TESOL 2022: Inspiring and Empowering ELT Professionals
On March 22, 2022, the 2022 Hybrid TESOL
International Convention & English Language Expo
opened in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA—and online. Renowned for its
big-city fun in a small-town, friendly atmosphere, Pittsburgh was the
perfect host city for a Convention that welcomed, in person, more than
2,000 professionals—in addition to the more than 8,000 professionals who
attended online from all parts of the world, from 140 different
countries.
Convention Highlights
In addition to academic and InterSection sessions, there were a
number of special events. Preconvention
Institutes offered in-depth, hands-on workshops designed and
led by experts on high-demand topics, such as pronunciation, family
engagement, and high-impact English language teaching. The Graduate
Student Forum offered a place for master’s and doctoral
students to support their peers, learn about their research results,
network with peers and faculty, and gain teaching ideas. There were also
special workshops for SWEL (Teacher Leadership for School-Wide English
Learning) and for novice researchers.
The Computer-Assisted Language Learning Interest Section hosted
its free TESOL
Electronic Village (EV), an ed-tech learning space for TESOL
professionals—for the first time completely virtual. The virtual EV
allowed participants to discover new e-tools and instructional
activities and learn with CALL experts and colleagues around the world.
Though the 2022 TESOL EV has come to a close, you can still interact
with the hands-on
learning content and view recordings
of live sessions on YouTube.
To gain some individual insight into the Convention experience,
view any of nearly 40
attendee interviews recorded in Pittsburgh. In the video
below, Meg Eubanks talks about building community, her Convention
session, winning the TESOL Teacher of the Year Award, and
more:
Between attending sessions, visiting exhibitors at the English
Language Expo, and networking with friends and colleagues, many
attendees shared why they love being an English language professional.
Here are a few of the reasons:
It gives me an opportunity to inspire and impact lives.
My students need to know English.
Being multilingual breaks down barriers and connects us all!
More communication is good for the world.
I want to be the advocate that our students need.
I want to do
for others what someone once did for me (as a refugee).
It is my calling!
To close the Convention, TESOL held its
Annual Business Meeting, where hundreds of TESOL members gathered to
hear updates on the association’s growth over the past year. New board
members were sworn in, which included the passing of the gavel to the
association’s new president, Joyce Kling, and the installation of
Shelley Taylor as president-elect. Other new board members included
Elisabeth Chan, Raichle Farrelly, and Kate Mastruserio
Reynolds.
Popular Sessions
The 2022 Convention provided attendees with many opportunities
to add to their educator toolkits. Nine hundred sessions, both in-person
and virtual, covered strands like advocacy, social justice, and
community building; language assessment; content-integrated approaches;
and digital learning and technologies.
For an idea of what English language educators found
interesting in 2022, here are a few of the most attended and viewed
sessions:
Embracing the Balancing Act: ELT Professionals Empowering Themselves
English as a Lingua Franca in Multilingual Classrooms: Meeting the Challenges
Using Technology Tools to Teach Reading Comprehension Strategies
Project-Based Teaching as Solution to Online Learning in Low-Resource Contexts
Assessing English Proficiency Efficiently and Meaningfully in the Digital Age
Teaching Grammar Communicatively: How the Situational Approach Helps
Modifying Materials to Make Content More Comprehensible for ELs
Engaging Young ELs With TESOL's 6 Principles
Designing Literacy Instruction for Today's Multilingual Learners
Collaborative Reading in a Virtual World
Future-Proof Competencies: The Soft Skills Students Need for Employment
Using Comics to Promote Literacy Among ELs
Visual Thinking Strategies: Creating Multiple Points of Entry for ELs
The Metaverse, Unlimited Horizons, and Language Learning in Virtual Reality
Adapting Assessment for Language Skills for the 21st Century
Keynote Recap
As always, keynotes drew the biggest crowds at the Convention,
each among the most viewed sessions online. Here are some highlights
from each keynote:
Opening Keynote: Hector Ramirez
Mini-Lessons Motivate Your Learners to Assemble the Language Puzzle
To kick off the event, curriculum implementation specialist
Hector Ramirez provided the opening keynote to an excited crowd of both
online and in-person attendees. His keynote was the most watched session
of the Convention. In an hour-long presentation, Ramirez guided English
educators on how 15-minute lessons can empower students to own, apply,
and transfer the English language. In these mini-lessons, teachers can
break down information into digestible pieces and determine what
students need to know in that moment and what can wait until later,
allowing lessons to be spread over the course of a year versus in just a
few months.
➢ Hector Ramirez: “You need to change your actions to impact student learning.”
TESOL President Gabriela Kleckova and Vietnamese artist and
activist Mai Khoi shared the stage Wednesday morning to discuss,
respectively, preventing burnout and standing up against government
censorship using the power of music. Kleckova argued that in an effort
to try and do it all, educators experience a clutter of too many ideas,
responsibilities, expectations, resources and opinions, which can become
overwhelming or paralyzing. Through prioritization, and “deliberately
reject[ing] all that is unnecessary,” educators can make active choices
to determine what really matters in a specific moment, whether it be in
everyday life or in the classroom.
➢ Gabriela Kleckova: “It does take a lot of energy to live a
simple life, to pack less, personally and professionally. But we get so
much back in return. Our learners get so much more in return.”
Artist and activist Mai Khoi, currently an exiled artist in
residence at City of Asylum Pittsburgh, performed excerpts from her
biographical song cycle entitled “Bad Activist.” Khoi’s aspirations to
alter government censorship through self-nomination for a position in
the National Assembly in Vietnam have come with a price: Her
performances have been raided, she’s been evicted from her home, and she
has been detained and interrogated by police. She continues to use her
platform to fight for the freedom of artistic freedom in
Vietnam.
➢ Mai Khoi: “I realized, we can't depend on foreign heroes to
save us….We Vietnamese need to fight for ourselves.”
Thursday Keynote: Gisele Barreto Fetterman
Invisible Immigrant to Advocate
Barreto Fetterman, Pennsylvania’s Second Lady, spoke about her
journey going from an invisible immigrant to an advocate for
Pennsylvania residents through community enrichment initiatives.
Undocumented for a decade, Barreto Fetterman learned to make herself
“invisible” to keep her family safe, knowing that any trouble could
result in her family being sent back to the violence they fled from in
Rio de Janeiro. Now, she serves her community through initiatives like
the Free Store, which provides necessities to residents, and 412 Rescue,
which picks up foods to be donated to food banks, nonprofits, and
shelters.
➢ Gisele Barreto Fetterman: “If we're afraid to talk to people who are
different, we will never get somewhere better.”
James E. Alatis Plenary: Helaine W. Marshall
Creating Fertile Spaces for Instructional Innovation in a Digital Age
Helaine W. Marshall highlighted three innovative educators who
took creative approaches in providing fertile learning spaces through
collaboration and technology acquisition: Khalid Fethi, Chizuko Konishi,
and Nan Frydland were able to create fertile spaces by leveraging
technology to expand classrooms, build collaboration, and reinvent
instruction. Fethi created an international film club to allow his
students to discuss films with students around the world; Chizuko
connects global universities through the Collaborative Online
International Learning (COIL) program; and Frydland innovated by using
WhatsApp as an alternative teaching platform when her school, whose
students were not computer literate and didn’t have access to computers
or WiFi, closed. Marshall asserted that fertile learning spaces are an
asset but will take patience (ideas may take years to execute) and
persistence.
➢ Helaine W. Marshall: “In our content, we need to create
conditions so our students can reach their potential and find joy in the
spaces we create for them.”
TESOLers in Motion
Take a look at some awesome photos from Pittsburgh covering just a handful of the many events and sessions—see if you can spot a friend, colleague, or yourself!
TESOL 2023
It’s never too early to start planning for next year’s
Convention, which will be held 21–24 March 2023 in Portland, Oregon,
USA. The deadline for all proposal
submissions is 1 June 2022.
“We don’t read that much at school. Mostly we do our work,” observed Selena, a third grade multilingual learner (MLL). I knew the “work” she was referring to involved reading, but obviously she didn’t think it was real reading. I had asked about her reading experiences in school, and was dismayed to hear her frank answer. Still, I wasn’t surprised. Read more.
Over the last decade or so, comics and graphic novels have moved from what many considered disengaged distractions to great ways to encourage literacy in the classroom. In fact, there are teachers out there using comics as the core of their curricula, keeping students invested in their learning through storytelling all year long. But this is no secret to language teachers. As long as we’ve been able to give students a pencil and fold a piece of paper into six (or four, or eight) panels, we’ve encouraged our students to make up stories, build dialogue, and practice more English.Read more.
Formative assessment refers to assessment used to inform our instruction, and formative feedback refers to the feedback we give to students to help them grow and learn. This blog post contains three strategies for formative assessment and feedback and some practical classroom-based activities to apply these strategies with your English learners. Read more.
What can educators do right now, in their own classrooms, to support students of varied cultures and languages? Written for current and future teachers of ELs across various educational and geographical settings, this concise guide provides educators with specific instructional practices to promote greater inclusion and educational equity for their students. Key topics covered in this book include: why home language is essential to student success; incorporating home language into instruction; planning plurilingual lessons and inclusive classrooms; home language and learning in the digital age; reimagining instructional materials; and using home language to advance social justice.
While SEL is becoming increasing critical for learners’ success, teachers often feel unprepared to incorporate or address it in their classrooms. This book serves as a practical, concise, and easy-to-follow reference that English language teachers in K-12 and adult education and English language teacher educators can use in their classrooms. It is one of the limited emerging SEL resources available that is tailored to the English language teaching field and contributes to filling the existing gap of SEL in English language education. Teachers will be equipped with the necessary knowledge and skills to practice self-care and be confident in implementing SEL in their learning spaces to support and benefit their learners.
This book guides educators in teaching young learners (2- to 12-year-olds) in an English as a foreign language setting by using The 6 Principles for Exemplary Teaching of English Learners® as a framework. A core set of principles for the exemplary teaching and learning of English as a new language, The 6 Principles and their recommended practices are targets of teaching excellence that provide teachers with the knowledge to improve instruction and assessment. Instructional techniques are illustrated throughout the book with numerous classroom examples, case studies, checklists, and vignettes.
Active TESOL members may read current and recent issues of TESOL Connections online at http://www.tesol.org/tc. Inclusion in TESOL Connections does not constitute an endorsement by TESOL.
TESOL International Association
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