An Overview of IATEFL's Special Interest Groups
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The IATEFL has fourteen Special Interest Groups. There are two overall
aims of the SIGs.
- They cater for the special interests of our 10,000 members around the
world, fifty per cent of which belong to one SIG or more. These special
interests range from Young Learners to English for Special Purposes, from
ELT Management to Computers
- They maintain the international profile of the association by holding
events in many countries around the world. So if members are unable to
attend the main conference, which is usually held in the UK, there is an
excellent chance for them to attend SIG events held in their own countries
In 1996 there were SIG events held in Argentina, the Czech Republic,
Germany, Romania, and Turkey, as well as numerous events in the UK and the
highly successful SIG Symposium, with representatives of all SIGs, held
in Vienna, Austria.
Together with the IATEFL Newsletter, which reaches all our members
world-wide, the SIGs have a central role in the international profile of
the association.
So what benefits are there from joining a SIG?
- Members with an interest in a special area of expertise are catered
for
- Members receive three newsletters a year
- Members can participate in special events organised two or more times
a year by the SIG
- Members receive information about the SIG programmes both at its own
events as well as at the main IATEFL conference
- Members can attend the Biennial SIG Symposium, which is a state-of-the-art
conference; in Vienna in 1996 it had fourteen keynote speakers plus David
Crystal giving the opening plenary
All SIGs can be contacted through the IATEFL Head Office: 3 Kingsdown
Chambers, Kingsdown Park, Whitstable, Kent, CT5 2DL, UK. Tel: +44 (0) 1227
276528; Fax: +44 (0) 1227274415; e-mail:100070.1327@compuserve.com
Business English
BESIG, the IATEFL Business English Special Interest Group is for the
business English teaching profession and is one of the most popular of the
IATEFL Special Interest Groups with a membership of over 800. We have members
in over 50 countries across South America, Africa, and Asia, with the largest
proportion coming from Europe.
We offer ways to improve your expertise in teaching business English,
and a link with other people in the profession. Apart from our annual international
conferences, regional workshops, regular newsletters and reports describing
conference papers/workshops in detail, we do this by encouraging the setting
up of regional groups. These regional groups are called SIGnets and at present
there are ten in Central Europe. They exist to provide a professional network
for Business English teachers through regular workshops and talks. We are
now trying to establish such groups in Asia in order to link business English
teachers who may be unable to attend international conferences.
The BESIG calendar has been full and varied in recent years with events
in the UK, Romania, Latvia, Moscow, Austria, and Germany.
Judith Fortey, Co-ordinator
Computer
For a group which is concerned with new technology, it's worth noting
that the Computer Special Interest Group is one of the oldest SIGs in IATEFL.
We started life as a independent group and then came under the wings
of IATEFL a number of years ago. Our main aim is to provide a service to
our membership by keeping them up-to-date with the world computers in language
learning and teaching in all its facets. We also regularly offer training
in new and more traditional areas.
Recent events have focused on a variety of events including the Internet,
multimedia authoring, computer-based business English materials, and materials
design. Conference papers have followed similar lines and many of these
are reported in recent newsletters. The newsletter also publishes reviews
of currently available material, ideas about classroom practice, and more
discursive pieces that look at background issues as well as those directly
related to the classroom.
Current trends in the computing world lead us to look at how we can explore
the Internet with our students, and how to exploit the current general and
ELT specific CD ROM-based multimedia materials. Computers seem to be increasingly
used for independent learning with individual students buying materials
to use at home, logging on to an e-mail list for learners to exchange views
or ideas, searching the World Wide Web to help them in their task, or going
to the self-access centre in their school or college to make use of text
reconstruction or to play language games.
Other areas of continued interest have been in the analysis of text for
materials production and for classroom use. Concordancing packages have
changed the way that dictionaries are produced and have also had an impact
on materials design through task-based learning. There are a number of readily
available classroom concordances that both learners and teachers can use
for their own hypothesis testing. Word processing for the improvement of
writing skills seems to be a continued are of interest.
The early enthusiasm of a few pioneers has slowly been replaced by a
wider audience of general teachers who see the computer as a useful tool
to help enhance and enliven their classes and which allows their students
more control over their learning.
Gary Motteram, Co-ordinator:Å@ http//www.man.ac.uk/IATEFL/
ELT Management
The ELT Management Special Interest Group was created in 1990 to meet
the needs of managers in both state and private sectors of the industry.
The ELT Management SIG aims to:
- raise awareness among the ELT profession of management issues
- contribute to the development of good management practices within ELT
- provide a forum for the discussion of management issues
- provide opportunities for, and information about, relevant management
training.
- add to the raising of levels of services which we offer our clients
Our main activities so far have included:
- The ELT Management Newsletter includes book and software reviews
as well as a wide range of articles. Recent articles have covered marketing,
staff development and training, time management, professional qualifications
in ELT management, quality, customer care, and project management.
- Helping in finding jobs: the group organises a JobShop at the annual
IATEFL conference, the Newsletter carries job advertisements, and IATEFL
provides access to a job information service through its World Wide Web
site.
- Workshops: these usually last a day. Topics covered have included personnel
management, motivation and decision-making, managing conflict, quality,
time management and strategic planning.
- Conferences: the SIG organises a management track at the IATEFL annual
conference and the ELT management sessions at the biennial SIG Symposium.
We organised our first international conference at Bilkent University in
Ankara, Turkey in 1995 on the topics of quality Management and the Management
of Change. The papers from this conference have been published by IATEFL
and are for sale from the IATEFL Head Office.
English for Special Purposes
The ESP SIG has 406 members and membership has been growing ever since
its foundation five years ago. The present committee represents the spread
of the SIG members throughout the world.
The SIG publishes its newsletters three times a year. In addition, we
have started to send so-called Co-ordinators' Circulars (CC) to all members
to keep them abreast about the internal developments.
As for activities, we give support to regional, topic-based events and
we organise our own events. Following the first international success of
a joint BETA/BESIG-ESP SIG Conference in Romania, we put together our first
one-day mini-conference in co-operation with the Volkshochschule Bielefeld,
Germany, on the topic, What is ESP? A conference on Teaching and Learning
English for Social and Medical Applications is planned for 1998 in Bulgaria
under the auspices of the SOKRATES programme of the European Union.
J. Wolfgang H. Ridder, Co-ordinator
Global Issues(GI SIG)
The Global Issues SIG is the most recently formed SIG. Our membership
is growing steadily and approximately 60% of the current members are from
outside the UK. Our first newsletters have appeared and a Global Issues
Day took place in January 1996. Links are being established with other organisations
working in fields related to Global Issues and Education.
What are Global Issues?
Global issues include peace, justice and equality, human rights and social
responsibility, racism and sexism, the environment, world development, and
international understanding.
What is the purpose of the GI SIG?
The GI SIG aims to provide a forum among ELT practitioners to stimulate
awareness and understanding of global issues, and to encourage the development
if global education within language teaching. This approach aims to equip
students with the knowledge, skills and values which can help them confront
both local and global problems. The GI SIG aims to promote a less Eurocentric
perspective within in ELT.
Learner Independence
The Learner Independence SIG has a network of members world-wide whose
common interests cover:
- setting up self access centres
- teacher training in the use of learning centres
- learning centres for elementary students
- counselling for learning centres
- taking the learning centre into the classroom
- what learners do in learning centres
- the difference between learning centres in an English-speaking country
and abroad
- learning styles and learning strategies
- motivating learners for self-study
- developing teachers for learner autonomy
- different cultural approaches to learner independence
- self-assessment and self-placement
- the effectiveness of self-access learning
- distance learning including e-mail and computer conferencing
- using radio, TV, video, feature films, and hi-tech media for independent
study
- using dictionaries and making personal lexicons
- activities to do outside the classroom
Apart from newsletters and events, we are involved in other projects:
- a recipe book of ideas, tips and photocopiable worksheets for encouraging
learners to take greater responsibility for their learning
- a register of self-access facilities throughout the world (contact
us if you have not yet received our questionnaire)
- a register of post-graduate qualifications offering self-access/learner
independence courses
We're also hoping to set up a Video Forum parallel to the Poster Forum
at the IATEFL International Conference. We're also looking for groups or
organisations to work with in countries around the world to set up events
there and so to widen the interest and range of our activities.
Jenny Timmer, Co-ordinator
Literature and Cultural Studies
For many people, the first interest in a language comes from discovering
its literature, an interest which is sustained by contact with the culture.
The Literature and Cultural Studies Special Interest Group exists to
promote and encourage intercultural understanding through the medium of
literature. It explores all aspects of literature, and their application
to ELT. It does so through organising a specialised track at the annual
IATEFL conference, planning a series of talks at the SIG Symposium every
two years, organising workshops and conference of its own, and producing
newsletters.
Our last event was a highly successful one day symposium with an impressive
line up of speakers including Gill Lazar, Alan Pulverness, Roger Gower,
Jane Spiro, and Teresa O'Brien. At the SIG Symposium held jointly with the
British Council in Vienna there were strong contributions from local teachers
and our keynote speaker was Guy Cook.
We are now planning an exciting two years. These events will include:
- a joint conference with the British Council in Bavaria
- a day symposium looking at ways of combining the use of films with
teaching literature in EFL
- a day symposium devoted to cultural studies and their place within
ELT.
- a joint symposium with the Teacher Trainer SIG in Hungary
Amos Paran, Co-ordinator:
http://www.man.ac.uk/IATEFL/
Media Special Interest Group
The Media Special Interest Group offers international connections to
the most international of language materials: the media. Our open-house
committee meetings in 1996 were held in Chicago (USA), Keele and London
(UK), and Vienna (Austria). The current issue of our newsletter, Screen,
was guest edited from Taiwan--the next could be done by you! It reaches
a world-wide membership at least three times per year. The SIG members run
training workshops and seminars at conferences--London, Vienna, and Orlando--or
anywhere on demand. We'll help you run your own workshop--just get us near
enough to your country or region.
The Media SIG deals with visual materials in language learning and teaching.
The Media SIG members focus mainly on screen images: video, film, moving
images in CD and other computer programmes, and of course television, whether
satellite, cable, or terrestrial. We have a reference archive of all UK-based
EFL materials.
When the SIG was founded (as the Video SIG) there were some television
series perhaps available on video. Since then, the technology available
to schools, colleges, study centres, and the home or office-based learner
has developed at an amazing rate. The advent of satellite TV around the
globe led to a huge development in techniques for capitalising on the undoubted
benefits of television--real TV, aimed at native speakers, and covering
far more than the topics of a textbook course or national curriculum. The
members of the Media SIG have built up an unrivalled knowledge in this area.
Their expertise ranges from teaching in classrooms for children, university
students, or adults, to designing TV programmes, producing and directing
them, writing textbooks and training manuals, and visiting most parts of
the world to train teachers and learners how to exploit this valuable resource.
The arrival of computer-generated images has brought a new dimension to
the work of the Media SIG: maintaining the methodological and pedagogical
gains made in using the screen in teaching. Join the Media SIG and share
the experiences!
Jack Lonergan, Co-ordinator
Pronunciation
Research is increasingly showing that poor pronunciation is the biggest
cause of misunderstanding. The IATEFL Pronunciation group is trying to do
something about this.
Our group is the only international group dealing with the teaching of
pronunciation within English language teaching. It is for people who realise
the importance of pronunciation--in terms both of speaking and of understanding
speech--and believe that it should and can be dealt with in a systematic
way in the classroom. Most important, it bridges the gap between the academic
world of phonetics/phonology and the world of the ordinary classroom teacher.
Perhaps the most noteworthy of any of the events organised by the group
was the joint IATEFL/TESOL Pronunciation Institute held at Long Beach, California,
in the context of the 1996 TESOL Convention. This event brought together
experts from both sides of the Atlantic.
For those unable to attend our conferences and workshops, the main reason
for joining the group is to receive the journal Speak Out!, a publication
of international standing. This comes out twice a year, a mixed issue in
the winter, and one devoted to a single topic in the summer. Winter issues
cover a wide range of relevant topics, from important new theories to tips
for immediate use in the classroom, from book reviews to details of relevant
computer programs. Summer issues have included such topics as coping with
the problems of specific L1s (including Japanese!) and the technology of
pronunciation teaching. Three, so far, have come with audio cassettes. These
include the most recent 10th anniversary issue Changes in Pronunciation,"
a 68-page document with contributions from such distinguished authors as
David Crystal and David Roach.
Michael Vaughan Rees, Co-ordinator
Research
The Research Special Interest Group has two broad aims. Its first aim
is to promote the concept of classroom research, particularly undertaken
by practising teachers. It assists practitioners to see that small-scale
discovery projects can make an important contribution to their development
by enabling them to find out more about themselves as teachers and more
about their students as learners. It also provides a forum for those already
engaged in classroom research to exchange ideas and compare outcomes.
Research SIG's second aim is to build bridges between researchers and
practitioners. With this aim in mind, it is organising a series of major
conferences on teaching and learning of language skills. Plenary papers
are given by leading figures in each of the fields who are not necessarily
mainstream EFL specialists; contributions from participants draw both on
research and on experience. The first conference was on Reading Skills.
Future topics are listening, vocabulary acquisition, and speaking.
The SIG's newsletter contains reports on research projects in progress,
discussion of important issues in language learning, requests for cooperation
and advice, and details of academic research which is of interest to members.
To promote classroom research, the SIG is offering a bursary of £300.00
to enable a teacher to undertake a project which would not otherwise be
possible.
The SIG is currently fostering ideas on how to undertake research. It
recently set up a Study Day on research methods in co-operation with the
University of Leuven in Belgium and a further Study Day in the UK. Every
two years, the SIG helps to co-ordinate one of the major tdtr (Teacher Development
Teachers Research) conferences which attract a great deal of international
support. The next one is in Israel in September 1997.
Research SIG is currently developing its own publications. It produces
an annual collection of papers, presenting recent findings by Research SIG
members which are of significance to the profession at large. The Group
also produces an occasional series entitled Update on . . . ., which enables
members to refresh their knowledge of particular areas of ELT theory. Currently
under discussion is the possibility of publishing a Handbook of Classroom
Research, with contributions by well-known names. Research SIG publications
are provided to SIG members free of charge or at a discount.
Our members perhaps have the widest range of backgrounds of any of the
IATEFL SIGs. They include experienced teachers, directors of studies, researchers
in universities and teacher training institutions, freelance teacher trainers,
and materials writers. They come from all over the world. Their range of
research interests is stimulatingly diverse: everything from cognitive psychology
to action research, from discourse analysis to vocabulary acquisition, from
skills-based approaches to classroom interaction. Our long-term plans include
setting up a register to enable those with similar interests to make contact
with each other.
John Field, Co-ordinator
Teacher Development
The Teacher Development SIG aims:
- to provide a forum for teachers for whom an important priority is to
develop their own unique potential as teachers
- to develop their skill and awareness in meeting the inevitable problems
of being a teacher
- to keep alive a sense of challenge and satisfaction in the job.
The Teacher Development SIG was formed by Adrian Underhill in 1985, and
was the first SIG to be created as part of IATEFL. Typical priorities include:
- What does development mean to me in my context?
- How can I become the best teacher that I can be?
- What hinders and what helps me in doing that?
- How can I help myself by working with others who are also interested?
Our newsletter editor, who lives in The Netherlands, usually invites
a SIG member from another country to co-ordinate a series of articles for
a particular newsletter. In the past, guest co-ordinators from Switzerland,
Slovakia, Czech Republic and The Netherlands, have contributed, and further
contributions from the USA, India and Austria are planned. If you are interested
in co-ordinating a series, you can contact Rosie Tanner through the IATEFL
Head Office.
We organise practical and experimental workshops in the UK. For example,
past events have included a half-day workshop on using one's voice, and
a two-day workshop on Neuro-Linguistic Programming.
In addition, we co-operate with other SIGs in organising joint conferences
outside the UK. In 1996 there was a one-day joint Teacher Development and
Research workshop entitled Learning from the Classroom, investigating the
methods and outcomes of teacher-directed research.
A joint conference entitled Teacher Training and Teacher Development:
Integration and Diversity is planned involving the Teacher Development SIG,
Teacher Trainer SIG and the University of Bilkent, Turkey.
We encourage teachers to form local groups outside the UK (called SIGnets)
with the purposes of networking, organising events, and sharing their insights
and experiences. In this way, individuals and groups of teachers can undertake
activities focusing on personal and professional development.
Chris Jacques, co-ordinator
Teacher Training
Are you involved in teacher training? If so, why not become involved
in the IATEFL Teacher Trainer Special Interest Group?
We aim to represent the interests of the teacher trainer community as
well as to enhance the professional development of its members. We organise
events both at regular IATEFL conferences and symposiums and on other occasions,
and we publish a newsletter three times a year, and keep our members up-to-date
with key issues in the profession.
At the moment we are in the process of redefining how we can meet our
members' wishes and needs more precisely, and are responding to a questionnaire
sent out in 1996. Better networking with parts of the world where we have
not previously been present has been strongly requested by the membership
and we are looking into ways of achieving this.
The Teacher Trainer SIG was present this year at the IATEFL conference
in Keele, and members unable to attend this conference will be able to read
the papers that were given in a forthcoming newsletter. We had a lively
track at the Vienna IATEFL Symposium and the papers presented are included
in the proceedings.
Gillian Porter Ladousse, co-ordinator
Testing
Promoting evaluation, assessment and teaching within EFL--this is the
aim of the Testing Special Interest Group.
As the approach to learner assessment slowly changes from psychometrics
to more educational assessment, so the focus of the Testing SIG opens up.
We invite members to share their experience of testing and alternative assessment
processes.
The Testing SIG has been co-operating with other SIGs and has been active
internationally. We have had shared symposiums with the Learner Independence
SIG, the Young Learners SIG and Research SIG. Proceedings from both events
have been published by IATEFL, Putting Learners in their Proper Place and
Entry Points. We have a track at the annual IATEFL conference. Past events
have been held in Austria, UK, Argentina, and future events are to be held
in Germany and Poland.
Young Learners
Many teachers are now working with learners between the ages of five
and sixteen. As the interest in teaching English to young learners steadily
grows there is a greater demand for communication and exchange of ideas
in this field. The Young Learners SIG aims to help teachers and teacher
trainers circulate these ideas and the latest theories through their ever-increasing
global network of members.
The Young Learners Special Interest Group (SIG) has grown from strength
to strength ever since its beginnings in 1986. Through its newsletter and
its events, the SIG is able to provide its members with ideas, support,
networking, and suggest avenues for further training and professional development.
The newsletter is written by and for the members as it is their contributions
which are collated into the newsletter: these include practical classroom
ideas and tips, reviews, articles on methodology and theory and competitions.
The SIG holds regular seminars and conferences, often in conjunction
with other SIGs, such as the Teacher Trainers, Learner Independence, and
Testing SIGs. Recent events have been held in The Netherlands, UK, Austria,
Spain, and the Czech Republic. Forthcoming events are going to be held in
Greece, Turkey, France and Italy. The focus of these seminars and conferences
reflects the interest of the members and the key issues of the day, such
as training teachers of young learners, learner independence, and testing
and assessment.
This article copyright © 1997 by the author.
Document URL: http://www.jalt-publications.org/tlt/files/97/aug/IATEFL.html
Last modified: January 30, 1998
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