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For English Language Teachers Around the World
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1459 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. Week 4 - What's the Scoop?

    In: Teacher's Corner: Journalism Format(s): Text
    Have fun with radio broadcasts in your classroom. In this week’s Teacher’s Corner, students practice speaking, writing, and reading skills by putting together news radio broadcasts.
  2. Teacher’s Corner: What is a MOOC?

    Format(s): Text
    In this month’s Teacher’s Corner, get tips for how to use MOOCs in and out of the classroom!
  3. Teacher's Corner: Simple Ways to Incorporate Pragmatics in the EFL Classroom

    Format(s): Text
    Teaching vocabulary and common phrases is an essential task of the English language classroom, but it is also important to teach the pragmatics of a language to help learners use language appropriately in different situations. This month’s Teacher’s Corner explores the idea of pragmatics and why it is a valuable component to include in instruction. The article also contains resources and ideas for including pragmatics instruction and building up students’ pragmatic competence.
  4. Teacher's Corner: Speaking - Information Gap Activities

    Format(s): Text
    This month’s Teacher’s Corner will examine the many forms information gaps can take, and we will explore several practical information gap variations that you can implement in classrooms of all levels.
  5. The Lighter Side: Winter Sports Word Search

    In: English Teaching Forum 2010, Volume 48, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    This winter sports word search gives students clues to the name of a sport they need to find in the puzzle.
  6. What is English for Specific Purposes?

    In: English Teaching Forum 2003, Volume 41, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    This article gives examples of the lessons the author learned from years of teaching ESP. She learned to investigate authentic material thoroughly before making assumptions about learner needs. She tells of occasions on which she relied on the input from textbook writers and job supervisors who made errors in analyzing what students most needed in their language classes. She discussed a learner-focused style, which follows the theory that career development and language development follow the same path, from specific and technical to context- and experience-based.
  7. On How Thinking Shapes Speaking: Techniques to Enhance Students’

    In: English Teaching Forum 2015, Volume 53, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    The institution where we work in Buenos Aires—Asociación Ex Alumnos del Profesorado en Lenguas Vivas “Juan Ramón Fernández” (AEXALEVI)—is devoted to the teaching of foreign languages, particularly English, and it administers examinations all over Argentina.
  8. Guess What? - Mime the Words

    In: Activate Games for Learning English - Guess What? Format(s): Text
    In Mime the Words, the Describer is allowed to say the topic and nothing else. Instead, the Describer must describe the words on the Guess What? card using mime.
  9. Guess What?- You Don't Say

    In: Activate Games for Learning English - Guess What? Format(s): Text
    "You Don’t Say" is a game that encourages students to use alternative sentences and descriptions as they describe a topic without saying certain words – an excellent activity for vocabulary and fluency practice.
  10. Fishing—A Sport for All Seasons

    In: English Teaching Forum 2011, Volume 49, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    Fishing is the feature lesson topic for this issue. Catching fish with hooks is known as angling, which is why fishermen are typically called anglers. Americans fish in urban and rural settings and enjoy many different kinds of fishing including bass fishing, fly fishing and ice fishing. The article discusses recent trends in fishing, including high-tech tools such as GPS devices.

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For English Language Teachers Around the World

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