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1832 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. The Lighter Side

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 1 Format(s): Text
    These are two vocabulary activities. “J-Words Crossword Puzzle” invites students to use clues to fill in a crossword with words that start with the letter “J.” "Postcards Word Search" uses vocabulary from the feature article, "A Postcard from America."
  2. Promoting Solidarity in Short Interactions

    In: Teaching Pragmatics Format(s): Text, Video, Website
    This lesson in Teaching Pragmatics aims to raise awareness of and give practice in using strategies of relexicalisation for descriptive accounts and for promoting solidarity in short interactions. A sub-goal is to provide students with interesting and natural vehicles for vocabulary development, recycling and revision.
  3. A Postcard from America

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 1 Format(s): Text
    This feature article for learner use is by author Robert Olen Butler. It briefly describes the history and cultural aspects of postcards. The author provides detail about several postcards in his personal collection. He values the images and the glimpses into people’s lives as written on the postcards. A glossary of terms and images of postcards accompany the article. Appropriate for high intermediate to advanced students.
  4. Polite Ways of Correcting or Contradicting our Conversation's Partner's Assumptions

    In: Teaching Pragmatics Format(s): Text, Video, Website
    This lesson aims to raise learners' pragmatic awareness towards an important conversational function and to help them to be aware of the negative impression brought about by the non-use of actually (or other softeners of contradiction or correction) and for students to learn to produce corrections or contradictions prefaced by actually.
  5. Are You Listening? (Backchannel Behaviors)

    In: Teaching Pragmatics Format(s): Text, Video, Website
    This lesson aims to promote awareness of short responses during conversations such as uh-huh and yeah known as backchannel behaviors; to increase awareness of cultural differences in backchannel behaviors; to allow students to practice behaviors that indicate active listening.
  6. Talking on a Second Channel Using Parentheticals in English Discourse

    In: Teaching Pragmatics Format(s): Text, Video, Website
    This lesson in Teaching Pragmatics aims to help students learn to pronounce a range of parentheticals appropriately.
  7. The LIghter Side of TEFL: Limericks

    In: The Lighter Side of TEFL, Volume 1 Format(s): Text
    This section of The Lighter Side of TEFL focuses on limericks, which are light, nonsensical verses of five lines in which the first, second, and fifth lines rhyme with each other and the third and fourth lines, shorter in form, make up a rhymed couplet.
  8. Letters to the Editor

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 2 Format(s): Text
    This letter to the editor was written in response to the article, “Language vs. Literature in English Departments in the Arab World” by Marwan M. Obeidat. The letter addresses this controversial topic from a different point of view. Dr. M. N. K. Bose, who writes the letter, argues that courses teaching language skills are valuable to improve the English proficiency of Arab university students. He stresses that English translations of Arabic literature are more valuable than Western literature in Arabic universities.
  9. The Lighter Side

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 2 Format(s): Text
    There are two games in this issue. “Sights in the City: A Word Puzzle” is for high intermediate or advanced students who are familiar with tourist attractions in the United States. Clues about landmarks and their locations are provided, as are “hangman” type blanks to cue the number of letters in the answer. The second game is “Urban Renewal: A Word Search Puzzle.”
  10. Maps and Legends

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 2 Format(s): Text
    The author of this student-directed reading, Michael Chabon, shares his experience as a pioneer of the Columbia Experiment. Columbia’s renewal was the dream of James Rouse, who put together a team of city planners to design a lovely, convenient, modern city where races lived together in harmony. Chabon writes about the impact of living with the dream and vision of the city’s development. Since the late 1960s, Columbia has grown from a few thousand people to the second largest city in Maryland.

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