Most teachers would agree that ideally only English should be spoken
in English class. However, in practice this is often more easily said
than done. It’s easy to see why students struggle – young minds whir
away 24/7 in their native language, so suddenly changing into English
mode is somewhat akin to a right hander being told to only use their
left hand for an hour a week! For me, mastering this aspect of classroom
management is still a work in progress, and one that I have to re-deal
with periodically. First year students are the most challenging, but
there are plenty of “hard nuts” with ingrained bad habits that will
unconsciously chatter away in their native tongue seemingly no matter
what you try! Looking back, I became much more effective at managing
classroom chatter over the years and these days it is rarely a problem. I
would like to share a few insights gleaned through my own experiences,
trial and error, study and conversations with other teachers.
Be consistent, realistic and patient:
Make your expectations clear from the start, but be patient – it can
take several months of consistent effort before students really get it. I
prefer to gently lead students in this direction by making them feel
good about the challenge . i.e. I’m always sure to praise students in
front of others when they make a good effort to use English. I point out
(non English) chatter, without going overboard to the point where it
affects flow. In other words – don’t spend a whole lot of time and
energy trying to achieve this goal overnight, but gently push kids in
the right direction.
Students can also be trained to catch each other out. If you use the
phrases “English only please!”, or “Don’t speak Japanese, please!”, your
students will start using them too with a little encouragement. It can
also help to periodically get an assistant to address your students and
their parents in their native language about what you are doing and why
it is important.
How to break a hard-core chatterer:
A while back, I had a ten year old student that was a hard core
chatterer. Seemingly no matter what I tried he would freely babble away
in Japanese moments later. He had been studying for a few years, and was
doing okay overall. The problem was, all the other kids in the class
were trained to only speak English in class, yet this one boy just
didn’t get it! One day I had a flash of inspiration that fixed the
problem within a fortnight: I walked into class and placed fifteen
points on his desk (in my lessons with younger kids, I often reward
kids with points that can be exchanged for goodies at the school shop.
Sure, there are some pros and cons to this approach, but I’ll leave that
for another article…) Anyway, fifteen points was more than a
lesson’s worth of reward. The boy was delighted and confused. His peers
were jealous. That lesson, every time the boy spoke Japanese, much to
his horror I took away a point. By lesson’s end, he’d lost all his bonus
points and was a little upset. The next lesson however, when I put ten
points on his desk, I was only able to catch him out a couple of times
all lesson, and he couldn’t wipe the smile off his face! The following
week, I only gave him five bonus points, and he kept them all! He got
it, and never looked back!
An English lesson in English!
It’s really satisfying as a teacher to have your class free from
foreign chatter. Students will learn faster and importantly practice
engaging their brain in English, too. Parents are impressed, too! I
strongly recommend making the process fun – appeal to students’ love of
praise, and their competitive and fun-loving natures. This gets much
better results than entering into a battle of wills. If you go about
things the right way, you will reach your goal smoothly and naturally.
If you feel like you are continually battling students over this issue
or this aspect of classroom management is eating into too much class
time, chances are you need to try a different tack. Best of luck! I’m
interested to hear of other teacher’s experiences and thoughts.
Leon Butchers is the creator of the best selling AGO card game series. Hailing from Auckland, New Zealand he has taught English in Japan for over ten years.
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You know its funny that most of us think that we know such amazing English or we are really good at. But when a proper qualified person examines it we are wayy off mark.
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