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Archive for the ‘Market Leader’ Category

New ESL handouts November 2009 Part Two

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

Been a while since Part One, due to mainly teaching under 7s recently and not needing handouts for hopping round the class whilst touching yellow things and screaming. So, here are some of the hundreds of worksheets that I have never found time to put up before. I’ve been putting them up in alphabetical order and looking at this batch they aren’t the best, but better ones coming up in the next lot soon.

In approximate order of how much I like them:

Travel going to mimes and useful phrases (quite a neat way of combining grammar, TPR and functional language, though I say so myself)

Travel problems “What are you going to do?” Elementary version (this time combining grammar, travel vocab, and discussion of real problems our more naive students might actually experience abroad)

Marketing vocabulary and discussion questions

Hotel negotiations roleplay cards (also suitable for travel English, English for travel industry staff, or also for business classes on negotiations)

Like/ would like and comparatives/ superlatives discussion questions (if you ever want to combine those points, here is possibly the only way to do it!)

How questions Answer Me speaking game

Upper intermediate art vocabulary

Intelligent Business Mid-course boardgame

Inside Out Upper Intermediate Pictionary

Inside Out Upper Units 1 to 9 Ask and tell speaking game

Steve Jobs article and business idioms (Market Leader Upper Intermediate)

More academic word list collocations (just a list- did warn you these weren’t the best worksheets ever! For more useful academic word list stuff look here)

New TEFLtastic worksheets August 2009 Part One

Sunday, August 9th, 2009

For those of you unfortunate enough to be teaching while I am on holiday, I have two things for you:

This message- Ha ha! Nah nah, nah nah nah!

These worksheets (the first two are especially good for summer schools of all ages):

Mr Bean The Library Present Continuous (giving them lots of help but including some tricky language in a fun way)

Mr Bean The Exam Present Continuous (giving them a bit more freedom to come up with their own sentences so good after the one above- you can then move onto doing another video with no help with making sentences)

Conversational reactions Answer Me game

Body vocabulary good, bad or neutral (my version of the Silent Way/ TPR for adults)

Body idioms mimes pairwork

Guess the body part collocations and actions

Mid term feedback discussion questions

Market Leader Upper Intermediate Rotating Board Game (a great game for revision at all levels and ages, if that is the stage you are at)

Telephoning phrasal verbs and prepositions board game

Customer service discussion questions (turning a massively long build up to a reading into something good)

IELTS Speaking about leisure, sports and health (also linking to a reading, this time IELTS Masterclass Unit 3, but can leave that bit out)

New TEFLtastic worksheets July 2009 Part Two

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

In no particular order:

Weekend vocabulary and complaints (my latest attempt to actually tie chatting about your weekend into lessons)

Your weekend formal and informal questions (ditto, and an attempt to expand the language that they use when this topic inevitably comes up)

Money idioms Call my bluff

Money proverbs articles practice (at last, a lesson that makes proverbs useful!)

Money discussion questions articles practice

Big money and little money idioms

Countable and uncountable nouns 20 questions

Revision brainstorming game (for the teen book Challenges 1, but easily adapted for other classes)

My Kitchen Writing task (for There is/ There are and Countable and uncountable nouns)

A an the SNAP (card game for articles practise)

Film and song titles correct the mistakes (so that they notice the language around them)

Most of the above designed for Market Leader Intermediate and Upper, Inside Out Upper and Challenges 1, but useable with many other classes (sometimes after a little editing)

New worksheets July 09 Part 1 is here.

Guest worksheets always wanted- just email them to me as Word documents or similar and leave the hard slog of putting it up and PDFing it to me!

New TEFLtastic worksheets June 2009 Part Three

Monday, June 15th, 2009

AKA last week’s new worksheets, but thought a blog post with “last” in the title might not be much of a seller. Quite a few good ones this week, though I say so myself:

Renovating hotels (for “enough”, “quite a lot” etc, and a lot more fun than it sounds. Probably good for architecture and travel industry students too)

Design an amusement park (Feelings vocab and amusement park vocabulary- great for 8 to 13 year olds who for some reason this is the best topic in the whole wide world ever ever ever)

Mind the Baby Mr Bean (also feelings and amusement park vocab)

Learning languages discussion questions (good for IELTS or learner training)

Business body idioms pairwork dictation (if you’ve never done a pairwork dictation before, you’re in for a treat- thanks Mario Rin!)

Britain or America? Business and social manners (good for Biz, cultural training classes or lesson on how to generalize, e.g. IELTS)

British and American business etiquette (for modals practice and discussion)

Business writing tasks on the topic of “Success and failure” (for Market Leader, but useable with many others if like me you have made a resolution to give your biz students more writing practice)

Business English Present Simple or Continuous discussion questions (discuss, fill the gaps from memory, discuss the grammar, make your own similar discussion questions)

Market Leader Lesson plans and worksheets

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

I’ve updated my Market Leader worksheets page so that all of the worksheets are available in PDF and Word formats. If anyone has any worksheets that you’ve used with these books (old or new editions) or links to other materials specifically useful for these, would love to include them there. Comments on what you think about the books also welcome.

The best end of term revision games

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008

One way of finishing the term is with Xmas-themed stuff (see the post below). Another good one is lots of fun revision games.

As I’ve spent a few years teaching students who want to do every page in the book but have zero tolerance for anything that is not fun (e.g. about 75% of Language to Go), I’ve spent a fair bit of time trying to come up with fun review activities. Add to that the fact that our students here get their final marks more than a weekbefore the end of term, and that adds up to Alex spending hours scouring the tapescripts for words worth revising and searching his brain for games that work with a whole term of random words, expressions and grammar. And here are the ideas I’ve come up with (mainly meaning stolen from other TEFL books), in reverse order of how much I use them:

4. The definitions game

Pure simplicity. Give them some words you want to revise and they try to explain which one they have chosen until their partner(s) can work out which one it is. More fun than it sounds. Available here as:

New Headway Pre-Int Vocab Revision Definitions game

Market Leader Pre and Int vocabulary revision game

As usual, the best way with TEFLtastic worksheets is to cut and paste from the webpage into Word, adjust sizes, and print

3. Taboo

One step up in terms of difficulty and fun is for students to be given 3 words that they cannot say when trying to explain which word they have chosen. If the students make the playing cards for each other, this adds even more to the fun, challenge and usefulness of revision. An example of this is:

Market Leader Pre Intermediate Taboo Vocab game

2. Ask and tell ( Truth or dare)

This is possibly the best TEFL game ever!

You can make them challenging each other even more fun and add some personalised speaking by giving them words and expressions that they can make personal questions about. They choose a random card, make a question, flip a coin, and either answer the question themselves (if it was a tail) or ask it to someone in their group (if it was heads). It tends to get a bit risque, but as they are making the questions themselves (and often end up being most embarrassed by their own questions), they accept it even if they wouldn’t as a conversation topic set by you.

Examples:

Market Leader Pre (Old Edition) Truth or Dare (not really the rules of Truth or Dare, but can be a way of describing it to students)

New Headway Pre Vocab Revision Ask or Tell game

1. Revision rotating board game

I can’t outdo that one for fun and them doing everything themselves without complaining, but this one is possibly even better for the amount of language you can revise, putting functional language, situational roleplays, grammar, and collocations and other vocab all into the same game.

The squares on the board have challenges that students can get points for, e.g. one point for every time they guess something true about their partner, one point for every way of answering the phone they can remember, one point for every adjective opposite, or one point for every line in a dialogue they improvise. Whenever they make a mistake (factual or language), they have to stop and count how many points they got in that challenge. That is then the number of squares they can move on the board.

Examples:

Natural English Intermediate Revision Rotating Board Game

Market Leader Intermediate New Edition Rotating Board Game

New Headway Pre-Intermediate Revision Rotating Board Game

Elementary Revision Rotating Board Game (designed for Language to Go Elementary, but have used it successfully with other Elem classes)

Pre-Intermediate Revision Rotating Board Game (designed for Face2Face, but easily adaptable)

Business English revision Rotating Board Game

New stuff November 08

Friday, November 14th, 2008

I’ve been very busy deep in the dark chaotic depths of the TEFLtastic Worksheets pages, and have also found time for a few of the usual articles. If useful stuff that makes your life easier is not your thing, will be back to the usual trivia here on the main page soon…

Articles

15 ways to start an adult lesson

15 ways to finish a preschool English lesson

15 more ways to boost your teaching confidence (as promised- not often I actually write something I planned to…)

Worksheets and lesson plans

A much expanded Market Leader worksheets and lesson plans page

Business Past Continuous and Personality Accusations game (THE classic Past Continuous game- not my original idea, but don’t know any other online or Business English versions)

Business English Needs Analysis ranking task

Crime Vocabulary storytelling game

Complaints roleplays

Pingu Will for predictions video worksheet 1 (3 more available on the Video Worksheets page, but can’t be bothered giving each link)

Passives guess the country game

Active/ Passive True/ False quiz

Trends and conditionals discussion and grammar presentation

Rules and regulations pictionary (mainly passive forms)

Second conditional chain writing (consequences) game

Passives disasters storytelling

Second conditional supernatural error correction and discussion

Supernatural modals of possibility discussion

Special occasions reported speech cultural differences guessing game and discussion

Last chance for free books for teachers in Japan

Monday, September 8th, 2008

I’m starting to pack to go to Korea, and the lack of CDs is a godsend. Books, however, are going to be a problem…

If you are in Japan, my loss could be your gain. If you are interested in any of the books below, I will send you a copy and even include one of the freebies listed at the bottom, in exchange for writing a review for TEFL.net reviews, as explained here. Please note, however, that I am paying postage out of my own pocket and will be rather miffed if good intentions does not turn into an actual review, so only volunteer this time if you are sure you can do it. When the publishers are paying postage like usual, however…

If you are in Korea, I might also be willing to add it to my box of books to take and send it from there, so you might be second choice but still, volunteer away!

If anyone is interested, please use the Request to Review for TEFL.net box on the Reviewer’s Guide page (a vital read for everyone who is interested), leave a message here, or email me using the Contact Me button on the main page of the blog.

Books available:

Oxford University Press
Complex Systems and Applied Linguistics

Activities Using Resources- Heather Westrup and Joanna Baker (Oxford Basics)
Vocabulary Activities- Mary Slattery (Oxford Basics for Children)
Listen and Do (Oxford Basics for Children)
The Oxford ESOL Handbook
Creating Songs and Chants- Carolyn Graham

Summertown Publishing
Success with BULATS

Marshall Cavendish Education
Achieve BULATS

Cambridge
The TKT Course

Delta Publishing
Challenging Children

The English Company
The English Course 3rd Edition (Gary Ireland, Kevin Murphy, Max Woollerton)

Already been reviewed, but will give away to people who volunteer to review titles above:

Oxford
Form Focused Instruction and Teacher Education

A History of English Language Teaching

New worksheets, workshops, reviews and articles July 2008 Part One

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

Here are the links for stuff I have published here and elsewhere so far this month that you might have missed, in case the heat makes me lose the rest of my energy and I forget at the end of the month:

On Usingenglish.com (theeeeeeey’re back!)

Why does my teacher use games in an adult class?

Why does our teacher make us read difficult authentic texts?

How British is your English? Questionnaire and explaining unknown vocab speaking practice worksheets- one of my favourites!

Elsewhere on TEFLtastic

Korean speakers- common vocabulary mistakes in English

Determiners practice- starting presentations- designed to go with Market Leader, but also suitable for whoever else is unlucky enough to need to tie those two topics together…

Classroom language TEFL workshop notes- with accompanying teacher training worksheets below

Ranking classroom language- teacher training pairwork worksheets

Simplifying classroom language- teacher training worksheets, with tips on using gestures in class to give instructions etc.

Classroom language further reading and links

Teaching likes and dislikes and free time activities teacher training workshop plan

Business English pron worksheets section (the worksheets are old, but the section is new)

Intelligent Business Worksheets and Games section- also useful for other Bus Eng classes

Market Leader worksheets and games- ditto

My stuff elsewhere on TEFL.net

In the Idea Thinktank

15 games for the language of likes and dislikes

15 classroom language games

15 punishments for pre-school English classes

15 Business English games for describing your company and job

15 criteria for good kindergarten worksheets

In TEFL.net Articles

15 good reasons to write TEFL reviews

In TEFL.net reviews

A History of English Language Teaching Second Edition review

 

And if the heat is keeping you awake instead of making you sleepy, you can have a look at June’s links too (newly updated as I’d forgotten about the reviews):

New articles, worksheets and reviews June 2008