Penny Ur was awarded an OBE
(Officer of the Order of the
services to English Language Teaching earlier this year and as my last gig for the British Council I organised an event in her honour at the annual summer ETAI conference in Jerusalem. Knowing that events of
this kind can easily slide into a sentimental outpouring of endless congratulations
and knowing that Penny is not the kind of person who would like that, we were
keen to keep it professional, elegant and not too gooey (Amanda Caplan,
personal communication, 22 March 2013).
The event opened with footage from
from the Queen. At this point, quite unexpectedly, the packed house broke into
a rapturous applause. We wanted to avoid soppiness but this was indeed very
emotional and I swear quite a few of us had tears in our eyes. After the
standing ovation had subsided, Caron Sethill, Deputy Director of the British
Council Israel officially opened the event with a short speech congratulating
Penny on her achievement. This was followed by five speakers delivering short
papers devoted mainly to Penny Ur's books.
Amanda Caplan shared with us a few
activities and tips from Penny's recently republished "Vocabulary Activities". Nava Horovitz, Penny's long-time friend and collaborator talked about teachers' notes
in "Discussions that Work" in her presentation entitled "Penny's gems". Jeremy Day was up next and he shared his experience of working with Penny on the Active Grammar series. The
last two papers were devoted to Penny's articles. Michele Ben, chair of ETAI, talked
about the importance of crap-detecting
which she learned from Penny. Finally I provided my interpretation of Penny's 1997
article "The
English Teacher as Professional" in my Pecha-Kucha 20x20 style
presentation.
The lights went out again and we
watched a celebratory video montage put together by my colleague Linda (immense thanks once again!)
Greetings
from teachers and colleagues from all over the world really overwhelmed the
heroine of the day and she was literally speechless when she got up on the
stage. Penny confessed that she rarely stumbles for words but that was a rare
occasion she did.
The event turned out exactly the
way I envisaged: tasteful, professional and entertaining - with just a dash of sentimentality thrown in. Many thanks to everyone who helped me organise it.
Photo by Manar Yacoub |
For photos from the event, click here
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