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1068 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. The Line Between Questions, Responses, and Readers

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    This article uses the Stephen Crane story “The Open Boat” (freely available on the American English website) as an anchor text to demonstrate how teachers can apply Raphael’s Question-Answer Relationship (QAR) technique to a text that students might be assigned to read. The article includes numerous examples and tips that teachers can use to adapt the technique to other texts as a way to enhance student engagement and interest in reading.
  2. Let Them Play: Board Games for Language Practice

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    Authors Kevin McCaughey and Rick Rosenberg demonstrate techniques for using board games to stimulate student-centered language practice that is flexible, productive, engaging, and fun. The article includes tips for efficient game play and for using games with a variety of levels and class sizes. The authors show that playing board games for language practice can be educational AND entertaining.
  3. Storytelling Clubs: A Multilingual, Multimodal Approach

    In: English Teaching Forum 2025, Volume 63, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    Riah Werner uses her experience with a storytelling club in Tanzania to give guidance for starting, customizing, and maintaining storytelling clubs in other contexts. The article provides options and suggests specific activities for those who are interesting in starting a similar club of their own.
  4. Activity Proposal to Work with English Language Variation: Focus on the Phonetic-Phonological Level

    In: English Teaching Forum 2025, Volume 63, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    Author Adriano Delego demonstrates why it is important for learners to be able to understand variations in English language spoken around the world, then describes six activities teachers can use to give their students practice in listening to and comprehending different varieties of English.
  5. Scavenger Hunts in ELT

    In: English Teaching Forum 2025, Volume 63, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    Laura Loder Buechel explores the many ways that scavenger hunts can add fun, movement, collaboration, and practical applications of knowledge to English language learning. The article includes detailed descriptions of different kinds of hunts, many of which are appropriate for young learners, and includes templates and ready-to-use ideas.
  6. Reading (and Writing) beyond the Lines

    In: English Teaching Forum 2025, Volume 63, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    Author Vanesa Polastri loves to give her learners stories (and other texts) that contain “gaps of indeterminacy”—that is, missing information that the learners must provide by using hints in the texts, their own knowledge, and their imagination. The author suggests ways the technique can be used for learners of different ages and language levels.
  7. My Classroom: Bolivia

    In: English Teaching Forum 2025, Volume 63, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    Learn how Claudia Andrade Serrano engaged her students with a place-based language-learning project that involved planting churqui-tree “seed bombs.” Students used English throughout the project, from making and planting the seed bombs to writing and sharing original poems about nature. The article, written by Susan Huss-Lederman, conveys the students’ enthusiasm and includes thoughts on how other teachers can try similar projects of their own.
  8. Think-Talk-Write Design: Digital Tools for Language Autonomy and Writing Literacies

    In: English Teaching Forum 2025, Volume 63, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    Author Florence Elizabeth Bacabac takes the reader through a series of detailed steps that demonstrate how to help students think (with a focus on cognitive awareness), talk (using communicative activities), and write (applying grammar in writing contexts. The author shows how digital tools can align with the principles of critical thinking and audience awareness.
  9. Repeated Reading with Retelling: A Multi-skilled Fluency Activity

    In: English Teaching Forum 2025, Volume 63, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    Author Tim Stoeckel describes the Repeated Reading with Retelling (RRR) activity, which combines the strengths of the well-known “4/3/2” and “repeated reading” techniques. RRR gives students at nearly all language levels practice in multiple language skills and can be used with a variety of text types, making it a fit in a wide range of language-learning classes.
  10. A Simple and Authentic Assessment of Language Learners’ Reading Abilities: The Reading Level Measurement Method

    In: English Teaching Forum 2025, Volume 63, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    Author Aaron Mermelstein explains the importance of accurately placing learners at the correct level for reading practice, then describes the Reading Level Measurement Method, a student-centered device that can be used to measure students’ placement (and progress) and can give reading instructors important information about the effectiveness of their reading program.

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