We speak to three experts involved in the IELTS test prep industry in China and hear different points of view on getting students to memorize answers, schools finding test questions and what effect does it all have on the students when they take the test.
Understanding Classroom Discourse (with Steve Walsh)
I speak with Steve Walsh, Professor of Applied Linguistics at Newcastle University about the quality of teacher talk and the effect this has on student learning. Steve talks with us about the questions that teachers ask as well as the rules and roles which influence how we interact with our students.
Racism and Ethics in Teacher Recruitment (with Ekitzel Wood)
Ross speaks with Ekitzel Wood about online marketing ethics and discrimination in teacher recruitment. We know data from Facebook was used in the last US Presidential Election, but how does your Facebook information change the job advertisements that you see? Online marketing affects the jobs we have access to, who are colleagues are and the expectations our students have. Hear the power schools now have to discriminate by gender, age and race, and how this affects you.
Episode 100! A Brief History of English (With David Crystal)
We celebrate our 100th episode by interviewing linguist, writer, editor, lecturer and broadcaster Professor David Crystal about the history of English. David takes us all the way back to the first surviving example of written English, to the birth of American English to the spread of text messaging to the present day with the internet and corpus linguistics.
Differentiated Support (with Chris Roland)
Young learner and teens expert Chris Roland talks to us about giving differentiated support to students. We discuss which students we are trying to help when we differentiate, which students teachers tend to forget about when they plan and how to differentiate without needing to spend twice as long preparing materials as usual.
What To Do When Your Trainees Fail (With Fifi Pyatt)
As a teacher trainer, one of the most uncomfortable experiences in telling trainees they failed something; a class, an assignment or possibly even a whole course. We speak Trinity College London CertTESOL and DipTESOL course director with Felicity Pyatt about what to do when that happens. How to decide to ‘fail’ a trainee, how to break the news and how to help trainees bounce back.
Opportunities in Online Teacher Development (with Matt Courtois)
Podcast: Mutilate Your Coursebook! A Guide to Adapting Teaching Materials
Online Lockdown Language Teaching (with Morag McIntosh)
The Who What How When and Why of Error Correction
Incorporating Learner Autonomy into Online Teaching (with Russell Stannard)
Russell Stannard joins me to talk about online teaching. We discuss some of the current challenges that teachers around the world are facing due to Covid19 forcing classes to go online, and we also talk about what the longer term effects on teaching and learning will be. How will this encourage learner autonomy? How will it change the role of the teacher? And how could it create more learning outside of the classroom?
Advantages and Opportunities in Online Teaching (with Matt Courtois)
Regular guest Matt Courtois returns to discuss teaching groups of young learners online. We focus on some of the advantages of online teaching – what is it possible to do online, that isn’t possible to do offline? How to get students to genuinely and meaningfully communicate with each other online? And why tech problems and glitches might actually be the best part of online language lessons.
Using Literature To Teach Language (with Anne Carmichael)
Lots gets said about the value of graded readers, but how can teachers use these in class? We speak with Diploma in TESOL course director Anne Carmichael about using graded readers with students at different levels, how teachers can integrate different skills using graded readers and how teachers can deal with new language from the texts.