Very good conversation with a language coach! I love the questions that were asked and the points that were discussed during the session!
2 ปีที่แล้ว +1
I love this video, it made my day! It just proves what I believe in: language coaching can help one overcome their fears and master the language, and a coach offers a different service than a teacher, which is unfortunately a typical misconception by many people. I am building a language coach for people wanting to conquer Spanish and I am more than motivated than ever! btw, I cannot find part 2 , what is recorded at all?
I wonder if she has ever been trained (or educated) as a REAL teacher. What she is describing is simply what any great teacher does anyway in a one-2-one learning session. Setting personal goals for a client is part of the game - not a superpower. And, the question every (so-called) Language Coach has NEVER been able to answer for me is "When does Coaching end and when does Language Learning start?"
Language learning starts with basic preparation and then everything is about you being an independent language learner. Once you become an independent language learner the idiots are going to call you a conspiracy theorist. It begins and ends with coaching.
She sounds like a politician, a lot of unnecessary words and syntagms which don't mean anything or very little. I'll tell you what coaching a language really is: one on one tutoring. The end, thank you, that would $5. The term coach is used by people who are targeting higher income and wealthier clientele. When you tell someone you are a teacher...its like saying you're a shepherd...but when you tell someone you're a coach...it's like saying you're a horticultural and agronomist manager. See what I mean?
Sorry , can't agree with that. Yes, I have seen so many people misusing the term coach just for beneficial gains. But, there is really a difference. A coach really goes beyond than a traditional tutor. English is my second language and I met many different tutors and English teachers and it took me a really long time to master the language. I still, of course, make many mistakes and have a thick accent. But, I always wondered if there would be a person who specializes on helping you master the language and could be actually there for you any time you have a doubt. I know a coach won't be there 24/7 but they actually do a very good job at helping you navigate through the difficulties of learning the language on an almost daily basis if you want to. I am a tutor. I love my students, but I don't expect them to email me during a day I'm not supposed to see them to ask me a random question. I do make goals with them, but it's on them 100% to achieve them and work on them without me. I'll only focus on the teaching and answering questions on the days I see them. I prepare my lessons in advanced, they have a syllabus (I do adjust it accordingly) and we have the hour long lesson and I don't expect to hear from them until the next session. They can email me, but it's really not my priority to answer them right away. Whereas, when I hired a coach (yes, it was too expensive for me so I couldn't continue), she would call me whenever she thought of an idea for me to try on a day, she would challenge me, I could email her 24 hours and she would respond almost immediately, she knew techniques to make me feel less anxious and nervous about speaking the language, and always would hear all of my frustrations about the language and mistakes I thought I made, and taught me how to look for many other resources that would help me along the way. My regular teachers and tutors never did that.
That's a possibility, someone offering the same service could brand themselves as a coach in an effort to try and get higher paying customers sure however, coaching is a methodology in it's own right and if a teacher uses a coaching methodology and thus offers additional services it has value. I think the confusion is comparing titles instead of methodologies, you can call yourself a teacher and still use a coaching methodology. There are also different styles of coaching.
@@carlzammit6441 That's true yes, but there is no coaching methodology that isn't already implemented in basic teaching methodologies. Coaching is a relatively new term that sprung out of the teaching bubble I just think it's quite misleading. A CEO of a company in China would very much prefer to hire a language coach to an English teacher. On my business card I've put "language coach" even though I'm a simple teacher. I just know there's a bigger chance for me to be hired by a higher paying customer that way. It's all marketing I guess.
@@dr.boinkersbookkeeping9028 at a surface level sure but I'd hope that a CEO would be able to compare providers based upon the value of their services irrespective of their self appointed title. This woman is using the coaching methodology of life coaches/executive coaches, it's a coaching methodology in addition to traditional language learning methods. I think she finds it difficult to explain in simple terms what she offers but she's def. Legit and offering services above and beyond any language providers I know and I'm planning to pursue this path as well. What services do you offer your students? Are you in China? I'm in Japan.
Agreed. Actually from what I've seen generally language coaches don't even speak a second language nor have they really studied the research and strategies of how they learned their own so I feel it's just a bit of the blind leading the blind since they don't even have "tools/strategies" that they know can work for people to improve themselves. Personally I think language coaching a person who has THEIR OWN SUCCESS and knows specific useful methods to learn a language is probably FAR BETTER than language classes because I don't think language teaching is necessarily that useful 1 on 1 for 1 to 2 hours a week. Essentially I've been studying language learning tips from people who have already beaten the game (learned a second language) and just give useful tips for how to do so. There are a variety of proven tips/strategies which can be better suited person to person and a language "coach" could help a person improve their self study /input this way and probably succeed spending far less money and learning far more that way that from teachers.
Loving the clarity of the information! Thanks for sharing!
Thank you for this amazing video! Unfortunately, I couldn’t find part 2/2
Very good conversation with a language coach! I love the questions that were asked and the points that were discussed during the session!
I love this video, it made my day! It just proves what I believe in: language coaching can help one overcome their fears and master the language, and a coach offers a different service than a teacher, which is unfortunately a typical misconception by many people. I am building a language coach for people wanting to conquer Spanish and I am more than motivated than ever! btw, I cannot find part 2 , what is recorded at all?
Really clever coach! I like her! Thanks a lot!!!
Very insightful! Thanks for sharing this vid. Is there a part 2? Can't find it!
fantastic sir
wow! great explanation
fantastic explanation!
wow, amazing, thanks for that!!!
so fantastic, from Cambodia
Great video!!! Very clarifying!!!
Where s part 2 plz?
For someone living in Hawaii, Nuremberg is an exotic place, isn't it ?
Where is part 2?
is there a part 2 anywhere on your channel? I might be blind....
Kasia Smith :(
2024 now but where is part 2?
I wonder if she has ever been trained (or educated) as a REAL teacher. What she is describing is simply what any great teacher does anyway in a one-2-one learning session. Setting personal goals for a client is part of the game - not a superpower. And, the question every (so-called) Language Coach has NEVER been able to answer for me is "When does Coaching end and when does Language Learning start?"
Language learning starts with basic preparation and then everything is about you being an independent language learner. Once you become an independent language learner the idiots are going to call you a conspiracy theorist. It begins and ends with coaching.
cristine is here
Marry me 😍
kིkིkིkིkིkིkིkིkིkི
She sounds like a politician, a lot of unnecessary words and syntagms which don't mean anything or very little. I'll tell you what coaching a language really is: one on one tutoring. The end, thank you, that would $5. The term coach is used by people who are targeting higher income and wealthier clientele. When you tell someone you are a teacher...its like saying you're a shepherd...but when you tell someone you're a coach...it's like saying you're a horticultural and agronomist manager. See what I mean?
Sorry , can't agree with that. Yes, I have seen so many people misusing the term coach just for beneficial gains. But, there is really a difference. A coach really goes beyond than a traditional tutor. English is my second language and I met many different tutors and English teachers and it took me a really long time to master the language. I still, of course, make many mistakes and have a thick accent. But, I always wondered if there would be a person who specializes on helping you master the language and could be actually there for you any time you have a doubt. I know a coach won't be there 24/7 but they actually do a very good job at helping you navigate through the difficulties of learning the language on an almost daily basis if you want to. I am a tutor. I love my students, but I don't expect them to email me during a day I'm not supposed to see them to ask me a random question. I do make goals with them, but it's on them 100% to achieve them and work on them without me. I'll only focus on the teaching and answering questions on the days I see them. I prepare my lessons in advanced, they have a syllabus (I do adjust it accordingly) and we have the hour long lesson and I don't expect to hear from them until the next session. They can email me, but it's really not my priority to answer them right away. Whereas, when I hired a coach (yes, it was too expensive for me so I couldn't continue), she would call me whenever she thought of an idea for me to try on a day, she would challenge me, I could email her 24 hours and she would respond almost immediately, she knew techniques to make me feel less anxious and nervous about speaking the language, and always would hear all of my frustrations about the language and mistakes I thought I made, and taught me how to look for many other resources that would help me along the way. My regular teachers and tutors never did that.
That's a possibility, someone offering the same service could brand themselves as a coach in an effort to try and get higher paying customers sure however, coaching is a methodology in it's own right and if a teacher uses a coaching methodology and thus offers additional services it has value. I think the confusion is comparing titles instead of methodologies, you can call yourself a teacher and still use a coaching methodology. There are also different styles of coaching.
@@carlzammit6441 That's true yes, but there is no coaching methodology that isn't already implemented in basic teaching methodologies. Coaching is a relatively new term that sprung out of the teaching bubble I just think it's quite misleading. A CEO of a company in China would very much prefer to hire a language coach to an English teacher. On my business card I've put "language coach" even though I'm a simple teacher. I just know there's a bigger chance for me to be hired by a higher paying customer that way. It's all marketing I guess.
@@dr.boinkersbookkeeping9028 at a surface level sure but I'd hope that a CEO would be able to compare providers based upon the value of their services irrespective of their self appointed title. This woman is using the coaching methodology of life coaches/executive coaches, it's a coaching methodology in addition to traditional language learning methods. I think she finds it difficult to explain in simple terms what she offers but she's def. Legit and offering services above and beyond any language providers I know and I'm planning to pursue this path as well. What services do you offer your students? Are you in China? I'm in Japan.
Agreed. Actually from what I've seen generally language coaches don't even speak a second language nor have they really studied the research and strategies of how they learned their own so I feel it's just a bit of the blind leading the blind since they don't even have "tools/strategies" that they know can work for people to improve themselves. Personally I think language coaching a person who has THEIR OWN SUCCESS and knows specific useful methods to learn a language is probably FAR BETTER than language classes because I don't think language teaching is necessarily that useful 1 on 1 for 1 to 2 hours a week. Essentially I've been studying language learning tips from people who have already beaten the game (learned a second language) and just give useful tips for how to do so. There are a variety of proven tips/strategies which can be better suited person to person and a language "coach" could help a person improve their self study /input this way and probably succeed spending far less money and learning far more that way that from teachers.