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223 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. One of These Does Not Belong: Creating Interesting Multiple-Choice Questions for Teaching and Testing

    In: English Teaching Forum 2021, Volume 59, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    The author presents a simple, clever way to make all kinds of multiple-choice questions more interesting and more challenging for learners. Teachers can use the technique with both online and face-to-face instruction.
  2. Picturing America: Masterpieces of American Art

    Format(s): Website
    Pictures of famous American art with accompanying lesson plans from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
  3. Art for All: Teaching Resources from the Metropolitan Museum of Art

    In: American English Webinars Format(s): Text, Video
    "Art for All: Teaching Resources from the Metropolitan Museum of Art" webinar demonstrates how experience with art can support language development. This interactive session features an introduction to selections from the Met’s encyclopedic collection, strategies for engaging students with works of art, and an overview of related online resources available for teachers.
  4. Tools for Activating Materials and Tasks in the English Language Classroom

    In: English Teaching Forum 2009, Volume 47, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    This article presents techniques to make classroom materials and tasks more interactive and student-centered and thus motivate learners to take more control over their own learning. It demonstrates these techniques through elicitation, gapping, and adaptation/extension strategies. The article offers examples of classroom activities with detailed instructions to show how teachers can use materials and tasks in the English language classroom to address students’ interests, needs, and goals.
  5. Regrets and Wishes of the Rich, Famous, or Fictional

    In: Teacher's Corner: Conditionals Format(s): Text
    In this activity, students will practice or review using conditionals to express wishes and regrets about the past. This conditional form used in this situation is often called the past unreal conditional or the third conditional.
  6. The Intercultural Approach to EFL Teaching and Learning

    In: English Teaching Forum 2008, Volume 46, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    This article discusses the teaching of intercultural awareness together with language in foreign contexts. Following a brief discussion of what culture means, the author presents a three-stage intercultural approach for teaching EFL students. For each stage, the author explains the goals and provides five activities as examples. As a follow-up, the author shares challenges for this approach and possible solutions.
  7. Authentic Video in the Beginning ESOL Classroom: Using a Full-Length Feature Film for Listening and Speaking Strategy Practice

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 1 Format(s): Text
    Using film in the classroom can be effective with beginning English learners. A full-length film offers continuous context to discuss humor, culture, and language functions, real-life communication with images and non-verbal cues, increased retention due to activating the right hemisphere of the brain, and the lowering of students’ affective filters. The authors include a lesson based on their experience teaching listening and speaking skills using the movie “What about Bob.” Assessment techniques and potential problems are considered.
  8. Animating Your Instruction: Using Comics and Graphic Novels in the English Language Classroom

    In: American English Webinars Format(s): Text, Video
    "Animating Your Instruction: Using Comics and Graphic Novels in the English Language Classroom" explores the popularity of illustrated stories among teachers and students alike and offers suggestions on how to use them to “animate” your classes.
  9. Integrating Authentic Materials and Language Skills in English for Science and Technology Instruction

    In: English Teaching Forum 2001, Volume 39, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    This article describes how a unit in an English for Science and Technology (EST) course integrated three learning materials: a research article from a scientific journal, an article from a magazine that reports on the scientific journal article, and an instructional video with its script. Instruction was focused on both content and rhetorical functions. The author shows how the language skills of reading, writing, speaking, and listening were used for each of the three materials.
  10. Web 2.0 Tools: Using Free and Open Educational Resources to Impact Learning Locally and Globally

    Format(s): Text, Video
    This webinar, “Web 2.0 Tools: Using Free and Open Educational Resources to Impact Learning Locally and Globally,” explores some of the most useful online resources for educators with a focus on open education resources (OER).

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