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849 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. The Lighter Side: Dare to Read

    In: English Teaching Forum 2012, Volume 50, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    This puzzle offers 20 scrambled words that all relate to “things people read.”
  2. 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.
  3. Three Interactive Alternatives for Developing Reading Fluency

    In: English Teaching Forum 2019, Volume 57, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    Using clear examples and explanations, this article presents three ways for students to interact with peers and with texts to develop reading fluency.
  4. Task-Based Reading Activities Using Authentic Materials and Skills

    In: English Teaching Forum 2021, Volume 59, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    The author describes in detail a two-stage reading activity that incorporates authentic materials, task-based learning, and stations. The article includes ideas for adaptation and presents a number of further teaching applications.
  5. Reading Up-Close and Personal: Connection-Making and the Classic American Short Story

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    Authors Spencer Salas and Bernadette Musetti use the O. Henry story “Transients in Arcadia” (available on the American English website) to illustrate how readers can make a text more meaningful by connecting it to themselves, to other texts, and to the world.
  6. Translation and Foreign Language Reading Comprehension: A Neglected Didactic Procedure

    In: English Teaching Forum 2006, Volume 44, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    In reviewing views on the use of L1 in L2 classrooms, the author argues for the benefits of using L1. The author argues for the benefits of written translation activities based on the ideas that translation uses authentic materials, is interactive, learner-centered, and promotes learner autonomy. The author also argues that written translation activities can be used as a post-reading activity to check learners’ reading comprehension and provide items for future tests. A sample activity is given and suggestions are discussed.
  7. Two Writing Activities for Extensive Reading

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 3 Format(s): Text
    These activities promote writing fluency and self-monitoring as well as skills such as getting started with writing and skimming. Students demonstrate understanding of their extensive reading. Timed repeated thinking and writing is similar to free-writing. It includes brief cycles of writing and reflecting. In each cycle, students start their writing over. A similar activity involves cycles of skimming, writing, and thinking. For variation, students can start from where their last writing left off or choose the most important point as a starting place for the next writing turn.
  8. Lesson Plan: Reading, Writing, and Performing Poetry

    In: English Teaching Forum 2006, Volume 44, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    This lesson plan contains poetry-related activities that aim to help students read and interpret English poetry, and write their own poems. The activities are introduced in each of the following parts: talking about poetry, understanding poetic devices, interpreting poems, using poetry for language acquisition, writing original poems, performing poetry, and organizing poetry slams.
  9. Writing for the Reader: A Problem-Solution Approach

    In: English Teaching Forum 2012, Volume 50, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    A “how to” piece on using the problem-solution approach to writing academic articles, this article explores (originally published in 1997) defining the audience, defining the author, and evaluating the structure of an article, and it outlines helpful questions for writers and readers.
  10. Story 1: Are You Ready to Learn English?

    In: Why English? Comics for the Classroom Format(s): MP3, Text
    The stories in Why English? Comics for the Classroom – written by teenagers and young adults – will appeal to learners of all ages. These stories provide an enjoyable opportunity to increase vocabulary, reading comprehension, listening, speaking, and writing.

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