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For English Language Teachers Around the World
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977 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. Week 1 - Routines for Everyday Language

    In: Teacher's Corner: Teaching Beginners Format(s): Text
    This week, learn to establish routines to help beginners feel comfortable right from the start.
  2. Language & Literature in Tertiary Education: The Case for Stylistics

    In: English Teaching Forum 2002, Volume 40, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    This article discusses the lack of quality in students’ literary criticism in degree English courses, suggesting that students have difficulty understanding literary texts in English. It recommends stylistic analysis, the analysis of structures and vocabulary, as a way that learners of English as a second or foreign language can develop a more active and independent approach to understanding and critiquing literary works.
  3. Instant Feedback for Learner Training: Using Individual Assessment Cards

    In: English Teaching Forum 2002, Volume 40, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    This article presents the idea of using student assessment cards to train students to adopt efficient learning strategies. It discusses how individual assessment cards allow each student to see how well he or she is progressing at any point in the course. The article describes what a student assessment card is and provides detailed guidelines, including descriptions of the content on each side of the card, and about when and how to use these in the language classroom.
  4. Tips for Reading Extensively

    In: English Teaching Forum 2004, Volume 42, Issue 4 Format(s): Text
    This article describes how instructors can help their students benefit from extensive reading. Ten tips cover the basic guidelines of extensive reading. Extensive reading can improve learners’ fluency, confidence, and motivation in addition to expanding vocabulary and increasing reading speed. Students should read for overall comprehension and avoid turning to dictionaries with each new word. Modeling extensive reading and reading aloud with enthusiasm may also encourage student interest.
  5. Lesson Plan: Taking a Look at Schools

    In: English Teaching Forum 2005, Volume 43, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    This lesson plan, based on a short reading of a student’s description of a one-room schoolhouse, has a variety of activities, including group discussions, vocabulary practice, a spelling bee, research topics, interviews, and a task that has students exploring their own school.
  6. Literacy Memoirs

    In: English Teaching Forum 2005, Volume 43, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This article discusses the use of literacy memoirs to help students become motivated to write. This can give students the chance for reflection on their literacy skills while also improving their writing in English. The author explains how a literacy memoir workshop can work in a process writing classroom, giving a sample schedule and examples of student memoirs.
  7. Shall We Dance: Team Teaching as Supervision in the English Language Classroom

    In: English Teaching Forum 2005, Volume 43, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    This article compares team teaching to a dance in which leadership shifts from partner to partner. It argues for the use of team teaching as an effective and motivating means of professional development. The author shares his experience in team teaching and offers a list of steps that can be used to establish and maintain team teaching that is effective for both the professionals and their students, such as when to involve students and when to trade roles.
  8. Rules and Laws

    In: English Teaching Forum 2001, Volume 39, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    This article presents a lesson that gives students the opportunity to explore aspects of rules and laws. The goal of the lesson is to help students learn vocabulary and concepts associated with the topic, practice their English language skills, and develop an understanding of the role of rules and laws in civil societies. The article shares three activities for a fifty-minute lesson plan, but the authors state that teachers may modify the lesson for their own contexts and student needs.
  9. Picture This – Paraphrase It!

    In: Activate Games for Learning American English: Picture This Format(s): Text
    Paraphrase It! provides students with practice saying the same thing in a variety of different ways by paraphrasing. This game works best in groups of 3-4 students
  10. Picture This – Simple Switches

    In: Activate Games for Learning American English: Picture This Format(s): Text
    In Simple Switches, students ask each other questions that they have altered from the original question on a Picture This card.

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U.S. Department of State
Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs
For English Language Teachers Around the World

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