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2095 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 1

    Format(s): Text
    Find suggestions for incorporating board games productively in your classes, no matter what level you teach or how large your classes are—and find four new Activate games, too! Also get ideas for using QAR to promote reading engagement and comprehension … getting students to retell stories by creating texts/tweets in their own words … using the Seven Wonders for project-based learning … and stimulating learning with vertical game boards.
  2. 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.
  3. Insert: Four New Activate Board Games

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 1 Format(s): Text, Image / Poster / Maps
    This issue includes a unique bonus: four completely new Activate board games that you and your students can begin playing immediately. The directions may be self-explanatory, but detailed instructions and tips can be found in the article “Let Them Play: Board Games for Language Practice,” also in this issue.
  4. Let Them Play: Board Games for Language Practice

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    Authors Kevin McCaughey and Rick Rosenberg demonstrate techniques for using board games to stimulate student-centered language practice that is flexible, productive, engaging, and fun. The article includes tips for efficient game play and for using games with a variety of levels and class sizes. The authors show that playing board games for language practice can be educational AND entertaining.
  5. C.A.R.E.: A Methodological Framework for Using Pop Songs in the EL2 Classroom

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    Author Harald Spann explains the C.A.R.E. framework to support “planning and teaching pop-song lessons in different learning contexts.” Using the Beatles’ “Here Comes the Sun” as an anchor, the author provides numerous examples of how teachers can apply the framework (covering creativity, analysis, response, and English) for multiple purposes.
  6. Reader’s Guide

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    This guide is designed to enrich your reading of the articles in this issue. You may choose to read them on your own, taking notes or jotting down answers to the discussion questions below. Or you may use the guide to explore the articles with colleagues.
  7. SAD PEACH: The Steps for Giving Effective Instructions in English

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    Author Claire Lee explains the steps in the acronym SAD PEACH, which can be used as a guide for giving instructions effectively with learners at various skill levels. The author presents a sample vocabulary game to illustrate how the steps can be applied.
  8. Hidden Pictures: An Integrated Speaking and Listening Activity

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    Author Heather Gaddis provides a detailed, step-by-step description of an original activity in which students examine and describe pictures that are similar to one another. The author includes suggestions for adapting the activity for different purposes and for integrating themes—which teachers can choose—into the activity for targeted practice.
  9. The Lighter Side: Scrambled Lyrics

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    In this puzzle, you are given the first lines to songs, but the second lines to those songs are not only scrambled—they are also out of order. Your job is to unscramble each of the second lines and then match it with the first line that it follows. If you and your students are feeling creative, after solving the puzzle you can continue the songs with your own ideas and even make up melodies and sing them.
  10. My Classroom: Zanzibar

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 3 Format(s): Text
    Learn how Muhaymina Omar and her students on Unguja, one of the two main islands in Tanzania’s Zanzibar Archipelago, have come together in regular classes and in a special Saturday class to study English, collaborate to solve problems, and learn about themselves and the world around them.

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