2018: Themes of the year
It's that time
when you find yourself looking back on the past 12 months and ahead to the coming
year. To be honest, 2018 wasn't the easiest year for me workwise. Through the
first half of the year, I struggled with work as my chronic pain condition went
through a particularly bad patch. This led to me taking two months off through
the summer to rest and recover. It really helped from a health perspective, but
meant a big financial hit. Then over the last few months of the year, I had the
frustration of projects being delayed and cancelled, with more lost
income and my cash-flow at less than a trickle!
Those things
aside, it was a good year for ideas. Two of my highlights of 2018 were
conference talks which reflect two of the themes of my professional year.
IATEFL:
vocabulary learning and teaching
After many years
of doing talks on behalf of publishers, I decided to submit my own
proposal - Wordlists: snog, marry, avoid? - for IATEFL 2018 (summary here). When you
put together a talk for a publisher, it's usually based on a project you've
been working on, so apart from deciding on what angle to take, the content is
generally fairly straightforward. Planning my own talk was a very different
proposition. I had a few ideas floating around my head about vocab-related
themes I’d like to tackle, but settling on a specific topic and then deciding
exactly what to include was trickier.
Over the past
couple of years, I’ve been getting more interested in the principles behind
vocabulary learning and teaching, and planning my talk sent me into a new
flurry of reading and thinking (often in cafes and also on a rather lovely reading retreat).
Vocabulary has long been my ‘thing’ and I’ve dipped into theory and research
over the years and, of course, built up lots of accumulated knowledge from
experience of working with vocab day in, day out. I always felt my wider knowledge was a bit
patchy though and I didn’t want to stand up in front of a roomful of ELT
experts with a load of gaping holes in my arguments! Although I know there’s still masses out
there to read and digest, I do feel like I’ve now filled a few gaps and joined
up a few dots. More importantly, perhaps, I feel like I’ve got something to say
in my own right, which has been a bit of a revelation.
All my mulling
over of vocab-related stuff led onto another talk about the principles I try to
apply when I’m writing vocab materials at the joint MaWSIG/Oxford Brookes event
in June (summary here) – another great event and lovely to get such a positive
response from my peers, thanks guys :)
And I’ve still
got lots of vocab-related ideas whirring around, so I think there’s more to
come if I can just find the right outlets …
IVACS: corpus
research
This time last
year, I was at a bit of a turning point in my ELT career and I decided I needed
to refocus on the areas of ELT that interest me most (see posts here and here).
One of those areas was corpus research and it’s something that I have managed
to get more involved in over the past year or so, with corpus research work for
a couple of different publishers and rather excitingly, my first talk at a
corpus linguistics conference in Malta in June.
Unlike the ELT
events I’m familiar with, corpus linguistics conferences tend to be much more
academic affairs. So, although I felt confident that I had some interesting
stuff to talk about (summary here), I wasn’t 100% certain about the reception
I’d get from an audience of academics. Much to my relief, no one questioned my
methodology or picked up on my lack of a reference list! In fact, many of the
people I spoke to were quite excited to meet someone who actually does corpus
research ‘in the real world’ and I had lots of great conversations with a
wonderful range of fascinating people. It’s definitely a world I’d like to stay
in touch with and with a couple of new and interesting pieces of research under
my belt this year, it’s something I’d like to talk more about … if I can find a
way to fund it …
The cold, hard economics of
it all
Although IATEFL
and IVACS were highlights of my professional year, both were largely
self-funded and, together with another couple of events, ate up a lot of cash
which I didn’t really have to spare given the aforementioned patchy workflow
and lack of income.
So this year,
I’ve had to rule out going to events unless I have a sponsor to help out with costs. Luckily, I already have two conferences– the
English UK academic conference in London on 19 Jan and TESOL Spain in Oviedo in
March – lined up with backing from event organizers/publishers and maybe
another one in the pipeline for the summer.
I’ve had to cross another couple that I’d hoped to speak at off my list
because I couldn’t get any backing, which is sad, but hey.
Perhaps more importantly for 2019, as well as the little
inspirational blips that conferences provide, I need to refocus on the
day-to-day work at my desk to pay the bills. January has got off to a busy
start with one project finishing up and another quickie writing job in progress, but my
schedule for February onwards is looking worryingly empty. I’d really like to see all my investment in reading and thinking and talking at events translate into interesting writing projects where I can put some of those ideas into practice.
Labels: IATEFL, IVACS, reading, vocabulary
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