Showing posts with label Nigerian teacher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nigerian teacher. Show all posts

Thursday, 13 June 2019

The Importance of Being Extra


Teaching style depends on personality type. Some teachers are quiet and cool, they speak slowly, get their point across and manage to keep the students interested. My goodness, I’ll never know how they do it, they are the real MVPs. You see me, I am extra. No, scratch that- I’m extra- extra LOL. If you pass by my class you’ll hear a lot of productive noise and above all, lots of laughter. My class has to be fun; otherwise, I’d bore myself to death, not to talk of my students. In my opinion, to successfully get young people engaged in learning, you’d have to be crazy, humorous, cool and innovative all at once. Let me tell you about my typical lesson.

In real life, to those who do not know me well, I seem introverted and shy but I kid you not, the moment I walk into the class the let's-run-this-show spirit comes upon me and I immediately transform into this energy goddess no matter how bad I was feeling before class time! I walk into the class mouth first, chat the students up, and sometimes I dance to invisible music in my head as I set up my computer. Note that the class hasn’t started yet, the students still have about five minutes prep time so, they’re looking at me and already laughing, wondering what this crazy teacher has in store for them today, I make sure I never disappoint. I try to bring in something new that they’ve never seen before. 
One thing that has worked for me this week has been the use of Bitmojis to spice up my lesson. Bitmoji is an app owned by the same company that runs the Snapchat app, and it allows you to create a Bitmoji character that looks like you, just like the "so extra" picture in this post. Imagine the excitement and surprise when “I” showed up on the screen LOL. You can use Bitmojis to spice your lessons in any imaginable way and I'm thinking of making stickers from them too. Sometimes I use hilarious GIF images that move around on the screen when I’m running my slide show. I can’t stand “normal” lessons, you guys.

Today I wore extra big, star-shaped glasses that made the kids laugh out loud, they didn’t see it coming. Amidst good mornings and laughter, the students who bumped into me at the entrance tried to make comments about my glasses in English. While teaching the grammar point “What do you think of ….?” / I think (that)…”, during the introduction stage, after several examples using pictures, I turned my back to the class for a minute then I put my glasses on, turned around, struck a pose and asked: “What do you think of my glasses?” ”Ha-ha, I think they’re crazy”, “I think that Lola is cute” “I think it’s funny”. See? Target language used, lesson aim achieved, we all laughed, end.of.story.  Look, a little silliness never hurt anyone.
Sometimes my silliness is spontaneous, in response to the tempo in the class; most times it begins at the planning stage. I have a good time planning my lessons, especially when creating resources and visuals. I imagine how it’ll play out and make necessary adjustments. By the time I’m done, I’m so pumped up and excited and this translates into my lessons. I know I’m blowing my own trumpet but hey, it’s mine!

Oh, I enjoy my students, genuinely laugh at their jokes, and I am very generous with praises, and sometimes I get so emotional when they have done very well as a group and I put my hand to my heart and tell I love them. Of course, there’ll always be those naughty ones who try to hijack your lesson, I dramatically roll my eyes and bless them with a look that says “really!” and they adjust immediately. Balance is very important.

I realise that not everyone can be energetic and extra like me and I’m not asking you to become who you’re not but no matter your personality type, enthusiasm is one ingredient that you can never do without. Don’t be dull and never sulk no matter what you’re going through at that time; nobody likes a teacher who shows up in class sucking lemons. Do all you can in the best way that agrees with your personality to let your students know that you’re interested in them and that you’re happy to be their teacher.

Phew, this week is almost over! Tomorrow I'll tell you about my bloopers, all the many things that didn't go so well this week and how I handled them. 
Please leave a note and let me know which part of this post resonates with you the most.

Thanks for stopping by, see you next post!


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Wednesday, 13 June 2018

Click to Find out How to Plan Your CPD the Japanese Way



Kudos to trainers/educators working tirelessly to improve Education in Nigeria by equipping teachers with modern teaching techniques, and hats off to teachers who put a lot of effort into attending workshops, both paid and free, in order to improve their teaching game. I’m all for reading wide and gathering knowledge but don’t be a “knowledge junkie”-gathering and gathering but never implementing.
Let’s face it, most training platforms are not very practical and most teachers don’t really know how to use the knowledge gleaned from numerous workshops when they get back to their classrooms so they fall back to old and familiar ways of doing things. This issue has bothered me for a long time as I explored different ways to make PD sessions more beneficial to teachers. In one of my blog posts, I proffered the British Council CPD path as a way out but some teachers have sent me emails complaining about how broad and general this plan is, not tailored to meet immediate and specific needs of teachers.

Recently, my supervisor introduced me to a system of professional development, used by Japanese teachers, which is aimed at improving teaching in a collaborative way. This method is forming part of my research and I am willing to work with teachers who want to be part of the pioneers to spearhead a more practical method of CPD which will go a long way to promote collaboration amongst teachers and improve teaching and learning in Nigeria. Improvement is faster if you’re actively involved and sharing ideas in a cycle that involves collaborative planning + implementation, reflection, feedback. 
So, if you would like to take your professional development in your own hands, teaming up with other teachers to discuss the issues you are having at the moment and improve teaching please click on the pre-study survey link at the end of this post.  However, the scope of my research only takes English Teachers in Nigeria into account. Following the success of this first phase, more teachers will be factored in, please bear with me.

If you are an English Teacher in Nigeria and are interested in joining this CPD program which will involve collaborating with other English teachers in your area, physically and online, kindly click on this link to fill the registration form and I will get back to you. Also, if you are also interested in leading a team of 10 teachers in your area, send an email, captioned CPD for English Teachers, to 1teacher2anoda@gmail.com stating your Name, location, and a short write-up of about 150 words stating your experience as a teacher leader. 

Keep learning, keep growing.

またね!


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Thursday, 11 May 2017

Teacher Training Alert- ONYENKUZI 10.0

Listen - as a TEACHER...You Play one of THE most IMPORTANT roles in society--especially in Nigeria and across Africa! Why? Because day after day you can be a CHANGE AGENT, purposefully investing in and raising up young future leaders in your classrooms.
Onyenkuzi 10.0 is an INCREDIBLE virtual coaching program that will help TEACHERS feel Purposeful and EMPOWERED in and outside the classroom. Only 10 spots are offered at a very low price. So, GET ON BOARD.
Share with the teachers you know who need a boost of encouragement, inspiration and direction. This program will increase vision and expose teachers to POSSIBILITIES for making an impact and feeling more fulfilled in their work.
This coaching program runs for one month and is entirely online. Participants would have direct one-on-one access to a coach via email, will be in a WhatsApp group with other teachers and take part in group discussion and brainstorm sessions and be part of an internet-based research project. Successful participants will receive a certificate of completion.
May/June Batch begins 17th May 2017. 
To get more information and registration details, send a mail to Joy@teachtoleadng.org
Get Empowered,
CIAO

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Monday, 22 August 2016

Teachers Deserve Much More Than Better Pay

  As we prepare to commence a new school year the question every concerned stakeholder in the Nigerian educational system should be asking is “Do we have enough qualified teachers to man the classrooms and educate the millions of Nigerian children who will be going back to school next month?”
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Friday, 19 August 2016

In the news... Improved WASSCE 2016 Results.


After a nerve-wracking wait and much anticipation, Secondary schools across Nigeria have taken to social media platforms to celebrate and display exceptional WASSCE results. 
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Monday, 25 July 2016

The Millionaire Teacher- A Review


 A few weeks ago, someone gave me an assignment to check out 20 blog sites in my niche and pin point what I like about them so I went on a blog search spree. After several searches, I found lots of cool teacher blogs but I discovered they all had 1 major thing in common- they were all owned and run by non-Nigerians!
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Thursday, 2 July 2015

Hey There! Welcome to my blog.

"Education has taken a downward spiral, the Nigerian educational system is plunging like a low neckline; we have low quality teachers; schools don't pay well; the government is starving the educational sector" bla bla bla, yada, yada yada! Phew!
Playing the blame game, all talk and no action will lead us nowhere. How does that saying go again? " Ask not what your country can do for you but what you can do for your country" Right? Or something like that. It may be a cliche but rings true no doubt.
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