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For English Language Teachers Around the World
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22 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. Information Gaps: Graphic Organizers and Oral Clues

    In: Teacher's Corner: Speaking - Information Gap Activities Format(s): Text
    This week’s activity is an information gap using schedules. Speaking English, students collaborate to reach a shared solution.
  2. The Lighter Side of TEFL: Crossword Puzzles

    In: The Lighter Side of TEFL, Volume 1 Format(s): Text
    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.
  3. Week 3 - English on Tour

    In: Teacher's Corner: Career Opportunities Format(s): Text
    This week’s Teacher’s Corner provides students with the opportunity to practice speaking and presentation skills through a tour guide activity.
  4. All That Jazz

    In: English Teaching Forum 2003, Volume 41, Number 2 Format(s): Text, Image / Poster / Maps
    This article is the first of three to introduce Jazz music, which was born in the United States over a period of 200 years. Jazz was influenced by African, Latin American, and European music. It is generally accepted that Jazz was first recognized in New Orleans, Louisiana, the southeastern United States. This mostly historical article features many Jazz musicians including Ferdinand “Jelly Roll” Morton, Buddy Bolden, Joe “King” Oliver, and Louis “Satchmo” Armstrong. A list of Web sites is included.
  5. My Classroom: Zanzibar

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    Learn how Muhaymina Omar and her students on Unguja, one of the two main islands in Tanzania’s Zanzibar Archipelago, have come together in regular classes and in a special Saturday class to study English, collaborate to solve problems, and learn about themselves and the world around them.
  6. Implementing Humor Instruction in English Language Teaching

    In: English Teaching Forum 2021, Volume 59, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    The authors demonstrate the importance of understanding kinds of humor that differ across cultures and offer clear suggestions for teaching three kinds—verbal irony, memes, and satirical news—with examples that can help students develop humor competency and enhance their twenty-first-century skills, including digital and media literacy.
  7. 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.
  8. Teaching Techniques: Group Grammar

    In: English Teaching Forum 2015, Volume 53, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    Before becoming a teacher of English to speakers of other languages, I taught French, and too often I saw that impersonal grammar exercises about “Jacques” and “Nathalie” were meaningless to the students. Worse, those exercises led to apathy and stagnation. So I decided to do grammar activities in which students used each other’s names, instead of random ones, and used the grammar to express ideas about their own lives.
  9. Week 2 - Simple and Phrasal Modals

    In: Teacher's Corner: Modals Format(s): Text
    In this week’s Teacher’s Corner, students use simple and phrasal modals in new and engaging ways.
  10. My Classroom: Ethiopia

    In: English Teaching Forum 2015, Volume 53, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    Dawit Negeri has been teaching in the English Department at Ambo University for the past five years.

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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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