Archive for the ‘Photocopiable worksheets’ Category
Monday, December 1st, 2008
… are exactly the same as Xmas ESL ideas 2007 (haven’t written any special lessons on seasonal shopping in a worldwide depression yet, although I could use my grandfather’s story about his pet rabbit being served up for an East End Xmas lunch if I did), but at least that means this year I can get all the links out of the way in one post and so not repeat the TEFL equivalent of 6 weeks of nonstop Xmas carols like we had here in 2007. And here all the articles, teaching ideas and photocopiable worksheets are- a veritable Xmas feast, stuffed stocking etc etc to bring seasonal cheer to the last few weeks before the holiday without the need for sipping brandy between classes:
Articles and teaching ideas
Christmas vocabulary you can mime
Combining Xmas with a young learner syllabus
Doing something with Xmas songs
Putting the grammar back into Christmas
Games and other photocopiable worksheets
Future Perfect New Year predictions
New Year action and state verbs
New Year resolutions adverbs of frequency - going to for plans and learner training
Xmas first conditional superstitions bluff game - a classic, hopefully not ruined in my version
Christmas Adverbs of Frequency- Present Simple and lots of lovely (not stereotyped) cultural information
Christmas traditions passives bluff game
Xmas guess the country modals of deduction
Christmas Present Simple and Continuous mimes- contrasting routines and things happening now, with lots of nice Chrimbo vocab
Christmas Past Tense mimes - Past continuous when they finish miming and then tense review as they talk about their own experiences of those things
Will for future predictions Xmas
Xmas trivia number pairwork - good for Business English, Technical English and other ESP classes
Business English Christmas cards Do’s and Don’ts - imperatives and important cultural information
Describing Xmas foods bluff game - good for students who want to explain food from their own country to foreign guests, e.g. Business English students who often entertain clients
Going to Xmas mimes - for predictions with present evidence
Xmas party negotiations - the best ever game for the language of meetings and negotiations, as there is a clear winner, and some good Xmas vocab
Video Worksheets
Friends Series One New Year episode
Edward Scissor Hands- cute, seasonal, the easiest film in the English language, and full of lots of lovely reference expressions
The Life of Brian - as mentioned on a recent Dave’s ESL Cafe thread, only for veeeery high level and open-minded students
Xmas Song worksheets
Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer
The Christmas Song (”Chesnuts roasting on an open fire” etc)
White Xmas song correct the mistakes
Posted in Adverbs of frequency, Business English and ESP, Christmas lessons, Cross cultural training in EFL, Cultural differences/ cultural training, First conditional, Food vocabulary, Future perfect, Going to for future plans, Going to for predictions with present evidence, Grammar games, Language of negotiation, Modals of deduction, New Year themed lessons, Passives, Past continuous, Photocopiable worksheets, Present continuous/ present simple, TEFL articles, TPR, Technical English, Vocab games, Will for predictions, pre-school/ kindergarten/ very young learners, state and action verbs, video | No Comments »
Sunday, November 30th, 2008
As I haven’t said for a while, the real purpose of this blog isn’t pontificating on all things TEFL (not sure how I started doing that, maybe Wordpress is haunted by a malevolent spirit?) but to give links to my articles and worksheets. And here are some more:
15 more ways to bring lucky chances into your classroom and lesson planning
Yet another 15 ways of boosting your teaching confidence
And there is so much new stuff on my worksheet pages that I can’t even remember what it all is, but I seem to remember most of it is in my grammar games and worksheets section, mainly about reported speech, Present Perfect Continuous and modal verbs.
Might I also suggest New Stuff November 08 Part One, which was obviously written when Xmas was much further away as I actually got round to tracking down individual worksheets and putting links to them.
Tags: Creativity
Posted in Grammar, Grammar games, Lesson planning, Lesson plans, Materials, Modals, Photocopiable worksheets, Present Perfect Continuous, Present perfect, TEFL, TEFL articles, reported speech | No Comments »
Friday, November 7th, 2008
“Sole Mates” from “The Grammar Activity Book”
Tie words that go together (such as collocations) to different students’ shoelaces. They then walk around putting their feet next to each other to try to match them up. If they make an incorrect pair, they have to take off their shoes and put them in the “lost soles” pile until (at that point I stopped reading…) Also useable (?) for dependant prepositions, verb patterns etc.
This was by far the nuttiest idea in the book, but certainly not the only one that made me go “What??” On the positive side, there are few ideas in the book that you would have seen anywhere else. On the negative side, there are at times very good reasons why no one had written those ideas down…
Tags: Warmers
Posted in Alternative teaching techniques, Cambridge University Press, Classroom management, Collocations, Dependant prepositions, ELT publishing, Grammar, Grammar games, Materials, Photocopiable worksheets, Prepositions, TEFL, TEFL games, Teaching, Teaching English Abroad, The Grammar Activity Book, Vocab games, Vocabulary, adjective plus preposition, links | 3 Comments »
Monday, October 13th, 2008
I have to fly away from my Yahoo BB internet connection now, and I may be some time. So while I am gone from cyberspace, you all have a chance to read the over 200 articles I’ve written elsewhere- starting with this month’s supply:
15 easy ways to bring change into the classroom
15 ways of dealing with students who pause before they speak
15 ways of dealing with pre-experience Business English and ESP students
15 ways to boost your teaching and lesson planning creativity
15 places to start getting published
15 ways to correct spoken errors
15 ways to bring lucky chances into your classroom and lesson planning
Done already? Well, I’m sure you’ve all been good and read the entire list of articles etc in the September list further down this page already, so the extra homework for the keen this month will be having a look at:
TEFLtastic articles (reorganised a bit to have more links to articles elsewhere on the same topics)
and
TEFLtastic worksheets (ditto)
Tags: Creativity, Flexibility
Posted in Alternative teaching techniques, Business English and ESP, Classroom dynamics, Classroom management, Cultural differences/ cultural training, ELT publishing, Error correction, Fluency practice, Grammar, Needs analysis, Photocopiable worksheets, Pre-experience learners, Problem students, Skills, Speaking, TEFL, TEFL career planning, Teaching, Teaching English Abroad, Teaching English in Finland, Teaching English in Japan, Teaching shy students, getting into ELT publishing | 3 Comments »
Monday, September 15th, 2008
Posted in Becoming a Director of Studies, Business English and ESP, Business English games, CELTA, Complaints, Cross cultural training in EFL, Cultural differences/ cultural training, EFL management, Email, Error correction, Grammar, Grammar games, Language of negotiation, Needs analysis, Onestopenglish, Passives, Photocopiable worksheets, Present continuous/ present simple, Present tenses, TEFL, TEFL career planning, TEFL certificate, TEFL games, TEFL reviews, Teacher training, Teaching, Teaching qualifications, Teaching young learners, Telephoning, Text messages (SMS), Usingenglish, Writing, links, pre-school/ kindergarten/ very young learners | 2 Comments »
Friday, September 12th, 2008
Posted in Answerphone messages, Business English and ESP, Business English games, Delta Publishing, ELT publishing, Functional language, Materials, Oxford University Press (OUP), Photocopiable worksheets, Skills, Speaking, TEFL, TEFL games, TEFL reviews, Telephoning, Usingenglish, links | No Comments »
Tuesday, September 9th, 2008
Have done a bit more tedious reorganisation so that you don’t need to do so much tedious searching, and you can now find all the links to my stuff on said topics elsewhere on the internet as well as my exclusive TEFLtastic stuff here:
Teaching exam classes-articles and tips for teachers
and here:
EFL exam worksheets, lesson plans and tips for students
Comments or tips for other good sources welcome here:
Posted in Cambridge Advanced (CAE) Use of English, Cambridge FCE (First Certificate), Cambridge Proficiency (CPE) Use of English, EFL exams, ETS, English for Academic Purposes, FCE Listening, IELTS, IELTS Academic Reading, IELTS Speaking, Lesson plans, Listening, Materials, Photocopiable worksheets, Reading, Speaking, TEFL, TOEFL, TOEIC, Teaching, Usingenglish, Vocabulary, links | No Comments »
Sunday, July 13th, 2008
I’m continuing to learn from and ponder on the information in the Cambridge Grammar of English, and as before testing the matters I’ve been chewing on against your native speaker intuitions would be appreciated (sorry for the very unpleasant mental picture from that metaphor first thing on a Monday morning!)
The (modern?) name for & is “and” (not ampersand)
{ } = chain brackets (they’ve always been squiggly brackets to me!)
< > = diamond brackets
American English uses commas before and or but more frequently than British English
“Subordinate clauses can be separated by a comma from a preceding main clause, especially when the relation between them might be obscured because the clauses are long.” (pg 842), so “We can get there for around six, if there are no problems with the traffic on the motorway” is okay with or without the comma, despite being in the reverse position of the usual first conditional with a comma
Colons are used to indicate subtitles, and to mark a clause in which reasons are given: “We decided against it: it wasn’t lightweight enough”
Single quotation marks are becoming more widespread in direct speech
Colons may be used to introduce direct speech when it is particularly long
There are apostrophes (becoming optional) in “for goodness’ sake” and “for appearance’ sake”
In informal writing multiple dashes may be used:
“Just got back from Mallorca— we really loved it.”
If punctuation is your thing, or really isn’t you or your students’ thing but should be, here are some links:
Wikipedia on the ampersand
Info on Eats, Shoots and Leaves by Lynn Truss- a funny book on punctuation!
A whole list of punctuation books on Amazon
Punctuation worksheets on ESL Printables.com
And that is all I could find of interest. For classroom activities, one thing that works well, especially with FCE and CAE classes, is for students to take a text that is correct and add spelling and punctuation errors for another team to find.
Another good game is to put a text on the board including punctuation and get them to read out the whole text (including punctuation) over and over as you delete it one word or punctuation mark at a time until they can no longer remember it or the whole text has disappeared.
The game above works well with kids too. A more physical game for kids on the same point is to write up a sentence with one piece of punctuation missing in large letters on the board, and get them to take turns throwing a sticky ball (= sucker ball) at the place they think the punctuation mark should be.
Tags: Links, Reviews
Posted in Cambridge Advanced (CAE) Use of English, Cambridge FCE (First Certificate), Cambridge University Press, EFL exams, ELT publishing, Grammar books, Materials, Photocopiable worksheets, Punctuation, TEFL, TEFL games, Teaching, Teaching young learners, Technology, Writing, links | No Comments »
Friday, July 4th, 2008
I’ve been reading through the new Cambridge Grammar of English. Not something I usually do for pleasure (honestly!), but got a free copy for TEFL.net reviews and so felt like I ought to examine at least some parts in detail- and now I am reading it for pleasure!
Maybe the most interesting thing is that the use of corpora rather than just common sense (otherwise known as native speaker intuition) means there are bits on almost every page where you go “Really?” Below is a list of the “Oh yes, I suppose so.” and “No, I really don’t think so” moments so far based on British and American English. Most good science throws out counterintuitive things like this. Unfortunately, so does most bad science, so I’d appreciate it if you would comment on how the things below match with your own experience and instinct- there are a few I have doubts on myself.
- In AmE, the score in “The Seattle Sea Hawks beat the Cincinnati Reds 7-O is pronounced” “seven nothing” or “seven to nothing” or “seven zip”
- “Four from nine is/leaves five” is okay in BrE
- The form in “Eleven hundred pounds” (rather than “one hundred one hundred”) is more popular in AmE than BrE
- “isn’t” (rather than ’s not) is many times more frequent in BrE than AmE
- Interrogative tags are about four times more frequent in BrE than in AmE
- The “do” in reduced clauses with modal verbs
“Are you going?”
“I might do”
is only used in British English
- She lives on/ in Leonora Street is a Br/ Am thing
- “Must” is much more frequent in BrE than AmE
- “Had better” is six times more frequent in BrE
- “Going to” often used for direction giving (finding your way) in AmE: “You’re gonna go two blocks…”
- “I suppose” is much more frequent in BrE
If you ended up here wanting to find more more traditional stuff about British and American English, try:
Wikipedia (of course) American and British English differences
The American’s Guide to Speaking British English
BBC America British American Dictionary
If you are interested in worksheets for classroom use on British and American English, look here:
How British is your Financial English?
ESL Printable British and American English page
British and American English elesson from the (recommended) textbook Inside Out
British and American: The main differences from the (equally recommended) vocab book Word for Word
And if you’d like your own shiny new TEFL book hot off the press for free, see here.
Posted in British and American English, Cambridge University Press, Corpus linguistics, Cultural differences/ cultural training, Grammar, Grammar books, Linguistics, applied linguistics and SLA, Materials, Photocopiable worksheets, Self-study materials, TEFL, Teaching, links | 8 Comments »
Tuesday, July 1st, 2008
All that TEFL International stuff below is not only depressing, I’m starting to think it is actually quite pointless. For example, if we compare the number of teachers who have paid money to TEFL International, let alone the number of people who felt unhappy afterwards, how does that compare to the number of teachers who need some new games for the Present Simple? One percent? Less? Not forgetting of course that 99% of English teachers in the world are not native speakers and have never heard of the CELTA or any of the “equivalents”.
Luckily, I have found time between training to be a TEFL boxing referee to continue writing some practical ideas that anyone should make teachers’ lives easier. You can find them here:
Usingenglish.com (which seems to be active again after going veeeeery quiet)
Business English Present Continuous Sounds and Mimes- contrasting with the Present Simple, and with loads of useful office and other Bus Eng vocab
Why does my teacher skip exercises in the textbook?- article for students, but could also help teachers answer their questions and think through their classroom activities
TEFL.net Idea Thinktank
The 15 stages of using pre-school English songs
The first 15 stages in using worksheets in pre-school English classes
15 ways to personalize your young learner classes - also suitable for very young and very low level learners
15 criteria for a good kindergarten English song- how to choose and use them
15 techniques for calming down a pre-school class
15 variations for large pre-school classes- the best games with small classes and how to make them work with 50 or more kids
15 fun sit down activities for pre-school classes- to save both your energy and theirs!
15 flashcard activities for any pre-school English class- simple, cheap and exciting!
TEFL.net TEFL Articles
15 criteria for a good TEFL workshop
TEFL.net Reviews
Teacher Language Awareness book review
Telephone English (Macmillan) book review
Lessons from good language learners book review
If that ain’t enough for you, here is the same for new stuff in May:
New Worksheets and Articles May 2008
Posted in Business English and ESP, Classroom management, Discipline in the classroom, Materials, Photocopiable worksheets, Present tenses, Problem students, TEFL, TEFL games, TEFL.net, Teaching, Teaching large classes, Teaching young learners, Using songs with kids, Usingenglish, links, pre-school/ kindergarten/ very young learners | No Comments »