05 September 2014 / by Radmila Gurkova

Learning environments for young learners in English





Day after day, the richness of possibilities of the English language world brings us new opportunities and challenges. Our passion for discovering more and more new fields brought us the chance to meet a team of nursery school educators willing to implement the best educational proposal in English for their bilingual institution. They had to choose between the option of just hiring native English teachers or the alternative of finding the best educational project in English for their learners. They chose the second. When The Little One director Ixiar Vilas first called us, we had already been toying with the idea of exploring the world of very young learners of English. So her call couldn't have been done in a better moment. We met and our ideas on education immediately connected. We were dreaming the same dreams, sharing the same goals and we decided to partner up in the adventurous project of creating an exclusive methodology for very young learners in English, non-existing in the Spanish market right now.

September was the chosen moment for OxbridgeTEFL and The Little One to start intensive workshop sessions with one objective in mind: to create an ESL  methodology featuring learning environments for very young learners in English.

After researching the existing methods offered in the market nowadays, we realized that there is a total absence of material for very young learners: children aged 1 to 3 years old. Most publishers target their resources for 3+ years old learners but there is absolutely nothing for kids under that age. This gap in learning material for very young learners goes together with a gap in specific ESL teachers preparation for accomplishing teaching 1 to 3 year olds in English. There is no specific teacher training and there are no specific resources but there is one reality and this is parents wanting and looking for institutions who provide education in English for their children.

After analyzing the situation, we decided that if there isn't a specific educational project that would target very young learners of English language in Spain, then we would create it from scratch. We couldn't have done it alone and we couldn't have found a better partner: a young nursery institution with highly qualified educators who care deeply about the educational project they are offering in English and Spanish.

A team of young educators leaded by entrepreneur  Ixiar Vilas, director of the school and her partner Maite Martin, an experienced and vocational teacher, accepted the challenge to participate in the creation of an ESL methodology and resources for very young children under the expertise of OxbridgeTEFL.

We launched our first workshop in which our aim was to create the fundamentals of our project. Our goals were:

1. Setting clear educational objectives and goals for learners aged 1 to 5 years

2. Creating course syllabi for every particular age group between 1 and 5 years

3. Creating learners' materials and resources for the classroom in English for each age group

The two-week event ended with vary valuable conclusions and, what is more important, with full accomplishment of our goals. Now the first term class materials are being designed, printed and tested with our young learners. Ah… and we have a new family, The Little One family.

Our next steps include analyzing the results of our material in the classroom and preparing the next two terms of this academic year. Meanwhile, we cannot stop amazing ourselves with how quickly our young learners evolve and react to the stimuli we have suggested. Their smiling faces, the loving attitude towards their educators, their unconditional acceptance and their progress is our best reward. We know that what we've started was necessary and now we know it is worth it!

 

10

April 2015
Be brainy: Multiple intelligences theory
by Vincent Chieppa
...

07

April 2015
It's never too late to learn how to teach
by Elena Riches
As we grow older it’s all very easy to sit and wonder why we didn't do certain things before it became ‘too late’.  And whenever I hear people say, ‘I wish I’d done this’ my response is always, “What’s stopping you from doing it now?”, a question that usually stops a person in their tracks and makes them think. ...

03

April 2015
How to... set up audio-visual discussion topics
by Vincent Chieppa
...

30

March 2015
What is intonation and why teach it?
by Elena Riches
What is intonation? The term 'intonation' refers to the linguistic use of pitch to convey meaning of a sentence and/or word and during your life as a TEFL teacher you will come across students who will have difficulty using intonation and stress in the correct manner - this means they may not...

27

March 2015
Task-based language teaching: 6 tools for task force teachers
by Vincent Chieppa
...

24

March 2015
'Schwa' - unstressed syllables
by Elena Riches
Before I was taught how to teach English, by Oxbridge TEFL, I had no idea that the word "schwa" existed. Today, I'm writing about the 'schwa', which isn't (incidentally) about the pronunciation of words such as 'Schwartz' and 'Schwarzkopf'...it's about ...

20

March 2015
New teaching techniques: Sparking inspiration
by Vincent Chieppa
The era of “chalk and talk” is over.  We as teachers know that we need to incorporate new teaching techniques seeing that nowadays simply presenting information to our students is just not enough.  Students have to engross themselves in what they are being taught, they need to discover the worth of what we teach them and it is our job to igni...

17

March 2015
ESL - Common Mistakes Students Make
by Elena Riches
In my last blog post I listed a few 'false friends' - English words that students confuse with words from their own language - in this one, I'm going to talk about common mistakes. Every single day, at least one student ...

12

March 2015
Games people play: No-prep ESL games for all ages
by Vincent Chieppa
...

10

March 2015
False Friend
by Elena Riches
For anyone who's never taught English or taken an advanced English course, you could be forgiven for assuming that a 'false friend' is someone who pretends to like you when they don't. However, a false friend is in fact a word or phrase in two languages or dialects (or letters in two alphabets) that look...