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977 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. Week 2 - Professional Video Gamer

    In: Teacher's Corner: Gerunds and Infinitives Format(s): Text
    This week, while students learn to use gerunds and infinitives, take some time to learn about the wide world of video games from them!
  2. The Reflective Portfolio: Two Case Studies from the United Arab Emirates

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 1 Format(s): Text
    This article explains the benefits of using portfolios, an alternative assessment tool, to assess writing. The author identifies the characteristics of alternative assessment. Portfolios evaluate student progress over time and can include revisions. They are based on activities that show what students can do with language. Portfolios emphasize strengths and involve reflection by the student. Case studies show how portfolios were used in English courses at two universities. The authors advise allowing time for reflection and training in self-evaluation.
  3. Near-Peer Tutoring in an ESOL Music Project

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 2 Format(s): Text
    This article describes how near-peer tutoring was used to foster a supportive, learner-centered environment in an adult ESOL setting. Students from beginning and advanced classes worked together to learn a song to perform at a year-end ceremony. The task involved vocabulary, pronunciation, intonation, and comprehension. Benefits of the music project included building relationships, breaking the routine, and lowering students’ affective filters. The project allowed the adults to be self-directed, empowered them to critique themselves, and gave them a sense of accomplishment.
  4. An Integrated Skills Lesson Plan for "Maps and Legends" by Michael Chabon

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 2 Format(s): Text
    This lesson plan is based on the article “Maps and Legends” by novelist Michael Chabon and is for high intermediate to advance students. The lesson includes group and pair work. Students discuss the neighborhood where they grew up. They read the text and identify unfamiliar words, then answer comprehension questions in writing or discussion groups. Post-reading activities include scanning, inferring meaning from context, dictionary practice, and discussion questions. The lesson ends with questions to make connections beyond the text and project ideas.
  5. On Native Language Intrusions and Making Do with Words: Linguistically Homogeneous Classrooms and Native Language Use

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 4 Format(s): Text
    Should L1 use be avoided in an EFL context, where classrooms tend to be linguistically homogeneous and where students have little opportunity to use English outside the classroom? This article reviews research on native language use in the classroom, how it is used (or not used), and the effects. It addresses topics such as impact on learning, teacher guilt, “covert use,” affective and processing benefits, validating the students’ own language, and solidarity with the instructor. The author concludes that a trend toward what Atkinson calls “judicious use” is reasonable.
  6. Classroom Techniques: Communicative Activities for Middle School Classrooms

    In: English Teaching Forum 2006, Volume 44, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    The author states that communicative activities, known to help language learning, can be difficult to use with middle school students. The author offers four suggestions for carrying out communicative activities and presents two activities that are designed to motivate students to use English to express their views.
  7. Creating a Learner-Centred Teacher Education Program

    In: English Teaching Forum 2001, Volume 39, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This article describes the creation of a learner-centered classroom environment, with students who came from a teacher-centered background. A teacher-dominated classroom is one where the teacher talks most of the time, leads activities, and constantly passes judgment on student performance. The authors describe a learner-centered classroom as one where students work on distinct tasks and projects individually or in small groups, developing learner autonomy and control. The authors share steps in their process of creating a learner-centered classroom.
  8. Talking to Learn across Classrooms and Communities

    In: English Teaching Forum 2013, Volume 51, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    The authors of this article present a model for principled discussion and suggest ways to engage students in focused discussions drawing from their experiences, offering guidance for helping students make the most of the dialogue sessions.
  9. Teacher's Corner: Making Learning Fun

    Format(s): Text
    In the January Teacher’s Corner, we will look at ways to make learning fun, accessible, and meaningful in the English language classroom. Each week, we will present a fun and engaging activity that focuses on one domain of language learning: listening, speaking, reading, or writing.
  10. Podcasting in the Classroom

    In: American English Webinars Format(s): Text, Video
    This webinar explores an alternative solution to the challenge of providing students enough speaking and listening time in the class.

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