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  1. Poems About English and Access (1)

    In: Poetry Format(s): Text
    Read poems written by learners from around the world. The theme of these poems is English and Access Programs. Download the poems or read them online..
  2. My Classroom: Seattle, Washington

    In: English Teaching Forum, Volume 60, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    Learn how Irene Thanh Pham, who teaches in a dual language program at an elementary school in Seattle, helps her students learn both language (English and Vietnamese) and culture (primarily American and Vietnamese) while stressing identity awareness and educational equity.
  3. Teacher's Corner: Simple Ways to Incorporate Pragmatics in the EFL Classroom

    Format(s): Text
    Teaching vocabulary and common phrases is an essential task of the English language classroom, but it is also important to teach the pragmatics of a language to help learners use language appropriately in different situations. This month’s Teacher’s Corner explores the idea of pragmatics and why it is a valuable component to include in instruction. The article also contains resources and ideas for including pragmatics instruction and building up students’ pragmatic competence.
  4. Reflective Teacher Observation Model for In-Service Teacher Trainees

    In: English Teaching Forum 2007, Volume 45, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    This article proposes the Teacher Observation Programme for in-service teacher trainees. The program is reflective, collaborative, and builds confidence. It enables teachers to grow in their ability to self-evaluate. Trainees who have made decisions about their own observation, who have created and used their own observational tools, and who have used reflective lesson plans will be better equipped to do action research. Some of the key components of the program are needs assessment, building rapport, summative assessment and post-observational feedback.
  5. Teacher's Corner: Engaging English Language Learners with New Forms of Literacy

    Format(s): Text
    In the 21st century, our students have to know how to read and communicate using more than just words on paper or a computer screen. Communication takes many forms, and our classroom teaching will benefit by bringing in these new forms of communication. April’s Teacher’s Corner looks at several new literacies: instant messaging, comics and graphic novels, short-form videos, and podcasting. We explore what these forms are and how we can use them in the classroom to help students develop their language skills and to solve problems in an ever-changing world of communication.
  6. Poems Made Into Songs

    In: Poetry Format(s): MP3
    Students from all over the world participated in poetry writing to celebrate National Poetry Month. Three of the poems were then made into songs! Listen to them or download the MP3s here!
  7. 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.
  8. Teaching Techniques: Cultural Introductions by Way of Storytelling

    In: English Teaching Forum 2015, Volume 53, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This introductory lesson is something I have used on the first day of class with students around the globe.
  9. Supporting Comprehension and Developing Summative Tasks

    In: Teacher's Corner – Teaching with Authentic Materials Format(s): Text
    This week’s Teacher’s Corner will discuss different strategies for helping students interact with authentic materials and understand their content.
  10. The Future is Now: Preparing a New Generation of CBI Teachers

    In: English Teaching Forum 2011, Volume 49, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This article discusses the use of Content Based Instruction (CBI) and provides ways that language-teacher education programs can better prepare CBI teachers. The author argues that CBI is particularly relevant now, in the 21st century. The article explains what specific skills are needed to successfully teach using a CBI approach, including Language Proficiency, Academic Skills, Pedagogical Knowledge, and content-language interface skills.

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For English Language Teachers Around the World

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