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2037 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. Flag Day

    In: Celebrate! Holidays in the U.S.A. Format(s): Text
    National Flags are not merely symbols of a country; their colors and designs convey past history and future goals.
  2. My Classroom: Madagascar

    In: English Teaching Forum 2020, Volume 58, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    Learn how teachers Niry Razafimamonjy and Josiana Andriantsalama, at the Lycee Jacques Rabemananjara beside the Indian Ocean in Taomasina, support their students’ learning and contribute to the field of English language teaching in Madagascar.
  3. My Classroom: Indonesia

    In: English Teaching Forum 2015, Volume 53, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    Alief Noor Farida is a junior lecturer at Indonesia’s Universitas Negeri Semarang (UNNES). Now teaching her fourth semester and an alumna of the English Education program at UNNES, Ms. Farida is an especially motivated and dedicated educator. She teaches 18 hours per week, specializing in grammar and writing-skills courses. The Intensive Course she teaches, focusing on reading, writing, speaking, and grammar skills, serves as a foundation for incoming English Department students.
  4. Adapting a Resource for Multi-Level Classrooms

    In: Teacher's Corner: Adapting Materials for Students' Levels Format(s): Text
    It is likely most English language teachers have had to teach a group of learners who vary greatly in their language abilities.
  5. Using Public Speaking Tasks in English Language Teaching

    In: English Teaching Forum 2009, Volume 47, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    There are advantages to using public speaking tasks in the L2 classroom. Among them are the ability to use the four skills (e.g., when responding to audience questions, creating a presentation, or writing notes), the development of critical thinking skills, and the opportunity that public speaking provides for sharing information. The author offers guidelines and figures to illustrate the steps involved in supporting students in their research, demonstration, and review.
  6. CAR: A Means for Motivating Students to Read

    In: English Teaching Forum 2009, Volume 47, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This article addresses the relationship between motivational approaches and second language reading development. It discusses competence, autonomy, and relatedness (CAR) as instructional strategies to teach reading. Competence is established when learners feel they can do the task, autonomy is established when they feel they have the control over it, and relatedness is established when tasks are related to each other. The article suggests ways to use these ideas in the classroom.
  7. Misconception Analysis: A Necessary Complement to Foreign Language Teaching

    In: English Teaching Forum 2001, Volume 39, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    This article draws on findings from cognitive psychology that emphasize learners and their learning needs. The author proposes a solution for dealing with language learning problems, called misconception analysis (MA). The article explains MA, its usefulness, and language classroom applications. The author classifies misconceptions about language learning into four groups: misconceptions about the goals of language learning, the nature of language, the processes and strategies of language learning, and language elements.
  8. Abstracts from Other Journals

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 4 Format(s): Text
    “Challenges for ELT from the expansion in teaching children” addresses a growing international trend of teaching English to younger learners (TEYL). Some issues raised are teacher education, student motivation, assessment, and the diversity of levels that exist in secondary school. The second article explores the topic of “Ownership” of English and the NS-NNS distinction. The study asked speakers from India, Malaysia, Singapore, and the United States to rate the acceptability of sentences. Their answers reflected their degree of ownership and perceptions of the target language.
  9. Home

    A website for English language teachers around the world. Resources include English Teaching Forum, lesson plans, professional development material, and texts to help teach U.S. culture, conversational American English, and idioms. Downloadable e-books and audio books include classic American stories such as “To Build a Fire,” “The Tell-Tale Heart,” “Gift of the Magi,” and more.

  10. Just Off Main Street

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 3 Format(s): Text
    “Just off Main Street” is for learner use and is an account of the writer’s experience as an Arab American. It opens with a description of the writer’s childhood and the cultural divide between life inside and outside the home. Readers will be drawn into the vivid description of daily life. The article looks at the challenges of being bi-cultural, of keeping home life separate, of being “exoticized,” of becoming comfortable and proud of one’s heritage, and of finding community. The article provides opportunities for discussions of culture, identity, and activism.

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