Teaching Teachers as Mission Activity: English Language Center in Service to Others

The Mission in Motion blog has made Ignatian Pedagogy a central focus in the last few years. Ignatian Pedagogy refers to the set of practices, approaches, and values orientations of teachers who desire to incorporate the spirit and content of Jesuit principles in their teaching activities. The entire framework derives from St. Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Jesuits and original source of pedagogical guidance for instructors in Jesuit schools. The paradigm is not, however, a one-size-fits-all method for bringing mission and values into learning spaces nor is it a prescription for teaching particular content. Rather, Ignatian Pedagogy, like the spirituality and values that inspire it, makes the individual uniqueness of a teacher, her students, and their context the starting point for developing a teaching strategy. 

This week’s Mission in Motion explores how the English Learning Center at SCS lived out the Georgetown value of being People for Others by serving 150 local students with a 10-hour English course. 

At SCS, we are fortunate to be home to the English Language Center, an English language and teacher training center that has been at Georgetown for nearly 60 years. Through a diverse array of programs offered to students from around the world, the ELC promotes “global understanding and education through programs that enhance English language proficiency, language teaching, and intercultural understanding” as well as “academic excellence in teaching and learning that is guided by a commitment to diversity and tolerance, and respect for the individual.” Several examples of the Center’s commitment to respect for the individual and commitment to a Community in Diversity, like the ELC annual Thanksgiving panel and potluck, have been featured on this site. 

A more recent example of ELC service to the community typifies the Center’s tight alignment with the Spirit of Georgetown. Recently featured on the SCS website, the article “Certificate Students Gain In-Person Teaching Experience” tells the story of how the Teaching English as a Foreign Language (TEFL) Certificate served 150 local students from D.C., Maryland, and Virginia. In a 10-hour English course, TEFL teaching candidates gained direct practical experience in meeting the learning needs of these 150 students. The occasion brought the teaching candidates together with the students from a wide variety of cultural and language backgrounds. 

Multiple goods were served by this program experience. The teaching candidates gained valuable professional experience that can be leveraged as they seek TEFL jobs throughout the world. Such a direct practicum experience is at the heart of the Ignatian Pedagogical Paradigm, which emphasizes the centrality of “action” in an interrelationship between “experience” and “reflection.” By having the direct experience of teaching in this way, the TEFL candidates can reflect on their practices with the help of program faculty and other students in the program. There is no substitute for real-world professional experience and the TEFL candidates are now better situated to enhance their knowledge base and skillset as a result of this teaching practicum.

In addition to benefits for the teachers, this program advanced the Spirit of Georgetown and its value of service with and for others. By aligning teacher training with the needs of local learners, the ELC TEFL program realized the University’s mission commitment to education in the service of community and the common good. The program design serves as a model for how to simultaneously realize the values of Academic Excellence and People for Others. Teaching and learning, regardless of the academic or professional discipline, can always be directed toward the generous service of the world. 

I hope you check out the Teaching English as a Foreign Language Certificate website and learn more about how the English Language Center brings Georgetown values to life.