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jcj 09-01-2011 03:59 AM

non-native English teachers
 
I believe the key to English in Japan is in the hands of the non-native English speaking teachers. Especially those who teach young children at home. Does anyone know how I can contact these teachers? Are there groups online? Or websites?
Japanese is OK. My wife can read it for me!!!
Thanks

acjama 09-01-2011 05:30 AM

True. It does make sense that for Japanese to learn English as foreign language, it is advisable to have a teacher who has passed the same difficulties, i.e. a non-native English speaker. The process for learning a foreign language is quite different from learning a mother language. I didn't get vocabulary homework at my native language lessons, and I never had to analyze paragraph structures or poetry at any of my foreign language lessons.

There are Little Angels in Mitaka, Tokyo.

jcj 09-02-2011 01:12 AM

thanks
 
Thank you acjama. That is only one reason I think non-native speakers are key. They are also very enthusiastic and enjoy what they are doing. Of course many native teachers are genki too, but most of them work in schools. I am looking for teachers who work from home. I know of two. They are Japanese moms and teach small groups (another reason they are successful) of young kids (important to get them before at pre-school age) at home. If I know two their must be hundreds or thousands of them in Japan. I am looking for a way to contact them.
Thanks again

acjama 09-02-2011 05:50 AM

You're welcome! :vsign:

The Japan Times article that hinted about the non-native teacher English school Little Angels also mentioned RareJobs.com that offer English lessons via Skype. Maybe you'll get forward from there.

dogsbody70 09-02-2011 11:46 AM

so on this basis there is no point in English native speakers going to Japan to teach English?

acjama 09-02-2011 10:20 PM

Hmm, I suddenly have the urge to quote Shakespeare...

Depends on your priorities. Are they:

1) To fulfill your teenage life long dream (described in full detail here) of "living in Japan" by riding the demand that ignores the result and damns the rest?
- Sure, c'mon in!

2) To actually teach somebody English in a way that in the end, that person can actually converse in English?
- well, have you yourself learned a foreign language? If not, what insights can you give to a person whose starting efforts exceed your end results? How are your pedagogic studies going?

Better to follow somebody's example than simply walk alone to a direction he's vaguely pointing to. :vsign:

BillZhao 09-03-2011 02:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jcj (Post 878335)
I believe the key to English in Japan is in the hands of the non-native English speaking teachers. Especially those who teach young children at home. Does anyone know how I can contact these teachers? Are there groups online? Or websites?
Japanese is OK. My wife can read it for me!!!
Thanks

Maybe, I think you can watch more English movies, it is a good path to learn English. I think the most biggest problems for Japanese is pronounce, if you can do that, you will love English. I am a Chinese.

jcj 09-04-2011 11:47 AM

I am not saying native teachers are unnecessary. Most natives work in schools. by the time a kid is school age she has passed the stage of picking up English phonemes from natural native speech anyway. I am suggesting the teachers who work at home, with very young kids are giving the students a great head start. It is fun, not part of a full day of other studies, and in small groups.

these teachers can use audio-visual aids to get the correct pronunciation

jcj 09-04-2011 11:47 AM

thank you acjama

dogsbody70 09-04-2011 01:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by acjama (Post 878505)
Hmm, I suddenly have the urge to quote Shakespeare...

Depends on your priorities. Are they:

1) To fulfill your teenage life long dream (described in full detail here) of "living in Japan" by riding the demand that ignores the result and damns the rest?
- Sure, c'mon in!

2) To actually teach somebody English in a way that in the end, that person can actually converse in English?
- well, have you yourself learned a foreign language? If not, what insights can you give to a person whose starting efforts exceed your end results? How are your pedagogic studies going?

Better to follow somebody's example than simply walk alone to a direction he's vaguely pointing to. :vsign:


Most Native english speakers do a special course on teaching English as a foreign language.

So if a person visits England-- are they to avoid all the locals and search for foreign teachers of ENGLISH?

Its crackers to me.

RobinMask 09-04-2011 04:21 PM

I actually agree with Dogs, but I think - to an extent - it can help native teachers enormously if they have learned a foriegn language themselves, simply because they can identify and anticipate the possible mistakes that may or may not arise, and they will be able to empathise more with the student's needs and difficulties.

The problem with non-native English teachers is that they are non-native. I know many non-native speakers of English who are fluent, but they will very rarely be at the level of a native speaker, simply because - having a different mother tongue - they simply won't know everything about the language that they have learned. They may mispronounce certain words, their spelling may be off, they may not recognise archaic words or academic/scientific terms . . .

Personally I'd rather learn a language from a native speaker, (providing they have training, as Dogs said) just because they are less likely to make mistakes and I'd be able to learn the language spoken as it is meant to be spoken.

Edit:

Quote:

these teachers can use audio-visual aids to get the correct pronunciation
JCJ, pronunciation can be very difficult to learn frm audio-visual aids. If a student struggles with how to pronounce a word, then unless the teacher themselves can pronounce it then they will struggle. It's like with how the French roll their "r"'s, or how the Japanese can't pronounce their 'l' sounds . . . if you are relying solely on audio-visual aids I don't think it's possible for a non-native teacher to teach it properly, solely as they don't know how to pronounce it and an audio-visual aid can't explain that kind of thing. If the aid could then why would you need a teacher?

acjama 09-05-2011 12:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dogsbody70 (Post 878652)
Most Native english speakers do a special course on teaching English as a foreign language.

Really? A whole course! All the way to the end? Wow, that must be the biggest insult to professional teachers all around the world I've ever heard! I'll make a note of that while I go chatting up people in English on the streets and even City Hall! Oh yeah, that's right... if only those pesky results wouldn't exist.

I'd say this is a good place for a caveat: If the shoe fits...

Quote:

Originally Posted by RobinMask
They may mispronounce certain words, their spelling may be off, they may not recognise archaic words or academic/scientific terms . . .

And native speakers are immune to those? Let's share some laughs over at the Lamebook, shall we?

Incidentally, I've heard a lot about the importance of pronounciation above everything else. Why? Native speakers with no accredited qualification have impulsive control over their own accent only. How does that help a student? They may know how to do it, but how do they convey that to the student any better than a tape recorder?

Allow me to demonstrate. You can walk, right? Instruct your friend in the art of walking. He will survive, because he uses common understanding that you both have to fulfill the gaps in your explanation, meaning he already knows how to walk.
A foreign language student has no common understanding with you, so do the following: instruct your friend to only do as you say and nothing else. When he wakes up, you will have an awakening of your own.

jcj 09-05-2011 01:43 AM

If they are learning English to go to England then they might want to specifically learn British english. the fact is, though, that English is the international language. the chances are that a Japanese speakers is as likely, or more likely to use English with a Korean, German, Chinese or what have you than an Englishman.
See Dr. jessica jenkins for starters

jcj 09-05-2011 01:54 AM

to robin Mask

you miss the point. I am talking about starting young. I am not against native teachers teaching in schools but school age is too late for difficult phonemes. School aged kids will not get them from native or non-native conversation in any case. See Dr. janet Werker

they will get them young, and that is when the non-native teachers come in. many of the teachers teaching very young kids, in small happy groups, are non-native and they, at this age, are key.

these kids can pick up the sounds from audio devices as long as the sounds are contrasted, emphasized and given in numerous voices. (one native won't do it anyway) See Dr. patricia Kuhl.

Non-native teachers need not fret their pronunciation. Kids can get the difficult phonemes from audio visual devices. Heck, it even works with students who are supposed to be beyond the critical period for learning such things:
Zhang, Y., & Wang, Y. (2007). Neural plasticity in speech acquisition and learning.
Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 10 (2), 147-160.

masaegu 09-05-2011 11:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RobinMask (Post 878658)
They may mispronounce certain words, their spelling may be off, they may not recognise archaic words or academic/scientific terms . . .

I find it very ironical that an outright supporter of romatized Japanese as yourself is even discussing "correct spelling".  

ヤッパその程度なんだよな~。マジウケ。

dogsbody70 09-05-2011 11:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by acjama (Post 878683)
Really? A whole course! All the way to the end? Wow, that must be the biggest insult to professional teachers all around the world I've ever heard! I'll make a note of that while I go chatting up people in English on the streets and even City Hall! Oh yeah, that's right... if only those pesky results wouldn't exist.

I'd say this is a good place for a caveat: If the shoe fits...


And native speakers are immune to those? Let's share some laughs over at the Lamebook, shall we?

Incidentally, I've heard a lot about the importance of pronounciation above everything else. Why? Native speakers with no accredited qualification have impulsive control over their own accent only. How does that help a student? They may know how to do it, but how do they convey that to the student any better than a tape recorder?

Allow me to demonstrate. You can walk, right? Instruct your friend in the art of walking. He will survive, because he uses common understanding that you both have to fulfill the gaps in your explanation, meaning he already knows how to walk.
A foreign language student has no common understanding with you, so do the following: instruct your friend to only do as you say and nothing else. When he wakes up, you will have an awakening of your own.

what a rude arrogant person you are acjama.

RobinMask 09-05-2011 12:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by masaegu (Post 878876)
I find it very ironical that an outright supporter of romatized Japanese as yourself is even discussing "correct spelling".  

ヤッパその程度なんだよな~。マジウケ。

I don't think I've ever said I was an 'outright' supporter of romaji. I think in the few discussions that have cropped up I have supported its use for beginners, and I stand by my belief that it's good for some types of learners to begin in romaji and work their way up into kana and then kanji.

Insofar as the topic . . . spelling is extremely important in English, more so than in Japanese. In Japanese words are spelled phoenetically in the kana, and it's extremely difficult to 'mispell' a kanji. The very placement of an apostrophe can give the phrase "sisters friends" multiple meanings, and a typo of a simple word can change the entire meaning of a sentence. I argue - in English - native speakers will always trump over non-natives, because they are more likely to be aware of these important little differences. A non-native speaker may be just as good as a native, better, but if I was paying for a lesson I would prefer a native speaker, I think many would.

Also, I can't read what you wrote in Japanese. I don't recognise those two kanji yet, and although I can read kana I'm still not at any level to decipher what you said in terms of vocab.

Quote:

Originally Posted by jcj
you miss the point. I am talking about starting young. I am not against native teachers teaching in schools but school age is too late for difficult phonemes. School aged kids will not get them from native or non-native conversation in any case. See Dr. janet Werker

they will get them young, and that is when the non-native teachers come in. many of the teachers teaching very young kids, in small happy groups, are non-native and they, at this age, are key.

In retrospect you perhaps have a point. My reasoning would probably be a little different, but with young children a non-native speaker would be most helpful, although I would personally say it depends on whether that teacher has the same primary language as the students. To learn the basics it would probably be easier for young students to learn from a teacher who can speak the same language as themselves, but I still think a native speaker is key, simply because they can spot errors or correct mistakes that the non-native might miss, and at such an early age accuracy is vital. It may be easy to learn a language, but it's very difficult to correct a mistake later on that's been taught and learned in one so young.

dogsbody70 09-05-2011 03:44 PM

I can well understand that it would be good for a Japanese teacher who is teaching young japanese children some basics of the English language. Obviously it would be easier for children to learn from someone who speaks their own language to then teach them basic English or any other language they wish to learn. I believe that young children pick up languages really quickly. Here in UK we should be teaching languages from an early age.

Someone poo pooed the EFL Courses for those who wish to teach English to speakers of another language. But it retraces all the grammar etc that is needed to teach someone else.

I wonder why here in UK we have so many foreign students coming here to study English from an English teacher? I do believe its important to mix with people who speak the language naturally. If I went to Japan I would want to learn from a Japanese teacher--but it would help if that teacher could also speak my language so there could be explanations.

What do Japanese teachers of their own language have to do-- to be qualified to teach Japanese to foreign students? do they have tests?

Nyororin 09-06-2011 04:51 PM

I agree that the future of learning English lies largely in the hands of non-native teachers... But not for the same reasons outlined in this thread so far. I fee, that way simply because most of the time, the first exposure to English is with a non-native teacher. Most English teachers in Japan are not native speakers. English conversation teachers almost always are, but the majority does not go to conversation classes. They go to regular school, where the regular English classes are overwhelmingly taught by non-native speakers.

If you improve the base - in this case the non-native teachers - you improve everything. Therefore I feel that improving the quality of the non-native teachers will go a lot further than just throwing native speakers and hoping something will stick.

In terms of value; a qualified native speaker is better than a qualified non-native speaker is better than a non-qualified native speaker is better than a non-qualified non-native speaker.
There are a lot more non-native teachers who could have their skills improved, but not many truly qualified native speaking teachers...

RealJames 09-06-2011 07:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nyororin (Post 878931)
In terms of value; a qualified native speaker is better than a qualified non-native speaker is better than a non-qualified native speaker is better than a non-qualified non-native speaker.
There are a lot more non-native teachers who could have their skills improved, but not many truly qualified native speaking teachers...

I agree entirely.
In the few times this topic has come up in the forums I feel that there is a biased comparison of trained non-native versus non-trained native (and in that case each has their strengths and weaknesses) when training can be acquired but nativity can not.

I've had lots of applications for positions at my school by both native and non-native, over a hundred at least.
The non-native tend to have awkward sentence structure and spelling mistakes far more than the native... in their resumes!

I'd like to point out that I agree with a point acjama made about the priorities of the native speaker going to Japan. It does tend to happen a lot that they are here to have fun and teach English as a meal-ticket and visa-extender.
I'm not impressed with the insinuation that non-native foreigners are somehow exempt from this same behavior, it's the same shit from a different pile.

Also, Masaegu, "ironical" is correct but so is "ironic" and if you want to sound native and a little less awkward, use the latter.

JohnBraden 09-06-2011 07:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RealJames (Post 878937)
I agree entirely.
In the few times this topic has come up in the forums I feel that there is a biased comparison of trained non-native versus non-trained native (and in that case each has their strengths and weaknesses) when training can be acquired but nativity can not.

I've had lots of applications for positions at my school by both native and non-native, over a hundred at least.
The non-native tend to have awkward sentence structure and spelling mistakes far more than the native... in their resumes!

I'd like to point out that I agree with a point acjama made about the priorities of the native speaker going to Japan. It does tend to happen a lot that they are here to have fun and teach English as a meal-ticket and visa-extender.
I'm not impressed with the insinuation that non-native foreigners are somehow exempt from this same behavior, it's the same shit from a different pile.

Also, Masaegu, "ironical" is correct but so is "ironic" and if you want to sound native and a little less awkward, use the ladder.

That would be "latter", RealJames! :mtongue: good to see ya back!

RealJames 09-06-2011 08:04 PM

lol look at me making a fool of myself with a 5am post :P
time to go to bed I guess!!

And thanks, I've been ridiculously busy but I hope to have some time to throw spelling mistakes around here now and then. :)

JohnBraden 09-06-2011 10:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RealJames (Post 878944)
lol look at me making a fool of myself with a 5am post :P
time to go to bed I guess!!

And thanks, I've been ridiculously busy but I hope to have some time to throw spelling mistakes around here now and then. :)

Yes, I did notice the time differential and thought you had an all-nighter!!!:D

acjama 09-06-2011 11:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dogsbody70 (Post 878877)
what a rude arrogant person you are acjama.

Agreed. But that doesn't invalidate my point in any way.

Here's another one: a person goes into university and studies six years for his/her Masters degree in English. After that, he/she enters the pedagogic curriculum, and finishes that as minor. Then he/she gets a teaching job and ends up in a class with 20 kids who do not speak a word of English and who are ten years old. By the time they are 13, the homework includes essays and classes have complete conversations in English. Mistakes and weird sentences occur, sure, but they are 13 years old. By the time they get to the university, they don't even notice that the lectures were switched to English because there is a guest student from Trinidad attending.

This is not a hypothetical situation, I was there.

You take a course and you expect the same respect as my teacher? I might be rude, but you are by far more arrogant than I.

Quote:

Originally Posted by RealJames
I'm not impressed with the insinuation that non-native foreigners are somehow exempt from this same behavior, it's the same shit from a different pile.

Native vs. non-native speaker was really not my point there, but rather that Japanese favor native speakers far more than professional teachers of any origin, and native speaking non-qualifieds are just using that to party in Japan, with obvious results. Non-native speakers can't really abuse the system the same way. Instead, in order to have English skills, they need to go through everything that Japanese want their kids to go through.

jcj 09-07-2011 08:32 AM

Great...some people are getting the point. The best way for a young child to learn a second language is to play with a native speaker of that language. No doubt...but how real is that?
I said the key is non-native speakers because they are the ones teaching the youngest kids... for the most part. Most parents don't have the money or the opportunity to get their kids into classes taught by natives and by the time kids get into such a class it is a formal situation, part of a long day, in a big group, and often with team teachers not doing things exactly right.

The key is taking advantage of what is given...not arguing about what should be. AND non-natives are great teachers for a number of reasons..many of which have been pointed out.

the advantage of natives pronunciation which will not be learned from natural conversation anyway. It has to be explicitly taught. How many natives are aware of the work of Patricia Kuhl?

ps for those interested...it is Jennifer Jenkins...no Jessica

jcj 09-07-2011 08:33 AM

let me repeat my question:

anybody know any non-native teachers teaching kids... I'd like to contact them

acjama 09-07-2011 11:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jcj (Post 878986)
let me repeat my question:

I understand your frustration. This kind of thing happens a lot.

Were you looking for private persons such as forum members, or organizations such as were referenced in messages #2 and #4?

jcj 09-08-2011 08:10 AM

thanks acjama.

I looked at those groups. Little Angles are speakers of Indian English (as I understood it) and so are really native.

Rarejobs seems to be an online service so not exactly what I'm looking for.

I'd like to contact the Japanese moms who enjoy English, maybe spent some time overseas, and are teaching small groups of young kids at home. How do I contact them? What do I even search for?

thanks again

acjama 09-09-2011 06:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jcj (Post 879073)
Rarejobs seems to be an online service so not exactly what I'm looking for.

Oh, sorry. I could have been clearer.

The JT article presented Rarejobs.com as a service where you can contact non-native English teachers who teach via Skype. For a payment, of course.

I once participated in a joint lecture with Sokendai and Irkutsk State University via Skype. Powerpoint presentations were a slight pain but improvements were found for even that, so I think VoIP schooling is something worth considering.


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