Displaying 1301 - 1310 of 1635

This lesson in Teaching Pragmatics aims for  students to become more fluent in using and understanding basic greetings and leave-takings in brief "small talk" encounters.

Author: Jennifer M. Herrin Format: Text, Video, Website
Availability

This section of The Lighter Side of TEFL focuses on idioms, which are expressions that cannot be understood literally.

Author: Elizabeth Ball Format: Text
Availability

A hardcopy of this section is available as part of the full resource.
View Hardcopy Details for the Full Resource

This lesson in Teaching Pragmatics aims to help students learn to pronounce a range of parentheticals appropriately. Parentheticals are expressions used to direct a message, to tell a listener how the speaker feels about a message, to manage the interpretation of the main message, to exemplify something, or to show deference or express something politely.

Author: Wayne B. Dickerson Format: Text, Video, Website
Availability

This lesson in Teaching Pragmatics aims to promote awareness of short responses during conversations such as uh-huh and yeah known as backchannel behaviors; to increase awareness of cultural differences in backchannel behaviors; to allow students to practice behaviors that indicate active listening.

Author: Anne Berry Format: Text, Video, Website
Availability

This lesson in Teaching Pragmatics aims to help students learn to respond appropriately to maintain a conversation.

Author: Sara Gallow Format: Text, Video, Website
Availability

This article describes how near-peer tutoring was used to foster a supportive, learner-centered environment in an adult ESOL setting. Students from beginning and advanced classes worked together to learn a song to perform at a year-end ceremony. The task involved vocabulary, pronunciation, intonation, and comprehension. Benefits of the music project included building relationships, breaking the routine, and lowering students’ affective filters. The project allowed the adults to be self-directed, empowered them to critique themselves, and gave them a sense of accomplishment.

Authors: Tamara Kirson, Jung-Yoon Lee Format: Text
Availability

This section of The Lighter Side of TEFL focuses on crossword puzzles, a challenging word game in which students must decide which word satisfies the clue and fits the number of available spaces.

Author: Elizabeth Ball Format: Text
Availability

A hardcopy of this section is available as part of the full resource.
View Hardcopy Details for the Full Resource

Reciprocal Teaching (RT) can be used to increase student talk time and improve communicative competence. This strategy uses paraphrasing, reported speech, question formation and concept-checking to promote dialogue. As students move from short responses toward longer conversations (or language for transactional purposes), their fluency and retention increase. These “long turns” provide important practice. The author also emphasizes the importance of prompts for lower-level students. The article includes examples of each strategy as well as several axioms of reciprocal teaching.

Author: A. Felipe Vela Izquierdo Format: Text
Availability

One of the key developments in vocabulary teaching stems from Michael Lewis’s Lexical Approach, which considers language as chunks of words combined for meaning. These frequently occurring word combinations are called collocations. This article points out a number of problems that result from learning words in isolation. Work with meaningful phrases can help improve students’ comprehension and comprehensibility. The article includes reading and listening activities to raise awareness of collocations as well as writing and speaking activities.

Author: Tanju Deveci Format: Text
Availability

This section of The Lighter Side of TEFL focuses on word games, which reinforce learned vocabulary.

Author: Elizabeth Ball Format: Text
Availability

A hardcopy of this section is available as part of the full resource.
View Hardcopy Details for the Full Resource

Pages