I have been a part-time English teacher in Luzhou junior high school at Taipei county for more than two years. During last school year, I taught 7 graders and the night cram school. From this school year, I teach students in the night cram school only. In this period, I know some experienced English teachers who are worth respecting and modeling for me. One of them that has helped me a lot and imparted me most experiences is Mrs. Chen. I have always regarded her as my mentor. Therefore, I decided to ask her to be the interviewee this time.
Before showing the records of the interview, I would like to tell you something about Mrs. Chen first, because this may make you know more about this respected English teacher. Mrs. Chen was graduated from the English Department at National Taiwan Normal University in the year of 1983. She has the experience of teaching English to junior high school for more than 20 years. As I can remember, she is always one the teachers who left the office late. She asks her students who do not pass the quizzes to the office to receive make-up quizzes during the 15-minute break times or after school. And I was also impressed by an experience that students on her class are polite. One time, I went to supervised her class in the monthly test in the winter of 2005, every students on her class said thank you to me when I gave them the test papers. She is also very generous; she sometimes bought young teachers like me some snacks or milk. In one word, I am so lucky and glad to work with her.
Following are the records of the interview.
Hyde: What is your teaching philosophy? As an English teacher, what do you think you can bring to your students?
Mrs. Chen: I think that learning English, which is a foreign language for us, is different from learning Chinese, that is our native langauge. The students need many chances to practice it. Therefore, a teacher should offer some drills for them. And I think grammar is very important. Grammar is the foundation to use English well. So I think a good English teacher must be able to make students understand grammar rules clearly and give them some drills to practice the patterns and rules personally. After they practice over and over again, I think they can master those rules well.
Hyde: Is there any barrier and support you face in the teaching context? Can you share with me.
Mrs. Chen: The biggest barrier I face could be also the one that most teacher may face. That is that some students do not even want to learn at all. They have no interest in English; they give up learning this language before they start. It’s pretty frustrating sometimes. When facing this kind of students, what I have been doing is to set different standards for them. They do not need to compete with other classmates, but they have to achieve their own goals. If they can make any improvement, I always give them some rewards to encourage them, trying to help them find the meaning to learn. As for the support, everytime when I see my students perform well or make progress, I feel so happy. For instance, one of my students just won the first prize on the English speech competetion last month. Something like that is my supports in the life of teaching.
Hyde: If you have an opportunity to make a new choice, will you still teach English?
Mrs. Chen: If I could start over, I would still choose to do further studies to gain a PHD and teach in universities. It is not bad to teach in high schools, but it is more interesting and challenging to teach professional subjects in universities, and there is probably less pressure from exams, so I think it will be happier to teach there. But the prerequisite is that I have to read lots of books.
Hyde: Please give some constructive suggestions to those who are on the way of being an English teacher.
Mrs. Chen: I am firmly convinced that those who want to be an English teacher in the future that a teacher should be equipped with the qualities of confidence, profession, and patience. Besides, he or she should read more articles and journals about language teaching. Because teaching language is a complex and challenging task, we cannot teach students by our instincts or follow the ways that our teacher had taught us. Some teachers teach hard and spend a lot of time on their students, but their effort pay back little, because they teach on the basis of their own experience. That is some kind of risky, therefore I strongly suggest that teachers should read books about Language teaching and even teenager phychology.
My Reflection on the Interview
I totally agree with Mrs. Chen’s perspective about that teachers should not just teach on the basis of their own experience. Because your experience cannot be always right. It is very likely that your experience works this time, but next time it doesn’t, because the students are different. I always hear some people say that theories are theories; when it comes to reality, it’s another case. What they say does not make any sense. A theory is the accumulation of tons of experience, and it must be tested and proved again and again. In my career of an English teacher, no matter in junior high school or cram schools, I have always heard other teachers said to their students (usually angrily) “Why are you doing that?” or “Why can’t you understand this?” Everytime I hear this kind of words from their mouth, I want to laugh at the teacher. I always want to tell them ”If you had ever read the Cognitive Development Theory by Piaget, you would not say that.” If a teenager could be so polite courteous and diligent all the time, he would not be a teenager; If a kid could understand and learn everything the teacher them just a few time, congradulations, you found a prodigy there.
To conclude, I feel in the innermost recesses of my heart that a teacher should read theories about psychology and teaching and learning. And patience is also an indespensible element for a good teacher. I appreciate Mr. Chen to share so much pressious experience with me.