Helping Our Tutors Be Successful

A Project Prototype by Olga Thomason

published on Dec 14, 2021

Students will assist Russian-speaking academic professionals in adapting to new fast-paced academic environment in UGA by creating a website page with UGA logistic information.

Overview files comments

Preparing for the Project

Project idea development and establishing partners

Launching the Project

Entry Event

Managing the Project

Work in 2 groups

Tagging #1

Partnering with students from Russia

Discussion of the gathered results

Tagging #2

Comparison of Table #1 and Table #2

Interviews with tutors

Interviews and Table #3

Tagging and Table #4

Table #4

Pilot video and accompanying note

Discussion of the pilot videos and notes

Work in pairs and production of the final product

Assessment

Presentation and defense of the final product

Final Product

Implementation Info

Implementation information not specified.

Preparing for the Project

Project idea development and establishing partners

UGA Russian Flagship Program regularly employs Fulbright students from Russian-speaking countries who have to join the Flagship team as language tutors and have to navigate an academic system completely new to them being professionally active from day one. This project aims to aid the adaptation of Russian-speaking graduate (and undergraduate) students by creating a website page in Russian that contains comprehensive logistic information for new Russian-speaking tutors and can also be used by new Russian-speaking exchange students and instructors who plan connect their professional life with UGA. The UGA Russian Flagship faculty, the program’s coordinator, and the Fulbright students who are currently employed as tutors were slected to serve as project’s partners. UGA students  also partnered with students from Russia who collaborated on this project.

This project was implemented into an advanced Russian course on contemporary Russian society and culture which was created for learners at the intermediate-high or low (mid) -advanced levels.

Many details of this project were developed during the Tech Center PBLL Summer Institute, August 4-11, 2021, at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa in Honolulu, HI under insightful supervision of its leaders.

Launching the Project

Entry Event

A former UGA Russian Flagship tutor was invited to speak in class about her experiences during the first months of her instructional work at UGA and comment on any difficulties, hardships, or confusions that happened during this time. This presentation was followed by a discussion where students asked the guest speaker questions further specifying reasons for harndships that had been mentioned and also identifying the ways in which the problems were solved. 

During the same meeting, students discussed among themselves sutiations that created problems for them as freshmen.

Students filled out a Google table #1 with the information that they heard from the guest speaker and added additional information from their personal experiences and those of their peers.

Sample of Table#1

 

Task Type:
driving question
Task Focus:
content

Managing the Project

Work in 2 groups

Students were randomly divided in to two groups. Each group analysed the data in Table #1 and suggested tags for the recorded situations.

Table #1 with tags suggested by students

Task Type:
need to know
Task Focus:
content

Tagging #1

During the next meeting, students discussed the tags that were suggested by the two groups and finalized the variants that the majority had agreed on.

Table #1 with the finalized tagging set

 

Task Type:
driving question
Task Focus:
content

Partnering with students from Russia

UGA Russian Flagship program has an ongoing partnership with several educational institutions in Russia. Students from the Pacific National University in Khabarovsk, Russia who studied English and specialized in intercultural communications were selected as collaborators for this project.

UGA students worked individually with their partners from Russia and asked them about potential problems that they would anticipate in a case if they became a student at UGA. In addition, UGA students asked their Russian collaborators about possible way to solve these hardships and underlying reasonings behind the proposed solutions. All the findings were recorded in Google Table #2. 

Table #2

Task Type:
need to know
Task Focus:
interaction

Discussion of the gathered results

UGA students dicussed the results of the interviews that they had conducted with their Russian partners, commented on gaps and issues that they had experienced during this task.

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
reflection

Tagging #2

Students return to working in two groups. Each group analyses the data in Table #2 and suggests tags for the recorded situations.

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
content

Comparison of Table #1 and Table #2

Both groups met and compared the results of Table #1 and Table #2 and agreed on the final variant of the tagging set.

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
interaction

Interviews with tutors

Each of the two groups conducts an interview with a Russian tutor (suggested by the instructor) in two stages:
(1) surveying the hardships that a tutor experienced during the initial period of his/her work at UGA (open-ended general questions);
(2) asking about suggestions on finding solution(s) for 5-7 hardships recorded in Table #1 and Table #2.

Students create a video of the interview and upload it to the project’s Google folder. Students create a google Table #3 where they record data just as they did for Table #1 and #2.

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
interaction

Interviews and Table #3

Both groups met together and discussed their experiences during conducting their interveiws. Students reviewed the data gathered in Table #3.

Sample of Table #3

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
reflection

Tagging and Table #4

Each of the two groups created tags for situations in Table #3.

Each group searched for various available resources (UGA centers, Athens programs, web sites, brochures, etc.) that could be useful for solving the recorded hardships and created a data bank in a Google Table #4.

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
content

Table #4

Both groups met and discussed results of thier tagging of hardships in Table #3. Students brainstormed adding additional resources to the data bank collected in Table #4

Sample of Table #4

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
content

Pilot video and accompanying note

Each of the two groups selected a problem that was frequently mentioned in Tables #1-3 and created a short note with the information that would help to solve the selected problem. Students are encouraged to include in their notes links to resources recorded in Table #4. The pilot notes were uploaded to the project’s folder.

Each of the two groups created a 3-5-minute video that accompanied the note. The pilot videos contained visuals and commentaries that targeted the selected problem. The videos were uploaded to the project’s folder.

Students were given a link to a survey that let them provide commentaries and suggestions for the pilot notes and videos of their peers anonymously. Several tutors were given this link as well.

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
content

Discussion of the pilot videos and notes

Students discussed the uploaded pilot videos and notes and reflected on the feedback that they have received from their UGA and Russian peers and tutors.

Sample of the feedback survey

Samples of the collected responces in the survey

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
reflection

Work in pairs and production of the final product

All students were divided into pairs: they were asked to find a partner in the group, those that were left without a collaborator were joined together in to new pairs. 

-       Each pair selected 2 problems from Tables #1-3 that they would like to work on.

-       Each member of a pair conducted and recorded a video interview of his/her Russian partner with regards to the selected problems.

-        Each pair collaborated on conducting and recording a video interview with a tutor with regards to the selected problems

-        Videos of these interviews were uploaded to the Google folder of the project.

-        Each pair created a table similar to Table #3 and uploaded it to the project’s folder.

-        Each pair reflected on the received results.

-        Each student in a pair created 1 supporting note and 1 video that addressed the selected hardship and helped to find solutions for it.

-        All notes and videos were uploaded to the project’s folder.

Tutors and students were given access to the final products and a link to a survey that allowed them to submit comments and suggestions for each product anonymously.  

Task Focus:
content

Assessment

Presentation and defense of the final product

During the course of three final weeks of the semester, each student had a chance to present and defend hisher final product. Students were encouraged to address the feedback that they have received from their UGA and Russian peers and from their tutors. 

Sample of a note (highlighted words contain links to the useful sources)

Task Focus:
reflection

Final Product

The revised final videos and notes are posted at https://www.russianflagship.com/tutors.

In following years, this project will be updated by new groups of students working on this project. Feedback from previous users will be taken into account.

Task Focus:
reflection

Implementation Info

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