Manchester 2015 Preview Brochure
Transcription
Manchester 2015 Preview Brochure
11 - 14 APRIL 2015 MANCHESTER PREVIEW BROCHURE TH ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL IATEFL CONFERENCE AND EXHIBITION THIS BROCHURE IS SPONSORED BY 1 Life Skills help to develop... SOCIAL AND CREATIVE SKILLS SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY MUTUAL UNDERSTANDING AND TOLERANCE LEARNING AUTONOMY AND LEARNING STRATEGIES THINKING SKILLS TO EXPLAIN, INFER, CLASSIFY NOTICE AND DISCOVER INTERPERSONAL AND COLLABORATIVE SKILLS 2 2 - 17 6. ACCOMMODATION 3, 4. BOOKING INFORMATION 4. CANCELLATION & INSURANCE 6. CAR PARKING 9. CATERING 9.CONFERENCE APP 7. CONFERENCE TIMETABLE 15-17. EVENING & DAYTIME EVENTS 2, 11.EXHIBITION INFORMATION 9, 60 & 61. HOW TO ... TRACK 10. IATEFL CONTACT DETAILS 9. INTERNET CENTRE 5. JOBS MARKET FAIR 5. MANCHESTER ONLINE 2, 67-68. PLENARY SPEAKERS 5, 12-14. SCHOLARSHIPS & WINNERS 10, 69. SIGNATURE EVENTS 8. SPONSORS 6. VENUE ADDRESS PRE-CONFERENCE EVENTS 18 - 25 18-25. PRE-CONFERENCE EVENTS (PCES) PROGRAMME INFORMATION 27 - 66 59. ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING 9, 60 & 61. HOW TO ... TRACK 62. IATEFL SIGS 63-66. IATEFL SIG DAYS 59. IATEFL SIG OPEN FORUMS 2, 67-68. PLENARY SPEAKERS 27-58. PREVIEW OF PRESENTATIONS 10, 69. SIGNATURE EVENTS 59. TRIBUTE SESSION Visit www.iatefl.org to: • make your booking for the conference and PCEs • join IATEFL to benefit from the reduced members’ conference fee (please allow 48 hours for your membership to be processed) • learn more about IATEFL C O N T E N T S PA G E GENERAL INFORMATION 1 PLENARY SPEAKERS This year at the IATEFL Annual Conference there will be five stimulating plenary sessions. These sessions will be presented by the following speakers: Ann Cotton Carol Ann Duffy Joy Egbert Donald Freeman Harry Kuchah Please refer to pages 67-68 for details of this year’s plenary speakers. THE CONFERENCE The Conference will bring together ELT professionals from around the world to discuss, reflect on and develop their ideas. It offers many opportunities for professional contact and development and is a great networking event. It involves a four-day programme of over 500 sessions, including forums, poster presentations, talks and workshops. 14 Pre-Conference Events (PCEs), organised by our Special Interest Groups, plus IATEFL’s Associates’ Day, will take place on Friday 10th April. The IATEFL Conference and Exhibition is a four-day event that takes place in the UK every year. This year it will take place in Manchester from Saturday 11th to Tuesday 14th April 2015. THE ELT RESOURCES EXHIBITION The ELT Resources Exhibition takes place throughout the conference (Saturday 11th to Tuesday 14th April) and offers delegates the chance to view the latest ELT publications, products and services available to them. With a great mix of worldwide exhibitors showcasing a variety of teaching aids from course providers, publishers, digital innovators and much more, the exhibition is free to all and provides a vibrant and social atmosphere, which is not to be missed. Do take time to visit and re-visit the exhibition stands during the conference. Exhibition opening times Saturday 0830-1730 Monday 0830-1730 Sunday 0830-1730Tuesday 0830-1215 Bookings for the conference and/or a PCE should be made online at: www.iatefl.org/annualconference/manchester-2015 Please read the information in this brochure before going online. 2 GENERAL INFORMATION IATEFL’S 49TH ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE AND EXHIBITION MANCHESTER CENTRAL, MANCHESTER, UK. The city of Manchester is a metropolitan borough in North West England, famous for its architecture, culture, music scene as well as its scientific and engineering output. It offers a range of fascinating museums & galleries which celebrate its Roman history, rich industrial heritage, role in the Industrial Revolution and the renowned Lowry gallery. BOOKING FOR CONFERENCE Bookings for the Conference and/or a Pre-Conference Event (PCE) can only be made online. Please read the information below before going online at www.iatefl.org/annual-conference/ manchester-2015. Booking is open to anyone who wishes to attend the conference. Entrance to the exhibition and jobs market fair is free to all and does not need to be booked. For conference attendance, book early to take advantage of our early bird rate. The early bird rate applies if full payment is received by 29th January 2015. IATEFL member IATEFL Student member* Non-members EARLY BIRD RATE: (booking & full payment received on or before 29th January 2015) £149 £99 £208 STANDARD RATE: (booking & full payment received after 29th January 2015) £195 £113 £250 **SINGLE DAY RATE: (between 11th and 13th April) £85 £52 £102 HALF DAY RATE: (Tuesday 14th April) £40 £28 £50 EARLY BIRD RATE: (booking & full payment received on or before 29th January 2015) £65 £65 £81 STANDARD RATE: (booking & full payment received after 29th January 2015) £78 £78 £93 CONFERENCE FEES PCE FEES * fees apply only to delegates with Student Membership of IATEFL ** Please note: if you are attending for two or three days and the full rate is cheaper, please select the lower four-day rate when booking. GENERAL INFORMATION Manchester is historically known as the world’s first industrialised city & the sixth largest city in the UK. 3 If you wish to join IATEFL in order to take advantage of the reduced members’ rate, please join online at www.iatefl.org or email [email protected] for a membership form. Please do not leave this until the last minute as it can take up to two working days for your membership to become active. If you wish to book a place for a PCE, please note that places are limited so it is advisable to book and pay as early as possible to avoid disappointment. European funding might be possible to help with conference attendance costs. For details, visit the Education and Training website at http://ec.europa.eu/education. Delegates please make every effort not to leave your conference booking until the last minute as the IATEFL Office will be fully committed to conference arrangements from March 2015. Unless we receive your online booking by 18th March 2015, you will need to book on arrival at the venue. LOCAL DELEGATES The last 24 hours of the conference (from lunchtime Monday to Tuesday afternoon) we allow local ESOL and EFL professionals, who live within 50 miles of Manchester and are unable to make the whole conference, the opportunity to attend the conference and exhibition for the final 24 hours. The ‘Local Day’ provides the following opportunities: A resources exhibition displaying the latest ELT materials Access to the jobs market fair The opportunity to attend presentations The chance to attend an evening event on Monday night Two stimulating plenary sessions on Tuesday The opportunity to network with fellow ELT professionals from around the world How to book: please book online at www.iatefl.org/annual-conference/manchester-2015. There is a tick box under the ‘Conference Fees’ for ‘Local Delegate’. Alternatively, you can book onsite from 1300 on Monday 13th April. The fee for local delegates attending the last 24 hours of the conference is £57.00. REGISTRATION TIMES The registration desk will be open from 0800 to 0945 on Friday 10th April for Pre-Conference Event (PCE) delegates ONLY. The registration desk will be open at 1130 on Friday for conference-only delegates. Delegates must collect their badge from the registration desk before they can attend a PCE or conference sessions, as admission is strictly badge only. Delegates attending both a PCE and the conference, need only register once. 4 Pre-registered delegates Registration opening times On arrival please collect your badge, conference pack and Conference Programme from the IATEFL registration desk. The registration desk will be located at the Central Foyer (through the main entrance) of Manchester Central. PCE delegates only: Onsite registration for new delegates Friday 10 April1130-1800 Saturday 11 April 0800-1730 Sunday 12 April 0800-1730 Monday 13 April 0800-1730 Tuesday 14 April 0800-1300 Onsite registrations are welcome. Please complete a conference booking form and pay at the Payment Desk. You will then receive a receipt, your badge, a conference pack and the Conference Programme. Friday 10 April 0800-0945 Conference delegates: GENERAL INFORMATION CANCELLATIONS AND INSURANCE Cancellations of Conference and PCE bookings received before 1st March 2015 will incur a 50% cancellation charge. Cancellations after this date will not be refunded. We strongly recommend that delegates purchase insurance to cover any cancellations and losses that may occur whilst they are away from home. Working together with the British Council we are proud to be able to make the conference accessible to a large global community of teachers and educators, both members and non-members, through Manchester Online. Remote delegates will be able to watch live video sessions and recorded highlights of the conference on the Manchester Online website and access a wide range of multimedia resources including video, audio and PowerPoint presentations of selected sessions and of course details on our exhibitors. Online delegates will also be able to take part in discussion forums linked to the main conference themes and interact with conference presenters via the website. Manchester Online will also feature video interviews with conference presenters and onsite delegates who will share their thoughts and experiences with the online community. Coming to the conference in person isn’t possible for all of our members, so we hope that Manchester Online will be a very good alternative for those unable to attend and a resource for at least a year after the event. IATEFL PATRON Meet the Patron - Following the success of this innovation in Harrogate, David Crystal will again be in attendance on the IATEFL exhibition stand. Join him there on Saturday 11th and Monday 13th during the lunch break for a chat or just to say hello. David Crystal will also be holding a signature event on Tuesday 14th April on A Question of Language with David Crystal. More details of this exciting event are on page 69. IATEFL JOBS MARKET FAIR Now in its 6th year, the IATEFL Jobs Market Fair is a valuable forum for connecting employers with talented ELT professionals from around the world. It demonstrates our commitment to support our members in their own professional development, as well as our aim to extend our reach and bring new members into the IATEFL community. Access to the Jobs Market Fair is free of charge. Jobseekers should visit www.iatefl.org to preview jobs online and apply for posts pre-conference. Recruiters who would like to participate in the IATEFL Jobs Market Fair in Manchester can view the package information on our website at www.iatefl.org or email [email protected]. There are a range of opportunities for advertising roles online, on our Jobs Boards and interviewing candidates during the conference. CONFERENCE SCHOLARSHIPS Each year IATEFL offers a great range of conference scholarships to enable teachers/trainers/ELT professionals the opportunity to attend the IATEFL Annual Conference in the UK. IATEFL thanks all of our scholarship sponsors for their generous support. Details on our Manchester Conference scholarship winners, can be found on pages 12-14. To keep check on any incoming scholarships for 2016, please visit: http://www.iatefl.org/scholarships/current-list-of-scholarships GENERAL INFORMATION BRITISH COUNCIL / IATEFL MANCHESTER ONLINE 5 For information on getting to Manchester and the venue as well as free local travel information, please visit www.iatefl.org/annual-conference/manchester-2015. VENUE ADDRESS Manchester Central Windmill Street, Manchester, M2 3GX, UK CAR PARKING The NCP (National Car Park) directly below Manchester Central is open 24 hours a day. It has 720 spaces. The height restriction for this car park is 1.98m. For more information contact NCP: Tel + 44 (0) 161 817 8900 or visit: www.ncp.co.uk. The cost of parking at December 2014 are: 2 hours or less £6.10 Between 2 and 4 hours £9.50 Between 4 and 6 hours £10.50 Between 6 and 12 hours £14.50 Between 12 and 24 hours £18.40 ACCOMMODATION Reservation Highway has arranged accommodation at various hotels in Manchester. There are different price bands from which you can choose. To reserve accommodation at your preferred hotel, we strongly recommend that you book as early as possible. To book accommodation, please go to www.iatefl.org/annual-conference/manchester-2015. Scroll down to “Accommodation in Manchester” where there is a link to book online. Alternatively, you can go directly to the site at www.reservation-highway.co.uk/efl15. If you have any queries, please email [email protected] or telephone +44 (0)1423 525577. If you do not receive confirmation one week after making your booking, you are advised to contact Reservation Highway at the above email address or telephone number. INVITATION LETTERS FOR INTERNATIONAL DELEGATES Delegates who require an invitation letter in order to make travel visa arrangements should make a conference booking online at www.iatefl.org/annual-conference/manchester-2015. Under the ‘Personal Information’ section, tick the box ‘invitation letter required’ and fill in your passport number where indicated. Please ensure you have filled in your full name, postal address, nationality, passport number, fax number (if you have one), and your email address in the correct fields. 6 Please note that invitation letters are only for overseas delegates who require an invitation to assist with their travel visa application. GENERAL INFORMATION GETTING TO MANCHESTER FRIDAY 10TH APRIL – PRE-CONFERENCE EVENTS AND ASSOCIATES’ DAY 0800-0945 1000-1700 1000-1700 1130-1800 The registration desk is open for PCE delegates (Conference delegates can register from 1130) Associates’ Day takes place (invited representatives) PCEs take place The registration desk is open for conference delegates SATURDAY 11TH - TUESDAY 14TH APRIL - THE FOUR-DAY CONFERENCE AND EXHIBITION SATURDAY 11TH APRIL From 0800 0900-1025 Register for the conference. Exhibition and Internet Centre open from 0830. You can also attend a How to ... session from 0815 to 0845 Opening Announcements and First Plenary Session by Donald Freeman 1040-1125 1125-1200 1200-1305 1305-1405 1405-1635 1635-1710 1710-1825 Sessions Coffee break Sessions Lunch break Sessions Coffee break Sessions 1110-1145 1145-1300 1300-1420 1310-1410 1420-1635 1635-1710 1710-1815 Coffee break Sessions Lunch break IATEFL AGM Sessions Coffee break Sessions 1025-1055 1055-1130 1130-1235 1235-1335 1335-1605 1605-1640 1640-1830 Sessions Coffee break Sessions Lunch break Sessions Coffee break Sessions 1315-1415 Plenary Session by Carol Ann Duffy Closing address and a free raffle Book signing and Conference Farewell Snacks SUNDAY 12TH APRIL From 0800 0900-1010 1025-1110 Register for the conference. Exhibition and Internet Centre open from 0830. You can also attend a How to ... session from 0815 to 0845 Plenary Session by Joy Egbert Sessions MONDAY 13TH APRIL From 0800 0900-1010 Register for the conference. Exhibition and Internet Centre open from 0830. You can also attend a How to ... session from 0815 to 0845 Plenary Session by Ann Cotton TUESDAY 14TH APRIL From 0800 0900-1010 1025-1140 1140-1215 1215-1300 Register for the conference. Exhibition and Internet Centre open from 0830. You can also attend a How to ... session from 0815 to 0845 Plenary Session by Harry Kuchah Sessions Coffee break Sessions 1415-1430 1430 GENERAL INFORMATION CONFERENCE DAY TIMES 7 The IATEFL 2015 conference is a fantastic platform to showcase your brand, products and services to educators, researchers and students in the field of ELT. These packages are designed to maximise the exposure and impact that your brand can make on our conference attendees. We offer Platinum, Gold, Silver and Bronze packages as well as sponsorship of individual items. The Harrogate conference in April 2014 was attended by delegates from 113 countries; 64% of those delegates came from outside the UK. Sponsorship of the conference therefore represents excellent value for money in terms of reaching a global audience. IATEFL would like to thank the following key and general sponsors to-date for their commitment and generous contribution to the success of the conference: PLATINUM PLATINUM SILVER BRONZE BRONZE BRONZE BRONZE BRONZE GENERAL GENERAL Sponsorship opportunities are still available to suit every budget. For further details on sponsorship, or if you wish to be considered for alternative conference sponsorships, please visit www.iatefl.org/annual-conference/sponsorship or contact Glenda Smart, IATEFL Executive Officer, at [email protected]. 8 GENERAL INFORMATION SPONSORS & SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES A complimentary tea/coffee will be served during the breaks. During the lunch breaks there will be a variety of hot and cold food on sale. Catering and bar facilities will be available throughout the day for delegates to purchase snacks and drinks. Alternatively take a stroll and enjoy the local cafés and restaurants located in the city, just a few minutes’ walk away. CONFERENCE APP This is the fourth year of our conference app for iPhone/iPad and Android phone users. The free app will be available in the spring of 2015 and it will allow delegates to: browse and search the Conference Programme; select individual sessions and add them to a conference planner; view a map of the conference venue and help you navigate the conference; see what others are saying about the conference via an integrated Twitter channel; share your location ideas and thoughts via a variety of social media connections; access the IATEFL Online site. INTERNET CENTRE sponsored by Password English Language Testing There will be an Internet Centre situated within the exhibition area. As well as checking emails and browsing the web, the Internet Centre will be a great place to play an active part in Manchester Online. PROGRAMME INFORMATION IMPORTANT PROGRAMME NOTE This pre-conference brochure will be superseded by the official Conference Programme that you will receive on arrival at the conference. The Conference Programme will be available on the IATEFL website www.iatefl.org/annual-conference/manchester-2015 from late March. HOW TO... SESSIONS The How to... sessions are 30-minute practical talks that take place from 0815 to 0845 before the start of each main conference day. The How to... sessions are designed to give delegates advice and tips on a range of specific topics and skills areas, such as presenting at international conferences, writing for publication and professional development. The How to... sessions on Saturday are specially designed to help new delegates make the most of the conference. Please refer to pages 60-61 for this year’s sessions. IATEFL SIG DAYS (SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP DAYS) If you are interested in a particular SIG area, you have the opportunity to follow a track of selected sessions throughout the day. One session in this track will be the SIG’s Open Forum. At a SIG Open Forum, delegates can find out more about the SIG, its events and its committee. Each Special Interest Group has a ‘SIG Day’ on one of the first three days of the conference – five SIG Days per day. Details, including which day each SIG Day is on, are shown on pages 63-66. GENERAL INFORMATION CATERING sponsored by ETS TOEFL 9 The signature events are hosted by major ELT institutions and publishers. They are designed to showcase expertise and throw light on state-of-the-art thinking in a key area which is relevant to the particular institution or publisher. The signature events provide a unique opportunity for delegates to find out about upcoming trends, learn about new areas of research, and engage with well-known, international experts in exciting and often controversial topics. The signature events vary in format and include talks, panel discussions and debates. There will be five signature events during the conference. Please refer to page 69 for details of these sessions by: Pearson (Saturday) British Council (Saturday) Cambridge English (Sunday) ELT Journal (Monday) IATEFL Patron (Tuesday) ELT CONVERSATION This session is an in-depth conversation in which two speakers discuss and explore issues surrounding a key topic in ELT. They will address key questions from the point of view of their own knowledge, experience, convictions and doubts. There will also be an opportunity for delegates to express their views and pose questions from the floor. IATEFL CONTACT DETAILS IATEFL 2 & 3 The Foundry Seager Road Faversham Kent, ME13 7FD UK Tel: +44(0)1795 591414 Fax: +44(0)1795 538951 Email: [email protected] www.iatefl.org Registered as a Company in England and Wales 2531041. Registered as a Charity 1090853 10 GENERAL INFORMATION SIGNATURE EVENTS IATEFL & Special Interest Groups Helbling Languages IATEFL Associates IELTS IATEFL Scholarships International Books International House London Advance Consulting for Education Knowledge Transmission Bell Educational Services Language World Co.Ltd Black Cat Cideb Publishing Macmillan Education Bournemouth English Book Centre - BEBC MM Publications British Council National Geographic Learning/Cengage British Study Centres NILE Cambridge English Oxford University Press Collins Pearson ELI Publishing Ltd Pilgrims English 360 Target English English Language Bookshop telc – language tests English UK Trinity College London ETS TOFEL® University of Derby Online Learning Express Publishing University of Exeter Garnet Education Yellow House English Ltd Global ELT THE ELT RESOURCES EXHIBITION A complimentary tea/coffee will be served during the breaks. During the lunch breaks there will be a variety of hot and cold food on sale. Catering and bar facilities will be available throughout the day for delegates to purchase snacks and drinks. Ample seating in the exhibition - great for networking and meeting old and new friends. Come and meet David Crystal (IATEFL Patron) at the IATEFL stand on Saturday 11th April and Monday 13th April during the lunch breaks. GENERAL INFORMATION LIST OF ELT RESOURCES EXHIBITORS 11 IATEFL has a Scholarship Working Party (SWP) whose job it is to raise scholarship funds, create new scholarships, publicise the existence of the current scholarships to teachers worldwide, and select scholarship winners. The SWP also works to improve the conference experience for scholarship winners and applicants. To these ends there will be a scholarship stand in the exhibition and someone from the SWP will be there at the coffee breaks and lunch breaks to answer questions and receive generous offers of sponsorship for future scholarships, so whether you are a current or past scholar, a potential applicant, or a potential sponsor, do come along for a chat. THIS YEAR’S SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS ARE... 12 Africa Scholarship Africa Scholarship Africa Scholarship Abdourahmane Fall Senegal Charles Karoro Muhirwe Rwanda Mouna Jemai Tunisia IATEFL BESIG Facilitators Scholarship IATEFL BESIG Facilitators Scholarship IATEFL Bill Lee Scholarship Evelina Miscin Croatia Olena Korol Ukraine Agnieszka Dudzik Poland Cambridge English: English Teacher Scholarship Cambridge English: John Trim Scholarship Cambridge English: Dr Peter Hargreaves Scholarship Tien Minh Mai Vietnam Alison Salm Iraq Phat Thuan Quynh Tran Vietnam IATEFL SCHOLARSHIPS IATEFL SCHOLARSHIPS Exam English Online Teaching Scholarship IATEFL Gill Sturtridge FirstTime Speaker Scholarship Pinar Yeni Palabiyik Turkey Jaime Miller-Rap USA Nasy Inthisone Pfanner Austria IATEFL Gillian Porter Ladousse Scholarship IELTS Morgan Terry Memorial Scholarship International House Brita Haycraft Better Spoken English Scholarship Ushakiran Wagle Nepal Cristina Peralejo Canada Anastasiia Shamrai Ukraine International House Global Reach Scholarship International House Global Reach Scholarship International House John Haycraft Classroom Exploration Scholarship Umesh Shrestha Nepal Anastasia Reva Russian Federation Olja Milosevic Serbia International House John Haycraft Classroom Exploration Scholarship International House Training and Development Scholarship IATEFL Latin America Scholarship Katie Moran France Ruwaida Abu-Rass Israel Andres Cuenca Uruguay visit: www.iatefl.org/scholarships/scholarships-overview-and-faqs IATEFL SCHOLARSHIPS Eastbourne School of English - Graham Smith Scholarship 13 IATEFL Learning Technologies SIG Diana Eastment Scholarship IATEFL Learning Technologies SIG Travel Scholarship Cari Freer Turkey Liliana Simón Argentina Monica Veado Brazil One Dragon Scholarship Onestopenglish Creativity in the Classroom Scholarship Pilgrims Scholarship Shu Li China Aysen Deger Turkey Patricia Salguero Peru IATEFL Ray Tongue Scholarship Regent Scholarship IATEFL Teacher Development SIG Michael Berman Scholarship Kirti Kapur India Sagun Shrestha Nepal Deepthi Sashidhar India Trinity College London Language Examinations Scholarship Trinity College London Teacher Trainer Scholarship Saeede Haghi Iran Alexey Korenev Russian Federation visit: www.iatefl.org/scholarships/scholarships-overview-and-faqs 14 IATEFL SCHOLARSHIPS IATEFL Leadership and Management SIG Scholarship EVENING EVENTS FRIDAY 10TH APRIL Welcome Reception at 1800hrs We are delighted to hold a Welcome Reception to offer delegates a warm welcome to Manchester. IATEFL President, Carol Read, will welcome you to the conference and the Lord Mayor of Manchester will welcome you to the city. Entry is by conference badge only, so please register at our registration desk first. SATURDAY 11TH APRIL Pecha Kucha (sponsored by IELTS) Originating from the word “chitchat,” a Japanese term describing the sound of conversation, we again offer you a Pecha Kucha evening. By now you should know the format: each speaker is allowed a slideshow of 20 images, each shown for 20 seconds, giving a total presentation time of six minutes and forty seconds before the next speaker is up, keeping presentations concise and fast-paced. Extending a warm vote of thanks to our sponsor, IELTS, the event will be facilitated by Bita Rezaei and features several new speakers. It promises to be as exciting as ever so don’t miss it! International Music Fest See your fellow IATEFL members in a different light at the International Music Fest when we get together and speak the universal language of music! Bring world music and traditional songs from your culture and in your language. (Please no CDs or classroom songs which are better in the main conference.) Adrian Underhill, Chaz Pugliese and Bethany Cagnol will host the evening. Come and enjoy IATEFL’s hidden talent and network through music! British Council-hosted evening A British Council-hosted evening in The Town Hall, Albert Square Join the British Council for an enjoyable evening in an iconic landmark in Manchester – the Town Hall. Regarded as one of the finest examples of Neo-Gothic architecture in the UK, it is one of the most important Grade 1 listed buildings in England. Come to the event to meet with friends old and new, and relax after a busy day at the conference. The event will be an excellent opportunity to enjoy exclusive access to grand rooms, such as the Great Hall, which is decorated with murals by Ford Maddox Brown. Food and drink will be served throughout the evening. In the heart of the city, the Town Hall is just a four-minute walk from the conference centre. Find out more about this exquisite venue at: www.manchester.gov.uk/townhall/ EVENING & DAYTIME EVENTS A programme of events will be arranged for delegates during the evenings of the conference week. Details, times and venues will be in the Conference Programme (handed to delegates at the conference and available online from early March) and on the conference app (we will let delegates know when it’s ready). Preliminary details are: 15 International Word Fest Hosted by Rakesh Bhanot and Chris Lima Come share words sing a song recite a poem read aloud some prose in English or another language or, just sit and enjoy listening to others. Individual or joint performances welcome. Contributions can be between 1 and 5 minutes. Chris is a teacher, a teacher trainer and a researcher. Her areas of interest are in the role of literature in English language education and the use of new technologies in teaching and learning. She is the Coordinator of the IATEFL Literature, Media & Cultural Studies SIG. Rakesh started teaching English in 1972 and is now a freelance teacher trainer. In his spare time he writes haikus (sic). Mrs Hoover’s Singlish “Next to marrying a native speaker — and, let’s face it, not everyone is in a position to do that — the fastest way to improve your fluency in English is to sing it!” Britain’s number one hostmother for overseas students returns to IATEFL with a masterclass on how to gladden students’ hearts with the gift of song. Mrs Joyce Hoover is widely acknowledged (by the Hove Hanging Basket and Loose Cover Society) to be the world-renowned expert on hospitality and ‘learning by doing’. And all that without ever venturing into a classroom. She’s made it a lifelong principle never to compromise her firm beliefs about language acquisition by actually acquiring one herself. And now, for one night only, ‘the woman who put the hospital into hospitality’, demonstrates her theory and practice of Singlish and her conviction that ‘the class that sings together, clings together!’ “My life will never be the same after this enlightening talk given by Mrs Hoover. It was amusing to the point of having tears coming to my eyes – she is magical, hilarious and absolutely unmissable!” Elisabete Thess (reviewing Mrs Hoover’s appearance at IATEFL 2011) “Truly the ‘Best of British’, and the highlight of our social programme … much enjoyed by our overseas and UK delegates alike.” Professor Roger Moore, INTERSPEECH “Hilarious – a must see!” Ken Wilson The Fair List UK Come and learn about The Fair List, the award for excellence of gender balance in plenary and keynote speakers and panelists at UK, ELT conferences and events. In the past year we were shortlisted for an ELTON award and held our first webinar, so come along and help us to celebrate these achievements. Come along too to find out who is on the list for the year 2014 and cheer them as they get their playful certificates. Each year we have a fun awarenessraising activity too that might surprise (in a good way!) To find out more about The Fair List, please take a look at www.thefairlist.org. There you will find loads of ideas for conference organizers, speakers and also for participants interested in gender parity in UK, ELT events. All delegates welcome! 16 EVENING & DAYTIME EVENTS SUNDAY 12TH APRIL International Quiz (sponsored by ETS) Back for yet another year: bigger, better and this year very, very different. A multimedia extravaganza under the new management of Victoria Boobyer & Gavin Dudeney... it’s the IATEFL International Quiz. You’ll need a global team with diverse interests and knowledge, a sense of humour and a desire to meet new people, have some fun, network and work together to score more points than any other team. Music, fun... a drink or two and the chance to be crowned quiz champions of Manchester 2015. Extensive Reading Foundation Reception and Awards Ceremony The event is hosted by Catherine Walter, who will present the 2014 Language Learner Literature Awards. Come and meet the award-winning authors over drinks and nibbles, and enjoy a display of all the finalist books. The first 200 attendees will receive a free copy of one of the winning books. Sponsored by the British Council, Cambridge English, Compass Media, ELI Publishing, Helbling Languages, IATEFL, Macmillan Education, National Geographic/ Cengage Learning, Oxford University Press and Pearson Education. Sharing our Stories Come and tell a story or just listen! An evening event of storytelling hosted by storytellers David Heathfield and Andrew Wright. People from around the world attending the IATEFL Conference and from the Manchester story club, ‘Word of Mouth’, tell stories from their cultures and traditions and from their own lives and experiences. David and Andrew offer a framework and encouragement for this to happen and contribute a few stories themselves. This is a wonderful opportunity for visitors to Manchester to meet local people and to hear their stories and for local Manchester people to hear stories from around the world. DAYTIME EVENTS Following the success of previous years we are offering a similar format for the tours in Manchester, including the popular walking tours. We are hoping to offer a coach excursion to Quarry Bank; an 18th Century cotton mill which is home to Europe’s largest working waterwheel and offers fantastic opportunities to get a taste of British life during the Industrial Revolution. The Greg family were instrumental in the development of Quarry Bank and IATEFL Past President, Peter Grundy, who grew up in Quarry Bank, is also a direct descendent of the Greg family. We hope that he may be able to join us on this tour and give his own entertaining insights and experiences. Further details on all of the tours will be released shortly and will be available to purchase before the conference via our online shop. EVENING & DAYTIME EVENTS MONDAY 13TH APRIL 17 Pre-Conference Events (PCEs), organised by all 15 IATEFL Special Interest Groups (SIGs), will be held on Friday 10th April specifically for delegates who wish to concentrate on a particular topic. PCEs are planned as professional development days and participants will receive a certificate of attendance. Delegates who wish to attend a PCE can book online at: www.iatefl.org/annual-conference/manchester-2015. The online booking form has been designed for delegates who wish to attend a PCE, the main conference, or both. Please note that PCEs are full-day events (1000-1700) so delegates can therefore only book one PCE. We recommend that delegates book and pay early for a PCE as there are limited places available. Places will not be confirmed until full payment is received. A sandwich lunch is provided for PCE delegates. PCE FEES IATEFL Member Non-member Early Bird rate: (booking & full payment received on or before 29th January 2015) £65 £81 Standard rate: (booking & full payment received after 29th January 2015) £78 £93 THE PRE-CONFERENCE EVENTS ARE: BUSINESS ENGLISH AND TESTING, EVALUATION & ASSESSMENT JOINT PCE - Testing more than just English – What do we need to know and how can we test in the best way for our purposes? ENGLISH FOR SPECIFIC PURPOSES AND BALEAP JOINT PCE - Employability and transferability in EAP and ESP ES(O)L - Challenges, issues and developments in ES(O)L teaching and learning GLOBAL ISSUES - Debate, discussion, dialogue: triggers for change LEADERSHIP & MANAGEMENT - People management for the academic manager LEARNER AUTONOMY - Language learner autonomy – getting started LEARNING TECHNOLOGIES - Technology in action LITERATURE, MEDIA & CULTURAL STUDIES - 101 ways of teaching a poem: Bringing poetry into language teaching MATERIALS WRITING - The material writer’s essential toolkit PRONUNCIATION - Practical pronunciation teaching RESEARCH - Developing as a researcher TEACHER DEVELOPMENT - Challenges and Rewards - getting to the heart of the matter with exploratory practice TEACHER TRAINING & EDUCATION - Exploring Trainee and Trainer Beliefs and Practices 18 YOUNG LEARNERS AND TEENAGERS – Learner first – teens PRE-CONFERENCE EVENTS PRE-CONFERENCE EVENTS (PCES) FRIDAY 10TH APRIL 2015 BUSINESS ENGLISH SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP AND TESTING, EVALUATION & ASSESSMENT SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP JOINT PCE Testing more than just English – What do we need to know and how can we test in the best way for our purposes? Testing is becoming an increasingly important area of language teaching, including the teaching of specialised English. It is often assumed that teachers of Business English, for example, automatically know how to set, score and run tests, but this is in fact not always the case. The joint PCE offered by BESIG and TEASIG will focus on the testing of more than just language and cover general principles of test setting, constructing tests for different purposes, and dealing with the issues of testing knowledge, skills and intercultural competence. The PCE presenters will deal with, among other things, the following questions: What do teachers need to know about testing in order to set valid and reliable tests? Are teachers always the best testsetters and testers? What is the main purpose of tests? How can tests be useful and valid? How can we test more than just language and should we do this? What are the differences between oral and written tests? The PCE will end with a panel discussion where delegates will have the opportunity to ask questions, raise issues and deal with any open issues. The speakers are international experts who will share their expertise and experience. Speakers: Rudi Camerer, elc - European Language Competence, Frankfurt & Sarbrucken, Germany – ‘Testing intercultural competence’ Barry O’Sullivan, British Council, UK – ‘Principles of testing’ JoAnn Salvisberg; Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts School of Business, Switzerland – ‘Testing oral skills’ Ivana Vidakovic, Cambridge English Language Assessment, UK – ‘Workplace English’ Cambridge English are generously sponsoring the event. ENGLISH FOR SPECIFIC PURPOSES SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP AND BALEAP JOINT PCE Employability and transferability in EAP and ESP Employability is a major focus in almost all government policies all over the world. As a result, all education providers including vocational and higher education institutions are expected to ensure that their curricula meet employability skills needs in the industry. However, employability may mean different things in different contexts. In the current global job market, communication skills is considered one of the key employability skills and thus the ability to use English language in employment is a necessity given the global status of the language. In this context, it is important to explore what role English language proficiency (academic or occupational) plays in employability and how students transfer such proficiency from EAP and ESP to their employment. Addressing this theme of Employability and transferability in EAP and ESP, the IATEFL ESP SIG is organizing its next Pre-Conference Event jointly with BALEAP. The PCE aims to explore some key questions in the field such as How important is ESP for new employees or is more general EFL skills all that employers are looking for? How can universities who need to develop students’ EAP help students to transfer their language skills to English for Occupational/Professional Purposes? We expect that our PCE theme will bring together a diverse range of researchers and practitioners in professional and academic English to share their views and practices which are applicable to other EAP and ESP contexts. PRE-CONFERENCE EVENTS PRELIMINARY DETAILS OF THE PCEs 19 We will look at how ESOL practitioners can meet some of the challenges involved with teaching ESOL classes at different levels in community, further education and vocational classes. Furthermore, we will discuss how we can best teach the skills of Speaking, Listening, Reading and Writing that migrants and refugees need. We will also look at how we as ESOL practitioners can make learning a positive educational experience for students, some of whom may never have been in an educational environment before. Once more we will explore some of the didactic and practical issues that we face as teachers both in the UK and abroad; and the challenges that we face trying to meet the latest government requirements in ESOL provision. There will be a mixture of short talks, seminars and workshops where we will work collaboratively with each other exploring some of the issues which most affect us and our learners. We know from past feedback how much participants have enjoyed being able to meet new colleagues from other institutions and share best practices, which is why during the lunch and refreshment breaks you will have the opportunity to meet our speakers so that you can exchange your views with each other. We do hope that you will be able to join us for our Pre-Conference Event day. GLOBAL ISSUES SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP PCE Debate, discussion, dialogue: triggers for change Facilitators: Scott Thornbury & Margit Szesztay The day will be a series of workshops focusing on how to get the most out of oral interaction with EFL groups in secondary school classrooms, higher education seminars and adult education contexts. Our main focus will be on ways of making English language teaching intellectually challenging and personally engaging. We will be looking at discussion triggers that wake up minds and create an urge to exchange ideas, express views, and come to appreciate a richness of perspectives. We will explore the way debate, discussion and dialogue can lead us to question taken-for-granted assumptions and can help us to think creatively and compassionately. The triggers for talk will include video clips, TED talks, short articles, poems and taboo topics related to politics, religion and sex. In addition to triggers for talk, we will consider the role of the teacher as discussion leader, debate organizer and dialogue facilitator. What can we do if one or two people dominate a discussion? What if students respond with apathy and the discussion falls flat? What should we do with shy, introvert students who are reluctant to speak? What if there is conflict among group members? What if some of our students express views that are intolerant and hurtful to others? How can we create a culture of open-mindedness and high-quality listening? These will be some of the key issues to be addressed. Join us and together we will explore ways of making classroom interaction more meaningful, engaging and intellectually stimulating. We will also reflect on the way engaging in group dialogue can widen horizons, raise awareness of global issues and motivate us to take action. 20 PRE-CONFERENCE EVENTS ES(O)L SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP PCE Challenges, issues and developments in ES(O)l teaching and learning People management: managing challenging situations, groups and individuals Managing challenging people and situations are some of the most difficult tasks and responsibilities of the academic manager. This PCE will look at some important aspects of people and conflict management through the discussion of case studies. Under the guidance of facilitators, groups will be invited to come up with solutions to challenging situations. Individuals will have the chance to: • Reflect on their own performance in managing challenging situations; • Listen to the ideas and best practices of other managers; • Learn from the suggestions of the seminar facilitators. The overall aim of the day will be to build up a set of best practices to take away which will help academic managers improve their people management skills. The PCE will be facilitated by Andy Hockley, Jenny Johnson, Loraine Kennedy, George Pickering and Josh Round. We hope to see you there! LEARNER AUTONOMY SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP PCE Language learner autonomy – getting started The question of how to get started seems to be one of the most pressing issues when trying to implement principles of language learner autonomy (LLA). Therefore, this year’s Pre-conference Event (PCE) will focus on various areas and concerns relevant to “getting started” - from primary school to university level. During the day, we will particularly, though not exclusively, deal with the following topics: • • • • Developing language learner autonomy with young learners Getting learners who have been educated in a traditional way actively involved in their own learning. Preparing student teachers and in-service teachers for developing learner autonomy. Evaluating and assessing – how to get started at all levels. These topics, which will be addressed in various forms of presentation (e.g. plenaries, poster presentations, workshops), will partly also be supported by research data. We are happy to welcome as our first plenary speaker Annamaria Pinter. In her plenary, “From passive objects of research to active co-researchers: children developing autonomous skills.” she will share with us her experience and valuable insight into working with young learners. The second plenary will be given by Leni Dam and Lienhard Legenhausen and carries the title “Preparing teachers for developing language learner autonomy – some examples from in- and pre-service teacher training.” As in previous years, we are hoping for an interactive day where the speakers’ inputs along with the participants’ exchange of ideas, experiences, and views will ensure a successful outcome. Looking forward to seeing you in Manchester! PRE-CONFERENCE EVENTS LEADERSHIP & MANAGEMENT SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP PCE People management for the academic manager 21 As we continue our journey into the new millennium, social media is abuzz with the sounds of educators declaring their love for technology in teaching. Alongside their growing assertions that “technology brings teaching to life” and “learners need technology to engage in the task”, the range of technology available and the opportunities it affords for the modification and redefinition of how we teach, also seems to be growing day by day. However, although these rapid developments should indeed be embraced and celebrated, in order for teachers to understand the whats, hows and whys of the available technology, it needs to be exemplified; a lack of lucidity leaves even the most “tech savvy” teacher feeling overwhelmed and bewildered. This year’s LT SIG Pre-Conference Event aims to shed a very practical light on the wealth of information on using technology in language learning that we encounter daily. Real teachers will show what they do in their classes, and present case studies showcasing “technology in action”. The morning comprises three of our plenary speakers, Agnes Kukluska-Hulme, Liliana Simon, and James Thomas, putting forward their ideas and experiences on a range of technology related topics. Their talks will guide and inform participants in areas such as mobile and blended learning, and error tagging software. The afternoon offers the LT SIG’s first technology showcase event. Through a series of mini-demonstrations aimed at all levels, experienced teachers will show practical examples of how they are using technology with their learners. You will be invited to try out the tools being presented and to judge their value for yourselves. Regardless of your level of experience with technology, the day’s practical “showcase” promises to be a unique learning, sharing and networking experience for all. This PCE will be held offsite at Manchester University, a 15-20 minute walk from the conference venue. We’re looking forward to seeing you there! LITERATURE, MEDIA & CULTURAL STUDIES SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP PCE 101 ways of teaching a poem: Bringing poetry into language teaching ‘Poetry offers an alternative language and discourse, often engaging learners’ emotions; encourages language awareness and enhanced language memorization contexts.’ (Byram, M. and Hu, A., 2013, p. 539-40) The day will offer participants a series of 30-minute workshops on using poetry in English language teaching. The presenters will propose activities designed to be used in various teaching contexts and which can be adapted to a wide variety of language levels, from primary school learners to language and literature students in higher education. This is going to be a very dynamic, fun-packed day that we hope will motivate teachers to bring poetry into their teaching practice and also suggest to participants who already work with poems new ways of using them for language learning. Each workshop will focus on ‘one poem-one activity’ allowing participants to go back to their classroom with some ideas about how to further explore poetry in ELT. Conducting the workshops will be speakers with vast experience in the field of literature and language teaching, including some of the LMCS SIG committee members and leading names in ELT. Confirmed speakers: • • • Jeremy Harmer Carol Read Claudia Ferradas • • • Alan Pulverness Amos Paran Alan Maley • • • Chris Lima Hania Bociek Carel Burghout Please come and join us for the LMCS PCE Manchester 2015! Reference: Byram, M. and Hu, A. (eds), 2013. Routledge Enyclopedia of Language Teaching and Learning. 2nd Ed. London: Routledge. 22 PRE-CONFERENCE EVENTS LEARNING TECHNOLOGIES SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP PCE Technology in action No matter how much experience you have as a materials writer, no matter whether you’re writing for print or for digital, there are certain core skills that every writer needs to master. Can you write an effective multiple choice question? Can you write audio and video scripts that sound authentic? Can you write a great artwork brief and make your pictures ‘pay their way’? Can you use technology to make your writing better and more efficient? Can you write activities for video? Can you use corpus tools? Can you handle the challenge of writing ESP material? Can you take content that you know works in your classroom and make it work in a coursebook? In this highly interactive PCE, MaWSIG will be running a series of short workshops from Sue Kay, Ben Goldstein, Ceri Jones, Nick Tims, John Hughes, Kieran Donaghy, Anna Whitcher, Julie Moore, Evan Frendo and Christien Lee. Attendees will have the chance to work with these leading materials writers to learn, to ask questions, and to share expertise. Whether you’re an experienced writer, or a teacher taking your first steps into the field, there’ll be something here for you. PRONUNCIATION SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP PCE Practical pronunciation teaching Pronunciation matters. All the grammar and vocabulary in the world won’t help you if no one can understand what you are saying. Most teachers realise this but many lack the tools and perhaps confidence to do pronunciation justice. This PCE addresses the day-to-day issues of pronunciation teaching from different perspectives, all firmly anchored in the classroom setting. If you are an experienced instructor, you will refresh your teaching and be encouraged to share your knowledge and views. If you are new to the profession or ideas presented, the PCE will offer you a snapshot of best practice as demonstrated by experts in the field. Sessions: Maximising pronunciation practice through blended learning This presentation describes online tools and Apps adopted to complement face-to-face instruction and to increase the time students spend practising pronunciation and fluency. Sophie Farag (The American University in Cairo) How to identify pronunciation priorities in the multilingual classroom For teachers of multilingual groups, it can be tricky to identify which pronunciation features to focus on in class. Where to begin when the students all have different needs? Laura Patsko (St George International) Flipping intonation! Making focus on practice practical Flipped learning is a pedagogical approach which allows the teacher to spend more classroom time on practical work. Here, we show how it can be used to address one of the trickiest areas of pronunciation in ELT: intonation. Jane Setter (University of Reading) Articulatory settings - a practical demonstration I will give participants the opportunity of seeing for themselves how the use of articulatory setting helps students reach good pronunciation easily and well. I will do so using French. Roslyn Young (Pronunciation Science Ltd) IDEAS for teaching pronunciation In this session we explore numerous practical IDEAS for teaching the pronunciation of English to (young) adults, going beyond ‘listen-and-repeat’ into far more creative areas for pronunciation teaching. Robin Walker (englishglobalcommunication) PCE updates can be found on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Pronsig/460534014066126 PRE-CONFERENCE EVENTS MATERIALS WRITING SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP PCE The materials writer’s essential toolkit 23 A participant-centred day with input and invited commentary from Sue Garton, David Nunan and Cynthia White What does it mean to develop as a ‘researcher’? Whether you are a student, a teacher, an academic or another kind of professional, and wherever you are in your research journey – near the beginning or further along the road – this event will offer a valuable opportunity to step back, reflect and learn from others and share your experiences in a collegial, informal and friendly atmosphere. Following the format of our very successful 2014 Pre-conference Event, the 2015 event will offer a combination of poster presentations, group discussions, panel discussion and expert-led input centring on areas of particular concern and interest to participants. Based on the many excellent proposals for posters that have been submitted, we have structured the day around three main themes, which will be explored in the posters, in ‘impulses’ from our guest speakers and in group discussions: • • • A researchers’ journey: Challenges, issues and strategies Specific methods and specific challenges Identities, roles, relationships and contexts in research This innovative pre-conference event will appeal to all those involved and/or interested in research in EFL/ESL contexts. It will both raise questions and provide multiple insights with regard to specific methods as well as how we develop as researchers and combine multiple roles and identities (such as teacher and researcher identities) in our various work contexts. With over 25 poster presentations and inputs from world-renowned scholars, this promises an exciting event and we hope you will join us for our Research SIG PCE day. TEACHER DEVELOPMENT SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP PCE Challenges and Rewards - getting to the heart of the matter with exploratory practice To be a teacher is to be rewarded. Rewarded by our students and their accomplishments. To be a teacher is to be challenged. Challenged by things that do not work as we had hoped. This question of reward and challenge is one which we would like to explore with you during our PCE in Manchester. A number of speakers, from different perspectives and spaces, will join us to share the challenges they have faced in their classrooms and the experiments they undertook in an attempt to find solutions… and hopefully rewards. In the afternoon, we invite you to join us in Open Space. What one challenge do you face everyday and how might you examine it? How can we support each other in constructing action plans to examine those challenges? To make the most of the Open Space, we suggest you take some time to think about some critical incidents in your teaching. How did you respond as a teacher? What did the class do? What could you do differently in future? Did you get any support from your peers? By the end of the day, we hope to walk away with simple, realistic but inspiring plans for our own development... in search of rewards. As well as this, you are sure to walk away with new and renewed friendships - a perfect end to our day, and a perfect starting point for the main conference. 24 PRE-CONFERENCE EVENTS RESEARCH SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP PCE Developing as a researcher It is now well-established that ELT professionals’ beliefs influence both how they learn and how they behave and in teacher training and education contexts the beliefs of trainees and trainers will thus interact in defining the impact that the training has. In this interactive event we will investigate how beliefs impinge on teacher training and education and how attending to beliefs can enhance our work as teacher trainers and educators. In the first part of the day we will focus on trainees’ beliefs, on how they shape trainee learning, and on specific strategies trainers can use to understand trainees’ beliefs; in the second part of the day the focus will be on the beliefs that trainers have and how these influence their work. Throughout the day, the focus will be on critically reflective discussion and debate through which participants will be encouraged to make explicit and challenge their own beliefs about and practices in language teacher education. Discussion will be supported with input that draws on contemporary research and theory in the field of teacher education. The facilitator will be Simon Borg, who is well-known internationally for his work on language teachers’ beliefs - see http://simon-borg.co.uk YOUNG LEARNERS & TEENAGERS SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP PCE Learner first - teens How can we put the teenage language learner first and focus on their needs? Teenagers are often seen as “difficult” by a lot of teachers. With a wide variety of presentations and workshops we will consider a Learner First approach and how this can help teens to fulfill their potential. Speakers for this event include: Joanna Budden - Putting the learner first: obstacles and action plans She will challenge us to think about how we can put learners in their classroom first. She will also work with participants to create positive action plans for putting our teenage learners first in the areas of learning that are most relevant for them. Joe Dale - Lights! Camera! Action! iPad! - moviemaking in the languages classroom In this session, Joe will look at movie-making and animation apps to promote creativity, collaboration and higher order thinking, including Popplet Lite, iMovie, Do Ink Green Screen, Tellagami and Lego Movie Maker. Volunteers from the audience will be welcome to take part in the practical demonstration. Olha Madlylus - Teenagers – what makes them tick? She will delve into the reasons behind not only what we often see as difficult and unreasonable teen behaviour but also the potential that teens have for engaging with learning. She will seek to identify strategies, tasks and modes of participation within the classroom which may suit and stimulate teens and help make the school a more successful and fun experience for them. Herbert Puchta - The importance of values in teaching English to teens He will look at why it is important to pass them on to our teenage students, and how we can help our students to understand and take on board important values. He will explore various models of how to respectfully influence students’ values and help them to understand the importance of valuebased behaviour. PRE-CONFERENCE EVENTS TEACHER TRAINING & EDUCATION SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP PCE Exploring trainee and trainer beliefs and practices 25 DEADLINE DATES FOR YOUR DIARY 24 JULY 2014 18 SEPTEMBER 2014 16 DECEMBER 2014 29 JANUARY 2015 18 MARCH 2015 10 APRIL 2015 11-14 APRIL 2015 26 Scholarship application deadline - online only www.iatefl.org/scholarships/scholarships-overview-and-faqs Speaker proposal submission deadline- online only www.iatefl.org/annual-conference/manchester-2015 Speaker payment deadline Early bird payment deadline for non-speaker delegates Online conference booking closes (exisiting orders can be paid prior to conference & onsite bookings are welcome) Pre-Conference Events and Associates’ Day IATEFL Manchester Conference and Exhibition DEADLINES FOR YOUR DIARY IATEFL’S 49TH ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE AND EXHIBITION MANCHESTER CENTRAL, MANCHESTER, UK. PREVIEW OF PRESENTATIONS (PROVISIONAL) Please note provisional and will change before the conference. Updates will be on our website. Saturday Applied linguistics The ethics of researching English language skills in rural Bangladesh Qumrul Hasan Chowdhury Appropriate strategies for teaching grammar a Dave Willis retrospective Jane Willis Developing teacher language awareness Daniel Xerri & Odette Vassallo Evaluation for returns - a fourlevel approach Naziha Ali Jafri An impact study of BEC Vantage on test-takers in China Xiangdong Gu Communicating communicative competence Pete Rutherford The pragmatics of successful business communication Chia Suan Chong Market smarter to sell higher as a freelance trainer Christina Rebuffet-Broadus What not to do. What not to say Barry Tomalin What motivates an English language teacher to teach? Hsuan-Yau (Tony) Lai Business English English for academic purposes Formative assessment Simon Andrewes Teaching intercultural communication competence in the ESP tertiary context Agnieszka Dudzik & Agnieszka Dzieciol-Pedich English for specific purposes Teaching intercultural communication competence in the ESP tertiary context Agnieszka Dudzik & Agnieszka Dzieciol-Pedich Exploring techniques for shifting classroom energy and sustaining student motivation Mohamed EL-Zamil An overview of ESP research in Brazil: developments and directions Rosinda Ramos Structured tasks for reading authentic journal articles in EAP Barbara Howarth Dictogloss redux: grammar dictation in a digital age William Kerr 27 EAP writing: teaching strategies for effective paraphrasing Tina Kuzic Teaching technical English challenge Dominic Welsh a Metadiscoursal features of academic writing in the university business school Philip Nathan Teaching technical English challenge Dominic Welsh a The Digitshire Project Mojca Belak Fun listening Lindsey Gutt Visualising English grammar: picturing, gesturing and performing in the classroom Natalia Belousova Communicative teaching: what do PRC students think? James Jenkin Jazz and the dark matter of teaching Adrian Underhill Metadiscoursal features of academic writing in the university business school Philip Nathan An overview of ESP research in Brazil: developments and directions Rosinda Ramos Language proficiency profiles - the demise of global language proficiency Geoff Tranter English for specific academic purposes Structured tasks for reading authentic journal articles in EAP Barbara Howarth EAP writing: teaching strategies for effective paraphrasing Tina Kuzic General Begin anywhere an improvisational approach for ELT Roy Bicknell The playful approach: activating children's self-learning language strategies Opal Dunn 28 The use of own-language techniques in multilingual classes Philip Kerr Classroom management share the responsibility with your students! Agnieszka Luczak What does "get" mean? Kate Evans Forever grammar: what every teacher needs to know Martin Parrott Medium and message in PowerPoint Peter Grundy Emotional engagement for adult students Herbert Puchta Thinking in English: ways to develop cognitive skills Michele C Guerrini The importance of emotions in language learning Eva Trumpesova-Rudolfova Effective questioning for effective learning Lindsay Warwick HOT (high-order thinking) listening tasks for learners Jennie Wright Silent way for intermediate and advanced classes Roslyn Young Forum on approaches to developing reading skills Practical ways to develop fluency in L2 reading Michael Green Reason to read: a genre-specific development approach to reading David Petrie Revisiting reading Peter Watkins Global issues 'International Youth Forum model' - a leadership skill-building workshop Tatiana Ischenko Teaching English in an atmosphere of insurgency; the Nigerian example Agnes Ada Okpe teachable moments throughout a content-based curriculum Sylvia Ozbalt & Cristina Peralejo Around the world in 45 minutes: global justice in ELT Linda Ruas Forum on nurturing creative global leaders through cooperative learning Migrant workers and mobile phones: an aid to learning? Mike Solly Practical guideline of English class toward global citizenship education Sohyon Jo Doing diversity in English language programmes for young learners David Valente Nurturing creative global citizens through collaborative learning You Kyoung Jung Something to MULL over: mapping the urban linguistic landscape Damian Williams Nurturing resourceful students through 3Cs: cultural understanding, creativity and collaboration Kyuyun Lim Leadership & management Exploring techniques for shifting classroom energy and sustaining student motivation Mohamed EL-Zamil Engaging teachers in curriculum development; an appreciative inquiry approach Suzanne Littlewood Creating a successful induction programme for EFL teachers abroad Ross Thorburn Rolling enrolment: what do teachers and students think? Jenny Johnson The why and the how of management research George Pickering What not to do. What not to say Barry Tomalin Fostering learner autonomy online - Facebook as a social learning space Christian Ludwig & Ward Peeters When project-based learning met the person-centered approach Patricia Salguero Learner autonomy Moved from Sunday The next generation of autonomous instruction thru VoiceThreads Marsha Appling-Nunez & Melissa Van De Wege Collaborative learning and the joint construction of meaning and understanding Anja Burkert EAP learners developing as practitioners of learning Susan Dawson Can we do it? Yes, we can Helen Jackson Beyond language skills: inspiring projects in secondary teaching Tien Minh Mai Teacher expectations, learner interpretations: assessing selfdirected projects Diane Malcolm Social networking: developing intercultural competence and fostering autonomous learning Ruby Vurdien Teachers wanted! Spot the teacher in the classroom Mehtap Yavuzdogan Becoming one with language: reflections on becoming different Ian Michael Robinson A new way to teach reading Ken Lackman 29 Learning technologies Moved from Sunday The next generation of autonomous instruction thru VoiceThreads Marsha Appling-Nunez & Melissa Van De Wege Creating TBL lessons from online video content Steve Bliss Using iAnnotate for integrated online academic writing feedback Nancy Carter & Alex Golding Filmmaking in the classroom Vanja Fazinic Making virtual technology in teaching intercultural communication personal and real Natalia Grishina Sounds good, looks good: using short video clips in ELT Michael Harrison Dictionary evolution: exploiting modern referencing tools to the max Julie Moore & Lisa Sutherland Introducing tablets and leading teachers toward effective use Ryan Parmee Augmented reality: practical ideas for its use in the classroom Stephen Pilton Through the looking Glass: creating a video-ready classroom David Read & Will Nash Digital corner Liliana Esther Simon Why bother implementing an ePortfolio system in a language school? Rolf Tynan Writing and the art of collaboration an online project Monica Veado Literature, media & cultural studies Teaching language or teaching culture? Benjamin Dobbs The roles of extensive reading in teacher education Chris Lima Teaching culture - teaching critical thinking Ivana Kirin & Marinko Uremovic Literature in an age of distraction Alan Maley Literature, critical, creative thinking and assessment mould a creative writer Inas Kotby Materials development Improving English-taught course delivery at university Victoria Bamond & Birgit Strotmann Uncovering expertise in coursebook writing Heather Buchanan & Julie Norton Intermediate plateau: helping our students with authentic material Ila Cristina Coimbra 30 The house that crack built: a picturebook for teens Sandie Mourao Shakespeare for English language learners Lisa Peter literature to enhance their intercultural competence Jennifer Schumm Fauster Sounds good, looks good: using short video clips in ELT Michael Harrison Reading: a key skill in learning English Hans Mol Dictogloss redux: grammar dictation in a digital age William Kerr Whole class creativity in the L2 classroom Brian Tomlinson 'Video for all' - video for language learning and teaching Steve Mann Materials writing Lying is the best policy... to get learners speaking! Jason Anderson Questions for learning and some unexpected answers Andrew Walkley Moved from Monday Vocabulary testing: why, what and how? Russell Whitehead & Felicity O'Dell Pronunciation coaching Wayne Rimmer Moved from Sunday Pronunciation (m)other tongue tied? Robin Walker The difficulty of defining grammatical difficulty Johan Graus Moved from Tuesday Developing a sustainable exploratory/action research project: improving oral presentations Katie Moran Cancelled Inclusive writing: taking learning preferences into account Marjorie Rosenberg Pronunciation Developing a pleasant non-native accent Sebastian Lesniewski Research A difficult vocation: including unmotivated students in EFL further education Foster Andrew & Runna Badwan activities of various degrees of communicativeness Yi-Mei Chen The ethics of researching English language skills in rural Bangladesh Qumrul Hasan Chowdhury Four weeks of pain: is the CELTA worth it? Elizabeth Davies Learning through English: children in India meeting the challenge Simon Etherton Rethinking monolingualism in TESOL courses - a plurilingual view Danielle Freitas TESOLacademic.org - the story so far! Huw Jarvis Cancelled English medium of instruction policy: community perspectives in Nepal Ashok Raj Khati The development of cognition and beliefs on CELTA courses Karla Leal Castaneda Research and teaching: bridging the gap Patsy Lightbown Designing materials: from theory to practice? Sonia Munro & Susan Sheehan Reflecting on reflection revisited Nicola Salmon & Elna Coetzer Social networking: developing intercultural competence and fostering autonomous learning Ruby Vurdien Something to MULL over: mapping the urban linguistic landscape Damian Williams Strategic English education development for schools in Algeria Nora Menia & Deirdre Nicholas 31 Teacher development Networking as a professional development resource for ELT in Yemen Khaled Kaid Ahmed Abdu Albaraty A difficult vocation: including unmotivated students in EFL further education Foster Andrew & Runna Badwan EFL teacher trainer: could this just be the beginning? Ben Beaumont The pragmatics of successful business communication Chia Suan Chong The joys of being a mature entrant to EFL teaching Helen Dennis-Smith Read? Why read? Skip, scan or skim? Reading solutions Ermek Esenaliev Let's see! Drawing skills for teachers Martyn Ford How social media is changing the DNA of professional development Ann Foreman Strictly Come CELTA. An analogy and some thoughts on feedback Jo Gakonga Transition from trainee to teacher: a mentoring programme Kaithe Greene Twerking the meaning: the pragmatic implicature of song lyrics Andreas Grundtvig Language students' perceptions of practice lessons in a pre-service course Sally Janssen 32 TESOLacademic.org - the story so far! Huw Jarvis Continuing the quest for developing teacher educator skills Rubina Khan Self-assessment skills: the role of the teacher Richard Kiely What motivates an English language teacher to teach? Hsuan-Yau (Tony) Lai ETTE: tracing the impacts of a large-scale ELT project Sue Leather Research and teaching: bridging the gap Patsy Lightbown The roles of extensive reading in teacher education Chris Lima Engaging teachers in curriculum development; an appreciative inquiry approach Suzanne Littlewood Literature in an age of distraction Alan Maley A status update for teachers Neil McCutcheon Moved from Tuesday Developing a sustainable exploratory/action research project: improving oral presentations Katie Moran Vietnamese teacher education's changing landscape in a global economy Rosemary Orlando How low can you go? High-impact low-resource activities for YLs Tom Ottway, Barbara Gardner & Rachel Johnson Market smarter to sell higher as a freelance trainer Christina Rebuffet-Broadus Engaging parents in their learning Karen Saxby Helping teachers motivate learners - with a touch of drama Alison Smith Questions for learning and some unexpected answers Andrew Walkley Only connect: seven strategies for ensuring teacher-student communication Ken Wilson Developing teacher language awareness Daniel Xerri & Odette Vassallo Forum on blended teacher training The flipped model of teacher training Fakhra Al-Mamary Developing teachers' classroom English through self-directed learning Julia Cave Smith & Patrick Musafiri British Council's professional ELT program: blended learning, MI, a breakthrough Mohammadreza Soofinajafi Forum on peer observation Forum on INSETT Forum on action research EFL teachers and peer observation: beliefs, challenges and implications Gihan Ismail The impact of a short in-service course for Chinese teachers Ailsa Deverick Action research for teacher trainers Alex Cann Teachers in the making: learning, reflecting and growing Monica Freire Capacity building of English teachers through guided action research Blerta Mustafa & Yllke Pacarizi Peer observation: introducing a system that actually works for everyone Shirley Norton Peer observation: making it work for lasting CPD Carole Robinson & Maria Heron Case studies of INSET impact on EFL teacher change Ming Li Spreading and embedding teacher research in difficult circumstances Paula Rebolledo & Tom Connelly Forum on novice teachers Pairing the unpaired Laxman Gnawali EFL novice teachers: teaching and participating communities of practice Gloria Romero The resilience of novice teachers Barbara Roosken Teacher training & education Exploring language teaching in pre-service TEFL education in Chile Loreto Aliaga how to develop thinking skills in taskbased learning Dina Blanco-Ioannou Where are we now? Current teaching paradigms in pre-service training Bill Harris How to make speaking assessment more reliable Mila Angelova Moved from Tuesday Using metaphors in evaluating the work of teacher trainers Lola Bulut Language students' perceptions of practice lessons in a pre-service course Sally Janssen Improving English-taught course delivery at university Victoria Bamond & Birgit Strotmann Four weeks of pain: is the CELTA worth it? Elizabeth Davies Continuing the quest for developing teacher educator skills Rubina Khan EFL teacher trainer: could this just be the beginning? Ben Beaumont How social media is changing the DNA of professional development Ann Foreman The development of cognition and beliefs on CELTA courses Karla Leal Castaneda Strictly Come CELTA. An analogy and some thoughts on feedback Jo Gakonga ETTE: tracing the impacts of a large-scale ELT project Sue Leather The difficulty of defining grammatical difficulty Johan Graus 'Video for all' - video for language learning and teaching Steve Mann Familiarisation activities awareness of the CEFR levels and descriptors Jana Beresova 33 Designing materials: from theory to practice? Sonia Munro & Susan Sheehan Through the looking Glass: creating a video-ready classroom David Read & Will Nash Warmth-recognition-sense-ofbelonging: a framework for success Karina Nazzari Jetstream Helbling's course for Vietnamese teacher education's changing landscape in a global economy Rosemary Orlando Getting it right: how to rate writing Sibylle Plassmann adults in the 21st Century Jane Revell Digital corner Liliana Esther Simon Creating a successful induction programme for EFL teachers abroad Ross Thorburn Forum on reflection Investigating reflective practice in a training course for young learners Oliver Beddall Looped reflective practice for teacher development Martin Froggett a tool The role of and cultural differences in TEFL reflective thinking David Gerlach The artsy side of teaching Radmila Popovic Testing, evaluation & assessment Evaluation for returns - a fourlevel approach Naziha Ali Jafri Identifying the academic reading skills needed for IELTS success Pauline Cullen Communicating communicative competence Pete Rutherford Formative assessment Simon Andrewes An impact study of BEC Vantage on test-takers in China Xiangdong Gu Potential and pitfalls of assessment: enhancing learning through constructive alignment Alex Thorp How to make speaking assessment more reliable Mila Angelova Familiarisation activities awareness of the CEFR levels and descriptors Jana Beresova Moved to Monday Vocabulary levels: which words are at which level? Stephen Bullon An uncertain and approximate business? Why teachers should love testing Jeremy Harmer Self-assessment skills: the role of the teacher Richard Kiely Getting it right: how to rate writing Sibylle Plassmann Language proficiency profiles - the demise of global language proficiency Geoff Tranter Moved from Monday Vocabulary testing: why, what and how? Russell Whitehead & Felicity O'Dell Young learners & teenagers The right age? Mandana Arfa Kaboodvand how to develop thinking skills in taskbased learning Dina Blanco-Ioannou 34 Memorable, not memorized learning Lulu Campbell Getting the most from video Robert Campbell activities of various degrees of communicativeness Yi-Mei Chen Filmmaking in the classroom Vanja Fazinic 'International Youth Forum model' - a leadership skill-building workshop Tatiana Ischenko Warmth-recognition-sense-ofbelonging: a framework for success Karina Nazzari Hand-holding for effective formative assessment and better teaching-learning outcomes Kirti Kapur Make up poor class time by sending an audio file Martha Ada Onjewu Helping ESOL students navigate the complicated US university application process Elizabeth Wentzel How low can you go? High-impact low-resource activities for YLs Tom Ottway, Barbara Gardner & Rachel Johnson Only connect: seven strategies for ensuring teacher-student communication Ken Wilson Literature, critical, creative thinking and assessment mould a creative writer Inas Kotby Beyond language skills: inspiring projects in secondary teaching Tien Minh Mai Groove.me: Learning English through pop music in primary school Elona Manders Reading: a key skill in learning English Hans Mol Learning to listen: teaching purposeful listening to develop language proficiency Pallavi Naik Shakespeare for English language learners Lisa Peter When project-based learning met the person-centered approach Patricia Salguero Engaging parents in their learning Karen Saxby You too can make young pupils bilingual with English! Claire Selby Helping teachers motivate learners - with a touch of drama Alison Smith Doing diversity in English language programmes for young learners David Valente Forum on nurturing creative global leaders through cooperative learning Practical guideline of English class toward global citizenship education Sohyon Jo Nurturing creative global citizens through collaborative learning You Kyoung Jung Nurturing resourceful students through 3Cs: cultural understanding, creativity and collaboration Kyuyun Lim Sunday Applied linguistics Innovations in ELT in Iran Chris Kennedy & Danny Whitehead Getting 'em out there: cultural exploration and second language learning Deak Kirkham Authenticity in English language classrooms: going beyond the text(book) Erkan Kulekci Developing the Survey of ELT Research in India Lina Mukhopadhyay Thai EFL teachers' evaluation of teaching practice: a self-rated investigation Sureepong Phothongsunan Language-supportive education in English medium-of-instruction contexts John Simpson Walk before you run: reading strategies for Arabic learners Emina Tuzovic 35 Business English Are all the roads leading to Rome? Cari Freer The world is my classroom Richard Osborne Business storytelling: helping learners to create memorable stories Dana Poklepovic English for academic purposes The difference is academic: developing elementary EAP Edward de Chazal Planning C1 level translation activities Carol Ebbert Learner autonomy in the language classroom: academic writing in action Natalia Eydelman Reaching the right balance in students' self-driven videoconferences Hana Katrnakova English speakers' club for enhancing English culture Krishna Khatiwada However, while, thus... how to teach transitions successfully Petra Kletzenbauer An integrated writing task: a tool to teach and assess Irina Nuzha English for specific purposes Keep CALM and write accessible ESP materials! Emily Bryson Soft skills in ESP: lawyer-client interview and the like Barbora Chovancova 36 Swapshop - ideas for teaching IELTS Mina Patel Academic writing for students of economics: for and against Svetlana Petrovskaya What is the question? Dealing with IELTS Writing Task 2 Sarah Philpot Academic Reading Circles: improving learner engagement and text comprehension Tyson Seburn How does just chatting become a purposeful conversation? Candy van Olst The development of L2 reading self-concept in an academic context Carolyn Walker Teaching study skills to university students Dorothy Zemach Soft power: adding soft skills training to your teaching toolkit Mark Powell A multi-skill approach to designing a business English course Tatiana Tolstova Forum on EAP writing Integrating simulations in a seminar-based approach to EAP writing Gusztav Demeter Explicit SPRE instruction - an aid to essay writing Niall Lloyd Beyond the five-paragraph essay in EAP writing Jennifer MacDonald Forum on different perspectives on feedback Managing mindsets: an approach to providing effective feedback Anna Hasper Error correction for speaking: an evidence-based approach Christopher Smith Years of teaching experience and perceiving and handling spoken errors Ozgur Taskesen The difference is academic: developing elementary EAP academic language Edward de Chazal Language teachers' target language: ESP of language teaching Alexey Korenev Reaching the right balance in students' self-driven videoconferences Hana Katrnakova An integrated writing task: a tool to teach and assess Irina Nuzha Implementing task-based needs analysis in an ESP curriculum Catherine Prewett-Schrempf A reappraisal of translation in ESP: legal English Belen Ramirez Practical advice on creating authentic Medical English listening materials Sheila Thorn ToT impact on students' learning in Egyptian technical colleges Mohamed Ahmed Abd Elwakeel Mystery mini dramas for your next class Colin Granger Forum on interculturality Achieving meaningfulness, developing language skills and building confidence through ethnography Krista Court A few histories of English Jonathan Marks General Grammar: deixis - pointing this way and that Paul Davis Online teacher education: building effective and affective learning strategies Adriana de los Santos Revitalizing language classes through humor Kobra Derakhshan Towards a functional approach to teaching conditionals Adam Dixon Memorisation in the EFL classroom Mary Giuraniuc Uncovering culture Ben Goldstein & Ceri Jones Strengthening English language teaching with classroom activities Geeta Goyal something How to harness emotions for success in the classroom Sean McDonald Engaging 30 students in an inclusive classroom Romulo Neves Developing a lexical syllabus: challenges and opportunities Diane Schmitt Reading and listening activities: understanding today or understanding tomorrow? Catherine Walter Forum on motivating students to read Advocating reading to an antireading generation Baya Bensalah Building intercultural competence and managing international projects Barbara Lapornik Intercultural experiences of South Asian students in the Germanic cluster Adrian Millward-Sadler Educating for cultural awareness Kristina Urboniene Forum on non-nativeness in ELT: implications, knowledge of language, and credibility The taboo issue of a (non-native) teacher's knowledge of English Higor Cavalcante Non-nativeness and its critical implications on non-native English-speaking teachers Shazia Nawaz Awan Promoting non-native trainers' credibility Ahmed Othman Autonomous reading tasks: their influence on confidence and language skills Ilse Born-Lechleitner Self-regulated reading vs. critical reading: which one boosts reading motivation? Mona Khabiri Global issues Integrating human values in EFL instruction Ruwaida Abu-Rass Exploring EFL learners' intercultural competence through international service-learning programs Chiuhui Wu 37 Leadership & management Integrating new teachers into an established staffroom Fiona Dunlop The Chimp Paradox and a stressfree life Diarmuid Fogarty Are all the roads leading to Rome? Cari Freer The dogme and demand high of ELT management Maureen McGarvey How to get your team thinking Duncan Foord Using performance indicators to monitor training initiatives Vinicius Nobre Institutional self-assessment: a leadership tool for quality assurance Susan Sheerin Learner autonomy How can the British Council products lead to learner autonomy? Nadeem Abdulbaqi Al-Murshedi Moved to Saturday The next generation of autonomous instruction thru VoiceThreads Marsha Appling-Nunez & Melissa Van De Wege Creativity in teacher development: peer group mentoring and collective writing Felicity Kjisik, Sandro John Amendolara & Leena Karlsson Enhancing second language acquisition through formal instruction in English-speaking environments Alan Martins Amorim Peer teaching activities for pronunciation lessons Bindu Varghese Teaching study skills to university students Dorothy Zemach Getting 'em out there: cultural exploration and second language learning Deak Kirkham Learning technologies products lead to learner autonomy? Nadeem Abdulbaqi Al-Murshedi EFL teacher education for the 21st Century David Coulson Moved to Saturday The next generation of autonomous instruction thru Chop, knead and slice: getting the multiValentina Dodge Marsha Appling-Nunez & Melissa Van De Wege Who needs ELT newsletters? The Greek issue! Your issue Kantarakis Eftychios VoiceThreads Camelot project: machinima for online language learning and teaching Tuncer Can How can the British Council Student support in online-only courses Deirdre Cijffers & Gordon Lewis 38 Learner autonomy in the language classroom: academic writing in action Natalia Eydelman Technology and learning oriented assessment: helping teachers and learners Evelina Galaczi & Angeliki Salamoura It's MALL and it's powerful David Gatrell Successfully implementing effective flipped or blended learning: a StudyBundles approach Daniel Hinkley A teacher-centred approach to new technologies and blended learning Mike Howard Multimodal texts in language teaching: developing viewing and representing skills Tamas Kiss Learning English in a mobile age: successful classroom practices Margarida Marques Pereira From whiteboards to Web 2.0 Daniel Martin Help your students to master their vocabulary faster Anna Poplawska The challenge: motivation and productive skills through technology Nataliya Yordanova Managing teacher digital identity: sharing, oversharing and undersharing Sophia Mavridi Training university students into digital natives challenge taken! Nora Tartsay Nemeth iPads in ELT: how are we using them and why? Mark Osborne Improving English language learner outcomes using online data Rasil Warnakulasooriya Blended learning in higher education; motivating mixed-ability classes Joyce den Heijer Digital or analogue: making choices about technology in lesson planning David Pearce Test-teach-test with technology Philip Weir Flipped lessons in and out of the EFL classroom Jose Maria Lopez Lago Can remote teaching promote deep learning? Paul Woods New Vistas OpenClass opens to university graduates Elena Yastrebova Forum on blended learning Literature, media & cultural studies Film-music, film and TEFL realizing a vision James Fitzgibbon Shakespeare now: resetting and Robert Hill Want to spice up your lessons? Try with a song Sandra Vida Storytelling and improvising: creativity at play David Heathfield How do you like me? Participatory culture and ELT Ana Carolina Lopes for song lyrics in EFL Chris Walklett Can a picture tell a thousand words? Hugh Dellar However, while, thus... how to teach transitions successfully Petra Kletzenbauer Help your students to master their vocabulary faster Anna Poplawska Shakespeare now: resetting and Exploiting "ear slips" and misplaced boundaries in oral skills instruction Maria Parker, Brenda Imber & Carson Maynard Practical advice on creating authentic Medical English listening materials Sheila Thorn Materials development Robert Hill Materials writing Free and fair ELT: for writers, publishers and teachers Katherine Bilsborough & Chuck Sandy Can a picture tell a thousand words? Hugh Dellar Keep CALM and write accessible ESP materials! Emily Bryson From tradition to innovation: a British Indian collaboration in course design Penny Hands Soft skills in ESP: lawyer-client interview and the like Barbora Chovancova Tools, tips and tasks for developing materials writing skills John Hughes your project the editor! Fiona MacKenzie & David Baker The why, what and how of selfpublishing for teachers Johanna Stirling Teaching creative writing through the iStory project Djalal Tebib 39 Pronunciation Exploiting "ear slips" and misplaced boundaries in oral skills instruction Maria Parker, Brenda Imber & Carson Maynard Peer teaching activities for pronunciation lessons Bindu Varghese Moved to Saturday Pronunciation (m)other tongue tied? Robin Walker Teacher voices: does research meet practice? Zarina Markova Towards initiating YELTA Nagm-Addin Saif Focusing on sounds - using synthetic phonics to teach listening Adam Scott Research Researching professional development with the use of the narrative approach Volha Arkhipenka Evaluating an action research scheme for English language teachers Simon Borg Developing the Survey of ELT Research in India Lina Mukhopadhyay Focusing on sounds - using synthetic phonics to teach listening Adam Scott iPads in ELT: how are we using them and why? Mark Osborne Language-supportive education in English medium-of-instruction contexts John Simpson Thai EFL teachers' evaluation of teaching practice: a self-rated investigation Sureepong Phothongsunan The development of L2 reading self-concept in an academic context Carolyn Walker Researching professional development with the use of the narrative approach Volha Arkhipenka Evaluating an action research scheme for English language teachers Simon Borg Professional development through observational feedback Ibrahima Diallo Quality improvement in teacher development through peerobservation and feedback Mohamed Tahar Asses Exploring a new global framework for continuing professional development Paul Braddock How to increase your market worth as an EFL teacher Carol Bausor A reflective journey for language teachers Caroline Campbell Sensing our teaching space: changing our practice Valeria Benevolo Franca Action research in the classroom the ultimate development tool Gill Davidson & Sarah Glinski Exploring a new global framework for continuing professional development Paul Braddock The impact of action research on development Emily Edwards Teacher development 40 From pragmatism to professional autonomy: transforming online postgraduate study Alex Ding & Jane Evison Lessons learned as a language learner Madeleine du Vivier & Jo-Ann Delaney The impact of action research on development Emily Edwards Who needs ELT newsletters? The Greek issue! Your issue Kantarakis Eftychios Enabling teachers to teach emerging middle class students Henrique Moura The why, what and how of selfpublishing for teachers Johanna Stirling Classroom observations: a tool for mentoring and growth Sophie Farag Using performance indicators to monitor training initiatives Vinicius Nobre A sustainable model for CPD: reflections from China Maggie Swannock & Donna Cook The Chimp Paradox and a stressfree life Diarmuid Fogarty Topics, texts, tasks and a stolen packet of sweets Danny Norrington-Davies Teaching @ the edge of chaos Adrian Tennant It's MALL and it's powerful David Gatrell Better together: peer-coaching for continuing professional development Dita Phillips & Ela Wassell Peer facilitators: supporting teachers with mobile-learning professional development Malcolm Griffiths Creativity in teacher development: peer group mentoring and collective writing Felicity Kjisik, Sandro John Amendolara & Leena Karlsson Teacher voices: does research meet practice? Zarina Markova Managing teacher digital identity: sharing, oversharing and undersharing Sophia Mavridi Teacher training & education STAD (Student TeamsAchievement Divisions): energizing cooperative learning Siddika Sabooni Towards initiating YELTA Nagm-Addin Saif Teacher identity - in search of who we really are Liliana Sanchez Forming synergetic professional learning communities: becoming highly effective TESOL professionals M. Athar Hussain Shah Improve your teaching: profile, plan, progress Mary Whiteside & Virgil Ierubino Forum on teacher reflection in practice Reflective teaching: an institutional bottom-up approach to CPD Artemis Aghvami Operationalizing reflective practice in teaching English as a foreign language Niki Christodoulou Training international teachers on a Masters programme: a reflective approach Teti Dragas & Lesley Kendall Integrating human values in EFL instruction Ruwaida Abu-Rass EFL teacher education for the 21st Century David Coulson Classroom observations: a tool for mentoring and growth Sophie Farag How to increase your market worth as an EFL teacher Carol Bausor Professional development through observational feedback Ibrahima Diallo Teaching English at public nocturnal schools in Brazil Andreia Fernandes Camelot project: machinima for online language learning and teaching Tuncer Can From pragmatism to professional autonomy: transforming online postgraduate study Alex Ding & Jane Evison Peer facilitators: supporting teachers with mobile-learning professional development Malcolm Griffiths Initial teacher training: challenges and innovations in course design Willy Cardoso Lessons learned as a language learner Madeleine du Vivier & Jo-Ann Delaney 41 Language teachers' target language: ESP of language teaching Alexey Korenev Topics, texts, tasks and a stolen packet of sweets Danny Norrington-Davies Teachers helping teachers: the Venezuelan experience Evelin Ojeda Naveda A sustainable model for CPD: reflections from China Maggie Swannock & Donna Cook Training university students into digital natives challenge taken! Nora Tartsay Nemeth Teaching @ the edge of chaos Adrian Tennant Are trainers really omniscient? Ushakiran Wagle Designing and delivering effective professional development from EFL teachers' perspectives Anwar Abdel Razeq A project-based approach to professional development Andrew Bosson The impact and issues of a Malaysian professional development programme Wendy Hiew Better together: peer-coaching for continuing professional development Dita Phillips & Ela Wassell Improve your teaching: profile, plan, progress Mary Whiteside & Virgil Ierubino Teacher identity - in search of who we really are Liliana Sanchez Forum on using online resources for teacher development CPD in low-resource contexts Michael Connolly & Reesha Alvi Theory at home, practice in class John Arnold IT self-access in Ethiopia: a challenging context Peter Hare & Yonas Bekele The effect of goal quality on subsequent self-regulation of learning H. Douglas Sewell Forming synergetic professional learning communities: becoming highly effective TESOL professionals M. Athar Hussain Shah Exploiting seminar and conference videos for professional development and training Ellen Darling Experiences of a webinarian Gayle Norman Testing, evaluation & assessment Enhancing assessment literacy: nurturing learning-oriented outcomes in the language classroom Vivien Berry Fairness as a consideration in writing test items Marian Crandall Technology and learning oriented assessment: helping teachers and learners Evelina Galaczi & Angeliki Salamoura 42 Forum on professional development The role of visual stimuli in EAP listening tests Saeede Haghi Raising scores: gamification activities for test preparation teachers Christien Lee What is the question? Dealing with IELTS Writing Task 2 Sarah Philpot Forum on large and medium-scale resources provision The need for Regional English Support Centres in developing countries Shane Martenstyn A reflective workshop on writing standardization practices: is standardization possible? Mehvar Turkkan From summative to formative assessment in a traditional ELT institute Isabela Villas Boas Katia Falcomer Young learners & teenagers Making up grammar rules Georgios Chatzis Developing readable Englishmedium textbooks in Rwanda John Clegg Using authentic storybooks in an early years classroom Nicky Francis Out-of-school English learning: hidden resource or classroom curse? Samuel Lefever Developing fluency through video Nino Maisuradze, Nino Salukvadze & Nino Mikeladze Working with readers and genre using a project-based approach Rafael Monteiro Using writing and drawing to release tension among traumatised students Hasan Ramadan Parental engagement: practical ideas from opening a new teaching centre Laura Jane McWilliams Can remote teaching promote deep learning? Paul Woods Students' strategic skills and their relation to test validity Abdullah Al Fraidan Effects of task type and pre-task planning on L2 performance Saraswati Dawadi Conversational routines: right words at the right time and place Gerrard Mugford Listening activities: teachers and students think the same in Sarajevo? Harun Bastug & Mehmet Akdogan Getting to grips with anxiety: from understanding to classroom practice Christina Gkonou & Mark Daubney How to optimize language learning through effective noticing strategies Harisimran Sandhu Some (further) doubts about CLIL learning outcome research Anthony Bruton How to assess students' grammar: introducing a new practical method David Jay Bringing corpus research into the language classroom Jane Templeton Yesterday... today... tomorrow... Olena Korol Changing the mindset of lower level learners through online collaborations Ellen Rana L1 - how to avoid it and when to use it Rachael Harris Monday Applied linguistics Business English Teaching English as a lingua franca (ELF): pros & cons Rudi Camerer English for the workplace: changing needs and changing contexts Jonathan Deer How to make ELT videos Vicki Hollett English for employability: assessing oral skills through a job interview Patrick McMahon Developing listening competence Evelina Miscin Spice up your Business English class with Pecha Kucha! Suzanne Vetter-M'Caw 43 English for academic purposes Being a student in English-medium engineering programmes: experiences & challenges Holi Ali Learning on the job: professional development through materials writing Olga Barnashova, Rod Bolitho, Svetlana Suchkova & Ekaterina Shadrova Developing the vocabulary strand of an EAP program Ozlem Baykan Critical thinking skills and their effect on EAP competence Jane Brooks Advanced reading skills subskills, tasks and texts Jill Buggey Low level, not low ambition! Teaching EAP to low-level learners Stephanie Dimond-Bayir How does L1 affect IELTS scores? Louisa Dunne Critical thinking skills in English language teaching Edward Newbon Neurodrama in ELT - planned with the brain in mind Alicja Galazka process Jemma Prior The dictogloss adapted for teaching phrases common in academic writing Seth Lindstromberg Raising awareness of group formation: some of the complexities Ann F.V. Smith Promoting learner agency through teaching language learning strategies Nuwar Mawlawi Diab Worlds without: English language learners' speaking activities outside the classroom Simon Williams English for employability: assessing oral skills through a job interview Patrick McMahon Assessing hospital communication skills of migrant health professionals in Europe Diana Metzner English for specific purposes From monolithic to binomial CLIL: a novel merged learning approach Renata Agolli The learner: a resource to make ESP specific?! Martin Beck Assessing hospital communication skills of migrant health professionals in Europe Diana Metzner process Jemma Prior English for specific academic purposes English-medium instruction (EMI) teaching strategies for Korean engineering students EunGyong Kim & Soo-Ok Kweon 44 CLIL: integration is the keyword Irina Titarenko English skills and technicalvocational education in a developing context Arifa Rahman ES(O)L Language input through projectbased learning: why and how Steve Brown Talk English: from CELTA to volunteer ESOL in South Africa Julie Douglas Recognising and working with emergent language in the ESOL classroom Richard Gallen Meeting the needs of English Creole-speaking students Yvonne Pratt-Johnson General Extensive reading: benefits and implementation Marcos Benevides The teacher as an event maker Andrew Wright Textploitation: getting more from a text David Byrne & Mark Heffernan Forum on dyslexia A visual manifesto for language teaching Kieran Donaghy & Anna Whitcher English language teaching using a theme-centred interaction (TCI) approach Cyriac Joby Promoting more meaningful learning and critical thinking in class J. Daniel Martin Neto & Claudia Freitas Triumpho Write more! Making the most of student journals Sandy Millin Say anything - using impro to develop language fluency Nicholas Munby Communicative language teaching in the 21st Century Chaz Pugliese Dyslexia and other SpLDs: simple strategies for maximum inclusion Anne Margaret Smith Do you love the theatre as we do? Olga Vavelyuk Dyslexia in the teaching environment Martin Bloomfield Using interactive web in teaching LD students Julia Koifman Classroom-based interventions for dyslexia inclusion in language education Maria Reraki Forum on drama activities in different language contexts: theory and praxis Classroom drama activities: research and a pedagogical proposal Vera Cabrera Duarte Drama festival: from kick-off to final performance Andrea Calvozo Transforming the EFL learning environment through drama activities Adolfo Tanzi Neto The Cambridge English Scale future of results reporting Andrew Somers the Make or break it! Teaching learners to write delicate emails Genevieve White Forum on vocabulary learning Are previously-learned formulaic sequences gone? A longitudinal study Thamer Alharthi Low-level students' perceptions about the usefulness of online vocabulary learning Sermin Celik More than words... Bruno Leys Forum on feedback on student writing The concept of student engagement and written corrective feedback Alia Moser Effect of metalinguistic written corrective feedback on linguistic errors Mehdi Solhi Andarab feeding forward for self-regulated learning Stephanie Xerri Agius Forum on extensive reading Reading interests and attitude among foundation year Arab EFL learners Nkechi Christopher Extensive reading competition: in quest of enlightened souls Pankaj Paul Book Club Cafe! Improving vocabulary through extensive reading Lesley Speer & Jose Lara 45 Global issues From monolithic to binomial CLIL: a novel merged learning approach Renata Agolli English alone is not enough: teaching multilingualism Michael Carrier Critical thinking skills and their effect on EAP competence Jane Brooks Investigating young bilingual children: possible reasons for underachievement at school Hilda Hio Fong Fok Can the Common European Framework be adapted for young learners? Trish Burrows Middle East meets West: global English and Emirati cultural identity Sarah Hopkyns Teaching English through international children's songs: a global approach Joan Kang Shin Worldwide English proficiency insight and implications: latest EF EPI rankings Christopher McCormick Gender, ideology and humor in the ESL/EFL classroom Thais Regina Santos Borges Interactive Language Fair Lesson study approach to professional development in ELT Seyit Omer Gok Exploratory practice for language learning with engineering students Hugh Nicoll Developing learning-oriented assessment tools: implications for teacher learning Padmini Kankata Teaching literacy through what students read Oluwayomi Oladunjoye Visual teaching and learning practice in Cambodian EFL higher education Bophan Khan Going mobile: a language learning Enes Kurtay CIG No classes, such learning; experiences of In-House Distance courses (IHDs) Vilhelm Lindholm 46 Monological and dialogical approaches in learning English at secondary level Anne Ontero What can you learn from a test? Daniel Pell More than a holiday English teaching assistants in Thailand Lauren Perkins Teaching ESP at an economic university: looking for new techniques Elena Velikaya Anxiety in self-study foreign language learning Corinna von Ludwiger Using assessment rubrics for improving learner autonomy and summarising skills Irina Yunatova Leadership & management Implementing blended learning: an institutional view Eric Baber & Carla Arena Embedding quality deep in the threat? Bruna Benedetti Caltabiano Managing renovation and change in ELT curriculum and materials development Isora Justina Enriquez O'Farrill Noah's ark: planning for mobile Nicky Hockly Aspiring to inspire: how to become a great LTO manager Fiona Thomas English as bridge between Afghan army cadets and British forces Tareq Walizada Learner autonomy Teaching learning strategies in a flipped instruction model Anna Uhl Chamot Sequential drift from teacher dependence to learner autonomy Shafqat Khalil Teaching children how to learn Gail Ellis & Nayr Ibrahim Yesterday... today... tomorrow... Olena Korol Making ourselves expendable: corpora training for learner autonomy Federico Espinosa Promoting learner agency through teaching language learning strategies Nuwar Mawlawi Diab Pronunciation to go: learning to learn from the dictionary Mark Hancock How to improve speaking proficiency in learners Justin Noppe Learning technologies Tailoring a comparative corpus website Emrah Akkurt & Asli Abak Sen Using Skype to help Palestinian speaking Atiyyeh Al-Habal Implementing blended learning: an institutional view Eric Baber & Carla Arena The app trap: why are entertaining ELT apps so rare? Jonathan Bygrave Is self-publishing a realistic option in ELT? Trends, tips, challenges Deborah Capras Fostering autonomy: harnessing the outside world from within the classroom Elizabeth Pinard Changing the mindset of lower level learners through online collaborations Ellen Rana Using Pinterest to promote genuine communication and enhance personalised learning Andreia Zakime Mobile devices for teacher learning training: lessons and implications Kalyan Chattopadhyay Developing and managing an eBook project from concept to completion Aysen Gilroy & Andrew Mcgladdery Innovation and quality: videoconferencing, team-teaching and digital literacy for YLs Hannah Ciborowska Apps for learning independence and inclusion Raquel Gonzaga Teens and their apps what is there to know? Ana d'Almeida Tracy Dumais Making ourselves expendable: corpora training for learner autonomy Federico Espinosa Ways to exploit authentic videos in EFL classes Muzeyyen Nazli Gungor & Mustafa Akin Gungor Nine steps into the digital classroom Marjorie Hernandez Noah's ark: planning for mobile Nicky Hockly 47 Getting started with blended and online learning Cleve Miller Principles for meaningful technology integration Maria Victoria Saumell Help your students to master their vocabulary faster Anna Poplawska Audio feedback in writing: can it help chronically dissatisfied learners? Petek Sirin Passive users or critical thinkers? Developing critical thinking with technology Dimitrios Primalis Premier Skills English: an action research project on teaching vocabulary Michael Radford An engaged tone: how ELT might handle the Nick Robinson, Tim Gifford & Laurie Harrison Digital twitteracy: 10 teaching solutions Claire Ross Assessing the writing process like a fly on the wall Ismael Sombra Bringing corpus research into the language classroom Jane Templeton Interactive whiteboard in teaching English for students with special needs Kuangyun Ting An App(etite) for construction Shaun Wilden & Nikola Fortova Using Pinterest to promote genuine communication and enhance personalised learning Andreia Zakime Forum on online learning platforms What the MOOC? Managing the massive online course Chris Cavey & Eleanor Clements Using Google sites to support teachers in multiple locations Tam Connors-Sadek MOOC mania: implications for English language teaching Peter Davidson Social learning: motivating students to use English through social technology Catherine Whitaker Literature, media & cultural studies visual competences using films and TV shows Annika Kreft & Viviane Lohe Materials development Learning on the job: professional development through materials writing Olga Barnashova, Rod Bolitho, Svetlana Suchkova & Ekaterina Shadrova Language input through projectbased learning: why and how Steve Brown Managing renovation and change in ELT curriculum and materials development Isora Justina Enriquez O'Farrill 48 Teaching literature using the five senses Maria Lucia Sciamarelli The three worlds of Chinese school-age English learners Yafu Gong & Wenjuan Ding Getting started with blended and online learning Cleve Miller Addressing mismatches between classroom context and coursebooks Kathleen Graves Help your students to master their vocabulary faster Anna Poplawska Subskills: the key to unlocking texts Rob Metcalf Premier Skills English: an action research project on teaching vocabulary Michael Radford Materials writing Is self-publishing a realistic option in ELT? Trends, tips, challenges Deborah Capras Frameworks for creativity in materials design Jill Hadfield How to make ELT videos Vicki Hollett Fostering autonomy: harnessing the outside world from within the classroom Elizabeth Pinard Moved to Saturday Vocabulary testing: why, what and how? Russell Whitehead & Felicity O'Dell Pronunciation Do we still need the phonemic chart? Richard Benson Pronunciation to go: learning to learn from the dictionary Mark Hancock Listening and connected speech: untruthful rules, unruly truths Richard Cauldwell People, pronunciation and play Luke Meddings Feeding speaking-fluency forward: using technology to raise the bar Jessica Cobley & Becky Steven Research Se habla ingles: an analysis of language policy in Mexico Pilar Aramayo Prudencio Some (further) doubts about CLIL learning outcome research Anthony Bruton Exploring the metacognitive approach to teaching listening David Collett Beyond myths and rituals: developing a 'grammar of choice' Martina Elicker & Ulla Fuerstenberg Recognising and working with emergent language in the ESOL classroom Richard Gallen Teacher beliefs, practices and teaching speaking Arwa Gandeel The ear of the beholder: helping learners understand different accents Laura Patsko Getting to grips with anxiety: from understanding to classroom practice Christina Gkonou & Mark Daubney Nine steps into the digital classroom Marjorie Hernandez Middle East meets West: global English and Emirati cultural identity Sarah Hopkyns Teaching English in primary schools: challenges of the Chilean classroom Maria Jesus Inostroza The dictogloss adapted for teaching phrases common in academic writing Seth Lindstromberg Inside their heads: the importance of learner beliefs and attitudes Jessica Mackay Research into practice: revisiting pronunciation teaching Pamela Rogerson-Revell Authentic listening: stepping from bottom-up processing to understanding Olga Sergeeva Understanding group dynamics in the English classroom Olja Milosevic Conversational routines: right words at the right time and place Gerrard Mugford English skills and technicalvocational education in a developing context Arifa Rahman Gender, ideology and humor in the ESL/EFL classroom Thais Regina Santos Borges What makes the online productive level of vocabulary tests difficult? Wei-Wei Shen Creating intercultural ambassadors through English in Nepal: a case study Sagun Shrestha 49 Audio feedback in writing: can it help chronically dissatisfied learners? Petek Sirin Monitoring and evaluation: 9000 Malaysian English language teachers Zoe Tysoe & Vanessa Lee Do EFL textbooks foster intercultural teaching/learning? Pawel Sobkowiak Inclusive education - what we, ELT teachers and directors, can do Mercedes Viola Forum on EAP/ESP reading Metacognitive strategy instruction for ESL university-level learners' reading strategy Bushra Ahmed Khurram Reading strategies and incidental vocabulary acquisition in ESP Sanja Radmilo Derado Trying to meet first-year English majors' academic reading needs Marina Vulovic &Kris Van de Poel Teacher development Planning for am/is/are? Planning for relative clauses? Nazan Akturk & Nurdan Yesil How to be paper light in your EFL classrooms Pam Kaur Gibbons Continued professional development making a lasting impact in the classroom Alex Birtles & Annamaria Pinter Parent-teacher dialogues Divya Madhavan Motivating reluctant learners: from challenges to achievements Peyman Bohlori Opening up the 'moment': inside Demand High Chris Edgoose in lesson feedback: a proposed framework Ana Garcia-Stone Frameworks for creativity in materials design Jill Hadfield Lesson jamming: planning lessons in groups Tom Heaven What's so special about Special Educational Needs? Graeme Hodgson 50 Where are the women in ELT? Russell Mayne & Nicola Prentis Fit and fun - educating our students for a healthy future Anton Prochazka Alternatives to coffee and chocolate: energy management for teachers Margit Szesztay In defence of TTT Emma Whitehouse Bridging the technophobetechnophile gap in teacher training and development Tessa Woodward & Daniel Monaghan Innovated interactions - how to elevate and redefine speaking activities Nihal Yildirim & Sally Ghalayini Learning from adjacent fields: economics and economy of EFL classrooms Svetlana Zhavoronkova Forum on thoughts on the observation process Lesson observations - the observer becomes the observee Conrad Heyns The elephant in the classroom: thoughts on the observer paradox Phil Keegan Interactive observation an alternative training approach Karen Waterston Forum on teacher blogs How does blogging help teacher candidates construct their teacher identities? Salli Aysegul See you on the other side: blogs and teacher reflection Barbara Chamberlin, Angela Pickering & Paul Slater Blogging; an adventure in support of teacher development Asli Lidice Gokturk Saglam Forum on online teacher training/development Teacher training and EAP: developing a framework for online training James Lambert Using online teacher development to make vocational education more fun Ahmed Salem Working together online: insights into a teacher education programme Marja Zibelius Teacher training & education Becoming a teacher trainer: learning to share skills with others Ahmad Jamshed Adel Effects of task type and pre-task planning on L2 performance Saraswati Dawadi Planning for am/is/are? Planning for relative clauses? Nazan Akturk & Nurdan Yesil Capturing the reality of the classroom in teacher education courses Gabriel Diaz Maggioli Teaching English as a lingua franca (ELF): pros & cons Rudi Camerer Teaching learning strategies in a flipped instruction model Anna Uhl Chamot Mobile devices for teacher learning training: lessons and implications Kalyan Chattopadhyay Innovation and quality: videoconferencing, team-teaching and digital literacy for YLs Hannah Ciborowska Quality control: towards a framework for assessing online training courses Gavin Dudeney & Thom Kiddle Beyond myths and rituals: developing a 'grammar of choice' Martina Elicker & Ulla Fuerstenberg The 4Cs of a successful partnership in teacher training Gulshan Huseynova Making it awesome: teaching and reaching teens Niki Joseph Artistic and creative practice in foreign language teaching and learning Peter Lutzker Best activities out of the den Gabriela Marcenaro Bonsignore Mindful corrective feedback: supporting learning Lesley Painter-Farrell A developmental and nonjudgemental way to observe teachers Lewis Richards Monitoring and evaluation: 9000 Malaysian English language teachers Zoe Tysoe & Vanessa Lee In defence of TTT Emma Whitehouse 51 Testing, evaluation & assessment Students' strategic skills and their relation to test validity Abdullah Al Fraidan How does L1 affect IELTS scores? The learner: a resource to make ESP specific?! Martin Beck Assessment for learning in primary EFL classrooms: challenges and successes Sophie Handy Moved from Saturday Vocabulary levels: which words are at which level? Stephen Bullon Continuous and comprehensive evaluation (CCE) a reality check! Ravinarayan Chakrakodi Feeding speaking-fluency forward: using technology to raise the bar Jessica Cobley & Becky Steven Young learners & teenagers Using Skype to help Palestinian How to assess students' grammar: introducing a new practical method David Jay Measuring learner outcomes: examples from around the world Claire Masson Curriculum vs. teaching: CLT in teaching English in Bangladesh Nasreen Sultana Re-conceptualising young learner language classroom assessment feedback? Achu Charles Tante Moved to Saturday Vocabulary testing: why, what and how? Russell Whitehead & Felicity O'Dell What makes the online productive level of vocabulary tests difficult? Wei-Wei Shen speaking Atiyyeh Al-Habal Investigating young bilingual children: possible reasons for underachievement at school Hilda Hio Fong Fok Teaching English through international children's songs: a global approach Joan Kang Shin Continued professional development making a lasting impact in the classroom Alex Birtles & Annamaria Pinter Assessment for learning in primary EFL classrooms: challenges and successes Sophie Handy visual competences using films and TV shows Annika Kreft & Viviane Lohe Learning is a game we play Carol Brown Morales What's so special about Special Educational Needs? Graeme Hodgson Is storytelling relevant in the 21st Century primary classroom? Viv Lambert & Mo Choy Teaching English in primary schools: challenges of the Chilean classroom Maria Jesus Inostroza Artistic and creative practice in foreign language teaching and learning Peter Lutzker Increase student motivation with authentic learning Nasy Inthisone Pfanner Parent-teacher dialogues Divya Madhavan Can the Common European Framework be adapted for young learners? Trish Burrows Switch off, tune in! Mindful singletasking with teens Joanna Dossetor Tracy Dumais Teaching children how to learn Gail Ellis & Nayr Ibrahim 52 Louisa Dunne Assessing student progress on rolling enrolment courses Katherine Solomon Making it awesome: teaching and reaching teens Niki Joseph Subskills: the key to unlocking texts Rob Metcalf Understanding group dynamics in the English classroom Olja Milosevic Passive users or critical thinkers? Developing critical thinking with technology Dimitrios Primalis Fit and fun - educating our students for a healthy future Anton Prochazka Creating intercultural ambassadors through English in Nepal: a case study Sagun Shrestha Forum on poetry Re-conceptualising young learner language classroom assessment feedback? Achu Charles Tante Grammar templates for the future with poetry for children Janice Bland Teaching for knowledge vs. teaching for use Neil Armstrong & William Ford Is younger always better? The age debate in young learners Victoria Murphy Poetry in teaching: incorporate verse in your everyday classroom Jasmina Arsenijevic Approaches to introducing contemporary poems in ELT Kirill Ignatov Tuesday Applied linguistics Emails for teaching pragmatics in the ESL classroom Afrah Ali Business English Biz15 Byte-sized Business English Mike Hogan Mini-conference simulation: business communication skills Andrew Preshous English for academic purposes and learning Chris Heady IELTS heading/section matching an effective and time-efficient technique Deborah Hobbs What's on your mind? Social networking for EAP students Tim Leigh Sustainable assessment? Users' perception of an ESL multi-source feedback system Boon Sier Jeanette Lim Real world tasks to engage and motivate Louise Pullen & Dan Jones How spiky can a spiky profile be? Karen Smith Preparing for PTE Academic and IELTS; comparisons and resources Jo Tomlinson Towards a critical teaching of English Rachel Ramsay English for specific purposes Real world tasks to engage and motivate Louise Pullen & Dan Jones Topic knowledge and IELTS success Louis Rogers & Nicholas Thorner 53 General Examining differentiation of instruction in ELT Thomas Ewens & Wieslawa Karczmarczuk Global issues Exploiting print & digital newspapers for intercultural sensitivity development Gloria R L Sampaio Leadership & management Mobile learning - empowering teachers and engaging students Jane Cohen Learner autonomy Structured academic controversies: creating friends not foes in classroom debates Sanaa Abdel Hady Makhlouf Learning technologies Beyond classroom limits: podcasting for EFL learners' writing Yousif Alshumaimeri & Ebrahim Bamanger BYOD a real account of implementation Leticia Camila Bissoto Queiroz de Moraes Biz15 Byte-sized Business English Mike Hogan Learner autonomy in action: where do we go from here? Gamze Sayram Teaching with technology in a classroom without any Kathryn Smelser Videocameras in the hands of learners Jamie Keddie Reviewing EdTech products Jo Sayers English & ICT for adolescent girls Masuda Khatoon Teaching with technology in a classroom without any Kathryn Smelser What's on your mind? Social networking for EAP students Tim Leigh Course (be)ware: key lessons in online course development Paul Sweeney How to gamify your English class Elena Peresada Literature, media & cultural studies Motivating ESL learners using folktales Rout Anirudha 54 How poetry can aid students' comprehension Rosemary Westwell Materials development Emails for teaching pragmatics in the ESL classroom Afrah Ali Taking flight from the OK plateau Nick Bilbrough LearnEnglish Schools: ICT solutions for contexts with limited internet access Deepali Dharmaraj Materials writing Critical issues and mainstream textbook content: a disruptive innovation? Derek Philip Creative grammar Charles Robert Hadfield Classic exercises and why they work in the 21st Century Hanna Kryszewska Structured academic controversies: creating friends not foes in classroom debates Sanaa Abdel Hady Makhlouf Learning listening: the challenge of unscripted language Anne McDonald Mini-conference simulation: business communication skills Andrew Preshous How poetry can aid students' comprehension Rosemary Westwell Course (be)ware: key lessons in online course development Paul Sweeney Pronunciation Pronunciation: what to do before you do sounds Piers Messum Research Drawings are talking: exploring visual narratives Julide Inozu Teaching grammar in context at primary school Maree Jeurissen Virtually unknown: web conferences as a tool for teacher development Caroline Moore Critical issues and mainstream textbook content: a disruptive innovation? Derek Philip Moved to Saturday Developing a sustainable exploratory/action research project: improving oral presentations Katie Moran Learner autonomy in action: where do we go from here? Gamze Sayram 55 Teacher development Through the eyes of the teachers: seeing beyond the surface Meltem Akbulut Yildirmis & Mehtap Ince Overcoming challenges for continuous professional development in teacher education Marcela Cintra Moved to Saturday Developing a sustainable exploratory/action research project: improving oral presentations Katie Moran Quality education at scale: possibilities, problems and PEELI Sobia Nusrat and learning Chris Heady Developing teacher excellence Andrew Nye & Karen Momber Virtually unknown: web conferences as a tool for teacher development Caroline Moore Practical, scalable training for compulsory education teachers addressing the challenge Liz Robinson & Tim Banks Why isn't your group work achieving the desired results? Adam Simpson Introducing literacy in an earlyyears EFL setting Stephen Thompson & Jane Thompson Structured spontaneity. spontaneity and creativity for roleplaying Robert Zammit Teacher training & education Through the eyes of the teachers: seeing beyond the surface Meltem Akbulut Yildirmis & Mehtap Ince Moved to Saturday Using metaphors in evaluating the work of teacher trainers Lola Bulut Quality education at scale: possibilities, problems and PEELI Sobia Nusrat Developing teacher excellence Andrew Nye & Karen Momber Practical, scalable training for compulsory education teachers addressing the challenge Liz Robinson & Tim Banks The natural CELTA - a farewell to language? Joanna Stansfield & Emma MeadeFlynn Improving your classroom test through simple statistics Louise Lauppe Testing, evaluation & assessment IELTS heading/section matching an effective and time-efficient technique Deborah Hobbs Sustainable assessment? Users' perception of an ESL multi-source feedback system Boon Sier Jeanette Lim Teacher cognition on written feedback: novice and experienced teachers Gul Karaagac Topic knowledge and IELTS success Louis Rogers & Nicholas Thorner Improving your classroom test through simple statistics Louise Lauppe 56 How spiky can a spiky profile be? Karen Smith Preparing for PTE Academic and IELTS; comparisons and resources Jo Tomlinson Young learners & teenagers Motivating ESL learners using folktales Rout Anirudha Phonics for parents as partners in learning Chloe Goudvis Is younger always better? The age debate in young learners Victoria Murphy Learning language through arts: teaching street art in EFL classrooms Henriette Dausend Engaging, fun learning: helping students gain grammar and EFL skills Carol Higho Difficulties with team teaching in Hong Kong kindergartens Mei Lee Ng LearnEnglish Schools: ICT Drawings are talking: exploring solutions for contexts with limited internet access Deepali Dharmaraj Help yourself! Exploring selfmotivating strategies with teenagers Edmund Dudley visual narratives Julide Inozu English & ICT for adolescent girls Masuda Khatoon How to gamify your English class Elena Peresada Introducing literacy in an earlyyears EFL setting Stephen Thompson & Jane Thompson 57 Poster presentations (sponsored by ETS TOEFL ®) From professional development to professional dissemination Noha Faisal Mohamed Abdelmotagally Mini reading self-assessment tools fatma Al Alalwi & Noura Al Kalbani Recurring writing errors preservice teachers make at lowerintermediate levels Marisol Amigo Peacebuilding and grammar acquisition in Kurdistan Region, Iraq Lone Bendixen Goulani Global perspectives, local incentives Fernanda Benedito Using English picture book storytimes to build confidence in ELL Diane Nancy Brown The impact of podcasts on learners' listening comprehension Saliha Chelli ELT in mixed-ability groups in Moscow 'Tsaritsyno' School 548 Olga Chinareva Apprentisys - managing student payment, attendance, assessment and more Carol Cregg 58 Integrated assessment in foreign language teaching Carolyn De Meyer & Vanessa De Wilde logs from two essay categories Okon Effiong, Omama Osman, Alaa Al-Housain & Reham ALHousain Diamonds are forever: ensuring language learners achieve lifelong learning aspirations Carol Joy Everhard Effective strategies for teaching English words by using etymology Yoko Hirase Role of inhibition/extroversion in raising cultural awareness at the kindergarten Nadine Jaafarawi What makes UFRO students succeed and fail at learning English? Oriana Onate Knowing ME - a non-profit-making project on Maritime English Alexia Piaggio Exploring EFL l communication strategies via computer-mediated oral communication Sumanee Pinweha English for academics Marija Popova Need for a new assessment and role of ELT teachers Betul Ayse Sayin The Ultimate Guide to CELTA and self-publishing Emma Jones & Amanda Momeni Developing an online master's course: experience, challenges and evaluation Helen Thompson & Helen Donaghue Oral feedback behaviour of native and non-native English teachers Burcin Kagitci Yildiz Using the vizualisation method in teaching language skills Aida Tulegenova Enhancing EFL learners' motivation and autonomy through webskills and activities Warda Khouni Reading approach in foreign language (English) proficiency attainment Birsen Tutunis Demonstration of a personalized English reading learning system Jim-Min Lin Aligning the Vocabulary Levels Test with the CEFR Desiree Verdonk Additional sessions S ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING The IATEFL AGM, sponsored by telc - language tests, will take place on Sunday 12th April from 1310 to 1410. TRIBUTE SESSION The tribute session is an opportunity to remember colleagues who've died during the year since the last conference. If you've lost a colleague or former colleague, you'll have an opportunity to say a few words in their memory and, if you wish, to bring along a memento (book, teaching materials, etc.). Or you may just want to come to the session to hear about colleagues who are no longer with us, and perhaps to add any memories you may have. The tribute session will take place on Sunday 12th April from 1710 to 1815. HORNBY SCHOLAR & ALUMNI SLOTS The name of A.S. Hornby is highly regarded in the ELT world, not only through his publications and ideas on teaching methods but also through the work of the A.S. Hornby Educational Trust, set up in 1961. This was a farsighted and generous initiative whereby a large proportion of Hornby's income was set aside to improve the teaching and learning of English as a foreign language, chiefly by providing grants to enable English teachers from overseas to come to Britain for professional training. The Hornby scholars this year will present Teacher cognition and communicative curricula: bridging the gaps on Saturday 11th April. The Hornby scholars are: Wimansha Abeyawickrama (Sri Lanka), Babita Chapagain (Nepal), Abdou Dieng (Senegal), Suzuki Koda Fuentes (Chile), Natalia Gatti (Uruguay), Jingli Jiang (China), Jenny Joshua (South Africa), Shefali Kulkarni (India), Saleha Mersin (Malaysia), Bulara Monyaki (South Africa) & Seetha Venunathan (India) Facilitated by Martin Weddell (University of Leeds, UK) Two Hornby Alumni will also be presenting. The alumni are: Evelin Ojeda Naveda (Venezuela) presenting on Teachers helping teachers: the Venezuelan experience and Ravinarayan Chakrakodi (India) presenting on Continuous and comprehensive evaluation (CCE) a reality check! SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP OPEN FORUMS Saturday Sunday English for Specific Purposes Leadership & Management Global Issues Materials Writing Learner Autonomy Research Learning Technologies Testing, Evaluation & Assessment Literature, Media & Cultural Studies Young Learners & Teenagers See pages 63-66 for information on the SIG Days. Monday Business English ES(O)L Pronunciation Teacher Development Teacher Trainers & Educators ELT CONVERSATION Teaching English for the Workplace Issues and Discussion Join Almut Koester and Evan Frendo as they discuss some of the big issues in teaching English for the workplace. The format is simple. They have selected a series of quotations from recent publications on workplace English, covering areas such as business English as a lingua franca, the relationship between research and practice, and the role of the teacher. These quotations will be projected onto the screens in the room. Together they will explore what each quotation means, and discuss whether or not they agree with it. You will then have a chance to challenge or add to what they have said. Come prepared for a lively discussion! Evan Frendo has worked in ESP since 1993, mostly in the corporate sector. He travels regularly in Europe and Asia to run courses, speak at conferences, or to work as a consultant. Almut Koester is Professor of English Business Communication and researches spoken workplace discourse. She is interested in applications of research to Business English teaching. 59 OPEN SPACE 2015 Open Space is a mini-conference in itself. It gives you the chance not only to flag up and explore the topics that matter to you and your colleagues, but also to learn a new conference tool for use elsewhere in your professional life. Facilitated by Adrian Underhill, Susan Barduhn and Ros Wright, you will have the opportunity to identify issues that are professionally significant or that fire you up at that moment, and through a brief selection process arrive at a spontaneous conference during which you might host a session in relation to your topic, or participate in the sessions of others. After the first round each group gives a content resume to the other groups, and then a second round of sessions begins, either growing out of a previous session or starting afresh. The whole point is to come without notes or preparation and to work with what is collectively brought in the form of experience, inquiry and the passion of the moment. This session lasts 1hr 45 mins. The iterative and developing nature of Open Space necessitates participants to stay throughout. So, come prepared to engage with the ELT issues that fire you and others up (mobile learning, perspectives, new contacts and a new ELT conference methodology. These morning sessions aim to inform and support delegates across a range of areas they may be unfamiliar with. The sessions will take place from 0815 to 0845, giving you time to get to the plenary sessions. Please see the Conference Programme, handed to you at conference, for the venues. Saturday 11 th April How to get the most out of this conference Susan Barduhn This session is for new IATEFL conference participants as well as those of you who have attended many conferences... but feel your experience could go deeper. We will analyze the programme, form learning groups for those who wish to jigsaw their conference experience, and share conference time management tips. This session will be repeated at lunchtime. How to reflect on research talks at the conference Sarah Mercer In this session, we will explore how to make the most of the talks and presentations we attend during the conference. In particular, we will focus on how to reflect on the research we hear about and consider its relevance for and connections to our own professional contexts. How to give a presentation at an international conference Jeremy Day Giving a presentation can be a stressful experience. This session will give you ways of organising yourself before your presentation and conducting yourself during your presentation to reduce that stress. The aim of the session is to make your presentation a more satisfying experience for you and for your participants. Sunday 12 th April How to become a successful freelancer Mike Hogan 1) Organizational details budgeting & finances, flexible schedule, security, 2) How to get work self-marketing & professionalizing yourself, 3) How to keep work quality control, referrals, and solid admin. 60 How to be successful in an ELT interview Timothy Phillips Appearance, Attitude, and Awareness of your interviewer are as important as your abilities. In this session, learn how to get yourself a AAA-rating and the job! How to write for IATEFL Voices and other English teaching magazines Alison Schwetlick In this session I will outline how to come up with an idea, choose the right publication for it and then convert it into a publishable piece. I will include examples of genres; writing styles; pertinent guidelines; and tips on how to work with the editor. Monday 13 th April How to get the most from your teaching association Jane Ryder & Ros Wright Teaching Associations? This session provides you with advice on getting Committee as well as help you evaluate the skills you can offer the TA in your locality. How to move into language school management Andy Hockley This session will look at starting the transition from teacher to manager - including reasons why you might think about making that move, ways of developing to prepare yourself to take on new responsibilities, and issues that you might want to be aware of. Come and see what is involved. How to get published in a refereed journal Graham Hall This session will look at why you might want to get published in an "academic" journal, and how to go about it. The editor of ELT Journal will share tips and suggestions for getting your work in print. Tuesday 14 th April How to submit a speaker proposal Madeleine du Vivier In this session, we will review the criteria that are used to decide if a conference proposal is accepted for the IATEFL Annual Conference programme. We will discuss what makes a successful proposal, both in terms of the abstract and the summary, and how to ensure that your proposal is accepted. How to move from being a teacher to becoming a trainer Silvana Richardson It is often a challenge to go from being a teacher to a teacher trainer. In this session, I will describe how you can develop the skills and knowledge that you need for the role, as well as formal progression routes. How to write successfully for IATEFL Conference Selections Tania Pattison Conference Selections publication. The editor will provide guidance on how to prepare your report, will show examples of past submissions that were accepted for publication, and will answer any questions you have. 61 IATEFL SIGs (SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS) What are the SIGs? The aim of the IATEFL Special Interest Groups is to extend the work of IATEFL into professional specialist areas, to enable members to benefit from information regarding new professional developments and local and international events. Why should I join a SIG? Each Special Interest Group aims to provide its members with three mailings per year (at least two of which are newsletters or equivalent publications). The SIG newsletters often include articles from members, as well as informing the membership of the proceedings of conferences and one-day events which members may have been unable to attend. Each Special Interest Group aims to organise a minimum of two face-to-face events per year (ideally at least one outside the UK). In addition, online events may be held. In addition there are other benefits for SIG members, which vary from one SIG to another, such as websites, discussion lists, use of social media, scholarships and archives of online events and publications. Full Individual Members of IATEFL are entitled to join one Special Interest Group included in their membership fee. Who are the SIGs? Business English English for Specific Purposes ES(O)L Global Issues Leadership & Management Learner Autonomy Learning Technologies Literature, Media & Cultural Studies Materials Writing Pronunciation You can be active in IATEFL: Be active Research Teacher Development Teacher Training & Education Testing, Evaluation & Assessment Young Learners & Teenagers Join an IATEFL SIG For more information about the SIGs, come to the IATEFL stand in the exhibition, contact IATEFL at [email protected], visit www.iatefl.org, or contact the coordinators of each group at the relevant email address below: Business English [email protected] English for Speakers of Other Languages [email protected] English for Specific Purposes - [email protected] Global Issues - [email protected] Leadership & Management - [email protected] Learner Autonomy - [email protected] Learning Technologies - [email protected] Literature, Media & Cultural Studies - [email protected] 62 Materials Writing [email protected] Pronunciation - [email protected] Research [email protected] Teacher Development - [email protected] Teacher Training and Education - [email protected] Testing, Evaluation & Assessment - [email protected] Young Learners & Teenagers - [email protected] SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP DAYS What is a SIG Day? From the speaker proposals submitted for the conference, each SIG chose presentations related to their SIG particular SIG area, you have the opportunity to follow this track of selected sessions throughout the day. One session in each SIG Day about the SIG, its events and its committee. Details, including which day each SIG Day is on, are shown below. Presentations (pages 27-58) to see what other interesting presentations related to your areas of special interest are being held throughout the conference. Business English (Monday) Ellen Rana Jonathan Deer Patrick McMahon Evelina Miscin Suzanne Vetter-M'Caw Olena Korol Vicki Hollett Open Forum Changing the mindset of lower level learners through online collaborations English for the workplace: changing needs and changing contexts English for employability: assessing oral skills through a job interview Developing listening competence Spice up your Business English class with Pecha Kucha! Yesterday... today... tomorrow... How to make ELT videos BESIG Open Forum English for Specific Purposes (Saturday) Tina Kuzic Dominic Welsh Open Forum William Kerr Rosinda Ramos Agnieszka Dudzik & Agnieszka Dzieciol-Pedich Barbara Howarth Philip Nathan EAP writing: teaching strategies for effective paraphrasing Teaching technical English a challenge ESPSIG Open Forum Dictogloss redux: grammar dictation in a digital age An overview of ESP research in Brazil: developments and directions Teaching intercultural communication competence in the ESP tertiary context Structured tasks for reading authentic journal articles in EAP Metadiscoursal features of academic writing in the university business school ES(O)L (Monday) Genevieve White Richard Gallen Julie Douglas Open Forum Yvonne Pratt-Johnson Steve Brown Make or break it! Teaching learners to write delicate emails Recognising and working with emergent language in the ESOL classroom Talk English: from CELTA to volunteer ESOL in South Africa ES(O)LSIG Open Forum Meeting the needs of English Creole-speaking students Language input through project-based learning: why and how 63 Global Issues (Saturday) Sylvia Ozbalt & Cristina Peralejo Sohyon Jo You Kyoung Jung Kyuyun Lim Tatiana Ischenko Open Forum David Valente Damian Williams Mike Solly based curriculum Practical guideline of English class toward global citizenship education Nurturing creative global citizens through collaborative learning Nurturing resourceful students through 3Cs: cultural understanding, creativity and collaboration 'International Youth Forum model' - a leadership skill-building workshop GISIG Open Forum Doing diversity in English language programmes for young learners Something to MULL over: mapping the urban linguistic landscape Migrant workers and mobile phones: an aid to learning? Leadership & Management (Sunday) Duncan Foord Diarmuid Fogarty Open Forum Maureen McGarvey Vinicius Nobre Fiona Dunlop Cari Freer Susan Sheerin How to get your team thinking The Chimp Paradox and a stress-free life LAMSIG Open Forum The dogme and demand high of ELT management Using performance indicators to monitor training initiatives Integrating new teachers into an established staffroom Are all the roads leading to Rome? Institutional self-assessment: a leadership tool for quality assurance Learner Autonomy (Saturday) Marsha Appling-Nunez & Melissa Van De Wege Christian Ludwig & Ward Peeters Ruby Vurdien Anja Burkert Helen Jackson Diane Malcolm Open Forum Susan Dawson Mehtap Yavuzdogan The next generation of autonomous instruction thru VoiceThreads Fostering learner autonomy online - Facebook as a social learning space Social networking: developing intercultural competence and fostering autonomous learning Collaborative learning and the joint construction of meaning and understanding Can we do it? Yes, we can Teacher expectations, learner interpretations: assessing self-directed projects LASIG Open Forum EAP learners developing as practitioners of learning Teachers wanted! Spot the teacher in the classroom Learning Technologies (Saturday) Michael Harrison Monica Veado Liliana Esther Simon Ryan Parmee Stephen Pilton Nancy Carter & Alex Golding David Read & Will Nash Open Forum 64 Sounds good, looks good: using short video clips in ELT Writing and the art of collaboration an online project Digital corner Introducing tablets and leading teachers toward effective use Augmented reality: practical ideas for its use in the classroom Using iAnnotate for integrated online academic writing feedback Through the looking Glass: creating a video-ready classroom LTSIG Open Forum Literature, Media & Cultural Studies (Saturday) Sandie Mourao Benjamin Dobbs Jennifer Schumm Fauster Open Forum Lisa Peter Alan Maley Chris Lima Inas Kotby The house that crack built: a picturebook for teens Teaching language or teaching culture? competence LMCS SIG Open Forum Shakespeare for English language learners Literature in an age of distraction The roles of extensive reading in teacher education Literature, critical, creative thinking and assessment mould a creative writer Materials Writing (Sunday) Fiona MacKenzie & David Baker Katherine Bilsborough & Chuck Sandy Emily Bryson Johanna Stirling Hugh Dellar John Hughes Penny Hands Open Forum the editor! Free and fair ELT: for writers, publishers and teachers Keep CALM and write accessible ESP materials! The why, what and how of self-publishing for teachers Can a picture tell a thousand words? Tools, tips and tasks for developing materials writing skills From tradition to innovation: a British Indian collaboration in course design MaWSIG Open Forum Pronunciation (Monday) Pamela Rogerson-Revell Luke Meddings Open Forum Mark Hancock Olga Sergeeva Richard Cauldwell Richard Benson Laura Patsko teaching People, pronunciation and play PronSIG Open Forum Pronunciation to go: learning to learn from the dictionary Authentic listening: stepping from bottom-up processing to understanding Listening and connected speech: untruthful rules, unruly truths Do we still need the phonemic chart? The ear of the beholder: helping learners understand different accents Research (Sunday) Paul Braddock Nagm-Addin Saif Volha Arkhipenka Zarina Markova Lina Mukhopadhyay Open Forum Simon Borg Emily Edwards Exploring a new global framework for continuing professional development Towards initiating YELTA Researching professional development with the use of the narrative approach Teacher voices: does research meet practice? Developing the Survey of ELT Research in India RESIG Open Forum Evaluating an action research scheme for English language teachers development 65 Teacher Development (Monday) Tom Heaven Conrad Heyns Phil Keegan Karen Waterston Margit Szesztay Ana Garcia-Stone Open Forum Divya Madhavan Tessa Woodward & Daniel Monaghan Lesson jamming: planning lessons in groups Lesson observations - the observer becomes the observee The elephant in the classroom: thoughts on the observer paradox Interactive observation an alternative training approach Alternatives to coffee and chocolate: energy management for teachers TDSIG Open Forum Parent-teacher dialogues Bridging the technophobe-technophile gap in teacher training and development Teacher Training & Education (Monday) Kalyan Chattopadhyay Anna Uhl Chamot Gulshan Huseynova Lesley Painter-Farrell Gavin Dudeney & Thom Kiddle Gabriel Diaz Maggioli Open Forum Lewis Richards Mobile devices for teacher learning training: lessons and implications Teaching learning strategies in a flipped instruction model The 4Cs of a successful partnership in teacher training Mindful corrective feedback: supporting learning Quality control: towards a framework for assessing online training courses Capturing the reality of the classroom in teacher education courses TTEdSIG Open Forum A developmental and non-judgemental way to observe teachers Testing, Evaluation & Assessment (Sunday) Marian Crandall Isabela Villas Boas & Katia Falcomer Evelina Galaczi & Angeliki Salamoura Christien Lee Vivien Berry Mehvar Turkkan Saeede Haghi Open Forum Fairness as a consideration in writing test items From summative to formative assessment in a traditional ELT institute Technology and learning oriented assessment: helping teachers and learners Raising scores: gamification activities for test preparation teachers Enhancing assessment literacy: nurturing learning-oriented outcomes in the language classroom A reflective workshop on writing standardization practices: is standardization possible? The role of visual stimuli in EAP listening tests TEASIG Open Forum Young Learners & Teenagers (Sunday) Georgios Chatzis Paul Woods Rachael Harris Hasan Ramadan Nicky Francis John Clegg Open Forum Laura Jane McWilliams Samuel Lefever 66 Making up grammar rules Can remote teaching promote deep learning? L1 - how to avoid it and when to use it Using writing and drawing to release tension among traumatised students Using authentic storybooks in an early years classroom Developing readable English-medium textbooks in Rwanda YLTSIG Open Forum Parental engagement: practical ideas from opening a new teaching centre Out-of-school English learning: hidden resource or classroom curse? PLENARY SPEAKERS Donald Freeman Frozen in thought? How we think and what we do in ELT Saturday 11 th April ought to know and be able to do. These prescriptions are anchored in central ideas in the field that we generally take for granted. We do not challenge them, even though they inexorably shape all aspects of the work of ELT- from national policies and standards for teaching to administrative procedures and day-to-day work in ELT classrooms. These central ideas come from diverse sources: some are loosely derived from research, while others are inherited in the history of what we do. The ideas themselves are taken as common sense, and thus are woven into the social expectations of the work of teaching. In become immobilized in a critical sense by these ideas and what they mean for what we do as teachers and teacher educators. This talk examines some of these central ideas that we live by in ELT, including ideas about how instruction. I examine what the ideas mean for the work of classroom teachers given how English functions in the 21st Century, and how they shape and constrain our thinking in teacher education and research. I argue that, if they are left unscrutinized and unchallenged, the ideas can undermine -examining them, thereby thawing our thinking, is a critical step in reasserting social control over the public work of English language teaching. Joy Egbert Sunday 12 th April Engagement principles and practice in classroom learning, language and technology A still-common issue with technology use in language learning is an overly-strong focus on the digital tools and a relatively weak emphasis on actual learning. This technocentric approach may arise, in part, from a lack of clear theoretical grounding for classroom technology use. While it's unclear whether atheoretical uses of technology actually provide barriers to learning, it is clear from the research that principled uses can lead to student achievement. But which principles should language educators use to guide their planning? This plenary proposes that principles of task engagement, as part of an educator's overall understanding of second language learning, can serve both educators and learners well in technology-enhanced environments. Task engagement -- which includes principles of authenticity, connection, interaction, feedback and challenge/skills balance -supports current popular trends such as flipping instruction and the use of serious education games that underscore the need for students to find their studies engaging. This plenary provides an overview of task engagement and examples of why and how language educators might engage their learners with technology. 67 Ann Cotton Monday 13 th April a model of action In the theatre of international development, girls' education has moved from the wings to centre stage in the last 25 years. Ann Cotton will chart this change and both the philosophical underpinnings and utilitarian arguments that have propelled it. Camfed's work is driven by the right to education of every child, and the delivery of that right. Its work has demonstrated that girls' exclusion from education is rooted in family poverty and the enforced decisions as to which child should go to school. Ann will explore the arguments that variously place culture, traditional mores and poverty at the root of girls' educational exclusion. The address will describe how Camfed has worked with rural communities in five African countries - Ghana, Malawi, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe - where family poverty is endemic. The Camfed Model works in a full partnership with Ministries of Education, traditional and faith-based leaders, head teachers and teachers, parents and children. This inclusion is a fundamental principle of the Model and one that shows evidencebased results in delivering sustainable systemic change. Ann Cotton will illuminate the systems and processes that have been built to ensure transparency and accountability first and foremost to the child, Camfed's primary client. Ann will describe the different forms of capital that Camfed recognises respects and extends - capital that includes knowledge, social and institutional capital. The address will conclude with the analysis of Cama, the alumnae organisation of Camfed secondary school graduates that is more than 25,000-strong, explaining the depth of empathy and analysis members bring to the stage as we work to establish and build health and education systems that serve the needs of everyone. Harry Kuchah Tuesday 14 th April ELT in difficult circumstances: Challenges, possibilities and future directions accommodated in an unsuitably shaped room, ill-graded, with a teacher who perhaps does not learning English around the world has grown exponentially, especially in developing countries where the movement for Education for All has led to increased enrolments at primary level without a concomitant increase in resources. In sub-Saharan Africa, for example, this has exacerbated existing challenges to classroom practice such as over-crowded and multi-grade classrooms, lack of textbooks, lack of libraries, poor exposure to the English language usage, lack of financial and material resources and other cultural constraints. Despite these challenges, the dominant discourse on ELT methodology promoted in such contexts is still being largely generated in ideal (North) contexts and sometimes resisted by local practitioners as not sufficiently appropriate for their challenging local realities. Studies examining language teaching policy and practice in developing countries reveal incompatibilities between MoE policies and actual classroom practices of teachers and bring into perspective calls from several ELT professionals and researchers for the development of contextually appropriate forms of ELT pedagogy in underprivileged contexts. In this presentation, I draw from my experiences of teaching very large classes (over 200 teenagers and 100 children) in under-resourced contexts in Cameroon and go on to examine the pragmatic responses of teachers in otherwise difficult circumstances. Then I make a case for an ELT methodology which takes on board both learner and teacher agency and suggest ways in which teaching English in such circumstances may benefit from a bottom-up enhancement approach to teacher development and the dissemination of good practice. Carol Ann Duffy A Poetry Reading by Carol Ann Duffy, Poet Laureate Tuesday 14 th April A poetry reading by the poet laureate from old and new work. Followed by a book signing. 68 SIGNATURE EVENTS Pearson Saturday 11 th April on measuring the impact of our products on learners in order to improve learning outcomes and ensure we are equipping learners to achieve what they need to make progress. British Council Saturday 11 th April Identifying and developing the skills and knowledge a teacher needs Quality of teaching is important in increasing learner achievement. How can quality be improved and meet the challenges of education in the twenty-first century? An invited panel will discuss how we identify and develop the skills and knowledge a teacher needs to achieve quality teaching and learning. Cambridge English The language debate Sunday 12 th April The Cambridge English Teaching Framework, along with most other ELT professional development needs to be an accurate model. This raises a number of questions: focus on? These questions will be explored in a panel session, with experts in the field discussing their views and experiences. The topic will then be opened up to the audience for further debate. ELTJ Debate Monday 13th April This house believes that language testing does more harm than good A remarkable amount of time is devoted to testing and assessment in ELT by teachers and learners, by schools and institutions, and, of course, by test designers and administrators themselves. Whilst tests are ho loses from testing and assessment in ELT? Indeed, does language testing do more harm than good? Our two speakers will debate the issues surrounding language testing in ELT. Please come along, have your say, ask questions and join in the vote. IATEFL Signature Event A question of language with David Crystal Tuesday 14th April Following the enormous success of IATEFL's first Q&A webinar with David Crystal in 2013, this year IATEFL is proud to offer its very own Signature Event featuring our highly knowledgeable patron. During this session, you decide on the content! David will answer questions on various language issues such as language use and change as well as grammar and lexis. Questions will be collected in advance on IATEFL's various social media sites and at the Meet the Patron events at the IATEFL Stand during the conference. David will also take questions from the floor. Come join this IATEFL Signature Event and get those questions answered! 69 THIS BROCHURE IS SPONSORED BY WWW.IATEFL.ORG 27
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