Skip to main content

Member Moment: Ndeye Diallo

by Ndeye Diallo |

TESOL Member Moment celebrates our members’ achievements and contributions to the field of English language teaching.

Ndeye Diallo
TESOL Professional Member
ESL Specialist, Learning Facilitator for Evolutions High School
Providence, Rhode Island, USA

Why are you a TESOL member?

I am a TESOL member to not only connect with other ELT professionals but to learn from the best. I additionally aspired to be an agent of change in the English language teaching (ELT) field by bringing in a different cultural and professional perspective and be a voice amongst TESOL professionals of African descent.

There is a multitude of benefits from which I gained as a member of the TESOL organization, from having the opportunity to network and collaborate with other TESOL professionals to working under the guidance of past chairs who took me under their professional wings. These experiences have made me a better educator and a more prepared ELT professional. They provided me with the tools necessary to serve my multilingual learners and paved the way for me to become more confident and break through as a TESOL professional of African descent.

What has been your most significant achievement in or contribution to the TESOL field?

My most significant achievement in the TESOL field is joining the leadership team of the English as a Foreign Language Interest Section (EFLIS) as the current chair for 2019. I was able to plan, organize and moderate sessions during TESOL Convention 2019. This year, I helped run five webinars for global EFLIS members and shared best practices with the ELT community at large.

More specific instances of these experiences and contribution are as follows:

  • I presented a session with the “Nonnative” English Speaker Teachers Interest Section entitled, “Global TESOL Professionals of African Descent: Negotiating Identity and Inequity.”
  • Moderated an InterSection session by the EFLIS, Social Responsibility Interest Section, and Bilingual-Multilingual Education Interest Section entitled, “Preserving the Tower of Babel: Language Diversity as Social Justice.”
  • Facilitated the EFLIS and Intercultural Communication Interest Section presentation entitled, “Intercultural Communication and Competence Education Models in the EFL Context.”
  • Lastly, as chair, I was the moderator of our academic session, called “Differentiated Instruction and Assessment in EFL Contexts: Research, Practice, Recommendations.”

Presenters:

  • Yilin Sun, PhD; Past President, TESOL (2013–2016); Seattle Colleges, USA
  • Deborah Short, PhD; President, TESOL (2019–2022); Director, Academic Language Research & Training, Arlington, VA, USA
  • Juliana Diaz, Institucion Universitaria Colombo Americana- UNICA, Bogota Colombia
  • Ke Xu; Chair, TESOL Professional Publications Council; Past Chair, TESOL EFLIS; Borough of Manhattan Community College, City University of New York, USA
  • Eddy White, PhD; Assessment Coordinator, Center for English as a Second Language (CESL); Associate Professor, College of Humanities, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA

About the author

Ndeye Diallo

Ndeye Diallo was born and raised in Senegal. She received her BA in American literature from Cheikh Anta Diop University and her second master’s in TESL at St. Cloud State University. Ndeye has worked as an ESL instructor in the summer program at Brown University; at Dorcas Place, an adult literacy center; at an independent school as a French and ESL teacher; as an adjunct professor at Johnson and Wales University; and as a lecturer at Qatar University. Currently, Ndeye works as an ESL specialist for the Providence Public School District in Rhode Island.

comments powered by Disqus

This website uses cookies. A cookie is a small piece of code that gives your computer a unique identity, but it does not contain any information that allows us to identify you personally. For more information on how TESOL International Association uses cookies, please read our privacy policy. Most browsers automatically accept cookies, but if you prefer, you can opt out by changing your browser settings.