My Experience teaching the IELTS in Jaffna
- March 17, 2025
- 0
Someone sent me a link to someone else advertising IELTS classes. A well meaning person who thought I should advertise like that to get more students.The said advertisement
Someone sent me a link to someone else advertising IELTS classes. A well meaning person who thought I should advertise like that to get more students.The said advertisement
Someone sent me a link to someone else advertising IELTS classes. A well meaning person who thought I should advertise like that to get more students.
The said advertisement guaranteed good results and shared students’ messages to the teacher that relayed they had scored 6.5 or higher in the exam. That was the teacher’s version of testimonials.
Here is the thing:
I can share messages like that too.
In every batch, about 10 percent of students will get 6.5 or higher, in my experience. That is because they were already competent in the language when they joined the class. I can share their feedback too, and claim it’s all due to me.
I won’t however, because it isn’t the truth.
The average Sri Lankan has a very poor level of English. In a two month IELTS course, there is no way I can bring them up to 6.5.
If they study with me for two years or more, then yes, I can.
Even that is not guaranteed, as the students have to do a lot of work on their own apart from what I teach. If you take a region like Jaffna, people never hear English used around them in daily life. And if they are not in the habit of watching movies, reading books, travelling or interacting with English speakers from outside the region – which most of them are not – even studying with me is not going to be fully effective.
You can’t learn a language solely in the classroom. That’s not how it works. I have managed to do this only in a few instances; when I taught intensive courses, where the students were with me four hours a day, three days a week over four months. Because I had a captive audience for that many hours a day, I was able to ensure they read books, and watched movies for part of the class apart from textbook activities. They picked up rapidly.
Students who came in barely speaking English and certainly not writing it, went out speaking fluently, conducting vibrant debates, storytelling. public speaking, essay writing… the works. Even I was astounded by how fast they developed.
When I tried to replicate it via zoom during covid however, I failed with quite a few. (Also was successful with a few – but it was at best 50:50). Because the classes were only 1.5 hours each over the weekend. I taught the textbook basics and urged them to watch movies and read books on their own. Even took the trouble to search out cartoons and children’s movies as well as graded readers suitable to their level and sent them the links. The students who diligently followed those links picked up rapidly. But that was often less than 50 percent of the class. Most lack the discipline to follow through and so were not as successful.
Sri Lankans, especially the kind of students I get from my area who are monolingual, also have a very poor understanding of how to pick up a new language. I keep telling them it is not a classroom activity and they have to put in the work to interact with the language in order to learn it.
None of you are dumb but you do have some dumb community wide attitudes and practices when it comes to getting an IELTS certificate. So here’s some free advice, uncomfortable though it may be: Investigate methods of language acquisition, take the time to follow it, work hard, and you will get your certificates.
You can’t bribe the examiners, and there are no shortcuts. Do the work.