EEO STATEMENT Yorktown Systems Group, Inc., and its wholly-owned subsidiaries, are an Equal Opportunity Employer. No employee or applicant for employment is denied equal opportunity because of race, color, sex, national origin, religion, age, disability, marital status, pregnancy, sexual orientation, gender identity, genetic information, any other non-merit-based factor, or other characteristics protected by law. As part of the company's equal employment opportunity policy, Yorktown Systems Group, Inc., and its subsidiaries, will also take affirmative action as called for by applicable laws and Executive Orders to ensure that minority group individuals, females, disabled veterans, recently separated veterans, other protected veterans, Armed Forces service medal veterans, and qualified disabled persons are introduced into our workforce and considered for promotional opportunities. The Unconventional, LLC. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Yorktown Systems Group, Inc.
ABOUT THE ORGANIZATION Yorktown Systems Group, Inc., and its wholly-owned subsidiaries, are a committed team of dedicated former military and civilian professionals who believe in providing ethical and quality services to Government customers. Our leadership team is composed primarily of Veterans who are now serving in a corporate environment rather than in uniform. Our customer's missions become our own and we are committed to working as a team to achieve success. Because of the depth and experiences of our corporate leadership, we can assure all our customers that "we will do what we say we can do" and will focus on our customer's missions rather than corporate goals. Our business model is based on a personal commitment from our leaders to maintain contact with our customers to continually and consistently gauge our performance. Yorktown Systems Group was founded on the idea that providing quality and ethical services with a laser focus on our customer's goals is an effective long-term business model. Our mission, therefore, is to help our customers meet their requirements and goals. The contractor will not discharge or in any other manner discriminate against any employee or applicant for employment because such employee or applicant has inquired about, discussed, or disclosed the compensation of the employee or applicant or another employee or applicant. This provision shall not apply to instances in which an employee who has access to the compensation information of other employees or applicants as a part of such employee's essential job functions discloses the compensation of such other employees or applicants to individuals who do not otherwise have access to such information, unless such disclosure is in response to a formal complaint or charge, in furtherance of an investigation, proceeding, hearing, or action, including an investigation conducted by the employer, or is consistent with the contractor's legal duty to furnish information. The Unconventional, LLC is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Yorktown Systems Group, Inc.
Location
Arlington, VA - Arlington, VA 22201 US
National Capital Region (NCR) - Washington, DC 20540 US (Primary)
Remote Arlington, VA - Arlington, VA 22201 US
Remote Washington DC - Washington, DC 20001 US
Washington, DC - Washington, DC US
Job Description
Summary:
The Unconventional is seeking a highly skilled Language Instructor to join our team to support the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center (DLIFLC). DLIFLC is responsible for ensuring that our Nation's effort to understand the languages and cultures of our friends and foes alike are met. The DLIFLC provides culturally based foreign language education, training, evaluation, and sustainment to enhance the security of the nation here and abroad. DLIFLC plays a critical role in the preparation of service members for their missions whether as Foreign Area Officers, foreign affairs or liaison officers, military attaches, or simply as the language "go-to" soldier in a platoon on a patrol in a far-off province where the need for a language and cultural expertise can mean the difference between key national security mission success and failure, or simply life and death. In this role you will be responsible for providing classroom language instruction for the Defense Language Institute - Washington (DLI-W).
Specific duties may include, but are not limited to:
- Provide professional foreign language instruction to students in a classroom and/or virtual environment. Instruction can last six (6) hours or more per day, with courses ranging from ten (10) weeks or longer.
- Will prepare for each class he/she teaches, tailoring the lesson to individual student’s needs.
- All instruction and instructional support services provided under this contract must be based on proficiency-oriented principles of second language acquisition with a strong focus on instructional methods that are the most effective for adult learners.
- Instruction must be culturally-based, learner-centered, employing authentic materials and real-world tasks that resemble what students may do with their language skills in their final job assignments. Emphasis is placed on communicative competence in real-life situations and practical application of language skills to include appropriate military terminology and exposure to both formal and informal language including colloquial and idiomatic speech.
- The program emphasizes creativity and flexibility to meet the unique instructional needs of a diverse student population.
- At all levels of proficiency, from the beginner to advanced, level- and topic-appropriate lessons, materials and activities must be utilized to generate as much uninhibited, spontaneous use of the language as possible. This helps advance the students’ proficiency in all three evaluated/tested modalities in addition to writing.
- Writing skills must be taught to promote/enable language acquisition, leading to increased proficiency in a target language.
- Adults are goal-oriented and typically want practical applications for their learning. Methods like Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) and Task-based Language Teaching (TBLT) align well, as they focus on using the language for real-world communication and specific purposes. However, older methods that focus on grammar instruction as a foundation for building language skills, particularly early in the course, are equally acceptable.
- Sufficient attention must be devoted to the skills associated with non-participatory listening and general reading comprehension to permit level- appropriate attainment of the end-of-course proficiency objectives. This must be done through deliberate and frequent exposure to a range and variety of authentic target-language materials, accompanied by appropriate tasks and activities.
- The program is expected to bridge the gap between global and job-specific language performance skills and to prepare students for tasks they will likely perform in the target language. These skills include reading handwriting, keyboarding, writing for professional purposes and general correspondence.
- Training must engage the students’ higher order thinking skills (analyze, evaluate, create), develop independent learning skills and adhere to the best practices in and principles of adult education.
- The training MUST incorporate the use of diverse instructional technologies such as, but not limited to, electronic flash cards, online learning applications (apps), games, virtual and augmented reality, social collaboration tools in the LMS, a Human Language Technology tools (HLT) and Gen AI.
- Intercultural Competence and cultural knowledge MUST be integrated into language instruction in all phases of training. DLI recognizes that languages cannot be learned in a cultural vacuum. Language and culture are intricately intertwined and difficult to separate; therefore, language skills are to be developed in a context that includes information on the value systems, behavioral patterns, institutions, geography, and political, economic, and social systems of the areas where the target language is spoken.
- In all languages Contractors are expected to use authentic materials and language together in immersive ways with diagnostically oriented teaching methods guided by the following principles:
- Diagnostically oriented approach
- Learner-centered, skill-integrated approach
- Content-based curriculum and instruction
- Task-based and scenario-based instruction
- Instructional materials that address individual students’ needs
- Use of meaningful, interactive tasks
- Use of target language (TL)
- Use of authentic materials (current news, opinions, columns, etc.)
- Immersive environment
- Curriculum/materials should include:
- Sufficient quantity, analysis, and comprehension of listening and reading Target Language (TL) texts
- Integration of productive TL skills (speaking and writing)
- Application of Higher-Order Thinking Skills (HOTS)
- Reinforcement of vocabulary and discourse models, meaningful asks/activities/homework
- Integration of linguistic structure and vocabulary with discourse structure, pragmatics, and socio-cultural awareness
- Ancillary objectives such as manner or tenor (level of style, proper use of registers, cultural connotations, and politeness forms) and colloquial usage and/or slang must be introduced and taught during the course
- All courses regardless of length must include a syllabus.