Tuesday, 5th November (Cambridge)

1. Two pieces on Higher Education for a change of sorts:

i) A trenchant piece for University World News by Nishat Riaz & Mary Stiasny, Universities have a duty beyond the production of knowledge https://www.universityworldnews.com/post.php?story=2024102508233637

ii) a cool, detached look at the future of international student recruitment in/for the UK by Vincenzo Raimo and Janet B Ilieva for the HEPI blog, Building Sustainable Futures: Rethinking International Student Recruitment in the UK https://www.hepi.ac.uk/2024/10/31/building-sustainable-futures-rethinking-international-student-recruitment-in-the-uk/

2. The November issue of TTJ (Teacher Trainer Journal), with its usual rich global coverage, is here https://pilgrimsttj.com/ with PDF below.

[file x 1]

3. Free to download from Mark Hancock, The Pair Squares Collection, for work in class on minimal pairs http://hancockmcdonald.com/materials/pair-squares-collection Fifty sets of cards like the example below (which I hope survives its electronic journey). In my day, we used Ann Baker’s Ship or Sheep? – which to my surprise is still in print but a bit more expensive than I remember!

4. As we await the results of the knife-edge US presidential election, here’s a TED talk from Lawrence Lessig, How AI could hack democracy, which begins with some staggeringly high percentages relating to well-educated people who believed the election was stolen last time round – and still believe it was stolen, three years on (as was confirmed big time on last night’s TV news here in UK) https://www.ted.com/talks/lawrence_lessig_how_ai_could_hack_democracy?subtitle=en (Interesting fact in passing: Lessig was the founder of Creative Commons.)

5. And, finally, a very pleasant accidental discovery, the Booker Prize Monthly Spotlight, which this month focuses on The Story of the Lost Child’ by Elena Ferrante, translated by Ann Goldstein. Extract, guide and competition (enter before 29th November!) here  https://thebookerprizes.com/the-booker-library/features/monthly-spotlight-the-story-of-the-lost-child-by-elena-ferrante

Last month was Sarah Waters https://thebookerprizes.com/the-booker-library/features/monthly-spotlight-the-little-stranger-by-sarah-waters

And the month before, Jon Fosse https://thebookerprizes.com/the-booker-library/features/monthly-spotlight-the-other-name-septology-i-ii-by-jon-fosse-translated Plus a wealth of other interesting stuff here, including ‘Where to Start’ pieces on Julian Barnes, Zadie Smith & J. M. Coetzee, in their ‘Features’ section https://thebookerprizes.com/the-booker-library/features?page=1

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Thursday, 31st October (Cambridge)

1. First up, the answers to Tuesday’s ‘name the novels’ quiz in the document below.

2. I attended a powerful Hands Up Project (HUP) event online last Saturday on Emergent education in war zones. Here’s some of the links that people shared:

The Zinn Education Project https://www.zinnedproject.org/

Teach Palestine https://teachpalestine.org/

Social Justice Books https://socialjusticebooks.org/booklists/palestine/

DevelopmentEducation.ie https://developmenteducation.ie/ and here’s their handout on teaching Palestine and Israel (PDF below as well) https://developmenteducation.ie/media/documents/Palestine_and_Israel_CDU.pdf

Here’s Nick Bilbrough explaining what HUP is all about https://youtu.be/P8CXvHeZkeU and here’s the HUP YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/@thehandsupproject71

3. Gemma De La Cruz-Duffy from Manchester Adult Education Service will be giving the next NATESOL webinar, on AI Tools for Differentiation and Feedback at 16:00 UK time on Wednesday, 6TH November. More info and registration here https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1OGe4ZDk39RVLMha_OeFTLIg9G_crRA-Dtq7LiX4PBQ4/viewform?edit_requested=true and PDF of flyer below.

Join us for a workshop where Gemma shares how teachers at her workplace are saving time and improving efficiency using AI-powered tools in differentiation and feedback [and discover] practical strategies for utilising free and accessible AI tools in your classroom, real-world examples of how AI can help you personalise learning and provide effective feedback to diverse learners, and time-saving tips for streamlining your workload and maximizing your impact.

4. This one’s a good blend of transcript and video and, in addition to being an interesting listen, would make the basis of a good lesson for students of Business Studies/English, I think: Reinventing Rolls-Royce: a conversation with Rolls-Royce CEO Tufan Erginbilgiçconducted by Michael Bershan from McKinsey & Companyhttps://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/strategy-and-corporate-finance/our-insights/reinventing-rolls-royce-a-conversation-with-ceo-tufan-erginbilgic

5. And, finally, autumn leaves in Tokyo https://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2019/10/18/travel/top-10-locals-guide-see-autumn-leaves-tokyo/ Even better than Cambridge!

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Tuesday, 29th October (Richmond)

1. This year’s IATEFL Themes online conference is this coming Saturday 2nd and Sunday 3rd November, and it’s 50% highlights from this year’s f2f conference in Brighton in April (on Saturday) and 50% Special Interest Group (SIG) presentations (on Sunday). More info and registration here https://www.iatefl.org/events/621 Programme preview below.

IATEFL Themes is free if you’re a member of IATEFL or an associate member of IATEFL through your local English teachers’ association: details of associate membership in the flyer below, if you’re not yet a member.

2. Macmillan English Young Learners’ Festival is on 4th, 6th & 8th November, repeated at 10:00, 14:00 & 21:30 each day. More info, including programme and registration here https://www.macmillanenglish.com/test-page/young-learners-festival

The world inside a child’s head truly is a magical one, and the best part is that it’s totally unique for each child. They all have their own dreams, ideas, experiences and abilities, which, to say the least, offers a certain level of challenge for their brave, creative and patient teacher! The Young Learners’ Festival will shine a spotlight on various development opportunities for teachers of young learners like individuality, personalisation, respect, imagination and academic progress.

Macmillan also have a Connecting Teens Day on Tuesday 19th November and an Educating Adults Day on Wednesday 4th December, both repeated three times in the course of the day.

3. No fewer than three pieces from Ipsos, the polling company:

What Britons are expecting/fearing from tomorrow’s budget https://www.ipsos.com/en-uk/half-britons-more-fearful-hopeful-about-how-labours-budget-announcements-will-impact-public

A technically over-complicated but rewarding piece on British Brands https://www.canva.com/design/DAGTj0mFh2g/ioNSHMo4aGyOs6jwpgtgow/view

And the latest in the Ipsos KEYS series of webinars, Global Trends 2024: In Search of a New Consensus, which presents the new Ipsos set of nine global trends https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvungLJ7okM

Screenshot of those nine trends below, just in case that’s helpful

4. Fleur Adcock died earlier this month at the age of 90. Here’s the Poetry Book Society’s tribute to her, one of her own poems, Magnolia Seed Pods

MAGNOLIA SEED PODS

Among the wonders vouchsafed to me

during my suburban wanderings

in two countries, this one and that one,

were these exotic excrescences,

each a miniature pineapple,

framed in petals the size of saucers.

The first I saw were strewn underfoot,

with no magnolia bloom in sight:

a mystification until I asked.

It was late in life when I found them.

Who would have thought I’d still be allowed

to walk out freely where there were trees

and carry on as I’ve always done:

picking things up and looking at them?

I’ve attached a picture of a splendid looking magnolia seed pod below!

Here’s Fleur reading her own work (and looking very healthy) earlier this year https://vimeo.com/976452996

5. And, finally, which twenty novels are represented in the picture below? Answers on Thursday!

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Thursday, 24th October (Cambridge)

Some reading for the weekend!

1. First up tonight, a thought-provoking LinkedIn piece from Richard Culattta, Why we need to reconsider banning phones in schools https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/why-we-need-reconsider-banning-phones-schools-richard-culatta-q0d1e/

2. Ceibal, now nearly twenty years old, was (and is) Uruguay’s imaginative response to educational challenges. One strand is Ceibal en Inglés (Ceibal in English) and they have a new publication just out, edited by Gabriela Kaplan & Antonieta Reyes, Collaboration as the axis of Ceibal en Inglés  https://ceibal.edu.uy/plataformas-y-programas/ceibal-en-ingles/sobre-biblioteca/publicaciones/

This publication brings to light the main ingredient of success in Ceibal en Inglés, which is the capacity to learn to collaborate and cooperate at all levels, that is in the classroom and beyond. Readers will find in this book several examples of successful collaboration between teachers, within institutes, between institutes and Ceibal, between Ceibal en Inglés and the public education sector, between Ceibal en Inglés and our partners in Uruguay and abroad. These articles give clear evidence that collaboration is possible, that it is possible for everyone to learn to work with interdependence, and that once this is attained, excellent educational experiences can be lived by hundreds of students in Uruguay. Each one of the articles in this publication seems to bring home one of the main tenets of collaborative learning, “Working together to achieve a common goal produces higher achievement and greater productivity than does working competitively or individualistically”.

PDF below. Thanks to Emma Rogers from Little Bridge (p. 131!) for bringing this to my attention.

3. Chrissi Nerantzi, Delyth Edwards, Simon Green & Lou Harvey from The University of Leeds have just published With love from a dissertation supervisor: Advice for the journey https://zenodo.org/records/13939375

Blurb: We are delighted to release this open book. It has been co-authored by four scholars in the School of Education at the University of Leeds to support master’s students working on their dissertations. What you will read in this book is based on the scholars’ experiences supporting students as supervisors and what they have observed and learnt individually and collectively over the years in relation to dissertation supervision. The book is written in a conversational style to connect directly with those reading and using it as a resource during their dissertation journey. While this book has been written with students in education in mind, the book may also be useful for students in a range of disciplines and professional areas, also where final projects may be used instead of dissertations. Before finalising the book, we invited students and recent graduates to review it and are grateful for their input. We have taken their valuable feedback on board to finalise the book. This book could be used by dissertation students and supervisors alike. Supervisors may also wish to use numbered pages 1-30 as a flashcard set in seminars when preparing students for working on their dissertation. It could also form the basis of a board game and other playful workshop activities to support students. Check out the licence to identify how you can use, repurpose and build on it. If you would like to get in touch with the team please contact c.nerantzi @ leeds.ac.uk (without the spaces).

PDF below.

4. Here’s an advance open-access article from ELTJ by Fruzsina Szabó & Joanna Szoke: How does generative AI promote autonomy and inclusivity in language teaching? https://academic.oup.com/eltj/advance-article/doi/10.1093/elt/ccae052/7784519 PDF below.

Abstract In recent years, artificial intelligence (AI) has increasingly made advances across various fields, including ELT. In this article we embrace an egalitarian dialogue framework to explore and understand the role of AI in language education. This format provides a useful backdrop for navigating the dual responses—enthusiasm and scepticism—by which AI’s influence in education has often been characterized. We critically assess both the advantages and limitations of AI in ELT, highlighting and praising how AI-powered tools can assist educators in differentiating instruction, promoting learner autonomy, and creating personalized and inclusive learning environments, thus making education more accessible to students with diverse and individual needs. However, the article also addresses the challenges posed by the digital divide, particularly the inequities in access to (AI) technologies in low-socioeconomic-status regions. We also reflect upon how AI can become an obstacle in developing learner autonomy due to the risks associated with overdependence on such technologies and the lack of critical skills. The article concludes that although AI presents exciting opportunities for advancing and facilitating language learning, its integration must be approached with a rational mindset to ensure that it serves to bridge educational gaps rather than intensify them.

Latest issue of ELTJ here https://academic.oup.com/eltj/issue with a number of open-access articles, including Raising awareness among the TESOL community about the professional identity tensions of women EFL teachers in Africa, From notes to writing: three students in focus and Imagining an anti-racist pronunciation pedagogy   

5. And, finally and one hopes not elegiacally, from Wicked Leeks, The Declining Butterfly Effect https://wickedleeks.riverford.co.uk/opinion/food-farming-fairness-with-will-white-a-future-without-butterflies/

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Tuesday, 22nd October (Richmond)

1. Preply is one of the bigger online tutorial organisations. Their Online Teaching Conference 2024 starts this Thursday, 24th October, https://preply-tutors-conference-2024.vfairs.com/

PDF of programme below and here’s the high-octane blurb:

Unlock your career potential: Connect, learn & grow. Get ready for three days of unmissable talks from leading minds in the teaching industry. Our conference gives teachers worldwide the chance to discover insights, techniques, and cutting-edge tools to take their teaching and career to new heights. We’ve also prepared a number of virtual meetups, Q&A sessions, and goodie bags to help you get the most out of the event. Completely free, catering for eight languages, and open to all teachers worldwide – you’re going to want to be there.

2. Well intentioned, certainly, the United Nations’ Global Digital Compact https://www.un.org/techenvoy/global-digital-compact

The preamble states

1. Digital technologies are dramatically transforming our world. They offer immense potential benefits for the well-being and advancement of people and societies and for our planet. They hold out the promise of accelerating the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals.

2. We can only achieve this through strengthened international cooperation that closes all digital divides between and within countries. We recognize the challenges that these divides pose for many countries, in particular developing countries, which have pressing development needs and limited resources.

3. We recognize that the pace and power of emerging technologies are creating new possibilities but also new risks for humanity, some of which are not yet fully known. We recognize the need to identify and mitigate risks and to ensure human oversight of technology in ways that advance sustainable development and the full enjoyment of human rights.

4. Our goal is an inclusive, open, sustainable, fair, safe and secure digital future for all. This Global Digital Compact sets out the objectives, principles, commitments and actions we undertake to achieve it in the non-military domain.

5. We have strong foundations on which to build. Our digital cooperation rests on international law, including the Charter of the United Nations, international human rights law and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. We remain committed to the outcomes of the World Summit on the Information Society reflected in the Geneva Declaration of Principles and Plan of Action and the Tunis Agenda for the Information Society. The United Nations provides a critical platform for the global digital cooperation we need, and we will harness existing processes to do so.

6. Our cooperation must be agile and adaptable to the rapidly changing digital landscape. As Governments, we will work in collaboration and partnership with the private sector, civil society, international organizations, the technical and academic communities and all other stakeholders, within their respective roles and responsibilities, to realize the digital future we seek.

PDF of full text below.

3. JELI is the open-access Journal of Education, Language, and Ideology and has just published its fourth issue https://jelipub.com/

The Journal of Education, Language, and Ideology (JELI) is an international peer-reviewed academic journal (online-only) that publishes rigorous scholarship that advances inquiries in issues related to ideology, language, and education. Although articles are written in English, the journal welcomes studies dealing with the teaching and learning of languages other than English as well. JELI invites cutting-edge research from around the world with sound and diverse methodological designs and innovative implications for teaching multiple languages or any one language as a first, second, or third language. The journal is open-access, and the published articles are freely available to anyone.

Their most downloaded article thus far has been Ideologies of Mother Tongue at an Indian University: From Stage to Discussion by Christina P. Davis & Chaise LaDousa PDF below. https://jelipub.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/davisladousa_2023_ideologies_of_mother.pdf

The concept of mother tongue gained salience in India in the mid-nineteenth century and has been central to language and education policy, scholarship in the humanities and social sciences, and lay conceptions of language. While scholars have outlined the multiple meanings and uses of the term, we move the analysis of mother tongue from its possibilities to moments of practice.

(How does JELI manage with quite such a large editorial board, I wonder?)

4. There’s an ECML BarCamp on AI for Language Education from 16:00 to 18:00 UK time on Tuesday, 5th November, for which I think places might be limited, hence this early notice.

Flyer here (and below) https://www.ecml.at/Portals/1/7MTP/AI-Lang/documents/AI%20Lang_invitation-BarCamp1%205nov24.pdf?ver=2024-10-07-165315-707

registration here  https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSd6x72-3fDUcyJWQpFTOjhKcb53TfpDqbnfd-L-nYc19xVAAA/viewform

and more on the AI for language education project here https://www.ecml.at/ECML-Programme/Programme2024-2027/AIforlanguageeducation/tabid/5856/language/en-GB/Default.aspx

Just in case you need it, like I did, more on the etymology of the term BarCamp here! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BarCamp

5. And, finally, Dish, a weekly podcast dinner party https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/dish/id1626354833

Not all the guests will be known to listeners outside the UK, but Damian Lewis, Anna Maxwell Martin, Mary Berry and Stanley Tucci may be?

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Thursday, 17th October (Cambridge)

1. The latest edition of Oxford University Press’s English Language Teaching Online Conference, ELTOC begins next Thursday, 24th October. More info and registration here https://elt.oup.com/feature/global/eltoc/?cc=gb&selLanguage=en

Topics to be covered include ‘How AI can save your time’, ‘Video and multimodal literacy’ & ‘The power of concept-based inquiry’.

2. The Carbon Brief strapline is ‘Clear on Climate’. They’re offering a webinar at 15:00 UK time next Tuesday, 22nd October: What to watch at COP16. Registration here https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/5817289937503/WN_PIykxVlUTZKt5vip5YzEjw#/registration

Carbon Brief’s specialist team of food, land and nature journalists has travelled to Cali, Colombia to cover the COP16 UN biodiversity summit. They are hosting a free webinar where they will discuss the key issues facing negotiators in Cali, plus what outcomes to expect from the summit. They will also be answering your questions.

3. Two free-to-view pieces from The Paris Review:

A conversation between Merve Emre & Sally Rooney, Loving the Limitations of the Novel https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2024/10/09/loving-the-limitations-of-the-novel-a-conversation-between-sally-rooney-and-merve-emre/

Unlocked for this week only, a short story by Morgan Thomas, ‘Everything I Haven’t Done’ https://www.theparisreview.org/fiction/8326/everything-i-havent-done-morgan-thomas

4. McKinsey have just issued a new report, The Skills Revolution and the Future of Learning and Earning https://tinyurl.com/5eysf8ue PDF below.

As companies in all sectors deploy new technologies including automation and artificial intelligence (AI), workers need to adapt their capabilities continuously. Private- and public-sector leaders have a critical role to play in helping prepare the workforce of tomorrow for this skills revolution. Based on the latest McKinsey research, this paper examines trends across the major stages of education, from early childhood to lifelong learning, with a particular focus on the Middle East and North Africa. It highlights the growing importance of skills at all these learning stages and examines how new technologies and approaches can help students prepare for the future.

5. And, finally and possibly unexpectedly, the Kate Bush experience of your dreams, Baby Bushka, is finally here! https://www.ilovebabybushka.com/

Thanks to Neil Cooper for that one, from his blog, The Noise of Art https://neilcooper.substack.com/

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Tuesday, 15th October (Richmond)

1. A good blog post for Macmillan English by my NILE colleague, Jason Skeet: What is assessment for learning and why is it important? https://www.macmillanenglish.com/blog-resources/article/advancing-learning-what-is-assessment-for-learning-and-why-is-it-important

Assessment for learning is one of those terms used frequently in education but often discussed in differing ways, so it can end up meaning different things to different people. One source of confusion lies in the idea of what is meant by ‘assessment’, which for many people involves testing and grading learners. Dylan Wiliam — someone who has written extensively about assessment for learning and whose work informs most of what I have to say here — is on record as saying he wishes he could go back in time and popularise the term ‘responsive teaching’ instead. It is the notion of assessing and then responding to learners’ needs, as these needs arise in the process of the learning, that lies at the heart of effective assessment for learning.

2. Alexei Navalny’s prison diaries have just been published, as part of his about-to-be-posthumously published memoir, Patriot. Here’s an extract from them, published in The New Yorker last week, lighter in tone than one might perhaps expect:

We all have that classic labor-camp look that belongs in a movie about the Gulag. The heavy jackets, fur hats, and mittens, the enormous wooden shovels, each of which is so heavy you would think it was made of cast iron, especially after it gets saturated with water, which freezes. They are the selfsame shovels used by the soldiers who cleared the streets of my military home town when I was a child. You might have thought that in the thirty years that have passed since then shovel technology would have progressed toward production of lighter shovels, but in Russia, as with so many other things, we didn’t hack it. We were brought a couple of lightweight shovels that immediately broke. The response was the usual “Oh, well, what the hell, let them use the wooden shovels. We’ve used them for shovelling snow all our lives. They are reliable.” As if to say, our grandfathers invented these shovels and far be it from us to doubt their wisdom by trying to improve something that is already ideal.

So there I was, scowling, wearing a heavy winter jacket, and wielding a wooden shovel with snow frozen to it. The only thing that amused me, and at least partly enabled me to accept this reality, is that on these occasions I feel like the hero of my all-time favorite joke. It is a Soviet joke, but has a certain relevance today.

A boy goes out for a stroll in the courtyard of his apartment block. Boys playing soccer there invite him to join in. The boy is a bit of a stay-at-home, but he’s interested and runs over to play with them. He eventually manages to kick the ball, very hard, but unfortunately it crashes through the window of the basement room where the janitor lives. Unsurprisingly, the janitor emerges. He is unshaven, wearing a fur hat and quilted jacket, and clearly the worse for a hangover. Infuriated, the janitor stares at the boy before rushing at him.

The boy runs away as fast as he can and thinks, What do I need this for? After all, I’m a quiet, stay-at-home sort of boy. I like reading. Why play soccer with the other boys? Why am I running away right now from this scary janitor when I could be lying at home on the couch reading a book by my favorite American writer, Hemingway?

Meanwhile, Hemingway is reclining on a chaise longue in Cuba, with a glass of rum in his hand, and thinking, God, I’m so tired of this rum and Cuba. All this dancing, and shouting, and the sea. Damn it, I’m a clever guy. Why am I here instead of being in Paris discussing existentialism with my colleague Jean-Paul Sartre over a glass of Calvados?

Meanwhile, Jean-Paul Sartre, sipping Calvados, is looking at the scene in front of him and thinking, How I hate Paris. I can’t stand the sight of these boulevards. I’m sick and tired of all these rapturous students and their revolutions. Why do I have to be here, when I long to be in Moscow, engaging in fascinating dialogue with my friend Andrei Platonov, the great Russian writer?

Meanwhile, in Moscow, Platonov is running across a snow-covered courtyard and thinking, If I catch that little bastard, I’ll fucking kill him.

Here’s the BBC News piece on Patriot https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cj6eppg77geo

And here’s The New Yorker piece (which – Cross fingers crossed – you might be able to read without a subscription) https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/10/21/alexei-navalny-patriot-memoir

3. The Korean novelist Han Kang, perhaps best known for The Vegetarian, won the 117th Nobel Prize for Literature last week, the first Korean writer to do so. Here’s a number of gift articles from The New York Times about and by her:

The announcement of her Nobel award https://tinyurl.com/utazeuxz

The 2016 NYT review of The Vegetarian https://tinyurl.com/3cxuswmm

Her own piece, Read Your Way Through Seoul https://tinyurl.com/2328xx63

4. An update on one of the bees in my bonnet, the Lucy Letby case https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2024/oct/10/lucy-letby-police-cps-handling-case-raises-new-concerns-about-convictions

5. And, finally and spectacularly, the Northern Lights courtesy of Edinburgh University https://www.instagram.com/edinburghuniversity/p/DA_SdZ6idyy/?img_index=1

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Thursday, 10th October (Cambridge)

1. Here’s one from Bill Gates that got lost at the back of the drawer earlier this summer, Can online classes change the game for some students?, an interview with Blaire Penry, the 2024 Washington State Teacher of the Year https://www.gatesnotes.com/Blaire-Penry-believes-online-classes-change-the-game-for-some-students plus a short video https://youtu.be/8v8N_ily4Xs

2. Here’s an open-access TESOL Quarterly piece, English in Displacement: Language Learning and Test Preparation Experiences of Refugees and Asylum Seekers by Brigita Séguis, Heidi Miu & Ross Goldstone https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/tesq.3356 PDF below.

Here’s the abstract: In an effort to better support adult and refugee English language learners, this paper aims to focus on understanding the needs and experiences of one specific group, that is, refugee and asylum seeker healthcare professionals (RASHPs), based in the United Kingdom. RASHPs tend to be highly educated and experienced learners. One of their main objectives is to acquire high levels of English language proficiency and possibly return to clinical practice in their new host country. The data for the study come from an online survey that was completed by 106 respondents, followed by interviews conducted with three nurses and nine doctors. Additionally, two language test preparation teachers were also interviewed. The findings show that RASHPs represent a very diverse group of learners, with a range of linguistic backgrounds, age groups, and proficiency levels. Results further reveal that RASHPs often face a range of situational, technological and psycho-social barriers that may prevent them from fully engaging with their English language and test preparation classes. The study concludes with a series of classroom and policy-level recommendations that could help ensure better outcomes for refugee and asylum seeker learners.

3. Here’s Russell Stannard’s presentation at IATEFL Poland back in April on 5 Key AI Tools for Language Teachers https://youtu.be/9uZHjc0Uxx8 I’m not quite sure that AI did a perfect job on the URLs in his abstract, though!

Bags more stuff on Russell’s YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/@ttvRussell

4. A Rolling Stone piece by Jon Blistein, Inside the $621 Million Legal Battle for the ‘Soul of the Internet’ https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/internet-archive-major-label-music-lawsuit-1235105273/

Major record labels have sued the online library Internet Archive over thousands of old recordings, raising the question: Who owns the past?

5. And, finally, a decidedly non-hagiographical blog post from Cocoa Runners on 200 Years of Cadbury’s https://cocoarunners.com/blog/200-years-of-cadburys/

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Tuesday, 8th October (Richmond)

1. I’ve mentioned Carne Ross’s blog, Gentle Anarchy, before. Here’s his deconstruction of an article in Saturday’s Financial Times by John Sawers, the onetime director of MI6, the UK’s external intelligence service, Deconstructing the Discourse of the State https://carneross.substack.com/p/deconstructing-the-discourse-of-the There’s a chance that the FT will have made him take it down before this gets posted, so I’m attaching a PDF as well – which probably makes me an accomplice to his ‘crime’. There are crimes and there are crimes …

Plus, a recent interview with John Sawers from Engelsberg Ideas which reads differently read through a Carne Ross lens, ‘We need to see these terrorist groups through their own mindsets’ https://engelsbergideas.com/essays/we-need-to-see-these-terrorist-groups-through-their-own-mindsets/

2. Here’s two legitimate copies, to redress the criminal balance of this post: issues 55 and 56 of the Cambridge journal, Studies in Language Testing, both edited by Linda Taylor and Beverley Baker and reviewing Language Assessment Literacy and Competence.

Volume 1, Research and Reflections from the Field, begins with a nice personal piece by Linda Taylor, Reflecting on an apprenticeship journey in language assessment literacy; Volume 2, Case Studies from Around the World is introduced by Beverley Baker. SILT site here https://www.cambridgeenglish.org/english-research-group/published-research/silt/ and PDFs below.

3. I stumbled across this Poem of the Week piece last week when reading a piece about Wilfred Owen which referred to Strange Meeting – which I’d not heard of – as his best-known poem https://www.theguardian.com/books/booksblog/2022/apr/04/poem-of-the-week-strange-meeting-by-wilfred-owen

4. Here’s a free course from Central Square Foundation (CSF), Building FLN (Foundational Literacy and Numeracy) Outcomes at Scale Using Structured Pedagogy, curated in collaboration with the What Works Hub for Global Education https://www.youtube.com/playlist?app=desktop&list=PL2lL2cUAI_HVJ6reU7l71n0WtX2N9xyss

CSF define FLN as “the ability to read with meaning and perform basic math calculations by the end of grade 3. It is the critical building block in a child’s learning journey and hence, needs to be prioritized. The three-episode series offers a deep dive on what the Structured Pedagogy approach is, what it means, and how can it be leveraged to design and execute effective learning programmes at scale. The 15-minute modules are anchored by members of the CSF team, who also share interesting case studies as well as highlights from (CSF) work on the ground”.

The CSF YouTube channel is here https://www.youtube.com/@CentralSquareFoundationOrg and their website here https://www.centralsquarefoundation.org/

5. And, finally, from the Scottish Book Trust, 20 Brilliant Novels set in Edinburgh https://www.scottishbooktrust.com/book-lists/20-brilliant-novels-set-in-edinburgh

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Thursday, 3rd October (Richmond)

1. First up today, another extended online celebration of teaching from the British Council, this one a ‘non-central’ event not included in Tuesday’s list, the ASEAN TeachingEnglish Online Conference 2024, Understanding our Learners. It begins next Thursday, 10th October, and runs – intermittently! – for a  month. More info and (scroll down) registration here https://www.britishcouncil.or.th/en/programmes/teach/asean2024 Conference programme here (and PDF below) https://www.britishcouncil.or.th/sites/default/files/bcapac-conference_schedule_e-brochure_1.pdf. The times in the programme are Thai time, I think, but the registration page will sort that out for you. Conveniently scheduled in the evening for ASEAN participants! Details of conference speakers here https://www.britishcouncil.or.th/en/programmes/teach/asean2024speakers

2. Colm Tóibín does one podcast a month on The Art of Reading for the Irish Arts Council, most recently on Paul Lynch’s ‘Prophet Song’, which won the Booker Prize last year https://open.spotify.com/show/08oJHDxsS0To5HLDJAKmbT And here’s Colm’s second annual ‘Irish Fiction’ lecture https://open.spotify.com/episode/1BrMT4xX44y3A9edKZVqHc?si=7f0a079fb6f1479e

3. Gallup’s annual Global Safety Report measures how safe people feel around the world. Here’s their 2024 report (PDF below) https://www.gallup.com/analytics/356996/gallup-global-safety-research-center.aspx  and here’s its Key Findings:

• In 2023, 70% of adults felt safe, up from 64% in 2013. However, this is a slight decline from the record-high 72% in 2020.

• Feelings of safety are highest in Asia-Pacific (75%), Western Europe (75%), the Middle East and North Africa (74%), Northern America (72%), and post-Soviet Eurasia (71%). Post-Soviet Eurasia has seen the most significant improvement, with a 34-percentage point increase since its low of 37% in 2006.

• Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America and the Caribbean remain the regions where people felt the least safe walking alone at night, at 51% and 47%, respectively.

• In 2023, over seven in 10 adults worldwide (71%) said they had confidence in their local police, considerably higher than the 62% who reported this in 2013.

Thanks to Maja Mandekić for that one!

4. Fredric Jameson died the other day. He was a regular contributor to The London Review of Books, who have made a number of his pieces free to read by way of tribute. I loved all six of Karl Ove Knausgaard’s ‘My Struggle’ books, but I have friends who think me mad for doing so: here’s Jameson’s wonderful piece on Knausgaard, which suggests both I and my friends are right! https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v40/n21/fredric-jameson/itemised and here’s more of his work for the paper https://www.lrb.co.uk/contributors/fredric-jameson

The latest Big Interview from Monocle happens to be with Knausgaard and “explores his fixation with death, family and freedom” https://open.spotify.com/episode/6ac03kTnfhu5dfLeUkcVmi

5. And, finally and worryingly, from The Conversation, Breathing may introduce microplastics to the brain https://theconversation.com/breathing-may-introduce-microplastics-to-the-brain-new-study-239347

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