Working for a life as a teacher and an
English coordinator, the “Lebanese Educational System” course was very
provoking and appealing to my needs and desires, since compared to the
experience that I once had, I usually felt falling within the cracks,
especially when I had to work in a new field of curriculum, standards, and
design, being unacquainted of prioritizing concept, its integration, and
understanding. When I first read the title “Lebanese Educational System” in the
list of offered courses I instantly found myself clicking the ‘Register’
button, I believed that the course will effectively answer all my guesses and
that it will add significance and meaning to the understanding of what might
best work in each and every classroom; as to me each and every class reflected
and resembled a whole new explicit world. I proudly admit it, the course was of
great influence and it did meet my expectations, now I see myself more
confident to choose, especially when it comes to standards, curriculum, and
books, what best works for my students, their level, their need, their culture,
and many others. To get a clear knowledge of where I now stand, that is to set
it on ground, I prepared a critique of a Grade Nine English Language book which
not only did I previously study when I was a Grade Nine student, but also
taught, during my teaching career. This critique analyses and evaluates the book
from two different angles; the first focuses on structure and appearance
(form), and the second uses a microscopic lens to surf content (i.e. meaning
and function).
Digging a bit deeper into the book,
a closer look to structure and appearance is presented. From its colorful cover
page and throughout flipping through the pages, the book proves to be colorful,
well organized, and with readable size and font. The pictures in the cover page
tackle some of the concepts discussed in the units presented; like:
self-confidence, sports, supernatural events, trade, tourism, and many others.
To continue, Themes begins with an introduction that states features of
the book, a thematic approach, and a brief explanation of the components of the
Themes book. Moving on to the ‘Table of Contents’, one can clearly
notice an arrangement and series of twelve topics and concepts; respectively,
Building Self-confidence, Crafts, Scientific Discoveries, Sports, Mysteries and
Supernatural Events, Tolerance, Preserving Our Planet, Trade, The Generation
Gap, Natural Disasters, Social Behavior, and
Education, that vary in type; Social, Scientific, Historical,
Economical, and Educational, style and genre; Expository text; Social Studies
and Sciences, Realistic Fiction, Historical Fiction, Persuasive text,
Biography, Myth, Legend, E-mail, Poem, and Drama. (see Themes, p. 8)
At first
glance, being the critic, I had to make the ‘familiar’ ‘strange’; that is, I
had to make sure that regardless of studying and teaching the book, I still had
to deal with the book as if I have never encountered it before; here, two main
ideas rang the bell in my mind. First, I believed the subjects could have been
better sequenced according to relevance of concepts and their flow, however,
after surfing into content, the arrangement that I disliked proved to be
purposeful, hence concepts were sequenced, from simple to complex, in terms of
meeting standards, goals, language, concepts, familiarity (relevance to
students’ prior knowledge), and desired results. A second idea that triggered
my mind reflected the fact that if in each and every unit a series of eight
lessons followed, and if the book contains twelve units, will a teacher make it
to successfully cover all the units and their lessons by the end of the school
year? After the experience of teaching the book for three consecutive years and
studying it, as a student, I can clearly state that it was impossible to finish
all the units, lessons and activities during one academic year. Working more
with appearance, it is witnessed that each unit starts with a cover page that
has pictures, regardless of being old; in fashion and style, however, each
relates and reflects a discussed concept. Under the pictures, some definitions
and proverbs follow, these stimulate big ideas that will encourage and motivate
students to read. I remember that I used to like those quotes and I tried to
use them in my productions of speaking and writing, being a student, and
recently, as a teacher, I try to transfer my juvenile admiration to my students
too. Concerning the flow of lessons within each unit, I validate the idea that
the lessons are related and the end of one leads to the introduction of the
other; building the background knowledge of the students, a fact that I really
liked. To continue, the lessons in all the units seem to follow some sequence
and routine where each lesson starts with 3-4 essential questions that relate
students’ background knowledge (the familiar) to the lesson (the new), and the
general (basics) to the specific (core). After the essential questions, a
reading text follows, and in most times a vocabulary chart, an activity that
tests the objective, and some questions about the reading, are presented to
check for understanding. At last, a writing task and an assignment end the
lesson. It is important to mention that in each unit two to three grammatical
lessons (out of the total eight lessons) are presented. Talking about graphic
organizers and illustrations; tables, charts, statistical representations, maps
and even pictures, all are designed and used to reflect purpose. The
illustrator chose to use real pictures and snapshots every time he was willing
to reflect a serious reality and every time he wanted to show authenticity, as
the case is in the units of ‘Building Self-Confidence, Crafts, Scientific
Discoveries, Sports, etc…On the other hand, his choice fell on fiction pictures
in the units that discuss legends, myths and mysteries, like the case is in
Unit 5 entitled “Mysteries and Supernatural Events”. The closure of the book
was about two appendixes that only related to grammar. (see Themes, p.259-262)
In order not to criticize the
authors just because they didn’t write the book that I would have wanted, I
decided to judge the book according to what the authors clearly announced, ‘to
reflect their intensions’. Diving into content, being the one with the pen and
paper, I found it crucial to note down an analysis and an evaluation of what
the authors declared to be achieving in terms of what the book is about; the
desired results, that is, the clear goals and objectives, that conform to the
national standards set by the Center for Educational Research and Development
(CERD). Working hand in hand with the standards, makes the book fall into the
same sin these standards originally suffer from, the sin of coverage, that
tackles the Goldilocks’ theory; where some standards are too big, like ‘Demonstrate critical
understanding of spoken discourse’, ‘Demonstrate ability to speak fluently and
accurately’, ‘Demonstrate critical understanding of what is read’, ‘Demonstrate
ability to write correctly, coherently, and fluently’, and ‘Develop critical
thinking skills’ while others are too small, like ‘Develop basic
understanding of short passages of spoken discourse’ to be met. (CERD) To add, what is
positive about the book, is the fact that it encourages the integration of all
language skills, since in each and every lesson one is asked to listen as well
as to speak, and read as well as to write, this comes in different and various
forms, for example in Unit 1, that talks about building self-confidence,
students are asked to listen in order to answer essential thematic questions
like; “What is self-confidence?”, “Why is it important to have
self-confidence?” What kind of a person would you be without self-confidence?”
which are seen as of great significance depending on the intensions behind the
desired answers. Moreover, the lesson continues with a reading part ending with
writing a piece of journal, all related to the concept of “Building
Self-Confidence”. (see Themes, p.10-12) Another point of strength that
is seen in the book and validated thought the CERD standards is the focus on
the development of: critical thinking; proved in questions like, “Why is it
important to work on your self-confidence?”, “At what point in the story do you
think T.J’s self-confidence began to grow?”, and “What is the message (theme)
behind the poem?” (see Themes, p.10, 16
and 29 respectively), cultural awareness; presented in the reading
lesson itself, especially when discussing matters about society, customs,
beliefs and traditions like, “How do you feel when people around you support
and motivate you to do well? Think of an example from your own personal life
and share it” and “How do you feel when people around you show they don’t think
you can do something or you are not good enough to do it? Think of an example
from your own personal life and share it.” (see Themes, p.13), and study
skills like, “In pairs decide which is the main idea of each paragraph in the
selection?”, “Reread the selection “Broken Wing” in Lesson 2, and in your group
work, organize the events in chronological order.”, and “What kind of
tone/attitude does the speaker have? Explain your answer.” (see Themes, p. 16, 17, and 29 respectively)
Moving to talk about the thematic
approach, Themes, from its lessons, vocabulary, grammar, integrated
skills, level of critical thinking, and its culture proves to use authentic
texts and activities that present a concept based curriculum, but that actually
encourage content, this is because their thematic-approach doesn’t fully
encourage students to do, use, or transfer the knowledge to gain significant
learning experiences, also because more focus is given on teaching than on
learning; which can be seen through the vast amount of lessons hoping to be covered
in a single curricular year that at its utmost lasts a maximum of nine months,
falling in the trap of the “Expert Blind Spot”, believing that when covering
everything the students will understand better, or that teaching more is
better, which is not true. Although claiming to be of concept-based
orientation, unfortunately, I didn’t have the chance to prove ‘the degree of
Grade Nine curricular integration with other materials’ the book tends to
carry, neither had I the chance to check whether it is really about integration
or coordination among the resting curricular subjects.
Under the
thematic approach title, the authors declare the book to enable students
acquire vocabulary and grammatical structures in context. For the vocabulary,
it is true that they work on etymology and word derivations, it is also true
that most of the vocabulary when compared to the standardized Vocabulary Size
test[1] (Schmitt, 2010)
confirm to be authentic (i.e. transferable to real usage in life) and suitable
to the students’ level, taking into consideration their English as a Foreign
Language reality; here are few examples of the transferable words: rare, resemble, induced, concealing, etc…
(see Themes, p. 43). However, most
of the vocabulary although derived from the reading text (i.e. context) is
presented in a table with its definition, it is true that the vocabulary were
taken from context but it was never dealt as critically asking the students to
derive meaning from it. As to say, ‘vocabulary in context’ was a beneficial
means, but unfortunately, with ill formed ways; hence outside there, in real
life, explicit vocabulary definitions are never served with each and every piece
of reading that we might encounter.
On the other
hand, whether during my school years as a student, or later, as a teacher, I
remember that the grammar of the book was always presented with extra-handouts
and sheets that were either prerequisites for the coming lessons in the book,
or follow-ups with further explanations and extra-activities; because although
going hand in hand with the grammatical standards at CERD and its sequence, yet
they were very limited in explanation and practice. To add, being the critic, I
believe that the grammar in Themes could have carried a more meaningful
consideration, one that treats grammar not only as forms (Morphosyntax; How is
it formed?) and functions (Pragmatics; When/why is it used?) in context, but
also, one that focuses on meaning (Semantics/Meaning; What does it mean?) as a
separate dimension, integrating what has been seen in context (in the book), to
what the students might be needing and
using in their real lives. An example to this, the book explains the ‘Conditionals’
lesson derived from the reading text (pp. 252-253) presenting the formula or
rule, its function or use, but never encourages students to transfer this
knowledge into their lives, for example, by drawing their attention to use the
3rd conditional and its form whenever they feel sorry about
something or whenever they regret something in their lives.
After analyzing and
evaluating what the book is about, it is time to talk about other aspects that
the authors should pay attention to if they are willing to raise a more
fashionable and updated version of Themes, 2nd Edition.
Thanks to the
rapid knowledge explosion, some lessons in the book have expired, they no
longer sound as interesting as they were; as the case was when I was a student,
this is clearly shown specially through the units that tackle scientific
concepts, those that because of globalization and advanced technology are no
longer classified as top ten, even more, they are not mentioned in the whole
list. In the “Scientific Discoveries” Unit, although the authors attempt to use
content (real topics) to teach English, yet they present out-of-time
information; i.e. in a time were laptops, computers and other machines found
their way to accommodate blind people, the book proudly insists to crown the
Braille as the exquisite and most advanced invention to challenge blindness
(see Themes, p. 54-56), also the
book mentions visiting the moon as the hottest and latest news in a time were
astronauts are paving the way to live there (see Themes, p. 66)
Talking about
language, the book presents a clear and up-to-level language that discusses
concepts and issues educating students away from politics and religion. The
language used fits the level of the students and their need for understanding;
however, the presence of small mistakes, although little in occurrence, affect
the credibility of the book and students’ trust, especially when it comes to
grammar. In the ‘Modal Verbs’ grammar lesson, when they explain the ‘logical
conclusion’ part in the examples found on page 102, a complete change in
meaning takes place and if the student studies it the way it is presented
paying attention to form at the expense of function and meaning, he will
definitely be learning what is ungrammatical, unaccepted in grammar; hence
grammar isn’t only about rule and form, but about form, function and meaning
interrelated, the following is the example:
-The missing
ships and planes must have sunk to the bottom of the ocean.
-There must have been foul weather since the planes took off in perfect flying weather conditions.
-Being experienced pilots, the crew could have lost their way.
-There must have been foul weather since the planes took off in perfect flying weather conditions.
-Being experienced pilots, the crew could have lost their way.
From this
example, after directing the students to the mistake and its huge effect on the
meaning of the sentence, the students will increase a sense of uncertainty,
expecting other similar mistakes to occur in other coming grammatical lessons,
once they reoccur, the students will be chaotic whether or not to trust the
existing information, thus uncertainty is all what they will end to have every
time they question the book’s credibility.
There were
other minimal typing mistakes, like in ‘Activity 3’ stating, “Here’s the
content page of the book the above selection is taken from. In pairs, read the
selection and decided (meaning decide) which chapter each paragraph
comes from.” (Themes, Unit 5, Lesson 2, p.95) Also, on page 24 under the
‘Simple Present Tense’ title, “… a true or factual atatement (meaning
statement)” Another example is depicted in the ‘Word Order’ lesson (p. 130)
under the ‘Interrogatives’ title where they mistakenly use a period instead of
a question mark for punctuation: “Does the contribution of fossil fuels
increase the concentration in the atmosphere of certain greenhouse gases.”
Having these minimal mistakes, whose corrections are within the grasp, I wonder
why are these old versions still available on library shelves? Why aren’t they
just revised, renewed, and reformed?
To conclude, no book is so good that
it has no weaknesses or is free of criticism, a good book will always have some
positive aspects that exceed the negative ones, and this book could be a better
one if it is carefully taken into consideration. For this, I recommend a newer
version of updated pictures, a sincere focus on concept fearless of coverage
and content, not only the elimination of expired lessons but their replacement
with long-lasting lessons that focus on
concepts not on changing facts , a change in the routine followed in most of
the lessons, an actual implementation of learning vocabulary in context; where
the top-down and bottom-up successful interactions between the reader and the
text are the major factors for the contextual guessing of vocabulary, a serious
call for learning, using and transferring grammar with a focus on the
interrelation of form, function and meaning along with a more sufficient
explanation and wider playground for practice, and a correction of the minimal
mistakes that challenge the validity and credibility of the book.
Reference
(n.d.). Retrieved from CERD:
http://www.crdp.org/CRDP/all%20curriculum/English/English_Second%20language%20curriculumn.htm
Ghaith, G., Zahara, M. S., Abou Ayyash, A., Van Loan, A., & Zay'our,
A. (2000). Themes English Language. Lebanon: Educational Company for
Printing, Publising and Distribution S.A.R.L).
Schmitt, N. (2010). An Introduction to Applied Linguistics, 2nd
Edition. Hodder Education, Inc.
Don't hesitate to provide me with your comments and opinions.

I agree u in the part related to the" Lebanese Educational System” course. It was really so effective and interesting. For your criticism of grade nine English book,and as all our Lebanese curriculum it's really overloaded. teachers should be so clever and careful to select what topics students really need in their real life...
ReplyDeleteAgain we need to call for a concept-based curriculum rather than being worried about content-coverage, this without forgetting the great help that technology offers with its tools, that make students active learners who use problem-solving, critical thinking, creativity and innovation, and cooperation and collaboration as the major skills to acquire new literacy; visual literacy, technological literacy, media literacy, computer literacy, and many others.
ReplyDeleteThat's true we should care for the understanding of the concept, and not for covering the curriculum.
ReplyDelete