[Community-service] Tutoring ESL

nfoster at extremezone.com nfoster at extremezone.com
Mon Jul 27 12:47:07 UTC 2015


Hello Ashley:

This sounds like a wonderful opportunity and a lot of fun.

When I was in college I volunteered as a language partner.  We met with exchange
students from all over the world and worked on conversation skills.  We didn't
have any teaching materials; we just had conversations.  It was a lot of fun
and I learned so much about other countries and cultures.  Sometimes it was
pretty amusing when they couldn't think of a word or I tried to explain a word
or concept that they didn't know.

I wonder if Hadly has any ESL materials or the place that used to be RFD, can't
think of the new name.

Good luck and please keep us posted on your progress.

Nella


Quoting Ashley Bramlett via Community-service <community-service at nfbnet.org>:

> Hi all,
>
> So I have an opportunity to tutor ESL speaking skills at a nonprofit called
> Homestretch.
>
> I really want to help people improve their english skills, but am not sure I
> can do it with the language barrier. I know I rely on oral communication a
> lot in the absence of seeing all body gestures. I’m concerned the lack of
> understanding them will hinder our progress unless we can find ways to
> communicate such as more hand over hand and them pointing to labeled pictures
> I might make up.
>
> Here is the little I know. The clients know English. Their needs are in
> improving vocabulary in sentences, improving pronounciation skills, and other
> communication tasks.
> I’d tutor for at least an hour per week if I go forward. I’m going to
> learn more when I do an orientation with the volunteer coordinator.
> I told the coordinator about my low vision and she has not really said
> anything about it but treated me like a regular volunteer. She just told me
> their needs and requested a time to do my orientation.
> I’m sure I can ask about any curriculum matterials they have in that
> meeting and hopefully figure out my accomodations. I’m fairly sure one
> accomodation will be bringing my laptop equipped with jaws
> to do some activities. I might be able to use their cds for listening
> exercises if they have the teaching cds I need. I know that when learning
> spanish in high school, we had many listening exercises on cd so I’m sure
> their some for teaching english.
>
> So, have any of you taught ESL with emphasis on oral communication?
> If so, what adaptations did you make?
> Did you have any accessible teaching resources?
> I know if I use cds for listening exercises or computer streaming audio, this
> should be accessible as its purely auditorily.
>
> Thanks.
> Ashley






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