Archive for the ‘Teaching functional language’ Category
Wednesday, July 30th, 2008
As mentioned in a comment or two below (and in every other sentence in my real life conversation), I am off on my reasonably well deserved hols from Friday and won’t even be looking at a computer screen for the next 10 days. For those of you who can’t live without an opinionated TEFL rant until I get back, I’m sure there must be something in my 458 posts over the last 14 months that you must have missed, so have a little trawl through the archives here- I’m sure there must be something there to entertain and/ or offend you!
For those of you still here for the serious stuff that I was supposed to have set this blog up for, here are the links to bits and pieces I have been involved in elsewhere in the world on TEFL. The top two are my own particular favourites from the last few months:
15 ways to help your students forget
15 ways to help your students dream in English
15 games for the language of describing people
15 real life situations for the language of describing people
15 typical textbook activities you can personalize
15 difficulties in teaching the language of describing people
15 ways to write a TEFL review
Office vocabulary compound noun stress
Why does my teacher make us work in pairs?
Talking about your job and company first class
Business English prepositions
Present Simple/ Continuous and Tense Review Guessing Game
Complaints prepositions practice
Posted in Business English games, Cross cultural training in EFL, Cultural differences/ cultural training, ELT publishing, Grammar games, Learner training, Linguistics, applied linguistics and SLA, Memory and language learning, Pairwork and groupwork, Personalisation, Present continuous/ present simple, TEFL, TEFL games, TEFL reviews, TEFL.net, Teaching Business English and ESP, Teaching functional language, Teaching functional language- complaints, Teaching grammar, Teaching materials, Teaching polite complaints, Teaching prepositions, Teaching present tenses, Teaching pronunciation, Teaching vocabulary, Teaching vocabulary- Compound nouns, Usingenglish, links | No Comments »
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
Posted in Body language in the classroom, British and American English, Business English games, Discipline in the classroom, Intelligent Business, Language of presentations, Linguistics book reviews, Linguistics, applied linguistics and SLA, Market Leader, Oxford University Press (OUP), TEFL, TEFL games, Teacher training, Teaching Business English and ESP, Teaching English in Korea, Teaching articles (a/ an/ the/ some etc.), Teaching grammar, Teaching pre-school kindergarten/ teaching very young c, Teaching pronunciation, Using authentic texts, Usingenglish, links, workshops for teachers | No Comments »
Wednesday, July 9th, 2008
My first surprise was introducing students to the piece of ELT jargon “speech acts”, something I only vaguely remembered from my reading for my DELTA myself, but more about that when I get round to reviewing The Cambridge Grammar of English…
Some of the above were some I had never thought about, some are ones I still doubt, and the rest are just vaguely interesting (something that is worth celebrating when you are reading your way through a grammar book!) Any comments after testing these against your “native speaker intuitions” (also known as “TEFL teacher prejudices”) gratefully received:
“You must” and “you’ll have to” are often used to give non-specific invitations
“And you must come down to Barr at some stage or another”
“You’ll have to come round for a coffee”
What if…? is used for How about…? in “standard British and Irish English”
“What if I set the table?”
“What if we had it here?”
How’s about…? for How about…? in informal contexts in standard British and Irish English
Informal lexis softens a speech act:
“pop in” instead of “visit”/ “wee” in “a wee favour”
“Please” is usually used at the end of a question, but children often put it first:
“Please can I have some more bread?”
“so” and “then” are common in declarative clauses functioning as questions
“So you had a good day at work then?”
“Didn’t it just!” is part of a general pattern of interrogative structures used as explanations, like “Was I exhausted!” and “Hasn’t she grown!”
“Would you mind if one of our representatives comes and gives you a free demonstration?” Would you mind + present
“You want to sound-proof your room with egg boxes”- “want to” for advice in “standard British and Irish English”
Posted in Cambridge University Press, Corpus linguistics, Linguistics, applied linguistics and SLA, Speaking, Speech acts, TEFL, TEFL reviews, TESOL, Teaching, Teaching functional language, Teaching grammar, Teaching materials | No Comments »
Tuesday, June 24th, 2008
Posted in Cambridge FCE (First Certificate), Cross cultural training in EFL, Emailing in English, Financial English, Grammar games, Medical and pharmaceutical English, Photocopiable worksheets, TEFL, TEFL games, Teaching Business English and ESP, Teaching Cambridge Advanced (CAE) Use of English, Teaching Cambridge Proficiency (CPE) Use of English, Teaching EFL exam classes, Teaching IELTS, Teaching TOEFL, Teaching TOEIC, Teaching Technical English, Teaching Travel and Tourism English, Teaching business and ESP writing, Teaching functional language, Teaching grammar, Teaching materials, Teaching numbers, Teaching pronunciation, Teaching pronunciation- pronunciation games, Teaching skills, Teaching telephoning in English, Teaching vocabulary, Teaching writing, Using video in class, Vocabulary games, Writing games, negotiating, presentation skills | 1 Comment »
Sunday, May 18th, 2008
“My first two years in Japan were spent teaching English… The students… studied English- or should I say, English was taught in their presence. Nothing ever seemed to sink in. Years of classes and endless tests and still they couldn’t master the intricacies of a simple ‘How are you?’ When I tried to have the most elemental of English conversations with them they looked at me with blank expressions, shrugged their shoulders, and said ‘Wakaranai’ (’Huh?’) They did this, I believe, just to annoy me. Don’t get me wrong, these teenagers were polite and studious and well-mannered, but they were still teenagers, and teenagers are pretty well insufferable anywhere you go on this planet.” (more…)
Posted in British Council, CELTA, Cultural differences/ cultural training, Diploma/ DELTA, ETJ- English Teachers in Japan, Eikaiwa, JALT, Japanese education, Learning Japanese, Mixed ablitity classes, Pairwork and groupwork, Problem students, Rave Spelling's ESL Au Lait, TEFL, TEFL career planning, TEFL working conditions, Teacher forums, Teaching, Teaching Business English and ESP, Teaching English in Japan, Teaching TOEIC, Teaching functional language, Teaching low levels, Teaching materials, becoming a teacher trainer | 1 Comment »
Thursday, May 1st, 2008
Hopefully it’s just Mayday bank holiday rather than my lack of effort TEFLtasticwise recently that has seen a sudden drop in my number of views, but if only to make myself feel better I thought I’d give a list of where I’ve been making much more effort elsewhere, with links:
TEFL.net Idea Thinktank
15 fun ways to switch students onto graded readers
15 fun gapfill tasks
15 fun job application practice tasks- CV writing, cover letter, interview practice, HR vocabulary etc.
TEFL.net articles
15 common misconceptions about Business English and ESP
15 cultural differences in the Japanese classroom
15 more cultural differences in the Japanese classroom
15 criteria for a good cultural training lesson
15 more criteria for good cultural training lesson
15 important cultural differences in the classroom
15 more important cultural differences in the classroom
Onestopenglish (Macmillan) articles
Motivating teachers whose Business English students miss class
UsingEnglish articles for teachers
Why your students overuse their dictionaries- with solutions
70 characteristics of a good grammar presentation- possibly the longest article on this subject ever!
Why your students don’t want to do pairwork- with solutions and some pondering about whether they might not sometimes be right
Why your students still make mistakes with grammar they know well- with solutions and a call to relax when there are no solutions
The advantages and disadvantages of peer observations- with how to exploit the advantages and avoid the disadvantages
Things to put in a Self-Access Centre or Student Library- with tips on how to do it on the cheap
Why do my students question me?- with solutions
Why your students have problems with listening comprehension- with solutions
UsingEnglish.com articles for students (teachers might also want to have a look at what I am writing about them)
Why does my teacher make me read silently?
Why doesn’t my teacher correct all my mistakes when I’m speaking?
Why does my teacher make me learn the phonemic script?
UsingEnglish photocopiable PDF worksheets
Travel English pairwork B and V
Business and technical English easily confused words
CAE Reading Part Two match the quotes
TEFLtastic worksheets (pain in the arse to print out but worth the effort)
English for job applications/ HR worksheets
Cultural training worksheets for EFL classes
Requests and offers functional language review
The Roots of Medical English LP and 4 worksheets
And that’s it for TEFL stuff. The other thing I’ve been busy with is my wedding speech for the day after tomorrow, which could well mean that May will be an even less busy month in TEFLtasticland. Anyone fancy writing a guest piece or feeding me a story to keep the 1700 viewers I get on a good day entertained until I get back into the flow? If so, try the “Contact me” link on the right…
Posted in Body language and gestures, Body language in the classroom, Cross cultural training in EFL, Cultural differences/ cultural training, Difficult sounds, EFL management, Error correction, False friends, Graded readers, Learner training, Lesson observations, Medical and pharmaceutical English, Online EFL articles, Peer observations, Photocopiable worksheets, Problem students, TEFL, TEFL games, TEFL.net, Taboo topics, Teaching Business English and ESP, Teaching EFL exam classes, Teaching English Abroad, Teaching English in Japan, Teaching functional language, Teaching grammar, Teaching language of requests, Teaching listening skills, Teaching materials, Teaching polite requests, Teaching pronunciation, Teaching pronunciation- pronunciation games, Teaching reading skills, Teaching travel and tourism English, Teaching vocabulary, Usingenglish, links | 3 Comments »
Tuesday, December 11th, 2007
In my endless quest to make Business English fun and to tie together seemingly unrelated topics (why I can’t just say “Right, that’s done, let’s move onto page 53″ like normal people, I really don’t understand!), I have come up with a fun way of practising negotiations that also brings up planning how to give a presentation:
Presentation/ workshop preparation checklist and negotiations
Enjoy! Feedback gratefully accepted below:
Posted in Photocopiable worksheets, TEFL, Teaching Business English and ESP, Teaching materials, negotiating, presentation skills | No Comments »
Saturday, December 8th, 2007
More Xmas links, should you be a glutton for merriment (including one that says “Focus: Fluency speaking, advanced vocab, conversation, destroying students’ enjoyment of Christmas”, which is nice)
(more…)
Posted in Christmas themed lessons for adult classes, Past continuous, Present continuous/ present simple, Present perfect, Present perfect/ simple past, TEFL, Teaching Technical English, Teaching conjunctions, Teaching functional language, Teaching future tenses, Teaching grammar, Teaching imperatives, Teaching present tenses, Teaching will for predictions, festivals and celebrations, teaching past tenses | 1 Comment »