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Altahair Attia Adelkarim

Reflections on a learning experience

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Title Basic Arabic for advanced learners

 

Narrator

I was the tutor and facilitator for the course

 

Situation

The setting was a room in Bristol University, where a group of PhD students, each of whom is writing a thesis on Middle-East Social Politics, have come together with a desire to learn the basics of Arabic in order to further their studies. None of them had any previous knowledge of the language.

 

Task

I hoped that I would be able to teach them the rudiments of Arabic, as well as a few pre-fabricated phrases that would be useful in context. This should give the ability for the individual to at least begin to understand the meaning when a political broadcast is made. I would feel that I had been successful if the students were able to view a report from Aljazeera and then discuss it – even if the discussion was in English, they would have to have understood enough to talk about it afterwards.

 

Actions

The first step was an introduction to the spoken word in Arabic, learning basic greetings and respectful phrases. This produced no surprise results, but the PhD group did grasp the basics very quickly. The next step was to introduce the written word in Arabic. This is a more complex field, and required deep concentration from the students. I did not expect the group to be able to read after just one lesson about the alphabet, so I was not surprised when no-one was able to do so. The lessons gave the history of the language and the links to religion (Islam), we then moved on to pre-fabricated phrases related to social politics.

 

Results

The students all gained a good background of Arabic culture and language; the students used the target language for instruction very quickly, with a rapid grasp of basic religious and polite phrases. I am meeting objectives, but each day I check if progress has been made (through plenaries), and adjust lessons accordingly. The additional outcomes were that the students were very quickly able to respond to questions in Arabic, and to write from right to left,

 

Reflections

The main reflection is that I should make more use of audio-visual (VARK) resources, as I found that students learned more quickly using this method. I also discovered that prefabricated phrases can teach a lot if the students are willing and ready to learn.

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Altahair Attia Adelkarim

OER Course

Visible to anyone in the world

Week

Topic

Resources

Suitability (G/M/B)

1

 Introduction to Arabic Language

LAO

 Good

2

The Arabic Alphabet

LAO

 Good

3

Prefabricated phrases (Politics)

AlJazeera

 Very Good

4

Prefabricated phrases (Social)

AlArabiya

 Very Good

5

Recap

 LAO ,

AlJazeera ,

AlArabiya

 Good

 

This is a course in Arabic for PhD students who are producing a thesis on Middle-East Social Politics.

I am currently teaching this group of PhD students (University of Bristol), and this OER course would be an alternative for those unable to attend. I have given the links to the students, along with my Skype username so that they can discuss at any time, making of use of technology.

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