Focuses on technology-related vocabulary and simple phrases for reporting technical issues. Students practice asking for wifi and password information.
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.
A high-stakes simulated networking mixer where students must apply their knowledge of idioms, phrasal verbs, and social listening to complete specific "missions."
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.
Focuses on the structural and social aspects of casual professional conversations, emphasizing the role of fillers, backchanneling, and small talk in building rapport.
Students analyze how speakers use shorthand references to history, pop culture, and sports to convey complex ideas, and develop strategies for asking for clarification when references are missed.
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.
Focuses on the transition from formal to informal spoken English by identifying and decoding phrasal verbs in narrative segments.
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.
Students encounter high-frequency idioms used in professional settings through context-rich audio simulations, moving beyond rote memorization to contextual inference.
Deconstructs persuasive speech to identify rhetorical strategies, tonal journeys, and the use of strategic pauses for emotional impact.
Examines how speakers adjust their register and tone based on audience and context, focusing on professional vs. informal markers.
Explores how shifting stress within a single sentence radically alters its implied meaning and subtext.
Focuses on identifying bias and subjectivity in media and speeches by analyzing word choice, emotional tone, and selective emphasis.
Students analyze the acoustic cues of irony and sarcasm—such as pitch, length, and intonation—to distinguish between literal and intended meaning in spoken English.
A capstone transcription challenge where students apply all decoding skills to unscripted natural speech.
A culminating simulation where students alternate between active participation and observational analysis using the fishbowl method. Focuses on applying all previously learned listening skills.
Analyzes how sounds influence each other, changing their identity based on neighboring sounds.
Explores the schwa sound and weak forms of function words that maintain English rhythm.
Focuses on the cognitive load of tracking multiple speakers in a fast-paced environment. Students practice mapping argument threads and identifying alliances in group discourse.
Investigates sound loss in rapid speech, specifically focusing on dropped /t/ and /d/ sounds in clusters.
Focuses on consonant-vowel linking (catenation) to help students identify word boundaries in rapid speech.
Students identify the rhetorical structures used to agree and disagree in intellectual debates. The lesson focuses on 'yes, but' constructions and nuanced consensus building.
An analysis of the verbal and non-verbal cues used to manage floor control in academic discussions. Students learn to predict and identify transitions between speakers.
A culminating simulation where students apply all strategies during a mock academic lecture assessment.
Students explore how academic speakers use hedging language to soften assertions and maintain professional relationships. Activities focus on distinguishing between literal meaning and pragmatic intent.
Students practice synthesizing auditory information into concise, logical summaries and paraphrasing key points.
Introduction to shorthand, symbols, and the Cornell note-taking method for capturing information in real-time.
Focuses on distinguishing core academic arguments from anecdotes and digressions using linguistic and vocal cues.
Students learn to identify macro-markers and signposting language that signal organizational structure in academic lectures.
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.
A final simulation where students complete a test section with slightly less time than standard allowed. The focus is on maintaining composure and adhering to the triage strategy strictly.
Students learn how to guess intelligently when time runs out or the answer is unknown. This includes 'letter of the day' strategies and making educated guesses based on partial knowledge.
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 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 explore techniques to handle 'brain freeze' and panic during exams. The lesson covers breathing techniques and positive self-talk, alongside cognitive strategies like jotting down notes to offload memory.
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.
Integrating all previous strategies under strict time constraints with a focus on meta-cognitive monitoring.