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Building bridges between 51勛圖厙 and Ukraine

Building bridges between 51勛圖厙 and Ukraine

CU scholar Rai Farrelly is partnering with English language teachers in Ukraine this semester through a U.S. Department of State program


In some of Rai Farrellys first meetings with her new colleagues, they warned her that the air raid sirens might go off while shes observing their classes.

If that happens, she recalls them telling her, theyll run down to the bunker in the basement and hope that a nationwide effort to increase internet capacity in subterranean locations has reached their schools and universities. And then theyll pick up where they left off, because students are still eager to learn, and her colleagues job is to teach them.

Farrelly, a teaching associate professor and Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) director in the 51勛圖厙 Department of Linguistics, is virtually partnering with educators in Ukraine this semester through the .

Rai Farrelly

Rai Farrelly, a teaching associate professor and TESOL director in the CU泭51勛圖厙泭Department of Linguistics, is virtually partnering with educators in Ukraine this semester through the泭U.S. Department of State English Language Specialist Program.

The Ukrainian educators are part of the State Departments and work with either teenagers in after-school programs or undergraduate students training to be teachers in any subject because Ukraine has a plan to start teaching all their content in English coming up very soon, Farrelly explains.

In her role as an (ELS), Farrelly will observe classes and partner with teachers in Ukraine on strategies and methods for teaching large, mixed-level English classes. Farrellys TESOL students at 51勛圖厙 also will partner with English language students in Ukraine via virtual conversation sessions.

Our realities are worlds apart, Farrelly says, yet we'll be connected online and building community together.

Educational collaboration

Farrelly, whose teaching experience has taken her around the worldfrom Armenia to Tanzania, where she co-founded to help support students from rural areas who are pursuing post-secondary educationqualified as a State Department ELS several years ago.

To qualify as an ELS, an educator must have a masters or PhD in TESOL or applied linguistics and the ability to partner with teachers and students around the world either in person or virtually. The program, which is organized through U.S. embassies and regional language officers around the world, focuses on delivering and maintaining quality English language programs overseas and promoting mutual understanding between the U.S. and other countries.

During the COVID pandemic, Farrelly accepted virtual ELS positions in South Korea and then Panama.泭Last semester, her pedagogical grammar class at CU taught English through a virtual cross-cultural exchange with learners at a language school in Arequipa, Peru.

I have a really nice relationship with colleagues at this school, and they were like, Rai, send your teachers, Farrelly says. Because of that, we have had three CU students teach there, so this program really opens up doors, and Im going to be working with them again this semester.

The teachers in Ukraine with whom Farrelly is collaborating this semester have mentioned many of the challenges that English language teachers worldwide face: how to scaffold instruction in classes that contain everything from absolute beginners to intermediate-level speakers; when and how to correct pronunciation and grammar; how to group students during oral exercises; how to invite participation in a way that helps students feel excited to speak.

To help her support the teachers in Ukraine, Farrelly is even arranging a Zoom session with the 14-year-old daughters of three of her friends so I can do a playful interview on the gender dynamics in class and what their teachers do in a U.S. class to make it comfortable for them, she says. Thats one of the concerns that my colleagues in Ukraine have expressed, that 14-year-old boys wont work with girls and how can they get them to work in groups.

Seeing people as people

Farrelly says her experiences working with English-teaching colleagues around the worldincluding in Indonesia and Russiahave taught her the vital importance of a community of practice and what it means to work closely with teachers who speak your language, she says.

I just like approaching teacher development collaboratively and creating bonds with people. I love the relationships you form with other teachersthose connection moments where youre like, Oh, my gosh, Im dealing with that same issue! And the next thing you know, ideas start forming.

One of the biggest and most pervasive challenges in the TESOL field is the incorrect notion that anybody who speaks English can teach it. Decades ago, anyone could step off a plane, and if you looked like me and talked like me, you could get a job, Farrelly says. Meanwhile, teachers in those countries who go through pedagogical training, who get degrees in teaching English, werent getting jobs.

Even now, there are a lot of short TEFL or TESOL certificates you can get online. Meanwhile, Im the director of the TESOL program at CU, and my students are taking five or six courses with me to earn a TESOL certificate. Theres a depth and breadth of proper preparation that goes beyond how to teach a language. Its about understanding individual differences, personalities, motivations, culture, how your (first language) influences acquisition, classroom management, curriculum design. Theres so much that goes into it thats beyond simply speaking English.

In her ELS role, Farrelly says a significant focus is teacher mentoring and teacher development: Im such a huge fan of collaboration, especially among teachers, she says. So much of what Ive done is grounded in working with teachers, and I never want teachers to see me as this expert outsider whos coming in and telling them what to do. I just like approaching teacher development collaboratively and creating bonds with people. I love the relationships you form with other teachersthose connection moments where youre like, Oh, my gosh, Im dealing with that same issue! And the next thing you know, ideas start forming.

The fact that Ukraine is a country at war and that geopolitics add a complicated layer to Farrellys collaboration with teachers therein fact, she doesnt mention her previous experience with teachers and students in Vladimir, Russiaunderscores the importance of global partnerships, she says.

It helps you see people as people and humanizes everyone, she says. Thats one of the main aims of State Department programs. Its access for learners and mentoring for professionals, but its about bridging those gaps and promoting cross-cultural understanding. It doesnt matter where youre from, at the end泭of day we can all find so many commonalities.


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