COMMUNITY COLLEGE CONNECTION
RECRUITMENT AND RETENTION IN THE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
PART 2: DESIGNING YOUR FRENCH PROGRAM
Reprinted from the AATF National Bulletin, Vol.27, No.
3 (January 2002)
If you are a typical full time or adjunct French instructor
in a community college, you are probably teaching within a program that is
already in place. My community college is relatively young (we opened our doors
in 1987), and I was the first French instructor at my college. Yet when I was
hired as an adjunct instructor the very first fall semester, many elements of
our current program had already been established. I imagine that our program was
designed by an administrator who had "borrowed" the course titles,
descriptions, and credit hours from other institutions. For that first year, my
only input was choosing a textbook and fitting my curriculum into an existing
framework.
During the first few years of our college there were no
full-time foreign language instructors. Within a year I was the
"unofficial" department chair, and two and a half years later I was
the first foreign language teacher offered a full-time position. All of this did
not happen by accident. I had a plan, and through a combination of sheer
determination and good luck, I ended up just where I wanted to be.
Like the majority of community college faculty, I had worked
as a part-time instructor for many years before being hired full time. During my
adjunct years, I had ample opportunity to experience and observe various French
programs in action. I experimented with various teaching methods and took a
variety of graduate education courses. When I was finally in a position to make
some significant program decisions, I had formulated some good working theories
of my own. Here are my suggestions:
Work with what you cannot change. When I came to my
college, the program was set up with four-credit-hour courses offered in both
the day (three times a week) and evening (once a week) format. The evening
classes were and continue to be a strain—three and a half hours in one
sitting. Our first dean of instruction was adamant about covering exactly the
same curriculum in both day and evening classes. I know that theoretically our
evening format is a horrible way to learn a foreign language, but whenever we
survey the students they insist that they can come only one night a week and
would not take the course in a two-evening-a-week format. So we have learned to
make the best of it, reviewing more, assigning some material as independent
study, providing a support system outside of class, and varying our activities
in the evening classes to minimize the inevitable cognitive overload. I believe
that retention suffers from semester to semester because of this unfortunate
evening schedule, but the payoff is a program where students can move freely
between the day and evening classes as their life and work schedules change.
Keep in touch and stay informed.
I have been extremely
fortunate in having had significant input into my college’s foreign language
program. I have been able to chose textbooks, rewrite course descriptions and
curricula, develop four new French courses, influence our general education
policies to encourage foreign language study, and as program coordinator I have
established a strong global studies program that supports foreign language. My
experience has demonstrated that you can influence your program even while
working part time as the only French teacher on campus. If you are currently an
adjunct instructor, talk to everyone and learn everything you can about the
language program at the school(s) where you teach. Part time or full time, try
to stay informed and get involved with the decision-making processes. Take
education courses, and go to conferences where you can network and learn about
the latest issues, programs, and methodologies. Get to know all of the other
language teachers and program administrators at your institution(s). Remember,
even if you are not in charge, you can influence decisions and changes in your
program through the knowledgeable input and suggestions that you provide to your
superiors and fellow faculty members.
I welcome your comments on the Community College Connection
articles, and would appreciate your feedback and suggestions for future subjects
you would like to see discussed. I would especially enjoy knowing about your
community college success stories. Please contact
Denise
McCracken regarding these articles.
Denise McCracken
St. Charles Community College
(MO)
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Created: October 18, 2001
Last update: January 16, 2002
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