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1377 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. Online English-English Learner Dictionaries Boost Word Learning

    In: English Teaching Forum 2012, Volume 50, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    This article suggests that English language learners can benefit greatly from using learner dictionaries that are corpus-based, supply word frequency data, and offer collocation guides, authentic examples, and topical vocabulary. The author discusses teacher applications for each dictionary feature.
  2. The Dialogue Journal: A Tool for Building Better Writers

    In: English Teaching Forum 2013, Volume 51, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    Using dialogue journals gives English language learners valuable writing practice. This article explores topics such as audience, fluency, teacher-student relationships, empowerment, and making the connection to academic writing. And the author gives practical advice on how teachers can institute dialogue journals in their classrooms and how best to respond to students’ journals.
  3. Teaching English for Science and Technology: An Approach for Reading with Engineering English

    In: English Teaching Forum 2013, Volume 51, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    Recognizing the relevance of English for Specific Purposes, this article outlines an approach for using authentic readings in a course in Engineering English. The article describes the importance of needs analysis, rhetorical focus, and reading for content; it suggests content for 15 lessons and provides a sample worksheet and other suggestions for assessment.
  4. Exploring Children's Picture Storybooks with Adult and Adolescent EFL Learners

    In: English Teaching Forum 2013, Volume 51, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    The author presents a theoretical framework for using picture storybooks in teaching EFL to adults, suggesting that the storybooks are helpful in teaching both mechanics and culture. The article provides activities and resources and suggests themes that can be explored through the picture storybooks.
  5. Assessment Literacy: Building a Base for Better Teaching and Learning

    In: English Teaching Forum 2014, Volume 52, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This article presents principles and practices of effective assessment, outlining seven key concepts—usefulness, reliability, validity, practicality, washback, authenticity, and transparency—and demonstrating how to apply them in creating an exam blueprint.
  6. Classroom Activities

    In: English Teaching Forum 2014, Volume 52, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This section presents three stand-alone English language-learning activities related to dogs.
  7. Teaching Students to Categorize TOEFL Essay Topics

    In: English Teaching Forum 2014, Volume 52, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    The author maintains that categorizing TOEFL iBT writing topics helps test takers because they will be more familiar with the topics and thus better able to write about them and because categorizing topics requires critical thinking about the topics. Using some of the 185 TOEFL prompt questions and 10 additional prompts, the article explores ways to code and analyze the prompts, illustrating the process with tables.
  8. Considering Multimodal Materials and Modes of Communication for Authentic Communication in Online Classes

    In: English Teaching Forum, Volume 60, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    The author, Jonathan Maiullo, proposes ideas for considering the use of multimodal materials and different ways of communicating in order to offer students a rich, authentic learning experience; the article includes five example activities that “illustrate the ways that multimodal materials combine with modes of communication to create authentic online communicative activities.”
  9. Questionnaires as a Tool for Teaching English Language through Learner-Create Knowledge

    In: English Teaching Forum 2022, Volume 60, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    Christopher Strelluf and Eric Ekembe explain potential benefits of learner-created knowledge which can be particularly valuable in low-resource contexts, and present a detailed, adaptable approach for using questionnaires to create knowledge, inspire critical thinking, and develop language skills.
  10. The Collaborative Scaffolding Model of Teaching Speaking

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    This article, by Krishna Prasad Parajuli, describes a step-by-step activity in which students work in groups to begin, develop, and share stories they create. Teachers can also use the approach with debates, speeches, interviews, and other speaking genres as students enhance their speaking, listening, and collaborating skills.

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For English Language Teachers Around the World

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