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For English Language Teachers Around the World
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95 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. Making the Most of Large Classes by Using Learning Teams

    In: Teacher's Corner: Common Challenges in the English Classroom Format(s): Text
    Large classes can be challenging. Learn ways to make the most of large classes by using learning teams in this week’s Teacher’s Corner.
  2. Using a Daily Routine for Language Practice

    In: Teacher's Corner: Teaching Young Learners Format(s): Text
    Young learners benefit from a structured environment. Routines help students feel connected to what they are learning. For language learners, routines also help lower the affective filter (feelings of anxiety or self-consciousness) by providing structured, familiar activities in which they can easily participate.
  3. Teacher's Corner: Teaching Grammar for Communicative Competence

    Format(s): Text
    This month in Teacher’s Corner, we look at how to teach grammar in ways that help students to build their communicative competence. A communicative grammar lesson gives students the opportunity to practice the target grammar item through specific communicative tasks and activities.This month’s article is filled with ideas and resources to help students use the language they are learning.
  4. 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.
  5. Practical Tips for Increasing Listening Practice Time

    In: English Teaching Forum 2015, Volume 53, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    This article help teachers of English reconsider how to think about listening tasks. It provides guidance for increasing classroom listening practice through short, dedicated tasks, with an emphasis on the practical business of setting up and “class-managing” listening activities in order to give students more practice.

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U.S. Department of State
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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