Students create a personalized digital glossary of sight words they encounter most in their personal digital lives.
Students engage in a 'shadowing' technique, repeating audio immediately after hearing it to internalize the rhythm and flow of connected speech. This active processing reinforces their ability to predict and process sound streams.
Focusing on function words, this lesson tackles common reductions like 'gonna,' 'wanna,' and weak forms of auxiliary verbs. Students analyze unscripted interviews to catch these reductions in context.
Students learn how sounds influence their neighbors (e.g., 'hand bag' becoming 'hambag'). The lesson uses minimal pair discrimination and dictation exercises to train ears to recognize words despite phonological changes.
Students participate in a university-style mini-lecture simulation. They apply all learned strategies—signpost identification, Cornell note-taking, and synthesis—to capture information and complete a formal assessment.
This lesson covers the phenomenon of elision, where sounds (particularly /t/ and /d/) disappear in rapid speech. Students practice listening to high-speed dialogues to identify words that have been 'swallowed' by the speaker.
Learners practice reconstructing audio messages in their own words, focusing on paraphrasing rather than direct quotation. Peer evaluation ensures accuracy and comprehension through a synthesis-based workshop.
An exploration of how cultural backgrounds influence communication styles, focusing on silence, interruption, and pragmatic markers.
Students analyze tone in high-stakes social interactions, identifying markers of escalation, de-escalation, and negotiation in conflict scenarios.
Students learn to identify hedging language (e.g., 'somewhat', 'it appears') to gauge a speaker's confidence and distinguish between facts and cautious opinions.
This lesson focuses on identifying sarcasm and irony through prosody, pitch, and context clues, helping students avoid literal misinterpretations.
Students investigate how words flow together in natural speech, specifically focusing on consonant-vowel linking and intrusive sounds (/r/, /w/, /j/). They analyze audio samples to 'unstick' connected words.
Students explore the difference between what is said and what is meant by analyzing indirect speech acts and politeness strategies in everyday scenarios.
Students synthesize a full mini-lecture into a coherent summary, identifying stance and major takeaways.
A workshop on the Cornell, Outline, and Mapping methods, emphasizing shorthand and relationship visualization.
This lesson trains students to identify tonal shifts and linguistic markers that signal tangents or personal asides.
Learners differentiate between core arguments and supporting examples using vocal cues and structural patterns.
Students analyze signposting language to predict content and map the structural flow of academic talks.
Students analyze academic discourse to distinguish core arguments from supporting details. They practice 'pruning' irrelevant information and identifying essential evidence using a 'Podcast Editor' scenario.
Students learn and practice the Cornell Note-Taking system. The lesson focuses on organizing notes spatially, separating keywords from details, and creating summaries to improve real-time lecture comprehension.
Students synthesize their skills by analyzing and performing an authentic dialogue. They record and critique their own performance, focusing on natural flow, reductions, and idioms.
Focusing on the 'music' of English, students learn how shifting sentence stress and intonation changes meaning and conveys emotion. They practice detecting nuances in vocal delivery.
A final project where students select a podcast episode, analyze its intent and bias, and present their findings with specific audio evidence.
Students move beyond literal translation to explore high-frequency idioms and phrasal verbs. They learn to use context clues to decode figurative meaning in social dialogues.
Without visual cues, students analyze dialogue to infer relationships and social context based on formality levels and conversational register.
This lesson targets common reductions (wanna, gonna) and elisions in American English through dictation and game-based recognition. Students bridge the gap between written formal forms and spoken informal patterns.
Students investigate consonant-vowel linking and word boundaries to understand why words 'run together' in natural English. They learn to visualize the 'speech stream' and identify individual words within it.
Students dissect persuasive speeches and advertisements to identify rhetorical devices and emotional appeals used to sway a listener's perspective.
Learners explore how vocal qualities like pitch, speed, and volume convey emotion and sarcasm, moving beyond the literal meaning of words.
Students listen to news segments and editorials to distinguish objective facts from subjective opinions, focusing on signal words and evidence-based reporting.
Students identify and categorize 'signpost' language (e.g., transitions) that signal shifts in topics within academic discourse. This foundational skill helps students predict content and navigate lecture structures.
In this final simulation, students listen to witness statements regarding a missing mascot. They must apply all previously learned skills—tone, idioms, and fact-checking—to identify the culprit.
Learners analyze speaker motivation and intent by focusing on word stress and hidden messages. They practice identifying if a speaker is complaining, persuading, or apologizing without using those specific words.
Students practice identifying hyperbole and distinguishing factual information from emotional exaggeration in storytelling. They learn to recognize the 'fishing story' effect in casual conversation.
Students decode common American idioms by listening to them in context. They distinguish between literal and figurative meanings and create a visual dictionary of non-literal language.
Students explore how pitch, volume, and intonation change the meaning of a sentence. They learn to identify emotional cues in spoken English, such as sarcasm, surprise, and anger.
Students apply all learned pacing, triage, and guessing strategies in a high-stakes, full-length timed simulation that mimics the official testing environment.
Students participate in a timed scavenger hunt requiring them to employ skimming and scanning to retrieve information from multiple academic texts.
Students learn high-speed strategies for the final minutes of an exam, including elimination techniques, 'Letter of the Day' probability, and risk assessment for educated guessing.
Students focus on transition words that signal shifts in meaning to track logical flow and infer meaning in academic arguments.
A full-scale simulation of a TOEFL/IELTS integrated task. Students apply shorthand, signpost recognition, and synthesis skills to a new topic, producing a comprehensive written response.
Students test and compare two primary reading strategies—reading the passage first vs. reading questions first—to discover which method enhances their individual efficiency and accuracy.
Students focus on the speaking section of integrated exams. They practice turning shorthand notes into fluent, grammatically correct spoken responses, emphasizing the use of transition phrases and maintaining eye contact.
Students practice scanning patterns to spot specific targets like proper nouns, dates, and numbers in dense academic text.
Students learn to categorize exam questions by difficulty—Easy, Medium, or Hard—to prioritize high-probability points and avoid time-sink questions.
Students practice the core skill of integrated tasks by comparing a written passage with a contrasting audio lecture. They learn to use T-charts to map points of conflict and support between sources.
Learners practice skimming to grasp the main argument by focusing on the first and last sentences of paragraphs, distinguishing between topic and details.
Students learn to recognize verbal markers that indicate the organizational structure of a lecture. They practice predicting upcoming content based on these 'signposts' to categorize their notes as they listen.
Students establish their baseline reading and answering speeds through a diagnostic task and learn to calculate their personal 'minutes per question' rate.
Students explore how headings, subheadings, captions, and distinct formatting act as signposts to map a text's layout before reading.
A culminating lesson where students apply all deconstruction techniques to a mixed set of academic questions, annotating their thought process and marking stems.