Sunday, November 25, 2012

Teacher Training Workshop

 
 Abayneh introducing the Lifeplayer to English teachers in Debre Markos and surrounding areas.


                                      Teachers exploring the capabilities of the Lifeplayer

The British Council is an amazing organization. They work in more than 140 countries, their main goal being to improve English Language and the teaching of English Language. In addition, they have other social programs, which I am just learning about. The latest genious of the BC are Learning Boxes, which are currently being delivered to high schools in the Amhara area of Ethiopia. Inside each Learning Box are resource materials designed for teachers to use with extracurricular English Clubs. Although there are a variety of materials in the kit, the heart is a radio/MP3 called a Lifeplayer. This ingenious device was created in South Africa and it is an engineering miracle. I attended one day of a three day workshop designed to train English teachers on how to use the Lifeplayer and the materials inside the Learning Box. The main reason I went was to meet the local English teachers in hopes of doing community outreach. The English Clubs we have established at the university would like to visit some of the schools to show off their talents in drama, debate, music, and poetry. Besides giving authentic goals to DMU students, we hope to encourage high school students to work to improve their English.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Coffee Talk

 
Our first big ELIC event was very successful. It was called Coffee Talk. We attract students by offering coffee, bread, and kolo (roasted barley). The first night of the program was a bit like Dear Abby, where students write their problems on a small piece of paper and insert them into the Coffee Talk box. The participants broke into small groups to try to solve the students' problems. The goal is to develop oral English, which most Ethiopian students are quite low in. About 55 students participated. The students will help plan future Coffee Talk nights using formats such as debate or what one student called Boasting Night.













 

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Learning and Teaching

Kim, Zeylelam, and Adignaw at the Assessment workshop in Addis in November, 2012.
 

Two colleagues from the English Department and I attended a two day workshop in Addis Ababa hosted by the Addis Ababa English Teachers Association, headed by AbaynehHailu. Every two weeks Abayneh organizes a professional development workshop in Addis for English teachers from elementary to university. His latest endeavor was to bring Dr. Cristine Coombs and her two colleagues from Dubai. After we heard that all students in Dubai have laptops and wireless internet, we immediately knew they were out of our league. The training was about how to assess all areas of English language; reading, writing, speaking, and listening. One of the most interesting parts was the writing of multiple choice questions. We discussed the cornerstones of testing which include usefulness, validity, reliability, practicality, washback, authenticity, transparency, and security. We went over various types of tests, focusing mostly on how to create a multiple choice test. I never knew how complicated it was to create a good version of a multiple choice assessment.The presenters all work at the university level in Dubai. Most of the assessments at university level are considered high stakes. Zelalem, Adugnaw, and I will be responsible for training the other English teachers in the English department at DebreMarkos University about what we learned.

 I stayed in Addis for a few days preparing for a workshop I was to give to high school students in Harar. I decided  to travel east a couple days before the workshop to do some experience sharing at Dira Dawa University and Haramaya University. Dira Dawa was HOT. This small city in Eastern Oromia district of Ethiopia is literally a lowland bowl surrounded by scrub-dotted hills. Since there were very few trees or grass, the houses were made of  stones and mud. Once I arrived in Dira Dawa, I contacted Daisy, the VSO volunteer who worked in the English Language Improvement Center at Dira Dawa University. I met with her and her counterpart Nega. They were frustrated because after 6 years, there was still no center. The university had not yet given them a space. They were trying to organize English clubs, classes for secretaries, and other trainings, but none of then had come to fruition yet.




American Corner inside the Dira Dawa Public Library          Nega and Daisy in front of their office


Posters advertising ELIC in Dira Dawa















Haramaya was a different story. Gary, the VSO volunteer who had been there for more than two years, and his counterpart were an active pair. English Clubs ran themselves. It had 5 officers and they had their own office. They even had a key to the ELIC. They only had one club, which is different than the way we organized our English Clubs in Debre Markos. They held movie nights and showed English language films. They hosted Literature nights and Debate nights. Gary informed me that last week there were 600 students who attended the movie that English Club organized. They charged 2 birr entrance, so the English Club can use it for whatever they want at the end of the year. The ELIC in Haramaya was most famous for its support of freshman girls, who drop out at a rate of 30% , mainly due to lack of English skills. The ELIC hired 16 graduate students to tutor 1,000 girls throughout the year in 32 hour, 8 week courses. It was an amazing feat. The tutors were responsible for organizing their own classes, leaving ELIC staff to tackle other needs on campus. They also hosted some workshops on the IELTS, which is an English Language assessment that all Masters and Doctoral candidates have to take before being admitted to Addis Ababa University.




                               The ELIC staf and student leaders at Haramaya University


After Haramaya I moved on to Harar to teach the English Access Microscholarship Program students. I was preceeded by an awards ceremony for the winners of an essay writing contest hosted by the Cultural Affairs Office of the American Embassy. The Access program is aimed to high school students from poor families in various countries throughout the world. In Ethiopia, we have two Access programs running. The kids have to compete for this two year class, held every Saturday, that emphasizes English Language and American culture. I prepared a class about Veterans Day, which included clips of songs from World War Two (for those of you old enough to remember the Andrew Sisters) and the Vietnam War Era (Country Joe and the Fish at Woodstock, protests against the war). I showed them a Veterans Day Parade, several memorial monuments in Washington DC, and clips from Born on the Fourth of July. I wanted the students to see the contrast in feelings that American citizens and veterans alike had in the U.S. concerning service in the military. They were a shy bunch in my presence and didn't practice their oral English as much as I wanted them to. This is a common occurance for me in Ethiopia. Since I am a native speaker, many people are afraid to speak with me, thinking I may judge their mistakes. Emphasizing descriptive adjectives throughout the class, the students were assigned to write a poem about an imaginary soldier using an adjective list to help them.

                                                        Obsa reading his essay
Top: Molly and Tahra from the American Embassy with the winners of the essay contest;
Two of the female winners with their prizes;
37 of the 42 Access students in Harar
 
 

 

Monday, November 5, 2012

University Life


                           Hanging out with my fellow teachers in the countryside, sharing a meal.




When I arrived to Debre Markos University I could not help notice its lack of beauty. Compared to Adama University, which has been around a long time, DMU only began construction five years ago. This may seem like a long time to a Westerner, but it is barely a scratch here in Ethiopia. Things take time. Construction is ongoing. Flowers and bathrooms will have to wait. In spite of that, internal beauty of the staff and students make up for lack of external beauty.

When I first arrived to Debre Markos, I was warmly greeted by Zelaylem, an English teacher and coordinator of the English Language Improvement Center (ELIC). Although it is required by the Ministry of Education, in almost every university the ELIC is an unfunded program that gets little attention. So imagine my surprise when I was told that my job would be to work in the ELIC. I literally had to beg for 5 weeks before they would give me classes to teach. So now I am scheduled to team teach two classes in December. Advanced Writing 1 and Advanced Writing 2. DMU, as well as many other universities, has started the Modular system. That means that during a span of 12 days, the students earn 3 credit hours. Class is 4 hours a day. Imagine. Worse than summer school. Like a night class every night. It is tough on both teachers and students. No one seems to like it but that is the direction things are going here in Ethiopia.

Zelaylem and I are in the process of organizing English Clubs and trying to make the ELIC more than an empty shell. Students have the choice between Drama, Music, Debate, or Magazine clubs, debate being the most popular and music the least. We've managed to talk several teachers into being club advisers and hope the clubs do not die a slow death once everyone gets busy. We are planning Talent Shows, English language films, Coffee Talk (sort of like Dear Abby, but the students solve their problems over coffee and popcorn), and a year-end field trip.

              First English Club meeting. Zelaylem, my teaching partner, addressing the English Club members.

The Countryside

The Countryside
A shepard in the countryside plays the washint (flute) to pass the time.