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For English Language Teachers Around the World
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237 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. Learn American Business English Wordbook

    In: VOA Interactive Learning: Wordbooks Format(s): Website
    Learn business English with this interactive Wordbook. Improve your business English with definitions and examples.
  2. To Correct or Not Correct? Ideas for Subtle Error Correction During Speaking Tasks

    In: American English Webinars Format(s): Text, Video
    This webinar presents techniques designed to correct students’ grammar without interrupting the free flow of speech or the lesson.
  3. Voice of America's Interactive Learning: The Classroom Official Facebook Page

    Format(s): Website
    The Facebook Page of Voice of America Special English, a component of the interactive VOA experience.
  4. Teaching Young Learners

    In: English Teaching Forum 2005, Volume 43, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    This author shares her unique approach to teaching young learners. She emphasizes that her approach involves features of communicative styles, the audio lingual approach (AL), and Total Physical Response (TPR), as she believes it is necessary to bring together all three styles of teaching to develop language proficiency. She includes a lesson plan for beginner level students to improve grammar competency.
  5. Classroom Techniques: Unleashing Writing Creativity in Students

    In: English Teaching Forum 2005, Volume 43, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    This article argues for free, creative writing in the L2 classroom. The author states that because writing can be stressful and at times paralyzing, the goal of L2 writing should not be to produce perfect, error-free work. The teacher should be a coach, dictionary, and grammar book. The author includes creative writing activities.
  6. Getting the Most Out of the Dictionary

    In: English Teaching Forum 2012, Volume 50, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    Inspired by questions from language teachers, this discussion of dictionaries (reprinted from 1974) explores their utility in determining pronunciation, meaning, and points of grammar and makes recommendations about the kind of dictionaries teachers should use with their students.
  7. Using Teacher-Developed Corpora in the CBI classroom

    In: English Teaching Forum 2008, Volume 46, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    This article argues for the use of teacher-generated corpora in content-based courses. Using a content course for engineering and architecture students as an example, the article explains how a corpus consisting of texts from textbooks and journal articles helped students learn grammar, vocabulary, and writing. The article explains how the corpus was compiled and presents examples of how students learned to analyze language use using corpus tools and dictionaries. The article ends by emphasizing the advantages of corpus analysis for self-directed learning.
  8. Bringing One Language to Another: Multilingualism as a Resource in the Language Classroom

    In: English Teaching Forum 2011, Volume 49, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    Many EFL students are already multilingual, but they may not realize the strengths they bring to language learning. This article calls on instructors to help students develop language awareness and guide them to find ways to apply what they know about language. The author shows how this process occurred in a sociolinguistics course and includes sample lessons for all ages and a variety of levels of proficiency. Lessons incorporate the students’ language knowledge in such skill areas as grammar and vocabulary.
  9. Alternatives to Current Pedagogy for Teaching the Present Perfect Progressive

    In: English Teaching Forum 2003, Volume 41, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    These researchers collected 250 samples of spoken and written American English from high-level communicators and analyzed the use of the present perfect progressive tense. They compared these samples to five leading ESL and EFL grammar textbooks. This article reviews the research and findings. The five leading textbooks provided good overall structure for teaching the present perfect progressive tense, but the use of the tense was critically influenced by broad context, adverbs, temporal context and the uses of other tenses including the present and present perfect tense.
  10. Developing Writing

    Format(s): Text
    Developing Writing is a reading and writing skills text designed for beginning to intermediate learners of English.

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For English Language Teachers Around the World

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