Ready for Action: How to Be Completely Prepared for Your ESL Class

Anyone who has ever stood in front of a group of students has experienced doubts about their ability, worries that they’re insufficiently prepared, or fears that they won’t get along with the group. It’s like giving a big corporate presentation, only this kind of presentation lasts for an entire career; even when you’ve finished explaining the content, you’re still there, monitoring practice, dealing with problems, asking check questions and following up to make sure the material is really being learned. It’s a profession which, like few others, places demands on our confidence, and challenges our views of ourselves.
The initial steps, when teachers might deliver a practice lesson at the end of their training, or begin working in a school for the first time, are critical for building confidence. And I believe that this confidence isn’t just ‘nice to have’; it’s an essential tool that new teachers will need in their professional lives, and as trainers, we can help them shrug off their fears and get off to the best possible start.
Experienced teachers can dash off a good lesson plan in a few moments, perhaps on their way to school on the bus or while watching TV the night before class. For a new teacher, building the kind of lesson plan which will be most helpful – one which is detailed, comprehensive and caters for all the ‘what-ifs’ – can take several hours. Assure your students that this is time well spent, and that it will get much easier, and faster, with practice. Eventually, they’ll have a personal library consisting of several big folders of past lesson plans to refer to, and each time will be a subtle improvement over previous versions.
PW (10-15) +M, FB
This is my short-hand for PairWork, which will last 10-15 minutes, during which I’ll Monitor the practice, and then I’ll ask for FeedBack. I can boil this section down to an acronymized code, because I’ve organized pairwork practice many hundreds of times. But that wasn’t always so. Here’s how the same type of section appeared in a plan, back in 1999, when I’d just finished my CELTA certificate:Visualizations like this can really help dissolve away some anxiety, because in a small way, the teacher has already been there and done it.I have my trainees close their eyes and imagine their students at their desks, imagine how the room will look, and picture just how the whole scene will fit together.
Think about it. Neil Armstrong nailed the Apollo 11 moon landing, in difficult circumstances and while running out of fuel, because he’d practiced those very skills thousands of times. Placido Domingo can sing entire operas from memory, because he’s practiced the heck out of them. The more we practice, the better we perform, it’s as simple as that.
Student teachers who rehearse – in front of a mirror, or their friends or colleagues, or through watching a video of themselves – end up reducing their Teacher Talking Time (TTT)
Student teachers who rehearse – in front of a mirror, or their friends or colleagues, or through watching a video of themselves – end up reducing their Teacher Talking Time (TTT), tend to explain the content more concisely and with better examples, and use clearer language for classroom instructions. They can also roughly judge their use of time, and adjust their plan accordingly. And this doesn’t just apply to the Presentation section of the class; have them practice their check questions, so that they ask just the right type to elicit the target language. This example is less successful:
Teacher: | Is this green? |
Student: | Yes. |
Fair enough, the student has shown that they understand the word. But how about this:
Teacher: | What color is this? |
Student: | It’s green. |
Gold star! The student has used the target language in a full sentence – the Holy Grail of language learning. But they only did so because the question required it.
The best rehearsals combine preparation with imagination; the trainee can anticipate what a student might ask. Believe me, you don’t want to find yourself improvising an explanation of a complex grammar point – I’ve lived through train-wrecks of my own creation because of this, more than once – so run it through during prep time, just so you’ve done it at least once before you have to do it ‘live’.
New teachers can learn an extraordinary amount by simply observing experienced teachers in action. Help them focus on particular aspects of the class – the Presentation section, how the teacher uses simple language, gestures, pictures and objects, and how they structure and manage class time – and then discuss their findings afterward. What would they have done differently? What might they emulate in the future?
I encourage my trainees to remember four priceless pieces of advice through a mnemonic.
Breathe deeply and slowly
Ask lots of questions
Smile often
Slow down your speaking
These are the four most common newbie errors, in my experience. Student teachers get themselves stressed out, mentally and physically, which has a whole suite of troubling results. A common one is that it increases their speed of speaking, which is never a good thing, especially with lower-level learners. They aren’t used to engaging their students through questions, and end up becoming more like a lecturer. And they forget to enjoy themselves, and to let the students see that this is a fun, shared experience with positive and interesting outcomes.
One of the biggest questions when analyzing a class is this: ‘Did the students use the target language?’ For new teachers, this won’t always be true, but that’s no reason for despair. Invite them to consider how the lesson might have gone differently if they’d modeled the target structure more, used more, or clearer examples, and perhaps monitored the students more closely to make sure they were on task. These are all good things to remind a new teacher before that fateful first day.
This is ESL, not brain surgery.
No one will get hurt if it goes badly. Relax, follow the plan, respond to your students, keep your eyes and ears open, and everything will be fine.