At the April 1963 annual conference of the National Association for Foreign Student Affairs (
NAFSA), now stands for Association of International Educators, there was a suggestion about a small conference of representatives from various kinds of ESOL programs. The pilot meeting was held in D.C. on September 12, 1963. There were representatives from NAFSA,
Center for Applied Linguistics (CAL), the
National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE), the
Modern Language Association (MLA), the
Speech Association of America (SAA), the
Bureau of Indian Affairs, the state educational systems of California, Michigan, Florida, Arizona, New Mexico, the city of New York, and Canada. They decided that a national convention on the teaching of English to speakers of other languages should be held in Arizona, May 8–9, 1964. They also decided that there was a need for a professional journal associated with the conference. The first conference took place with 700 participants. At this point,
TESOL organization was called The National Advisory Council on Teaching of English as a Foreign Language (NACTEFL). An
ad hoc committee representing professional organizations, state educational systems, and individuals concerned with the teaching of English to speakers of other languages met on January 30, 1965. They prepared a brief for the meeting and came up with a questionnaire to enable any and all members of the Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages, Inc. (TESOL) was established in 1966. Thus, TESOL became its own separate organization. At the third annual meeting, they also made the first steps for TESOL Quarterly and they appointed their first editor, Betty Wallace Robinett from
Ball State University, Indiana. Volume 1, Issue 1 of the
Quarterly was published in March 1967. In the editorial of the first issue, the emphasis is put on practical matters. Moreover, even at its initiation, TESOL had global goals. It was concerned with English as a Second Language, as well as English as a Foreign Language. The first issue raised three concerns for the field; there is a high demand for ESL or EFL overseas, there are more than 100,000 foreign students in the U.S. and Canada and there is a need to help raise the language competence of these students, and lastly, there are several millions of residents in the U.S. whose first language is not English and teachers need support. The first issue also listed goals for the journal and the organization. Brief version of the goals is as follows; • a central office, with a TESOL library • development of the journal as the central organ of the profession • a newsletter relevant to the TESOL field • a national register of competent personnel • a publishing program, in addition to the journal and the newsletter. which will offer pamphlets, fliers, reprints, recordings, etc. • a speaking and consulting program for workshops and professional development • an annual convention • planned program of national and regional meetings • organization cooperation with other organizations Also, there were several goals about what TESOL could achieve nationally; • Appointment of TESL specialist in a high position of the
U.S. Office of Education • Appointment of a TESL specialist as a consultant in every state where there is a TESOL program • Recognition of the problem by school administration about the needs of ESL students • Establishments of national guidelines for certification and preparation of teachers • Increased research in the pedagogy of ESL Some of the topics from the first issue were; teaching the sounds of English, the place of dictations in the ESL classroom, teaching reading and composition, the need for materials for teaching to Southwestern Indian speakers, teaching English to Spanish-English speakers, current trends of teaching English in France, curriculum trends in TESOL, programs administered by the U.S. department of Education. == 50th Anniversary ==