Members sign in | Register | Advertise | Contact
Home | About TEFL | Teacher training | TEFL jobs | Resource centre | Advice | Language schools | Forum

Resource centre > Articles
Send to a friend

Language Learners' Listening Comprehension
"Teacher, I don't understand." "Huh?", "What?", "Can you repeat that, please?"
"What did he say?", "Teacher, we don't understand." Do any of these sound
familiar? Undoubtedly they do... read more
English Only in the EFL Classroom: Worth the
Hassle?
When should teachers use L1 in EFL classrooms? ....read
more
What is standard English?
The term English speaker is so broad few people realize the extent of our
language differences across the world. Whilst we all essentially speak one
language there are some variations both in grammar and vocabulary, spelling and
pronunciation....read more
How to Teach a Child English One to One
- make one to one teaching fun...read more
Teaching Mixed Ability Language Courses - A
Solution
One of the most difficult situations for the language teacher is a group which
includes students of different levels, of varying learning ability, or even
both. How do you design a lesson to meet all the varying needs?...read
more
Teaching High Level Lexis to
Business English Learners
Do business English students need phrasal verbs, metaphorical and idiomatic
language, and the full range of lexis used by native speakers?...read
more
Classroom Warmers
An effective warmer could make the difference between an alert and participating
class, and a group of zombies who decide to catch up on the sleep they missed
out on from the night before...read more
Using Authentic Materials
How can authentic materials be incorporated into an English language teaching
curriculum or course of study?...read
more
Top Tips for Teaching Business English
The following tips should help you feel more prepared when you take on a
Business English class for the first time...read
more
Using Stories in the Preschool ESL
Classroom
Do you want to start using stories in the preschool ESL classroom but don't know
where to start? Here are some ways to get started...read
more
Interactive Story Telling
Short stories and folktales can be used in the EFL classroom to practise both
listening and speaking. Here's one way...read
more
Negotiating Course Content
How do you react if you're convinced that what the student wants is not what
they really need? Do you insist on doing it "your way" and almost certainly lose
the student's belief in the efficacy of the course? Or do you give them what
they want although firmly believing it will do little to advance their learning?
This article looks at a response which worked well with one student...
read more
Teaching Grammar with Fun Learning Games
Teaching English grammar can be hard going - for the teacher and the students.
It doesn't have to be difficult or painful. Here are four sound reasons to teach
grammar with games...
read more
Giving and Checking Instructions
Some of the activities that we use in the classroom are fairly complex in terms
of the way they're organised. How can you make sure that your instructions are
as clear and comprehensible as possible? Here are some guidelines...read
more
Staying in control of a large class
If you have a large class you need a few things up your sleeve to bring the
class into line immediately if things get a little over-heated. Here are some
tips and ideas to help you contain your pupils' enthusiasm and manage your large
class...
read more
Motivating young children to learn
English
Young children are often eager, almost too eager. The problem arises when they
are eager to do things other than what you’re trying to teach them. Here are six
tips to keep them interested in class and motivated to do what you want them to
do...
read more
Teaching Your ESL Students to Understand
Real English
In class, do you slow down your speech and try to articulate a little more
precisely than you do when talking to other native speakers?...
read more
Grammar Teaching: Implicit or
Explicit?
Based on my 15 years of EFL (English as a Foreign Language) teaching experience,
the statement "grammar teaching should be implicit, not explicit" could be
argued both for and against...
read more
Teaching children grammar through games
One of the questions ESL and TEFL teachers are asking on forums the world over
is: how can you teach grammar through games? You'll find you can teach
everything you want with games, and the children remember it better to boot...
read more
Fun EFL Class Projects
Class projects are a great way to put into practice skills that have been learnt
during an English course. The following projects that I'll be sharing with you
have worked really well with teenagers who were on short term courses of a few
weeks...
read more
Activities with little preparation
How often do you find yourself preparing a class, racking your brain for
something different, a new activity to liven up a group of tired students, or
just to bring something fresh to the ESL classroom? Here are 10 ideas to get you
started...
read more
Using Popular Songs to Improve Language
Listening Comprehension Skills
Are your students sometimes bored in spite of your best efforts? Are you looking
for some new and different techniques? Could you use a learning activity that
would really wake them up? Would you like to get and keep the students'
interest?...
read more
Teaching ESL to Children
Teaching ESL to children is challenging but also very rewarding. Before I walk
into a class of 10-year olds, I take a deep breath. Children have no attention
span AT ALL, and so I tell myself to slow right down before I start...
read more
Three Fun Ideas for Teaching Grammar
Grammar. The very mention of the word strikes fear into the heart of the
staunchest language learner. Many EFL teachers also feel the pit of their
stomach churn at the thought of preparing and giving a grammar lesson. But what
are we to do?...
read more
Should English TEFL Teachers Be Bi-Lingual?
The Controversy... often, when prospective TESOL trainees are taking their first
TEFL certification course, the question arises, "Do English teachers need to
know a foreign language?"...
read more
Authentic VS. Graded Material in
Second Languages
The main difference between authentic vs. graded materials is that in the
latter, the materials almost always revolve around a particular structure. For
example, with "The Past Tense", every single speaker in the dialogs or even the
texts given to the students are in that tense...
read more
Exploiting an Authentic Reading Passage for
English Language Learning
Teachers of EFL are almost constantly strapped for time and fresh materials to
use in their English classes. With the advent of the internet, however,
authentic readings in English are now only a few mouse clicks away. But what to
do with these snippets of information?...
read more
How to Dramatize Your Foreign Language Teaching
and Learning
To crank out more speaking and develop more vocabulary and language use in
context, try some of these additional drama-based activities to spice things up
a bit...
read more
How to Add Drama to an EFL Class or Start a Drama
Group
Why not incorporate more drama into our classrooms? Here are some interesting
ways you could initiate drama into an EFL class or new drama group...
read more
Creating Materials for the EFL
Classroom Part 1
You don't really need to be a genius to produce highly successful, dynamic
lessons using authentic materials. You do need to know about your EFL or ESL
students, what they can do, what they like, how they think and their motivations
for learning English...
read more
Three Mistakes Foreign Language Teachers
Make
Are you guilty of any of these erroneous practices in ELT? Any one of them can
easily derail the students' efforts in language acquisition and learning or
cause them grave problems. Don't be a stumbling block to your learners'
progress...
read more
How to Use Mind-Maps in Language Learning
The basic principle of mind-maps is that the mind dislikes traditional, linear
note taking and thus anything we write should start in the centre of the page
with related ideas branching out in all directions. Mind-maps can be an
important and effective asset to anyone who wants to learn a language...
read more
Are you in a Really
Communicative Second Language Classroom?
Almost everyone has heard about the need for authentic communication in the
classroom and almost every single course on the market and even classrooms say
they are communicative in nature. Nevertheless, upon completion of those
courses, students fail to engage in even basic conversations. How is this
possible?...
read more
Second Language Acquisition
in Adult Learners
In "Language Acquisition vs. Language Learning" we mentioned an important
distinction in the way in which children acquire their mother tongue naturally,
by means of meaningful interactions with their parents in which the focus of
every single exchange is communicative in nature...
read more
Language acquisition vs Language
Learning
According to linguists, there is an important distinction between language
acquisition and language learning. Children acquire their mother tongue through
interaction with their parents and their environment. Their need to communicate
paves the way for language acquisition...
read more
Why You Should Use Songs to Teach English
Language teachers can and should use songs as part of their classroom teaching
repertoire. Songs contain authentic language, are easily obtainable, provide
vocabulary, grammar and cultural aspects and are fun for the students...
read more
What's the Strangest Thing You've Ever
Eaten?
What brought the house down was my tale of breakfasts in America's south with
fried pork brains scrambled with eggs along with fried slices of pig testicles,
known as "mountain oysters". Mouths dropped open and glazed-over eyes seemed to
double in size. Then they started talking...
read more
ESL Roleplay
One of the most difficult and frustrating things is making the transition from
the classroom to the 'real' world. In the classroom, everyone knows you are a
student and mistakes are allowed. Speaking another language outside the
classroom is completely different...
read more
Effective Learners and a
Learner-Centered Classroom (Part 1)
Each learner and each learning experience is unique; yet educators can identify
patterns in the learning process. Designing effective learning requirements
requires a clear understanding of both commonalities and differences in the
learners and the learning...
read more
Blindfold activities in the
TEFL classroom
One method of creating a genuine information gap is through the use of blindfold
activities. Blindfolds can be employed in a variety of ways in the TEFL
classroom to foster a truly communicative and student-centered approach to
learning. Here are a few ideas to get you started...
read more
Teaching ESL with Playing Cards
Cards are a wonderful way to motivate students and teach English. They don't
even think it as class work. The fascination with card games is that they
involve mental math, chance, skill, social interaction and sometimes cheating or
bluffing...
read more
10 ways to use DVD and video in your ESL class -
part 1
Have you ever wondered how to use movies in your ESL classes, without just
sitting your students down in front of the screen, hitting 'Play' and sitting
back to watch. Here are a few ideas to get you started...
read more
10 ways to use DVD and video in your ESL class -
part 2
Here are a few more ideas for using video in ESL classes, using very short
extracts from movies to present and practise new language, and develop
communicative skills...
read more
eslbase © 2005-2008
Terms of use |
Disclaimer |
Privacy |
Contact |
Advertise |
Links |
Site map |
Testimonials |
Language exchange |
TEFL blog
TEFL jobs and TEFL courses, information, advice and
ESL resources for teachers - English language teaching articles