27 January 2015 / by Elena Riches

Paperless Lessons Are The Future - Join The Paper-free ESL Community!



Ready-to-use paperless lessons are now a reality for the OxbridgeTEFL community members due to the implementation of an integrated system of online management of the teaching/learning process. Not only there is no single paper wasted for a lesson plan, but also both teachers and students are now able to evaluate the teaching process in real time. Taking the register is no longer a paper dependent process and students can access the same learning content as teachers  for their classes.

In a previous blog I discussed the fact that I believe teaching is an art and, because of this, it means that every teacher has a different style of teaching. This doesn't make a teacher any better or worse than another teacher, it just means their classes have a personal touch.

Some teachers write their own material, some use text books and others follow a curriculum. At OxbridgeTEFL, the teachers write their own material and pool it so that the other teachers in the community are able to use them. Each of these lessons follow a format whereby one or more (given time constraints) Topic, Structure and Vocabulary activity is taught and each activity (irrespective of type) consists of an objective, the body of the activity, target language and wrap-up. In my opinion this system works well as the teachers are able to write the activity in their own style and, in turn, the students get to learn every aspect of the English language in each class and be taught in a different way by each teacher. In addition, the activities are evaluated by the teachers as to which ones worked well and which ones were not so good. The not so good activities are then either removed from circulation or, improved upon.



The process of allocating the lesson plans means masses of paper is used to print the material which is then handed out to the teachers whose job it is to ensure that it is all correctly printed (no attachments missing, etc) and then we have to carry it to our lessons. This is a bit of a chore, to say the least, as well as a waste of paper, ink and time. However, the system has now been dramatically improved. Given that this is the age of technology, the founders of Oxbridge decided that it would make more sense to be able to access lessons via a tablet or laptop (or mobile even). And, we are now able to do just that. Yippee!



Due to paper we have had centuries of world knowledge in our hands. Books have been an incredible tool to transmitting knowledge, culture, values, stories...but, paper also has its limitations. Once printed, it cannot be modified until the next edition. Textbooks have a shelf live and they quickly become obsolete. Interactivity, as understood in today's technological era, is non-existent. New devices have emerged to cover new necessities and take the educational projects even further. Now we can store hundreds of books in our tablets, access the Internet with our smart phones and create and edit educational material in real time. We have the latest updates with economy of time, weight and money!



Do you remember how your teacher used to take the register in class? With a digital device, it now takes just a click to update the register and track attendance rate for each student.



Who can forget the old tapes which used to go with your language textbooks? The CD came along to replace it and then we had YouTube and Vimeo. Our activities now contain video excerpts with the exact duration and moment featured in the activity: A part of a film that contains passive voice? The latest breaking news? We have the activity and we now have the video to go with it, along with its target language and comprehension or debate questions.



Many times we are asked to provide concrete proof of the progress of a student. As hard as it can be (I always compare it with watching a child grow) we are now able to assess the content acquisition of each individual student after each individual class! Progress graphs, content acquisition tracking, needs analysis are now easier than ever and much more personalized and precise. With such information we can personalize lesson plans too at the same speed learning happens. 'Smileys' are now indicators for content acquisition and they determine what content to plan to each group or student without spending long hours analyzing stats.



One to five, how many stars would you give to the trendiest restaurant in town? And to the last activity you did? Knowing how the teacher feels about the material they use is precious information to know which activities we can continue using and which ones need removing or improving. That will potentially increase enormously the quality of our teaching material until we only present 5 star activities to students.



Not only do we not have to sieve through large amounts of material and carry it around with us, we are also able to teach classes using a projector or TV screen and can now incorporate video clips too. It also puts paid to having to remember how good or bad your students are doing when having to assess them after the class as, you can do this on the spot while taking the lesson.



Paperless lessons means a total paper-free life in the classroom.

This new system was tested by several teachers over the course of a week and found to be a success so, it will be put into play this week. Good riddance to paper!

If you are in a position where you are using text books or carrying heaps of paper around with you, maybe it's time you jumped on the bandwagon. Click HERE to arrange a free, no obligation interview and join our paper-free community....

...what have you got to lose, apart from a load of paperwork!

 

 

 

 

12

June 2014
What makes a good ESL teacher. Preparation
by Radmila Gurkova
What are the qualities that make a good ESL teacher? When asked at a job interview what makes a good ESL teachers, candidates often praise personal traits such as patience, creativity, knowledge, skills, empathy, experience… But what if you have just finished your TEFL course and are not that experienced yet. Does that mean y...

30

May 2014
FM - Unifying format criteria for TEFL activities. The cherry on the cake!
by Radmila Gurkova
On debate: We need to unify format criteria when creating TEFL activities in order to create the perfect activity. The teachers creating activities and the ones correcting them have to use the same criteria. We agreed to: Creating st...

30

May 2014
TEFL classes by videoconference for elementary level students.
by Radmila Gurkova
TEFL classes by videoconference are often related to high level students. How should our teaching change in order to grant successful and exciting learning experience to our students? On debate: Elementary level stu...

16

May 2014
ESL activity lab. Creating functional beginners material - I play!
by Radmila Gurkova
The purpose of this piece of ESL activity belonging to our activities section for beginners is to introduce the verb 'play'. The previous ESL activity included the verb 'like' as well as 'play' so we removed the verb to like in order to simplify the activity. We introduced 4 Sports which all add something different to the ESL...

13

May 2014
ESL activities for beginners - a new ESL activity is born
by Radmila Gurkova
If you think these faces are too serious and concentrated, you are about right. The guys you are seeing in the picture, part of our Oxbridge TEFL teacher team in Madrid, are deeply engaged in creating ESL activities for beginners. Four teachers. One activity. An ESL activity for beginner learners of English t...

08

May 2014
How to teach beginners English as a foreign language- I want, I don't want
by Radmila Gurkova
How to teach beginners English as a foreign language in the target language only is sometimes a headache for ESL teachers. As it turned out, teaching the function I WANT in English without translating is not that easy. Students tend to confuse its meaning with I LIKE because this structure appears in similar contexts. How to teach beginners I...

20

March 2014
My favorite ESL class
by Radmila Gurkova
We asked different teachers about their favorite ESL class. We wanted them to explain what makes a great ESL class really memorable. We often hear teachers complaining about certain students and classes that were difficult. It's much more productive and rewarding to hear about TEFL teacher's favorite class...

14

March 2014
Positive learning environment: Learn from sports and apply to ESL classes to create the best environment for your students
by Radmila Gurkova
What is the best learning environment and how can we create a positive learning environment in our ESL classes? What can we learn from sports about positive learning environments? ...

07

March 2014
How to teach pronunciation through ESL activities. Say it clearer, not louder
by Radmila Gurkova
The OxbridgeTEFL community launched the project of how to teach pronunciation through ESL activities as a result of the necessity of creating specific tools -apart from the usual work on pronunciation through vocabulary activities- that would target Spanish learners' pronunciation. What moved us ...

27

February 2014
My Top 5 Reasons to do a TEFL course: featuring India Boddy
by Radmila Gurkova
Maki...