Portraits For Inspiring English Teachers
Portraits For Inspiring English Teachers
Portraits For Inspiring English Teachers
ISBN 978-0-86355-718-7
British Council 2013 Brand and Design/D091
10 Spring Gardens
London SW1A 2BN, UK
www.britishcouncil.org
Contents
Abstract................................................................................................................................................................................... 2
Introduction............................................................................................................................................................................ 3
Indonesian portraits............................................................................................................................................................. 5
Chinese portraits................................................................................................................................................................. 10
Similarities and differences between observed classes .......................................................................................... 14
Conclusions........................................................................................................................................................................... 15
References............................................................................................................................................................................ 16
| Contents
Abstract
The first report on our English Language Learning
and Teaching Research Award (ELTRP) funded
research project presented the data from a short
survey (n = 279) which asked learners aged 1422
to nominate and then describe state school teachers
who had inspired them. The names of 168 different
teachers were proposed, of whom 20 received two
or more nominations.
Here we report on following up a subset of eight
of the nominated teachers. Through visiting them
in their schools, observing one of their classes and
talking to them about their teaching principles, we
aimed to obtain snapshots of what inspiring teaching
looked like in context, and of some of the thinking
that underpinned such teaching.
As can be seen in the observed lessons below
(and the accompanying video extracts), inspiring
teaching looked very different in different classrooms.
Discrete reasons for such differences are inevitably
extremely complicated to untangle, but we suggest
several features of the political and social contexts
within which English is taught in the two countries,
which we feel may help account for many of the
differences we observed.
The inspiring teachers had things in common too,
most notably they really cared about their profession
and their subject, and about how to convey their
own enthusiasm to their learners in ways that would
encourage them to begin to care about learning it too.
However, we also realised that the visible expression
of each teachers care, as demonstrated through their
in and out of class behaviour, was different and that
it was bound to be so, since it had been shaped by
their individual experiences of negotiating the norms
and values of their particular school and classroom
contexts over time.
| Abstract
Introduction
It is well recognised that motivation is a key ingredient
in good educational practice: ideally people come to
classes motivated to learn, and teachers build on that
foundation. In the field of language education, there is
a growing awareness of what constitutes motivational
pedagogy (Drnyei, 2001), informed by increasing
numbers of research studies (e.g. Moskovsky et al.,
2013; Guilloteaux, 2013). Our particular interest is
in the kind of motivational teaching that anticipates
the time when teaching is over; that is, teaching that
inspires learners not only to do the teachers bidding
in the class but to study independently, of their own
volition, over many years, through the vicissitudes
of adolescent or young adult life. Especially in global
contexts where formal education is circumscribed in
time and resources, this is the only way that foreign
language competence is reliably achieved.
This is the second part of a report on a research
project which aimed to identify and describe a number
of state school English teachers in Guangzhou, China
and Jakarta, Indonesia who had inspired learners,
changed the way they felt about the subject and
persuaded them to invest time and effort in studying
the language beyond the classroom. In this report we
first briefly describe the mechanics of the visits, then
present portraits of four teachers, two from China,
two from Indonesia, including short video extracts
from their lessons. We have chosen these teachers
because of the contrasts they present to their
compatriots and to the teachers in the other country.
We believe they illustrate some of the diverse ways
in which language teachers can inspire learners, and
we hope their example may inspire other teachers
to continue searching for their own unique form of
inspirational pedagogy.
| Introduction
In China
School visits stretched over a month. They would
have been impossible without the help of our research
assistant who is an Educational Researcher/Teacher
Trainer working in one of the District Education offices
in Guangzhou. Three schools (two junior secondary
and one primary) were accessed through his obtaining
permission to visit and film in advance from districtand then school-level leaders. At each school the
visit was a fairly formal event, with at least one senior
member of the school staff (the Head, Deputy Head
or Head of English) welcoming us with refreshments
prior to the observation and then being present at the
interview. Two of the three observed lessons were in
normal classrooms and one in a special room used
for observations. (The primary school lesson data was
not analysed since the teacher was ill on the day, and
what was seen did not do her justice). The lessons
were all revision lessons, and it is impossible to judge
the degree to which they were normal lessons, though
they were clearly lessons that the teacher believed to
be potentially inspiring.
Access to the fourth school (senior secondary)
was through the research assistants personal
connections. At this school there was no formal
welcome and we met no member of the school
staff apart from the nominated teacher. The lesson
here took place in a model lesson classroom, which
had banked rows of cinema-like seats looking onto
the classroom.
In Indonesia
In Indonesia, our research assistant, a senior
lecturer in a prestigious higher-education (HE)
institution in Jakarta who has been involved in
teacher development and curriculum projects over
many years, recognised some of the names on the
list of nominated teachers and confirmed that they
had a good reputation; by contrast, the teacher
who received the most nominations was not known
to her. We selected the latter teacher plus three of
the others for possible visits. The research assistant
approached the head teacher in each school by letter,
briefly describing the research project and explaining
that we would like to invite the nominated teacher to
participate further in the study. In all cases the head
teachers had no objection and either passed on
the letter to the teacher concerned, who then
contacted the research assistant directly, or the
research assistant made a follow-up phone call
and contacted the teacher that way.
| Introduction
Indonesian portraits
Ibu (Mrs) Kartika
Kartika has been an English teacher at Junior
High School (JHS) 157, East Jakarta, for ten years,
having previously worked at another school on the
outskirts of Jakarta for ten years. She never intended
to become a teacher it was suggested to her by her
husband as a job that would allow her to spend plenty
of time with her three growing children though now
she really enjoys it.
Training
Kartika has a Teaching Diploma from Universitas
Islam in Bekasi; this was a one-year programme
that included a practicum, and she began teaching
immediately afterwards. Working in regular state
schools, she gets occasional opportunities for
in-service government training courses but these
are usually just one-day events. Her main chance
for self-development, she believes, comes through
the inter-school student competitions in which she
often represents JHS 157; for example, taking a
group of students on a residential long weekend
for an English language speech contest, or a storytelling competition.
Learner comments
Kartika had a very high number of nominations (27)
though almost all were from students currently in her
junior high school who had been taught by her the
previous year. Respondents praised both her personal
character and her teaching skill. Running through the
comments though was an apparent contradiction:
she was kind and yet strict, her teaching was great
fun but also disciplined. She was also praised for her
energy and fighting spirit, and evidently was more
than a teacher to some pupils they felt they knew
her as a person. Her lessons were enjoyable and full
of humour, yet pupils also claimed they learned a lot.
Teaching principles*
According to Kartika there is a pervasive view among
Indonesians that English is difficult to learn: you know
that English is such a terrible thing for most of our
people, our students, yeah, they dont like English very
much, they hate English, so I can change their point
of view about English, English is very, very fun, so Im
teaching them, I always strive to make my lessons fun,
so they dont feel stressed. She became aware early
in her teaching career of the challenge this attitude
presents to teachers, and resolved to overcome it.
Her first step, she said, was to change her relationship
with the learners: They like my style of teaching
because I make myself as a student so I see things
| Indonesian portraits
Observed lesson
This was a Year 9 class of 40 students, aged 1415,
seated in the standard Indonesian format of paired
tables five columns of eight students across.
The first 50 minutes of a regular 90-minute class
was observed. Kartika led the lesson energetically
throughout, finding time to relax when students were
working on exercises. At these times she sat at her
desk at the front, occasionally going to help students
who put their hands up for assistance. Students
Outline
The teacher (T) introduces lesson (in English)
telling students that theyll sing together the song
Beauty and the Beast (Celine Dion version), which
theyve done before. She first tries to elicit the gist
of the story from students though only one student
contributes. [five minutes]
1. T plays song (2x) while students do a gap-fill
exercise in their worksheets. [ten minutes]
2. T puts up PowerPoint (PPT) slide showing
a poster of aspirational aphorisms (e.g. I
CHOOSE to live by choice, not by chance;
to make changes, not excuses...) T says this
poster is the theme of the lesson and explains
each line; she then translates each line into
Bahasa Indonesia and checks that students
understand, elaborating on the message of
the poster. She gets noticeably more response
from students now shes mixing English and
Indonesian. [eight minutes]
3. T goes through gap-fill answers using an
answer key projected on the board.
[seven minutes]
4. Now all students have complete lyrics, T plays
the song again and some students sing softly
as they listen. [five minutes]
Video extract
| Indonesian portraits
Ibu Endah
Endah is an English teacher in a middle-ranking
senior high school in East Jakarta, and she has
worked there for 29 years, enjoying the relatively
peaceful environment, the colleagues and the support
she gets from the head teacher. She has worked in
other institutions, including a large private language
school in the city where she met her English husband,
but for the past seven years she has concentrated
on her work at this school. She says she has never
been interested in moving into administration or
management, as it would distract her from her
regular teaching.
Training
She studied for a degree in English Language and
Literature, a course that included some practical
teacher training. She feels she learned a great deal
by working at other schools: If I just teach here I
dont improve because I do not meet other people
but because I taught in other places that improved
me a lot, especially in [private language school], I had
to take international certificates, FCE, also CPE, that
improved me a lot and I taught higher levels of English
and that make me learn more. She is a British Council
virtual teacher, co-operating with other teachers
and using materials provided by the British Council
to make lesson plans together. She also attends
workshops regularly at the American Regional English
Language Office (RELO). She says she offered this
opportunity to other English teachers in the school
but they told her they didnt have time to attend:
Well I dont have time too, but I try to make time!
| Indonesian portraits
Learner comments
Endah was nominated by five students, who had a
range of compliments for her. Three mentioned her
patience/kindness, and ability to keep a disciplined
class, and explain language points in full, while
remaining cheerful. She was a teacher who can
make their children laugh, yet still serious in the
class. All said she made them more interested in
the language, while three of them said they feel more
confident having had her as a teacher, mentioning
the way she praised them for their ability to use the
language. Two students mentioned her excellent
English and one went on to praise her for her
extensive cultural knowledge of the UK.
Teaching principles
Endah thinks that students come to her school with a
low motivation to learn English: Maybe because their
school before they were not well, or [they] didnt get
enough, like that, so I try to motivate them by giving
good materials, interesting materials, it is closer to
the nature of language. She never has any difficulty
finding new materials, which she can adapt for her
teaching: Oh there are lots, especially the British
Council Ive got a lot of listening from them, the
internet. Ive also bought a lot of books, Ive had a
lot of training so I can open more websites,
addresses, so at home I mostly use my laptop to
browse, Im going to teach this, what is it?. She also
invites students to bring materials to class, which they
do, especially English language songs which they like
and which they enjoy translating into Indonesian.
As for the new students entering her school, she
says I dont want to make it difficult for them, so
that they can perform, the most important thing
is that they have self-confidence to talk in English,
in a simple way. This sometimes means giving
them praise or even rewards for their good work.
By contrast with some other teachers, she wants
her students to be active in class: I dont like it if the
classes are without spirit at all, what can I do there?
By enabling the students to enjoy her classes
I can see the expression on their faces she enjoys
teaching them. However she feels she is not always
able to give them the experience they deserve:
I dont have enough time too many classes, and
administration is very demanding, also marking so
much, preparations a lot, everything takes time, I feel
so sorry for them, you know, but I try to make a great
time in class.
Endah also makes sure the students know how
important English can be for their future, especially in
the capital city where even small children can speak
some English: I said make use of your ability, and
Outline
The lesson starts with the teacher very calmly
asking the students to perform as well as they
can, suggesting they take deep breaths if they feel
nervous. She asks other students to pay attention
and give support to those who are speaking. She
invites the first pair to the front, and then she sits at
her desk to the side, where she remains for the rest
of the lesson, occasionally making notes on things
that the learners did or said. [two minutes]
1. The first pair give a presentation, giving
opposing views on the issue of national exams;
first pro then against. [all approximately
five minutes]
2. The second pair topic: dating in high school
students. Other students mostly pay attention,
though they are free to make occasional
comments to each other, or even to call
| Indonesian portraits
Observed lesson
This was a Year 12 class (ages 1718), and the first
half of a regular 90-minute session was observed.
Approximately 32 students were seated in paired
tables facing the front (the standard school layout).
The teacher stressed that this was a lesson they
were going to do anyway, to practise students oral
debating skills, and that we would not see much
teaching going on. At the end of the lesson (which
we did not witness), the teacher gave feedback
to the students on aspects of their performance
(e.g. use of PPT, language errors).
Video extract
| Indonesian portraits
Chinese portraits
Ms Wang
Ms Wang has been a teacher for 20 years and
currently teaches at a senior middle school in a fairly
affluent suburb of the city. She started teaching when
young: I liked to teach what I know especially about
English to the younger children in our neighbourhood.
She also remembers having a good English teacher
herself: My first English teacher is a middle-aged
woman who can speak excellent English so I think she
laid a very solid foundation for my English learning.
Training
She graduated from a four-year English Teacher
Education programme at Yunnan Normal University.
Most of the training was theoretical but she practised
teaching for two times for altogether over three
months, about four months maybe, I think it was really
very helpful for me. Her only In-service Educational
Training (INSET) experience since graduation has
been one month at Bourneville College in the UK:
That was really very happy, and also professionally
useful, some parts of it is interesting and also
practical here in China where Im teaching.
Learner comments
Ms Wang was nominated by four former students.
They emphasised her personal characteristics more
than specific aspects of her teaching. She teaches at
a school where most students are weekly boarders
and nominators highlighted her role as a mother to
those far from home, a friend at times of illness, and
her patience and encouragement, (she taught me
to persist and not give up; she made me feel good
about myself).
Teaching principles
Ms Wang believes that good teachers normally
have some common quality, they are kind, ready to
help, positive, warm hearted maybe. (These were
many of the things that her students said about her.)
She saw preparing students for their future lives
beyond school as an important feature of her role.
I say that learning English is not only about learning
English. [] In class I will take every opportunity to
teach them some of the qualities that they need
very much when they get into the society. [] For
example, I said Im trying to be a POP teacher, P refers
to positive, O of course to optimistic and the other P
refers to persevering. I think these are the qualities
Im trying to make all my students to have. []
Sometimes I think they will not need the knowledge
of English that I taught them, but they will always
need these qualities.
10
| Chinese portraits
Observed lesson
The focus was attributive clauses (AC). Some 50
Year 10 learners, wearing uniforms, and seated in
groups of four to six around desks. They worked
with a photocopied handout containing exercises
and/or examples and with the accompanying PPT.
Ms Wang was smiling and approachable (students
asked her questions) throughout, and provided
positive feedback: very good, etc. Groups of students
were numbered and competed to answer questions,
and marks for correct answers were noted down
against their number on the blackboard. Ms Wang
used Chinese extensively to repeat instructions
(previously given in English), to help students when
checking progress on tasks and to respond to student
answers. English language use by students was limited
to responding to questions, often at the same time.
They too used Chinese for some responses, questions
to the teacher and discussion within the group. During
Activity 2 below, the teacher worked separately at the
front of the class with one group of weaker boys for a
short time.
Outline
Introduction: quiet classical music in the
background, students spending several minutes
rubbing their eyes and temples before rising to
greet the teacher. (This is the normal procedure
for the first lesson of the afternoon.)
1. Questions. Attributive clauses (ACs) are used
to qualify what kind of thing? What are relative
pronouns and relative adverbs? Simultaneous
answers to complete gaps on PPT presentation
(2). Students work in groups to find answers to
questions on PPT and to complete the chart
on the handout.
The teacher works at the front with group
of boys, then circulates, helping as needed.
2. Student responses to (2). The teacher answers
some questions for them.
3. Same as versus same that. The teacher tries
to give examples to illustrate the difference.
Students orally answer questions on PPT to
show understanding. The teacher asks if there
are any questions about content so far. There
is a chorused no.
Video extract
11
| Chinese portraits
Ms Cai
Ms Cai has been a teacher for four years and
currently teaches at junior middle level at a school in
the centre of Guangzhou. She began teaching when
she was very young. At primary school my English
teacher impressed me most. She was a very young
and beautiful lady; she behaved very well and taught
us in an interesting way. [] She always asked me to
help other students because I had better grades in
this class. Also I had two sisters and a brother. I always
had a blackboard at my home and I loved to teach
them all. The learners that she currently teaches
are the same age as her brother, so she feels she
understands them well.
Training
Ms Cai completed a four-year English Teaching BA
at Guangzhou University. Most of the taught courses
were theoretical but I had many chances to teach
in some schools. We always used the time such as
summer and winter holidays. I went to the countryside
to help underdeveloped areas. She felt that the
months she spent in the classroom were a good
experience for me and very necessary for me to grow
up for the job. Since graduating she has had access
to online CPD: but I think thats not enough for me. I
want to have further. As a class teacher, she does not
think she has time at present.
Learner comments
Ms Cai had the largest number of nominations (24)
in China. Learners appreciated her use of varied
classroom materials (songs, stories and films), her
excellent language ability and use of English in the
classroom almost all the time, and her ability to
explain meanings clearly and to develop her learners
language learning skills and learning strategies.
Personally, they admired her sense of humour,
her sense of responsibility, her kindness and the
manner in which she encouraged learners, told
them they had potential and treated them as a friend.
Teaching principles
Ms Cai felt that making classes interesting for
students was extremely important for their learning.
She thinks that English teachers, who can use
enjoyable songs, films and games with learners,
have more opportunity to make classes interesting
than teachers of other subjects, who have to speak
and write on the blackboard all the time and the
students listen, think and take notes.
The teacher-learner relationship also plays an
important role in making students interested in
learning a subject. Ms Cai has a blog through which
she communicates with students out of class. My
students always say because I love you and want
to be your good friend I love English, if you assign
something to me I will do it. They always say this to me
in my blog, every night. This out-of-class relationship
is just like friends, very important I think.
She remains keen to keep on learning about teaching
and likes to read books about actual teaching written
by Chinese teachers who are so famous in a certain
place [that] publishers will ask them to write about
what they are doing.
Ms Cai explained that all activities in the lesson
were focused on the textbook unit because its
very important for the exam (mid term), because we
have to compete with others, other schools, other
teachers, so we have the pressure. She did not agree
with burdening children with so much work: If I had a
child I wouldnt like to burden him/her with so much
homework, I would send them abroad.
12
| Chinese portraits
Observed lesson
This was the first lesson of the day (08.00) with a
class of 57 Year 8 students in four double rows across
the classroom. All wore uniforms. The lesson was
presented almost entirely through a series of PPTs,
and was a revision lesson of Unit 4 from the middleschool textbook, Historical Scenes. The teacher wore
a microphone and stood at the front of the class
throughout. She radiated enthusiasm and spoke
English almost all the time, using Chinese briefly when
explaining grammatical points and giving homework.
Learners oral language use was controlled for all
activities except (7) below. They were attentive and
participative throughout. Learners worked in groups,
with correct responses to questions getting marks for
the group recorded on the blackboard.
Outline
The class began and ended with classical music
(Fr Elise) and all students rose to exchange
good mornings with the teacher.
1. Who am I? The teacher called a learner to the
front and whispered an identity. Students asked
a very limited range of questions to identify.
2. Students read out words and phrases from
the PPT and translated English to Chinese and
Chinese to English.
3. Students in groups were asked to retell a story
(from the textbook) using words and phrases
given on the PPT.
4. Students chorused recitation of the completed
story from PPT.
5. Grammar exercises from handout. MCQs of
present perfect versus simple past (the teacher
reminded them of the differences in Chinese).
This exercise was chosen because it is part
of the senior middle school entrance exam.
Learners completed individually and then
checked answers with each other.
Video extracts
13
| Chinese portraits
14
Conclusions
Given these similarities and differences, is it possible
to make any broad generalisations about the nature of
inspiring language teaching which might be useful for
teachers and their trainers? We believe the findings of
this phase of our research project, building on those
from Phase 1 (see Lamb and Wedell, 2013), allow us to
assert with reasonable confidence that:
1. Inspiring teachers are themselves inspired.
Despite their many differences, what our
seven observed teachers had in common was a
strong personal commitment to teaching. Their
interviews and lessons demonstrated to us that
they cared about doing their job well: they cared
about their subject, and about how to convey it
to their learners so that they cared too. Of course
teachers will show this care in many ways in the
video extracts we see Ms Wang explaining the
finer points of attributive clauses to her learners
in the same animated way as a basketball coach
might talk to his players during a time out; in
another extract we see Ibu Endah sitting calmly
at her desk while a pair of students present
to the rest of the class, making notes on their
performance so she could give feedback later.
As Csikszentmihalyi (1997) writes, If a teacher
does not believe in his job, does not enjoy the
learning he is trying to transmit, the student
will sense this and derive the entirely rational
conclusion that the particular subject matter is
not worth mastering for its own sake. (p. 77).
2. Inspiring teaching will always be shaped
by its particular context. This is because,
contra to popular belief, inspiring teachers
are usually made, not born, and their skills
will be honed through many years of deep
reflection on experience in particular classrooms
and institutions. All our teachers talked
knowledgeably about their learners, yet also gave
the strong impression that they were still learning
about them too. Of course inspiration will always
be unpredictable individuals can be inspired
by any kind of experience, even a negative one.
But in order to maximise the chances of the
greatest number of pupils being inspired over
a course, teaching has to be crafted to suit
those particular learners.
15
| Conclusion
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