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Tag: Learner Autonomy

The Age of Anxiety and the Teacher

Posted on May 3, 2026May 3, 2026 By eltvista.com
The Age of Anxiety and the Teacher
Extending the Moment of Hesitation
TESOL, Professional Development, Reflective Teaching, ELT Vista, eltvista.com

Stella Adler, acting coach and drama theorist, once remarked that “life beats down and crushes the soul, and art reminds you that you have one.” She was speaking in the context of the twentieth century, a period marked by war, economic depression, and the dislocations of modern life. Yet her observation continues to resonate today. Many writers have described modern society as an age of anxiety—a time in which institutions grow larger, systems become more complex, and individuals often find themselves navigating pressures that feel impersonal and difficult to influence.

Teachers, perhaps more than most professionals, recognize this condition. They encounter it not only in policy and institutional design, but in the daily negotiation between what is required and what is possible in the classroom.

The modern language teacher works within a dense web of expectations. Administrative structures demand documentation and measurable outcomes. Schools operate under financial pressures that often translate into part-time contracts, limited job security, and wages that struggle to keep pace with the cost of living. Experience—once considered the foundation of professional authority—can sometimes be treated as secondary to credentials, paperwork, or the latest fashionable methodology. Meanwhile, the broader culture celebrates entertainers, athletes, and now even social-media influencers with enthusiasm that rarely extends to those whose work quietly shapes the intellectual and human development of others.

And still, teachers continue to show up in classrooms every day.

Read More “The Age of Anxiety and the Teacher” »

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SEL, Emotional Intelligence, and Gratitude: A Practical View from the Language Classroom

Posted on January 26, 2026January 26, 2026 By Jay Leonard Schwartz
SEL, Emotional Intelligence, and Gratitude: A Practical View from the Language Classroom
Emotions Are Not Extra in Language Learning
Building Emotional Awareness ELT Vista

Most language classrooms are very good at helping students notice what went wrong. Much less time is spent helping them notice what helped. That imbalance matters. Over time, it shapes how learners experience risk, error, feedback—and ultimately, the language itself.

This is where gratitude enters the picture, though not in the way it is often understood. In the language classroom, gratitude is not about politeness or forced positivity. It is about attention—the ability to notice what supported learning while it was happening, rather than only what fell short afterward. In a humanistic TESOL context, gratitude is better understood as an attentional practice: a way of noticing value, effort, and relational contribution in real time.

Read More “SEL, Emotional Intelligence, and Gratitude: A Practical View from the Language Classroom” »

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Grades, Judgment, and the Machinery of Worth

Posted on January 4, 2026January 4, 2026 By Jay Leonard Schwartz
Grades, Judgment, and the Machinery of Worth

Grades, Judgment, and the Machinery of Worth

Grades are Signals

Nobody ever tells students the most dangerous thing about grades:
they don’t just measure performance—they train you to outsource your sense of worth.
They feel neutral and necessary. That’s exactly why they’re dangerous.

Grading is a necessary evil in education. Necessary, because institutions require some way to sort, credential, and move people through systems at scale. Evil—not in a melodramatic sense, but in a quiet, corrosive one—because grades are so easily mistaken for something they are not.

A grade is information. It is a signal within a bounded system. It is not a measure of human worth, potential, or legitimacy. Most students are never explicitly told this, which is why the signal so easily becomes a verdict. Unless that caveat is made explicit, students absorb something far more dangerous than the grade itself: the idea that judgment arrives from elsewhere, and that its verdict is final.

This is where the real injustice begins. Not because the system is intentionally cruel, but because it is largely silent about what its judgments are meant to mean—and what they are not.

Read More “Grades, Judgment, and the Machinery of Worth” »

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Creativity Is Not a Strategy—It’s a Birthright: Reclaiming the Human Side of Teaching in a Testing Culture

Posted on December 1, 2025January 4, 2026 By Jay Leonard Schwartz
Creativity Is Not a Strategy—It’s a Birthright: Reclaiming the Human Side of Teaching in a Testing Culture

In humanistic teaching, creativity is foundational because language itself is creative. Every sentence a learner forms is an act of risk-taking and self-expression. When instruction becomes reduced to test preparation, we mute the very capacities we claim to nurture: voice, imagination, identity.

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