Archive for the ‘TEFL reviews’ Category
Sunday, September 21st, 2008
Doesn’t last of course, especially the initial thrill of being in the chaos of a third world city or in the chaos left for you by the last person who had that DoS job, but if having some kind of career plan gets you out of the bed in the morning with more motivation than I had six months ago, wth- got to be a good thing!
Whether your next plan is/ will be how to become a teacher trainer, an ELT author, a better teacher or just someone who is making an active effort to fight the boredom, we at TEFLtastic have the article for you on our totally updated page right here.
Tags: Professionalism
Posted in Becoming a Director of Studies, Business English and ESP, CPD, EFL exams, EFL management, ELT publishing, Lesson observations, Materials, Peer observations, TEFL, TEFL CV/ TESOL resume, TEFL career planning, TEFL reviews, TESOL, Teacher training, Teaching, Teaching English in Asia, Teaching qualifications, Usingenglish, Working conditions, becoming a teacher trainer, finding good teaching jobs, getting into ELT publishing, links, workshops for teachers | No 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 »
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
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
Posted in Applied linguistics books, BULATS, Business English and ESP, Cambridge University Press, Delta Publishing, ELT publishing, Humanistic language teaching, IELTS, Linguistics book reviews, Linguistics, applied linguistics and SLA, Market Leader, Marshall Cavendish, Materials, Oxford University Press (OUP), Pearson Longman, Summertown Publishing, TEFL, TEFL reviews, Teacher training, Teaching English in Japan, Teaching English in Korea | 3 Comments »
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 and ESP, Business English games, Complaints, Compound nouns, Cross cultural training in EFL, Cultural differences/ cultural training, ELT publishing, Functional language, Grammar, Grammar games, Learner training, Linguistics, applied linguistics and SLA, Materials, Memory and language learning, Pairwork and groupwork, Personalisation, Prepositions, Present continuous/ present simple, Present tenses, Pronunciation, TEFL, TEFL games, TEFL reviews, TEFL.net, Usingenglish, Vocabulary, links | No Comments »
Monday, July 21st, 2008
“While many teachers may attend to the questions ‘Do you like this language? Do you like this class?’, perhaps the more fundamental question for a student is ‘Do I like myself in this class?’”
(more…)
Tags: Quotes, Tips
Posted in Books about teaching, Cambridge University Press, Classroom dynamics, Classroom management, Learner training, Materials, Mixed ability classes, Problem students, TEFL, TEFL celebs/ TEFL heroes and villains, TEFL heroes- Zoltan Dornyei, TEFL reviews, Teaching, Teaching methods and methodologies, links | 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, Functional language, Grammar, Linguistics, applied linguistics and SLA, Materials, Speaking, Speech acts, TEFL, TEFL reviews, TESOL, Teaching | No Comments »
Monday, June 23rd, 2008
Jonnyboy is the cartoonist behind the often amusing Langwich Scool (if you think that is faint praise take a look at how much I’ve struggled and repeated the same jokes in my own attempts at TEFL humour) and the author of the life saving books At Last, Photocopies You Can Give Your Kids’ Classes Without Them Groaning. And now he’s released a book that makes IELTS fun. No, that is not another failed attempt at TEFLtastic humour- it really is so. Check out the book IELTS Resource Pack with free samples hereon the Delta Publishing website. I’ve only tried out a few pages, but as a certified photocopiable materials sommelier I can guarantee it is going to be full of all kinds of fun stuff. Quite a lot looks useful for EAP and Technical English classes too.
What is perhaps even more surprising about Jon Marks is that he has become a Delta Publishing regular author without being, to my knowledge, a member of the Pilgrimsmafia. Or at least if he is, he seems to have a bs detector that stops any of his games getting self indulgent and silly.
Posted in Delta Publishing, EFL exams, ELT publishing, English for Academic Purposes, IELTS, Photocopiable worksheets, TEFL heroes- Jon Marks, TEFL reviews, Technical English | No Comments »
Thursday, May 22nd, 2008
The case for the prosecution starts with exhibit A, Intelligent Business, the newish series of textbooks from Longman.
First, a mea culpa. At first glance Intelligent Business seemed like such a good concept that I recommended it to my school-a business series where the bits about marketing that are useless for accountants are left to another book where the teaching of business concepts are implicit for once,leaving the separate series of skills books to deal with the nitty gritty of telephoning etc.
Good concepts don’t cost publishers money, however, and the rest of the process was obviously done on the cheap- cheap production values, obvious skimping on proof reading and classroom testing, filling of page space with waffle and instructions etc etc.
And cost (and corner) cutting is not the only example of economics at play here- we also have The Economist magazine tie in, The Economist magazine being owned by Pearson, who also own the ELT publisher…(I’m sure you can guess). And then there is the classic having it both ways of designing it clearly for a market niche and then hiding that fact in the hope that people it is less suitable for will buy it and so make it a bestseller.Either I’m turning into the grumpy old man of TEFL well before my time or there really was a halcyon time when the evil magic of the ELT publishers’ marketing departments was not so strong.
I’m not suggesting that the advent of real market forces in ELT publishing in the UK has entirely been a bad thing. The publishers have at least started producing materials suitable for the budgets and abilities of real schools, teachers and students. One good example of this is the Oxford Basics series, where we can perhaps forgive the proofreading and other basic errors pointed out in a recent MET review because the budgetary restraints that probably caused those problems seem to have resulted in a book that is much more accessible for the real world than the stuff the big boys produced until a few years ago.
So, no real answer to my question so far I’m afraid, but at least that proves that the post title was a real question and not a lead in to a slagging off I guess… We can all see if things get a bit clearer in Part Two, in which I will list things that have got better and worse over the last few years.
Posted in Business English and ESP, ELT publishing, Materials, Pearson Longman, TEFL, TEFL reviews, Teaching, Telephoning, textbooks | 1 Comment »
Friday, March 28th, 2008
As a blogger and writer of articles on the internet whose technical knowledge stops at Word, as usual I feel half chuffed at churning out so many articles, including a good one here and there, and half guilty at creating so much work for those who can name a programming language more recent than BASIC. So, with many thanks to the tech sorts who made this possible and without further ado, here are the new bits and pieces on the web that I’ve been associated with:
The TEFL.net review pages I edit now allow comments on any of the titles reviewed there, which is a fabulous idea which I wish had been mine.
On TEFL.net too, there is a new Idea Thinktank of practical teaching games etc, on which I have about 12 (!) articles including 15 Fun Things to do with a Whiteboard (yes, that’s a whiteboard rather than an interactive whiteboard- showing my age??) and the 15 Most Fun Pronunciation Games.
As if that wasn’t enough, I’ve also got some slightly more weighty ones up on the rejigged TEFL.net TEFL Articles Page, including Easy Ways to Improve Your TEFL Career.
And on Usingenglish.com in March:
Election- Second Conditionals speaking practice
101 IELTS Speaking Part Two Tasks about sports and hobbies
Why your students speak L1 in class
Why your students don’t do their homework
101 IELTS Speaking Part Two tasks about people, places, actions, things and times
Setting up workshops for teachers
Business English tense review
Business English silent letters and syllables
The language of trends spot the difference
I also had a review of a couple of BULATS books out in MET magazine this month, should you have a copy handy and fancy a look.
Posted in BULATS, Business English and ESP, EFL exams, IELTS Speaking, Materials, Photocopiable worksheets, Pronunciation, Pronunciation games, Second conditional, TEFL, TEFL career planning, TEFL games, TEFL reviews, TEFL.net, TESOL, Using L1 in class, Using a whiteboard, Whiteboard games, links, pronunciation games, workshops for teachers | No Comments »