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Journal ArticleDOI

Training and Supervision of College Foreign Language Teachers

Michio P. Hagiwara
- 01 Oct 1969 - 
- Vol. 3, Iss: 1, pp 90-107
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TLDR
The authors describes the teaching assistants in French, their training and supervision, and the extent of the supervisor's duties at the Univ. of Michigan, which aims to prepare the inexperienced assistants, in the shortest time possible, to decrease direct supervision gradually, and to encourage outstanding instructors to participate in the administration and supervision of the lower level courses.
Abstract
In the past two decades modern language instruction has changed considerably in theory and practice. Unfortunately, opportunities for young college teachers to evaluate and increase their language proficiency and teaching skills or increase their knowledge of methodology and linguistics have seldom been available. Many surveys seem to indicate that only a few foreign language departments have instituted any systematic training of graduate assistants. This article describes the teaching assistants in French, their training and supervision, and the extent of the supervisor's duties at the Univ. of Michigan. The program there aims to prepare the inexperienced assistants, in the shortest time possible, to decrease direct supervision gradually, and to encourage outstanding instructors to participate in the administration and supervision of the lower-level courses. It does not demand excessive time and energy from the assistants or cause major changes in the existing requirements for degree work. A description of the system offers an insight into the complexity of the problem as well as possibilities of solution. Moreover, an analysis of the past reports concerning the practices adopted by some institutions and the articles outlining ideal training programs yields useful information for the development and evaluation of a college foreign language teacher training and supervision program.

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Challenges in the 1990s for College Foreign Language Programs. Issues in Language Program Direction: A Series of Annual Volumes.

TL;DR: This collection of papers includes the following: "Style Wars: Teacher-Student Style Conflicts in the Language Classroom" (Rebecca L. Oxford, Madeline E. Ehrman, and Roberta Z. Lavine), "Articulating Learning in High School and College Programs: Holistic Theory in the Foreign Language Curriculum" (Janet Swaffar), and "Reconsidering the FL Requirement: From SeatTime to Proficiency in the Minnesota Experience".
Journal ArticleDOI

Challenges in the 1990s for college foreign language programs

TL;DR: A collection of papers about style wars in the language classroom can be found in this article, which includes the following: "Style Wars: Teacher-Student Style Conflicts in the Language Classroom" (Rebecca L. Oxford, Madeline E. Ehrman, and Roberta Z. Lavine); "Articulating Learning in High School and College Programs: Holistic Theory in the Foreign Language Curriculum" (Janet Swaffar); "Reconsidering the FL Requirement: From SeatTime to Proficiency in the Minnesota Experience" (
Journal ArticleDOI

Innovations in Teaching Assistant Development: An Apprenticeship Model

TL;DR: This article described an apprenticeship model that was developed and implemented across several language areas within one department at a large Canadian university and found that the apprenticeship program is very successful in training incoming graduate students to become competent foreign language instructors.

Personal Practical Knowledge of Graduate Spanish-Teaching Assistants: An Issue of Experience

TL;DR: The knowledge of instruction of the experienced GSTAs was found to be more developed than that of the inexperienced group, and they also relied more on experience than their new counterparts.
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