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American English
For English Language Teachers Around the World
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2033 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. Teaching English Through the Web

  2. Using the English Language to Connect with Teachers around the World

    “The discussions helped participants envision how the theories learned could better inform our materials writing,” Aliaa explains. “There were also collaborative materials development projects conducted in small groups via web-based document sharing applications.”

  3. Activate: Games for Learning American English - Word Bricks

    Format(s): Text
    Word Bricks help students identify word patterns in sentences. This overview will teach you sentence structure and patterns and help you to master all of the Word Bricks games!
  4. Using VOA Special English to Improve Advanced English Learners' Productive Use of High Frequency Words

    In: English Teaching Forum 2009, Volume 47, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This article focuses on advanced ESL learners’ acquisition of the spelling, pronunciation, and comprehension of high-frequency words at the productive skill level rather than at the receptive skill level. It discusses the use of the Voice of America (VOA) Special English program to expose learners to different activities requiring productive skills. The article offers examples of how the VOA program exposes learners to comprehensible input through high-frequency words and helps them produce these words both in writing and speaking.
  5. Activate Games for Learning American English: Picture This

    Format(s): Text
    Picture This cards are a set of cards that can be used for a variety of conversation and word games in English classes.
  6. Why English? Comics for the Classroom

    Format(s): Text
    This resource can be used by teachers and learners. It includes notes for teachers and activities to use in the classroom at the end of each story.
  7. Voice of America's Special English: Business

    Format(s): Website
    Articles and corresponding audio related to business for English language learners.
  8. Community-Based English Clubs: English Practice and Social Change Outside the Classroom

    In: English Teaching Forum 2016, Volume 54, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This article defines and provides a rationale for the creation of community-based English clubs.
  9. Activate Games for Learning English - Guess What?

    Format(s): Text
    Guess What? cards can be used for a variety of games in the classroom to provide an opportunity for students to practice making descriptions in English and to learn English vocabulary.
  10. English Clubs: Introducing English to Young Learners

    In: English Teaching Forum 2006, Volume 44, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    This article introduces an approach taken in Tunisia to introduce English as a foreign language to children in primary school classrooms. The author states that in Tunisia, children in primary schools are first taught Arabic and then French. The government does not want to overburden the students with English learning. Then, the author describes in detail the approach of an English club, including the materials and staff members and their training. The article concludes with a list of recommendations based on the Tunisian approach.

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U.S. Department of State
Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs
For English Language Teachers Around the World

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