I hate lesson plans…… with a passion

I am going to start this post by making a sweeping statement which is kinda harsh, and will definitely make some of you, my lovely readers, roll your eyes.

I hate writing lesson plans

I hate writing lesson plans which are part of a formal observation and have to be timed, have to have tasks with minutes next to them (gotcha! So, my title was a bit misleading ….).

The problem with lesson plans that are part of a formal school or diploma observation is that you get sucked in cause of the ‘minutes’, and you may lose sight of what you really should be focusing on. As far as I am concerned, lessons that had to be based on specific timing as part of the lesson plan made me feel like I am suffocating.

Maybe the timing bit is what I hate the most. Trying to figure out how many minutes you will spend on a grammar task, a reading, a group activity. So, you write up your ‘official’ lesson plan, you go into class and then you are stuck. You do not or maybe even cannot stray from what you planned in a hypothetical lesson plan.

Scenario one

You decide to do a reading task. It’s a dense semi-long reading passage and you plan ten mins for reading and four for exercises. You go into class and then you give the instructions and the students start reading.Ten minutes are up. You say, ” Has everyone finished reading? Do you need more time?” and then… some students dare to say, ” Yes, we need more time…..” .

OMG. There goes my planning… down the drain. I am behind in my minutes, and now I am gonna have to go rush rush through other stuff, or even skip other stuff which leads to more minute missing, more bad planning, more feeling like the person observing you will give you a bad grade! I have realised that when I am observed, I am ashamed to admit this, but I do lose sight of what my learners need and start dreading the tick tock of the clock.I think, ”I gotta stick to my timing. I should’ve put this setback in my anticipated problems, but I didn’t. Oh my, I am a bad teacher, I am not doing what’s on my lesson plan” (Joanna says sarcastically).

Scenario 2

You have a listening task. You decide to play the recording twice, but when the recording is over, your learners say, ” We didn’t find anything. It was too hard. We need to listen to it again”. You start sweating. You play the recording again cause that’s what the learners need and then… tick tock, tick tock.

How I normally plan lessons- my happy place

This is probably blasphemy, and the ELT Gods will probably ostracise me, but, when I am not observed and I do not have to make a detailed plan, I look at my material, start ticking what I will do, make notes, sometimes on post-it notes, I write down the minutes but very loosely, and then I walk into class. If something interesting comes up, I change my plan and go with the flow (ooooohh). If students are having difficulties, I start trying to figure out ways to explain things, and again stray from the plan. I think my lessons are good, my learners learn (most of the times) and everyone is happy. When I get observed, I may stick to my minutes, but I can’t say I am the happiest teacher on the block. My observed lessons are not my best ones, even when the feedback is really good (yes, sometimes it is…).

Beach in Chania

So, that’s why I hate lesson plans… with a passion. I dislike minutes. I wish lesson plans did not have the timing box, and we could just go with the flow or maybe I am just a bad planner….Oh! By the way, I know observations are aimed to help us, and give us suggestions on how to improve. I do really learn a lot from them. The latter does not mean though that I don’t feel trapped in my little boxes (the tables where you write your lp).

What do you guys think?

Talk soon

Jo

#Monthly Favourites July 2015

So guys, it’s that time of the month again. Time for #monthlyfavourites for July 2015. I will be talking about all the things I loved in July. You will find blog posts, websites, and lots of other random stuff in this post. So, let’s begin.

Blog posts

Hemingway or Woolf? Hana Ticha talks about this programme/app that allows you to check your writing and improve it. Really cool post. Do check it out! Post here

CPD for August and September. Read this post by Adi Rajan to see what you can do to learn more during the months August and September

How being a teacher has affected parenting. A great post by Rachael about how being a teacher influences the way she behaves as a parent.

About Games/gaming. Rose Bard shares her experiences with using games in class. The post can be found here.

Going beyond ELT in a blog post. I really enjoy reading posts by teachers, especially when they talk about where they are from or live. I read two excellent posts in July. One was by Sandy Millin and it was about Crimea and the other one was by Anna Zernova and she talks about St. Pete and what she likes doing there.

 Jamie Oliver TED talk + lesson ideas

I use the Jamie Oliver TED talk with my adult students (both BE and EAP) and they love it. You can find below the TED talk and a link to a website that has a PDF with lesson ideas and the transcript of the talk.

Software

If you like Post-it notes, then you might like Windows Sticky Notes. They are like little Post-it notes you stick to your screen. Just type Sticky Notes in the Search Programs and Files in the start menu tab  of your pc and you have it!! So easy to use!!!

sticky notes

See the sticky note on my screen?

BBC program

The desert island discs. My friend Deirdre recommended this website/program. This is a show that features people who are popular/famous in their field. They talk about their life and choose songs that have some sort of sentimental value for them. I heard Jo Malone’s interview and I loved it. I think this can be used with learners as well (dunno how yet, but will be back with an idea for this).

 For the ladies

Girls!! I found the perfect foundation. The one that never budges. It just stays put all day long  :). Estee Lauder double wear. Check it out!!

2015-08-02 11.26.39

On a more personal level……….

I am in the UK!! I ❤ it here. Of course, I am freezing, cause it is coooooold, but I am having loads of fun. I went to London and spent a weekend there. I had a very informative induction week at Sheffield university and learnt a lot about EAP (if you don’t know already, I am teaching academic English at Sheffield at the moment). I went to my first time ever stand up comedy and I had a blast! Icing on the cake? My classroom! It is in a beautiful building!!

Sheffield University ( Department of Music)

Sheffield University ( Department of Music)

Final thoughts

This post takes a lot of time because I need to add links and stuff. Let me know if you enjoy these #monthly favourites posts. Feel free to share them and add your own favourites in the comments section below.

daisy

Till next time…..

Paper clips, potatoes and peer observation in the EAP class

I am currently in Sheffield where I will be teaching EAP for the next six weeks. Last week was induction week and I learnt a few interesting things that I would like to share with you. Today I will be focusing on Academic Speaking and seminar skills in particular. But, before I go on, what are seminar skills in EAP?

I am not going to give you a definition, just my experience. Students gather in groups and talk about ‘academic’ issues that interest them. They may need to meet up to discuss articles they read or topics they are interested in, talk about the progress of a project or presentation etc. Seminar skills sessions train learners to develop skills that will help them take part in these academic group discussions. These skills may have to do with turn taking, interrupting, asking questions, expressing an opinion, disagreeing and so on. Seminar skills classes during pre sessional courses give the students the opportunity to participate in these discussions in a ‘realistic manner’. To make it simple, seminar skills are like group discussions.

During induction week, I was in a group that was talking about how teachers can help learners during seminar skills and some ideas were shared. Focus was on how to get all the students to talk and not just one dominating the discussion. So, how can you get students involved?

Getting rid of the paper clips

This is something I have tried many times. The teacher gives each student the same number of paper clips and asks the students to place the paper clips in the middle of the desk when they make a contribution to the discssion. A contribution has to be an argument or a full sentence. Saying , ”OK” or ”You have a point” for example,  does not count. In fact, if a student just says, ”hmmhmm ” all the time s/he should be given more paperclips!

My experience: My students really enjoy this and they actually laugh a lot while handing in their paper clips. It is like a mini competition which gets all the learners involved. You can also try this with formulaic expressions you want your learners to use during the ‘seminar’. Of course, the problem with handing strips of paper with expressions and asking students to use them is that this does not necessarily mean that your students understand them or are using them correctly. That’s why I prefer paper clips and not strips of paper with set phrases on them.

The hot potato

Similarly, students take turns expressing their views on a particular topic and then throw a ball (hot potato) to a student who is ‘forced’ to say something. Once each student has said something (substantial) they sit down. Students who are still standing must make a contribution to the discussion.

Peer observations

Group your students in four and then four students stand over them (so eight students in each group. Four sitting/four standing). Give the students that are standing rubrics/assessment criteria or some sort of purpose. The group that is sitting takes part in the conversation. The group that is standing observes/marks, or takes notes of their classmate (each student is observed by one classmate). At the end of the conversation, the ‘observers’ give feedback to their classmates and tell them how they did. What they did well, what they need to work on. Then, the groups change roles.

Students enjoy this cause they get feedback from their classmates. They also become more aware of what makes good seminar skills (especially if they are given criteria/rubrics). Finally, they feel that they need to contribute more as someone is monitoring them.

Of course these activities/tasks can be used when holding a general discussion in any other ELT class.

I hope you liked this post. Feel free to share or add your own ideas in the comments section below.

Till next time….

Sheffield University ( Department of Music)

Sheffield University ( Department of Music)

London calling…………

I don’t know how many times I have said this here (online I mean) but London is my favourite city in the world (so far, out of the ones I have seen). I ❤ London! I wish I lived there, but I don’t. If I did, I’d probably be broke cause London is expensive. So, in today’s post I am going to share with you a few of the things I did while I was there and may give you some ideas for your next trip to London.

Booking a hotel and pick-up service from Heathrow airport

I was going to stay for two nights in London with my friend Deirdre. We decided that staying in the center was a good idea, so we booked the Holiday Inn in Oxford Circus. This is right behind Debenhams (on Oxford street). Deirdre became a Holiday Inn member which meant we got a reduced price for the two nights. We also got  breakfast (big and yummy may I add).

Because I was travelling with heavy luggage and cause I was a bit intimidated by the whole Heathrow to Oxford Circus transport plan, I thought I should ask if there was a concierge service. There was, and I paid 55 pounds for someone from the Holiday Inn to pick me up and take me to the hotel. That was excellent!!

Day One (or should I say afternoon?)

I met up with Deirdre at the hotel, we rested a bit and then we went on a hunt to find Santander! That was such an adventure. It was very difficult to find the bank and when we eventually did, I found out that Santander does not accept euros. That’s when hunt number 2 started. We found a currency exchange shop. I got pounds and then went and deposited everything. You see, with the capital controls in Greece (that’s where I am from) it was difficult to get pounds and the 60 euros limit applies for people who are abroad as well (this is why I was travelling with euros). That’s why the bank was one of my priorities. After spending about 3 hours on the ‘money mission’, it was time to move on to the Vodafone mission and getting a UK sim card(to be honest, the Vodafone mission often interrupted the ‘money mission’ cause we were going in and out of Vodafone sores all down Oxford street).

Why Vodafone?

I make a lot of international calls and Vodafone has a program that allows you to have 240 free minutes to international numbers if you buy a 30 pound card. I don’t know the name of this special package, but if you are interested, ask at Vodafone. So, you get to use the 30 pounds+240 mins freebies.

I won’t get into more details about day 1. I’ll just say there was a bit of dinner and lots of girl talk.

Day 2

We went makeup shopping  :D.   Where? Boots, Superdrug and Selfridges. Selfridges is a very luxurious store. I love it but there is no way, I, as a teacher can afford anything or that much in there (OK a bit of an exaggeration, but it does have lots of designer brands).

Selfri

We then met up with another friend, had a nice drink at a pub, and went to Soho. We ended up in China town and had a lovely meal.  We walked around a bit and then the night came to end.

Off to Sheffield

Sunday morning I got the train from Kings Cross to Sheffield. My eyesight is not that grand and I was scared I wouldn’t be able to find the platforms, see the screens and all the jazz. That’s why when I arrived at the station, I immediately asked for help, and of course I was told where to go and what to do. All was good. The train trip was fine and now I am in Sheffield.

So, yeah that’s my update. I ❤ London and now I am looking forward to my pre-sessional EAP course at Sheffield Uni.

I already have a few EAP-related blog posts in my head cause we are having our induction at the moment (yeap, don’t worry, my posts are gonna go back to ELT-related topics).

Talk soon

xx

Joanna’s update: Off to the UK

Hello, hello, hello.
Yeap, yeap it’s THAT time of year. Pre- sessional EAP course time. This is my fifth year. For the past 5 summers I have been spending my summers in the UK and I ❤  it. I leave sunny old Greece, the beach, the endless coffee drinking, going out with my friends, eating at 11 p.m and I go to the UK where I work… a lot, but guess what people…. I enjoy it.

There are many reasons I like going to England for the summer. Firstly, I cannot take the Greek heat and all the beaching. Com’on man, how many hours of sitting on a sun bed can a workaholic teacher like me take? Then, there is the nice freezing cold summer-y English weather which I so enjoy!!

chairs

Teaching EAP during the summer is a nice change. I usually teach exam classes or Business English when I am at home. In the UK I extend my knowledge into other fields. I teach academic writing, seminar skills, presentations skills and so much more! I learn about robotics or international banking (I get a peak into what my students will be studying for their Master’s degree). I also get to interact with students from different countries. Most of my learners are Asian. I like seeing how they react to my teaching practice. Their educational background is much different to my educational background. This is so stimulating. It challenges you as a teacher and a person.

Careerwise it’s a great thing to have on your CV. I have been lucky enough to have taught at 3 excellent universities. I have actually experienced 3 different EAP courses (Newcastle University/University of Bristol /Sheffield University) and this has actually helped me improve my teaching. My experience from one course taps into what I am doing when teaching at another university. Plus, without wanting to sound pompous or snobby, teaching at a university is cool. Just think of the classrooms you get to teach in, the resources……..

It’s a working holiday. My weekends are mostly free so I get to travel. I go to London which is my favourite super, duper city. I also get to try new things, go for Friday night drinks after work (I never do that here) and I get to shop till I drop, cause for a materialist gal like me, the UK is me shopping paradise  😀

The funniest part of the whole experience is when you first meet someone, a colleague I mean, and you start the getting to know you questions. One of them is, ” Have you taught English abroad?” My answer….” Yeap!! My teaching abroad is teaching English in the UK ”   😀

So, I am off to the UK. Anyone fancy a meet up? I will be in Sheffield from July 20th till beginning of September…..

0d84d-1009433_10151779870592425_463889720_o

Talk soon

xxx

Academic Writing: Let’s talk about plagiarism

Today I am sharing with you an article I wrote for ELTA’s newsletter. This article is about academic writing and plagiarism. I discuss why students plagiarise and offer some suggestions on how to help students avoid it. So, let’s talk about plagiarism!!

Plagiarism is an academic offence that has existed for many years in academia, especially in academic writing. This article will provide a definition of what plagiarism is, why it occurs, as well as ideas for tasks a teacher can use in order to help learners avoid plagiarizing in academic writing.

Intoroduction

One of the biggest challenges for universities is students’ plagiarism. Plagiarism is presenting someone else’s work as your own without giving credit to the source (www.plagiarism.org). Plagiarism does not only refer to copying words, it can also be pictures, graphs or even music. Studies have shown that in the UK, undergraduate students have admitted to having copied a whole paragraph into their own work without acknowledging the source, and 26% have said that they have done so more than once or twice (Bennett, 2005, cited in Elander et al., 2010:157). Another study showed that 57% students did paraphrase, but did not reference, and 53% copied without referencing (Franklyn-Stokes and Newstead,1995 cited in Elander et al.,  2010: 157). As plagiarism is something that occurs quite often during students’ university studies, it is essential to identify why students plagiarise and determine what a teacher can do to help students avoid plagiarism.

Identifying why students plagiarise

Plagiarism can be intentional and unintentional. Intentional plagiarism is of course copying knowingly without referencing, unintentional plagiarism can occur if for example, there is a typographical mistake in the author’s name or date/page number of a publication. As plagiarism does occur, understanding and knowing why it happens is very important. Students may plagiarise because first of all, they may not be aware that they need to acknowledge all their sources when writing (Bloor and Bloor 1991, cited in Jordan, 2012: 48). In addition, students possibly do not actually realize what plagiarism is, and because the pressure to succeed is so great and students view plagiarism as the only way to achieve their goals (www.escalate.ac.uk). Learners may also plagiarise because they do not manage their time well, the workload is too heavy and it is easier to copy a text (www.nottingham.ac.uk). They might also feel scared that they will ‘insult’ experts. In fact, some international students often believe that they show respect by copying the exact words (Jordan 2012: 100). Finally, another reason why students plagiarise is because they might want to challenge their teacher (www.nottingham.ac.uk).

Addressing the problem of plagiarism

In order to eliminate plagiarism a teacher needs to take a few steps/measures. A teacher, first of all, needs to inform the learners. Students need to be clear about what plagiarism is and when it occurs. They also need to know how much (if any) tolerance towards plagiarism there is (especially when it is not deliberate). Students can also be asked to sign forms that state that the information in their assignments is their own (www.csu.edu.au).

As far as tasks are concerned, students often plagiarise because some tasks teachers use, have been used throughout the years, without any changes to them. In order to minimize the chances of plagiarism, it is essential that tasks are varied, especially for students who are from the same cohort (www.csu.edu.au). Allowing students to learn from looking at their own examples of plagiarsed texts is a great learning experience as well. It will in fact give students a better picture of what plagiarism looks like in their own texts.

Getting proof of how the learners find the information is also important. This can be done during one to one tutorials where a learner walks the teacher through where s/he found the information in his/her paper. The teacher can also ask students to highlight sections from the original sources they have and their version of what these sources say.

Another step a teacher must take in order to eliminate plagiarism is to look for it in texts and make students aware that looking for plagiarism is one of the assessment criteria for example, and that if detected it will affect grading (www.csu.edu.au). If plagiarism is detected, then measures need to be taken.

Ideas for tasks to help learners avoid plagiarism.

Learners require a lot of training in order to be able to avoid plagiarism. This is why it is imperative that learners are first of all, informed about what plagiarism is. This can be done by getting students involved in research about plagiarism, getting them to do projects, drilling terms related to plagiarism with the help of a terminology checker or even through simple reading comprehension tasks.  Showing students what plagiarism is can be very helpful too. This can be done by using videos. It is also a good idea to show students examples of what happened to people who plagiarised and to be clear about the referencing system they should use when writing.

 As far as actual writing is concerned, training learners on paraphrasing and summarizing skills will improve their writing skills and help them avoid plagiarising. Reformulation of texts can also give students a better understanding of how to move from copying and plagiarizing to recreating a plagiarism free text.

Finally, involving learners in activities that will require them using critical analysis and questioning their sources is another way to deter students from using texts as they are, and taking credit for them. The more the learners understand a source, the easier it will be for them to paraphrase it.

Conclusion

As plagiarism is not taken lightly by universities, understanding why it happens and taking measures to eliminate it is necessary. Teachers need to know why it happens and then train learners on how to avoid it. This can be done by informing them about plagiarism and also equipping them with micro skills and strategies that will make them writers who will produce plagiarism free texts.

You can find the ELTA newsletter here.

 I actually gave a whole presentation about this and you can watch my video here (excuse my nervousness).

References

Charles Sturt University (n.d). How to minimise plagiarism in your students’ work in five steps. (pdf) Available at: http://www.csu.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0011/235685/HOWTO_Plagiarism.pdf [Accessed online 09 July 2014]

Elander, J., Pittam, G., Lusher, J., Fox, P. &  Payne, N. (2010) Evaluation of an intervention to help students avoid unintentional plagiarism by improving their authorial identity. Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 35 (2). 157-171. Routlegde.

Jordan, R. R. (2012) English for Academic Purposes: A guide and resource book for teachers. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Plagiarism org.(2014) What is plagiarism? Available at: http://www.plagiarism.org/plagiarism-101/what-is-plagiarism/ [Accessed online at: 27 April 2015].

The Higher Education Academy (2006) How to identify when your students are using websites to plagiarise: the problem of ‘mouse-click’ plagiarism: 2.0 Why do students plagiarise. Available at: http://escalate.ac.uk/resources/webplagiarism/03.html [Accessed online at: 11 July 2014].

The University of Nottingham (2006) Academic integrity: Why do students plagiarise. Available at:http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/csc/academic-integrity/tutor/why-do-students-plagiarise.php [Accessed online: 10 July 2014].

Where does all the hate come from?

Burcu shared this video on Facebook. It’s a video of a YouTuber. I  ❤ watching beauty Youtubers.  If you have ever read my blog, you probably know that whilst I am a workaholic teacher, I do enjoy watching my beauty YouTubers talk about lifestyle, makeup, food etc. I even blog about it from time to time cause I am a wannabe fashionista. But this video was different.

The video, which is the focus of today’s post, is about looks and mean comments. It’s about (cyber-)bullying and loving yourself. I am going to focus on the bullying. By cyber-bullying I mean, hiding behind a fake (or real) internet name and being mean to someone you do not know. I really, really don’t get that. I mean, do people look themselves in the mirror before that start vomiting hate messages? Since when is cyber-bullying or any type of bullying kinda ….OK? It just seems to be going on and on. When does it stop? How does it stop? What are we, as teachers,  doing to stop people from being mean?

Back in the Flintstones’ days, when I was a kid, back in Sydney, I was called four eyes cause I wore/ wear glasses. That hurt. But it wasn’t plastered all over the internet. No Facebook, no YouTube, no ‘likes’.

Today, social media have taken bullying to a whole new level.

I don’t have children, I only have students, which I call my kids. They tell me stories about their ‘friends’ (online/offline-people they know and people they don’t know) and my kids make fun of them, they laugh. They say they post hurtful messages on social media cause, “Well, just for a laugh, Miss” They think it’s hilarious! I have actually told a couple of my kids off for being so hurtful on social media. I have actually called a parent out of concern.

Since when did hurting someone become funny? Seriously, where does all the hate come from? How can it end, and what can we as teachers do about it? Is the fact that our ‘kids’ are becoming so used to ‘impersonal’ communication why this is happening? Why are our kids becoming bullies? Why are we victims of cyber-bullying?  I don’t know. I have no answers. Just a bunch of questions.

My next question is, how do you cope and learn to love yourself when you are made to feel like you are a nobody and this becomes viral? How does the bully learn to become more sensitive?

Once again. No answers guys, just a concerned ramble…..

Take a minute and watch the video

This video is taken from the YouTube channel My Pale Skin

Till next time……

E-books: An Interview with Phil Wade

Hi Phil,

First of all, thank you for agreeing to this interview. As a teacher and a blogger, I am really interested in e-books, so I thought it was time to pick your brain a bit, and ask you a few questions about e-books. So, here are my questions.

What is an e-book (what are its properties) and how can it be read?

That is a good question. I think the simplest ebooks are PDFs. You can read them on any device. The most popular version is the ePub format that most online ebook distributors use. There are various other formats too but for me, I just think about the original Word Doc on my computer and then select ‘all formats’ when I upload them. Doing this helps anyone with any device read them from iPads to Kindles to phones to maybe even watches I guess.

Why e-books? I mean why did you decide to make an e-book as opposed to sharing everything on your personal blog for example?

Well, I went through an article writing phase where I felt that articles were a good way to share ideas and help people learn things. Then I went into blogging and learned about how I can interact with people quicker and become part of a blogging community. After that, I realized that I wanted to write longer blog posts but in the same kind of direct style. So, I started writing short ebooks as I loved the idea of having a collection on my iPad and reading short books on the bus, at break time or at home. I really liked having complete books i.e. introductions, main parts and samples. Each could deal with one subject and looked professional, I hoped.

What are the advantages of an e-book?

For me, I can read them on my phone. I use my phone all day for everything almost. Being able to open an ebook and read a page when I have some time between lessons or on my commute is very helpful. I can also quickly move through the book and change books.  Every week, I am able to select my weekly reading list and put them on my phone or iPad too. If I come across something new, I can download it on the bus and read it there and then. As I also teach with a phone and tablet, having books handy to open and use is very convenient and not as heavy as carrying around textbooks.

Are there any disadvantages?

I wouldn’t sit and read for hours on my phone, iPad or even computer. I prefer to read a short book or just a part in one go. Long ebooks can take time to download too. Some people use black and white or grey Kindles which I am not keen on. I much prefer a colour iPad Retina for reading.

Can teachers make an income from e-books?

Hmmmm. The golden question. I would say NO. I don’t know anyone who does but I guess some must do as there are lots of ebook writers. Probably novels make better money but only if the writers are known and they do marketing, lots of it. Most of the comments I have had from teachers/writers is related to this. Some are not happy about free ebooks or ebooks in general. Actually, I approached several publishers and none were interested. You can’t blame them though. I like writing and sharing them. If you think it is going to make you millions, you will be very surprised.

The majority of new ebook writers seem to be either bloggers eager to make a book or writers at publishers who want to make better money. I advise both to research costs and potential profits. The new VAT rule devastated the industry so you will make a lot less money now than before. When you end up with less than 50 or 40% of a book and then have to pay taxes in your own country, you do have to question if it’s worth the hassle.

I’d like you to now give us a step to step guide on how to go about making and uploading/sharing an e-book. Let’s call this the e-book starter kit.

Go the easy way and use an online platform. Write your book on it, select a cover and click ‘publish’. Done. I spent weeks of pulling out my hair doing formatting and I almost quit. I saw http://www.fastpencil.com/ the other day and it seemed good. I find writing on these platforms to be much easier than writing a Word Doc. Here is a much better explanation of the full process than I could give:

http://www.wikihow.com/Write-Your-First-eBook

 

Can you tell us a bit about your e-books? What do you write about? How do you get inspired? How has writing e-books affected/benefited you, your career?

I wrote 10 ebooks for Business English teachers. They are based on years of teaching and aimed at helping teachers become better at BE. My aim was to focus on developing teachers so they can help themselves rather than just be dependent on using books and worksheets all the time, even though they are good. I also crowdsourced a TEFL Teacher Tips ebook with some newish friends and co-wrote an IELTS Tips ebook.

The first 6 books were almost fully formed in my head as I had been thinking about them for years and I had already written articles on them so the books were a natural extension. The other 4 in the series I had to come up with from scratch as I decided to do a series. I had always been jealous of series and series editor and I thought “why can’t I have one?”. No publisher would ever let me write a BE book let alone a series. So the other books took some time to come up with. I just kept teaching and writing down possible topic ideas that colleagues would like.

The Teacher Tips one had ideas from all of us so I can’t take any credit for that one and the IELTS one I only helped with as my colleague, Jenny Bedwell, is an IELTS genius.

I have about 6 more ebooks in various stages on my computer. I am great with the ideas but writing 10+ pages is hard. I can easily write 5-10.

As the first 10 are free, I have made no money from them but I really enjoy seeing the downloads and hearing nice comments from people who find them useful. Most of these have been from poor areas where they can’t afford or even get traditional books. I also love writing and the whole process. I found a wonderful editor, Noreen Lam, who is very positive like me and really helps me come up with good ebooks. At the beginning, I was 100% against having an editor because some previous ones I had worked with had been a bit too tough, I needed more of a thinking partner than a member of the grammar police 😉 And someone who understood ebooks and edevices. They aren’t just books on phones.

I benefit from increasing my PLN too and I have been lucky enough to get to know other writers and people in the industry. We all support each other. As I see it, the main problem is always advertising. It is very very hard to promote indie ebooks as not every journal or TEFL association wants to review them. Perhaps though this is a good thing as it makes a very distinct line between traditional publishing and digital. This does mean that we need to develop the alternative publishing industry though which is why I created a marketing campaign for me and 3 other authors (Adam Simpson, Jorge Sette and Tyson Seburn) . I started with some images showing our ebooks and added the ‘by teachers for teachers’ and ‘for teachers by teachers’ slogans and #ELTebooks. As I see it, if each author advertises all the books, we each get more coverage and hopefully, the amount of writers will grow. This really is ELT writers making ebooks for other ELT teachers. Some critics have said the quality isn’t as good as real books and that we may be lowering coursebook writers incomes or pay etc but I don’t agree. From what I know, all publishers are having a tough time and really should be moving more into technology. These ebooks are a new niche as they are very specific, short and accessible. Published books tend to be longer, more formal and more general. They need mass markets and to be based on market research and forecasts. Our ebooks can be about anything and made much faster. This is a completely different market, as I see it.

Another point is that I actually haven’t worked anywhere in years that has used traditional coursebooks as nobody can afford them and they aren’t convenient. Every place I work uses digital materials and the odd handout. I even make ebooks for my courses now at the end to revise everything. I’m not bashing publishers or coursebook writers at all. I think they are great and I wish I could work on them but I’m not that good, famous or lucky. I believe in diversity and empowering teachers. I hope my books appeal to teachers and help them develop.

Oh, I entered the BE books for the David Riley award too and they were mentioned. That was incredible. My ELTons application wasn’t quite as succesful.

Where can someone find your e-books?

On Smashwords and iTunes. I don’t use Amazon which nobody seems to understand why. I don’t think you can give free books on there and I heard there is a set minimum price. I like the culture of Smashwords as it is for indie writers and iTunes is all about quality.

Business English Teacher Development series:

https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/philwade

https://itunes.apple.com/nz/artist/phil-wade/id215455871?mt=11

Top IELTS Speaking Tips:

https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/510591

https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/top-ielts-speaking-tips/id958690384?mt=11

TEFL Teacher Tips

Epub:

https://app.box.com/s/oslx186nukb070pu4rs8

PDF:

https://app.box.com/s/x4g8e7g8giup5a6w4xzf

Thank you so much for this interview!

My pleasure. It was very nice to be asked. I love your blog and your FB posts    🙂

Follow #ELTebooks on FB

ELTebooks blog

Bio

 

Phil has worked in ELT for 15 years. His current teaching interests are Business English, speaking skills and Blended Learning. He is a qualified Coach and Mentor and does ELT Marketing work.

phil

Vocabulary LSA: Helping elementary learners with restricted collocations

Today I am sharing my Vocabulary Lsa. I wrote about restricted collocations. I am sharing this so you can get some ideas. Do not copy from here because as we all know, Cambridge does not take plagiarism lightly.

1. Introduction

In my view, one of the hardest tasks for me as a teacher is to help students learn and then use new vocabulary. One part of vocabulary teaching which I find very interesting is restricted collocations. My students often have difficulty forming and using restricted collocations due to L1 interference, the lack of rules governing collocations, lack of familiarity as they may have never seen them before, miscollocating no matter what level their English is at (see section 2 for learner problems). Students need to be aware of collocations at an early stage so teaching collocations to elementary students is essential. At this level learners need to combine the vocabulary they have in new and useful ways so as to become effective communicators. I am writing this paper because I want to focus on teaching collocations and specifically make and do to elementary learners while dealing with the difficulties they may have by using tasks and activities that will make collocation learning more rewarding for my learners.

  1. Linguistic Analysis

1.1 What is a collocation?

Firth (1957 p.183, cited in Goudarzi and Moini 2012, p.248) was the first to talk about collocations and defined them as “the company that words keep”.

  According to the Longman dictionary of language teaching and applied linguistics (2010, p. 95)

  the way in which words are used together regularly. Collocation refers to the restrictions on how words can be used together, for example which prepositions are used with particular verbs, or which verbs and nouns are used together. For example, in English the verb perform is used with operation, but not with discussion:

                The doctor performed the operation.

                The committee performed a discussion. Instead we say:

                The committee held/had a discussion.Perform is used with (collocates with)   operation, and hold and have collocate with discussion  ibid.

  For Thornbury (2007, p.7) “two words are collocates if they occur together with more than chance frequency, such that, when we see one, we can make a fairly safe bet that the other is in the neighbourhood”. He moves on to say that the words forming a collocation do not necessarily follow one another. He zeros in on collocations by viewing them as part of a continuum of strength that goes from “compound words (second-hand, record player) through multi-word units or lexical chunks- bits and pieces, including idioms (out of the blue) and phrasal verbs of more or less fixed ness(set the record straight, set a new world record)”. Altering a collocation by changing one of its components can turn a text into non-standard English (ibid).

  Similarly, Benson et al offer a shorter-simpler definition (1986, cited in Hashemi et al 2011) “In English, as in other languages, there are many fixed, identifiable, non-idiomatic phrases and constructions. Such groups of words are called recurrent combinations, jixed combinations, or collocations”.

  There can be four categories of collocations (Cowie and Howarth’s model 1996, cited in Goudarzi and Moini 2012):

  1) Free combinations: the meaning of free combination is interpreted from the literal meaning of individual elements(open a window).2) Restricted collocations: a restricted collocation is more limited in the selection of compositional elements and usually has one component used in a specialized context (meet the demand).3) Figurative idioms: a figurative idiom has a metaphorical meaning as a whole that can somehow tell its literal interpretation (call the shot).4) Pure idioms: a pure idiom is a single unit whose meaning is totally unpredictable from the meaning of its components (spill the beans) ibid.

Benson et al (1986, cited in Hashemi et al 2012) classify collocations into two categories; lexical collocations and grammatical collocations.

  Lexical collocations are further divided into seven types, whereas grammatical collocations are divided into eight. Lexical collocations contain nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs. Lexical collocations may be verb+ noun, adjective+ noun, noun+ verb, adverb+ adjective and verb+ adverb. On the other hand, grammatical collocations are phrases containing a dominant word, such as a noun, an adjective, or a verb and a preposition or grammatical structure like an infinitive or clause (ibid).

  De-lexicalised verbs (get, have, make, do, put, take) are important when teaching collocation because they are often used with other words and form a chunk of meaning different to their basic meaning (Hunt n.d.).

 Form of collocations:

  • Adjective+noun: latest show
  • Noun+noun:reality show
  • Verb+adjective+noun: have a great time
  • Verb+adverb:discuss calmly
  • Adverb+adjective
  • Verb+preposition+noun:hand in an assignment

                                                                               Hunt n.d. (one stop English website)

1.2 How we learn collocations

  • Collocational priming:

  Hoey (1991,2005, cited in Sonbul and Schmitt 2003, p.127)  claims that people learn collocations through exposure to texts. People store concordances of lexical items and how they appear in a text, so every time they come across a word they may either create a new collocation or reinforce and change something they already know (ibid). According to Hoey (2005, cited in Sonbul and Schmitt 2003, p.127) collocational priming is related to the amount of input and there is slight difference between native and nonnative speakers. In fact, nonnative speakers acquire collocations through direct exposure because they are not surrounded by them in their everyday life.

  • Chunking

  According to Ellis (2001, cited in Durrant & Schmitt 2010) as far as the L1 in concerned,

  two or more words which frequently co-occur are recoded as a chunk and henceforth treated as a single entity. This process is recursive, with chunks themselves subsequently available for combination into still larger units, enabling language users to encode progressively greater amounts of information in short-term memory, so increasing the efficiency (ibid).

  Ellis (2001, cited in Durrant & Schmitt 2010) carefully points out though that collocations are not just formal associations and chunking is not just about implicit learning. He moves on to suggest that similar mechanisms are activated for the L2 learner too. Wray (2002, cited in Durrant & Schmitt 2010) on the other hand has an opposing view and states that adult L2 learners notice and recall words individually and not in chunks (ibid).

1.3 Why learn collocations?

They:

  • Increase learners language competence
  • Boost the learners’ communicative competence
  • Help learners become native like.
  •  Hashemi, M. et al (2012)

As Shin and Nation (2007, p. 339) put it, “learning collocations is an efficient way to improve the learner’s language fluency and native-like selection of language use.”

1.4 Phonology

There is no particular phonology for collocations but it is necessary for learners to be able to stress, chunk and link longer sentences so that they sound natural (Hunt n.d)

2. Learner Problems and suggested solutions   

Quantity/arbitrariness

There are so many possible collocations so choosing the right one may be challenging. This problem is more prominent with learners who are learning English in a non-English speaking country and there is not enough stimuli (exposure to English in natural speech). It is also possible that adult learners who already use collocations in their L1 may have difficulty with so many different collocations as they know that each collocation corresponds to different meanings

Suggested solutions

In this situation it is important to introduce techniques that will help the students organize/recall and revise the collocations they have encountered in the form it appeared.

A teacher could:

  •   Get learners to organize the new lexis in the way they appear in language by making a lexical notebook (Trownbridge 2012). Lexical notebooks are a good way to record words in chunks as opposed to isolated words. Ideally they would be organized in themes like house, work, health allowing learners to have all the useful collocations thematically linked.

Evaluation: Lexical notebooks help raise awareness (also see section 1.2) and they help learners notice how the language is used whilst others claim they can foster independence (Woolard 2000, cited in Trownbridge 2012). Unfortunately though, they may be time consuming, students may also be reluctant or neglect to go back to entries they have made in the past as many learners like recording in a linear fashion instead of going back (Trownbridge 2012) which may also lead to re-entering words. They also require good organizational skills so younger learners may have difficulty making such notebooks. It is also a dry method of recording chunks as in the end, they are lists of words written in a notebook.

A fun alteration to this would be making lexical cards which could also be used like domino cards where revising would also be part of a game.

  • To train learners on how to use collocation dictionaries, browse entries so as to remind themselves of known and more importantly half known collocations. They can also use the dictionary to find different ways to express something and use it in a more productive way later in an essay for example (Hoey cited in Lewis et al p. 99).

Evaluation: dictionaries promote autonomous learning and give the learner some independence to look at words they are interested in. Training learner to use dictionaries is essential because from my own experience learners are reluctant to look up a new word and prefer to just skip it without searching for something new.

L1 transfer

Frequently a student assumes that since in his L1 a verb and a noun go together in one way, they will do the same in English too or if words form a collocation in their L1 if they just translate it, it will work in the L2 too.  This is a major problem when thinking of restricted collocations as they have very limited combinations. Learners who live in a monolingual community and who are not used to being exposed to English stimuli may have more problems with L2 transfer. Beginners in English will probably struggle the most as they are more proficient in their mother tongue than in the L2 which means that they may miscollocate something that in Greek can be said in a certain way but in English cannot.

Suggested solutions

A teacher could:

  • Use the learners’ L1 if she has it in common with the students to raise awareness of the differences. Apart from writing lists with the L1 –L2 correspondent, using grids and ticking the right collocations is also an option

Evaluation: Such activities are consciousness raising and noticing activities (also see section 1,2). They are controlled tasks which aim getting familiar/recognizing these word chunks while they also help students appreciate the different structures. Such tasks can be used as lead in for productive activities. Instead of grids a teacher could stick some verbs like make or do on the wall, read out phrases and ask students to go to the side they think is right.

. Phonology

A lot of learners sound stilted as they read words individually and not as chunks which makes the sound unnatural. This could be a problem where there are heavy accents which also affect the way words are said. I have observed this in my own teaching context in Crete where the accent is distinct and affects the way all my learners say things. Students who are reluctant to speak or shy may also have difficulty with the phonological characteristics of collocations.

Suggested solutions

A teacher could:

  • Get students to practice stress and intonation by watching videos of authentic materials and using the transcripts to write down the rising and falling stress patterns during the collocations. They could then ask to mime or even make their own versions of what they watched.

Evaluation: video viewing is an enjoyable way to see how language is produced naturally so they can observe linkage of words that collocate, stress patterns and the rise and fall in intonation. Making learners replay something they have watched can be fun and will be appreciated by learners who are artistic but may be demotivating for those who are introvert or do not like performing in front of others which means that instead of classroom plays a teacher could turn this into a pair work task. Although this is quite a controlled activity it can be made freer depending on the level of the students. It is essential that the teacher makes sure that the learners are using the target language since in role playing sometimes the learners can get carried away and revert to their own language and forget the target language.

III. Meaning and noticing

Learners, especially lower level ones, tend to focus on individual words, the ones they do not know and not on collocations (Hunt, n.d.).

Suggested solution:

A teacher could:

  • Ask learner to read a text and then underline the nouns. Then tell them to underline the verbs before these nouns. After, students in groups try to guess the meaning of these word chunks. If a text has too many collocations, depending on the level and the reason for learning a teacher could select the ones she wants to focus on (Hill et al, cited in Lewis 2000 p.98).  This can be made more enjoyable if the texts are followed up by a game of collocation snap where learners place cards on the table and say ‘snap’ when a collocation is formed. The student who finds the most collocations is the winner.

Evaluation:  noticing activities zero in on one of the main problems elementary learners have which is concentrating on individual words and not on collocations. Such a noticing activity can be used as a lead in activity for a more engaging activity. Although, dry it does provide context and it does draw attention to meaning and noticing processes.

Games like snap on the other hand is usually a loud and fun way to notice collocations. Learners often remember what they have learnt during a game as it is associated with a happy memory.  They  draw back of games is sometimes they can be associated with luck and not actual knowledge of a collocation for example. Games are more appreciated by younger learners although card games are welcomed by adults too. The reason why someone is learning English may also affect the effectiveness of a game as an exam oriented class may be a bit reluctant to play a game! This is not a productive activity as it does not engage learners in producing a sentence and is a very controlled task.

Conclusion

“Without grammar very little can be conveyed, without vocabulary nothing can be conveyed” David Wilkins n. d., cited in Thornbury 2007, p.13).

References

 Durrant, P., & Schmitt, N. (2010). Adult learners’ retention of collocations from exposure.

Second Language Research, 26(2), 163-188.

Goudarzi, Z. & Moini, M. R. (2012).The Effect of Input Enhancement of Collocations in Reading on Collocation Learning and Retention of EFL Learners. International Education Studies Vol. 5, No. 3; June 2012. Available at: www.ccsenet.org/ies (pdf file)

Hashemi,M. Masoud, A.& Sohrab D. (2011) Collocation a neglected aspect in teaching and learning EFL Procedia – Social and Behavioral Sciences 31 (pdf file)

Hunt, R (n.d) Grammar and Vocabulary: Teaching students collocations. Available at: http://www.onestopenglish.com/support/methodology/grammar-vocabulary-and-skills/grammar-and-vocabulary-teaching-students-collocations/146468.article {Accessed online: 09.10.2013}

Lewis, M. (2000) Teaching Collocations: London. Language Teaching Publications

Shin, D. and Nation, P. (2008) ‘Beyond single words: the most frequent collocations in spoken English’. ELT Journal 62: 339-348.

Sonbul, S. & Schmitt, N. (2013) Explicit and implicit lexical Knowledge: Acquisitions of collocations under different input conditions. Language learning Volume 63 pp.121-159.

Richards, J & Schmidt, R. (2010)Longman Dictionary of Language Teaching and Applied Linguistics 4th edition:Malaysia. Pearson

Thornbury, S. (2007) How to teach vocabulary. Malaysia: Pearson, Longman.

Trowbridge,S.(2012)Lexical notebooks or vocabulary cards. Available at: https://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/article/lexical-notebooks-or-vocabulary-cards  {Accessed: 10.10.2012).

Good luck with your Delta!!!

I know I shouldn’t…. but I am.

I do not talk about politics. Eva. This is an ELT blog and I talk about teaching. I wanted to post my easy breezy #monthlyfavorites post today. Talk about what is good in the world of teaching and add my girlie stuff and live on my pink little cloud, but I cannot. I am sad and disappointed. I want someone to show that they care. Someone to take a stand and do something. This has nothing to do with a Yes or a No..My vote is for a solution.

I am Greek and I am a European. Don’t let me drown.

chairs