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Click each sound icon below to hear Director Emeritus John Means answer questions about NASILP students. Click on each question to link to a textual summary of each respective answer.

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John Means with Virginia Marcus

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What type of student is most likely to succeed in a rigorous self-instructional language program ("SILP")?
Why is more expected of students in this type of study than of those in the standard classroom-based instructional format?
Specifically, what are students expected to do during a typical week?
Is there one, single, overarching point that defines the essential nature of language study in a NASILP program?
For all practical purposes, aren't tutors more or less the same as teachers?
Isn't that what regular teachers do?
In practical terms, what does it really mean to be one's own teacher?
Students are expected to commit an hour or two every day to language study?
What if some students simply haven't had the time to go over the day's lesson before going to the tutorial session?
Couldn't the same thing could be said for team sports, or playing in an orchestra?
In, for example, their high school Spanish or French class, students probably had to learn lots of verb conjugations. Will such things be as important in this learning format?
In a self-directed language program, are the text and audio-visual materials the primary resources for learning?
Are grades for the course based on exam scores and class participation?
As soon as the students are tested, do examiners inform them of their grades?


Q.
What type of student is most likely to succeed in a rigorous self-instructional language program ("SILP")?

A.
In general, the more mature student fares best: the student who has a serious, long-term commitment to learning the language, and who is sufficiently disciplined to accept responsibility for daily preparation using all the resources required for the task. The dilettante and the procrastinator won't have the necessary "staying power."

Q.
Why is more expected of students in this type of study than of those in the standard classroom-based instructional format?

A.
In the classroom setting, the instructor leads students through the materials with teaching strategies that can be tailored to the learner, and encourages daily preparation with such time-honored motivation techniques as quizzes. In contrast, the SILP student must be goal-oriented and self-motivated, and is expected to introduce him/herself to the assigned materials. The tutor is a valuable resource, but is not trained to walk students through the text in the same way that one's high school teacher did.


Q.
Specifically, what are students expected to do during a typical week?

A.
At the start of the term, there should be some form of orientation for all new students that acquaints them with the basics, such as the regularly-scheduled meetings with the tutor at least twice a week, daily independent work with text and audio materials at the pace established by the program, periodic progress reports for the coordinator, and so forth.

During the semester, students are expected to spend an hour or two every day, working with the audio or video (tapes or CD-ROM), and with the text, manuals and workbooks. One responsibility is to introduce oneself to new material, on which the tutor builds the practice sessions which are best understood as "learning by doing."


Q.
Is there one, single, overarching point that defines the essential nature of language study in a NASILP program?

A.
Yes. The student does not have a teacher, and assumes responsibility for making use of a wide range of learning resources which include, among other things, regular small-group tutorials with a native-speaker of the language. Students must have a very clear understanding of what is expected of them.


Q.
For all practical purposes, aren't tutors more or less the same as teachers?

A.
No, tutors are not teachers, although they do provide students with direct, live, oral interaction with a native-speaker. Tutors are the best resource for oral practice and modeling of language use. They also monitor and correct the learner's speech as only a native-speaker can do.


Q.
Isn't that what regular teachers do?

A.
It's certainly a part of what classroom teachers do. But, unlike most classroom teachers, tutors will not introduce students to each new lesson, nor will they explain the text as a teacher might. Rather, tutors will assume that the students have already prepared themselves for the day's practice of the assigned material.


Q.
In practical terms, what does it really mean to be one's own teacher?

A.
It means that the learner must be strongly self-motivated and willing to make a serious commitment to daily study of the language. And, since language-learning is skill-building, "doing" it is far more important than analyzing it.


Q.
Students are expected to commit an hour or two every day to language study?

A.
That is certainly ideal, but of course a student's schedule on some days may be full, even without language study. The point is: daily exposure to the language is much more effective than leaving it for, say, the weekend. Nor can language learning be crammed into a frantic week or two at the end of the term.


Q.
What if some students simply haven't had the time to go over the day's lesson before going to the tutorial session?

A.
The tutorials are highly interactive, and students won't benefit very much from them if they can't participate at the level of those who are prepared.


Q.
Couldn't the same thing could be said for team sports, or playing in an orchestra?

A.
Those are also good examples of what I'm talking about - and its quite different from the way students approach their other academic assignments.


Q.
In, for example, their high school Spanish or French class, students probably had to learn lots of verb conjugations. Will such things be as important in this learning format?

A.
It is important to understand the structure of a language, but studying only a series of facts about a language doesn't prepare one to use it in real-life settings. There is a difference between factual knowledge about a language, and being able to use a language for genuine communication. That is why the text and tapes or disks focus on authentic use of the language in its own culture.


Q.
In a self-directed language program, are the text and audio-visual materials the primary resources for learning?

A.
Yes. The texts, with their accompanying A/V materials, have been specifically selected for this particular approach to language study. However, the tutorials are also very important. Students meet in small group sessions with a tutor who is an educated native-speaker of the language and who facilitates use of the language in culturally authentic, adult, conversational situations. Also, the program coordinator should be able to help students who are having problems related to the structure or functioning of the course.


Q.
Are grades for the course based on exam scores and class participation?

A.
Grades reflect students' ability to use the language skills they have learned. The tutor is never the examiner, and plays no role at all in the final exam. The examiner is a language professional - probably a professor of the language - who has had wide experience evaluating the performance of students in this type of program. The section of this discussion pertaining to testing addresses the exam format in detail.


Q.
As soon as the students are tested, do examiners inform them of their grades?

A.
Not usually. Examiners may wish to review their notes and any written materials after all exams are completed, then giving the grades and comments to the coordinator a day or two later. Needless to say, students may occasionally raise questions about their grades with the coordinator, who will take the matter up with the examiner if warranted.


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