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Reflections on in-work and pre-work BE.
by Paul Emmerson
What is Business English?
A naïve question to be sure, but a good one to step back and ask from
time to time.
Below, in blue, is a nine-point answer to that question that I wrote along
with my colleague Nick Hamilton back in 2000. It was going to be the
Introduction to Five Minute Activities for Business English (CUP) but never
made it into the book.
1. You start with a Needs Analysis.
2. The Needs Analysis leads on to a negotiated syllabus. There is no ‘main’
coursebook, although a selection of coursebook and other material may be
used. The classroom tasks and texts are personalized, based around the
interests and needs of those particular students.
3. The syllabus is designed around communication skills (telephoning,
meetings, presentations etc.) and business topics (management, marketing,
finance etc.), not the English verb tense system.
4. Language work is more lexical, including collocation and functional language,
and less grammatical than General English. Pronunciation is another
important area, especially the ability to break up speech into appropriate
phrases (phonological chunking) and to use stress to highlight key
information.
5. Teaching methodology includes much use of tasks, role-plays, discussions,
presentations, case studies and simulated real-life business situations.
Approaches and materials are mixed and matched, but there is unlikely to be
a high proportion of conventional Present-Practice lessons where one
grammar point provides the main thread of a lesson.
6. Much language work is done diagnostically following speaking activities.
Feedback slots are used for checking, correcting and developing language
(Output->Reformulate rather than Input->Practice).
7. There is use of a range of authentic and business material (magazine articles,
off-air video, company documents).
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2. 8. Delivery of the course is different: the students are ‘clients’ with high
expectations, the teachers are professional ‘trainers’ (or perhaps even
Language Consultants). Teachers and students sit together round a table like
in a meeting rather than in the classic GE ‘U’ shape with the teacher at the
front. Conversation across the table may develop its own dynamic far
removed from the teacher’s lesson plan.
9. While teachers are expected to be competent as Language Consultants,
classroom managers etc. they are usually not expected to be business
experts. This is a language course after all, not an MBA. However teachers
are expected to have an interest in business, ask intelligent questions, and
slowly develop their knowledge of the business world.
And we continued:
The above principles represent a ‘strong’ version of BE, and we realize that
there are some common situations where it is less appropriate:
Students studying BE in large groups in higher education – often called ‘prework’ students.
Students studying for a BE qualification (often pre-work as well).
Such students will almost certainly be following a coursebook, with tasks, texts
and language focus already included. Students will be less interested in or
unable to personalize activities. They might want to be taught about business
itself as well as business English.
Looking back thirteen years later it still looks like a good definition
(although ‘magazine articles’ rather than ‘internet articles’ shows how quickly
the world has changed). But the final paragraph – about pre-work BE – needs a
little more development. Back in those days I didn’t realize the simple fact that
the overwhelming majority of BE students are pre-work. Publishers have
certainly realized this: all major multi-level coursebooks that I know (except
InCompany) are aimed squarely at pre-work students. Does your coursebook
invite the student to talk about their own job? Unlikely. It would mean the
majority of users of the book being unable to contribute much.
Differences between Pre-Work and In-Work BE students
So what can I add now about the pre-work context?
My own teaching these days is in-work students coming to the UK for
short, intensive courses. In the past I have done a little teaching of pre-work
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3. groups, but not much. However, I do have contact with the pre-work BE world
through teacher training (TT). The majority of teachers who I train have large
pre-work groups in universities/colleges. On the TT courses we spend a lot of
time discussing how BE ideas can be applied to the pre-work classroom. The
table below is a short summary of the ideas that trainees most often
contribute in discussion.
Pre-Work
Typical situation: large classes, mixed ability,
following a coursebook.
Lesson structure clear, coming directly from
the coursebook.
More on business topics, less on business
communication skills.
Need models before they can do an activity:
an example email, an example presentation,
an example meeting etc.
Exam involved – course has to be designed
around this.
Few opportunities for personalization
because Ss aren’t working. However they
can draw on summer and p/t jobs,
internships.
T has to teach some business content – but
remember that Ss are studying business in
other classes.
Ss want a hybrid general/business course
with a fun, lively approach.
Large class size presents some classroom
management problems. The T has to think
creatively and use pairwork, project work
etc.
Key T skills: classroom management of large,
mixed-level groups.
Ss accept what you say/teach. They don’t
ask many questions and don’t challenge T or
each other. T knows best.
In-Work
Typical situation: small classes or 1:1, more
consistent language levels in a group,
coursebooks and other material used on a
mix-and-match basis.
Lesson structure flexible and liable to change
at any moment according to where the Ss
take the lesson.
Approximately equal balance.
Less need for models – they have experience
of emails, meetings etc. in their everyday
lives.
No exam involved – course designed around
student’s needs (ongoing/changing).
Personalization easy, necessary and
important.
Ss already know about business – in fact they
teach you about business.
Ss want a strong business/work focus. Happy
with dry, information-dense texts that a PreWork student might find boring.
Small class size allows more options for
classroom management. Whole class
activities are possible (discussions, RPs,
presentations) and Ss will do them without
being self-conscious.
Key T skills: ability to respond to the
changing needs of the Ss in real time and act
as a group facilitator and language
consultant.
Ss question what you say/teach. They freely
ask questions and challenge T and each
other.
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4. Motivation:
Ss have an exam to do
Ss need English to get a good job
Ss are young and can be immature, make
silly jokes in class, keep checking Facebook
on their smartphones, etc..
Ss are adolescents/young adults and bring
into class personal problems, parents’
expectations etc.
Motivation:
Ss have high expectations
Ss have paid a lot
Ss have voluntarily given up part of a busy
work schedule
Ss can be tired at the end of the day
Ss are sometimes ‘sent’ by their company
and don’t really want to be there
Ss are more mature and tend to keep their
personal lives out of class.
Exception: one-to-one classes, where Ss
often bring very personal things and you
have to be a sympathetic listener/counsellor
etc.
Implications
I think this raises some interesting questions. We think of ourselves as
one big BE community, but are we really separate tribes? Think of these:
The pre-work teacher who stands up in front of thirty mixed-level, samenationality 18 year olds in a provincial university in Poland, Mexico or China.
The teacher in a Private Language School who stands up in front of a small
group of similar-level, mixed-nationality business people on an intensive
course in the UK, the US, Canada, Australia or Ireland.
The in-company teacher working in Paris, Frankfurt, Zurich, Sao Paulo, Tokyo
or Seoul who jumps into taxis as s/he goes from office to office teaching 1:1
or small groups.
How much do these teachers have in common? What unites them?
What separates them? How much does it depend on the individual lesson?
How important is the approach of the individual teacher?
Perhaps the three teachers in the bullet points above are different
tribes. But perhaps not: it might be that most BE teachers in the world are part
of an in-betweeny tribe that exists somewhere between the pre-work and inwork poles. Under this in-betweeny scenario, teachers of pre-work students
are inclined towards one pole, but at the same time are trying valiantly to
incorporate more in-work techniques; and likewise teachers of in-work
students are inclined towards the other pole, but sometimes rely a little too
heavily on published material (especially at the start of their teaching careers)
without offering the students the chance for personalization.
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5. And yes, of course, every lesson is different.
It is also possible that there is a ‘silent majority’ tribe. At conferences
and teacher training courses we only come into contact with the best, most
motivated, and most open-minded teachers. They did decide to come to the
conference after all, while their colleagues stayed at home. Perhaps all those
who stayed at home are just working through a coursebook, page by page and
week by week, in difficult teaching situations, poorly paid and demotivated. Do
they make a separate tribe in their own right?
Paul Emmerson
August 2013
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