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399 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. Building Fluency through the Repeated Reading Method

    In: English Teaching Forum 2011, Volume 49, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This article discusses the success of Repeated Reading (RR) within EFL classrooms, illustrating three techniques of RR that can be used to develop students’ fluency, comprehension skills, and reading self-esteem. After providing a background on the RR method, the author explains the techniques step by step and suggests activities. The techniques include classic oral repeated reading (ORR), Paired repeated reading (PRR), and Reader’s Theater (RT).
  2. Lesson Plan: Using Journalism Skills in the Language Classroom

    In: English Teaching Forum 2006, Volume 44, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    This lesson plan contains four activities based on the theme of newspapers and journalism. It includes a lesson to familiarize students with newspapers, journalistic writing, interviewing, and creating a class newspaper. The activities can be used as individual lessons or a larger project of creating a class newspaper.
  3. Maximizing the Benefits of Project Work in Foreign Language Classrooms

    In: English Teaching Forum 2005, Volume 43, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    There are many benefits to using project work in the classroom, such as student autonomy, increased content knowledge, and motivation. This article gives ten steps for structuring project activities to maximize these benefits, using a case study on project-based learning in an English preparatory program in Turkey. Also included are recommendations for writers on how to include project-based learning in their materials.
  4. Teaching the World's Children: ESL for Ages Three to Seven

    In: English Teaching Forum 2005, Volume 43, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    This article discusses teaching English as a second language to very young learners. The authors talks about how important it is for children to have a wide variety of experiences when building language and literacy. The authors explain how the use of various environments, including learning centers, block centers, art or sand tables, writing areas, science and technology centers, and even libraries, can help shape the way a child learns language as well as improve other skills.
  5. Mind Mirror Projects: A Tool for Integrating Critical Thinking into the English Language Classroom

    In: English Teaching Forum 2009, Volume 47, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    Students often have difficulty 'reading between the lines.' This article suggests the use of mind mirror activities as a tool to improve students' critical thinking and learning skills (e.g., analysis, categorization, clarification, inferencing). The author describes a successful five-day group project from his own classroom that ended in students sharing their work through poster presentations.
  6. The Trans-Cultural Comparative Literature Method: Using Grammar Translation Techniques Effectively

    In: English Teaching Forum 2010, Volume 48, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This article explains the trans-cultural comparative literature method, which uses elements of communicative language teaching (CLT) and grammar-translation (GT) while comparing two culturally different texts. This method focuses on grammar and vocabulary, but also gives students a chance to analyze different cultures. An overview of CLT and GT is followed by guidelines for the trans-cultural comparative literature method and sample lesson plans for its use.
  7. Increasing Student Talk Time in the Online Classroom

    In: American English Webinars Format(s): Text, Video
    This session, "Increasing Student Talk Time in the Online Classroom," discussed benefits of increasing student oral language use in virtual environments, and explored routines, activities, and tools that gave students a voice in their online classrooms.
  8. Developing Pragmatic Competence in the EFL Classroom

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 3 Format(s): Text
    Pragmatic competence is an important part of communicative competence, yet it is often insufficiently addressed. This article outlines a program of four lessons on the speech acts of openings and closings. Lessons examine dialogues for cultural differences regarding forms of address, abruptness, expected responses, and so on. Students also consider pre-closing phrases, ways to express politeness, and formality. Finally, students expand an artificial dialogue to make it more realistic. Activities include translation, pair work, creative writing, class discussion, and role play.
  9. Strategic Corrective Feedback in the EFL Classroom

    In: American English Webinars Format(s): Text, Video
    This session, “Strategic Corrective Feedback in the EFL Classroom,” examines how teachers can thoughtfully select and apply corrective feedback techniques that can help students produce more accurate language output.
  10. Testing Writing in the EFL Classroom: Student Expectations

    In: English Teaching Forum 2002, Volume 40, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    This article reports on the inconsistency between the expected and actual grades of learners of English as foreign language in freshman English writing classes. It discusses the differences between students’ and instructors’ perceptions of acceptable essay writing. It suggests that teachers develop valid and reliable testing procedures and help students to increase their awareness and understanding of the proficiency levels required to write essays.

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