Upon reflection I feel everything that was
taught was relevant and always reused in following lessons. There seemed to be
a point to it all, and not just being taught it for the sake of filling lesson
time which I have experienced previously. One of the more useful aspects for me
to take away was seeing the benefits of going through the homework that was set
and it being corrected, either via email/eBridge or in the lesson itself. As a
learner I feel this is a very important part of learning, as I find in other
languages I do homework on a weekly basis, but as it is never corrected, I
sometimes struggle knowing if I am correct or not, and find other learners never
do the homework set as they know it will never be checked. This course has
shown me that there are other ways for a teacher to mark homework without
taking up valuable class time which can be more beneficial for the whole class,
for example having it submitted and marked before the next class which then can
be corrected and the teacher can spend part of the next class going over
problem areas and common mistakes if need be.
The lessons were varied which
made them interesting (and to all students it seems, not just me) and the
teacher was always open to questions. All handouts were clear and well
organised, i.e., in the order they were being used. The lesson in which STT and TTT were analysed
showed me the importance of having a balance of both when possible and getting all
the students to partake when necessary.
Overall there are definitely certain
teaching methods that I have seen over the 4 sessions that I hope to remember
and use when I do become a teacher. From the varied lessons, to getting the
students to participate when possible and in different ways e.g., not always
with the same partner or group (although I am aware that there will be
occasions that this will not be appropriate), to the usefulness of handouts if
presented well, to making sure everyone is clear on the aims and outcomes of
the class to the different ways to mark homework.
What struck me the most was the
importance of refreshing what the students have previously learnt before moving
onto the next stage. As a learner I have seen both sides – not recapping (normal
in my languages) and now recapping and I believe it is essential to recap as if
the students have not taken in nor understood what they were meant to, they will
not be able to advance to their full potential. It is also important for the
teacher as they will be able to gauge whether the outcomes of the previous
lessons have been fulfilled or whether they need to clarify something.
This learning experience has been
completely new to me. I have not studied
a language from ‘scratch’ where I have been unable to use my knowledge of other
languages to assist me, since I first started learning languages in a classroom
setting - about 26 years ago!
I felt that learning Dutch in
this way opened up my eyes to very effective and good ways of teaching a
language, and I am not just saying this to ‘please’ the teacher.