For the mid year meeting in KL this past weekend (Yes, I know halfway through already!) we were all asked to write an article on one of the activities we are most proud of at school. So here for your reading pleasure is the article I wrote:
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Form 1 students painting a mural for Earth day. |
How do you teach a language when the teacher and
the students can’t communicate? There are probably many answers to this
question, but my answer has been to rely on my strengths- art.
Soon
after I walked into my first class I realized that many of the tactics my
teachers used in my high school Spanish classes were not going to work here.
There just wasn’t the technology or the resources I was used to having in a
classroom, and more importantly I don’t speak the students’ language.
I
quickly ran into problems trying to explain myself in classes, but after a few
trials and errors I began to rely on my training as an art student. I started
to draw visuals to go along with my English to more clearly communicate with my
students. This tactic has been especially useful with my students who are
illiterate in Bahasa Melayu let alone English. One of the teachers at my school
after a successful lesson once told me, “those four girls fail Bahasa Melayu
but now they are speaking English.”
I
have found that incorporating art projects with my lessons has also been
particularly successful with my youngest students, 12 years old. These kids
have extreme amounts of energy and have very few opportunities to use it during
their listen, copy, worksheet classes. Including art has given them a way to
release some of their energy through creativity as well as allowing themselves
to express themselves further than their current English ability allows and
helps to ingrain new vocabulary into their memory. I have also noticed that
lessons that include creative projects have helped me with discipline in my
youngest, rowdiest classes.
For
Earth day I was looking for a project to do with my students to remind them of
how important it is to take care of our environment. I floated the idea of a
beach cleanup with the students, but
received a lackluster response. Our project instead turned into a mural
entitled “we’re all connected” on a wall in the school. As we painted we were able
to talk about the environment, climate change, and what the students could do
to help. We were also stopped by several curious students who wanted to know
why we’re painting the mural. I was very impressed as I heard my painting crew
explain to the passerbys about Earth day and our mural.
The
headmaster at my school seemed impressed with our work and put in a request for
a Teacher’s day mural we have been working on. And as a result we are forming a
Mural Club at school where we work to brighten up the old, bland school walls.
Half
way through the school year and I have only made a little progress on my Bahasa
Malayu skills, but I have made a lot of progress with communicating with my
students. Through my broken Bahasa Melayu, their English, and our art we are
able to figure each other out and after all that is the point of learning a new
language. Is it not?