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  1. Week 2 - Vocabulary Building Strategies

    In: Teacher's Corner: Teaching Beginners Format(s): Text
    Vocabulary development is an important part of teaching English to beginners. Students not only need to learn new words, but they also need multiple opportunities to interact with the new vocabulary in order to recall and use the words independently.
  2. Using a Daily Routine for Language Practice

    In: Teacher's Corner: Teaching Young Learners Format(s): Text
    Young learners benefit from a structured environment. Routines help students feel connected to what they are learning. For language learners, routines also help lower the affective filter (feelings of anxiety or self-consciousness) by providing structured, familiar activities in which they can easily participate.
  3. English Teaching Forum 2012, Volume 50, Number 4

    Format(s): Text
    The final issue in the 50th anniversary series. Contributor articles discuss “The Teaching Toolbox,” online learner dictionaries, and getting teens to work in class...
  4. Making Writing Fun

    In: Teacher's Corner: Making Learning Fun Format(s): Text
    Get creative with this week’s Teacher’s Corner! This activity is a fun way to encourage students to write in English.
  5. Week 3 - Conducting a Swot Analysis

    In: Teacher's Corner: Teaching Business English and Entrepreneurship Format(s): Text
    In this week’s Teacher’s Corner, students work together to conduct an analysis of a company’s strength, weaknesses, opportunities and threats.
  6. Understanding and Teaching Generation Y

    In: English Teaching Forum 2012, Volume 50, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    This article responds to the challenges of teaching Generation Y students, who are tech-savvy and feedback-dependent visual learners. Because "Gen Y" students are less likely to engage with traditional classroom teaching methods, this article is helpful in identifying specific activities teachers can employ to utilize students' attraction to digital media, multi-tasking, and a sense of global purpose.
  7. The E-pet: Enhancing Motivation in E-portfolios

    In: English Teaching Forum 2009, Volume 47, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    The authors wanted to make EAP portfolios more engaging and personal for students, so they introduced an e-pet to accompany the online portfolio program. The e-pet (much like a tamagotchi) grows from an egg into adulthood when the students interact with it through portfolio submissions. Teachers reported that students were enthusiastic about the e-portfolio and the e-pet. Student questionnaires showed a similar trend, with several students saying that the e-pet made the portfolio project motivating. The article includes directions for e-portfolio design.
  8. Tools for Activating Materials and Tasks in the English Language Classroom

    In: English Teaching Forum 2009, Volume 47, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    This article presents techniques to make classroom materials and tasks more interactive and student-centered and thus motivate learners to take more control over their own learning. It demonstrates these techniques through elicitation, gapping, and adaptation/extension strategies. The article offers examples of classroom activities with detailed instructions to show how teachers can use materials and tasks in the English language classroom to address students’ interests, needs, and goals.
  9. Using Guided, Corpus-Aided Discovery to Generate Active Learning

    In: English Teaching Forum 2008, Volume 46, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    This article shows how English teachers can provide careful guidance for students to use a corpus to research, discover, and reflect on the grammatical and sociolinguistic aspects of English. The author introduces the idea of using a corpus in teaching English and offers several important online resources for English language corpora. The author provides a rationale for corpus-based teaching and gives two examples of how to guide students in exploring linguistic features of English.
  10. Applying Metacognitive Strategies to Skimming Research Articles in an ESP Context

    In: English Teaching Forum 2006, Volume 44, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    The article focuses on explaining to post-secondary teachers how to teach their students to use metacognitive strategies to skim research articles in specialized fields. The author briefly explains metacognitive strategies in reading tasks and discusses the importance of strategy training and having a purpose in reading. The author then describes a lesson plan that includes a presentation and a three-step guided practice. The author concludes by emphasizing reading strategy training in an ESP context.

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For English Language Teachers Around the World

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