As an international instructor, should I openly talk about my accent?












5















I'm an international, teaching at an American University, and I have an accent, which can be strong at times. I'm working hard at it, have always been, but still, the accent is there.



This has never been a problem in my career as a researcher because I was most of the time working with senior researchers and grad students. And even if they were native, they've never expressed any concern about my accent.



I'm sure that several times they didn't understand a specific word I was saying but they catch the meaning from the context. Sometimes, people asked me to repeat in an informal way by simply saying "what's that?" or "say it again".



Last year, when I started to teach undergrads, which are unlikely to have experienced different accents, I had some issues.
Some students asked me to repeat and I gladly did. My concern is related to those students that didn't ask, either because they are shy or because they thought that by asking I would be offended.



This next semester (yes, I'm going to teach in the summer) I'm thinking to tell my students in the very first minutes of the first class about my accent and tell them that I'm totally fine if they need me to repeat some words.



I'm not sure about it, because I've read that the first 6 minutes with a new class are the most important ones, and by showing this "weakness" they will conclude that I'm not capable, knowledge-wise, to teach them.



A mentor of mine told me I should talk openly about my accent, and add that in addition to English, I fluently speak two other languages and can understand two others. Trying then to make a balance between my "weakness" (my accent when speaking English) and my knowledge with languages.










share|improve this question




















  • 3





    Acknowledging a weakness is a sign of strength.

    – Boris Bukh
    2 hours ago











  • I had a professor with an extremely-strong accent that started the first class by promising us we would be able to understand him fine after hearing him lecture for two weeks. I guess his prediction was more or less correct. Definitely don't talk too fast so they have a chance to ask when they missed what you said.

    – A Simple Algorithm
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    Related: academia.stackexchange.com/questions/121962/…

    – henning
    57 mins ago
















5















I'm an international, teaching at an American University, and I have an accent, which can be strong at times. I'm working hard at it, have always been, but still, the accent is there.



This has never been a problem in my career as a researcher because I was most of the time working with senior researchers and grad students. And even if they were native, they've never expressed any concern about my accent.



I'm sure that several times they didn't understand a specific word I was saying but they catch the meaning from the context. Sometimes, people asked me to repeat in an informal way by simply saying "what's that?" or "say it again".



Last year, when I started to teach undergrads, which are unlikely to have experienced different accents, I had some issues.
Some students asked me to repeat and I gladly did. My concern is related to those students that didn't ask, either because they are shy or because they thought that by asking I would be offended.



This next semester (yes, I'm going to teach in the summer) I'm thinking to tell my students in the very first minutes of the first class about my accent and tell them that I'm totally fine if they need me to repeat some words.



I'm not sure about it, because I've read that the first 6 minutes with a new class are the most important ones, and by showing this "weakness" they will conclude that I'm not capable, knowledge-wise, to teach them.



A mentor of mine told me I should talk openly about my accent, and add that in addition to English, I fluently speak two other languages and can understand two others. Trying then to make a balance between my "weakness" (my accent when speaking English) and my knowledge with languages.










share|improve this question




















  • 3





    Acknowledging a weakness is a sign of strength.

    – Boris Bukh
    2 hours ago











  • I had a professor with an extremely-strong accent that started the first class by promising us we would be able to understand him fine after hearing him lecture for two weeks. I guess his prediction was more or less correct. Definitely don't talk too fast so they have a chance to ask when they missed what you said.

    – A Simple Algorithm
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    Related: academia.stackexchange.com/questions/121962/…

    – henning
    57 mins ago














5












5








5








I'm an international, teaching at an American University, and I have an accent, which can be strong at times. I'm working hard at it, have always been, but still, the accent is there.



This has never been a problem in my career as a researcher because I was most of the time working with senior researchers and grad students. And even if they were native, they've never expressed any concern about my accent.



I'm sure that several times they didn't understand a specific word I was saying but they catch the meaning from the context. Sometimes, people asked me to repeat in an informal way by simply saying "what's that?" or "say it again".



Last year, when I started to teach undergrads, which are unlikely to have experienced different accents, I had some issues.
Some students asked me to repeat and I gladly did. My concern is related to those students that didn't ask, either because they are shy or because they thought that by asking I would be offended.



This next semester (yes, I'm going to teach in the summer) I'm thinking to tell my students in the very first minutes of the first class about my accent and tell them that I'm totally fine if they need me to repeat some words.



I'm not sure about it, because I've read that the first 6 minutes with a new class are the most important ones, and by showing this "weakness" they will conclude that I'm not capable, knowledge-wise, to teach them.



A mentor of mine told me I should talk openly about my accent, and add that in addition to English, I fluently speak two other languages and can understand two others. Trying then to make a balance between my "weakness" (my accent when speaking English) and my knowledge with languages.










share|improve this question
















I'm an international, teaching at an American University, and I have an accent, which can be strong at times. I'm working hard at it, have always been, but still, the accent is there.



This has never been a problem in my career as a researcher because I was most of the time working with senior researchers and grad students. And even if they were native, they've never expressed any concern about my accent.



I'm sure that several times they didn't understand a specific word I was saying but they catch the meaning from the context. Sometimes, people asked me to repeat in an informal way by simply saying "what's that?" or "say it again".



Last year, when I started to teach undergrads, which are unlikely to have experienced different accents, I had some issues.
Some students asked me to repeat and I gladly did. My concern is related to those students that didn't ask, either because they are shy or because they thought that by asking I would be offended.



This next semester (yes, I'm going to teach in the summer) I'm thinking to tell my students in the very first minutes of the first class about my accent and tell them that I'm totally fine if they need me to repeat some words.



I'm not sure about it, because I've read that the first 6 minutes with a new class are the most important ones, and by showing this "weakness" they will conclude that I'm not capable, knowledge-wise, to teach them.



A mentor of mine told me I should talk openly about my accent, and add that in addition to English, I fluently speak two other languages and can understand two others. Trying then to make a balance between my "weakness" (my accent when speaking English) and my knowledge with languages.







teaching students international






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share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago







ziulfer

















asked 2 hours ago









ziulferziulfer

28928




28928








  • 3





    Acknowledging a weakness is a sign of strength.

    – Boris Bukh
    2 hours ago











  • I had a professor with an extremely-strong accent that started the first class by promising us we would be able to understand him fine after hearing him lecture for two weeks. I guess his prediction was more or less correct. Definitely don't talk too fast so they have a chance to ask when they missed what you said.

    – A Simple Algorithm
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    Related: academia.stackexchange.com/questions/121962/…

    – henning
    57 mins ago














  • 3





    Acknowledging a weakness is a sign of strength.

    – Boris Bukh
    2 hours ago











  • I had a professor with an extremely-strong accent that started the first class by promising us we would be able to understand him fine after hearing him lecture for two weeks. I guess his prediction was more or less correct. Definitely don't talk too fast so they have a chance to ask when they missed what you said.

    – A Simple Algorithm
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    Related: academia.stackexchange.com/questions/121962/…

    – henning
    57 mins ago








3




3





Acknowledging a weakness is a sign of strength.

– Boris Bukh
2 hours ago





Acknowledging a weakness is a sign of strength.

– Boris Bukh
2 hours ago













I had a professor with an extremely-strong accent that started the first class by promising us we would be able to understand him fine after hearing him lecture for two weeks. I guess his prediction was more or less correct. Definitely don't talk too fast so they have a chance to ask when they missed what you said.

– A Simple Algorithm
1 hour ago





I had a professor with an extremely-strong accent that started the first class by promising us we would be able to understand him fine after hearing him lecture for two weeks. I guess his prediction was more or less correct. Definitely don't talk too fast so they have a chance to ask when they missed what you said.

– A Simple Algorithm
1 hour ago




1




1





Related: academia.stackexchange.com/questions/121962/…

– henning
57 mins ago





Related: academia.stackexchange.com/questions/121962/…

– henning
57 mins ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















5














Accents are tricky, especially in large lecture halls where students hear you over a mic, and can't see your lips. It would go a long way for your undergraduates to say something like:




As you've noticed, I have a strong (native language) accent in English. I know sometimes that makes it hard to understand certain words. Please don't hesitate to ask me to repeat something.




This would help with students who are shy or don't want to offend you. If you like, you could mention the other languages you're familiar with to encourage speakers of those languages to connect with you. This might impress mostly monolingual Americans into being more understanding.






share|improve this answer































    6














    A difference isn't a weakness. Don't think of it that way. You may find difficulty in communicating because of that difference, but it is just that, a difference. People in the US from Alabama and those from Boston speak English with different accent and different idioms. Eventually we get used to hearing a different accent so the effect lessens.



    In fact, you and I would have a lot of trouble communicating since I am quite deaf and technological solutions are only partial. Even it the best of situations a speaker sometimes needs to repeat or - better - say an equivalent thing with different words.



    But the first few minutes is, IMO, a good time to introduce yourself and how you speak. In fact, it can be fun if you "put on" an extreme version of your accent, just to show the range. Cockney slang, for example.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1





      Yes, I do laugh when they say we will have a "Town Hall" ...

      – Solar Mike
      2 hours ago











    • @SolarMike I've been trying to think what accent that would cause laughter in, but I can't figure it out. What did you mean?

      – Azor Ahai
      1 hour ago






    • 1





      @AzorAhai well, more than accent - it's Buffy's reference to Cockney rhyming slang... google is your friend ! So, whenever someone says they want a town hall (meeting) I tend to think that the amount that will be communicated will be small...

      – Solar Mike
      59 mins ago














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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    5














    Accents are tricky, especially in large lecture halls where students hear you over a mic, and can't see your lips. It would go a long way for your undergraduates to say something like:




    As you've noticed, I have a strong (native language) accent in English. I know sometimes that makes it hard to understand certain words. Please don't hesitate to ask me to repeat something.




    This would help with students who are shy or don't want to offend you. If you like, you could mention the other languages you're familiar with to encourage speakers of those languages to connect with you. This might impress mostly monolingual Americans into being more understanding.






    share|improve this answer




























      5














      Accents are tricky, especially in large lecture halls where students hear you over a mic, and can't see your lips. It would go a long way for your undergraduates to say something like:




      As you've noticed, I have a strong (native language) accent in English. I know sometimes that makes it hard to understand certain words. Please don't hesitate to ask me to repeat something.




      This would help with students who are shy or don't want to offend you. If you like, you could mention the other languages you're familiar with to encourage speakers of those languages to connect with you. This might impress mostly monolingual Americans into being more understanding.






      share|improve this answer


























        5












        5








        5







        Accents are tricky, especially in large lecture halls where students hear you over a mic, and can't see your lips. It would go a long way for your undergraduates to say something like:




        As you've noticed, I have a strong (native language) accent in English. I know sometimes that makes it hard to understand certain words. Please don't hesitate to ask me to repeat something.




        This would help with students who are shy or don't want to offend you. If you like, you could mention the other languages you're familiar with to encourage speakers of those languages to connect with you. This might impress mostly monolingual Americans into being more understanding.






        share|improve this answer













        Accents are tricky, especially in large lecture halls where students hear you over a mic, and can't see your lips. It would go a long way for your undergraduates to say something like:




        As you've noticed, I have a strong (native language) accent in English. I know sometimes that makes it hard to understand certain words. Please don't hesitate to ask me to repeat something.




        This would help with students who are shy or don't want to offend you. If you like, you could mention the other languages you're familiar with to encourage speakers of those languages to connect with you. This might impress mostly monolingual Americans into being more understanding.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 2 hours ago









        Azor AhaiAzor Ahai

        5,04211844




        5,04211844























            6














            A difference isn't a weakness. Don't think of it that way. You may find difficulty in communicating because of that difference, but it is just that, a difference. People in the US from Alabama and those from Boston speak English with different accent and different idioms. Eventually we get used to hearing a different accent so the effect lessens.



            In fact, you and I would have a lot of trouble communicating since I am quite deaf and technological solutions are only partial. Even it the best of situations a speaker sometimes needs to repeat or - better - say an equivalent thing with different words.



            But the first few minutes is, IMO, a good time to introduce yourself and how you speak. In fact, it can be fun if you "put on" an extreme version of your accent, just to show the range. Cockney slang, for example.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 1





              Yes, I do laugh when they say we will have a "Town Hall" ...

              – Solar Mike
              2 hours ago











            • @SolarMike I've been trying to think what accent that would cause laughter in, but I can't figure it out. What did you mean?

              – Azor Ahai
              1 hour ago






            • 1





              @AzorAhai well, more than accent - it's Buffy's reference to Cockney rhyming slang... google is your friend ! So, whenever someone says they want a town hall (meeting) I tend to think that the amount that will be communicated will be small...

              – Solar Mike
              59 mins ago


















            6














            A difference isn't a weakness. Don't think of it that way. You may find difficulty in communicating because of that difference, but it is just that, a difference. People in the US from Alabama and those from Boston speak English with different accent and different idioms. Eventually we get used to hearing a different accent so the effect lessens.



            In fact, you and I would have a lot of trouble communicating since I am quite deaf and technological solutions are only partial. Even it the best of situations a speaker sometimes needs to repeat or - better - say an equivalent thing with different words.



            But the first few minutes is, IMO, a good time to introduce yourself and how you speak. In fact, it can be fun if you "put on" an extreme version of your accent, just to show the range. Cockney slang, for example.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 1





              Yes, I do laugh when they say we will have a "Town Hall" ...

              – Solar Mike
              2 hours ago











            • @SolarMike I've been trying to think what accent that would cause laughter in, but I can't figure it out. What did you mean?

              – Azor Ahai
              1 hour ago






            • 1





              @AzorAhai well, more than accent - it's Buffy's reference to Cockney rhyming slang... google is your friend ! So, whenever someone says they want a town hall (meeting) I tend to think that the amount that will be communicated will be small...

              – Solar Mike
              59 mins ago
















            6












            6








            6







            A difference isn't a weakness. Don't think of it that way. You may find difficulty in communicating because of that difference, but it is just that, a difference. People in the US from Alabama and those from Boston speak English with different accent and different idioms. Eventually we get used to hearing a different accent so the effect lessens.



            In fact, you and I would have a lot of trouble communicating since I am quite deaf and technological solutions are only partial. Even it the best of situations a speaker sometimes needs to repeat or - better - say an equivalent thing with different words.



            But the first few minutes is, IMO, a good time to introduce yourself and how you speak. In fact, it can be fun if you "put on" an extreme version of your accent, just to show the range. Cockney slang, for example.






            share|improve this answer













            A difference isn't a weakness. Don't think of it that way. You may find difficulty in communicating because of that difference, but it is just that, a difference. People in the US from Alabama and those from Boston speak English with different accent and different idioms. Eventually we get used to hearing a different accent so the effect lessens.



            In fact, you and I would have a lot of trouble communicating since I am quite deaf and technological solutions are only partial. Even it the best of situations a speaker sometimes needs to repeat or - better - say an equivalent thing with different words.



            But the first few minutes is, IMO, a good time to introduce yourself and how you speak. In fact, it can be fun if you "put on" an extreme version of your accent, just to show the range. Cockney slang, for example.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 2 hours ago









            BuffyBuffy

            59.1k17182280




            59.1k17182280








            • 1





              Yes, I do laugh when they say we will have a "Town Hall" ...

              – Solar Mike
              2 hours ago











            • @SolarMike I've been trying to think what accent that would cause laughter in, but I can't figure it out. What did you mean?

              – Azor Ahai
              1 hour ago






            • 1





              @AzorAhai well, more than accent - it's Buffy's reference to Cockney rhyming slang... google is your friend ! So, whenever someone says they want a town hall (meeting) I tend to think that the amount that will be communicated will be small...

              – Solar Mike
              59 mins ago
















            • 1





              Yes, I do laugh when they say we will have a "Town Hall" ...

              – Solar Mike
              2 hours ago











            • @SolarMike I've been trying to think what accent that would cause laughter in, but I can't figure it out. What did you mean?

              – Azor Ahai
              1 hour ago






            • 1





              @AzorAhai well, more than accent - it's Buffy's reference to Cockney rhyming slang... google is your friend ! So, whenever someone says they want a town hall (meeting) I tend to think that the amount that will be communicated will be small...

              – Solar Mike
              59 mins ago










            1




            1





            Yes, I do laugh when they say we will have a "Town Hall" ...

            – Solar Mike
            2 hours ago





            Yes, I do laugh when they say we will have a "Town Hall" ...

            – Solar Mike
            2 hours ago













            @SolarMike I've been trying to think what accent that would cause laughter in, but I can't figure it out. What did you mean?

            – Azor Ahai
            1 hour ago





            @SolarMike I've been trying to think what accent that would cause laughter in, but I can't figure it out. What did you mean?

            – Azor Ahai
            1 hour ago




            1




            1





            @AzorAhai well, more than accent - it's Buffy's reference to Cockney rhyming slang... google is your friend ! So, whenever someone says they want a town hall (meeting) I tend to think that the amount that will be communicated will be small...

            – Solar Mike
            59 mins ago







            @AzorAhai well, more than accent - it's Buffy's reference to Cockney rhyming slang... google is your friend ! So, whenever someone says they want a town hall (meeting) I tend to think that the amount that will be communicated will be small...

            – Solar Mike
            59 mins ago




















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