The Michigan Daily Sr _. mil, Why complaining about your GSI's accent is a waste of time (and racist) Some students are blaming their academic troubles on their GSIs' accents. It's an easy way out. It's also the wrong one. By Gabe Nelson I Daily News Editor Like many students at the University, Business sopho- more Eric Brackmann can't understand his graduate student instructor. Brackmann tried to understand his economics GSI's accent, but he found communication "impos- sible." "I just gave up," Brackmann said. Now Brackmann lets his mind wander during class. "I tend to zone out for about the first 10 minutes as the GSI speaks," he said. Experiences like Brackmann's have become increasingly common in the new, global world of higher education. With an increase in the number of international graduate student instructors at the Uni- versity, administrators have dealt with an upswing in complaints from students saying their GSIs don't speak English fluently. Scott Kassner, a student advi- sor for the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, said at least one student per semester asks him for advice about a GSI the student can't understand. But unrest about accents is more significant than that number indicates, he said. "They might not be bringing it to our office, but we hear it and it happens," he said. Many students will drop out of a class or switch to another sec- tion of the same class if they find the GSI too hard to understand. Some stay in the class. Some mock the GSI's speech and treat the experience as an unpleasant rite of passage. And some actually learn more than they signed up for. In a world where many occupa- tions require employees to be able to understand people from other countries, understanding people from different areas is increas- ingly important. While a student might be able to avoid taking a class with an international GSI now, they might regret that deci- sion when they're working for a Chinese-owned company with co- workers who didn't grow up in the Midwest. For many, however, the prospect ofsittinginacorporateboard room trying to figure out what everyone else is saying isn't as frightening as failing calculus. One solution would be to forbid non-native English speakers from teaching classes, or on an indi- vidual level, to make sure all your GSIs speak English well. To quite a few students, that doesn't seem like a terrible idea. It is. THOSE WHO STAY WILL BE CHAMPIONS While some students give up when confronted with a hard-to- understand GSI, others learned from the struggle. Although it SCHEMBECHLER From page 11C She would be waiting at the kitchen counter for him with a bottle of Chivas Regal scotch, Bacon said. Schembechler went on to play college football at Miami (Ohio), where he started at offensive tack- le. Late in his career, he played under Woody Hayes, then Miami's coach. Hayes went on to coach at Ohio State. After graduating from Miami in 1951, Schembechler signed on as a graduate assistant under Hayes, who had taken over the head coach's job at Ohio State. There, Schembechler earned his master's degree in physical education. Following a tour of duty in the U.S. Army and brief assistant coaching stints at Presbyterian College in South Carolina, Bowl- ing Green and Northwestern, Schembechler returned to Colum- bus as one of Hayes's assistants. He served under Hayes for five more seasons before being hired as Miami's head coach in 1963. Schembechler led the Redskins (now the Redhawks) to a 40-17- 3 record in six seasons with the team. While coaching at Miami, Schembechler received job offers from Tulane, Vanderbilt and Pitts- burgh, Bacon said. Schembechler turned them all down. His sights were set on another job. "He was utterly passionate about Michigan," Bacon said. "He knew as a kid growing up in Ohio about Michigan's great tradition." In 1969, Michigan Athletic Director Don Canham needed someone to rebuild a program that had floundered during Bump Elliott's 10-year tenure. After interviewing Schem- bechler, Canham knew he had found the right man to return Michigan to its former glory. "His personality just struck me right away," Canham told The Michigan Daily in 2004. "I hired him 15 minutes after we began to talk. That was the turning point in my career as athletic director." Schembechler didn't take long to cement his legacy at Michigan. In his first season, the Wolverines came into their matchup with Ohio State as 17-pointunderdogs against made the class harder, it taught them how to communicate with people who don't speak English clearly. LSA sophomore Corinne Charlton said she had trouble understanding her foreign eco- nomics and calculus GSIs at first but eventually learned to commu- nicate with them. "It forced me to pay atten- tion, so it could be seen as a good thing," Charlton said. "Eventu- ally, I could figure out what they were saying." Many intro-level science and math courses at the University are taught by GSIs rather than by professors because it allows for smaller, more intimate classes where students can interact with their teachers, said mathematics lecturer Karen Rhea. All six GSIs currently teaching recitation sections for Mathemat- ics 216 are international GSIs. Science and math classes tend to elicit the most complaints about hard-to-understand GSIs because the classes are more difficult. Stu- dents will often blame their prob- lems on an international GSI to avoid blaming themselves, Kass- ner said. "Let's say a student is hav- ing trouble in calculus," the LSA student advisor said. "Is that dif- ficulty in calculus because of the way the GSI is speaking or is that because calculus is tough?" Kassner said international GSIs are an important element of a modern undergraduate education because they expose students to diverse cultures and accents. "One of the great advantages of being at a university like the Uni- versity of Michigan is that you get to encounter people from all over theworld," Kassnersaid. "Students should ask themselves, 'What can I learn from this person?" Not trying can be a form of rac- ism. SOFT RACISM Mocking international GSIs and blaming them for communication problems remains seen as largely acceptable on campus, even though other forms of discrimination are increasingly taboo. The Every Three Weekly, a cam- pus satire publication, published an article making fun of foreign professors called "North Campus Adopts Bloken Engrish As Official Language" last month. "Engineers, we all in same boat, and boat take you across watel, . and watel is ranguage," the article read. "Is a metaphol. Okay? Meta- phol?" Linguistics Prof. Kathryn Campbell-Kibler said articles like that draw on old stereotypes but use them in a new way. Asian language stereotypes have traditionally been used to an undefeated Buckeye squad. But the oddsmakers didn't account for the new man on the sideline. "He knew which guys to kick in the pants and which guys to pat on the head," Bacon said. "He was the single best motivator college foot- ball has ever seen." "If you were in his office deliv- ering water jugs or sandwiches, he would motivate you before you left," he said. In practice the week before the game, Schembechler taped "50-14" on the back of his players' helmets to remind them of their devastat- ing defeat a year earlier. The Wolverines came out of the tunnel at Michigan Stadium with a new determination. They shocked Ohio State with a 24-12 win, earn- ing Michigan its first trip to the Rose Bowl since 1964. That win set off what came to be known as the Ten-Year War, a series of bitterly fought games between Schembechler and Hayes, his former mentor. Those years intensified the Michigan- Ohio State rivalry, making it one of the most legendary in American sports. Over his coaching career, Schembechler continued to build his legacy as a Michigan icon. His toughness was unquestioned, his fairness universally praised and his temper legendary. Schem- bechler fostered a sense of Michi- gan pride in his teams. He focused on developing his players as more than just linemen or quarterbacks. "When we talk about the teams and how he prepared us to play, we also look at how he got us pre- pared to go on after football," said Betts, who played quarterback and safety under Schembechler in 1969 and 1970. "When you look around the country today at the guys who played for him, there's something very, very special about them" On the field, his coaching style was simple: Michigan would play hard-nosed football, grinding out wins with tough power running and an unshakable defense. The formula worked. Schembechler retired as head coach after the 1989 season with a .796 career winning percentage, having brought Michigan to 17 bowls. Schembechler's Wolverines never had a losing season. With 234 career wins, Schembechler ranks 10th all-time among Divi- depict Asian characters as stupid or inept. Although the character- istics of the mock language have remained the same - for example, an inability to distinguish between the letters "I" and "r" - it is now used to say Asians are good at math and science and bad at language skills, Campbell-Kibler said. Research shows that college students react differently to teach- ers from different national back- grounds. In a 1990 experiment by socio- linguists D.L. Rubin and K.A. Smith, undergraduates said a recorded lecture was easi- er to understand when played alongside a picture of a white woman than alongside a picture of an Asian woman. A 2005 experiment by Stepha- nie Lindemann showed that the average student college student has a more negative impression of Chinese, Russian and Mexican accents than of standard Ameri- can English. The students in Lin- demann's study ranked Chinese accents as the least prestigious. Complaints by students about hard-to-understand GSIs might be a kind of hidden racism, Campbell- Kibler said. Axelson said she spoke to an Italian economics GSI who experi- enced discrimination based on his accent. The GSI, who was white and dressed like an American, had already lived in the United States for two years and was fluent in English. "He was pretty at home here," Axelson said. "Based on his looks, you could easily think he was American." As the GSI entered the class- room and prepared for the begin- ning of class, he felt positive vibes, Axelson said. When he spoke with his Italian accent, though, every- thing changed. "People's faces closed off and they became hostile," Axelson sion I-A coaches. The only blemish on Schem- bechler's otherwise sterling coaching resume was his team's performance in bowl games. Schembechler's Michigan squads went 5-12 in bowls and never won a national title. But in the rivalry against Ohio State, Schembechler's teams put up a strong 11-9-1 record - a stark contrastto his predecessor Elliott's 3-7 record against the Buckeyes. The Wolverines' current streak of 100,000-plus fans in attendance began during Schembechler's ten- ure at a game against Purdue on Nov. 8, 1975. The phrase "Those who stay will be champions" - which Schem- bechler coined in his first season said. "That whole friendly atmo- sphere disappeared, and he then had to win them back." Some students misbehave in the classroom out of contempt for international GSIs, Axelson said. "I've seen students just do their e-mail in class," she said. "They'll hang out at the back of the room, talk to their friends, snicker about the GSI. That's really demoraliz- ing and undermining." Perhaps American students don't understand the importance of understanding different accents because they're lucky enough to grow up speaking English, the international language of busi- ness. The international graduate stu- dents understand, though that's one reason many of them study in the U.S. in the first place. NEW SLANG Nine international graduate stu- dents watched movie trailers in a Modern Languages Building class- room last month. The students, from different University depart- ments and schools, listened care- fully to the dialogue from movies like "Welcome to Mooseport," "50 First Dates" and "Shrek," silently mouthing the words. They used the trailers to learn American slang and colloquial English. In the class, English Language Institute 338, called Pronunciation in Context, ELI Lecturer Brenda Imber teaches international stu- dents to speak like Americans so they can communicate effectively with students and faculty. Some will become GSIs down the line. Others will stick to research. One graduate student spent 10 minutes before class writing e- mails to College of Engineering faculty in impeccable English. When the class started, though, he struggled to distinguish "they're" from "they are" and "we're" from as Michigan coach - remains an iconic part of Michigan lore. Schembechler also held the reins as Michigan's athletic direc- tor from 1988-1990. In 1989, he made the controversial decision to replace basketball coach Bill Frieder after Frieder announced he would be leaving to take a job at Arizona State Univirsity. "A Michigan man will coach Michigan, not an Arizona State man," Schembechler said at the time. That Michigan team went on to win the national championship. Until his death, Schembechler remained a constant presence on Michigan's campus. An honor- ary member of the senior society Michigamua, he maintained an "we are." It's the little things that are hard for non-native English speak- ers to master, Imber said. She told her students to mentally replace the word "they're" with "there." "Nobody can tell the differ- ence," Imber said. That is, nobody besides their students. The University has an extensive program in place to ensure that GSIs speak good Eng- lish, but for some it's not good enough. Are the little things really a substantial setback to communi- cation? To study at the University, inter- national students must pass the Test of English as a Foreign Lan- guage. Although all international graduate students have proven proficient in English, many have little experience speaking English in a classroom context, Axelson said. In ELI classes, GSIs learn what sort of language is expected in interactions with students and faculty, she said. "It's finding out what people actually do in an actual context," Axelson said. "If I want to estab- lish a rapport by having small talk, what kinds of things constitute small talk?" Many international students have to relearn greetings because the ones taught in textbooks are rarely followed in practice, Axel- son said. "Textbooks teach you a certain kind of greeting - the 'hello, how are you' sequence," Axelson said. "It may come as a surprise to hear interactions where people don't respond to 'how are you?' That's a weird one to hear if you've learned a pattern, which is 'fine, thank you, and you?' " TEACHING THE TEACHERS In 1984, the University had no training program for GSIs. Faced with an increasing num- ber of international graduate stu- dents who struggled with English in the classroom, the University began to require that all the inter- national graduate students take tests to gauge their command of academic English. The English Language Institute stepped in to become the primary form of Eng- lish instruction for graduate stu- dents. "GSIs are better teachers than they used tobe," Axelson said. All international students must now pass ELI's Academic Eng- lish Evaluation to become GSIs. They take the two-hour test at the beginning of each semester. Based on the results of the test, students are assigned to various English for Academic Purposes courses taught by the ELI. Cours- es for GSIs include Spoken and Written Grammar in Academic Contexts, Academic Speaking and Graduate Student Instructor Com- office in Schembechler Hall, which was named for him, and frequently spoke to Michigan's athletes. After his first wife, Millie, succumbed to adrenal cancer in 1992, the former coach helped to raise millions of dollars for can- cer research at the University. An endowed professorship at the University of Michigan Medical School also bears her name. "This is a tremendous shock and an irreplaceable loss for the University of Michigan fam- ily," University President Mary Sue Coleman said yesterday. "Bo Schembechler embodied all that is best about Michigan - loyalty, dedication and the drive for ever- greater excellence." This year, Schembechler audit- munication Skills. No matter how much English a GSI knows, terms like "electronic override" are going to be baffling at first, said assistant mathematics professor Dale Winter. That's why GSIs need to practice common classroom conversations before teaching classes, he said. International students taking ELI courses make presentations and hold simulated office hours as part of their training. ELI lecturers also teach gradu- ate students about American edu- cational culture. There are major differences between the way teachers and students interact in the United States and other coun- tries, Rhea said. One Chinese postdoctoral student teaching Math 115 was popular even though he origi- nally struggled to speak English because he made it clear that he cared about his students, she said. When a handful of administra- tors from Chinese universities vis- ited the University's mathematics department and spoke with the graduate student, they asked him why American students liked him so much. His answer cracked up the administrators. "In America, you have to care about the student," Rhea said, imi- tating the graduate student's Chi- nese accent. "The administrators laughed like that was arealbizarre idea." Many departments at the Uni- versity - including the math department - train their GSIs beyond the courses taught by the ELI. After receiving certification, math GSIs must take a month-long department-specific course before they can teach a course. They also "shadow" GSIs already teaching courses to learn how to grade assignments and interact with students, Rhea said. "We truly do not want to put someone in the classroom that we know we're going to get com- plaints on," she said. Granted, it can be difficult to understand an international GSI unfamiliar with American class- roomculture, who speaks accented or poor English. The experience, however, is what students make of it. The Internet and increasingly free trade have made English alin- gua franca that allows people from different countries and native speakers of different languages to communicate. Students have in international GSIs an opportunity to gain expo- sure to the myriad varieties of Eng- lish that cross the telephone lines and fill the boardrooms of today's international world. All they have to do is listen. This article originally ran on March 7, 2007, ed a class at Michigan's Ford School of Public Policy, named for his friend, University alum and former U.S. President Gerald Ford, who played football at Michigan. "Bo Schembechler was an out- standing citizen in every respect," Ford said in a written statement. "He was a dear friend of ours and willbegreatlymissed byhis numer- ous friends. It is a great loss to the University of Michigan in particu- lar and football in general." Schembechler leaves behind his wife Kathy and sons Glenn, Matt and Geoff. - Mariem Qamruzzaman and James V. Dowd contributed to this report. This article originally ranon Nov. 18, 2006. NEED A NEW COMP UTER? 30% - 50% OFF RETAIL! Nothing refurbished, everything is NEW and un-opened! Un-beatable prices --- we buy in bulk! FREE support for the life of your system. 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