Monday, November 18, 2019

CATESOL Recap


CATESOL 2019 Recap



CATESOL 2019 was a bit earlier than usual this year, held in Anaheim in October. Jaqueline, Stephanie, Abedin, and I all attended. Thought the conference has ended, the schedule and presenter materials are available on the conference website: CATESOL 2019.

Read on for a few highlights:


Effective Grading Through Color Coding
Jaquelin Yang




One of my favorite sessions at CATESOL this year was Charmaine Phipps’ session on more effective grading through color coding. I am working on slowly transitioning my classes to OER/ZTC, and Charmaine’s idea of color coding all of her handouts would be a useful strategy to try once I start creating my own materials.

A sample grading color scheme:
●      Green - formatting
●      Purple - structure of the paragraph or essay
●      Blue - grammar
●      Pink - sentence structure
●      Red - spelling

Charmaine prints all of her handouts for the semester on colored paper and has the students organize them in a binder in lieu of a textbook. Then, when the students write essays, she uses this same color coding system to grade them.

As a student, I never liked getting an essay back that was covered with red marks. Even if the comments were positive, it always felt somewhat discouraging. I recently tried this strategy out in one of my other classes, and once I got used to the technique, it actually made grading go by faster! I could take one look at a student’s paper and see if most of their problems were with spelling, grammar, or comprehension of the text. Additionally, I could compare various students’ work to see if I was grading fairly and consistently. Students enjoy this grading method because they can tell that you’ve put a lot of work into it, and that your marks are deliberate and meaningful.

Charmaine recommended the Pilot Frixion Erasable Pens because when you first start out with this system, it’s easy to make mistakes. I’ve recently tried out these pens, and they work wonderfully! Erasable pens have come a long way from when I last used them! My only warning is not to leave these near a cup of coffee or in an extremely hot car because the erasable feature is heat-activated.


I hope everyone has a wonderful holiday season & if you’ve tried out this grading system, let me know what you think!

Classroom Strategies for Overcoming Internal Barriers to Learner Success
Stephanie Lange



The 50th CATESOL conference in San Jose, CA was very insightful because it was the first time I have been to a CATESOL conference. There where so many great workshops to choose from that I became overwhelmed because they were all very interesting, but I could only choose to attend one at a time. Navigating through the convention center and looking for the workshop rooms was like navigating through a maze. If the room was not upstairs, then I had to go down to the basement and look for the room where the workshop would take place.  From all the workshops that I attended, “Classroom Strategies for Overcoming Internal Barriers to Learner Success” presented by Kristi Reyes, CALPRO and Mira Costa College, was my favorite. 

The workshop began with the handout - Helping Students Overcome Barriers - where the attendees had to put a checkmark next to strategies we have done in the classroom. For example, do you call students on their cellphones, or do you send students text messages to follow up on class attendance? The presenter had everyone share his or her answers on the questionnaire and a wonderful discussion took place. Ms. Reyes emphasized on the importance of open communication and positive reinforcement between the instructor and students at all times during the semester. She mentioned that by week nine, attendance drops to 59% in the classroom and it is a phenomenon that occurs every semester. As instructors, we have to be aware of many factors that are occurring in students lives: money problems, work, childcare, sickness, lack of confidence, mental illness and every other impediment that is occurring in students lives. This is where we come in as instructors; we have to encourage our students to succeed and have them see the classroom as an environment where they feel safe, and not ashamed of low grades or of their personal problems. Instructors should set short-term goals for the semester that students feel they can achieve instead of long-term goals that are not attainable. 

Time went very fast in this workshop because there was so much valuable information Ms. Reyes shared with all of the attendees. She finished the workshop recommending the book “Growth Mindset." When a student says; it is too hard, I cannot do this; we have to change their attitude immediately and say; yes, you can do it! Always taking mistakes in the classroom as a learning opportunity.


Key Take-aways
Denise Maduli-Williams




Colleges are deep in discussions/revisions about AB705 and CB 21. View the ASCC presentation on AB705: New Challenges and Benefits for ESL Faculty, and learn about the ESL CB21 Recoding Project.

CATESOL has a newest Interest Group: Online Teaching.

The three plenary speakers were highlights for me:

Huda Essa, of Culture Links, who reminded us of the privilege to know our family’s name and history.

Dr. Deborah Healey who spoke about intelligent use of technology in her plenary 
presentation: Growing Up Digital

Dr. Keith Folse who took a standing-only room on a journey around the globe while recounting his 40 years of teaching, only to bring us back home to the fact that one single teacher can have a huge impact in the lives of their students.

CATESOL 2020

The next CATESOL will be in Pasadena, October 8-11, 2020. More details to come, but keep a look out for volunteer opportunities, proposal deadlines, and scholarships.