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Faculty
& Staff
Meet
some TELC faculty and staff! |
Victoria Badalamenti, MA
in TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages)
from the School for International Training in Brattleboro, Vermont,
is the Director of The English Language Center. Ms.
Badalamenti has worked in the field of English as a Second
Language for over 25 years as an ESL teacher, teacher trainer,
textbook author, workshop presenter and administrative director. She
is also co-author of Grammar Dimensions: Form,
Meaning and Use: Book 1, a low-level grammar text,
published by Heinle & Heinle. |
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Linda Ann Kunz, EdD in Applied Linguistics
and MA TESOL at Teachers College, Columbia University, has
been teaching ESL in The English Language Center at LaGuardia
for 25 years. She is the author of 26 Steps and The
X-Word Grammar Series. Currently, she is also
teaching at Lehman College and New York University.
(Photo credit: Brent Buell)
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Peter B. Hoffman, MA
in TESOL from Michigan State University,
has experience teaching English in Shiga, Japan in addition
to his fifteen years at York College and LaGuardia Community
College, CUNY. Mr. Hoffman is a dedicated grammar and
writing teacher at The English Language Center. |
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Linda A.
Pelc, PhD in Linguistics, MA in TESOL, and MS in Supervision
and Administration, has been teaching ESL/EFL
for 29 years and has been in The English Language Center
since 1986. She has also taught TESOL courses
to teachers at New York University and The New School University
since 1995. She has worked as a teacher trainer/staff
developer for the New York City Department of Education
since 2001. |
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Laurie
Shayler, BA in Dance from SUNY at Brockport and MA in TESOL
from Hunter College, has been a teacher in TELC
for over 10 years where she created the elective class
DSL: Dance as a Second Language and teaches writing. In
this unique and very popular class, students improve their
English language skills through the artistry of Social
Dancing. She has performed with
a number of modern dance companies and choreographers throughout
the U.S., Europe and Asia. When she’s
not in the ESL classroom, she’s teaching Social Dancing
around New York City.
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Jennifer Horton Benichou, MA
in TESOL from Hunter College and MA
in Computing in Education from Teacher’s College, Columbia
University, has experience teaching in Brazil in
addition to her twenty years at Queens College and LaGuardia
Community College. Ms. Horton Benichou explores the
uses of technology for language learning in her research
and in the classroom. |
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Lenore Gale,
PhD and MA, has taught in TELC since 1997 and
previously taught both ESL and Spanish at several other
CUNY colleges for many years. However, she has also
pursued other careers, notably directing an arts-in-education
program at a Manhattan performing arts center for ten years,
writing curriculum guides for a Hispanic dance company,
and designing and producing her own line of jewelry. She
is fluent in Spanish, French, Portuguese, and Swedish,
so watch out if you gossip in any of those languages during
class. |
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Elizabeth Iannotti, MA in TESOL from
Teachers College, Columbia University, is an instructor
as well as the Academic Coordinator of the Day Intensive Program
at The English Language Center. Ms.
Iannotti has seven years experience teaching in Costa Rica
and the U.S. |
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Felicia
Rose, MA in TESOL, MA in Near Eastern Language and
Literature, works as the Curriculum and Resources
Coordinator in the English Language Center at LaGuardia.
Her interests include reading, writing and language teaching
and learning. |
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John Een, EdD in International
Educational Development from Teachers College, Columbia University
and MA in TESOL from the University of Minnesota,
is the Associate Director of The English Language Center. During
his 30-year career, he has been a classroom teacher, program
administrator, and teacher trainer in the U.S., China, France,
and Iran. After retiring from a full-time faculty position
at Columbia University, he returned to LaGuardia and TELC,
where he had previously worked as an ESL instructor and coordinator
from 1986 to 1990.
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Abdou
Hannaoui, PhD and MA in Linguistics/TESOL from SUNY Stony
Brook, is the Coordinator of the Evening Intensive & Non-Intensive
ESL programs. He was a Peace Corps training program Director
in Morocco and Yemen, Director of the first intensive ESL
program at Indiana State University, TESOL teacher trainer,
and EFL/ESL teacher in Morocco and the U.S.A. He also taught
courses in TESOL methodology, applied linguistics, Arabic,
and French. |
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Michele Fine, MA
in TESOL from New York University, has
experience teaching English in several private, state,
and city colleges and a maximum-security prison in addition
to her ten years at LaGuardia. An experienced reader
for the CUNY ACT exam, Ms. Fine teaches writing and ACT
preparation at The English Language Center.
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