We are now into our 3rd year of offering TESOL courses and still continue with 100% pass rate!
We are excited to inform you that we are launching a new adventure, and taking our CertTESOL course to Morocco!
A new country
A new environment
The same amazing teachers
the same amazing teaching plan!
We are looking for new TESOL candidates that are interested in travelling to Morocco to gain a CertTESOL qualification.
This course provides outstanding support with an amazing academic team!
contact Stephanie@apluscentres.co.uk for more information!
A+ English language school provides English classes for adults and TESOL teacher training.
Wednesday, 5 August 2015
Wednesday, 17 April 2013
TESOL update - Terrible timing!
Things are getting hotter in the CertTESOL kitchen. We've been teaching for a few weeks now and I think all of us are getting used to it. My timings are still atrocious, though. In the last lesson I taught, we didn't even get to the final production activity because I took too long on the others. I was upset with myself as I had spent ages on youtube sorting out some spooky music to play during it. The context was 'mysteries' and I had planned a fun activity with the students reading a 'make your own adventure' story that also asked them questions that needed to be answered using past modals of deduction. It was going to be great, but the trouble was that the class was double the size of classes I had taught before, and I didn't modify my teaching to take that into account. I gave each student individual attention, which ate into the time I had allotted each activity and meant that some students were waiting for me to come round to them and, consequently, took longer on the activities than normal. Ah, well. I learned a valuable lesson and this is exactly the reason why we teach so many real classes before we qualify.
I also got a bit adventurous with one lesson I taught the Copper class and decided to try task-based learning. This is our director-of-studies' favourite method of teaching, and I've always been intrigued by it so thought that this was the perfect opportunity to give it a go. It also meant that I would definitely get to do the fun bit of the lesson as it is at the beginning, not the end! I actually chickened out slightly and tried a watered-down version with some pre-arranged grammar shoehorned into the middle. This wasn't entirely successful as, despite copious scaffolding using the target language, the students weren't able to produce it themselves. I think I was being a bit ambitious with my pre-intermediate group. They seemed to enjoy the task though. I asked them about their favourite holidays, then lead into an activity to plan their dream holiday. I split them into groups, gave them a budget of £1000 and various pieces of paper with different accommodation, catering, transport and activity options, all priced with costs that would mean it would be difficult to have everything they wanted, to encourage discussion. I asked them to say why they chose the options over others, attempting to get them to use "I prefer" and "I'd rather."
They all did very well with their planning. I monitored their discussions and was really impressed that even the quieter ones were getting involved. I then switched to teaching the grammar of "I prefer" and "I'd rather," which is totally cheating in task-based learning terms, but, to be fair, it was my first attempt, so I'm not being too harsh with myself! I asked them to present their holidays to the class using the target language. Originally, I had intended to have them all present a little bit of their holiday as at the beginning of the task I had asked them to each pick an activity that is special for them. However, due to me getting very excited when Sunao told us that her favourite holiday was when she went to see the Northern Lights (something I've always wanted to see), asking her lots of questions about it and explaining to the rest of the class what the Northern Lights are, I had run out of time again! I thought I had planned it so well, too! Ah, well - at least I'm enthusiastic. I had to severely truncate the rest of my lesson so my poor class could finish in time to have a break and asked each group to choose one member to present their holiday. This had the effect that only the presenter got to practice the target language, which was such a shame as the rest of the lesson had gone well and I know that if only I'd reigned myself in at the beginning of the lesson, it wouldn't have ended so badly. Timing is obviously something I've still got to work on, and I hope to one day conquer it!
I also got a bit adventurous with one lesson I taught the Copper class and decided to try task-based learning. This is our director-of-studies' favourite method of teaching, and I've always been intrigued by it so thought that this was the perfect opportunity to give it a go. It also meant that I would definitely get to do the fun bit of the lesson as it is at the beginning, not the end! I actually chickened out slightly and tried a watered-down version with some pre-arranged grammar shoehorned into the middle. This wasn't entirely successful as, despite copious scaffolding using the target language, the students weren't able to produce it themselves. I think I was being a bit ambitious with my pre-intermediate group. They seemed to enjoy the task though. I asked them about their favourite holidays, then lead into an activity to plan their dream holiday. I split them into groups, gave them a budget of £1000 and various pieces of paper with different accommodation, catering, transport and activity options, all priced with costs that would mean it would be difficult to have everything they wanted, to encourage discussion. I asked them to say why they chose the options over others, attempting to get them to use "I prefer" and "I'd rather."
They all did very well with their planning. I monitored their discussions and was really impressed that even the quieter ones were getting involved. I then switched to teaching the grammar of "I prefer" and "I'd rather," which is totally cheating in task-based learning terms, but, to be fair, it was my first attempt, so I'm not being too harsh with myself! I asked them to present their holidays to the class using the target language. Originally, I had intended to have them all present a little bit of their holiday as at the beginning of the task I had asked them to each pick an activity that is special for them. However, due to me getting very excited when Sunao told us that her favourite holiday was when she went to see the Northern Lights (something I've always wanted to see), asking her lots of questions about it and explaining to the rest of the class what the Northern Lights are, I had run out of time again! I thought I had planned it so well, too! Ah, well - at least I'm enthusiastic. I had to severely truncate the rest of my lesson so my poor class could finish in time to have a break and asked each group to choose one member to present their holiday. This had the effect that only the presenter got to practice the target language, which was such a shame as the rest of the lesson had gone well and I know that if only I'd reigned myself in at the beginning of the lesson, it wouldn't have ended so badly. Timing is obviously something I've still got to work on, and I hope to one day conquer it!
Tuesday, 19 March 2013
Do the A+ shake!
Ever with their fingers on the pulse of current trends, our students decided to perform their own Harlem Shake one lunchtime. They improvised some costumes out of things found around the common room and had a quick practice before launching into it! Here's the results.
Tuesday, 26 February 2013
We won the football!
"Good morning," Khalifa said this morning as he put not one, but two trophies on my desk! I stared at them for a moment before realising what they were. Before I could ask him what the match was like, he was walking down the corridor and into class so he left me looking at the football trophies in astonishment. Then, I got excited and ran down the corridor with a trophy in each hand to show everyone. We've won the football!
At A+, we play 5-a-side football every Monday evening at Woodbourn Road football pitch. It's a very popular social activity and we often end up playing 7 or 8-a-side as more people sign up for it. We've been playing there for years but have got a bit more organised recently and started playing in the league.
The organisers put us in the Championship Division and we've been steadily getting better and better with each match and getting higher and higher in the league. Last night was the final and we were quietly confident that we'd have a fighting chance at the top spot. We'd very recently persuaded Munur, a professional footballer in his native Cyprus, to play for us and he was so good that he scored 8 goals and won 'man of the match!' Khalifa, our team captain has been a stalwart, organising a team each time they played. Aqeel played so hard last night that he injured both his knees and is currently at home recovering. Our other fantastic players were Pastor, Nicolas and Javier. It was a tough game and the other team put up a good defence but in the end, they were no competition for us and we won the match 17-9! I think you'll join me in congratulating the team on a well-deserved win!
At A+, we play 5-a-side football every Monday evening at Woodbourn Road football pitch. It's a very popular social activity and we often end up playing 7 or 8-a-side as more people sign up for it. We've been playing there for years but have got a bit more organised recently and started playing in the league.
The organisers put us in the Championship Division and we've been steadily getting better and better with each match and getting higher and higher in the league. Last night was the final and we were quietly confident that we'd have a fighting chance at the top spot. We'd very recently persuaded Munur, a professional footballer in his native Cyprus, to play for us and he was so good that he scored 8 goals and won 'man of the match!' Khalifa, our team captain has been a stalwart, organising a team each time they played. Aqeel played so hard last night that he injured both his knees and is currently at home recovering. Our other fantastic players were Pastor, Nicolas and Javier. It was a tough game and the other team put up a good defence but in the end, they were no competition for us and we won the match 17-9! I think you'll join me in congratulating the team on a well-deserved win!
Friday, 22 February 2013
A typical Sunday in the UK
We spent a sunny Sunday in Kelham Island last week. We met at the Cathedral tram stop and took the tram to Shalesmoor, which is near Kelham Island. We walked to the Kelham Island Museum through the old streets and past all the old industrial buildings, and I told the students some of the history of Sheffield. We reached the museum and stopped to look at the River Don, and I told the students about how rivers were very important in the history of industry in Sheffield. Rivers provided water for the mills and steam engines and boats could transport coal to the factories to power the machines, and then take the goods that were made away to be sold. We spent some time looking at the huge Bessemer converter outside the museum. The students were impressed with how big it was. Then, we went inside the museum and saw lots of exciting things. We saw the heaviest bomb in the world, the Grand Slam Bomb, weighing 10 tonnes. We also saw a machine powered by gas, the Crossley Gas Engine. We were very excited when it was announced that they would be running the River Don Engine, a very powerful steam engine that was used to roll steel plates and we hurried to the engine room. The engine was very noisy and we saw steam coming out of the valves. After we had seen the steam engine, we went around the rest of the museum. There was a reconstruction of a Victorian street that had traditional craft shops and we learned about how hard life was in the Victorian era. We also saw some very old cars and a jet engine from a plane.
After we had seen everything there was to see at the museum, we went for lunch in the museum cafe. As it was Sunday, a lot of us had a traditional British Sunday lunch of roast chicken, roast potatoes, Yorkshire pudding, roast parsnips and carrots. Then, some of us went to the pub. Kelham Island is famous for microbreweries (places that brew a small amount of beer) so we went to the Fat Cat, a very good pub next to the museum, to try some of the local beer. We had a great time and hope to do it again soon!
Wednesday, 13 February 2013
Problems, solutions and giving advice
I taught my first English lesson to real students last week and it went pretty well, if I do say so myself. They were all very kind to me, which helped because I was a little bit nervous! I started out by asking the students if they were ok and whether they had any worries, attempting to elicit some problems from them that I could use to present the language. Of course, none of them had any problems (well, none that they wanted to share, anyway) so I introduced one of my own. I told them about my struggle to lose weight and got some excellent advice from one student in particular! I weaved the context of agony aunts into the conversation by asking if there was anywhere I could write to for advice (since I was so embarrassed about my problem) and the students managed to get what I was driving at and said that I could write to a magazine. Bingo! At those magic words, I was able to properly introduce the lesson context, explaining what agony means and checking that the students knew what 'anonymous' meant. I projected the mock-up of an agony aunt page on the wall and asked the students to have a look at it.
I then brought in my first activity. I had spent the previous night writing a few problems on one set of cards and the solutions for the problems on another set and finding some pictures to illustrate them. I used a laminator for only the second time in my life to produce a rather spiffing set of cards. The idea was that the students were given one problem and one solution each, but the problems and solutions didn't match. To get a matching pair, they would have to confide their problems in each other. When they had found the person with the matching advice card, the other person would read them the advice, then give them the card. They could only sit down when they had got their matching advice card and given the other advice card away to someone else. I modelled the activity with Marco to make sure that they understood what they had to do but they stood about waiting for one person to read their problem out loud to the group, rather than mingling and talking amongst themselves, so I had to prompt them to interact. Afterwards, in my feedback session, Artemis said that although my instruction had been clear and my modelling good, sometimes students just need to be re-instructed, so that is something I will work on for next time.
Having got the students to match the problems and solutions, I then asked them to read what they had and projected the sentences onto the wall. I got them to analyse the grammar of the language used and also the difference in tone between them, 'should' being used for strong advice, whereas 'you could try' used for suggestions. I then quickly introduced the creative part of the lesson. I gave the students a sheet, the top half of which was labelled 'letter to an agony aunt,' and asked the students to think of a problem and write to an agony aunt about it for advice. They then swapped with someone else in the class who pretended that they were the agony aunt and replied, using the structures that we had looked at earlier. I then asked them to read out the problems and the advice given to the rest of the class.
Well, some of them were just hilarious. Bad breath featured heavily in a couple of cases. There was one husband who begged the agony aunt to save his marriage as his wife had such bad breath that he couldn't kiss her any more. The advice given was to scare the poor woman with tales of all the things that could be wrong with her until she went to the dentist. Another person's boss had bad breath and in the current economic climate, he didn't want to leave the job as he was afraid he wouldn't get a new one. The advice was to make a gift of some mouthwash and breath freshener as the boss couldn't turn down a present. Another person kept sleepwalking and one night woke up to find herself in the middle of the street wearing a Santa outfit! The agony aunt said that they really wanted to help, but first of all, the writer should stop drinking so much! Yet another one was simply unprintable, but very funny. I felt so lucky to have such talented students who really threw themselves into the activity.
I'm teaching them again this week so I hope this coming lesson is as entertaining as the last one. We've got past modals of ability tomorrow so I'm designing a lesson around their greatest achievements. Hopefully, they'll enjoy this one too.
Having got the students to match the problems and solutions, I then asked them to read what they had and projected the sentences onto the wall. I got them to analyse the grammar of the language used and also the difference in tone between them, 'should' being used for strong advice, whereas 'you could try' used for suggestions. I then quickly introduced the creative part of the lesson. I gave the students a sheet, the top half of which was labelled 'letter to an agony aunt,' and asked the students to think of a problem and write to an agony aunt about it for advice. They then swapped with someone else in the class who pretended that they were the agony aunt and replied, using the structures that we had looked at earlier. I then asked them to read out the problems and the advice given to the rest of the class.
Well, some of them were just hilarious. Bad breath featured heavily in a couple of cases. There was one husband who begged the agony aunt to save his marriage as his wife had such bad breath that he couldn't kiss her any more. The advice given was to scare the poor woman with tales of all the things that could be wrong with her until she went to the dentist. Another person's boss had bad breath and in the current economic climate, he didn't want to leave the job as he was afraid he wouldn't get a new one. The advice was to make a gift of some mouthwash and breath freshener as the boss couldn't turn down a present. Another person kept sleepwalking and one night woke up to find herself in the middle of the street wearing a Santa outfit! The agony aunt said that they really wanted to help, but first of all, the writer should stop drinking so much! Yet another one was simply unprintable, but very funny. I felt so lucky to have such talented students who really threw themselves into the activity.
I'm teaching them again this week so I hope this coming lesson is as entertaining as the last one. We've got past modals of ability tomorrow so I'm designing a lesson around their greatest achievements. Hopefully, they'll enjoy this one too.
Tuesday, 12 February 2013
It's Pancake Day!
110g/4oz plain flour, sifted
a pinch of salt
2 eggs
275ml/10fl oz milk
50g/2oz butter
Wednesday, 6 February 2013
Into the belly of the beast
I'm teaching tomorrow. Teaching actual students! I'm trying to keep a lid on my excitement, but this is definitely coupled with more than a slight bit of apprehension and, dare I say it, fear. I know that I've taught real students before, but that was years ago and most of that experience has been lost in the mists of time. This is proper teaching with students who are expecting the best. I don't know whether it helps that I know the students I'm teaching or not. On the plus side, I think I'll be less nervous but on the minus side, I know that I've got a few cheeky ones in there so I fervently hope they don't play me up! I think I'll have to rule with an iron fist if anything like that happens, but, if I'm honest, I don't think that's my style. I've told/warned them that I'll be teaching them on Thursday and that they have to be in school so I hope everyone turns up and doesn't take the opportunity to have a day off.
Thursday, 24 January 2013
Let it snow, let it snow, let it snow!
We woke up to a winter wonderland this Monday in Sheffield. It had snowed heavily overnight and the whole city is covered in a cold white blanket. Once we had finished jumping up and down in excitement and planning all the snowball fights and snowmen we could build, we faced our first hurdle - how to get to school. I live up one of Sheffield's many hills so couldn't drive in. The car was stuck under a load of snow and ice. After a desperate search online to see if any buses were running, we put on many layers of clothing and trudged down to wait with the rest of the frozen Sheffielders. We waited for what seemed like an eternity in the cold before the bus struggled along the road and eventually made it to school nearly an hour late to find that all the students were there and waiting for us. It just goes to show how dedicated our students are that they walked through all the bad weather to have English lessons.One of our students, Kahlifa, has spent most of his free time sledging since the snow started and gave us some video of his first attempt. Unfortunately, a tree got in his way! He told us that he improved later on and can now happily go down the hill without incident.
We've got more snow forecast for tomorrow so here's to many snowy days to come!
Thursday, 10 January 2013
Do you speak Farsi?
We all had a nice break over Christmas to recharge our batteries for the new year ahead - which was just as well as our first lesson back left me feeling dazed and confused. As part of the TESOL course, there is a section called 'The Unknown Language,' which sounds like we're going on an expedition to the Amazon to track down a member of a remote tribe, but actually, it just means learning a language that is unknown to us. We have a teacher called Artemis in the school who was originally from Iran, so the unknown language on our TESOL course is Farsi. I had been quite excited about the four Farsi lessons we would be taking. It's always nice to learn new skills and I was looking forward to speaking to Artemis in her native tongue.
So we all shuffled into class on Tuesday night, not really knowing what to expect. Personally, I've not studied another language in a classroom setting since I was at school, so I surprised myself by beginning to feel slightly nervous. As this was our first meeting since early December, Artemis greeted us in English and did some housekeeping also, thankfully, in English as if she had tried to explain teaching timetables in Farsi, I don't think any of us would have been where we needed to be! She then changed into Farsi and began the lesson.
So we all shuffled into class on Tuesday night, not really knowing what to expect. Personally, I've not studied another language in a classroom setting since I was at school, so I surprised myself by beginning to feel slightly nervous. As this was our first meeting since early December, Artemis greeted us in English and did some housekeeping also, thankfully, in English as if she had tried to explain teaching timetables in Farsi, I don't think any of us would have been where we needed to be! She then changed into Farsi and began the lesson.
Friday, 21 December 2012
T'was the week before Christmas...
...and all through the school (cough, cough) sorry about that, I'll just nip that one in the bud, I think.
We're getting in the Christmas spirit here at A+! Here's a video of our students decorating the tree that was kindly donated by Sue who teaches the TESOL course. The common room now looks very festive and people keep coming into the office and bringing us boxes of chocolates, which is lovely, but we also keep eating them and I've definitely got to go on a diet in the new year! Anyway, there's a lot of eating and drinking and making merry to do before then, so Merry Christmas one and all!
We're getting in the Christmas spirit here at A+! Here's a video of our students decorating the tree that was kindly donated by Sue who teaches the TESOL course. The common room now looks very festive and people keep coming into the office and bringing us boxes of chocolates, which is lovely, but we also keep eating them and I've definitely got to go on a diet in the new year! Anyway, there's a lot of eating and drinking and making merry to do before then, so Merry Christmas one and all!
A+ Film and Drama Club
Those of you who attend the school may have noticed a few posters scattered around the common room and classrooms advertising the A+ Film and Drama club. Well, we've been meeting for a couple of weeks now and have produced our first film already! Before we had even started, the students had decided on the characters they wanted to portray and during our first session, we brainstormed ideas for a story we wanted to film using these characters. I then set some homework (yes, homework from an after school club, it just goes to show how dedicated our students are that they actually did it!) to write the script. In our next meeting we read through the script and the students practised their parts. We decided to film it the next day and got most of it done. The students again showed how much they wanted the film to succeed when they volunteered to come in at half past eight the next morning to film the last two scenes. I'm incredibly proud of their performances and the effort they all put in. So here it is, our very first production.
Tuesday, 18 December 2012
First night nerves
Well, I did it! I taught English for the first time in several years. I'm not going to pretend that it all went well, because that would be a lie. I made mistakes, but the important thing is that I know what they are and will correct them next time.
To recap, we were given our first teaching task to plan a 10 minute lesson in pairs and had to teach it to the rest of the TESOL class. My teaching partner (Anwar) and I had chosen to teach 'how to order food in a restaurant.' We actually planned most of it while we were still at the school - yes, we're clever like that :) - so the next week was spent gathering materials and working out how to deliver the lesson. Anwar found some pictures of food that he forwarded to me and I set about polishing the lesson plan. The level we were aiming at was Elementary so we had to consider the language we used very carefully.
To recap, we were given our first teaching task to plan a 10 minute lesson in pairs and had to teach it to the rest of the TESOL class. My teaching partner (Anwar) and I had chosen to teach 'how to order food in a restaurant.' We actually planned most of it while we were still at the school - yes, we're clever like that :) - so the next week was spent gathering materials and working out how to deliver the lesson. Anwar found some pictures of food that he forwarded to me and I set about polishing the lesson plan. The level we were aiming at was Elementary so we had to consider the language we used very carefully.
Thursday, 13 December 2012
From the Director's Desk
Hello everyone,
Sheffield is very chilly at the moment, it was -1 C this morning and I had to scrape the ice off my car! It was all worth it though to get to the school and teach the students in the Bronze class. Thanks to you all for greeting me with a cheerful smile. I have heard the students practising their new production in the film club and hopefully we should be seeing the fruits of their labour very soon on the blog… Watch this space….
Sheffield is very chilly at the moment, it was -1 C this morning and I had to scrape the ice off my car! It was all worth it though to get to the school and teach the students in the Bronze class. Thanks to you all for greeting me with a cheerful smile. I have heard the students practising their new production in the film club and hopefully we should be seeing the fruits of their labour very soon on the blog… Watch this space….
I hope everybody has checked out our updated website and our
exciting new online courses, learning English from home – wherever that might be!
Everything here is gearing up for Christmas and we will be
closed over the Christmas period from the 22nd December 2012 to 2nd
January 2013, but before that we will be having our Christmas outing to
Sheffield City Hall on 20th December and our Christmas party for
staff and students on 21st December in the A+ common room.
We’re all looking forward to that.
Monday, 10 December 2012
This just got real!
Those of you who've been following my adventures in TESOL will have seen we've had quite a sedate introduction to the topic; lots of grammar, a few observations of real teachers here and there and some pieces of homework. This week, however, the pace quickened slightly when it was revealed we would be teaching our first lessons! OK, we'd just be teaching them to each other, but I think in some ways that's worse. At least students (well, elementary level students at least) can't understand half of what you're saying, so don't notice too much if you stutter and stumble over your words due to nerves. If you're teaching other trainees who are fluent in English, you have nowhere to hide.
Tuesday, 4 December 2012
From the Director's Desk
Hello again,
Well, I am so very proud of our trainees on the CertTESOL
which was moderated on Friday. Many thanks to our Trinity College London
Moderator who spent the day looking at the trainees work, interviewing them and
giving feedback to us about our course. They all passed with flying
colours and the feedback we were given was excellent!! Really, really
well done to all our trainees and and the A+ staff. Now all they need to
do is find their dream job wherever in the world they choose to go.
All the best to you all.
Thursday, 29 November 2012
Who goes to the island?
We know we've got some incredibly talented students here at A+, but it's time we shared them with the world so everyone else can see how amazing they are. Silver class have been begging to do more acting since their debuts in the A+ soap so this week they worked on their own auditions for a reality TV show. I'm hoping that a director one day stumbles upon these gems and whisks them off to Hollywood. You can vote for your favourite in the comments section and we'll make sure they get through to the next round of auditions.
Monday, 26 November 2012
A+ go on safari!
Friday, 23 November 2012
A+ English: My experience so far
I’m on my fourth week here and
Thursday, 22 November 2012
Modals, gerunds and second conditional, oh my!
So, I've been a TESOL trainee for a few weeks now, and I have to say I like it! I admit to a lot of grammar avoidance when I first started studying. Being faced with seemingly incomprehensible sentences such as, "A dependent clause always contains a past participle in non-finite sentence," would have sent me running for the hills just last month. To be honest, it leaves me feeling a bit wobbly now, but at least I've got the confidence to stand my ground and attempt to work it out instead of my brain just turning to mush and dribbling out of my ear!
We've done much more than learn grammar on this course, I'm very pleased to report. On Tuesday night,
We've done much more than learn grammar on this course, I'm very pleased to report. On Tuesday night,
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