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How to teach checking and clarifying

Phrases to check understanding and clarify meanings are probably the most important of all kinds of functional language for second language learners, particularly for: - Classroom communication - Speaking exams (for checking the meaning of the question before answering it) - Telephoning and teleconferencing - Giving and receiving instructions (e.g. giving directions) - Clearing up the inevitable misunderstandings of L2 communication Suitable phrases can be broadly divided into ones which are to help the other person understand and ones which are to seek (more) help understanding. These can be further divided into: - Asking for clarification of a particular point (e.g. What does mean?) - Checking your understanding (e.g. If I understand you correctly,) - Just showing a lack of understanding (e.g. Pardon?) - Asking for changes in the delivery (e.g. Can you explain that again, but starting at the end and working your way back?, Can you give me another word for?, Can you speak a little bit more slowly, please? and Can you spell that for me, please?) - Responding to language, body language, facial expressions etc that show that clarification is needed (e.g. I can see from your face that I havent explained myself well) - Giving more explanation before it is asked for (perhaps explaining why more explanation is given with phrases like Many people think that) - Other mentioning of the other persons (probable) lack of understanding (e.g. I know youre not really into computers, so sorry if that wasnt clear) - Offering more explanation if needed (e.g. If any of that isnt clear,) - Asking if a particular part is clear (e.g. Not many people know how to spell that, so) - More general enquiries about if you are being understood (e.g. Is that clear so far?) You could also indicate where a situation where additional clarification might be necessary with phrases like The meaning is somewhat ambiguous but, and the person listening might need

phrases for correcting their partner like Did you mean to say? Students will also probably need phrases to interrupt the person who is speaking in order to ask for clarification and phrases for getting back on track after they give more explanation. There is a big list of useful language for all of these at the end of this article from which you can choose suitable phrases for your students level and typical communication problems. Common student problems with checking and clarifying language include: - Using I beg your pardon when a shorter phrase would be more suitable - Using What? when something more formal would be more suitable (often because of translation from L1) - Similar things with sounds like Eh? - Other direct translations from L1 like One more (time) - Using very vague expressions like I dont understand that dont give the person speaking any information on which parts are not understood or why - Using too direct checking understanding expressions like Do you understand?, which can sound like teachers disciplining children! - Redundant words in expressions like Repeat again Activities to teach checking and clarifying Even more than other kinds of functional language, the best way of presenting checking and clarifying phrases and tactics is to first put students into a situation where they need the language, in order to see what they can already do and then help them expand on it. No attempt is therefore given to divide the activities below into presentation and practice ones, although the ones near the top are generally more suitable for presenting a large amount of language. Checking and clarifying gestures You can elicit or practise phrases for showing general lack of understanding, asking for repetition, showing you cant hear, asking the speaker to slow down, etc with gestures such as cupping an ear and shrugging shoulders. Checking your understanding or their understanding card game Students listen to typical checking and clarifying phrases and race to hold up one of the two cards that they have been given depending on whether it is for Checking the other persons understanding (e.g. Are you following me? and Is that clear?) or Checking your own understanding (e.g. Do you mean? and What does the last word mean?)

Checking and clarifying tips and useful phrases As there are many cultural differences and general communication tactics related to this point, it is worth tying together tips and language. One way of doing this is to give students a list of good and bad tips like Try to be specific about what you dont understand and Use I do beg your pardon as a more polite way of saying What. After crossing off the bad advice, students work together to brainstorm phrases for doing the things that they should. Checking and clarifying politeness competition As mentioned above, there are many potential politeness issues with checking/ clarifying. One way of practising getting past that is to give some short and obviously rude phrases like What? and Understood? for students to improve on, perhaps as a game where they have to come up with more and more polite versions and the politest wins. Checking and clarifying longer phrases games Another way of looking at the problems with rude clarifying and checking phrases is that they are usually simply too short. You can therefore get them to play the politeness competition game above, but with the challenge being instead to make a longer sentence than what is given and than their partners do. If you collect some longer phrases which are versions of shorter ones, you can also split these into two or three pieces of paper for students to try to fit together. After doing so, those slips of paper can also be used in the games below. Checking and clarifying with pieces of paper There are several games in which students are dealt pieces of paper which they can dispose of during the communicative activity, with the person with the fewest cards at the end winning that round or the game. The simplest to set up is to give the students cards with names of functions like Check what something specific means and Clarify something before you asked about it that they must do the function of to be able to discard that card. They can also be given specific words and/ or phrases that they should use while speaking in the same way. You will need to set up the situation each time they speak see roleplays below for some suggestions. Checking and clarifying first lesson This point can be brought up in the very first class by getting students to interview each other and write what they learn down on an interview form, not allowing them to show the form to each other or write their answers down to stimulate this kind of language. This can be further encouraged with questions that are difficult to understand (e.g. Educational career) and questions that stimulate dictation (e.g. Present classes and Full name). Dictation for checking and clarifying Dictogloss for checking and clarifying

Dictation is probably the most natural way of bringing up checking and clarifying language. This can simply be done with the teacher dictating with something similar to a dictogloss. The teacher reads out a text fairly quickly twice, with students taking notes the second time. Students try to reconstruct the whole text in pairs and small groups, in this variation without showing their notes to each other in order to stimulate more clarifying and checking language. In this variation, each group can then ask the teacher a certain fixed number of questions (e.g. six) before comparing their versions to the original, with the best version getting points or at least congratulations. Pairwork dictation for checking and clarifying An obvious thing to do to add even more checking and clarifying language is to get students dictating to each other. This can be made more intensive practice still by giving them things to dictate that commonly cause confusions (for speakers of their language or more generally) such as particular letters of the alphabet, minimal pairs, and difficult to distinguish numbers (15 and 50 etc). There are also dictation-based ideas which are less like a normal teacher-led dictation. For example, you could give them mixed up pairs of sentence halves, collocations, split idioms etc on Student A and Student B worksheets to match and write down without showing their partner their sheet. You could also do a Running Dictation, or simply do a telephoning roleplay involving dictation. There are numerous other ways of getting students to do this in the book Dictation: New Methods New Possibilities by Mario Rinvolucri and Paul Davis. You can also turn more common speaking activities like ranking tasks into dictation by giving students half of the options each and ask both of them to write their finished list without showing anything to each other. Use and explain activities A more general tip can be made out of the last activity, which is to give students words and phrases that they should use during a communicative task plus explanations that they can add only when their partner asks for confirmation (or takes them up on their offer to explain). For example, one student could ask the other for advice using tricky words given on the worksheet when explaining their problems. The person giving advice should ask checking understanding questions before giving their advice. Checking and clarifying roleplays The best roleplays are usually realistic situations for this kind of language, such as explaining how to do something, giving directions and other instructions, explaining problems, dictating (e.g. names, urls, email address, postal addresses), leaving messages, teleconferencing, talking about something that isnt visible, talking about processes, explaining options, explaining the reasons for something (e.g. why a recent news story happened), and something a student knows more about than their partner.

You can also prompt more unnatural but fun practice by telling students to exaggerate, e.g. by misunderstanding everything, talking too quickly and being vague. Checking and clarifying classroom questions Another way of looking at clarifying and checking questions is as a part of classroom language. As well as setting up activities where students need to ask the teacher questions and giving one student they information they need to answer their partners queries as mentioned above, you can get students to test each other on recent or useful vocabulary with typical classroom checking questions like Can you explain what means? and How do you spell // (in British English)? (with the word given in phonemic symbols, as an abbreviation or in another variety of English). Those sentences can also be presented in a similar way by giving students the written questions to answer about some vocabulary, then getting them to use the same questions to test each other. 222 checking and clarifying phrases (in alphabetical order) (Are there) any questions before I go on? (Do) go on. (Excuse me but) did you say? (I guess) I havent explained that very well, so (I think) I missed the bit where you explained (Im afraid/ Im sorry but/ Sorry but) I didnt catch (all of) that. (Im afraid/ Im sorry but/ Sorry but) Im not (really) following (you/ what you are saying/ your explanation/ your argument). (Im afraid/ Sorry but) Im not keeping up with you. (Im afraid/ Sorry but) that hasnt (really/ entirely) cleared it up for me. (Is there) anything that needs clearing up before I continue? (Just) to check if I (fully) understand you, ..., which is (commonly/ usually) defined as could perhaps do with a bit more explanation. explains/ explained this by

is a new term/ new concept for me. might benefit from some more explanation. , by which I mean , meaning , something whose (dictionary/ technical/ official) definition is , which (basically) means (that) , which can be defined as , which I would define as ,i.e A (rough) synonym/ translation/ equivalent would be A simpler (but less precise) definition/ explanation is Am I going through it too quickly? Am I making sense? Am I right in thinking that it is? And that means? And? Are you familiar with the term/ word/ concept ()? Are you going to explain? Are you planning to explain? Are you still with me? Before I go on, I should probably clarify Before you said that, I thought you meant/ were talking about Beg your pardon.

But (earlier) didnt you say? Can/ Could I confirm (whether)? Can/ Could I take you back to the place where? Can/ Could you be more explicit? Can/ Could you clear up for me whether? Can/ Could you confirm (whether)? Can/ Could you draw it for me? Can/ Could you elaborate (on that)? Can/ Could you explain a little more about? Can/ Could you explain it /that / just one more time? Can/ Could you explain that another way? Can/ Could you explain that in (a little) more detail? Can/ Could you explain that in laypersons terms? Can/ Could you explain what you mean by...? Can/ Could you give me an example (of what you mean/ of the kind of thing you mean/ of what you are talking about)? Can/ Could you put that in other words? Can/ Could you repeat (what you just said)? Can/ Could you say that (just) one more time? Can/ Could you say that again (another way)? Can/ Could you speak (a little more) slowly, please? Can/ Could you spell that/ (for me)? Can/ Could you start again right from the beginning? Can/ Could you write it down for me?

Did you (already) explain? Did you mean to say? Do you (perhaps) mean? Do you understand (the meaning of) the word? Does anything need explaining (before I move on)? Does that mean? E.g? Eh? For example, For example? For those unfamiliar with the word/ term, it means Got it (so far)? Have I explained myself properly? Have you come across the word (before)? Have you heard of? Hopefully Ive made it obvious that Hopefully its clear that I mean Hopefully you can understand from my explanation that How do you spell that/? How would you (directly) translate that into (Japanese)? How would you define? How would you say that in (Japanese)? I (still) dont (quite) get it.

I (still) don't (quite) understand () I basically know what you mean, but I can explain that another way if you like. I can illustrate this point with an analogy, I can see from your face/ expression that I can tell from your voice/ body language that I cant (really) picture it. I cant hear you (very well). I could (still) do with a little/ some (more) explanation (of) I dont (quite) understand what you mean by I dont know if youve come across that (word/ term/ concept) before. I dont know much/ anything about this subject, so I dont mean by that (but rather) I don't quite see what you're getting at. I get the general drift, but I got (a bit) lost (about) halfway through. I guess you mean I have (absolutely) no idea what you are trying to say! I have a question about I have another explanation (up my sleeve) if that ones no good. I havent come across that use of (before). I imagine you mean I might be starting to understand, but

I mostly understand what youre saying, but I think I understand (what you mean), but I thought I was following you, but (then) I understood that to be/ mean I was following your argument (up) until you got to I was with you up to (the point that) Im afraid I dont understood what you mean when you said Im guessing that means Im having difficulty understanding you/ following you/ hearing you. Im having problems understanding you/ hearing you/ following you. Im not (entirely) sure what means. Im not (quite) clear what you mean by Im not (quite) sure (that) I see what youre getting at. Im not (very) familiar with the word/ term/ meaning of Im not (very) familiar with this topic, so Im not sure I (fully) understand you. Im using that term here with its (usual) sense of Ive never (even) heard of Ive never heard the word/ term before. If a simpler explanation is needed/ would help, If I understand you correctly, (youre saying) If you need a simpler explanation, I'm not (quite) sure (that) I follow you/ get your point/ know what you mean.

In case that isnt clear, In laypersons terms, In other words,... In simpler terms, In words of one syllable, In this is explained as Is that (all) clear (so far)? Is that a different meaning of.. (to)? Is that the same as? Is that? Is there a more straightforward way of explaining? Is there another way of saying that/? It all sounds like gobbledegook. Its all Greek to me. Its going in one ear and out the other. Its quite loud in here, so Just guessing from context, Let me explain that in more detail... Let me put it in another way... Like what? Many people think that means, but in fact Meaning? Meaning, right?

More explanation please. My English isnt very good, so Now Im (even) more confused. Obviously I mean Pardon? Please let me know if that isnt clear. Say again? Say what now? Say what? Simply put, So, basically So, if I understand you correctly, So, in your view So, what you're saying is... So, would I be right in saying? So, would it be correct to say that? So? Some more explanation (of) might make it a bit clearer for me. Sorry? Such as? Surely you mean... That can't be right. That doesnt make sense (to me).

Thats (about) as clear as mud. Thats probably not a good enough explanation, so Thats, right? The meaning is (somewhat) ambiguous but The most common definition of that is The term is (commonly/ usually) used to mean There seems to be a contradiction between and Theres one thing I dont (quite) understand. This is a little tricky for me to understand, so This is probably just me being thick, but This word/ term is used to mean To be more precise, To clarify (what I mean), To explain further, To put it another way, To show you what I mean, To simplify (somewhat/ quite a lot), Was that clearer? What (exactly) are you getting at/ trying to say? What do you mean by? What does the last word/ bit/ sentence/ idea/ the word/ the expression mean (in this context)? What I understand from that is What I wanted to say was...

What I'm trying to say is... What on earth does mean? What was that again? What were you referring to when you mentioned? What you want to say is, right? What? Whats that in Japanese/ normal English/ everyday English/ laymans terms? Whats the difference between and? Whats your point? Would you define as? You dont seem (entirely/ very) happy with my explanation, so You dont seem to be using to mean You look like you have no idea what Im talking about. You lost me at You may as well be speaking a foreign language. You meant to say, right? You might think that means, but in fact You said, right? You seem to be assuming that I know about/ understand You seem to be using to mean Youre going to have to explain it for me from first principles. Youre speaking too quietly. Youre staring at me with a blank face/ like Im speaking Greek/ like Ive totally lost you.

Youve (totally) lost me.

30 ways to get ahead in ELT publishing


In no particular order: 1. Have lots of contacts. For example, keep in touch with your TEFL contacts such as people who study on the same course as you, as some of them will be future authors and editors 2. Have an impressive and ELT publishing-specific LinkedIn page, with lots of relevant contacts 3. Be low maintenance in your contacts with publishers, e.g. not double checking everything and absolutely always keeping to deadlines (even when the publishers stop contacting you or miss their own deadlines) 4. Write in an accessible way, e.g. for people with limited English or without specific cultural or TEFL knowledge, even when contacting publishers 5. Do your own illustrations, or find someone who can do them (but making it clear that using those illustrations is completely optional) 6. Need no editing (for example because you have lots of proofreading experience) 7. Specialise, but also have a wide range of experience 8. Get platforms by which you can publicise the thing you publish, e.g. get many Twitter followers, start a TEFL blog and make it well known and popular, and be a well-trusted source of advice on TEFL forums 9. Have a name that will be familiar to publishers/ customers see above, but also giving workshops 10. Interact with publishers as much as you can and as many ways as you can, e.g. send them copies of your published reviews of their books, volunteer for pre-publication reviewing, give workshops at events that they are involved in and chat to them between workshops, and request sample copies for your school 11. Have a great CV see above and also teacher training experience, relevant qualifications, working for well-known and well-respected chains of schools, writing outside TEFL, positions of responsibility such as on the board of your local chapter of TESOL, language level, and being an examiner 12. Be persistent without getting annoying 13. Show your familiarity with materials which compete with yours

14. Be someone the publishers want to impress and work with, e.g. an important contact in a large chain of schools that can give them lots of orders or the editor of a publication they would like good publicity from 15. Always have a few (extra) publishing proposals or ideas up your sleeve 16. Show your tech-savvy, e.g. by writing articles on ed-tech topics 17. Be visible in places where publishers notice, especially magazines and big conferences in their country 18. Work for a publisher for a while even if it is a smaller publisher, just as a sales rep, or is in non-ELT publishing 19. Be responsible for choosing/ buying books, e.g. for a chain of schools 20. Have a clear idea of both the ideal person to use your materials and the (many) other people it could be useful for 21. Think carefully about how your materials could be marketed, mentioning that in you contacts with publishers 22. Mention ELT publishing as much as possible, e.g. on your LinkedIn profile and on your business card 23. Sprinkle your business cards around 24. Get involved in publishers websites, e.g. submitting lesson plans to go on their sites 25. Send book proposals, but mainly so that they consider you for other projects (mentioning your keenness for such things in the accompanying email) 26. Work in a school with contacts, e.g. where some of the teachers or managers are authors or which are involved in pre-publication testing 27. Have a qualification in ELT materials writing, e.g. an MA or the course from ELTTeacher2Writer 28. Have original ideas, but also be prepared to work on unoriginal projects 29. Have experience of editing and being edited 30. Have experience of writing to deadlines for a specific audience

70 easy TEFL articles that anyone could write at least one of


Every teacher has at least one article about teaching in them. This article gives 70 suggestions for topics from which almost anyone could choose or adapt. Parts are given in bold so that you can add your own ideas to make your own article title/ topic, but please feel free to use the examples of complete titles below if you wish. Please note that not all the examples given reflect my own views on teaching or ideas of what the best titles on those topics would be. 1. A bit of TEFL history 2. A change in textbooks/ the range of books published by the big four/ the UK TEFL market (with why it has happened and its implications) 3. A comparison between two books/ two techniques for/ several explanations for one grammar point/ two qualifications/ teacher development face to face and online/ two exams/ two age groups/ two teaching situations 4. A critique of PPP/ how pairwork is usually used/ recent ESP titles 5. A manifesto for long term TEFL teachers/ teachers of very young learners/ dissatisfied parents of very young learners 6. A metaphor for teaching/ learning a language (with how far it can be taken and what we can learn from it) 7. A survey of TEFL forums/ TEFL job ads/ primary textbooks released in the last 12 months 8. A tribute to a writer/ an editor/ a publishing company/ a researcher 9. Activities based on the ideas in one book/ the ideas of one person/ a piece of research/ a personal conclusion about teaching languages 10. Adapting the ESP approach for General English classes/ PPP to what we know about learning languages/ Dogme for young learners 11. Advantages and disadvantages of peer correction/ correcting all written mistakes/ running around games (and how to exploit the advantages and lessen the disadvantages) 12. Advice for unmotivated teachers/ teaching very specialist ESP 13. Alternative uses of an OHP/ running dictations/ videos with the sound turned down

14. Alternative ways of starting classes/ ending classes/ deciding on a syllabus 15. Alternatives to spoken error correction/ teacher-led classes/ gapfills 16. Arguments for and against textbooks/ reading for pleasure in class time 17. Better ways of using L1/ eliciting/ brainstorming 18. Career advice for people with experience but no qualifications/ people who havent taught for a while/ people who want to get into teacher training/ people who want to change the industry 19. Changes needed in teacher education/ school inspections/ how we all teach 20. Choosing a job/ textbook/ career path/ kind of syllabus/ placement test 21. Circumstances in which you should/ shouldnt correct/ use peer correction/ have a teacherled class 22. Classifying different kinds of teacher/ student/ interaction/ classroom question (and the practical implications of that) 23. Combining listening and reading/ grammar and vocabulary/ speaking and learner training/ language and cultural training 24. Common misconceptions about very young learners/ vocabulary/ teaching pronunciation/ future tenses 25. Contesting the validity of/ Debunking IELTS scores/ CEFR levels/ multiple intelligences/ the Cambridge Delta 26. Cultural differences in attitudes to asking questions in class/ being corrected (and the implications) 27. Decreasing the time spent moving students around/ L1/ warming student up/ with textbooks open/ planning lessons 28. Decreasing TTT/ L1 29. ESP materials/ teaching magazines/ the CPE exam/ private EFL schools in the UK/ the International House chain then and now 30. Finding a balance between learner autonomy and classroom discipline/ TTT and STT/ grammar, vocabulary and functional language 31. Good and bad ways of bringing new technology into a school/ implementing change in a school

32. How to adapt textbook listenings/ authentic texts/ advice in teachers books (for your classes) 33. How to improve prediction skills/ motivation/ classroom dynamics/ what percentage of people do their homework 34. Ideas prompted by something you read/ a workshop you attended/ an experience in the classroom/ some student comments 35. Implications of a change in an exam/ the English language/ student attitudes/ student needs/ the age profile of the population/ the English teaching market/ a recent news event 36. Implications of copyright/ data protection/ health and safety/ child protection/ consumer protection law for TEFL teachers 37. Judging student progress/ the usefulness of the language that they have learnt/ a textbook/ a placement test/ a teacher 38. Limits to an approach/ the teachability of something that would otherwise be useful 39. Low-prep lesson planning/ teacher training/ cover lessons 40. Making a textbook/ exercise type/ exam practice more fun/ useful/ connected to student needs 41. Organising your time/ the teachers room/ CPD in your school/ a teaching association 42. Practical implications of a theory/ idea from applied linguistics/ psychology/ general education 43. Predictions for the future of the English language in university education/ language testing/ ELF 44. Preparing to take an initial teaching qualification/ teach teenagers for the first time 45. Prioritising language/ skills/ teaching skills to improve 46. Rearranging your classroom/ stages of a lesson/ a textbook 47. Reviving The Silent Way/ translation/ dictation/ techniques based on Behaviourism 48. Simpler ways to rearrange groups/ communicate with students outside class/ access the internet in class 49. Something from general education/ psychology/ what children do in their free time that could be adapted for TEFL

50. Something that never worked for me until I saw someone else teach it/ read something/ experienced language learning from the other side 51. Stages of developing fluency/ developing as a teacher/ ensuring student satisfaction 52. Standing up for primary school teachers who dont have specialised ELT training/ students who dont want to do pairwork 53. Teaching large groups/ Teaching ESP classes/ Teaching teenagers/ Teacher training with minimal resources 54. Techniques for teachers who arent confident about using the phonemic script/ their own texts/ running around games/ humanistic language teaching techniques 55. The characteristics of a good language learner/ Business English teacher/ teacher trainer/ DoS 56. The effects of sub-skills training on IELTS skills/ warmers on student learning 57. The importance (or not) of L1 interference/ training in skimming and scanning/ actual teaching of collocations 58. The theory and reality of needs analysis/ learner autonomy/ learning styles/ lesson plans/ teacher development 59. Theoretical weaknesses of PPP/ TBL/ Dogme/ written error correction 60. Using crayons/ digital voice recorders/ spellcheckers/ student writing/ anecdotes in class 61. Variations on a classic TEFL game/ a common teaching technique 62. Ways to teach/ present/ practise functional language/ collocations/ academic vocabulary/ pausing for thought techniques 63. Ways to use a new website/ piece of technology 64. What to do if you are being bullied at work/ you have one very disruptive student 65. What we could learn from speech therapists/ special needs teachers/ Silicon Valley startups 66. What we still dont know/ cannot know about the differences between learning L1 and L2/ the characteristics of an effective teacher/ why exam scores fluctuate (and the implications) 67. Why reading for pleasure is better than reading with comprehension questions (apart from when)

68. Why you should start/ increase student autonomy in class/ learner training/ 69. Why you should stop/ reduce the emphasis on tenses/ the percentage of pronunciation time spent on minimal pairs 70. Why doesn't work for a particular skill/ sub-skill/ language point or in a particular situation

How to write and publish TEFL articles


Another article on this site list gives many easy topics with which to start writing TEFL articles. This one concentrates on the process by which you can go about doing so. Article here mainly means something somewhere between a simple list of games and a proper research-based academic paper. The possible stages of the process are: - Choose where you want to publish your article and find out what it will need to be like to fit in and be accepted - Choose a title or topic to write about - Brainstorm ideas - Plan - Write - Edit - Get some help - Submit or publish yourself If you for some reason dont feel ready to write an article yet, there are also things you can do to get ready for that point, for example: - Read a lot - Write your own blog, or even start with tweets then working your way up to blog posts and then articles, as many people have done - Write teaching tips, and then lists of them - Give workshops, one of which might lead to an article

- Write reviews - Write texts for students - Do a qualification for which you have to write essays on TEFL-related topics Choosing where to publish Choosing where you want to publish could obviously be the last stage above rather than the first one, by which I mean deciding on where is most suitable by the content and style of the article and who you want to read it. This approach is obviously the best way of using something you have already written such as workshop notes or a brainstormed list of ideas for your class to make it into a publishable article a good tip for those who find it difficult to get started. If you do decide to aim for a particular publication as you write (knowing you can always change your mind later, of course), reading that publication as much as possible could also help you come up with a topic. You could even, as was the case for me, start by writing and sending an article directly in response to something you read in the publication. Deciding on a topic/ title As mentioned above, there is a big list of possible article topics on this site that you can use for inspiration. Other general tips on coming up with article titles/ topics include: - Take an existing title and change a few words (you can change the title further later if where you have ripped it off from will be too obvious) - Make it related to your recent classes - Make it connected to a particular area of interest - Make it connected to something you were weak at but are working on or have improved on - Observe someones class (in person or by watching a video) and base your article on something you notice making sure you fully hide the source of your ideas if that could be taken badly! It is also possible to let the topic and title emerge from the writing process, for example starting by writing 100 Random Great TEFL Games and narrowing that down whenever a useful pattern seems to be emerging, e.g. games that are all connected to asking and answering questions (which is pretty much how I came up with my first book proposal). Brainstorming and planning I could easily write a whole article on how to brainstorm, but for most people a Mind Map works best, and you can easily move from the categories on the Mind Map to the plan for the article by making the most useful major categories the paragraphs of the article. Nowadays I more

commonly brainstorm straight into a Word document and cut and paste those ideas straight into categories that then become paragraphs, but I wouldnt necessarily recommend this when you are first starting to write TEFL articles. Writing and editing Its quite difficult to give advice about actually sitting down and writing. A general rule for both brainstorming and writing is to try and come up with your own ideas first and then turn to other sources to check and expand on what you came up with. The most obvious source of additional ideas nowadays is probably Google, not forgetting Google Books for some of the many classic ideas that are nearly forgotten. Online ELT magazines and journals such as ELT Journal are also searchable online for subscribers, or there are always the indexes at the back of teacher resource books. Things to bear in mind during the writing and editing stages include: - Is it accessible to all the people who will read it, including people who dont share your age, teaching background, previous reading on the topic, nationality, English language level, etc? - Does it grab peoples attention from the first line? Does it tell people who might not think they are interested in the topic why they might want to read on (but without making people who really dont need to read do so)? - Have you mentioned the sources of your ideas (including vague statements of such like from one of the Communication Games books when you arent sure)? - Does each paragraph have a clear topic? Are those topics clearly linked to the topic and title of the article? - Are the grammar, punctuation etc not only correct but suitably conservative for the publication and readers? - Is the level of chattiness and personalisation right? General editing tips include: - Leave something untouched for at least a week and then come back to it. - Edit for each other. - Get work pre-publication reviewing or peer reviewing to improve your editing skills. - Stick strictly to a word limit. If none is given, ask for one, copy other articles in the same place, or just set yourself an arbitrary one (700 words is a good one online, or 1500 words is a good absolute maximum for most things).

- Make a note of any editing changes included in your published pieces so that you dont make the same mistake again. Getting help Help you can get includes: - Give a workshop on the topic - Post an early version, an outline or a key idea of an article on your blog for feedback - Swap editing help with another teacher - Send it to a Twitter contact (after asking if you may) Publishing Places to publish include, in approximate order of how easy it is to do so: - Your own blog - Article sharing sites - Someone elses blog - TEFL websites - ELT magazines (including those of teaching associations and TEFL websites with a magazine format such as Humanising Language Teaching) - ELT journals (including those of teaching associations) - Applied Linguistics journals - The TEFL section of a national newspaper I have also seen people start a forum thread with an article of theirs, although it seems like a bit of a waste given the amount of effort that goes into writing an article (unlike the effort that usually goes into what is generally written there). This does at least guarantee a fairly large readership, including people who might not generally read such a thing, but you have to be prepared for some very direct instant feedback! If its an article about TEFL for a non-TEFL audience, e.g. one telling people what they should do if they want to get into English teaching, there are also other possibilities such as travel sites and local newspapers.

Getting published in TEFL Why, what, where, and how


As its title suggests, this article is structured as a set of questions about getting published in TEFL with some of the many possible answers. The first of those questions is probably Why bother?, and some of the reasons are: - It helps you learn about the language and the writing process - It more generally improves your teaching, e.g. by helping you brainstorm ideas for your classes - It improves your CV/ helps you get better jobs - It impresses students - Its motivating - It helps put you in touch with like-minded people and useful people for your future career - It helps you organise and remember your own ideas - You can use it to publicise things such as your school or upcoming workshop - It helps (at least some of) the people who read it - It can help change things in ELT - It can provide a supplementary income (in a way that is a nice change from just doing more teaching) or even an alternative career path Perhaps even more important than all of those is the fact that there is no reason why not to get published in some way, because it is an incredibly easy thing to do. If you have doubts about that statement, it might depend on your definition of getting published in TEFL. Im taking the most general possible definition: Writing or recording something for language teachers or learners which is read, listened to or watched by more than one person who you dont know. Its quite difficult to divide genre and place when looking at examples of what you can publish (Is a blog post a genre?), but we can avoid that for a bit by first looking at functions: - Advice/ Tips/ Teaching ideas, e.g. on how to teach, where to teach, getting a job, taking qualifications, language learning, using technology, time management (on blogs, travel forums, TEFL forums, expat forums, EtP teaching tips page, Daves ESL Caf teaching tips page) - Humour (on blogs, occasionally some paper publications such as The Teacher Trainer, forums, Twitter, some sites)

- Manifestos (on blogs, some magazines and journals) - Musings (on blogs, Facebook, Twitter) - Self-reflection/ Getting something off your chest, e.g. reflecting on some feedback you received, looking back on something you used to do, discussing something you were told to do on a teacher training course (on your blog, other peoples blogs, forums if you also include questions) - Questions/ Calls for advice (on forums, your own blog, Twitter, LinkedIn groups) - Trendspotting/ Predictions (on forums, as an article) - Personal experiences/ Anecdotes, e.g. of working in a particular country, experiencing cultural differences, your own language learning (on forums, sometimes Onestopenglish and Guardian Weekly, blogs) - Polemics (on blogs, some magazines and journals) - Rants (on blogs, some forums, possibly some sites) - Exposs/ Blacklisting, e.g. lists of lies from a TEFL course providers website or a review of a school you worked for (on blogs, wikis, some forums) - Critiques/ Attacks on ideas or practices - Metaphors - Tributes/ Lavish praise/ Gushing - Devils advocate arguments - Setting up dilemmas/ unanswerable questions - Classifications, e.g. of students, kinds of exercises, textbooks - History - Comparisons - Pros and cons - Theory - Language analysis

Things which could be considered genres of TEFL writing include: - Books, including e-books (with big publishers, smaller international publishers, local publishers, local parts of big publishers, on sites that distribute self-published books and e-books) - Articles/ Essays/ Academic papers (in magazines and journals including of local and international teaching associations, on websites, on blogs) - Blog posts (on your own blog or as guest piece on other peoples) - Brainstorms/ Mind maps (on blogs, mind map sites) - Dialogues/ Debates (on blogs or polished up to be articles) - Discussion questions (as a worksheet on worksheet sharing sites, on your own site or blog, as a Wiki) - Graded reading materials - Interviews, with you or with someone else (on blogs, maybe other sites if you submit it as an article) - Lesson plans/ Worksheets/ Photocopiables (with Onestopenglish Lesson Share, Cambridge ESOL site, PearsonELT teacher materials, ESLprintables.com and similar TEFL materials sharing sites, general education sites, blogs) - News/ Topical pieces (in EL Gazette, blogs, some forums) - Newsletters (through LinkedIn or Facebook, to subscribers to your blog) - Presentation slides (on slide sharing sites, blog) - Questions and comments during a live webcast (on publishers sites, IATEFL conference sites) - Research results/ Statistics - Responses to other people's writing (letters in magazines, blog comments, tweets, Facebook comments, forums) - Reviews, e.g. of books, websites, apps, CD ROMs, teacher training, conferences (in magazines and journals, on websites such as TEFL.net and TESL-EJ, on blogs, on Amazon, Twitter, on TEFL course review sites) - Running commentary, e.g. of conferences (on Twitter)

- Selections from things by other people, e.g. quotes, links, lists of books (on Twitter, Facebook, your own blog, link sharing sites, Amazon) - Surveys for people reading to answer or sharing results - Rankings/ Lists - Games/ Activities - Online exercises/ Online activities Most of the above can also be done as videos or podcasts, or as software such as smartphone or tablet apps. Where? As mentioned above, many of the genres mentioned are also place-specific, e.g. Facebook posts and tweets. Other answers to Where? include: - Publishers and their websites Macmillan (including Onestopenglish and Macmillan Language House), CUP, OUP, Pearson, McGraw-Hill, National Geographic Learning/ Cengage, Collins ELT, Scholastic ELT, Wiley English as a Second Language, Kaplan Publishing, Its Magazines, Pavilion Publishing, Richmond, Express Publishing, Helbling Languages, Garnet Education, theround (e-books only), ABAX, Delta Publishing, Multilingual Matters, TESOL Bookstore, Michigan English Language Teaching, Routledge English Language Learning, Taylor and Francis ESL and Applied Linguistics, Barrons, Apricot, Compass Publishing, RIC Publications - Exam boards and their websites Cambridge ESOL teacher resources - Peer reviewed ELT and Applied Linguistics journals (paper-based, online, or both) - ELT Journal, TESOL Quarterly, TESOL Journal, TESL-EJ, The Reading Matrix, English Today, Language Learning and Technology, Language Testing, Applied Linguistics, Asian EFL Journal - TEFL magazines - English Teaching Professional, Modern English Teacher, Its for Teachers, Business Spotlight, The Teacher Trainer, IATEFL Issues, IATEFL SIG newsletters, magazines of local teaching associations - Online TEFL magazines (meaning sites which have a monthly format) Humanising Language Teaching - (Independent) ELT websites ones which ask for articles (TEFL.net, Englishclub.com, ESL Lounge, ESL Article.com, ESL Galaxy), ones which ask for worksheets, any others which give contact details - Trade papers EL Gazette

- More general language learning and teaching magazines and websites - Forums TEFL forums (ESLteachersboard, Usingenglish.com, TEFL.net Daves ESL Caf,), local TEFL forums (Ajarnforum), expat forums (Gaijinpot, Ajarn forum), travel forums (Lonely Planet thorntree) - Link sharing sites - Newspapers and their websites - Guardian Weekly, Independent, Telegraph, your local newspaper back home - Other peoples blogs too many to mention, but see Onestopblogs, TEFL.net blogregator, random TEFL blog generator for examples - Your own blog on TEFL sites (TeachingEnglish) or general platforms (Wordpress, Blogger) - Sites that distribute books and e-books theround - Sites that distribute podcasts - iTunes - Sites that sell apps - Sites which sell TEFL materials and allow comments/ reviews Amazon - Social networking sites Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter - Wiki pages (your own or existing ones Wikipedia, TEFL Wiki, Lets Japan wiki) - Your own website Wordpress.org, Moodle - School magazines/ newsletters IH Journal or that of your own school - School websites/ blogs - Other peoples email newsletters - TEFL course review sites - Travel websites/ blogs - General education sites - (TEFL or general education) worksheet sharing sites - (General) article sharing websites

- Slide sharing sites - Video sharing sites YouTube, Daily Motion The next question is which of all the above is best, and this brings us back to what your motivation is. Which For your teaching career, e.g. to help get a university job For university jobs, getting something published in peer review journals is the holy grail, and it is best to concentrate on this and get started as soon as possible, because it can easily take well over a year from sending something to getting it published even when that is possible. What is even more common is having things sent to peer-reviewed journals rejected or even ignored, so it is also worth working on other things that you can put into the Publications section of your CV while you are waiting for feedback from sending research etc to journals. One approach is to try and get other things in peer-reviewed journals, the two most obvious being letters in response to other peoples articles (when the journal has a Letters to the Editor section or similar) and book reviews, the latter being surprisingly easy to get published and meaning you can still put ELTJ, TESL-EJ etc on your CV. Ive also seen journals such as TESLEJ calling for people to peer review other peoples articles, which must be a good way of getting an idea of what they are looking for and just maybe meaning your own piece can jump the queue. The other approach is to work your way down the list of things which rank below the most desirable peer reviewed journals. Those would probably be, in approximate order: - Well-known TEFL magazines like English Teaching Professional, Modern English Teacher and EL Gazette - Websites of big publishers and exam boards like Macmillan, Cambridge and Pearson (even when it is in a section of the website that is quite easy to write for like Onestopenglish Lesson Share) - Other well-known websites like Humanising Language Teaching - Sites and newsletters of other large organisations, e.g. the British Councils TeachingEnglish or the International House magazine - Newspapers If you could publish some kind of book (even self-published), that would also of course impress. For people who want to eventually publish a book

Although it very rarely leads to anyone commissioning the book, it is still worth working up a formal book proposal with two sample units, a description of the rest of the book etc, as it could be that which puts you in the frame for something similar that they are already planning. Two more general tips are to get noticed by the publishers and to get stuff on your CV that will impress them whenever they take a look at it. More specifically, I would recommend you to specialise, get involved in pre-publication reviewing, publish reviews of ELT materials (perhaps sending copies to the publishers), chat to publishers at conferences, and give workshops at such conferences. To impress students The top thing has to be a book, for which see above. It can also impress them to see a copyright message at the bottom of your worksheet along with your own name. For motivation/ inspiration Reviews is also good for this one, especially if you get a good book but even if the book is nothing special, because critiquing something can help lead to your own ideas or even just make you feel better about your teaching. For the money For the vast majority of people, publishing is unlikely to ever pay more per hour than just doing overtime or concentrating on getting a better job would lead to. This includes: - Articles and reviews in journals and magazines - Online content for publishers and other sites - Writing work for books that is paid as a lump sum rather than as a percentage of sales - Putting videos on YouTube with ads - Publishing your own material online with ads (organised yourself or through Google Ads) - Publishing your own stuff online and charging a subscription - Publishing your own stuff online and having a donate button - Publishing your own stuff online and having a freemium model or selling something else through the site Although these are by no means guaranteed either, the only two chances of hitting it big are probably through a royalty-based writing job and self-publishing books, both of which nowadays mean having to do a lot of the publicity tips below. It may also be possible to approach a

teaching rate with the things mentioned above, and publishing provides both a nice change and all the benefits mentioned at the beginning of this article, so Ive never regretted my own efforts even when it has meant a slight financial hit to make time to write. For the publicity This is difficult to tell, because who knows how many people actually type in the names or urls given at the end of articles or reviews in paper-based magazines and journals or click on links in emails? Online it is also difficult to choose the most effective way of getting publicity, but these have all lead to a reasonable number of clicks for me: - Forum posts in which you have given a link to something you wrote (an on-topic one, obviously), in which signatures with a link are allowed, or very occasionally from sites in which you are only allowed to give a link on your profile page - Blog comments in which you have given a link to something youve written, or in which clicking on your name links to your blog or site (the latter is almost universal but much more rarely leads to clicks) - Online articles and reviews where you are allowed to give a link to your blog or site at the bottom - Giving links in Yahoo groups and LinkedIn groups, or generally just taking part and so getting your name known - Submitting a link to your blog to Onestopblogs, expat blog lists, etc - Giving links to suitable materials on your site for your students, e.g. to students who missed the lesson - Other people mentioning things you have published for them , e.g. guest pieces on your blog, on their blogs, or on social media such as Twitter - Guest pieces on other peoples blogs Things which I have no experience of but would also help: - Leaving Facebook comments - Twitter, including taking part in ELT Chat - Submitting blog posts to an ELT blog carnival - Submitting your own blog to a list of education blogs of the year and then trying to drum up votes

- Sending your ideas to someone famous, e.g. Krashen, who might champion them or at least give you a quote - Offering your book, subscription website etc for review To change the (TEFL) world The self-publicity tips above are probably the most important thing when it comes to having a real impact, but it is also worth bearing in mind that online articles are rarely referenced in paperbased publications. To help you learn about the language and the writing process The most important thing is to be edited, which rarely happens online. To improve your teaching Perhaps my greatest tip on this is to write about something related to your present classes. For example, I often write articles about how to teach the next point in the book as a way of brainstorming and motivating myself to find new ideas for that point. You can also choose books to review in the same way. It is also a good tip to also write about things you are weak on, if only as a blog post and/ or after lots of research. For people who need deadlines, someone nagging them etc to get something finished I can say from experience of being on both sides of the interaction that the best for this is almost certainly reviews, as once you have the book there is something concrete for the editor to nag you about, as well as something on your desk looking up at your disapprovingly. To put you in touch with useful and like-minded people Try LinkedIn groups, blogging (often commenting on and linking to other peoples blogs) and Twitter (especially ELT Chat) and almost certainly not forums. For people just getting started As it has lead to over 400 other published pieces of various kinds, I think that it is fair to start with my own experience of this. The main ways I got started are: - Writing teaching tips for EtP - Writing something responding to an article in IATEFL Issues and then sending it to them - Sending lesson plans, some with worksheets, to the Onestopenglish Lesson Share competition - Googling submit TEFL article and sending short articles to virtually all the sites that came up

- Signing up to review for MET and TESL-EJ - Starting with something that I had already written, e.g. polished up Cambridge Delta essays to Developingteachers.com, expanding forum posts to make blog posts, publishing a polished up job application essay on a TEFL site, turning teacher training workshop notes into articles - Writing more essay-like forum posts, e.g. a guide to teaching in Spain Similarly easy would be: - Starting your own blog on a free platform like Wordpress or Blogger - Reading and commenting on other TEFL blogs, perhaps by starting subscriptions to some RSS feeds or regularly looking at a TEFL blog aggregator - Subscribing to other peoples Twitter feeds and replying whenever you feel ready - Joining TEFL groups on Facebook or LinkedIn and commenting After a couple of years of that, I also sent my CV and book proposals round the publishers with an offer to do anything they might have for me. How This has been dealt with a bit above and I will also be writing separate articles on how to go about writing reviews, articles, worksheets etc, as each one is quite different. These, however, are the general stages, in many possible orders: - Read a lot (especially where and what you are thinking about publishing) and maybe analyse what you read - Decide what to write - Get ideas/ Plan - Try out/ Discuss any new ideas you come up with or come across - Write - Edit - Get help - Decide where to publish - Contact the people who you want to publish with

- Publish The main differences in the order above are: - Contacting the people who you want to publish with first, e.g. contacting the editor of a TEFL magazine to ask what kinds of pieces are really needed - Deciding what to write by where you want to publish it It also changes somewhat if you start with something you have already written for another purpose, e.g. a workshop plan or guide for teachers in your school.

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