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Category Archives: Dogme
Dogme vs CLIL
I would say CLIL is almost certainly having more impact worldwide, what with the interest from publishers and school boards and the fact that it is associated with the primary and secondary schools where the vast majority of the world’s classroom hours … Continue reading
Posted in CLIL, Dogme
9 Comments
Experimental lessons
Was hoping some of you could help me brainstorm things that could be done for the Cambridge DELTA experimental practice lesson, as well as any other advice on being experimental that they may have. The main difficulty in the DELTA is that you need … Continue reading
Interview with a Marxist TEFLer/ TEFLing Marxist
Interview done by email rather than talking to a Zapatista-style balaclavaed bandit in the jungle (which would’ve been nice), but the results are just as interesting as the always thought provoking Marxist TEFL Group blog, I think you’ll find: “Why define yourself as … Continue reading
The most TEFLtastic attempts at humour in 2009
Wasn’t a great year for humour on TEFLtastic (must be taking my job seriously in my old age?!), but I did manage my most successful spoof yet, if not quite up to the standard of UN to Ban Unnecessary Languages: Don’t Do the … Continue reading
What was the biggest change in TEFL in the Noughties?
If you’d asked me in 1999, I probably would’ve predicted that Task Based Learning was going to take over the TEFL world, for better or worse. What a damp squib that turned out to be, with apparently even Cutting Edge … Continue reading
Posted in British Council, Dogme, Electronic dictionaries, ELT publishing, Humanistic language teaching, IELTS, Interactive whiteboard, International House, Pilgrims, Teaching English in Japan, Teaching English in Thailand, teaching online, Technology, TEFL blogs, TEFL in the UK, Twitter, Wall Street
10 Comments
Karenne on teaching- interview Part Two
An Interview with Karenne of Kalinago English, part 2 Where are you teaching and what kind of teaching do you usually do? I mostly teach at software and IT companies and also at one of the biggest banks in Stuttgart, … Continue reading
A fireside chat with Sandy McManus
He’s been the most famous/ notorious online TEFL figure for around five years, and the age of Twitter doesn’t seem to have calmed him down at all. In this exclusive TEFLtastic interview, Sandy shows his sensitive side
Posted in Dogme, EL Gazette, first TEFL job, getting out of TEFL, Guardian TEFL, Humanistic language teaching, NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming), Teaching English in Spain, TEFL blacklist, TEFL blogs, TEFL career planning, TEFL chains, TEFL heroes- Mario Rinvolucri, TEFL heroes- Sandy McManus, TEFL heroes- Scott Thornbury, TEFL in the UK, TEFL villains- Paul Lowe, TEFLtrade
Tagged History of TEFL blogs, Interviews
13 Comments
The best of Teaching English Guest Writer Articles
Another example of how blogging can be a good thing even if nobody reads, in this case making me read something worthwhile that I just hadn’t quite found time for month after month after month… Surprising myself slightly, my top … Continue reading
Posted in British Council, Cross cultural training in EFL, Dogme, Linguistics, applied linguistics and SLA, Skills, Teaching English in Japan, Teaching methods and methodologies, TEFL
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You can't Beat that sh*t! Oh, okay, turns out you can…
So, Takeshi Kitano wins another film award at an arty festival, along no doubt with a whole load of other unwatchable crap. There are a few specifically Beat Takeshi points worth making here, such as: if the judges just watched some … Continue reading
Posted in Dogme, Linguistics, applied linguistics and SLA, TBA (Task Based Approach), TEFL Heroes- Michael Lewis, TEFL heroes- Scott Thornbury, TESOL, textbooks, The lexical approach
Comments Off on You can't Beat that sh*t! Oh, okay, turns out you can…