As regards English, I've taught it for five years now and I've had different types of students from different countries, levels, from beginners to advanced. My students have mostly been focused on improving their speaking skills, but I've also helped them improve their reading, listening and writing skills, depending on what they need the most.
Sometimes we practice interview questions if they ha...
As regards English, I've taught it for five years now and I've had different types of students from different countries, levels, from beginners to advanced. My students have mostly been focused on improving their speaking skills, but I've also helped them improve their reading, listening and writing skills, depending on what they need the most.
Sometimes we practice interview questions if they have an upcoming job interview, or see vocabulary related to their jobs when they work abroad. Some of my activities for homework include watching a video and taking interesting or new vocabulary from it (then discussing it and practicing it in class), recognizing mistakes from texts, listening to conversations or recordings and filling in blanks, reading articles to discuss in class, and writing about their families or the country they live in, among others. I always provide feedback and find different ways to keep working on what they have a harder time with.
I also recommend podcasts and series to watch if they want to, as well as other extra activities outside the class to not limit the learning to the class only.
As for Spanish, I've recently started teaching it too, with a similar methodology.
For both, we use Google Meet and Google Drive to save all the material we work on, including homework and what we see in class.
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