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  1. 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.
  2. Motivated to Work: The Power of Choice Boards

    In: English Teaching Forum 2023, Volume 61, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    Teaching Technique
  3. Make a Vertical, Whole-Class Board Game

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    Author Kevin McCaughey takes game-boarding to another dimension by showing how teachers and students can turn part of a classroom into a board game that the entire class can play. Step-by-step instructions ensure that teachers will know exactly how to apply the idea of vertical games in their own classrooms—and will be able to let students not only play the games, but help create them, too.
  4. 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.
  5. Curiosity and Comprehension

    In: English Teaching Forum 2012, Volume 50, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    This article, originally published in 1977, offers teachers techniques to pique students’ curiosity, making a case that curiosity spurs comprehension and initiative.
  6. Integrating Environmental Education into a Genre-Based EFL Writing Class

    In: English Teaching Forum 2014, Volume 52, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    This article offers practical ways to integrate environmental education into English language teaching by using the genre-based approach to teaching writing. The authors present a four-stage process for each of three types of writing—descriptive, narrative, and procedure—focusing the content of each type of writing on the environment.
  7. Using Freewriting to Make Sense of Literature

    In: English Teaching Forum 2016, Volume 54, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    Articles provide practical, innovative ideas for teaching English, based on current theory.
  8. 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.
  9. Error Correction and Feedback in the EFL Writing Classroom: Comparing Instructor and Student Preferences

    In: English Teaching Forum 2006, Volume 44, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This article discusses what EFL instructors and their students like and dislike about error correction and paper marking and discusses what this means for classroom teaching. The article lists the benefits and drawbacks of error correction for students’ writing and argues for the need to look at preferred methods for both teachers and students. It reports on a study of university EFL instructors and discusses these teachers’ beliefs regarding important aspects of writing and their preference for paper-marking techniques.
  10. Open Classroom Communication and the Learning of Citizenship Values

    In: English Teaching Forum 2007, Volume 45, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    This article discusses the importance of fostering citizenship values in language classrooms around the world, and specifically in Morocco. Class content, student-teacher roles, classroom activities, and teacher education can promote civic values of equality, respect, responsibility, tolerance, and compassion. A learner-centered environment where there is group work, open communication, and participation, models these values. By including cultural content and engaging students with meaningful issues, teachers can increase interest and motivation.

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For English Language Teachers Around the World

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