Instructions
for an EFL teacher
1.
Teach real-life speaking patterns to students. Native speakers of English have
a natural flow, emphasizing certain words and running others together. Drill
these patterns in practice in the classroom.
2.
Require students to speak to native speakers. Bring guests into the classroom
who are native speakers in order to expose your students to real speech
patterns and speeds. English teachers often change their speaking patterns to
allow for better understanding; this helps students learn in the classroom, but
they need practice for real-world speaking scenarios.
3. Show
movies in the classroom. Movies build passive comprehension skills needed for
conversation. Define terms for students beforehand and give out comprehension
quizzes or worksheets to assess students' understanding of the videos.
4. Teach functional lessons in group scenarios. For
example, teach one topic, like restaurant language, and the many possible
dialogues and vocabulary that could occur in such a setting. Have student’s
role play with each other to practice. Throw in changes in the scenario to help
students adapt to different situations in real life.
5. Drill pronunciation and clarity in your class.
Consistently correct common pronunciation mistakes. Build better pronunciation
by using tongue twisters.
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