Harrogate is a beautiful former spa town in northern
England and it was in this cozy city where spring was blossoming and flowers
were everywhere that the 48th Annual IATEFL Conference was held. It
was my first attendance at an IATEFL Conference and I was quite impressed with
the extraordinary multiculturalism , the astonishing volume of choice , the
impressive array of speakers and the cheerful atmosphere among the
participants.
The coaching and mentoring delegates formed a team in
Harrogate! We attended each other’ s presentations and exchanged a lot of
information and experience. It was wonderful to see that people from the most
distant parts of the world have been working hard to implement collaborative
practices in order to enhance teachers capacity and at the same time promote
professional development. All the sessions were excellent.
One valuable presentation I was able to catch was
given by Dr. Svetlana Belic Malinic from
Belgrade, Serbia. Svetlana presented the
results of an action research conducted
in an international school in Serbia which aimed to bring about change in
teachers perceptions of their pedagogical practice. The teachers were introduced
into reciprocal coaching schemata and, by doing peer coaching, were able to
support one another in their professional growth, which positively affected
their self-assessment. This shows how valuable it is to work collaboratively
and how teachers gain by exchanging their experience and practice.
In addition to the thought-provoking presentations I
attended, there was one innovative session format I really appreciated called ELT Conversation , which involved discussion
between two leading ELT professionals, Jeremy Harmer and Scott Thornbury. In this session the speakers
interviewed each other about the Communicative Approach. After 20 years, is it
time to redefine its concept? Is there a contemporary view of CLT? For more
than one hour, in a full auditorium, Harmer and Thornbury discussed the gains
and losses of this so well-established approach for language teaching followed
by questions addressed from the audience. A wonderful moment to revisit this approach
and reflect upon what we have doing in our classrooms in the last decades.
In the opponent flow, Jim Srivener gave a lively
presentation reassuring the importance of teaching grammar and urged the
audience to ignore those voices that tell you that you have to communicate all
the time. The presenter stressed that, yes, students want, need and learn from
grammar. The question is how teachers can make grammar genuinely engaging,
valuable and challenging. In order to make grammar really meaningful, Jim Scrivener
stresses that we should use lots of examples. They are input. And we should play
with examples. This is practice. We should never forget to make examples sound
real. Personalization is fundamental. After personalizing , students then are
able to use the language.
As you can see through my highlights above, IATEFL was
filled with diversity and innovation which have made me an IATEFL convert.
Those were professionally inspiring and enjoyable days that will always remain
in my mind. My thanks for the support and encouragement the Casa has given me
to participate in such a fabulous event.
Margarete Nogueira |
Dear Margarete,
ReplyDeleteThank you for wrting such an inspiring post. Having the rich opportunity to meet professionals from several parts of the world who share the same interest area must have been amazing.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteDear Margarete,
ReplyDeleteLoved your genuine, enthusiastic post about your impressions on the last IATEFL Conference.
Eneida Coaracy