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The Teaching English series offers a mixture of methodology and
practical ideas for teachers of English as a foreign language. The
Teaching English Online series complements the main series,
offering a mixture of methodology and practical ideas to get
teachers started on an online platform, and to support them in
creating and delivering dynamic and creative lessons whether they
are teaching solely online or in combination with physical classes.
Structuring Fun for Young Language Learners Online aims to provide
ELT teachers, directors of studies and academic managers with
advice about making the transition to teaching online, including:
examples related to the author's own experience, online safety and
best practice; managing your online classroom, dealing with stress
and supporting learners; adapting traditional tasks and making the
most of the online medium. The book includes a wide range of
colourful activities and numerous illustrations and examples from
actual online classes. Throughout, the goal is to help make lessons
enjoyable for both teacher and learners. The emphasis is on
low-tech, low-prep lessons with maximum results, whilst keeping the
focus clearly centred upon the goal of increasing children's
familiarity with and ability to produce words and sentences in
English. In Structuring Fun for Young Language Learners Online the
author examines how many principles of best practice (as covered in
the recently-published Structuring Fun for Young Learners in the
ELT Classroom, Chris Roland, Pavilion Publishing, 2020) from
face-to-face lessons translate to online teaching. The author
highlights what teachers will need to approach a little
differently, and looks at where the new medium allows us to do
things that we could not do so easily before. This book can be used
for self-study, as guided reading on more structured training
courses - where the three boxes for reflection and discussion at
the end of each chapter (Questions for Reflection, Things to Try
and Things to Share) can be used as the basis for group discussion
- or for trainers preparing their own sessions at an in-house
level.
Teaching young learners can be a huge amount of fun. As teachers we
can introduce all sorts of games, projects and variations on
traditional exercises. All this needs careful structuring if the
resulting activity is to be manageable and, more importantly, if it
is going to help students learn and practise words and sentences in
English. In Structuring Fun for Young Learners you'll learn about
the principles behind that structure with a roller coaster ride of
colourful ideas, examples and anecdotes as their vehicle. There are
over three hundred diagrams and photographs to help explain exactly
how the described activities work and give you the flavor of ELT
classes at primary level. When fun in the classroom is properly
structured, everyone is a winner. Your students will remember those
activities for years and you will still be able to cover your
course content without compromising on classroom management. In
order for all this to happen, important questions such as: 'How do
children behave in classrooms?' 'Why do they want to do some tasks
and refuse to do others?' 'What is learning anyway and how can we
tie our target words and sentences to the activities we do?' have
to be asked. These fundamentals are covered in the first five
chapters of the book. The second part of the book explores
movement, text, space, novelty objects, teacher-student dialogue,
personalisation, clips, images, support for learners, use of
coursebooks and your own professional development as a young
learner teacher. So, whether you are a new teacher, a seasoned
veteran or teacher trainer with young learners classes this is the
book for you.
This is a book packed full of lesson ideas, activities and advice
for teaching English to teenage students. This book goes much
further than simply telling you what to do and how to do it. It
looks at the why? It explains the deeper rationale for decisions we
might make as well as exploring the underlying principles and
factors that can make or break a lesson. It provides reflection
that will be of value when you are sitting at home thinking over
why one of your classes is not going the way that you want or when
you have seen a really good teaching idea at a conference but are
wondering how to make it work in your own class. Each chapter
follows the same pattern: - The first part begins with a Discussion
of a certain facet of teaching teens. It identifies key issues and
outlines situations the author has experienced in his own teaching,
and also draws upon writers and trainers who have played a role in
his own development. - In the second part of each chapter,
Practical applications, the discussion takes a more hands on turn
and outlines some classroom applications and techniques. - Each
chapter will then end with three summary sections. The Questions
for reflection box may serve to summarise the chapter. The Things
to try box can be the basis for small scale projects, action
research or professional development. Finally, the Things to share
box contains prompts for exchanging ideas where the chapter is
being used in a training setting.
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