Bruce Cooper
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After retiring from 30 years of engineering and research and
development at McDonnell Douglas, Bruce Cooper told himself “First, I
want to do nothing since I haven’t done that since I can’t remember.”
Three months later, he ended up at the Literacy Services Program at
the Newport Beach Library, where he has been tutoring a woman from
Japan for the last two years.
If it’s not their native language, a person trying to learn
English can be in an extremely challenging situation, he said.
There’s the vast vocabulary, the wide use of colloquialisms and the
phonetic system with a seemingly larger amount of exceptions than
rules. The position of teaching it might only be slightly less
complicated.
“When you first start out, it’s really somewhat difficult. It
takes a lot on the tutor’s part to really develop where to go and how
to go,” Cooper said.
The Literacy Services Program, composed of 75 volunteers and a
small staff, helps adults improve their reading and writing skills
through one-on-one tutoring. Sessions occur weekly and are typically
one to two hours.
“It’s a flexible program. We want them to develop skills that they
are looking for first and along the way we put in skills we think
they should have,” Cooper said. In the case of his student, Takako
Okano, “We changed our format to make it more work oriented.”
Okano came to the U.S. with her husband and two kids and is
working in the office of a Japanese doctor. Cooper has aided in
making her job a little easier by helping her practice the words and
phrases used in different phone communication scenarios.
They have also worked on giving people directions, using both
textbook and creative approaches. For instance, if she tells him
about a restaurant she ate at, he’ll ask her for directions from
there to the library.
Reading books has been another method of gaining greater
understanding of English. While the book “Holes” wasn’t easy to get
through, their current book presents even greater challenges.
“Willy Wonka is a little bit difficult in that there is so much
colloquialism,” Cooper said.
Before a student can enter the program, they must go through an
assessment session so that the tutors can decide which issues need to
be addressed and how. Cooper is one of five assessors and tries to do
one or two assessments week.
Cooper explained that through this part of his job, “I really get
to meet a lot of different people. I ask a lot of questions about
lifestyle, anything to get to know that person. I use that also as a
forum to get them to feel at ease, to get them to talk about
themselves.”
In tutoring, the student isn’t the only one who reaps rewards.
“You know, you really feel like you are doing something,” Cooper
said, adding with a laugh that, “You’ve got to pay back sometime.”
-- Story by Tom Forquer,
Photo by Don Leach
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