We speak with one of our favorite guests, __________ about _____________. An antidote to free talk activities, _____________ are a great way to get students to _______, listen to each other and ___________. ___________ activities can even be used in teacher training. Listen to fill in the _______.
The Apprenticeship of Observation (with Donald Freeman)
Donald Freeman, professor at the University of Michigan, joins me to talk about the how teachers become teachers. Do teachers teach as they were taught? What role does our experience as students play in forming our attitudes about teaching? And how does our experience as language learners and users influence our behavior in the classroom?
Authentic Texts and Tasks (with David Nunan)
Podcast: How To Advance Your Career In TEFL (with Jessica Keller, Jason Anderson & Felicity Pyatt)
We interview three former teachers who are all still part of the TEFL industry but have experienced very different careers. Jessica Keller tells us about becoming a recruitment expert, Jason Anderson about becoming an author and Felicity Pyatt about becoming a teacher trainer.
Meaningful Communication in Online Classes (With Jake Whiddon)
Jake Whiddon guest hosts the podcast and interviews Ross about interactions in online classes with young learners. We discuss the interactions that commonly occur in online lessons, what stops experienced teachers from being more creating in online teaching and how teachers can spark better and more meaningful interactions in their online classes.
Relationships with Materials (with Rod Bolitho)
Nominating Students to Talk (with Allan Crocker & Rebecca Gary)
Which students do we choose to speak in class? Trinity CertTESOL trainers Allan Crocker and Rebecca Gary join me to discuss how we pick students to speak, how to stop students from speaking too much, how to know who is ready to speak before anyone opens their mouths and what to do when no one wants to talk.
Motivation and Meaning Through Stories (with Andrew Wright)
I ask Andrew Wright, author of Storytelling with Children and Creating Stories with Children about using stories in language classes. Are stories more than a vehicle for teaching language? How should teachers react to students’ creations? And what can teachers do to encourage creativity with learners when writing stories.
Podcast: EFL's Love/Hate Relationship with Grammar (with Matt Courtois)
Wants and Needs in Test Preparation (with Pete Jones)
How should teachers familiarize themselves with the assessments they need to prepare their students for? Which test strategies should teachers teach? What effect do students’ expectations of test-prep have on teaching? Pete Jones tells us about approaches towards helping students prepare for language tests.
Setting Up Online English Courses (with Marek Kiczkowiak)
In reaction to Covid19, many teachers and schools have had to move their English courses online. But where to start? Dr. Marek Kiczkowiak tells us about his experiences creating online language courses for students and what he’s learned about online platforms, marketing and social media along the way.
4th Anniversary Podcast: What Have You Learned From Learning a Language
We meet with friends, family and special guests to hear about how language learning experiences affect and inform our views of language learning. In our longest podcast ever, we hear from Patsy Lightbown, Professor at Concordia University Canada about language learning experiences in Africa and North America; from teaching guru Ben Beaumont, from Trinity College London about the trauma of learning French at high school; from Janice Thorburn, former German and French teacher about learning German through grammar-translation and what that meant for her teaching later in her career; from our regular podcast guest Matt Courtois, about language immersion in Nepal, Russia, China and Bolivia led to very different outcomes; and from author and teacher trainer Wendy Arnold about how in spite of being a native English speaker in Peru, she failed her English exams at school.
Attitude & Awareness in Professional Development (with Kathleen Bailey)
Who is responsible for teacher development? Should teachers be forced to develop? What stops teachers from developing? Dr. Kathleen M. Bailey is professor of Applied Linguistics at the Monterey Institute of International Studies joins us to talk about teachers’ attitudes towards development, why much of what happens in our classrooms is unknown to teachers and what to do about these issues.
Podcast: Inside the World of Test-Prep in China
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.