CELFS Principles

by Maxine Gillway

What better way to start a new year than to go back to the principles that guide our practice?

Those of you who have worked on the pre-sessional at CELFS will know that we have a set of such principles, and will remember that I open most CPD sessions by asking you to recall them – so why should a blog be different? Can you remember our principles?

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Attending PIMs, Conferences and Colloquia: in learners’ shoes

by Steve Peters

One aspect in particular has taken me by surprise at Professional Issues Meetings (PIMs) and academic conferences. This is how others’ work can be joined up by a whole other set of dots to the ones I might use to map my own understanding of the field of EAP and Applied Linguistics. Attending presentations, responding to questions, striking up conversations have all provided the chance to reveal other horizon(s). (more…)

Contributing to the EAP conversation: Overcoming the 3 main barriers

by Paul Hendrie

Blog notes on Laptop

In my previous post I discussed my conversations with colleagues about the value of being ‘contributors’ (defined in that post as ‘ teachers who present, write a blog, publish articles, or actively share examples of their teaching practice’). (more…)

Developing students’ listening and speaking skills through Sonocent AudioNotetaker

by Elizabeth Allen

To help students develop their listening and speaking skills, I trialled a new software programme, Sonocent Audio Notetaker, in 2015-2016 with a group of ten Chinese students on the International Foundation Programme (IFP). (more…)