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Back in July I posted a selections of 20 ideas and activities that might be worth trying out as you get to know your new classes this school year – and since then there’ve been a couple of additional ideas to throw into the mix:
First Lesson Ideas / Warmers
First Lesson: Find Nobody Who…
First Lesson: I don’t know what you did last ...
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A very quick alternative to the standard composition task “What I did on my Summer holidays”.
Essentially, you ask the learners to write the composition (100 words? I guess length will be age & level dependent) about somebody else in the class.
I think I’ve blogged a similar activity at some point before, but not sure when. Anyway, the key to ...
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This is an alternative approach to the inevitable “what did you do on your holidays” conversation. Many first lesson activities and ideas are based on the premise that nobody knows anybody else but often the students in your classes have come up through the levels together and the only new person in the group is you…
It should also combat those ...
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This is an entry for everyone currently working at an ELT summer school somewhere in the world! It’s not always easy and there’s a lot of hard work – hopefully this post will help out a bit! I’ve been fortunate enough to enjoy my summer school experiences immensely over the years and one of the things I’ve enjoyed doing most has been the project ...
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An interesting post by Deborah Capras on the Business Spotlight blog relating to Microsoft’s recent billion dollar purchase of Skype. She raises the question:
Doesn’t $8.5 billion seem a lot of money for a verb I use almost every day for free?
Which is a really good question and got me thinking…. How much are words ...
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State of the World’s Mothers 2011 Statistics and Facts – Save the Children - thanks to Greg Fuller for posting this on facebook…..
There’s a lot of information here and obviously the most interesting thing for any class to do would be to pull out all the statistics that relate to their country and decide whether or not they agree with them, why, ...
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The Guardian newspaper recently ran a series of short stories related to oil, as part of a project to commemorate the one year anniversary of the Deepwater Horizon disaster – (see BBC story for background).
Called “Oil Stories“, the Guardian project contains eight short stories from different authors that seek to examine our relationship with ...
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Brave New World among top 10 books Americans most want banned | Books | guardian.co.uk.
This is a slightly misleading and somewhat patronising view of American life, when you consider, as the article states, that this list is based on a total of 348 “attempts” to remove books from American libraries. But it still makes interesting reading – at ...
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I first watched Ken Robinson’s TED talk – “Do Schools Kill Creativity?” some months ago – a thought provoking examination of the aims of the educational establishment. It has influenced my thinking about the aims of teaching quite heavily, though perhaps more on this in a later post.
It occurred to me that this would be a nice talk to use with a ...
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Giving feedback on classroom tasks is a tricky thing to come up with ideas for. Broadly, I think methods can be broken down into Collaborative / Competitive / Partial / Full. The four methods can interact, so you can have competitive partial feedback, followed by collaborative full feedback – or vice versa.
Collaborative methods might involve ...
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