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1459 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. Michael

    In: American Teens Talk! Format(s): MP3, Text
    In this interview, Michael talks about playing sports with his friends, fishing, and living in Switzerland.
  2. Activity 4 - Peer Assessments

    In: Teacher's Corner: Making Meaningful Assessments Format(s): Text
    This week in the Teacher’s Corner, we examine the value of peer assessments in the English language classroom and offer several ways for teachers to use peer assessments in the classroom regardless of content or skill.
  3. Football: Action on the Gridiron

    In: English Teaching Forum 2010, Volume 48, Number 4 Format(s): Text
    This issue features an in-depth article on the history, mechanics, gameplay, culture, and appeal of American football as well as a piece on America's yearly big event (the Super Bowl). There are powerful, dynamic sports photographs and descriptive, numbers-based explanations of how to play. The historical context reveals that football is not purely an American creation. A discussion of current-day football describes it as an event instead of just a game. A vocabulary section is also included so that students can learn how to 'talk football.'
  4. Consciousness-Raising Task: Discovering Comparative Adjective Rules

    In: Teacher's Corner: Comparatives and Superlatives - Adjectives Format(s): Text
    This week’s activity features a consciousness-raising (CR) task in which learners use example sentences containing the target form to discover general grammar rules about comparative adjectives.
  5. An Approach to Teaching Organizational Skills to Adults

    In: English Teaching Forum 2009, Volume 47, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    Much of L2 teaching is based on organizational skills that the students may not already have. A lack of organization causes frustration and lost time for both the teacher and the student. The author argues that teaching organizational skills and teaching language skills is not an either-or choice. She offers guidelines for skill development along with practical suggestions for materials, verbalization, and clarification.
  6. Cooperative Listening as a Means to Promote Strategic Listening Comprehension

    In: English Teaching Forum 2006, Volume 44, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This article argues for the use of a cooperative listening technique and describes the steps involved in using this approach. The author describes a five-step procedure for teaching listening strategies, and then uses his own experience to show how this approach can help learners develop listening comprehension. The author also discusses his perspectives on potential issues of this cooperative listening approach.
  7. English Proficiency Test: The Oral Component of a Primary School

    In: English Teaching Forum 2005, Volume 43, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    This article discusses the various problems found when teachers try to design the oral production part of English proficiency tests for young learners. The authors discuss matters such as intimidation or the possibility of relating the test too much to other conventional tests. They offer ways to address these issues, including testing for fluency, using elicitation procedures, and changing the view of the test into a more relaxed game-like scenario. The authors provide examples of where these ideas have been implemented.
  8. Integrating Reading, Writing, Listening, and Speaking with Visuals

    In: English Teaching Forum 2018, Volume 56, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    This Teaching Technique gives suggestions for using pictures and other images to give students practice in the “four skills” and using authentic English to communicate.
  9. Giving and Responding to Compliments

    In: Teaching Pragmatics Format(s): Text, Video, Website
    This lesson in Teaching Pragmatics aims to raise learners' awareness of pragmatic rules and to increase input to learners and opportunities to observe native English speakers' pragmatic behavior.
  10. Process Writing and the Internet: Blogs and Ning Networks in the Classroom

    In: English Teaching Forum 2011, Volume 49, Number 2 Format(s): Text
    This article presents a student-centered technique for teaching writing to ESL and EFL students who are familiar with Internet-based technology. There are two classroom lessons which use blogs (an Internet-based diary tool accessible by many) and Ning networks (an Internet-based network created for small groups for a small fee). A process-writing concept focuses on students’ social relationships and interests. Step-by-step directions are included for teachers and students who may be less familiar with these two technologies.

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