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    Jonathan Acuña Solano, Post Author
    Contact Email: jonacuso@gmail.com

From Physical Desks to Digital Breakout Rooms: Managing Interaction and Group Work in Online Adult ESL Classrooms

Adult Learners, Breakout Rooms, British Council, Classroom Management, CLT, Communicative Language Teaching, Interaction, online teaching, Reflective Practice 0 comments

 

Balance of structure and flexibility
AI-generated illustration by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in March 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     Working online and taking this course with the British Council has prompted me to reflect more deeply on my own teaching practices in virtual environments. The experience has encouraged me to examine not only what I do in my online classes, but also why I do it, and how these choices shape my learners’ opportunities for interaction and development.

     Perhaps these reflections and ideas may contribute to other teachers who are beginning their journey in the online teaching profession, particularly those seeking to navigate the complexities of managing interaction in digital spaces. Over the past fifteen years, I have worked extensively in online education, and this sustained experience has allowed me to observe patterns, challenges, and possibilities that might not be immediately visible to novice instructors.

     Through continuous reflective journaling, I have traced the path I have walked as an educator, identifying practices that have proven effective and others that required reconsideration. This process has not been immediate; rather, it has evolved gradually, shaped by experience, experimentation, and critical reflection. It is my hope that the insights presented in this paper, grounded both in structured training and personal experience, may serve as a meaningful point of reference for teachers striving to refine their own online teaching practices.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


From Physical Desks to Digital Breakout Rooms: Managing Interaction and Group Work in Online Adult ESL Classrooms

 

Abstract

This paper explores the organization of interaction in synchronous online English language classrooms for adult learners, drawing on insights from the British Council TeachingEnglish course Organising the Classroom and integrating reflective practice developed over more than fifteen years of online teaching experience. It examines how traditional principles of classroom management, particularly those related to pair and group work, can be adapted to virtual environments through tools such as breakout rooms. The discussion is supported by theoretical perspectives from applied linguistics and sociocultural theory, emphasizing the importance of interaction, learner autonomy, and scaffolding. Special attention is given to challenges such as mixed proficiency levels, learner dominance, and participation anxiety, as well as strategies to address them in online settings. Ultimately, the paper argues that effective online teaching requires a nuanced balance between structure and flexibility, allowing interaction to emerge organically while maintaining clear pedagogical objectives.

Keywords:

British Council, Online Teaching, Adult Learners, Breakout Rooms, Interaction, Reflective Practice, Classroom Management, Communicative Language Teaching, CLT

 

 

Resumen

Este artículo analiza la organización de la interacción en clases sincrónicas de inglés en línea dirigidas a estudiantes adultos, a partir de los aportes del curso Organising the Classroom del British Council y de la práctica reflexiva desarrollada a lo largo de más de quince años de experiencia docente en entornos virtuales. Se examina cómo los principios tradicionales de manejo de clase—especialmente aquellos relacionados con el trabajo en parejas y grupos—pueden adaptarse a contextos digitales mediante herramientas como las salas de trabajo (breakout rooms). Asimismo, se incorporan perspectivas teóricas de la lingüística aplicada y del enfoque sociocultural, destacando la importancia de la interacción, la autonomía del estudiante y el andamiaje. Se abordan desafíos comunes como los niveles mixtos, la dominancia de algunos estudiantes y la ansiedad al participar, junto con estrategias para enfrentarlos en contextos en línea. En conjunto, el artículo sostiene que la enseñanza efectiva en línea requiere un equilibrio matizado entre estructura y flexibilidad, permitiendo que la interacción surja de manera natural sin perder de vista los objetivos pedagógicos.

 

 

Resumo

Este artigo explora a organização da interação em aulas síncronas de inglês online para adultos, com base nas contribuições do curso Organising the Classroom do British Council e na prática reflexiva construída ao longo de mais de quinze anos de experiência no ensino virtual. Analisa-se como princípios tradicionais de gestão de sala de aula—especialmente aqueles relacionados ao trabalho em pares e grupos—podem ser adaptados a ambientes digitais por meio de ferramentas como breakout rooms. O texto também dialoga com perspectivas teóricas da linguística aplicada e da teoria sociocultural, enfatizando a importância da interação, da autonomia do aprendiz e do andamiaje (scaffolding). Além disso, são discutidos desafios recorrentes, como níveis mistos, alunos dominantes e ansiedade na participação, bem como estratégias para lidar com esses aspectos no ensino online. Em síntese, o artigo defende que o ensino eficaz em ambientes virtuais exige um equilíbrio sutil entre estrutura e flexibilidade, permitindo que a interação se desenvolva de forma orgânica, sem perder de vista os objetivos pedagógicos.

 


Introduction

Organizing interaction in the language classroom has long been recognized as one of the most significant responsibilities of a teacher. According to Jeremy Harmer (2007), classroom interaction is the engine that drives communicative language learning because it allows learners to negotiate meaning, test hypotheses, and refine their linguistic output. Traditionally, such interaction has depended heavily on physical classroom layouts: rows of desks, circular tables, or U-shaped seating arrangements. However, the rapid expansion of online teaching environments has challenged educators to rethink these spatial assumptions.

The TeachingEnglish course “Organising the Classroom,” developed by the British Council (n.d.), emphasizes that classroom layout can significantly influence the success of pair and group activities. Yet for teachers working online with adult learners, physical arrangements are replaced by virtual structures such as breakout rooms. These digital environments introduce a different pedagogical nuance: instead of moving desks or reorganizing chairs, teachers rely on technological tools to structure communication.

For educators teaching adult learners in synchronous online classes, the challenge is not simply technical but methodological. As I have come to observe in my own reflections from the course, the possibilities for grouping learners in platforms like Zoom or Microsoft Teams are limited yet flexible (Acuña Solano, 2026). Breakout rooms function as virtual tables where conversation can sprout up without the physical constraints of traditional classrooms. The teacher thus becomes not merely a facilitator of interaction but also a digital warder of collaborative spaces.

This paper, my 549th publication on my reflective blog, examines how the principles presented in the British Council course can be adapted to online adult EFL teaching contexts. By integrating theoretical insights from applied linguistics with practical reflections from online teaching experience, it argues that meaningful interaction can flourish even when the traditional classroom disappears.

Classroom Layout and Digital Space

In physical classrooms, teachers often experiment with multiple seating arrangements to encourage collaboration. A café-style layout, for example, places learners at small tables to promote discussion, while a U-shaped arrangement allows learners to see one another and the board simultaneously. Such configurations are frequently recommended in communicative language teaching because they facilitate peer interaction. However, these arrangements are not always possible. Large classes, fixed furniture, and limited space can restrict teachers’ options. In online classrooms, the situation is quite different: there are no desks to move, no chairs to reposition, and no rows or columns of students. Instead, interaction is structured through digital architecture.

Reflecting on my online teaching experience in synchronous online courses, I have often noted that breakout rooms function as the closest equivalent to group tables (Acuña Solano, 2026). Teachers may randomly assign learners to rooms or manually group them according to pedagogical goals. While manual grouping may be time-consuming, it allows instructors to strategically pair students with complementary strengths or similar proficiency levels.

From a sociocultural perspective, these digital interactions still reflect the collaborative learning principles described by Lev Vygotsky. Vygotsky’s (1978) concept of the Zone of Proximal Development emphasizes that learning occurs most effectively when individuals collaborate with peers who can scaffold their development. Even in online environments, the seeds of mischief, in the sense of curiosity, experimentation, and playful linguistic exploration, can emerge when learners work together in small groups. Interestingly, online environments may even enhance certain aspects of interaction. Because breakout rooms create independent conversational spaces, learners often feel less observed and therefore more willing to experiment with language. In such contexts, communication may flourish long ere this situation would have occurred in a traditional classroom where all students remain within earshot of the teacher.

Teacher Position and Monitoring Interaction

In physical classrooms, teacher positioning plays a crucial role in managing interaction. Teachers are often advised to stand at eye level with students and to monitor group work from a slight distance so that learners remain responsible for producing language themselves. Online environments transform this dynamic entirely. When a teacher enters a breakout room, learners immediately notice the teacher’s digital presence. As I often get to explain other colleagues, students can see the instructor arrive on screen, making monitoring more explicit than in physical classrooms (Acuña Solano, 2026).  This visibility can be beneficial, but it also requires careful moderation. If teachers remain too long in one room, learners may become overly dependent on them.

This challenge echoes concerns raised by Michael Long (1996) in his Interaction Hypothesis, which emphasizes that language development occurs when learners negotiate meaning during communication. If the teacher intervenes excessively, learners may not struggle productively with language. Teachers must therefore monitor interactions while resisting the temptation to provide every missing word or expression.

In practice, effective monitoring requires strategic movement among breakout rooms. Teachers might listen quietly, take notes on recurring errors, and later address them during feedback. This approach encourages learners to remain in thought about their own language production rather than relying on immediate correction. Such reflective monitoring also demonstrates pedagogical nuance. Rather than acting as a constant authority figure, the teacher becomes a guide who observes interaction, collects linguistic evidence, and supports learners’ communicative autonomy.

Common Challenges in Pair and Group Work

Despite its pedagogical benefits, group work can also present challenges. The British Council’s (n.d.) course identifies several common issues, including dominant learners, shy participants, mixed proficiency levels, and excessive noise. One frequent challenge involves learners who dominate discussions. These individuals may not be intentionally spiteful, yet their enthusiasm can prevent others from contributing. Assigning roles, such as group leader or secretary, can channel their energy productively and prevent them from monopolizing conversation.

Another challenge arises with shy learners who hesitate to speak. According to Rod Ellis (2003), anxiety can significantly influence second-language performance. Teachers must therefore create supportive environments where learners feel comfortable experimenting with language. Pairing shy students with supportive peers rather than overly assertive ones can help them gradually develop confidence.

Mixed-level groups present additional complexities. In university classrooms and adult education settings, learners often arrive with diverse linguistic backgrounds. While such diversity can enrich interaction, it can also create imbalances. Teachers must carefully design tasks that allow both stronger and weaker learners to contribute meaningfully. From my very personal perspective, mixed-level interaction can be beneficial when structured thoughtfully (Acuña Solano, 2026). In online breakout rooms, learners may collaborate with peers at similar levels during one activity and with more advanced partners during another. This rotation encourages learners to adapt their language and strategies across different communicative contexts.

Encouraging Meaningful Communication

One of the most important principles highlighted in the British Council’s (n.d.) course is that group work exists primarily to promote communication. Teachers must resist the impulse to control every aspect of interaction. Instead, they should create opportunities for learners to experiment with language and express their ideas.

This perspective endorsed by the British Council aligns with communicative language teaching and task-based learning approaches. According to Michael Long (1996), authentic interaction helps learners process input more deeply and develop more accurate language forms. When learners collaborate on tasks, whether discussing a problem, planning a project, or debating an issue, they engage in meaningful negotiation of meaning (Acuña Solano, 2026).

In online classrooms, teachers may initially long to have the sight of physical interaction among students, the subtle gestures, whispered comments, and spontaneous laughter that characterize face-to-face communication. Yet digital environments offer their own communicative possibilities. Chat boxes, collaborative documents, and breakout rooms create alternative channels for interaction (Acuña Solano, 2026). Teachers thus act as warders of these communicative spaces, ensuring that dialogue flows constructively without becoming chaotic. They must balance freedom with guidance, allowing interaction to flourish while maintaining clear pedagogical objectives.

Reflection and Professional Growth

Reflective teaching plays an essential role in improving classroom management. The British Council (n.d.) recommends that teachers evaluate their own behavior during lessons: Where do they stand? How much time do they spend with each group? Do they listen carefully to learners’ conversations? Such reflection can reveal unexpected patterns. Teachers may discover that they consistently spend more time with certain groups or that they unconsciously intervene too frequently. By analyzing these tendencies, educators can refine their strategies and foster more equitable interaction.

For online teaching and based on my online experiences, reflection is particularly important in online teaching contexts (Acuña Solano, 2026). Because digital classrooms lack physical cues, instructors must rely on careful observation and timing to ensure that all groups receive attention. Large classes may require teachers to monitor some groups first and others later, ensuring that interaction remains balanced (Acuña Solano, 2026).

Professional reflection also highlights the subtle emotional dynamics of group work. Some learners may appear willful or sulky when asked to collaborate, especially if they are accustomed to teacher-centered instruction. Gradual introduction of pair and group activities can help them adapt to more interactive learning environments.

Conclusion

Managing interaction in language classrooms requires creativity, flexibility, and pedagogical awareness. While many classroom-management strategies were originally designed for physical classrooms, their underlying principles remain relevant in digital learning environments.

The reflections presented in this paper demonstrate that online tools such as breakout rooms can effectively replicate the collaborative dynamics of traditional classrooms. When used thoughtfully, these tools allow interaction to sprout up naturally among like-minded learners, fostering meaningful communication and linguistic development (Acuña Solano, 2026).

The insights from the TeachingEnglish course by the British Council show that successful group work depends not only on classroom layout but also on teacher positioning, monitoring strategies, and sensitivity to learners’ emotional needs. Scholars such as Lev Vygotsky, Michael Long, and Rod Ellis reinforce the idea that interaction is fundamental to language development.

Ultimately, the teacher’s role is to cultivate environments where learners can communicate, experiment, and learn from one another. Whether in a physical classroom or a digital platform, the goal remains the same: to create spaces where language learning thrives through collaboration, reflection, and the subtle nuance of human interaction.

San José, Costa Rica

Sunday, March 29, 2026


 

📚 References

Acuña Solano, J. (2026). Personal reflections on TeachingEnglish: Organising the classroom course. Unpublished course notes.

British Council. (n.d.). TeachingEnglish: Organising the classroom. http://open.teachingenglish.org.uk/

Ellis, R. (2003). Task-based language learning and teaching. Oxford University Press.

Harmer, J. (2007). How to teach English. Longman.

Long, M. (1996). The role of the linguistic environment in second language acquisition. In W. Ritchie & T. Bhatia (Eds.), Handbook of second language acquisition. Academic Press.

Vygotsky, L. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psychological processes. Harvard University Press.



Post 549 - From Physical Desks to Digital Breakout Rooms by Jonathan Acuña



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Sunday, March 29, 2026



The Illusion of Sanctity: Cycles of Dysfunction in No Moinho by Eça de Queirós

Characterization, Dysfunctional Families, Eça de Queirós, Emotional Repression, Female Identity, Mimetic Desire, Portuguese Literature, Psychological Transformation, Realism, Social Perception 0 comments

 

Sanctity unraveling into fragility
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in March 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     Stories like No Moinho by Eça de Queirós invite us, as twenty-first-century readers and literature enthusiasts, to question the roles historically imposed on women across different societies and time periods. Maria da Piedade’s trajectory is not merely a personal tragedy; it becomes a lens through which we can examine how social expectations shape, repress, and ultimately distort female identity.

     While engaging with this narrative, I was reminded of La ruta de su evasión by Yolanda Oreamuno, where a similar tension unfolds. In Oreamuno’s work, the protagonist also seeks escape from a repressive social structure, one deeply rooted in early twentieth-century Costa Rican society. Both texts, though separated by geography and historical context, converge in their portrayal of women who attempt to flee oppressive environments, only to encounter new forms of constraint or internal fragmentation.

     The more I read of Eça de Queirós, the more I appreciate his incisive ability to expose the contradictions embedded in social norms. His literary craft does not merely depict reality; it interrogates it, revealing the fragile boundaries between virtue and repression, freedom and illusion. This essay, therefore, emerges not only as an academic exercise, but also as a personal reflection on the enduring relevance of these themes in contemporary literary discourse.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


The Illusion of Sanctity: Cycles of Dysfunction in No Moinho by Eça de Queirós

 

Abstract

This essay analyzes the construction of Maria da Piedade in No Moinho by Eça de Queirós through key techniques of characterization, including social perception, dialogue, and psychological development. It argues that the protagonist’s transformation from a seemingly saintly figure into a negligent mother reveals the cyclical nature of familial dysfunction and the consequences of emotional repression. By examining her escape from an oppressive maternal environment, her romantic awakening, and her eventual moral decline, the essay demonstrates how socially imposed ideals of female virtue can mask deeper psychological instability. Ultimately, the analysis highlights how Queirós critiques nineteenth-century gender expectations and exposes the fragile foundations of socially constructed sanctity.

Key Words:

Eça de Queirós, Characterization, Social Perception, Emotional Repression, Female Identity, Dysfunctional Families, Mimetic Desire, Psychological Transformation, Realism, Portuguese Literature

 

 

Resumen

Este ensayo analiza la construcción del personaje de María da Piedade en No Moinho de Eça de Queirós a través de técnicas de caracterización como la percepción social, el diálogo y el desarrollo psicológico. Se argumenta que la transformación de la protagonista, de una figura aparentemente santa a una madre negligente, revela la naturaleza cíclica de la disfunción familiar y las consecuencias de la represión emocional. Al examinar su escape de un entorno materno opresivo, su despertar romántico y su posterior decadencia moral, el ensayo demuestra cómo los ideales sociales impuestos sobre la virtud femenina pueden ocultar una profunda inestabilidad psicológica. En última instancia, el análisis evidencia cómo Queirós critica las expectativas de género del siglo XIX y expone la fragilidad de la santidad socialmente construida.

 

 

Resumo

Este ensaio analisa a construção da personagem Maria da Piedade em No Moinho de Eça de Queirós por meio de técnicas de caracterização como a percepção social, o diálogo e o desenvolvimento psicológico. Argumenta-se que a transformação da protagonista, de uma figura aparentemente santa a uma mãe negligente, revela a natureza cíclica da disfunção familiar e as consequências da repressão emocional. Ao examinar sua fuga de um ambiente materno opressor, seu despertar romântico e seu posterior declínio moral, o ensaio demonstra como os ideais sociais impostos à virtude feminina podem ocultar uma profunda instabilidade psicológica. Por fim, a análise evidencia como Queirós critica as expectativas de gênero do século XIX e expõe a fragilidade da santidade socialmente construída.

 


Introduction

In many nineteenth-century narratives, authors in several countries explored the tension between social expectations and the inner psychological life of individuals. The Portuguese realist writer Eça de Queirós frequently portrayed the hypocrisy and moral contradictions embedded in bourgeois society. His short story No Moinho offers a striking example of how social appearances can obscure deeper emotional and psychological realities. The story centers on Maria da Piedade, a woman admired by her community as a saintly and devoted wife. Yet beneath this public image lies a complex psychological transformation shaped by repression, desire, and inherited family dysfunction. Through the protagonist’s actions, internal awakening, and relationships with others, Queirós constructs a character whose apparent moral virtue gradually dissolves into emotional instability and destructive motherhood. Maria da Piedade’s trajectory, from escaping a dysfunctional family to becoming a revered “holy woman,” and eventually a negligent mother who repeats the patterns she once lived and then fled, reveals the cyclical nature of familial dysfunction and exposes the fragile foundations of socially constructed virtue.

Characterization Through Social Perception

One of the most important techniques used to construct Maria da Piedade’s character is the perception of her by others in her town. Early in the story, the community views her as a model of devotion and moral purity despite her origin in a dysfunctional family. Her life appears to embody Christian virtue: she faithfully cares for her ill husband and manages a modest household with humility and patience. In this sense, she becomes a “holy woman” in the eyes of the town, admired for her apparent sacrifice, devotion, and resignation.

However, this reputation is largely built on external observation rather than genuine knowledge of her interior life. As literary theorist Mikhail Bakhtin (1981) notes, characters often exist within a network of social voices that shape how they are perceived. Maria da Piedade’s sanctity is therefore not an intrinsic quality, but a narrative construct produced by the collective gaze of the community where she lives in. The townspeople interpret her suffering as moral strength, projecting onto her the image of the virtuous woman celebrated in nineteenth-century. Maria da Piedade’s true inner turmoil, what the reader is then able to witness through the story’s plot, reveals the true personality that she has, very different from what the people in the village can really perceive.

Yet Queirós subtly undermines this perception bit by bit. The narrative gradually reveals that Maria da Piedade’s piety may not arise from spiritual conviction but from emotional repression and circumstance. Her marriage itself was not the result of love but of convenience and her escape of her mother’s “dictatorship.” Thus, the saintly image the town celebrates is based on a misunderstanding of the character’s deeper motivations.

Escape from a Dysfunctional Family

Maria da Piedade’s background plays a crucial role in understanding her later behavior. Exposition in the narrative reveals that her marriage was partly motivated by a desire to escape a difficult family environment dominated by a harsh and oppressive mother. In many realist narratives, family structures function as the psychological origin of a character’s later conflicts. Sigmund Freud’s (1917/1957) reflections on repetition in human behavior suggest that individuals often reproduce unresolved emotional patterns from childhood. Though the reader is not told about the protagonist’s upbringing, it can be supposed that Maria da Piedade lived what she is living now.

In Maria da Piedade’s case, marriage appears less as a romantic union and more like an act of flight. By marrying a man who offers stability and distance from her oppressive mother, she believes she can construct a new life free from maternal domination. Ironically, however, the marriage places her in another form of emotional confinement; she “escaped” from a domineering mother that repressed her in different ways to enter a marriage that does not “free” her from any type of emotional repression. Her husband’s illness and passivity transform her into a caretaker rather than a partner, leaving her isolated and psychologically stagnant.

Thus, the very decision meant to liberate her from family dysfunction becomes the foundation of a new form of repression. Maria da Piedade’s life at the mill is marked by routine, sacrifice, and emotional silence. Her identity becomes defined by duty rather than personal fulfillment. The community interprets this resignation as virtue, but internally it produces a growing emotional vacuum that eventually shatters the townspeople’s perception of her in a million pieces.

Awakening of Desire and Psychological Transformation

The turning point in the story occurs when Maria da Piedade encounters Adrião, a visiting cousin whose romantic sensibilities introduce her to a world of emotional and literary imagination. Through dialogue and interaction, Adrião, a well-known writer in Lisbon, exposes her to romantic ideals and narratives that contrast sharply with the dull routine of her life.

Adrião’s stories and literary references awaken something long dormant within Maria da Piedade: a sense of personal longing and romantic possibility. According to René Girard’s theory of mimetic desire (1965), individuals often develop desires by imitating the aspirations presented to them by others. Adrião functions precisely in this role, acting as a mediator who introduces Maria da Piedade to new models of emotional life that she had long repressed due to her former mother’s domination and to her marriage out of convenience.

This awakening fundamentally alters her psychological landscape. For the first time, she begins to imagine a life defined not by sacrifice but by passion. The transformation is subtle yet profound. The once-resigned caretaker becomes a woman increasingly aware of her own sexual desires and frustrations. However, this awakening does not lead to genuine liberation. Instead, it destabilizes the fragile equilibrium of her life and her own family (husband and kids). Because her social environment provides no healthy outlet for these newly awakened desires, they gradually manifest in destructive ways making them visible to the townspeople who once considered her a saintly, devoted woman, wife, and mother.


The Collapse of the “Holy Woman” Persona

After Adrião leaves the town, Maria da Piedade undergoes a gradual moral and psychological deterioration, an unstoppable reaction to Adrião’s kiss. The idealized romantic world he introduced lingers in her imagination, intensifying her dissatisfaction with the reality she has been living in ever since. The gap between her fantasies and her everyday life becomes unbearable, and this gap triggers a moral and psychological revolution long hidden inside id.

Queirós illustrates this transformation (or revolution) through changes in her actions and behavior towards her family and in the eyes of the townspeople. The once devoted wife and mother begins to neglect her responsibilities at home. Her household deteriorates, and her emotional stability weakens. The saintly image that once defined her in the town collapses under the pressure of unfulfilled longing and uncontrolled libido.

This shift demonstrates the fragility of the moral identity imposed upon her by the townspeople. The community had celebrated her virtue for a long time because it appeared stable and selfless. Yet that virtue depended on emotional repression rather than genuine inner harmony. Once repression gives way to desire, the entire moral structure collapses, a type of Mr. Hyde’s personality is set free just minding her own ego’s drives.

Literary critic Ian Watt (1957) argues that realist literature often reveals the contradictions between social ideals and individual psychology. Maria da Piedade clearly embodies this contradiction. Her reputation as a holy woman masks an internal conflict, a set of repressed longings she has never materialized for her own joy that ultimately destroys the very virtues she was praised for. The superego’s projection onto the townspeople is then shattered into pieces.

Repetition of Dysfunctional Patterns

Perhaps the most tragic aspect of Maria da Piedade’s transformation lies in her role as a mother. In escaping her oppressive maternal household that probably repressed in many different ways, she hoped to break free from the emotional patterns of her childhood lived under her mother’s despotism. Yet by the end of the story, she unconsciously reproduces those same patterns in her own family; Maria da Piedade has become the opposite of her now ironic name, impiety.

As her emotional instability grows, she becomes increasingly negligent toward her children. The nurturing figure admired by the community transforms into a distant and irresponsible parent. This development illustrates the psychological principle of intergenerational repetition: individuals who experience dysfunctional family structures often replicate them without conscious awareness.

Maria da Piedade’s behavior reflects the very dynamics she once sought to escape. Her marriage, initially a refuge from her mother’s control, becomes the environment in which similar dysfunction emerges. Instead of providing emotional stability for her children, she introduces chaos and neglect.

In this sense, Queirós presents a deeply pessimistic vision of social and psychological inheritance. Personal escape does not automatically break cycles of dysfunction. Without self-awareness or emotional resolution, individuals may simply reproduce the structures that shaped them, and Maria da Piedade has personified her mother and has unleashed all the sequels of a dysfunctional family.

Themes of Social Hypocrisy and Emotional Repression

Through Maria da Piedade’s trajectory, Queirós explores broader themes related to social hypocrisy and emotional repression in nineteenth-century Portuguese Catholic-framed society. The townspeople’s admiration for her “supposed” holiness reflects a cultural ideal that celebrates female sacrifice while ignoring women’s emotional and womanly needs.

Her transformation exposes the dangers of the ideal that a married woman is meant to devote her life to her family. By valuing external virtue over psychological well-being, society creates conditions in which repression can eventually explode into destructive behavior. Maria da Piedade’s downfall therefore represents not merely a personal tragedy but also a critique of the moral expectations imposed on women where their needs are not slightly considered.

The story also challenges the assumption that moral virtue is visible through outward behavior alone. What kind of emotional turmoil did Adrião awake in the psychologically repressed protagonist of No Moinho? The townspeople believed they knew Maria da Piedade because they observed her acts of sacrifice. Yet they failed to perceive the emotional tensions and psychological suffering beneath those acts. The narrative thus reveals how easily social perception can misinterpret character and attribute psychological features a person does not possess.

Conclusion

In No Moinho, Eça de Queirós constructs a deeply complex portrayal of Maria da Piedade through multiple techniques of characterization, including social perception, dialogue, exposition, and psychological transformation. Initially celebrated as a saintly figure who selflessly cares for her family, Maria da Piedade gradually reveals a more troubled inner life shaped by repression, desire, and unresolved familial conflict.

Her marriage, originally a means of escaping a dysfunctional household, ultimately becomes the setting in which similar patterns of emotional instability reappear. The romantic awakening triggered by Adrião exposes the fragility of the moral identity imposed upon her, leading to the collapse of her saintly persona and the deterioration of her role as a mother.

Through this trajectory, Queirós demonstrates how individuals may unconsciously reproduce the very dysfunction they attempt to escape. Maria da Piedade’s story thus serves as a powerful exploration of the cyclical nature of family dynamics and the dangers of equating outward virtue with genuine emotional health.

San José, Costa Rica

Saturday, March 28, 2026



📚 References

Bakhtin, M. (1981). The dialogic imagination. University of Texas Press.

Freud, S. (1957). Mourning and melancholia. In J. Strachey (Ed.), The standard edition of the complete psychological works of Sigmund Freud (Vol. 14). Hogarth Press. (Original work published 1917)

Girard, R. (1965). Deceit, desire, and the novel: Self and other in literary structure. Johns Hopkins University Press.

Queirós, E. de. (1880). No moinho. http://www.dominiopublico.gov.br

Watt, I. (1957). The rise of the novel. University of California Press.


The Illusion of Sanctity - Cycles of Dysfunction in No Moinho by Eça de Queirós by Jonathan Acuña



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You can also listen in your favorite podcast app: simply copy the link below and paste it into your podcast app to enjoy a conversation about the ideas explored in this blog post.

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Saturday, March 28, 2026



Beyond the Teacher’s Spotlight: Interaction Patterns and Collaborative Learning in Online Adult EFL Classrooms

Adult Learners, Breakout Rooms, British Council, Collaborative Learning, Communicative Competence, Interaction Patterns, learner autonomy, Online EFL, Student Talk Time 0 comments

 

Dynamic online classroom interactions
AI-generated illustration by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in March 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     Before delving into the theoretical and pedagogical considerations presented in this essay, I find it necessary to briefly situate the reader within my own teaching journey. One of the very first things I learned as a novice teacher was the importance of having students work with others to help them develop their language skills. Pair work and group interaction were not merely methodological choices, but essential tools to foster communication, negotiation of meaning, and learner autonomy.

     However, one of the first questions I asked myself when I started teaching online was: how on earth can I replicate these dynamics in videoconferencing platforms? The absence of a physical classroom, the limitations of digital tools, and the perceived distance between learners initially made this transition seem like an ordeal.

     With time and practice, I came to discover that interaction patterns can indeed be replicated in online environments. Breakout rooms, structured tasks, and careful monitoring allow learners to continue practicing the language in meaningful ways. More importantly, these strategies ensure that students remain the central figures in the learning process, the ones who must take ownership of their learning, the ones who ultimately have to shine.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


Beyond the Teacher’s Spotlight: Interaction Patterns and Collaborative Learning in Online Adult EFL Classrooms


 

Abstract

This paper examines the role of interaction patterns and collaborative learning in online English as a Foreign Language (EFL) classrooms for young adults and working professionals. Drawing on insights from the British Council’s TeachingEnglish: Organising the Classroom course, as well as personal teaching reflections and established theories in second language acquisition, the study explores how pair work, group work, and varied interaction patterns contribute to communicative competence and learner autonomy. Particular attention is given to the challenges and opportunities presented by synchronous online teaching environments, including the use of breakout rooms, random grouping tools, and monitoring strategies. The discussion highlights the effectiveness of the 80/20 principle in maximizing student talk time and emphasizes the importance of varying interaction patterns to foster engagement and develop the 4 Cs: creativity, collaboration, critical thinking, and communication. The paper concludes that, when carefully implemented, interaction patterns can transform online classrooms into dynamic, learner-centered environments where students actively construct knowledge and meaning through communication.

Keywords:

British Council, Interaction Patterns, Collaborative Learning, Online EFL, Communicative Competence, Learner Autonomy, Student Talk Time, Breakout Rooms, Adult Learners

 

 

Resumen

Este trabajo analiza el papel de los patrones de interacción y el aprendizaje colaborativo en aulas de inglés como lengua extranjera (EFL) en línea, dirigidas a jóvenes adultos y profesionales en ejercicio. A partir de los aportes del curso TeachingEnglish: Organising the Classroom del British Council, así como de reflexiones docentes propias y teorías consolidadas en la adquisición de segundas lenguas, se examina cómo el trabajo en parejas, en grupos y la variación de patrones de interacción contribuyen al desarrollo de la competencia comunicativa y la autonomía del estudiante. Se presta especial atención a los desafíos y oportunidades que presentan los entornos virtuales sincrónicos, incluyendo el uso de salas de trabajo (breakout rooms), herramientas de agrupación aleatoria y estrategias de monitoreo. Asimismo, se destaca la efectividad del principio 80/20 para maximizar el tiempo de habla del estudiante y la importancia de diversificar los patrones de interacción para fomentar las 4C: creatividad, colaboración, pensamiento crítico y comunicación. Se concluye que, cuando se implementan adecuadamente, estos patrones pueden transformar el aula virtual en un entorno dinámico y centrado en el estudiante.

 

 

Resumo

Este artigo analisa o papel dos padrões de interação e da aprendizagem colaborativa em salas de aula de inglês como língua estrangeira (EFL) online, voltadas para jovens adultos e profissionais. Com base nos conteúdos do curso TeachingEnglish: Organising the Classroom do British Council, bem como em reflexões docentes e teorias consolidadas na aquisição de segundas línguas, discute-se como o trabalho em pares, em grupos e a variação dos padrões de interação contribuem para o desenvolvimento da competência comunicativa e da autonomia do aprendiz. Dá-se especial atenção aos desafios e às oportunidades dos ambientes virtuais síncronos, incluindo o uso de breakout rooms, ferramentas de agrupamento aleatório e estratégias de monitoramento. O estudo também destaca a eficácia do princípio 80/20 para maximizar o tempo de fala dos alunos e a importância de variar os padrões de interação para promover as 4Cs: criatividade, colaboração, pensamento crítico e comunicação. Conclui-se que, quando bem aplicados, esses padrões podem transformar a sala de aula online em um ambiente dinâmico e centrado no aluno.

 


Introduction

In modern English language teaching (ELT), the classroom is increasingly viewed as a space where learners actively construct knowledge through interaction rather than passively receive information. Communicative language teaching, task-based learning, and collaborative pedagogy all emphasize the importance of student interaction in the learning process. Within this framework, pair work, group work, and varied interaction patterns play a crucial role in helping learners develop communicative competence.

The TeachingEnglish: Organising the Classroom course developed by the British Council emphasizes that “using pair and group work can support the aims of different kinds of activities, and varying interaction patterns in lessons can also help vary the pace, or speed, of learning” (British Council, n.d.). These pedagogical strategies allow learners to speak more frequently, collaborate with peers, and test their understanding before teacher feedback is provided.

However, the implementation of such strategies requires adaptation depending on the teaching context. Many training materials assume a physical classroom filled with children or teenagers. In contrast, instructors working with university students or corporate professionals, particularly in online environments, must adapt these techniques to suit different learner profiles.

As reflected in my own teaching experience, “my classes gravitate around pair and group work 80% of the time” (Acuña Solano, 2026). This approach follows the principle that the classroom should not serve as a stage where the teacher performs, but rather as a collaborative environment where learners experiment with language, negotiate meaning, and refine their communicative abilities.

This essay explores how interaction patterns and collaborative strategies can be effectively implemented in online adult EFL classrooms, drawing from course insights, personal teaching reflections, and relevant scholarship.

Interaction Patterns and the Communicative Classroom

Interaction patterns refer to the different ways teachers and learners communicate and collaborate during classroom activities. According to the British Council (n.d.), these patterns include individual work, pair work, group work, mingling activities, and whole-class discussions. Each pattern contributes differently to the cognitive interaction with new content and the learning path of each student.

From a theoretical perspective, interaction plays a fundamental role in second or foreign language acquisition. According to Michael Long’s Interaction Hypothesis, language development occurs through negotiation of meaning during communication (Long, 1996). When learners encounter misunderstandings while practicing English, in or out of the classroom, they modify their language, request further clarification, or reformulate ideas to make themselves understood. These moments of negotiation push learners to refine their linguistic competence.

Pair and group work create precisely the conditions where such negotiation can take place. Learners test hypotheses about grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation while collaborating with peers in breakout rooms while participating in communication tasks. As Lev Vygotsky (1978) argues in his theory of social constructivism, learning takes place through interaction with others within the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD). Peers often provide scaffolding that allows learners to perform beyond their individual capabilities while successfully negotiating meaning and being understood.

For language instructors, however, implementing these interaction patterns for specific language to be practiced can sometimes feel like an ordeal. Managing multiple conversations simultaneously, ensuring all learners in a classroom participate, and maintaining clear instructions require careful planning. Yet when properly implemented, these patterns transform the classroom into a dynamic learning ecosystem where students truly profit from these exchanges with partners and with the teacher.

The 80/20 Principle and Learner-Centered Communication

A central principle guiding communicative teaching is maximizing student talk time. In my own teaching context, the 80/20 rule, where learners speak approximately 80% of the time while the teacher speaks 20%, serves as a guiding framework.

As I have noted in my course reflections:

“What any teacher needs to comprehend is that the class is not for him or her to shine. It is for the learners to use what they are learning, and pair and group work foster this ‘language negotiation’ necessary for students to know where they are standing in terms of their learning.” (Acuña Solano, 2026)

This perspective (of mine) aligns with Jeremy Harmer’s (2007) argument that effective language classrooms prioritize student interaction rather than teacher exposition. It needs to always bear in mind, language teachers function as facilitators, guides, and providers of feedback rather than as the sole source of knowledge.

In practice, achieving this balance requires a careful sequence of activities. A typical lesson may begin with a brief explanation, followed by controlled practice activities, and eventually lead to freer communicative tasks. Throughout the lesson, learners might work individually, in pairs, and in groups, allowing language to be used across a full gamut of activities, from grammar exercises to collaborative discussions.

The Role of Variety in Interaction Patterns

Variety in interaction patterns is essential to maintain engagement and cognitive stimulation. Teacher Keith from the British Council course notes that “the best lessons tend to have a variety of interaction patterns” (British Council, n.d.). A lesson may begin with a whole-class activity, shift to individual reading, move into pair discussions, and conclude with a group task. Such variation helps prevent monotony and fosters the development of the four key competencies often referred to as the 4 Cs: creativity, collaboration, critical thinking, and communication.

For adult learners, this variation is particularly important. Working professionals, for instance, often approach language learning with practical objectives such as participating in meetings, presenting ideas, or negotiating with colleagues. Activities must therefore simulate authentic communicative contexts. In some cases, discussions may become boisterous as learners passionately exchange opinions about workplace scenarios. At other times, the atmosphere may be quieter, with learners reflecting individually before sharing ideas with partners. These fluctuations in interaction dynamics contribute to a lively and engaging classroom environment.

Interaction in Online Classrooms

While pair and group work are well-established in physical classrooms, their implementation in online settings presents unique challenges. Virtual environments require teachers to manage digital tools such as breakout rooms while maintaining oversight of multiple conversations. In my experience teaching online, breakout rooms allow learners to collaborate in small groups. However, without careful monitoring, students may become distracted, fall silent, or simply shrug their shoulders when uncertain about what to say. Regular monitoring and clear instructions help prevent such situations.

Occasionally, instructors must also address unexpected disruptions. For example, a late-arriving student may suddenly barge in on a group activity after breakout rooms have already been assigned. Teachers must quickly adapt by reallocating participants or integrating the newcomer into an existing group.

Despite these logistical challenges, online environments also offer advantages. Randomization tools available in platforms such as Zoom or Microsoft Teams allow teachers to create groups quickly and efficiently. As I have frequently noted in my reflective journaling notes:

“I use the randomization feature in Zoom or Teams to pair my students or to create groups… what I always look in my grouping of students is to have them work with someone new all the time.” (Acuña Solano, 2026)

Such rotation helps learners interact with a broader range of classmates, fostering a sense of community and collaboration.

Strategic Grouping and Classroom Dynamics

Grouping learners effectively requires careful consideration. The British Council (n.d.) course highlights three main approaches: learner choice, random grouping, and strategic grouping. Strategic grouping involves the teacher deliberately organizing learners based on proficiency levels, personalities, or task objectives. This approach aligns with Johnson and Johnson’s (1999) research on cooperative learning, which emphasizes the importance of structured collaboration.

In adult classrooms, strategic grouping can prevent situations where one learner dominates the conversation while others remain passive. Teachers may pair more confident speakers with quieter learners to encourage balanced participation. At some other times, language teachers must also manage challenging personalities. A particularly disruptive student may behave like someone determined to follow behind in chase every off-topic discussion, diverting the group’s focus. Effective monitoring and clear expectations help maintain productive interaction.

Moreover, instructors must recognize that online group dynamics can sometimes appear uneven or lumpy. Some groups may engage in lively discussions, while others struggle to maintain momentum. Continuous feedback and structured tasks help smooth these irregularities.

Monitoring and Feedback

Monitoring group activities is a crucial component of interactive teaching. When learners engage in pair or group work, teachers circulate among groups, physically in traditional classrooms or virtually in breakout rooms, to observe interactions. During monitoring, teachers listen for common language errors, communication breakdowns, or particularly effective expressions. Feedback can then be provided to the whole class after the activity concludes.

This approach allows learners to complete tasks independently while still benefiting from teacher guidance. It also ensures that activities reach a meaningful conclusion, rather than trailing off without resolution. Ideally, each collaborative task should feel as though it reaches its finish to the last stone, leaving learners with a clear sense of achievement.

Conclusion

Interaction patterns form the backbone of communicative language teaching. Pair work, group work, individual tasks, and whole-class discussions each play a vital role in promoting language use and collaborative learning.

Although many teacher-training materials focus on younger learners, these strategies remain highly relevant for adult ESL classrooms, particularly in online environments. When carefully implemented, varied interaction patterns foster engagement, encourage negotiation of meaning, and support the development of communicative competence.

For instructors working with university students and corporate professionals, the challenge lies in adapting these strategies to digital platforms while maintaining learner autonomy and participation. Through thoughtful planning, monitoring, and flexible grouping strategies, teachers can transform the language classroom into a collaborative environment where learners actively construct knowledge.

Ultimately, the goal is to ensure that the classroom is not a stage for the teacher’s performance but a dynamic space where learners explore language together. When interaction patterns are thoughtfully orchestrated, the learning process becomes not merely an academic requirement but a meaningful and engaging journey. 

San José, Costa Rica

Friday, March 27, 2026


 

📚 References

Acuña Solano, J. (2026). Personal reflections on classroom interaction from the TeachingEnglish: Organising the Classroom course.

British Council. (n.d.). TeachingEnglish: Organising the classroom – Module 3: Managing interaction and resources. Retrieved from
http://https://open.teachingenglish.org.uk/Team/UserProgrammeDetails/699499

Harmer, J. (2007). How to teach English. Longman.

Johnson, D. W., & Johnson, R. T. (1999). Learning together and alone: Cooperative, competitive, and individualistic learning. Allyn & Bacon.

Long, M. H. (1996). The role of the linguistic environment in second language acquisition. In W. Ritchie & T. Bhatia (Eds.), Handbook of second language acquisition. Academic Press.

Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psychological processes. Harvard University Press.



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