What area are you working in?
I work in the German courses for international students, doctoral candidates and academic staff in English-language degree programmes and work contexts. My role as a teacher is to support international university members in their linguistic and social integration into everyday university life. In my role as team leader, I plan and coordinate the intensive and semester courses and provide specialist support to the lecturers teaching the courses. Another task is to develop teaching concepts, identify existing needs and take individual or group-specific measures to remove potential barriers.
What topics are you currently working on?
International students and employees who are new to Germany face enormous linguistic challenges in everyday university life. How can I enable beginners in particular to master the necessary language skills in everyday life as quickly and easily as possible in the limited teaching time (2 x 90 minutes per week during the lecture period)?
What is your area of expertise?
My speciality is phonetic aspects of learning German, as I believe that comprehensible pronunciation is the most important prerequisite for successful learning. I also like to develop interactive teaching materials that "bring grammar into play" and PowerPoint tutorials that make phonetic and grammatical structures visible and easy to understand.
What area are you working in?
I work in study preparation for refugees. I prepare students for the digital TestDaF.
What topics are you currently working on?
I am currently working on the topic of "Artificial intelligence in the classroom as a threat and an opportunity". I'm also focussing on test procedures and quality criteria for language tests.
What is your area of expertise?
I specialise in language development and language criticism.
What area are you working in?
I work in both the preparatory and the accompanying German courses. Study preparation plays an important role in paving the way for students to take up a degree programme; in the context of study support, participants are supported in their integration into everyday university life.
I also offer language courses in online format, for example for students at the Ukrainian Dnipro National University or as part of NEOLAIA.
In addition, I carefully prepare interns for their first teaching activities in the summer German courses so that they can start their role as teachers with a solid professional foundation.
What topics are you currently working on?
I am currently focussing particularly on exam preparation for the TestDaF. In my role as a yoga teacher, I am particularly focussing on stress reduction to help participants find inner peace and balance, even in exam situations. I also deal with first aid measures for blackouts, the role of resilience in foreign language learning and the far-reaching effects of psychological impairments, such as trauma, on the processes of language acquisition.
What is your area of expertise?
My speciality is joyful learning. I attach great importance to organising learning processes in such a way that they are enjoyable and inspiring. My aim is to awaken and encourage the curiosity of the participants. Despite the effort required to learn a language at a high level, the joy of learning should never be neglected.
What area are you working in?
I work in the field of language support for students, specialising in the academic language German (C1-C2). The aim here is to support international students in their linguistic and academic integration after successfully passing the university entrance exam and starting their studies and to increase their chances of academic success. My tasks primarily include coordinating the modules on academic language and academic writing in German as a foreign language, teaching interdisciplinary courses, workshops, writing workshops and providing specialist support to the team of teaching assistants. A further focus is individual writing counselling for the target group and the management of the counselling team. The final spurt project should also be emphasised with the aim of supporting students in the challenging final phase on their way to successfully completing their studies.
What topics are you currently working on?
At the moment, I'm increasingly focusing on the topic of training and supporting student writing consultants with the aim of professionalising their work. As part of an interest group of the Society for Writing Consultancy and Writing Research, I am in contact with colleagues from university writing centres across Germany. The focus of interest here includes topics such as methods of counselling, elements of training, writing and multilingualism, writing processes and text design, forms of supervision, techniques and procedures for text feedback and, currently, the potentials and risks of AI.
What is your area of expertise?
Firstly, the academic language itself. Academia is a very specific domain in which communication follows certain rules and is realised through different types of text. These rules often remain hidden from students at the beginning of their academic journey. With regard to the linguistic structures of science, the writing researcher Otto Kruse once aptly said: "Science also has its folklore, its dogmas and obsessions." And I find this fascinating, as well as the challenge of opening up this world to students so that they can understand the peculiarities of academic language and academic cognitive processes, systematically master academic forms of communication and, last but not least, find their own voice and develop their own identity. After all, participation in academic discourse is the ultimate goal of academic writing.
Secondly, I am interested in writing counselling and its role in the development of academic writing skills. In my view, the greatest resource of writing counselling lies in interaction. I observe on a daily basis how these communicative processes initiate reflection, learning and change processes and activate self-efficacy. And that's what writing counselling is all about: not correcting supposed deficits, but strengthening students in their writing development.
What area are you working in?
I work in the intensive German language and study preparation courses for the semester for English-language degree programmes. As the participants don't necessarily need German for their studies, the courses are more about helping them to understand and speak the German they need for their everyday lives.
What topics are you currently working on?
The participants usually have a very heavy workload to cope with in addition to the course. I am therefore constantly trying to find out how I can meet all participants where they are and support them so that they can successfully complete the course and continue to learn German with motivation.
What is your area of expertise?
My speciality is grammar. Teaching structures in the most interesting, playful and motivating way possible is particularly important to me. I also enjoy constantly developing my teaching methods with the aim of activating the participants and getting them to speak, as well as creating a good atmosphere in the course.
What area are you working in?
I have been working as a lecturer at Punktum since 2016 and I am involved in the German courses for international students, doctoral students and academic staff, as well as in the summer courses for cooperation students and in the study preparation courses for refugees.
What topics are you currently working on?
As I am currently doing my doctorate in English linguistics, I always try to establish a link to linguistics and often use the participants' native languages for this.
This really helps them to understand the German language better.
What is your area of expertise?
My academic career is my second job. My main job is as an entrepreneur in the business world.
What area are you working in?
I am also active in German courses for international students, doctoral candidates and academic staff in English-language degree programmes and work contexts. I teach both semester and summer courses as well as intensive courses. My current role as a teacher is primarily to teach general (basic) German language skills in a university context, which the above-mentioned target group needs at the beginning and during the course of the semester in order to quickly find their way around the university and in everyday life, both linguistically and socially.
What topics are you currently working on?
In the basic levels, where I generally teach, it's usually not just international students and employees who have just arrived in Germany without any basic knowledge of the German language or social norms, but also those who have been studying, researching or working in Germany for a while and are already familiar with certain university and everyday procedures. As a teacher, it's important for me to take all students in such a heterogeneous group on board as far as possible and guide them to the desired language goal without one or the other losing motivation to learn and therefore dropping out of the course.
What is your area of expertise?
My specialism is the language system, especially vocabulary and grammar. For me, the combination of both aspects is particularly important in initial language acquisition, especially as they create the basis for a successful learning process and complement each other well. The fact is, in order to be able to express certain matters in the foreign language, appropriate linguistic means are required, which is where vocabulary comes into play. In order to be able to express yourself correctly, it is necessary to master the grammatical structures of the foreign language. This is why I personally attach great importance to a varied training of vocabulary as well as implied or exploratory grammar, especially in the beginners' courses where the basic knowledge is taught.
What area are you working in?
I am currently in the final stages of my doctorate in German as a foreign and second language at the Faculty of Linguistics and Literary Studies at Bielefeld University. I also work as a German teacher in an international class at a secondary school in Bielefeld.
What topics are you currently working on?
I am currently working on the topic: "Investigating the motivation of Vietnamese learners of German - an empirical study in some language institutions in Vietnam". In my project, I aim to find out the motivational orientations of Vietnamese learners of German and the factors influencing their motivation to learn German. I am also focussing on analysing textbooks for foreign language teaching and the role of media use in German lessons.
What is your area of expertise?
My specialism is the teaching of German (German as a foreign and second language) in German lessons. I am also working with a colleague at a secondary school to develop a language support concept for German as a second language, which is geared towards newly immigrated pupils who have just arrived in Germany and still have little knowledge of German and therefore need support, particularly in the area of technical language. The focus of the DaZ lessons is on the one hand on the acquisition of words and sentences that are relevant to life and school and on the other hand on working through and consolidating the current lesson content so that the pupils can better follow the lessons in the mainstream class.
What area do you work in?
I work at PunktUm as a teacher for the study-related intensive courses for international students, doctoral candidates and academic staff. This primarily involves providing language and social support and preparing participants for everyday university and professional life.
What topics are you currently working on?
I am currently working on scenario didactics in vocational language courses. What potential does the scenario method offer learners to better prepare themselves for everyday working life and combine linguistic knowledge with practical skills? And what challenges do you still face in developing this method?
What is your favourite subject area?
I am particularly interested in multilingualism in foreign language courses, but also in scenario didactics and other action-orientated methods in language learning.