Please share the blog text or main topic.
Please share the blog text or main topic.
Please share the blog text or main topic.
Eliciting techniques pull language out of ESL students instead of feeding it to them. 12 classroom-tested moves with examples by CEFR level.
A working reference for ESL teachers: 50 essential phrasal verbs by topic, the structural rules students always miss, and methods that produce real fluency.
If you’ve ever asked a student “what’s your English level?” and received a vague answer like “intermediate,” you already know the challenge. Without a shared framework, “intermediate” can mean anything from navigating a menu to watching CNN without subtitles — making it hard to recognize and celebrate the real progress students have already made. That’s…
Quick Answer: The most effective way of teaching ESL writing is to treat writing as a process rather than a one-shot product. Give students a model text, let them plan and draft freely, then guide them through focused revision with feedback aimed at one or two patterns at a time. Frequent low-stakes writing beats occasional…
60 ESL writing prompts by CEFR level (A1–C2), with scaffolds, rubrics, and the four mistakes teachers make. Free templates for every classroom.
A teacher’s guide to using books and movies in mixed-ability ESL classes — with tiered tasks, scaffolded vocabulary, and a worked example you can reuse.
You've downloaded 15 free worksheets. Drop your email to keep going — it's free.