A beginner English sequence for undergraduate students focused on describing physical objects, environments, and locations. Students progress from naming classroom items to providing detailed descriptions for a 'Lost and Found' case study.
This sequence for graduate ESL students explores the nuances of English beyond literal meaning. Students will master the ability to detect sarcasm, bias, contrastive stress, and professional register, equipping them for complex academic and professional communication.
A graduate-level ESL listening sequence focused on the pragmatics of academic discourse. Students learn to navigate the subtleties of seminar discussions by identifying hedging, turn-taking signals, disagreement strategies, and multi-speaker argument threads.
A comprehensive sequence for intermediate ESL graduate students focused on mastering academic lecture comprehension, identifying discourse markers, filtering digressions, and implementing effective note-taking strategies.
This sequence equips intermediate ESL undergraduate students with the skills to navigate complex, multi-speaker environments like seminars and debates. Students progress from basic speaker identification to tracking complex argument evolution and detecting subtle bias markers.
This sequence targets the mechanical difficulties of understanding natural, fast-paced English. Students explore phonological rules like linking, elision, and assimilation to decode authentic, fluid speech patterns found in campus social life.
This sequence guides intermediate ESL students through the nuances of pragmatic meaning in English. Students will learn to decode indirect speech, sarcasm, hedging language, and emotional undertones in academic and social contexts to improve their listening comprehension and communicative competence.
This sequence equips intermediate ESL students with the linguistic and cognitive tools needed to navigate university lectures. It covers discourse markers, hierarchy of information, identifying tangents, note-taking systems, and synthesizing long-form academic speech.
A comprehensive sequence for 10th-grade ESL students focusing on academic listening and note-taking. Students learn to identify signpost language, use the Cornell method, distinguish main ideas from supporting details, and synthesize information from lectures.
A 5-lesson sequence for 12th-grade ESL students focused on interpreting tone, intent, and implicit meaning in professional settings like job interviews and negotiations.
A comprehensive unit for 12th-grade ESL students to master university-level listening skills, focusing on structural markers, note-taking systems, and synthesizing complex information.
A comprehensive sequence designed for graduate ESL students to master the integrated writing and speaking tasks of high-stakes academic exams like TOEFL iBT and IELTS. The curriculum focuses on shorthand note-taking, identifying inter-source relationships, utilizing structural templates, and rapid synthesis under timed conditions.
A mastery-based sequence for undergraduate ESL students focused on rapid structuring and drafting for standardized writing exams like the TOEFL and GRE. Students learn to decode prompts, outline in under three minutes, and use formulaic language to produce high-scoring academic essays under pressure.
A comprehensive unit for undergraduate ESL students to deconstruct the logic of standardized tests, focusing on question stems, distractor categorization, absolute language detection, and the process of elimination.
This sequence addresses the psychological and logistical challenges of timed exams through simulation and strategy, treating test-taking as a resource management game where time is the currency. Students learn to benchmark their pacing, apply triage strategies for difficult questions, manage anxiety, and utilize intelligent guessing to maximize their score potential.
A workshop-style sequence for undergraduate ESL students to master skimming and scanning techniques for high-stakes academic exams. Students move from conceptual understanding to timed application, focusing on efficiency and accuracy in dense academic texts.
An intermediate ESL sequence focused on mastering the complexities of natural spoken English. Students explore connected speech, reductions, idioms, and prosodic features to decode meaning beyond literal definitions in authentic media contexts like podcasts and interviews.
A comprehensive sequence for 11th Grade ESL students focused on mastering the metacognitive and tactical aspects of high-stakes testing, including time management, strategic guessing, and anxiety regulation.
This sequence prepares intermediate ESL students for university-level academic listening by focusing on signposting language, speaker stance, hedging, and strategic note-taking. Students will move from identifying basic transitions to synthesizing complex arguments from multiple spoken sources.
A comprehensive sequence designed for 11th-grade ESL students to master skimming and scanning techniques for academic success. Students progress from basic differentiation of reading speeds to advanced strategies for identifying tone, navigating text structures, and handling paraphrased test questions under time pressure.
This sequence develops advanced ESL academic skills focused on shorthand, signpost recognition, and synthesis for integrated exam tasks. Students learn to build efficient note-taking systems to manage cognitive load during high-stakes listening and reading assessments.
A comprehensive unit for high school seniors focused on deconstructing the logic of standardized English exams. Students learn to identify question components, categorize common distractors, and apply process-of-elimination techniques to improve performance on tests like TOEFL, IELTS, and SAT.
A comprehensive unit for 12th-grade ESL students to master high-speed academic reading. Students develop skimming, scanning, and vocabulary deduction skills to improve their performance on timed standardized tests.
An intermediate ESL sequence focused on mastering the nuances of spoken English. Students progress from decoding the mechanics of connected speech to analyzing abstract elements like sarcasm, bias, and persuasion in various audio contexts.
This sequence guides intermediate ESL students through the complexities of spoken English, moving from basic sentence stress to the nuances of sarcasm, idioms, and academic signposting. Students will develop the ability to infer speaker intent and respond appropriately in real-world scenarios.
An advanced exploration of conversational pragmatics for undergraduate students, focusing on the micro-behaviors of turn-taking, timing, and non-verbal cues in professional settings. Students progress from analyzing 200ms latency gaps to managing complex multi-party seminar dynamics.
A high-level ESL unit for 10th-grade advanced students focusing on critical listening, speaker intent, and rhetorical analysis. Students learn to decode subtext, detect bias, and identify logical fallacies in various auditory contexts.
A high-level ESL sequence for 10th graders focused on mastering academic lecture comprehension, note-taking strategies, and information synthesis for university readiness.
This sequence immerses advanced ESL students in the complexities of authentic, rapid-fire English speech. It covers connected speech mechanics, global accent variation, slang usage, and the sociolinguistics of code-switching, culminating in the analysis of real-world street interviews.
Students explore English beyond the textbook, focusing on authentic fast-paced speech, regional dialects, and varying registers to improve real-world listening comprehension.
A high-level listening and media literacy unit for advanced ESL students, focusing on the nuances of tone, sarcasm, journalistic bias, and power dynamics in spoken English. Students move from decoding emotional subtext to producing their own sophisticated audio commentary.
This sequence immerses advanced ESL students in the reality of natural English, focusing on regional dialects, connected speech, and colloquialisms to build authentic listening comprehension.
A high-level ESL sequence designed to prepare 11th-grade students for university lectures. It covers macro-structures like signposting, micro-skills like hedging and rhetorical appeals, and ends with a full lecture synthesis seminar.
A high-level ESL sequence focusing on inferential listening, rhetoric, and speaker intent. Students analyze advertisements, news, humor, and debates to decode subtext and bias.
This sequence challenges students to move beyond 'textbook English' to decode the realities of natural, fast-paced speech, including regional dialects and connected speech phenomena. Students investigate how sounds change, disappear, or merge in casual conversation (assimilation and elision) and explore major English accents (American, British, Australian). Through inquiry and case studies of real-world media, students learn to navigate the variability of the English language with confidence.
This sequence addresses the challenges of understanding natural, non-standardized English in global contexts, moving beyond textbook audio to explore regional dialects, strong accents, and connected speech. Students investigate how cultural context shapes language use and practice decoding colloquialisms and slang, culminating in a simulation of diverse English varieties in a professional setting.
This sequence guides graduate ESL students from literal language to idiomatic fluency, focusing on phrasal verbs, workplace idioms, cultural metaphors, and informal networking rapport. Students will learn to sound more natural and culturally connected in academic and professional settings.
This sequence immerses undergraduate students in the rigorous environment of university-level academic discourse, focusing on the deconstruction of complex lectures and presentations. Students move from identifying structural signposts to evaluating implicit bias, speaker intent, and rhetorical strategies in real-time.
This sequence addresses the mechanical aspects of speaking that often hinder comprehensibility for intermediate graduate learners: stress, rhythm, and intonation. Students move from analyzing recorded speech to intense drilling of sentence stress, finally applying these skills to a recorded monologue to improve clarity and professional delivery.
This sequence helps graduate students navigate the nuances of academic and professional English. Students learn to adjust their linguistic register based on context, audience, and power dynamics, moving from formal lectures to casual networking events.
A comprehensive graduate-level ESL sequence focusing on the cognitive processing of academic lectures. Students move from identifying structural markers to evaluating complex rhetorical strategies and stance-taking.
A high-level sequence for graduate ESL students focusing on the phonological, semantic, and pragmatic challenges of advanced English listening, including regional dialects, connected speech, and implicit meaning.
This advanced ESL sequence focuses on mastering natural, unscripted English. Students move beyond textbook grammar to analyze connected speech, regional dialects, and the subtle subtext of authentic media like podcasts and interviews.
This sequence prepares advanced ESL learners for the rigors of university-level listening by deconstructing rhetorical strategies, identifying signposting, and evaluating speaker bias in academic lectures. Students move from mastering note-taking structures to engaging in a high-stakes Socratic seminar based on audio evidence.
This sequence prepares advanced ESL students for academic success by mastering the structural analysis of complex lectures. Students learn to identify discourse markers, use the Cornell note-taking system, filter out tangents, visualize data from auditory descriptions, and synthesize long-form information.
An advanced ESL sequence for 12th graders focusing on decoding nuance, connected speech, accents, and rhetorical strategies in high-level spoken English. Students progress from phonological decoding to critical evaluation of speaker intent and bias.
This sequence immerses intermediate ESL students in the nuances of casual English conversation, focusing on idiomatic expressions, emotional intonation, and social registers. Students transition from literal understanding to figurative fluency through inquiry, simulation, and performance.
This sequence equips graduate students with the linguistic tools to navigate academic uncertainty. Focusing on modals of deduction and the strategic use of hedging, students learn to interpret data cautiously, critique literature politely, and defend their research with calibrated confidence.
A sequence for graduate ESL students focusing on using complex conditional structures (0, 1, 2, 3, mixed, and inverted) to build academic arguments, analyze research limitations, and propose future studies. Students move from basic review to advanced stylistic inversions and synthesis in a 'Future Directions' research context.
A comprehensive workshop sequence for graduate ESL students focusing on the strategic and functional use of passive voice in academic research writing. Students move from basic construction to sophisticated applications in methodology, literature reviews, and paragraph cohesion.
A grammar-focused ESL unit where students act as investigators to solve a classroom mystery. They master passive voice, modals of deduction, reported speech, and past perfect to write an objective case report.