The
Criteria of Good ESL Teacher
1. Knowledge
Students
have consistently and clearly targeted as the number one quality of a good
teacher exactly what you would expect: knowledge of the subject. You must be an
expert in your field-both theoretical and practical –preferably with an
industry interface and experience if you are going to be a good teacher in a
Management college or Business School. This is a prerequisite.
2. Communication
The
second core quality that good teachers possess is the ability to communicate
their knowledge and expertise to their students. You may be the greatest expert
ever in your field, but what would happen if you lectured in a style and
language the students are not able to comprehend clearly? How much would your
students learn?
It is a common misconception at the College level that
knowledge of a subject is all that's required to be a good teacher; that the
students should be willing and able to extract the meat from what you say-
regardless of how it is delivered (even if it is delivered in a uncomprehending
language or different style). This might be true at the post graduate level,
but elsewhere it is definitely untrue. It is especially untrue at the undergraduate
level. The teacher's job is to take advanced knowledge and make it accessible
to the students. A good teacher allows students to understand the material, and
to understand what it means (because it is one thing to understand how nuclear
bombs work, but quite another to understand what nuclear bombs mean).
A good teacher can take a subject and help make it crystal
clear to the students. A bad teacher can take that same material and make it
impenetrable. Or a bad teacher can devote so little time and effort to
preparation that the material presented is intrinsically confusing and
disorganized. A good teacher is willing to expend the effort needed to find
innovative and creative ways to make complicated ideas understandable to their
students, and to fit new ideas into the context available to the student. A
good teacher can explain complicated material in a way that students can
understand and use.
There is a saying, "Give me a fish and I eat for a day,
teach me to fish and I eat for a lifetime." This is the philosophy of a
good teacher. Give your students an answer and they can solve one problem, but
show students the techniques needed to find the answer for themselves and they
can become self-sufficient in the field. Students need to be shown how to apply
the new techniques you teach to problem solving.
3. Interest
A
good teacher starts with a firm knowledge of the subject, and builds on that
with a clarity and understanding designed to help students master the material.
The best teachers then go one step further. Because good teachers are
interested in the material being taught, they make the class interesting and
relevant to the students. Knowledge is worthless unless it is delivered to the
students in a form they can understand. But the effort expended making the
material understandable is wasted if the students are disinterested when it is
delivered, or if the students can see no point in learning the material.
Good teachers recognize this, and work hard to make their
material relevant. They show students how the material will apply to their
lives and their careers. Bad teachers make material "relevant" by
threatening students with failure on a test. Good teachers go far beyond this:
they make students want to learn the material by making it interesting.
This
is one of the things that makes industry and business examples so important and
vital to learning in a business school or college. Industry interface and
practical real life examples make the ideas discussed in class exciting and
important to the teacher, as well as to the students. If the teacher isn't
interested in what's being taught, then why should the students be?
4. Respect
Good
teachers always possess these three core qualities: knowledge, the ability to
convey to students an understanding of that knowledge, and the ability to make
the material interesting and relevant to students. Complementing these three is
a fourth: quality: good teachers have a deep-seated concern and respect for the
students in the classroom. Why else would a teacher put in the time and effort
needed to create a high quality class?
The creation of a good class requires an immense amount of
work. You don't simply come up with clear explanations, industry cases and
examples and experiments for the class off the top of your head. You don't
create fair, consistent, high quality tests, questionnaires and homework
assignments (read "learning experiences") five minutes before you
hand them out. You don't figure out ways to integrate new materials and
research into a class in an understandable way on your way to your college or
institute in the morning. You work at this sort of quality all the time.
You spend time with your students so you can learn about holes in their
understanding. You read and write and create to build an exciting and
interesting class every day. The only thing that would drive you to do that is
a concern and respect for the students in your classroom.
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