Tuesday, 31 May 2022

IATEFL Conference , Belfast 2022.

 The annual conference for the International Association of Teachers of English as a Foreign Language was held this year in Belfast. The mission is to: link, develop and support ELT professionals worldwide. Our association has over 4,000 members in more than 130 countries and this year around 2,000 converged on Northern Ireland to celebrate our first face-2-face post-covid event.                                            

The International Conference Centre Waterfront Hall was a huge venue by the beautiful River Lagan. Our program offers a wide range of event-types: workshop sessions, poster exhibitions, publishers’ displays, small group presentations through to large plenary sessions, so many of the venue resources are put to good use but accessing them quickly between sessions may be a challenge. That’s where volunteers help to lead us in the right direction. This year we had a large group who were all extremely helpful and obliging.                                        

Angeliki and I are old hands at attending conferences and we make sure we strike a balance between being educated as delegates and as tourists! That means we select our sessions very carefully to make optimum use of our time and to make the best of what is on offer on both fronts.                                   

For me this was a mix of good and not so good: there were a few presentations which gave you food for thought; others - especially by ‘big names ‘- were disappointing in being ill-prepared or thin in content. One delegate from the Netherlands said that one presenter was ‘resting on the laurels of his past reputation’, and I had to agree with her. Another disappointment was the alarming number of cancelled sessions which must have been a real headache for the organisers.

Some of us are a bit long in the tooth, but may still have something to say. In that case we must ensure it is pertinent and well prepared. Some of the delegates had come from as far away as Uruguay and Brazil - even European delegates had endured travel delays and difficulties to get there - we need to honour their presence and be professional.                             

And so we come to Angeliki’s presentation in a room housed in the adjoining Hilton Hotel, no less. Its gold and marble loos set the tone appropriately for the level of her performance! 😊 The talk attracted a full house, went very well and generated great discussion among participants. She received very positive comments but what really made her heart sing was when a former teacher, from the university she teaches pre-sessional courses at, told her this was one of the two best presentations at the conference, saying it was perfect! She was on cloud nine after that and that encouragement will live on to her next conference.                                     

And this brings me to a further role we ‘elders’ can adopt: to mentor the less-experienced which entails attending their sessions and giving them advice and support. We should never underestimate the value of an encouraging word to someone setting out on their conference career, or simply, as is the case with Angeliki, acknowledging that someone has put a great deal of effort into making their session relevant and interesting.

What more could we do but go celebrate over a fine meal and some nice wine? 

                                        


     

Saturday, 28 May 2022

1st May - Labour Day.

 On May 1st Labour Day is commemorated globally. The historic struggles of the labour movement are remembered. In the USA towards the end of the 19th century, Trade and Labour Unions were pushing for the introduction of the 8-hour working day. Here our focus is on the rally at Haymarket Square in Chicago, Illinois – then a major industrial centre – although many rallies were taking place throughout America at the same time.

On May 4th, 1886 crowds converged to hear their selected speakers, the meeting was said to be a peaceful one, and the speeches were coming to an end. Suddenly the police arrived en masse, demanding that the people disperse. It was then that a home-made bomb was thrown at the police and shots were exchanged, though exactly what happened next is unclear. The upshot was that in all, 7 police officers and at least 4 workers were killed. From then on May 1st was designated a day of remembrance and of maintaining the momentum of the labour movement.

Leading up to Labour Day in Greece, this was posted in many areas, produced by The General Confederation of Greek Workers, informing people of the upcoming strike, place and time of meeting. And that’s about it – no information as to why it’s happening, what is being commemorated, who will be involved. It is simply taken as given that they will honour the Union call to assemble.

                                                  


What really intrigued me was that the only additional ‘information’ was a list of words with positive connotations but how they related to the unions, the strike, its objective – nothing! Why should we automatically associate these words, which are unquestionably semantically positive, with the trade union movement? There is no monopoly on them. This struck me as being lazy copywriting and irresponsible of the organisers to make such an assumption.

 The words listed by the dove image are: democracy, justice, peace, equality.

 Nice words, good words. But if you should come across one of these posters where the word chocolate has been added – another good word which has just as much right to be included in that list as I see it! – I guess you know who the perpetrator was!