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BC TEAL is proud to present our 2025 Annual Conference: Disruptive Educational Practices: Strategies for Transformation.

Please note that the Friday evening event, the TEAL Charitable Foundation Awards & Fundraiser, requires an additional ticket purchase. Please register here to secure your spot and join us in celebrating the awardees while fundraising for a better cause in TEAL.

Educators shine in times of change to face unexpected challenges. This is when creativity flourishes by combining proven practices with fresh and innovative ideas. These times call for transformation which can be rooted in tradition or experience, or it can arise through unexplored approaches. The synthesis of old and new ideas drives meaningful progress. Join other insightful and creative educators as we flourish within the power of our community.
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Saturday, May 3
 

8:30am PDT

Integrating dynamic assessment in LINC classes writing assessment
Saturday May 3, 2025 8:30am - 9:15am PDT
TBA
Researchers have suggested that interactional feedback which is between teacher and learner during their writing is associated with L2 learning because it prompts learners to notice L2 forms. Giving corrective feedback in a procedural stage and starting from implicit and moving to explicit one by a teacher can help learners internalize the form. This feedback in the writing can be with specific grammar point, choice of vocabularies, tenses, articles, subject-verb agreement, countable and uncountable. Also, in the online classes some computerized feedback can help learners to focus more and find out their mistakes. This kind of feedback can be in the form of prefabricated comments by using Artificial Intelligence(AI). For giving feedback the typology of corrective feedback can be used. 
Typology of corrective feedback in writing adapted from Ellis (2009)
●Direct: The teacher crossing out the mistakes
●Indirect : the teacher just mentioned the students made some mistakes
●Metalinguistic: the teacher comments on mistakes
●The focus of feedback: the teacher selectively
●Electronic: The teacher provides hyperlink to the learners that provides some correct examples
●Reformulation: the teacher rewrites student’s writing. 
One type of giving feedback can be :
1.Metalinguistic implicit corrective feedback: The teacher provided some kind of metalinguistic clues at the bottom of the writings and provided some examples.
2.Metalinguistic implicit-explicit corrective feedback: The teacher highlighted the line which contained the error; she neither underlined the error itself nor provided the corrected form.
3.Explicit corrective feedback: The teacher would directly and explicitly correct the error by writing the correct form for the student
Speakers
avatar for Mori Lavasani

Mori Lavasani

LINC INSTRUCTOR, Mosaic
I have been teaching as a LINC instructor for three years. Currently, I am teaching as a casual teacher in Mosaic and regular in ISS BC. 
Saturday May 3, 2025 8:30am - 9:15am PDT
TBA

11:00am PDT

Arguments: Their Shape, Flow and Use in the SLA Classroom
Saturday May 3, 2025 11:00am - 11:45am PDT
In its most basic form, an argument is a claim and a reason to accept the claim. Argumentation is the process of clarifying the question at issue, gathering relevant evidence, and formulating the aforementioned reasons and the claim. Although it is a truism to state that arguments are everywhere and that everyone argues, one forum where arguments have yet to find a permanent place is the SLA classroom in Japan, perhaps because argument is conceived as a confrontational, win or lose interaction. This poster shows cooperative argument activities and their underlying concepts that have been used successfully in SLA classrooms. 
Another reason for the hesitation to use argumentation activities may be that arguing well is challenging for students. College and high school students have difficulty judging argument quality but do respond positively to various interventions, including engaging in argument with peers, media tutorials and scaffolding (Kuhn, D., Zillmer, N., Crowell, A., & Zavala, J.2013Larson, Britt & Kurby, 2009; Wilson, K., & Devereux, L. 2014). 
This poster presentation summarizes just such interventions. Following from the concept-based language instruction claim that learners need to internalize the systematic, scientific principles that underpin linguistic phenomena of interest via working with their materializations, salient features of arguments are shown as flow charts, diagrams, pictures and maps, to form SCOBAs, or schema for the orienting basis of action (Gal’perin, 1989; Hadidi, 2021; Lantolf and Thorne, 2006). 
These features include common lines of argument (e.g. cause to effect, effect to cause, sign, generalization), their elements (i.e. evidence, claim, warrant, qualifier, etc.), how the elements interact and, most importantly, a variety of arguments relevant to college-aged learners. What is the best book or movie for someone who wants to understand Japanese culture? What is marriage? Is it marriage good or bad? Should people get married? Should I get married? 
Participants can see and learn how arguments are structured, how they function, and how they enrich SLA classrooms of almost any level, background and topic. 
 
References 
Gal'perin, P. Y. (1989). Mental actions as a basis for the formation of thoughts and images. Soviet Psychology27(3), 45-64.
Hadidi, A. (2021). Application of a SCOBA in educational praxis of L2 written argumentative discourse. Language and Sociocultural Theory8(1), 68–96. https://doi.org/10.1558/lst.19037 
Kuhn, D., Zillmer, N., Crowell, A., & Zavala, J. (2013). Developing norms of argumentation: Metacognitive, epistemological, and social dimensions of developing argumentive competence. Cognition and Instruction31(4), 456-496.
Lantolf, J.P. & Thorne. S.L. (2006). Sociocultural theory and the genesis of second language development. Oxford University Press. 
Larson, A. A., Britt, M. A., & Kurby, C. A. (2009). Improving students' evaluation of informal arguments. The Journal of Experimental Education77(4), 339-366.
Wilson, K., & Devereux, L. (2014). Scaffolding theory: High challenge, high support in Academic Language and Learning (ALL) contexts. Journal of Academic Language and learning8(3), A91-A100.
Speakers
MH

Michael Herke

Setsunan University
Michael Herke is an Associate Professor at Setsunan University in Osaka, Japan. Before joining Setsunan, he taught at high school in Vancouver, BC, and at schools and universities around Osaka. 
Saturday May 3, 2025 11:00am - 11:45am PDT
Poster Session

1:00pm PDT

Inclusive Second Language Writing Instruction with the Universal Genre Sphere
Saturday May 3, 2025 1:00pm - 1:45pm PDT
TBA
This presentation introduces the Universal Genre Sphere (UGS), an instructional model for teaching academic writing to all learners, including neurodiverse students, dis/abled students, and students with limited formal education (David & Anderson, 2022). While research on second-language writing for neurodivergent EALs is expanding, little work has explored ways to scaffold writing instruction to serve all learners, including learners from other vulnerable and underserved communities. Rooted in Universal Design for Learning (UDL) and the Genre-Based Approach (GBA), UGS fosters equitable, inclusive, and effective learning environments (Hyland, 2003; David & Brown, 2020; CAST, 2025). UGS prioritizes inclusive design, aligning instruction with students’ interest while breaking learning into manageable and adaptable segments, making academic writing more accessible to a wider range of learners. 
This presentation will be divided into two parts. The first will provide an overview of UGS and findings from a one-year longitudinal study examining its impact on EAL students in a Master of Education TESL program at a Colombian university. The program’s traditionally lecture-based academic writing instruction was redesigned using a blend of principles from UDL and GBA to create a student-driven, multimodal learning experience. The redesign incorporated audio-visual materials for input and feedback, maximizing student-instructor interaction to support writing development. The second half of this session will be a hands-on workshop where participants will learn how to apply UGS principles into their own teaching contexts. Through a series of guided activities, educators will explore strategies aligned with UGS to enhance accessible and engagement in L2 writing instruction. Participants will leave with concrete strategies, and practical tools to implement UGS in their classrooms, making academic writing instruction more inclusive, flexible, and effective.  
Speakers
avatar for Rosa Dene David

Rosa Dene David

PhD Candidate, Lecturer, The University of British Columbia
Rosie Dene David, a PhD Candidate at the University of British Columbia, teaches in the Teacher Education program and holds a MATESOL from Portland State University.
Saturday May 3, 2025 1:00pm - 1:45pm PDT
TBA

2:00pm PDT

Pre-Writing Skill Building Activities for LINC Classrooms
Saturday May 3, 2025 2:00pm - 2:45pm PDT
TBA
In this workshop, I will explore three pre-writing strategies rooted in the writing studies discourse: freewriting, inkshedding, and loop-writing. These strategies are designed to help writers generate ideas, overcome writer’s block, and build confidence in articulating their thoughts on paper. Beyond introducing these techniques, I will demonstrate how they can be adapted into engaging, skill-building activities for the LINC (Language Instruction for Newcomers to Canada) classrooms (specifically CLB 4). Using examples drawn from key LINC themes such as Citizenship, Education, and more, I will showcase how these strategies can be seamlessly integrated into lesson plans to enrich learning experiences.
By incorporating these methods into their teaching practice, LINC instructors can provide learners with valuable opportunities to develop their writing fluency, enhance their ability to organize ideas effectively, and foster a more creative and fluid writing process. Participants in this workshop will gain hands-on experience with each strategy and learn practical ways to customize them to meet the diverse needs of LINC students, ultimately creating a more supportive, inclusive, and dynamic classroom environment.
Speakers
avatar for Rigvi Kumar

Rigvi Kumar

LINC Instructor and PBLA Lead Teacher, ASSIST Community Services Center
I'm a LINC Instructor and a PBLA Lead Teacher at ASSIST Community Services Center. I have experience in various English teaching environments, including EAP, LINC, and Writing Studies. Currently, I'm finishing my Masters in TESL at the University of Alberta. I'm deeply passionate... Read More →
Saturday May 3, 2025 2:00pm - 2:45pm PDT
TBA
 
From CA$115.47


BC TEAL 2025 Annual Conference
From CA$115.47
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