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{"id":3159,"date":"2015-01-26T10:16:37","date_gmt":"2015-01-26T06:16:37","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/englishbookgeorgia.com\/blogebg\/?p=3159"},"modified":"2015-01-26T10:21:18","modified_gmt":"2015-01-26T06:21:18","slug":"professional-development-collaborative-teaching-in-efl-esl","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/englishbookgeorgia.com\/blogebg\/professional-development-collaborative-teaching-in-efl-esl\/","title":{"rendered":"Professional Development: Collaborative Teaching in EFL\/ ESL"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"\"<\/p>\n

By Lindsay Clandfield and Jo Budden<\/p>\n

Level: Starter\/beginner, Elementary, Pre-intermediate, Intermediate, Upper intermediate, Advanced<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n

“I love my new job. I can be creative in my class preparation, I get along really well with my students and I really appreciate the responsibility. There’s nobody looking over my shoulder all the time when I’m at work. It’s me and my class.”<\/em><\/p>\n

“I feel bored and a bit depressed with my job. I feel like I am doing the same thing over and over again. I have no new ideas and I hate my course book. I don’t know if I can do this for the rest of my life. One of the problems is that I feel so lonely, even with a class full of students. I think I’m becoming disconnected from it all.”<\/em><\/p>\n

The first quote is from a new English teacher in their first few months of teaching (after the \u201cfear\u201d of the first classes has worn off) and the second is from an English teacher who has been working for some years. Do either of these sound familiar? Why does the second teacher feel that way? What has happened?<\/p>\n

The second teacher may be close to suffering from teacher burnout. Burnout is a response to chronic, everyday stress, rather than to occasional crises. As Dr. Susan Barduhn, President of IATEFL, notes, “People who go into teaching (or nursing, social work, fire-fighting or any kind of helping profession) often have a high need for approval and high expectations of themselves. The burnout-prone individual is one who simply takes on too much.” One of the best ways to avoid burnout is to start supporting and cooperating with fellow teachers and professionals. According to many studies, burnout and teacher turnover is drastically reduced when successful peer support exists.<\/p>\n

This article is about Collaborative Teaching. I take Collaborative Teaching to mean more than teaching or planning a class between more than one teacher (although it can take that form). For me, collaborative teaching is about developing different mechanisms of peer support. It is also about developing professionally, but not in isolation. What follows is a series of tips and activities for teachers to do to start collaborative teaching and stop burnout before it occurs.<\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n

Share ideas<\/strong><\/h3>\n

One of the easiest and cheapest ways to start collaborative teaching is to swap ideas. Teachers often do this anyway. You can formalize this process at your school in two ways:<\/p>\n

Organize a folder entitled Ideas and Tips. Divide it into sections (either by level, or by theme) and ask other teachers to contribute. For a project like this to work you really have to have someone in charge of keeping the folder or folders in order. Why not rotate that duty among teachers? You could also have a \u201cTip or Activity of the Week\u201d that you can post on the staff room wall.<\/p>\n

Offer to organize a meeting to exchange ideas at your work. All you need is a time and a place where teachers can meet. At a school where I worked we called it the Materials Circus Maximus(Gladiator had just come out in the theatres!) We all met on a Friday afternoon and shared activity ideas. This became even more popular when teachers would \u201cteach\u201d the others using their material. It made the activity more memorable when teachers actually played the part of learners.<\/p>\n

Sharing ideas in your school can be beneficial for all involved. But why stop at your school when you can share tips and classes with English teachers all around the world! One way of doing this is through the onestopenglish Lesson Share competition. See section G below for other ideas.<\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n

Start a teacher discussion group<\/strong><\/h3>\n

This aspect of collaborative teaching means going further than just swapping tips and materials. Get together with a group of other teachers (or even just one other teacher!) to exchange ideas and methods and reflect on your teaching. This could be to discuss problems you have had with a certain class or course book, to share good and bad moments in class or to reflect on a particular aspect of your teaching. It could be a formalized meeting with other teachers at the school, or a more informal meeting at a cafe.
\nHere are some directions that a teacher discussion group could take:<\/p>\n