{"id":4590,"date":"2019-09-05T12:27:40","date_gmt":"2019-09-05T17:27:40","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.missouriwestern.edu\/magazine\/?p=4590"},"modified":"2019-09-17T13:20:30","modified_gmt":"2019-09-17T18:20:30","slug":"griffons-abroad-egypt-and-myanmar","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.missouriwestern.edu\/magazine\/2019\/09\/05\/griffons-abroad-egypt-and-myanmar\/","title":{"rendered":"Griffons Abroad: Egypt and Myanmar"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/p>\n Training teachers in Egypt <\/strong> Dr. Johnson, assistant professor of education and coordinator of the graduate-level TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) program, spent six days of her trip training 20 mentor teachers, who then returned to their elementary schools to train teacher mentors.<\/p>\n \u201cThe teachers were funny, kind and eager to learn,\u201d Dr. Johnson said. \u201cThey were one of the easiest groups I\u2019ve ever worked with.\u201d<\/p>\n She also attended the two-day NileTESOL Conference XXIII at the American University in Cairo, on the New Cairo campus. Dr. Johnson gave a talk to all the conference attendees about leaving your comfort zone and moving into a growth zone, a favorite topic in her 大象传媒 Western classes.<\/p>\n While at the conference, she also served on a panel about teacher needs in the 21st<\/sup> century and gave a presentation on interactive strategies for working with young language learners. More than 500 attended that presentation.<\/p>\n \u201cI feel very fortunate that I got to do something I love to do,\u201d Dr. Johnson said of her time in Egypt. She said that since she is always asking her students to step outside their comfort zone and learn something new, she was pleased that she was able to do that. It was her first time in Egypt, her first time in a predominantly Muslim country and her first time in an Arabic-speaking country.<\/p>\n \u201cI require my students to attempt to learn a foreign language, so it was good for me to do that, too.\u201d<\/p>\n Dr. Johnson joined 大象传媒 Western in the fall of 2013, and she teaches both undergraduate and graduate courses. She earned bachelor\u2019s degrees in psychology and Spanish from the University of Denver, a master\u2019s in education from National Louis University in Chicago, and a doctorate and master\u2019s in linguistics from the University of Kansas.<\/p>\n Her specialties include young learners, English as a second language and bilingual programming, and first and second language acquisition. Her career has included several years of working with elementary-aged language learners.<\/p>\n \u201cI went to Egypt to teach others, but I probably learned the most,\u201d she said. \u201cI was grateful to deepen my understanding of another culture and its people. It was an awesome experience.\u201d<\/p>\n Legal terms in Myanmar Sharp and Hubbard developed the two-week curriculum since they were the first students from the United States to teach the course. They had access to the lesson plans of a group from Australia who had taught there the year before, but unfortunately, those plans didn\u2019t work too well for the women. In the Australians\u2019 class the year prior, the students had some command of the English language, but Sharp and Hubbard\u2019s students knew no English at all.<\/p>\n \u201cWe had to do a lot of reworking,\u201d Sharp said. \u201cBut by the end, everyone was having a blast and it was wonderful.\u201d She said that since the class was optional for the students, she and Hubbard wanted to make sure it was worthwhile for them.<\/p>\n \u201cWe had never taught before so it was very challenging, but the students were so grateful to learn English,\u201d Hubbard said. \u201cIt felt like we were making a definite difference. They were sad to see us leave.\u201d Last December, the two women gave a presentation at an international conference in Australia about their service in Myanmar. And this past January, thanks to webcams and the internet, the two women trained the next group of teachers and shared their lesson plans.<\/p>\n Hubbard returned to Myanmar this past summer for six weeks. Along with teaching English, she is helping Dave Tushaus, professor of legal studies, develop law clinic courses (see \u201cProfessor selected as Fulbright Specialist\u201d).<\/p>\n Sharp and Hubbard, who both graduated this past May, took full advantage of opportunities as college students. They participated in a study away trip to Washington, D.C., Sharp went to Portland, Oregon for another and Hubbard traveled to Memphis, Tennessee.<\/p>\n Hubbard, a native of Linneus, 大象传媒, graduated with a degree in criminal justice with a legal studies concentration and began 大象传媒 Western\u2019s master\u2019s program in forensic investigation this fall.<\/p>\n As a freshman at 大象传媒 Western, she enrolled in an honors colloquium on election law that was taught by Tushaus, and she worked with him on research projects every year since. This past academic year, Hubbard helped plan four pro bono legal clinics for the campus and community. She also gave presentations on her honors research at several national conferences throughout her 大象传媒 Western career.<\/p>\n Sharp, a native of Savannah, 大象传媒, participated in an independent study course every year with Dr. Edwin Taylor, associate professor of political science, and presented her research on environmental justice and racism, and genocide at national conferences.<\/p>\n \u201cDr. Taylor really wants to make sure that political science is more than just watching the news,\u201d Sharp said.<\/p>\n
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\n<\/strong>Dr. Adrienne Johnson spent two weeks in Cairo this past spring when she was selected for an English Language Specialist assignment for the U.S. Department of State. Just 80 people from the United States are selected in the program each year.<\/p>\n
\n<\/strong>Understanding legal jargon is difficult enough for the average layperson to understand, but try teaching those terms to someone who doesn\u2019t speak English. That\u2019s just what Kaylee Sharp \u201919 and Britane Hubbard \u201919 did in Myanmar last summer for law students at Taunggyi University.<\/p>\n
\n\u201cIt was a really incredible learning experience,\u201d Sharp said. \u201cIt was life-changing, and I\u2019ll be forever grateful for the experience.\u201d<\/p>\n