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Experience Level: Expert

If you are an expert teacher, you have more than ten years of teaching experience. You have taught a wide range of class types and language proficiency levels and in several different language programs and contexts. The videos in this category provide learning experiences about the more complex aspects of English language teaching that allow you to position yourself to train other teachers, develop curriculum and coordinate programs. Some of the videos in this category also take you much more deeply into the theory behind current language teaching practices.

Teaching Critical Thinking Skills

English for Academic Purposes (EAP) students have quite a challenge ahead of them. Not only do they need to learn the English language to quite a high level of proficiency, including complex vocabulary and complex grammar, they also need to learn different ways of thinking that will enable them to be successful in a higher education setting in an English-speaking context. In this session we will discuss the concept of critical thinking and its relationship to EAP student success, we will explore some of the cultural assumptions behind the concept, and finally, we will take a look at some possible approaches to teaching our students critical thinking.

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Teaching Critical Reading Skills

Higher level students, particularly those who are looking to move into higher education studies at an English-speaking university, need to learn to read critically. Reading critically means not just understanding the words in the text but also being able to ‘read between the lines’ for other layers of meaning presented by the author.

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Management Through Coaching

Managing is no longer about ordering our staff around or demanding that they do this or that. Managing is about helping our staff to do the best job possible. One of the most widely used definitions of management in this new approach to management is “the job of getting things done through others”. As managers, one of the skills we have to master, in order to get things done through others, is the skill of coaching. In this session, we will take a closer look at what coaching is, which skills you need to develop in order to coach successfully, and how you can gauge whether or not your coaching is effective.

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Language and Identity

Researchers have a keen interest in the relationship between language and identity. Current research shows that there is a strong connection between our language use and language choices and our identity. In this video, we’ll take a look at what has been established so far on the relationship between language and identity, as well as which questions still remain to be answered. We will start out by defining identity and looking at the different ways in which we can project our identities to the world. We will then explore the various types of identities as well as the concept of identity formation. We will wrap up the video by examining how language and identity intersect.

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Language Use and Technology

The topic of a lot of debate today is how language use is changing as a result of the different technologies that have been developed, and are being developed, for communication. In this session, we’re going to take a look at how the use of mobile technologies and social media is changing how we actually use language. We’ll also explore how technology is impacting communication across language barriers. This is a topic that we don’t have a lot of answers in, so we will, instead, focus on some of the questions that have come out of this fascinating area of debate.

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Language Use and Gender

An interesting area of language use is language use and gender. It generates a lot of captivating debate, is the source of a great deal of comedy and can even create some tension if you get too involved in the topic. As language teachers, it is a valuable area of language use for us to explore with our advanced level students so that they can refine both their understanding of the language and their use of the language.

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Language Use and Age

Researchers have found that humans use language differently as they move from one age group to the next throughout their life-spans. They have also found that the language used to talk about people and the language used to talk to people varies between the different age categories. In this video, we will first divide humans into four broad age categories with which to discuss the topic of language use and age. We will then take a look at some of the various words and terms used to describe people in the different age categories. Next, we will discuss how people in each of the four age categories use language themselves. Finally, we will examine some of the distinct features of the language used to speak to people in each of the age categories, as well as some of the assumptions behind this language use.

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Language and Multilingual Societies

Every society has a number of choices to make in terms of which language will be used in that society and when. When it comes to multilingual societies, decisions also need to be made concerning how many languages the society will support, how many languages members of the society are expected to learn, and so on. In this session, we’ll take a brief look at the layers of language use in multilingual and bilingual societies. We’ll then consider some of the language policy choices that governments must make. Finally, we’ll explore how individuals in a multilingual society use language.

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Language and Diversity

In this session, we will look at defining key terms when it comes to the connection between language use and ethnic diversity. We will discuss diversity, race, ethnicity, stereotyping, discrimination and racism and how they connect to individual choices when it comes to language use. Next, we will examine the intersection between ethnicity and language variation. Then, we will discuss the distinctions between regional language variation, socioeconomic language variation and ethnic language variation. Finally, we will look at some specific examples of language variations and why it can be difficult to categorize each of them.

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How to Use PowerPoint Effectively

In this session, we’re going to look at the use of PowerPoint as a teaching tool. PowerPoint is one of the most widely used – and misused – technologies in the language classroom. There is a common expression in circulation, ‘Death by PowerPoint’, and as the expression implies, PowerPoint often ‘kills’ the dynamics of the teaching and learning process. We’re going to take a look at some dos and don’ts when it comes to using PowerPoint in the language classroom so that you don’t subject your students to ‘Death by PowerPoint’.

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