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RE: ADSactly Life : Teaching with Your Fingernails

in #life5 years ago

It's very nice to see you writing for @adsactly!
I like the photo of the old teaching materials, and it reminds me of the differences between what materials were used to teach me (Run Jane run!) and those my children used. Both methods and collections of materials worked, but you've made me wonder if having to gather materials over the years from a bunch of modalities might not be BETTER than each student having the exact same modern textbook. As you say about different learning styles, a book that works for one student might not work for another.

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Hi, @owasco. Thanks for stopping by. It is complicated, especially in formal settings (schools, universities).
I always told those students who struggled with the language that the formal setting did not work in their benefit (because the institution tries to standardize teaching and learning). Usually, when those students who were underperforming enrolled in some private course or took a summer trip to, say, Trinidad (the closest English-speaking destination--we are talking about the old good days when a student could afford a three months stay at Trinidad) they learned more and faster. They'd come back to the university program more confident and ready to advance in their degrees.
Some institutions can be very strict in their approach and here's where the role of the instructor is so important: to find alternative methods, materials or techniques to address every student's learning skills and particular situations. A student with a speech impediment, for instance, may fail a phonetic/pronuntiation test in a university or academy, but that does not mean they cannot communicate effectively. That same student/learner can succeed in a different setting.

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