English Language
Institute
2005 Newsletter
From the director's desk .
  ELI wins record grant to expand teacher training in 2006  
  Faculty search fills full-time positions  
  Katharine Schneider retires  
  CAP students admitted to the University of Delaware  
  Third group of Algerian educators train at ELI, prepare for international conference  
  MA TESL graduates find job success  
  Conditional admissions for qualified PreMBA students  
  ALLEI continues to train lawyers and law students  
  Special Programs  
  Conference held for Chilean schoolteachers  
  Boy Scout project serves Chilean schoolchildren  
  Christina School District English Language Learners  
  Classroom notes  
  In memoriam: Ruth Jackson  
  Administrator Profile: Deb Detzel  
  Tutoring Center news  
  Evening classes offered to the community  
  ELI prepared for new internet-based TOEFL  
  ELI alum continues UD collaboration  
  Campus links  
  This old house  
  Evening of art  
  Personnel notes  
  Professional activities of faculty and staff  
  Homestay/host family programs: Bigger than ever  
  Cecily Sawyer-Harmon, homestay mom, instinctively  
  A sampler of 2005 graduates  
  Alumni news  
  Former ELI student thanks Newark community  
  Greetings to our alumni  

Conference held for Chilean schoolteachers

Have teacher trainer credentials, will travel. That could well be the motto for ELI instructor Susan Coakley. Coakley flew to Santiago, Chile, for a week in July to meet with Chilean schoolteachers who had previously received EFL training at ELI in 2004, a program which she coordinated.

Susan Coakley (standing, fifth from left) met with
2004 participants in the Chilean Teacher Training Program at a conference in Santiago in July.
 

The trip––unlike Coakley’s first follow-up visit in 2003 in which she toured schools––consisted of a conference for all the Chilean English teachers who trained abroad in 2004. This included sites in California, Canada and Australia, as well as the University of Delaware. Of the 23 teachers who visited Delaware in November 2004, 18 attended the conference. They all gave presentations demonstrating what they had learned in Delaware and how they were applying their newly acquired knowledge in their classrooms and sharing it with their colleagues.

Coakley was very favorably impressed with the progress made by these teachers.

“They spent a very intensive four weeks in Delaware last fall. Now I see that they have been working just as hard since they returned,” said Coakley.

“Each teacher has a project that he or she is implementing, based on their needs and on the methodologies and technologies learned during the 2004 program. Some teachers have worked at improving mostly their own teaching, while sharing with their colleagues. Others have focused on involving other teachers and classes throughout their schools. Still others planned activities that required collaboration throughout the town or district. All of the presentations showed a great deal of what the teachers had learned in Delaware and how well they have worked since their return to their schools.”

The Chilean Teacher Training Program has been held at the English Language Institute for five out of the past seven years since the program was established by the Chilean Ministry of Education as part of its Education Reform movement. The Ministry is stressing education in technology and in English in order to maintain and improve Chile’s position in the globalized economy.

Beginning in 1999, more than 125 English teachers from Chile have spent time in Newark, studying technology and pedagogy, improving their English proficiency and their teaching.

“The most amazing part of it all,” said Coakley, “is the realization that the work we do at ELI is being spread throughout Chile.