How To Teach English As A Foreign Language

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Delores Said:

Get certified to teach English as foreign language (TEFL)?

We Answered:

Many college courses will offer an ESOL certification through their Department of Education online. If you would like a reputable TEFL certification class, try going through TESOL: http://www.tesol.org/s_tesol/index.asp

I forgot to add that ESOL certification for non-degree purposes is normally three classes and very easily done in the time of one semester.

Clara Said:

what grades do you need to teach english as a foreign language?

We Answered:

Firstly you won't get a job in Germany. No language school or state school would employ you. Why? you have to have a degree as well as a T.E.F.L Certificate/Diploma. Two your not an EU citizen. There the German speak very good English. Remember they study languages at a very early age in schools there. Irish and British teach English all over Europe been EU citizens plus haven't to go through red tape to employ a non EU citizen. Plus an employer has to prove that he/she can't get someone to do the job meaning they have to advertise the job in all 28 EU countries before they would take someone from outside the EU. I'm Danish and speak and write good English. Just live right beside Germany. Look on the map and you see Denmark. Arhus is my home place. But if your from the UK make sure you have a degree plus postgraduate certificate in education PGCE to teach in Germany.

Lori Said:

How to teach English as a foreign language?

We Answered:

TPR stands for Total Physical Response, Total Physical Response. It’s a teaching method that works especially well with beginners. It’s a great, great method for teaching beginners. In fact, if I ever develop English lessons for beginners I will use TPR to teach beginning English because it is a very, very powerful method. In TPR students learn a language, not from translation, not by sitting passively in a chair, but through movement. They learn the basic core of the language with movement.

How does this work. Well, for example, pretend that I have a class and it’s a beginning class. Zero English, right? Everyone in the class has zero English. They don’t know anything, not one word of English. Well how would I teach them? What’s the best way to teach them? Well, normally, in a normal class, they would be taught with translation, right.

The teacher would say, for example, if they want to teach the word stand, stand up, well they would write stand up on the board and then they would translate that phrase into their native language.

So if imagine, let’s say, in Japan, so we have Japanese students. The Japanese teacher – the teacher in Japan – would write stand up on the board and then the teacher would translate that into Japanese and that’s how the students would learn the word or the phrase stand up. They would learn it by translation. They would write in their notebook and then they would try to memorize it again and again. Stand up equals this, stand up equals this, translation, translation, memorize, memorize.

Well that is purely mental, right? They’re just sitting in their chair, there’s nothing happening with their body, it’s just a mental exercise. Yes, they do eventually learn the phrase stand up, but they don’t learn it deeply. And that’s why most Japanese students, for example, cannot speak English very well and they don’t understand spoken English very well.

Written English is different because written English is more of a mental process, you can go slowly if you need to. But spoken English requires fast, instant understanding and you really need to learn it in your body. It needs to go deep into your mind and body if you’re going to understand and speak fast at native speeds.

Mark Said:

how do I get certified to teach English as a foreign language?

We Answered:

www.teflcorp.com/

they hane all the info there

Kathleen Said:

Do you know how to teach English as a foreign language to an Autistic age of 14?

We Answered:

wow...what a challenge. i don't. but i can tell you this...just to give you a bit of hope. recently i had one of my ESL students diagnosed LINK (severe developmental disabilities) he scored an 11 on a test where the average score is 87...the lowest the school had ever seen. and i taught him the same way i taught everyone else. obviously i knew something was wrong (that's a whole other story)....but the mind is SO AMAZING, and the desire to communicate is so strong...that he was able to do it. he understands me, i understand him, and he's been in the US only 3 years. it's incredible.

oh darn, i just realized you said Foreign language...that certainly limits his/her practice time doesn't it? well anyways...my point is..the mind is an amazing thing, and humans WILL find ways to communicate. have faith in this kid, they can do it!

Deborah Said:

How to teach my students to speak politely (English as a foreign language)?

We Answered:

Translate what they are saying into their own language using the same kinds of tones and let them realize the way they sound. You need to teach them the proper etiquette..and maybe that will open their eyes.

If not, your best bet would be to teach them the proper ways to interrupt or disagree with someone..that way they aren't rude.

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