[NIFL-ESL:9184] Re: Women learners

From: Holly Gensaw (hgensaw@ncen.org)
Date: Mon Jul 14 2003 - 13:38:39 EDT


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From: "Holly Gensaw" <hgensaw@ncen.org>
To: Multiple recipients of list <nifl-esl@literacy.nifl.gov>
Subject: [NIFL-ESL:9184] Re: Women learners
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Wow,
This is exactly was I was thinking and represents my
experience also. There are so many dynamics
to consider and it would make a great research study.
Anyone looking for collaboration?
----- Original Message -----
From: "Yvonne Lerew" <ylerew@lsssd.org>
To: "Multiple recipients of list" <nifl-esl@literacy.nifl.gov>
Sent: Monday, July 14, 2003 11:46 AM
Subject: [NIFL-ESL:9179] Re: Women learners


> I am also very interested in this question.  In my experience, adult women
> immigrants study more English in a classroom setting, however adult men
use
> English more at work and in the community so that after a few years the
men
> equal or exceed the women in terms of conversational English skills.
>
> Another factor that may be important is that most teachers (in our
program,
> all of the teachers) are women.  Would male teachers be better able to
> provide relevant lessons for male students?  Do the sorts of interactions
> that male students have, such as in all-male working environments like
> construction, get equal treatment in ESL classrooms?  Is the language
> and/or culturally appropriate behaviors in all-male interactions
> substantially different than in mixed groups or all-female groups?  I have
> looked for some research on this but have not found much.  Any ideas would
> be welcome.
>
> Thanks,
> Yvonne Lerew
> At 09:43 AM 7/14/2003 -0400, you wrote:
> >Good Morning,
> >One of my students in the method's course I am teaching asked a
> >question. I am hoping someone out there may have the answer/research.
> >Her question concerns research documentation on women learning English
> >more quickly than men. In her experience with her adult classes this has
> >happened. More men have dropped or have sporadic attendance than the
> >women. Therefore the women are making faster progress. Anything to
> >substantiate her view?
> >Thank you in advance for your response.
> >Cindy Shermeyer
>
>



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