Students explore restaurant menus, categorized by sections, and role-play ordering by reading descriptions to determine ingredients and dietary restrictions.
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.
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.
In this culminating lesson, students listen to two contrasting viewpoints on a single global issue. They must synthesize the information to answer a prompt, citing specific details from both audio sources to support their conclusion.
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.
Using their notes from previous lessons, students practice reconstructing the main argument of an auditory text. They work in pairs to verbally summarize a lecture segment to a partner who has not heard it, checking for accuracy and completeness.
Students analyze an audio segment on a controversial scientific or social topic to categorize statements as verifiable facts, speaker opinions, or theoretical propositions. The lesson emphasizes listening for modal verbs and qualifying language.
Learners are introduced to the Cornell Note-Taking System and concept mapping, practicing these methods while listening to extended discourse.
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.
The final lesson applies all previous skills to a sustained narrative format. Students listen to a podcast episode, mapping the plot and identifying colloquial nuances to demonstrate comprehensive understanding.
Students learn to identify sarcasm, irony, and humor by focusing on intonation and stress patterns rather than just literal word choice. They analyze how the same phrase can convey multiple meanings.
This lesson focuses on sociolinguistic awareness, teaching students how speakers adjust their speed, vocabulary, and tone based on their audience. Students compare formal and informal registers in various contexts.
Learners explore the difference between literal and figurative language through idiomatic expressions and phrasal verbs. Using context clues and tone, they decode meaning in authentic audio snippets.
Students apply listening skills to interpret complex interview questions and behavioral prompts.
Students evaluate emotional cues and de-escalation techniques in conflict resolution scenarios.
Students investigate how English sounds are connected, reduced, and linked in natural speech. They practice identifying and transcribing 'gonna', 'wanna', and 'shoulda' while learning the mechanics of linking sounds between words.
Students identify conditional language and tone shifts in negotiation simulations to spot willingness to compromise.
Learners decode indirect language and 'polite' workplace communication to find the underlying message.
Students analyze advertisements and workplace pitches to identify speaker goals and persuasive techniques.
Students learn to identify 'signpost' words that signal shifts in topic, examples, or conclusions to map the structure of academic lectures.
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 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 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.
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 listen to an unscripted interview segment to determine the relationship between speakers and their underlying attitudes by analyzing subtext, pauses, and back-channeling.
Students switch roles and become the test-makers. They write their own multiple-choice questions based on a shared text, intentionally creating plausible distractors.
Students tackle the difficult skill of understanding non-literal language by listening to sitcom clips or comedy podcasts to identify when a speaker means the opposite of what they say.
Students explore how shifting stress within a sentence changes its meaning. They analyze audio clips to determine the speaker's intent, focus, or correction based on prosodic features like pitch and volume.
Students specifically target questions using words like 'NOT,' 'EXCEPT,' 'ALWAYS,' or 'NEVER.' They rewrite these questions in positive terms to clarify meaning.
Using clips from casual interview podcasts, students identify idiomatic expressions and phrasal verbs. They deduce meanings based on context clues and tone rather than dictionary definitions.
Students investigate why native speakers sound 'fast' by analyzing linking sounds, elision, and assimilation. They transcribe audio clips of natural dialogue, specifically focusing on identifying words that have been reduced or linked together.
Students practice the physical and mental habit of crossing out clearly wrong answers to increase their probability of success. The lesson focuses on narrowing choices down to two options and using text evidence to make the final selection.
This lesson categorizes common types of wrong answers, such as 'too extreme,' 'partially true,' or 'irrelevant info.' Students label incorrect answers in sample questions with these categories.
Students break down the components of a test item: the stimulus, the stem (question), the correct answer, and the distractors. They learn to identify what the stem is actually asking before looking at the options.
A culminating project where students combine skimming for main ideas and scanning for evidence to verify facts in a set of academic articles.