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Jason Mark Ward<br />

Email: jasonmarkward@hotmail.com<br />

Personal Profile: An innovative, energetic and experienced writing teacher with two MAs, in TESOL and<br />

critical theory, and twelve years of over-seas university-level teaching, plus published expertise in teaching<br />

reading and writing, student-centred instruction, feedback and educational technology.<br />

Education and Training<br />

PhD in <strong>English</strong> (currently in progress). Nottingham University. UK<br />

2006-Present (P/T)<br />

My research into film and literature explores the exhilarating new field of adaptation and, specifically, the adaptation and<br />

appropriation of D. H. Lawrence. I have discovered a ‘lost’ short film, presented at the International D.H. Lawrence<br />

Conference, completed the upgrade from MPhil to PhD and am currently working to complete my thesis in 2010.<br />

MA in TESOL (GPA 3.93). The American University of Sharjah. UAE<br />

2003-2005 (P/T)<br />

Reading and Writing in ESL (A), Language Testing and Evaluation (A), Culture and the Language Teacher (A), Curriculum<br />

and Materials Development (A), Classroom Research (A), Language Acquisition and Development (A), Linguistics for ESL<br />

Teachers (B+), Advanced <strong>English</strong> Grammar (A), <strong>English</strong> Language Teaching Methodology (A), Practicum (A), Technology in<br />

the ESL Curriculum (A), Thesis: Computer Assisted Language Learning in Whole Language.<br />

MA in Critical Theory. Nottingham University. UK<br />

1997 (P/T)<br />

In teaching the most obvious benefits of this MA are critical literacy and critical thinking. When instructing reading, the<br />

cultural and ideological assumptions that underwrite texts are emphasised, and students encouraged to question how they<br />

feel about the content and how it relates to their lives. When teaching writing, students are advised to critically evaluate<br />

their own writing and speaking through discourse analysis, consider audience and the social and cultural purposes of<br />

language use, and to recognise rhetorical patterns. To advance critical thinking, students are encouraged to take<br />

responsibility for discovering meaning, and to find a purpose that is real to them and therefore worth the effort.<br />

BA (hons) 2:i in <strong>English</strong> Language and Literature. University of Central England. UK 1992<br />

Major courses: The History of the <strong>English</strong> Language, Socio-linguistics, Semantics, Sentence & Text, Words & Meaning,<br />

Poetics, Narrative, Genre and Gender, Chaucer, Shakespeare, Renaissance Drama, 17 th Century Literature, 18 th Century<br />

Literature, Literature 1790-1825, Literature 1840-1880, Reception of Literature, Modernist Short Story, Modernist<br />

Literature, 1930s America, Literature and its Determinants post-1945, Film Studies, Science Fiction.<br />

Theatre Training Programme. Holgate Theatre, Nottingham.<br />

1993 (P/T)<br />

This course developed management and team-building skills through theatre training, improvisation and performance.<br />

Presentations<br />

• INGED Ankara, Turkey 2009 – iRead: Student-Generated Reading<br />

• TESOL Qatar, Qatar 2009 – Student-Generated Content<br />

• AUS Research Forum, UAE 2009 - Not as Good as the Book: Can Film Adaptations Ever Live Up to Our Expectations<br />

• Nottingham University, UK 2008 – Team-taught an MA class with the director of the DH Lawrence Research Society<br />

• The Eleventh International D. H. Lawrence Conference. UK, 2007 - The endings of "Odour…"<br />

• TESOL Florida, USA 2006 – Dare to Moodle<br />

• TESOL Arabia, UAE 2006 – Moodlers in the Middle East<br />

• TESOL Texas, USA 2005 – Tale of two bloggers<br />

• TESOL Arabia, UAE 2005 – Computer-assisted feedback<br />

• TESOL Arabia, UAE 2004 – Reading, writing and blogging: Pushbutton publishing for our pupils<br />

• KYOTO JALT, Japan 2004 – Alternative assessment and the rise of the weblog<br />

• TESOL Arabia, UAE 2003 – Wired community in the CBI classroom [Online Discussion Groups]<br />

Publications<br />

• Chrysanthemums at Broadway (2010). D. H. Lawrence society newsletter, 85, 38-45.<br />

• Interactions in an online class (2010). In M. Al-Hamly, P. Davidson & I. Fayed (Eds.). Computers in <strong>English</strong> Language<br />

Teaching (pp. 155-167). United Arab Emirates: TESOL Arabia Publications.<br />

• Teaching to learn: Advantages of student-centred learning (2009). In C. Gunn (Ed.), Exploring TESOL practices in the<br />

Arabian Gulf (pp. 124-137). Dubai: TESOL Arabia.<br />

• The neon nights of the Emirates (2007). In Encounters in the Middle East (pp. 209-216). Palo Alto: Solas House.<br />

• ESL Café: The Computer-Assisted Feedback Experience (2006). In Proceedings of the 11th TESOL Arabia<br />

conference: Teaching, learning, leading (pp. 191-204), Vol 10. Dubai: TESOL Arabia.<br />

Moodling in the Middle East (2006). In C. Combe & L. Barlow (Eds.) Language teacher research in the Middle East<br />

(pp. 173-186). Alexandria, VA, USA: TESOL<br />

• Dare to Moodle! (2006). TESOL Perspectives, 14, (1), 10-16.<br />

• Having a BALL with Blog-Assisted Language Learning (2005, January). LORE: An E-journal for teachers of<br />

writing. Retrieved January 21, 2005, from http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/lore/digressions/content.htmdis13<br />

• Blog-assisted language learning (2004, October). TEFL web journal. Retrieved October 1, 2004, from<br />

http://www.teflweb-j.org/v3n1/blog_ward.pdf<br />

• Teaching ESL/EFL with the Internet (book review) (2004). TESOL Arabia Perspectives, 11 (3).<br />

• Dozens of restaurant reviews published in every Dubai Explorer book from 2004-2009. Dubai: Explorer Publishing.<br />

Jason Mark Ward’s Resume p. 1


Teaching Experience<br />

Senior Instructor of Writing. Department of Writing Studies (DWS). American University of Sharjah, UAE.<br />

Chaired and served on most committees for the department and the school such as IT, the E-Learning Platform and<br />

the Faculty Development, Placement and Recruitment committees. Senior instructor of the following courses:<br />

WRI102 Writing and Reading across the Curriculum. Taught and designed a writing course based around<br />

stimulating, culturally appropriate readings in areas such as philosophy, travel, film, and literature.<br />

WRI101 Communications 101 – Academic Writing. Pioneered the use of weblogs and utilised meaningful<br />

content such as film, literature, and psychoanalysis to teach effective composition skills at the 101 level.<br />

WRI001 Fundamentals of Writing. Designed and taught interactive methods of learning the basics of <strong>English</strong><br />

in 001 through student-centred online activities and discussion forums. Introduced Moodle to DWS.<br />

Adaptation: Text to film. I have also designed a syllabus for our communications department on the study of<br />

film adaptation (my PhD area) to promote reading and writing across the curriculum, which is awaiting approval.<br />

<strong>English</strong> Teacher. Bilkent University Ankara, Turkey.<br />

Previously taught <strong>English</strong> courses to native Turkish speakers at Bilkent University. Participated in a content-based<br />

instruction (CBI) pilot program that resulted in a new curriculum being instated in the university's <strong>English</strong> program.<br />

Instructed the following courses:<br />

• CCI (Cultures, Civilisations and Ideas) & AMER (American Studies). Taught 2 nd and 3 rd year engineering<br />

students how to discuss, read and write about challenging, canonised humanities and philosophy texts from<br />

Homer to Freud. Assisted in the adjunct course design, produced own lesson plans, assignments and weekly<br />

materials. Also, designed and administered the CCI web site.<br />

• ENG 101. Taught and designed 1 st year <strong>English</strong> courses to improve academic writing and oral <strong>English</strong> skills.<br />

Produced own CBI syllabus, course-books, lesson plans, weekly materials and websites for the topics of The Self<br />

and Identity (1999) and Dream Interpretation (2001).<br />

• ENG 102. Taught and designed 1 st year <strong>English</strong> and Composition II, to improve academic language skills and<br />

research writing. Produced CBI syllabus, course-books, lesson plans, weekly materials and websites for Dreams<br />

Research (2000) and Conspiracy Theory (2002).<br />

• ENG 403/410 Business Communication (ESP). Assisted in the design and delivery of a course in business<br />

communications to develop and improve business-writing skills and oral communication for 4 th year students.<br />

Designed and administered web site.<br />

Writing Consultant. Bilkent University Ankara, Turkey.<br />

Tutored five hours per week at BilWrite, the university writing centre:<br />

• Assisted students working on writing, reading and presentation assignments and <strong>CV</strong> building.<br />

• Specialised in computer skills, essay composition, research and humanities projects.<br />

ESL Teacher. LEC (Paris), Nottingham, UK.<br />

This position was an exciting, early introduction to teaching and working with students from a different culture:<br />

• Taught conversational <strong>English</strong> to groups of French students during their educational holidays in the UK.<br />

• Arranged and led excursions and activities, providing comprehensive information on the area and attractions.<br />

<strong>English</strong>, Communications and I.T. Teacher. People’s College, Nottingham & Wilmorton College, Derby, UK.<br />

Worked part-time in two community colleges simultaneously, teaching, assessing and preparing resources for a<br />

range of subjects:<br />

• Taught <strong>English</strong> ‘A’ Levels, and GCSEs, GNVQ, Credit Framework, RSA & BTEC Communications; RSA CLAIT, C&G<br />

Information Technology<br />

• Educated students from a wide range of backgrounds and with a variety of abilities, such as: mature students,<br />

recent immigrants, the hearing-impaired, and university applicants.<br />

• Helped students to find work placements, visited them on-site and provided support.<br />

<strong>English</strong> Teacher and School Administrator. Thomas Danby College, Leeds. UK<br />

Primarily responsible for the administration and evaluation of the schools of Health, Science, Leisure and Tourism<br />

and also taught part-time:<br />

• Taught GCSE <strong>English</strong> to a school referral student with autism and also to a class of mature students.<br />

• Supported care staff on field trips for students with learning difficulties.<br />

• Compiled agendas, took minutes, monitored databases, produced spreadsheets and reports.<br />

• Ran a fitness class for the other staff during my lunch break, three times a week.<br />

Aug<br />

2002-<br />

Jan 2010<br />

1998-<br />

June<br />

2002<br />

1998-<br />

2000<br />

Summers<br />

1991-<br />

1994<br />

1995-<br />

1996<br />

1997-<br />

1998<br />

Skills/ Hobbies<br />

• Helped to set up the Moodle CMS for The American University of Sharjah as part of an Open Source initiative.<br />

• Highly computer literate in the use of Macs, PCs, Blackboard, Moodle and a range of software and hardware.<br />

• Designed and administered a number of websites and CMSs for a range of courses and audiences and set up a<br />

tutorial database for daily use in the Bilkent writing centre.<br />

• Planned, produced and DJed my own weekly alternative shows for Bilkent Radio and Ankara’s Radiovizyon.<br />

• Performed and assisted in numerous student film projects and in a televised play for the Ruler of Sharjah.<br />

• Sing backing vocals and play harmonica for a band, which has performed concerts in Dubai and Sharjah.<br />

References. Available on request.<br />

Jason Mark Ward’s Resume p. 2

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