Extensive Reading for Teachers
My contention is that reading extensively, promiscuously and associatively is good for teacher, and for personal development. ‘The idea of the teacher having to be someone who is constantly developing and growing as a whole human being as a prerequisite for being able to truly help his or her pupils to be able to do the same, is such a core truth of teaching, yet it is typically ignored in FLT. (Peter Lutzker)
My contention is that reading extensively, promiscuously and associatively is good for teacher, and for personal development. ‘The idea of the teacher having to be someone who is constantly developing and growing as a whole human being as a prerequisite for being able to truly help his or her pupils to be able to do the same, is such a core truth of teaching, yet it is typically ignored in FLT. (Peter Lutzker)
ER
helps teachers to be better informed, both about their profession and
about the world. This makes them more interesting to be around – and
students generally like their teachers to be interesting people. For our
own sanity we need to read outside the language teaching ghetto. For
the sake of our students too.
It also helps
teachers to keep their own use of English fresh. As we saw, the research
on language learner reading shows how extensive reading feeds into
improvements in all areas of language competence. (Krashen 2004) If this
is true for learners, how much more true for teachers, who risk
infection by exposure to so much restricted and error - laden English or
who only read professional literature? Regular wide reading can add
zest and pleasure to our own use of the language.
Teachers
who show that they read widely are models for their students. We often
tell students to ‘read more’ but why should they read if we do not?
Teachers who are readers are more likely to have students who read too.
Furthermore,
the books we read outside our narrow professional field can have an
unpredictable effect on our practice within it. So much of what we
learn is learned sub-consciously. Its effects spread more by infection
than by direct injection. And it is highly individual. Individuals form
associative networks among the books they read. This results in a kind
of personal intertextuality, where the patterns form and re-form as we
read more different books. This gives us a rich mental yeast which we
can use to interact with others, while still retaining our individual
take on the texts and the world.
So Extensive Reading has a lot to offer - both for our students and ourselves Read on!.
http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/article/extensive-reading-why-it-good-our-students%E2%80%A6-us
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar