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Volunteer teaching , lesson planning and classroom management Taeko Toshima - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				I'd like to write about my experience in volunteer teaching with an  ALT, Assistant Language Teacher, at the local elementary school.Through this experience, the following important points that were  covered by the TEFL course have been re-confirmed.1. Planning and preparation before lessons.2. Usage of the whiteboard/blackboard, flash cards, and the CD  player.4. Facilities: classroom or gym'3. Body language: gestures and eye contact4. Voice control: volume, pronunciation, and accent5. DisciplineChiba prefecture, north east of Tokyo, where I live has been  employing ALTs from all over the world for a number of years. Most  of them are just out of college.  Some of them have lived in Japan  as exchange students in the past.  ALT stands for assistant language  teacher and therefore they...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Group Dynamics Peta Roberts - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 An understanding of the concept of group dynamics provides valuable  insight into the processes involved in a successful group lesson.  This awareness can assist the TEFL teacher in identifying what stage  the group is up to and the direction it is taking, ultimately  enhancing the cohesiveness of the group and the learning experiences  achieved.One of the most well-known and widely used theories of group  dynamics is Tuckman’s (1965) four-stage model of the “Group Cycleâ€.  This represents a sequence of processes that are not necessarily in  order, but which are linked to and determined by each other, and  seem to be readily observable in groups. The stages  of “formingâ€, “stormingâ€, “normingâ€, and “performing†are...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl article - TEFL Group Dynamics #395 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				An understanding of the concept of group dynamics provides valuable   insight into the processes involved in a successful group lesson.  This  awareness can assist the TEFL teacher in identifying what stage  the  group is up to and the direction it is taking, ultimately  enhancing the  cohesiveness of the group and the learning experiences  achieved.  One of the most well-known and widely used theories of group   dynamics is Tuckman?s (1965) four-stage model of the ?Group Cycle?.   This represents a sequence of processes that are not necessarily in   order, but which are linked to and determined by each other, and  seem  to be readily observable in groups. The stages  of ?forming?,  ?storming?, ?norming?, and ?performing? are identified  by Tuckman and  an additional stage of ?mourning? /...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			


