This Tuesday, I met with my conversation partner Michelle in Classroom 407 at CIES. She is from Africa , and her first language is French. This is the first time for her to come to the U.S. She is studying in foundation group at CIES.
When I met with her at 3:00pm, I found that it was a little hard to communicate with her because she could not understand me well and she could only speak a little English. I thought about this situation and wondered what should be the first and the most important thing for me to help her. After I had a short conversation with her about her name, I also found that it was not very easy for her to pronounce the letters and the words. Then, I decided to teach her English letters first. She was so smart that she could understand what I was teaching very quickly.
We spent about 10 minutes to review all the letters and I tried to figure out which letters she was not very familiar with and which letters she needs more practice. It is a little difficult for her to pronounce the letters K, Y, U, Q, R and W. I pointed out these letters and practiced them more with her. Besides, I taught some common dialogues to help her build basic communication abilities, such as “How are you doing?”, “What’s your name?”, “What color do you like?” “Excuse me, could I ask you a question?” and “Where are you from?” To my surprise, she can write these sentences very correctly.
After this first conversation meeting, I realized that these Foundation students really need more help than other international students. I also got some ideas about how to apply various strategies and methods, especially visual resources and body languages to help them absorb and learn English.
I am also working with someone with very little English comprehension. You seem to be on the right track with foundational learning tools (the alphabet, greetings, etc). I hope that I can help my tutor partner as much as possible despite our large language barrier. Visual tools are key!
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