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977 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. Fostering Student Motivation: Goal-Setting and Student Interest Questionnaires

    In: Teacher's Corner: Fostering Student Motivation Format(s): Text
    This week’s teaching tip illustrates how to use a beginning-of-course questionnaire activity to encourage students to think about motivation-related questions.
  2. Easy Reading Activities to Engage Students

    In: American English Webinars Format(s): Text, Video
    How to engage students and help them develop the skills needed to make them better readers. Watch the webinar or download the presentation.
  3. The Rio–Warsaw Connection: Encouraging Interculturalism among Students

    In: English Teaching Forum 2015, Volume 53, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    It all began in Norwich. As they do every year, teachers from different parts of the world went in July 2012 to that beautiful little city in the east of England to take part in one of the two-week professional development courses offered by the Norwich Institute for Language Education (NILE).
  4. Plurilingualism and Translanguaging Strategies for Language Teachers and Students

    In: American English Webinars Format(s): Text, Video
    This session, "Plurilingualism and Translanguaging Strategies for Language Teachers and Students," demonstrates how including students’ first language (L1) in the ELT classroom offers the potential for innovative and nuanced communication and understanding in both students’ L1 and L2 and shows activities that can be adapted for students of all ages and levels.
  5. Clause Relationships and Macro Patterns: Coherence, Cohesion, and the Writing of Advanced ESOL Students

    In: English Teaching Forum 2002 (Volume 40, Number 1) Format(s): Text
    This article discusses problems that non-native speakers of English may have in making their written texts cohesive and coherent. The author provides cohesive devices that can aid students in their writing and emphasizes the organization of ideas in order to build coherence. Included are activities designed to raise students' awareness of various patterns, help reformulate sentences, aid students in creating their own texts, and increase their ability to edit their own work.
  6. Teaching Students How to Write a Description with Photos

    In: English Teaching Forum 2017, Volume 55, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    This Teaching Technique explains what the author describes as a pre-task for teaching students to write descriptively about a photo diary that students create themselves.
  7. Enliven Your Class and Engage Your Students with Fun Facts

    In: English Teaching Forum 2023, Volume 61, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    Stephen Mark Silvers enlivens this article with dozens of “fun facts” while also explaining how teachers can use such facts to motivate students and develop students’ English skills in creative ways. The author, who notes that students’ responses to the facts will be “authentic and meaningful,” provides a number of sources where teachers can find fun facts to use with their classes.
  8. To the Moon! — A Launch Pad for Encouraging Students to Express Their Opinions

    In: English Teaching Forum 2011, Volume 49, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    Writing a persuasive essay can be a challenging task. This article outlines an activity that involves developing, communicating, and exploring opinions. Students work individually to select volunteers to go to the moon. Groups then try to agree on the selection, discussing their reasons and assumptions. A number of letter-writing assignments incorporate material from the discussions. This student-centered activity can improve confidence, critical thinking skills, and writing fluency, while students learn from and challenge each other.
  9. Is There a TA in Your Future? Upper-Class Teaching Assistants in the EFL Classroom

    In: English Teaching Forum 2023, Volume 61, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    Author Gene Richards argues that establishing a program that prepares and allows upper-class students to become teaching assistants (TAs) for lower-class students can have benefits for all students—as well as their teachers. The article provides suggestions for setting up and managing the program; it also includes templates for TA agreements and certificates that readers are welcome to use if they establish a TA program of their own.
  10. Helping Students Develop Coherence in Writing

    In: English Teaching Forum 2002, Volume 40, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This article discusses the need to bring coherence in writing from an abstract level to a concrete concept that can be described and taught. Teachers need to teach coherence by sharing its metalanguage with students. This can be done for example by using more specific comments such as “unclear reference” or “inappropriate conjunction” instead of vague ones such as “the essay lacks unity.” The article offers a coherence checklist for students to self-edit and to review their peers’ writing.

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For English Language Teachers Around the World

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