My Yu Jen
Experience
I have taught and
worked in
I started to do a lot of research into the dynamic
of non-mother tongue language acquisition, and kept trying to apply these
things in various environments, with mixed results.
During this process, about 10 years ago, I can
remember teaching a grammar class to adults in a university night school, and
as part of the lesson one lady mentioned her child's wonderful school. I asked
her why she said her daughter's elementary school was so unique, and she said,“The children are respected there.”Her daughter was studying at a private school called
Years later, I got the opportunity to come and work
at Yu-Jen and observe this first-hand. This opportunity metamorphosed into one
of being asked to apply some of the theory and experience of English language
teaching that I had gained over the years by supervising the ESL department. It
has had moments of frustration, because as with any large and successful
educational institution, change is approached cautiously, but teaching here has
also had moments of great reward.
Seeing children grow and develop is so fulfilling.
I see children in the ESL department 1st to 5th grades that were tiny babies in kindergarten
when I first arrived, now young English speakers looking ahead to their middle
school experience.
I hope that the words spoken to me so many years
ago by that mother stand true for all the years that this school impacts
children's lives, “Children are respected here.”