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Teaching styles He Hao Duan - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 Just as students may vary from class to class, so are teachers and  their teaching style.  This paper focuses on the four basic teaching  styles which are formal authority, demonstrator or personal model,  facilitator and delegator.  Which style is more effective'  Do you  want the students to focus on you or do you want to focus on the  students'  Which is your style'Lessons taught using the formal authority teaching style tends to be  teacher centered.  The most obvious example of this style is when a  teacher is lecturing.  In the class when the teacher is using the  formal authority teaching style, the teacher is in control of the  lesson and all of the attention and energy of the student is focused  on the teacher.  The formal authority teaching style is effective  because it is...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			ESL Games Joseph Hegel - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 In an elementary EFL/ESL class in South Korea, you may begin  teaching a  class and at the start and you are welcomed with the exclamation  from a  student “Game teacher!”  This could even turn into a chant of “Game,  Game, Game” with other students joining in.  While the interest in games  by  children can’t be denied in general, are games an effective and  useful in the ESL classroom'Games can be enjoyed by students of all ages in the ESL classroom, including  adults.  Students tend to welcome a break from the traditional  lecture and study methods they may be used to.  Games are a way to make learning  fun in  the classroom.  This can be important for students who are children  and may  be working hard in school day and night and for adults who are busy working  themselves. ...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Motivating Students No name supplied - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 While it may be a teacher's dream to instruct a class full of  naturally enthusiastic students, the reality of the matter is that  only a handful of students are motivated to learn on their own.  In  fact, many students need or expect their teachers to inspire and  motivate them: 'Effective learning in the classroom depends on the  teacher's ability ' to maintain the interest that brought students  to the course in the first place' (Ericksen, 1978, p.3).  Therefore,  whatever level of motivation students may have brought to the  classroom will be changed by what goes on in the classroom which  leaves a great responsibility on teachers.One strategy teachers can employ to motivate their students  is to monopolize on the existing needs of students.  Students may  have enrolled in a certain...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Dictionary Training Mary-Catherine Remin - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 One of the worst teaching experience is having a class come to an  abrupt halt while someone searches a dictionary for a specific word,  one usually not found in the end anyway.  The problem of using  dictionaries as a crutch could be rectified by not allowing the use  of them in a lesson at all.  The great art of circumlocution could  be used instead, albeit kicking and screaming.  Those experiences of  being derailed by frantic dictionary searches would make any ESL  teacher shudder and swear off dictionaries entirely.   Should native  language to English language dictionaries be banned altogether'  Some would argue that using dictionaries is a good technique  to use in the classroom.  One that actually helps to create a more  independent learner ( www.tefl.net/teacher_training). The...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Multiple Intelligences Carolyn Kuipers - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 In each class, there are many different students. Each of these  students has a different way of learning.  A teacher in an ESL  classroom will need to respect the many ways students learn and  develop lessons with a wide range of activities and exercises that  address these different intelligences. Howard Gardner''s theory of multiple intelligences emphasizes 8  different styles of learning that encompass most people. As the  teacher begins to understand the students in his/her class, they  will begin to develop a sense of how each student learns and be able  to tailor lessons to suit.Word SmartStudents who are word smart learn best through verbal activities.  Verbal activities are listening, reading, or speaking.  To target  these learners, a teacher may include discussions, worksheets,...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Establishing rapport Jennie Sazzu Flores - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 There are many ways to teach a class. Each teacher has his/her own  style of going about it. Although the level of importance of each  part that contributes to the whole of a class is important, I  believe one of the most relevant parts of a class in building  rapport with the students. Building rapport doesn't only ensure a  smoother classroom experience but also improve the quality of  lessons all together.Many institutions have put building or establishing rapport  as part of their teacher handbooks. This, often considered a very  insignificant part that many teachers do without, is something that  they believe to be of the greatest importance. Colleges like the  American University: School of Education believe that building  rapport goes hand in hand with the fact that teachers 'must...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			The Combination of Cooperative Learning and Authentic Materials Promotes Speaking in Small Groups in an EFL Class Galit David - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				  Nowadays, we live in a communicative society where people  need to have many skills in order to become part of society and to  integrate in it successfully. People need to know how to work as a  team, since part of the requirements for many jobs is the ability to  work together and share ideas. Cooperative learning is one of the  major strategies of introducing these communicative skills to pupils  of every level. The combination of cooperative learning, task-based  learning, and the use of authentic materials can promote  communication skills, where one of them is speaking. All of these  components are widely used around the world with a tremendous  success in EFL classes.  Review of Literature Cooperative LearningVarious names have been given to the cooperative learning  method of...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Teaching Slang and Idioms Margaret Johnson - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 In consideration of whether or not teachers of English as a second  language should teach slang or idioms in class, or rather, why  English teachers should teach idioms or slang, I did some research  on the internet regarding this particular topic. For the most part,  I found one David Burke's article on the subject to be most  informative (Burke, 1). I have formed my own opinion on the matter,  which I will discuss at length later in this essay.First, it is constructive to define exactly what slang words and  idioms are, to differentiate between the two as well as to be  completely precise in this pursuit. Dictionary.com defines an idiom  as 'an expression whose meaning is not predictable from the usual  meanings of its constituent elements' (dictionary.com, 1). In  contrast, slang is...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl reviews - Tefl Review From Paavani - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				   
 This TEFL review is from Paavani. She is from Ohio, USA, but just moved to South Korea where she will work as an English teacher. As this will be her first full-time teaching position, she decided to take our online TEFL/TESOL program to get the best possible foundation in teaching before starting her new position. After completing the course, she feels ready and prepared to teach Korean students in her own EFL classroom and she recommends this course to other new teachers. 
Below you can read feedback from an ITTT graduate regarding one section of their online TEFL certification course. Each of our online courses is broken down into concise units that focus on specific areas of English language teaching. This convenient, highly structured design means that you can quickly get to...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl article - TEFL Teaching English In China 1993 vs. The Present #244 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				China has been proclaimed to be the largest market for English   learners. In the last twenty years, progress in teaching and  learning  of English has exploded.   Arriving in China August 1993 was not my first time there. Though it   was my first time in the Northeast. I was to spend the next twelve   years of my life in the city of Shenyang. An industrial city of 7   million people. My first impression was that it was like being in a   1950´s black and white movie with no sub-titles..  I was to teach at Shenyang Institute of Technology. My first year, I   had 800 students. All except one of the classes, were freshmen. One   was a class of 25 graduate students. Shenyang was my home until  October  2005. There were tremendous changes in China during those  years  affecting...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Teaching English In China 1993 vs. The Present Patricia Eckel - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				China has been proclaimed to be the largest market for English  learners. In the last twenty years, progress in teaching and  learning of English has exploded. Arriving in China August 1993 was not my first time there. Though it  was my first time in the Northeast. I was to spend the next twelve  years of my life in the city of Shenyang. An industrial city of 7  million people. My first impression was that it was like being in a  1950´s black and white movie with no sub-titles..I was to teach at Shenyang Institute of Technology. My first year, I  had 800 students. All except one of the classes, were freshmen. One  was a class of 25 graduate students. Shenyang was my home until  October 2005. There were tremendous changes in China during those  years affecting all aspects of life....					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Importance of Games in TEFL Maegon Williams - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				In the teaching of English as a Second Language (ESL), games are  very important, with adults and especially with children.  Let’s  face it, no matter how much one wants to learn another language  sometimes class discussions about verb tenses and vocabulary can be  monotonous, slow, and boring.  Games make learning fun and can be  used to add a little spice to class.  Many people are motivated by  competition so games can stimulate this enthusiasm and help to  stimulate participation.    Games can be used to aid in: learning vocabulary, verb  usage, vocabulary review, pronunciation practice, phrase building,  confidence building, and encouraging students to think and respond  in English.  Games are great ways to begin or end a class. Openers for  classes are used to introduce new...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl article - TEFL Importance of Games in TEFL #354 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				In the teaching of English as a Second Language (ESL), games are  very  important, with adults and especially with children.  Let?s  face it, no  matter how much one wants to learn another language  sometimes class  discussions about verb tenses and vocabulary can be  monotonous, slow,  and boring.  Games make learning fun and can be  used to add a little  spice to class.  Many people are motivated by  competition so games can  stimulate this enthusiasm and help to  stimulate participation.    Games  can be used to aid in: learning vocabulary, verb  usage, vocabulary  review, pronunciation practice, phrase building,  confidence building,  and encouraging students to think and respond  in English.    Games are great ways to begin or end a class. Openers for  classes  are used to introduce...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl article - TEFL Productive skills. #347 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				This paper is concerned with teaching the productive skill of  writing  for students of non-native English speaking countries. This is an area   that has all but been ignored in the past and somewhat over looked in  the  field of TESOL, as administrators, teachers and students seem to be  more  concerned and more focused on the speaking side of the productive  skills.  As more and more ESL students are seeking writing help at the   college and university levels, the need becomes clear for better writing   instruction in the ESL classroom. The ability to write well is not a  naturally  acquired skill, nor is it a linear process easily fit into  some pre-taught  format. Writing must be taught as a set of practices in  a formal  instructional setting and must be practiced. Good writing ...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Productive skills. Michael Zimmer - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				This paper is concerned with teaching the productive skill of  writing for students of non-native English speaking countries. This is an area  that has all but been ignored in the past and somewhat over looked in the  field of TESOL, as administrators, teachers and students seem to be more  concerned and more focused on the speaking side of the productive skills.As more and more ESL students are seeking writing help at the  college and university levels, the need becomes clear for better writing  instruction in the ESL classroom. The ability to write well is not a naturally  acquired skill, nor is it a linear process easily fit into some pre-taught  format. Writing must be taught as a set of practices in a formal  instructional setting and must be practiced. Good writing involves composing...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl article - TEFL The Internet in the Classroom #366 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				Teaching EFL in the 21st century increasingly involves teaching students  how to sift through and evaluate information in English using the  Internet and other new technology. This is especially important for  English-language students who plan to study or work in countries with  knowledge-based economies. “[T]he vast amount of information  available on the Internet means that critical learning and literacy  skills are more important than ever before,”Mark Warschauer  wrote in a recent U.S. State Department publication. “We as  teachers should help learners think critically at the microlevel, for  example, by analyzing the perspectives and biases of individual World  Wide Web sites.”1<br /><br />As a teaching and  learning tool, the...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			How do online English teachers make money? - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT TEFL & TESOL
				How much money you can earn teaching English online depends on a variety of factors, including your qualifications, prior experience, and the platform you work for. Online English teachers are paid on an hourly basis, typically ranging between $15 and $30. If you decide to work through an online platform, as most online teachers do, a fee for connecting you with students and providing materials is also deducted in the form of a commission.
There are different ways to earn a living as an online English teacher. Some teachers work for an online ESL company, some offer their lessons on an open marketplace, and others even start their own online ESL business.
Depending on your qualifications and the type of platform, online English teachers can typically earn between $10 and $40 US per hour....					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Can you make a living teaching English online? - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT TEFL & TESOL
				The amount of money you can make teaching English online is determined by a number of factors, including your qualifications, previous experience, and the organization for which you work. A typical hourly rate for online English teachers can range between $15 and $30. If you choose to work through an agency, as most online teachers do, they will most likely take a cut of your pay as a fee for providing you with students and materials.
Online English teaching is what you make it. Most online English companies allow you to work as much or as little as you want, so your online English teaching gig can range from part-time side hustle to a full-time career.
Online English teacher salaries vary depending on a number of factors, including:
Online English teachers typically earn between $10 and...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			TEFL - 2 Weeks TEFL - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
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This is how our TEFL graduates feel they have gained from their course, and how they plan to put into action what they learned:
       G. M. South Korea  said:             Upon starting this course I had very little idea as to what to expect.  I had been teaching english for several years without any formal training of any kind,  sort of making it up as I went along.  When one enters a job without any formal theory or training, there are weaknesses and blindspots that are hard to identify and tackle.  As my education was originally technical, it offered me little to no help with this.  I did not know how to organize and execute a class so that the...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl article - TEFL Course Materials #227 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				In an ESL lesson, the materials chosen to present the new grammar  and  vocabulary are a very important part of the teacher?s  preparation and  largely determine how well the lesson will be  understood and enjoyed by  the students.  The options of materials  are many but all have their  own appropriate uses.  It is a good idea  for ESL teachers to build up a  collection of teaching materials and  ideas that span from fun games to  worksheets to short, easy novels.   Often, a course book is the main  guideline but other materials  should be used to complement and  diversify the lessons.  Choosing  the correct materials depend on many  different areas such as class  size, language level, personal interests  of the students, student  ages, etc.  But the teacher should view this  part of...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Course Materials Halina Wloka - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				In an ESL lesson, the materials chosen to present the new grammar  and vocabulary are a very important part of the teacher’s  preparation and largely determine how well the lesson will be  understood and enjoyed by the students.  The options of materials  are many but all have their own appropriate uses.  It is a good idea  for ESL teachers to build up a collection of teaching materials and  ideas that span from fun games to worksheets to short, easy novels.   Often, a course book is the main guideline but other materials  should be used to complement and diversify the lessons.  Choosing  the correct materials depend on many different areas such as class  size, language level, personal interests of the students, student  ages, etc.  But the teacher should view this part of planning...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Teaching Beginner Students No name supplied - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 Although some ESL teachers find the thought of teaching beginners a  bit frightening, they can be a very rewarding group to work with.   With beginners it is very easy to see improvement.  As a teacher,  being able to see your work pay off so quickly can be very  encouraging.Of course not all beginners are the same.  Beginners are  usually split into two categories: complete beginners and false  beginners.Complete beginners are students who have had no exposure to  English.  Because they have often had very little formal education,  they can be much more challenging to teach than false beginners.Kenneth Beare, author of English as 2nd Language, defines  false beginners as, 'Beginners that have already studied some  English at some point in their life.'  Most experts on the subject  have a...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Songs in the classroom Soohee Choi - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 Listening to music stimulates students to learn English and works  as a change of class atmosphere. Songs make an enjoyable learning  environment.  Songs have a small amount of information and a high  degree of superfluity; they make songs sound simple and this aid to  understanding. They contain authentic language, are easily  attainable, provide vocabulary and cultural aspects and are fun for  the students. They provide enjoyable speaking, listening, vocabulary  and language practice both in and out of the classroom.  Songs are a good resource for English Teaching; ''They are funny and can be selected to suit the needs and  interests of the students. Students think songs are natural and fun. Fun, even silly songs  abound in English. As texts, songs are interesting because most do  not...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Classroom Management Jaime Brooke - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				Being an EFL teacher can bring numerous rewards and happiness, but  even the most experienced EFL teacher runs into challenges in the  classroom from time to time, especially when teaching young  learners. Challenges may range from wondering how to organize the  seating of your students in the classroom to having a student that  is disruptive. There are many challenges that TEFL teachers face,  and unfortunately many are not given the resources/ideas or training  that is beneficial and essential in maintaining a productive and  homeostatic classroom. This is an essay about some of these  challenges, and of course some ideas for classroom management.Classroom management can be challenging for anyone, but  especially for the new teacher who has little experience in this  area.  It is not...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl reviews - Classroom Management For Teaching English As A Foreign Language Grouping Students - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				   
 Our next consideration is going to be how we actually group our students. There are perhaps three types of grouping arrangements that we can consider and within those we'll have a look at the potential positive and negatives of those particular arrangements. So firstly, what arrangements can we use? We could arrange our group as a whole class so all of their activities will be done as a whole class. They could be working as individuals and the final grouping arrangement we'll consider is that of small groups or indeed the use of pair work. So for each of these types of arrangements what are the potential positive and negatives with that type of arrangement? For the whole class certainly one of the main positive features is that it gives that class a sense of belonging. Secondly...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Where is EFL taught? - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT TEFL & TESOL
				Within the world of English language teaching there are many acronyms used to describe what type of teaching is involved in any particular scenario. EFL is one of the more common ones you will come across and it stands for English as a Foreign Language. You will find EFL is most commonly used when describing the teaching or learning of English in a non-English speaking country, such as Spain, Japan, or Mexico.
It is very common for either of these acronyms to be used when talking about any situation where a student is learning English, however, there is a technical difference between the two. As previously mentioned, EFL is when the student is learning English in a non-English speaking environment, for example, a Japanese student learning English in Tokyo. In this scenario there is often...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Building rapport in the classroom No name supplied - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 Building rapport is one of the most important steps to ensure a  good learning environment, ESL or otherwise.  By building rapport  you learn more about what is important to your students and can make  your teaching more authentic and meaningful.  It will make all the  difference in your students' enjoyment of the class.Rapport is defined as 'Relationship, especially one of mutual trust  or emotional affinity.'   Jerome Stark of The Coaching Clinic  recommends five steps for building rapport.  The first step is to be  curious about the other person.  People respond to those who are  genuinely interested in them.  Secondly, when asking questions of  others, be certain to give them time to respond.  Once again, this  shows that you are interested in them and is a sign of respect.  The  next...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Multiple Intelligences in the ESL Classroom Stephen Blake - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 Gardner's theory of Multiple Intelligences, in which he defines 7  different ways that people are intelligent, has become a driving  force in educational theory in the English Speaking world.  Personal  experience in a Master's Degree in Elementary Education program with  the University of Phoenix revealed that virtually every class which  contained a lesson planning element required that the various  intelligences be addressed in lessons. A Google search on 'ESL and  Multiple Intelligences' conducted on June 8, 2006 returned  approximately 450,000 internet articles on Multiple Intelligences in  teaching English as a Foreign Language alone. The theory is  certainly popular, and is used in training teachers and parents  alike in educating their children.But does the idea that there are...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Songs in the classroom Jamie Phillips - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 Music is everywhere. It's playing at the mall. It's playing in the  car, in the restaurants, at home. It's accessible, and crosses all  social, racial, and linguistic lines. As such, it is an excellent  recourse for teachers of English as a foreign language. It is  particularly good for teachers who are using the ESA method of  teaching, because songs fit the lesson plan for every stage of  teaching. Music in the classroom is widely supported by a worldwide  network of teachers as well as numerous studies showing their worth  as a teaching device. Getting students to break down their social inhibitors getting them  involved in the class lesson is one of the challenges facing  language teachers, particularly when said students are culturally  encouraged to be reticent, or when they are...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl article - TEFL Cultural sensitivity in the classroom #297 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				As an ESL teacher one of the biggest challenges I have had to face  is cultural sensitivity.  Not only on my part as a teacher but  on the part of  my students as well. My first experience on this subject dealt with stereotypes. Not only  those held by my students but those that I carried as well. The second issue was how  to bridge the gaps between our two cultures. Therefore, the issue becomes how do we  increase our level of  cultural sensitivity. There have been many studies done on this issue. Most focus on  the things the teacher should do to bridge the gap. I believe that it takes effort on the  part of both the student and the teacher to resolve this issue. As ESL teachers most of us have left our countries and begun  teaching in other countries. In his book The Developmental Model...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			


