for the efficient delivery of
the syllabus contents.
In the Mexican context both syllabi for EFL teaching and learning in secondary education
stipulate that students are expected to be the “main actors of the educational process.”
Therefore, all learning contents have to be “adapted,” as far as possible, to “their needs and
real interests” so that they are motivated in taking an active role in their own learning. For this
to be put into practice the EFL teachers’ role is conceived as “facilitators of learning and
organizers of class activities” (Basurto Santos, 2010, p. 116). They are also expected to
promote communicative situations and encourage students to work, when necessary,
independently from teachers. All these attitudes toward teaching and learning stipulated in
the Mexican EFL policy are undisputedly desired conditions for teaching and learning in EFL
classrooms. However, in reality, teachers in both studies said that time, the number of
students in each group, the reduced space of their classrooms, and the lack of necessary
teaching resources have all contributed to creating the opposite learning conditions to what is
stipulated in the official documents.
Time
The syllabus (SEP, 2006) states that students receive 50 minutes of instruction three times
a week during the 40 weeks of the school term. However, most teachers have expressed that
time for EFL instruction should be increased if real change is to be achieved. For example, in
Nora’s study, Lolita stated: “I think that English lessons should be one hour every day.”
Similarly, from Jolene’s study, Javier said that: “[English] classes in Secondary School should
be, at least five hours per week.” In addition, teachers report that the actual instruction time is
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reduced. In the first study, Gisela shared that: “[class] is 50 minutes [long], which is reduced to
30 when you have to check homework, you have to check attendance and etc., etc., etc.”
Agnes, one of the participants in the second study, echoed this concern about the
instruction time available in classrooms:
It is not true [that we] have a 50-minute class. [It is less time] . . . like 40 minutes because you enter
the classroom, take out your things, call the roll, ask the students to behave, etc., [and at least] 10
minutes have already passed.
Another challenge that was previously mentioned was in regard to oral practice and the
time available for instruction and practice in the classroom. Fernando stated:
But here I have 40 students and they are too many, híjole…sometimes I try to practice with a few
students. I say “ now, this row, you are going to practice today and next class other classmates will
be given the opportunity to practice speaking in English . . . I just can’t manage with all the students
I have in only one group, no it’s impossible.
The teachers indicated that the actual instruction and practice time is significantly less
than that indicated in the syllabus. In addition, they feel that in order to obtain the learning
objectives in the syllabus it is necessary to increase the time allocated for English instruction.
This echoes Gillies and Jester Quijada (2008), who indicate that time is a determining factor
between accessing a language and learning a language.
It is worth mentioning that EFL teachers in both studies did not only express their
concern about the limited time for English instruction but showed that they had been
thinking or trying to find some solutions to improve their students’ EFL learning. For
example, Fernando mentioned to Jolene that he was planning to implement a strategy to
hopefully reduce the time used for taking attendance and try to make more room for oral
practice in his lessons.
Class Size
Research has shown that the ideal number of students in a given classroom has proved to
be a controversial issue since more often than not budgetary considerations have been
prioritized over the teachers’ or the students’ needs (Glass, Cahen, Lee Smith, & Filby, 1982).
Furthermore, it has also been shown that the number of students in a class has an impact on
the quality of teaching and learning and especially on learners’ attainment (Galton, Gray, &
Rudduck, 2003). Research on EFL communicative teaching contexts, especially in developing
countries, has shown that overcrowded groups or classes that are too large represent a
challenging reality for EFL teachers (Sarwar, 2001), especially when these contexts lack
adequate teaching and learning resources (Peng, 2007). The following quote is fairly
representative of what teachers in Nora’s study stated:
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I have 48-52 students [per group]. We have asked to have groups with no more than 40 students
but they keep on enrolling and enrolling . . . I’d like to have smaller groups. Our classrooms are
small and uncomfortable, we cannot do any group dynamics because the time we take trying to
move the chairs around or to find the room to do something different, that takes up almost all the
class-time, there is NO space to do small group activities, different dynamics instead of teacher
fronted or students sitting in rows. ( MY)
Over ten years later, EFL teachers find themselves struggling with the same situation
regarding the number of students they have in each group. The following quote by a teacher
in Jolene’s study demonstrates this:
It would be perfect if the groups had 25 students . . . maybe even 30 students but no more. (Javier)
The teachers in Jolene’s study also identified other areas where group size inhibited their
teaching, such as error correction and adequately checking homework.
Class Mix
A further important issue aggravating the situation of EFL teaching and learning within
the public school setting is the lack of students’ differentiation according to their EFL
knowledge. This is something that all participants, in Nora’s research, regarded as one of the
biggest problems for both teachers and students alike. Yolanda, a secondary teacher,
highlighted this issue in the following extract:
There are many different [students’ EFL] levels within the same group. There are learners who have
had the opportunity to take or are taking English courses in other institutions and well you can see
the HUGE difference between those learners and the ones who haven’t had that opportunity. This
represents a CHALLENGE for me because I KNOW that they ALREADY know what I’m teaching.
This issue has recently been aggravated by the fact that since 2003, EFL programs have
been implemented in some elementary schools. Therefore, the teachers stated that the
program for secondary schools is now based on prior knowledge attained in the elementary
school EFL program. However, in the study carried out by Jolene, Agnes states:
Supposedly, the students have already had contact with English since elementary school. But that is
only on paper, not in practice. In some schools the parents come together and pay for a teacher, but
in [this town] that doesn’t happen.
This lack of student streaming has had, for over a decade, a negative impact on the
learning process as Javier highlights:
The fact is that students sometimes do not have the preparation that they should have had for the
level they are in.
Having excessively large groups where EFL teachers have to deal with students whose
EFL level may differ a great deal represents a challenge to teachers who do not have the
freedom to group the students according to their EFL knowledge.
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Limited Resources
Teachers in both studies also identified the lack of resources as a key factor in preventing
them from implementing the syllabus set by the educational authorities in Mexico. In 2004,
Gisela, a secondary teacher, could articulate very clearly how she was limited in the activities
she could carry out in the EFL classroom due to the lack of teaching materials other than the
textbook provided by the SEP:
The SEP sends different cassettes and videos for ALL other subjects but for ENGLISH there is
NOTHING, I tell you because I have asked “what’s new for English?” and they say “no, well, there’s
nothing” because even to rest from the routine of the classroom you could say “ok, today we are
going to watch a movie” or do something different, no? But there is NOTHING, NOTHING. BUT I
Think that the school principal is not to blame but rather it is the SEP since they are in charge of
sending the MATERIALS. There is a LOT for Biology, there is a lot for HISTORY, there are many
things, there are tapes for other subjects but not for ENGLISH, there is NOTHING.
At that time, Nadia, another secondary school teacher, also complained about all the
limitations that she was facing as an EFL teacher in her particular teaching context:
Well, [the working conditions for an EFL teacher in secondary education] are not the adequate
because for starters, for example, the SOCKETS in the classrooms DO NOT work, then if we want to
work with the tape recorder we have to buy BATTERIES and that’s very EXPENSIVE to be ALWAYS
buying batteries then to be honest I DON’T use the tape recorder because of that. We DO NOT have
a place, a locker where to keep our materials, NOTHING. We have to be CARRYING all our materials
then that’s heavy I mean the entire teaching and on top of that CARRYING well, NO!
Gisela’s and Nadia’s complaints, over a decade ago, are echoed by the teachers in Jolene’s
study. A common complaint is found in Agnes’ words:
Also the resources in the school…that is also difficult because if we are saying that there should be
a variety of stimuli, well that is not accomplished, that is an ideal situation. But we don’t have a
projector in each classroom . . . or computers. They just installed internet but they only allow you to
connect for 30 minutes. The CD player doesn’t work.
This ongoing frustrating teaching situation makes Javier conclude:
So it is more practical to teach them grammar. Not so much because I want to, but because
sometimes given the conditions it is more feasible.
All these difficult situations that the teachers mentioned above seem to highlight the
impossibility of making EFL teaching and learning more in accord with what is expected of
them as stated in the official syllabus.
Conclusions
As we have “heard,” from the main actors in EFL teaching, that is, the teachers, teaching
or trying to teach English as a foreign language in public schools is encumbered by the
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conditions found in schools: time, class size, class mix, and available resources. Although the
results presented in this paper come from two studies that were carried out in different years,
with a 10-year gap between them, there seems to be no significant improvement in these
conditions. We conclude that no matter what EFL teachers try to do to improve their
students’ learning experience if they are not provided with the working conditions deemed
necessary to enhance the teaching and learning of EFL in the public sector the unsuccessful
situation will prevail, echoing Cárdenas Ramos and Hernández Gaviria (2012), Haque and
Cray (2007), and Zappa-Hollman (2007).
Teachers have good ideas as to what needs to be done to improve the quality of EFL in
public secondary schools. In order to take action that positively impacts teaching and learning,
EFL teachers, as experts in the realities of the classrooms, need to be taken into account when
educational changes are planned. Also, school authorities must commit to take action and
change those aspects which are known to limit teaching and learning. Otherwise, EFL teaching
and learning in the public sector will continue to imitate that of two boxers who are in the ring to
fight but do not actually attempt to land any blows but rather just dance around the ring.
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The Authors
Nora M. Basurto Santos holds a PhD in ELT and Applied Linguistics from
Warwick University in England. She is a full-time researcher at the Universidad
Veracruzana, Mexico, where she teachers in the undergraduate and postgraduate
programs in English as Foreign Language and Applied Linguistics.
Jolene R. Gregory Weathers holds a BA in Biology/Pre-med from Colorado State
University (USA). She has 15 years of classroom experience in teaching EFL in
Mexico. Currently, she is studying for a Master’s in Teaching English as a Foreign
Language at Universidad Veracruzana (Mexico).
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