A monthly blog from EFL Classroom that gives you ideas, resources, and a place to set up your own online classroom. Links to video talks, new online resources, ongoing discussions and blogs, student-created content, ideas for current seasonal holidays, and their own Diigo Group, et al. EFL Classroom has developed well over the past year or so, and is well worth following.
This site is going EFL/ESL in a big way, using video:
"We recently found out that 22frames.com is becoming a popular site for learning English as a second language (ESL). It turns out that watching captioned videos provides a way to not only learn formal English but also idioms and other cultural concepts. To find videos, you can browse through categories or make caption-only video searches on your interests. Even more, we have been devoting significant time and resources to developing ESL-specific features that are motivated by our users' feedback."
"Recently, we found out that many of our
users are using the site to supplement their English learning (see:
http://www.22frames.com/esl.aspx ). They also began to pitch ideas we
could implement to make the site even more useful for this activity.
With so many requests, we decided to seriously consider these ideas
and devote significant time and resources into realizing them. Now,
we are turning our site into a substantial and FREE English learning
resource. We are aware of a couple sites out there that are also
focused on using captioned videos for English learning, so we've been
focusing on the unique user-motivated features. Therefore, my goal
here is to let you know about our free resource and that we are
opening the door to requests for anyone who might desire features that
have not been implemented elsewhere. Perhaps, you can share this with
your colleagues/readers/etc as it will help us better gauge which
features to prioritize and to increase the rate with which we will
release new features. Please note that we are really serious about
considering whatever feedback we get.
I'm also pleased to announce our first feature, which we expect will
help in learning/teaching popular English idioms. Idioms are a big
deal in learning English, and it is clear that watching them used in
real situations will increase the rate with which they are learned.
We therefore processed a large group of YouTube videos in o
A nice set of resources, mainly downloadable apps, for teachers to use with their classrooms. Some might also be useful for students to download and use.
Another good resource from the EFL Classroom 2.0
Check out the extensive list for topics of interest to EFL/ESL teachers. These are interesting and professional-looking, each about 30-40 min. on embedded video.
"What you see here are candid submissions from people who have engaged in a little exercise. Here's how it works. Think about the word Race. How would you distill your thoughts, experiences or observations about race into one sentence that only has six words?"
This National Public Radio blog makes the perfect starting point for a multicultural lesson for ESL/EFL students. The entries are sheer poetry and give a great deal of content to think about the issue of race and one's place in society, for better or worse. Each 6-word "poem" makes us, as one contributor said, "Look past race to underlying humanity."
This is a great article on using some of YouTube's lesser-known features: annotations to great adaptive listening exercise, playback speed control, and Safeshare links to remove ads for student viewing. This is a must-read article if you use video with your ESL/EFL students.
This is a collection of texts and accompanying images created by users that you can use for ESL/EFL activities. Have students create and add their own digital stories connected to a theme or short story they have searched for and read. You can also search by a key word, such as a grammatical term they are studying (e.g., "used to"). Thanks to C. Arena.
The blog for the Flickr group that collects pictures to use with EFL/ESL students. Join the crowd-sourcing, and use this blog to get ideas for teaching with pictures.
This has great videos on how to teach a wide variety of subjects, as well as how to manage students' behavior in class, set up collaborations, assessment, and esp. for US teachers, the common core standards. Very useful for teacher training, though not specifically oriented toward ESL/EFL.
Insert a URL on this page and it will render a readability score using Flesch, SMOG, etc., plus statistics such as number of words, sentences, etc. This could be helpful to determine readable authentic materials for ESL/EFL learners. However, I suspect most webpages all run pretty close to the same level. This would be interesting to experiment with, and especially useful for electronic books and content materials.
R. Stannard shows how to use ELT Pics, which is hosted by Flickr. You can also get an email feed to show pictures as they are updated. A nice way to garner resources for writing or student projects. Pictures are crowd-sourced, and curated by EFL teachers. I use pictures often for teaching writing: description, emotions, cultural comparisons, if-clauses, etc. Don't miss the "Making Collages" part of this video, as it includes PicMonkey, which has templates for collages. ELT Pics also has its own blog with ideas for using images.
"The Newseum displays these daily newspaper front pages in their original, unedited form. Some front pages may contain material that is objectionable to some visitors. Viewer discretion is advised."
This would be very handy, and easy to use, for adult ESL/EFL, social studies classes, or cross-cultural study: What is considered important in each location? How is the same news story treated differently in different cities or different parts of the world? Excellent for visual learners.
This would be very useful for h.s. social studies or an adult ESL/EFL class where students can compare how the news is presented in different newspapers, or compare what is considered important in different cultures.
The Newseum displays these daily newspaper front pages in their original, unedited form. Some front pages may contain material that is objectionable to some visitors. Viewer discretion is advised.
"Find flashcards to study or create your own flashcards.
"Study flashcards or use the other activities such as matching, crosswords, hangman, scrambled word, or bug chase.
"Study flashcards anytime/anywhere by printing your flashcards or by using a flashcard app. "
-- Subjects include geography, business, math, science, languages, medical subjets, and varies tests, such as GRE. Not specifically for ESL/EFL. Nice that you can use the flashcards on- or off-line.
Tools Nik Peachey used in a two week ICT/language teaching course for EFL teachers. A nice description of the tools, when they were introduced in the course, and accompanying video tutorials and examples.