Friday, 14th May

1. Chris Farrell from the Centre of English Studies is offering a month’s free trial of the online learning programme they developed as part of the PRELIM project in exchange for a little feedback. Visit their platform https://cesdirectlearning.podia.com/ and choose the course(s) that interest you most. The coupon code ‘BC’ will give you free access to all the courses for one month, until June 14th.

There are language courses from A2 to C1 and a range of teacher development courses, each made up of six half-hour lessons, including teaching the four skills, CLIL and Hybrid Learning. Chris would be delighted if you arranged to take a course together with colleagues from your school or district or teachers association.

Full details in the PDF below and link to feedback survey here https://tinyurl.com/57v89h3w (I’ll repost that survey link in three weeks’ time.)

2. Another good, free FutureLearn course has just started, on Communicating across Cultures https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/communicating-across-cultures Twelve hours, spread over three weeks – perhaps the sort of thing that your more ambitious older students might like to try? The course itself, with participants drawn from all over the globe, will be a chance to practise the theory they’re learning.

3. A friend who works in a museum, Henrietta Lidchi, has thought and written a lot over the years about the colonial past of many museum collections, and she introduced me earlier this week to this short video, First Contact, by Stephen Paul Judd about the arrival of the Pilgrim Fathers in the not-yet-united-or-even-invented states of America https://vimeo.com/145098773

If you have more than a passing interest in the issues of colonialism, collections and return, you might like to read the wide-ranging afterword to Henrie’s book, Dividing the Spoils: Perspectives on military collections and the British empire, that she kindly agreed I could share with you – PDFs of afterword and book flyer below. I don’t think Henrie’s expecting too many of us to buy it at £80, though!

4. And, finally, I’d always thought my colleague Michael was a bit of an Abba fan. Not true! Try this wonderful Bob Dylan series that he’s just recommended http://www.themetimeradio.com/

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Thursday, 13th May

1. Next Monday, 17th May, at 12:00 UK time, hosted by the University of East Anglia: Social interaction in language teacher education: What a corpus can and can’t tell us by Fiona Farr from the University of Limerick. More info and a registration link here: https://bit.ly/33kKsOr From the blurb: “… it is still true to say that although language teacher education is much done, it is little studied.” The talk will look at “specific evidence-based accounts of the spoken and written discourse of experienced language teacher educators and student teachers”. Can’t quite express why, but this one intrigues me!

2. Next Tuesday, 18th May, at 15:00 UK time is the third in the OECD ‘Ask an Expert’ series: Why play is so important for child learning and development will explore will “explore the important role play and risk-taking has in children’s lives, and how digital play is changing the game”. More info and registration here https://meetoecd1.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_diBIQTTlT3SfYWrZ6-FIQg Good that risk hasn’t been banned completely!

3. If crime fiction’s your bag, you’ll easily spend an hour or three exploring the Crime Reads site https://crimereads.com/ Here’s a piece on a film that Alfred Hitchcock never made about George Blake’s escape from Wormwood Scrubs Prison in 1966 https://crimereads.com/george-blake-prison-escape-hitchcock/ and here’s an interview with one of my current favourites, Jane Harper https://crimereads.com/jane-harper-the-australian-crime-author-everyone-seems-to-be-reading/

4. And, finally, an NTS ‘In Focus’ session on Gil Scott-Heron https://www.nts.live/shows/in-focus/episodes/in-focus-gil-scott-heron-10th-december-2019 Love it! None of that grime/garage/ jungle stuff ….

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Wednesday, 12th May

1. First out of the traps today, the first episode of the new Climate Connection podcast series https://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/article/climate-connection-episode-1-taking-temperature-0 You can stream it or download it, and there’s notes on each episode and a transcript.

Direct link to first episode here https://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/sites/teacheng/files/Climate%20Connection%20Episode%201%20%281%29.mp3  You’ll recognise the voice talking at the beginning, I’m sure!

2. More climate discussion (but no hot air): Green ELT opportunities & obstacles: savings and costs is the title of the next ELT Footprint UK online meeting at 16:00 UK time next Wednesday, 19th May. UK-focussed but travels well. More info here https://eltfootprint.uk/events/ and a registration link here https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0ldeqhrT4vEtzpgD4hBT_ENNVATL0kDE0V

3. Just started, the latest edition of the FutureLearn course on Teaching Languages in Primary Schools: Putting Research into Practice https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/teaching-languages-in-primary-schools-putting-research-into-practice Three hours a week for three weeks in which to explore how children learn languages and how to support their linguistic development.

4. A reminder that Reallyenglish are offering thirty days free access to their online IELTS course, which offers 180 hours of IELTS-focused English language self-study https://www.reallyenglish.com/free-trial-request-bc?hs_preview=niRJFZYy-45198326680 Six hours a day for the next thirty days – we’ll all be C2!

5. And, finally, this week’s phobia: thermophobia – something we may all have to learn to live with if we don’t get our collective climate act together soon.

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Tuesday, 11th May

1. The latest report from Oxford University Press (OUP), Education: The journey towards a digital revolution, draws on insights from OUP staff from 7 countries—the UK, Brazil, South Africa, Pakistan, India, Spain, and Turkey – as well as from hundreds of teachers globally, and extensive secondary research. One of the report’s recommendations is that ‘Governments should actively collaborate and learn from teachers and students and use their recent experiences to inform future policy and curriculum development’ – one can only hope! https://global.oup.com/news-items/homepage/reshape?cc=gb&WT.ac=reshape PDF below.

2. eLearning Africa’s ‘Primary & Secondary Education Virtual Exchange’ is free to attend if you work in education in Africa,: more info and registration here https://live.eventtia.com/en/elearning-africa-primary-secondary-education/Registerpage Plenty of notice to allow you to register.

eLearning Africa’s website is here https://www.elearning-africa.com/

3. The next TeachingEnglish ‘Education Exchange’ webinar, on Careers education in a pandemic, is tomorrow, Wednesday 12th July, at 16:00 UK time https://www.britishcouncil.org/education/schools/education-exchange-digital-events/careers-education The panel – from a wide range of educational and cultural backgrounds – will look at the impact of the pandemic on young people’s career plans and hopes. You need to register.

4. I hope today’s message will not be an exercise in frustration for many of you, with #2 free for Africa only, and this item addressed (in part) only to A. S. Hornby Educational Trust UK (ASHET) university MA course alumni.

Over the years, since A. S. Hornby founded ASHET in 1961, over five hundred ELT professionals from around the world have benefited from an MA scholarship at a UK university. Until recently, those alumni came together in a Yahoo Group, but Yahoo groups became defunct last December, alas. ASHET is now consulting alumni on a possible successor to the Yahoo Group and invites them to complete the following short survey by 31st May https://forms.gle/3VgXaDsBcGPHnVYo7 Alumni only, please!

However, ASHET’S Teacher Association Project Awards are open to all associations, and more info can be found here https://www.hornby-trust.org.uk/projects#Projects Copies of the information sheet and the application form below. More information on ASHET here https://www.hornby-trust.org.uk/

5. And, finally, prompted by the behaviour of the birds on our balcony since we started putting out ‘fat balls’ for them recently, here’s last summer’s National Theatre of Scotland short play about the war that develops between one man and the jackdaws in his back garden when he changes the bird food he gives them https://youtu.be/7OzSmjplkMM Switch on the subtitles if Peter Mullan’s accent is a challenge!

All the Scenes for Survival plays here https://www.nationaltheatrescotland.com/events/scenes-for-survival

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Monday, 10th May

1. Lots of good stuff on the IATEFL events page, where the large majority of events are still free to non-members https://www.iatefl.org/events Coming up this week is a TEA (Testing, Evaluation & Assessment) SIG & ESP (English for Specific Purposes) SIG event: ‘Content or Language: Do you Know Which One You’re Assessing?’ I suspect the answer to that question is – or would often be, if we asked ourselves the question – ‘No, now that I stop to think about it!”

More info here https://www.iatefl.org/events/223 and registration link here https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_BmujUAvrS8K-ORWGt4Q3cw

2. The UKFIET blog is well worth an occasional visit https://www.ukfiet.org/blog/ Featured on the front page at present are a piece by Emma Wagner of Save the Children on their new report, Action Towards Increased Quality Education for Internally Displaced Children – PDF below;

a piece by a UK-Ethiopia team on the widening of the education divide in Ethiopia caused by the pandemic;

and two thought-provoking pieces on diversity and the notion of ‘building back better’ by Yvette Hutchinson and Ruth Naylor, respectively.

3. What is to be Done About Fake News in Politics? is the title of an LSE event this Wednesday, 12th May at 17:00 UK time: “fake news is widely believed to have played a major role in the election of President Donald Trump, the outcome of the Brexit Referendum, and in general threatens the healthy functioning of news media in modern democracy”, says the event blurb. What can we do about it? More info and registration link here https://www.lse.ac.uk/Events/2021/05/202105121700/news

4. And, finally, from the archives of Cambridge Assessment, a glimpse of exam board activity in 1938 in the months leading up to the start of the Second World War when an exam pass was literally a matter of life and death for some people https://www.cambridgeassessment.org.uk/Images/598087-research-matters-30-autumn-2020.pdf PDF below and link to the Research Matters home page here https://www.cambridgeassessment.org.uk/our-research/all-published-resources/research-matters/

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Friday, May 7th

1. NILE’s report on ‘hybrid learning’ – will all learning be hybrid in future, I wonder? https://www.nile-elt.com/product?catalog=Hybrid-Learning-in-Language-Teaching-Organisations If you want to watch the recording of the discussion, which is good, you’ll need to register – but that’s free. PDF below.

2. Maybe not all for everyone, but something here for nearly everybody? The Queen’s University Belfast BAAL/CUP Seminar on Research Synthesis https://researchsynthesisseminar.weebly.com/programme.html

3. Some recent pieces from The Conversation:

i) Artificial Intelligence’s best chat up lines https://theconversation.com/can-i-see-your-parts-list-what-ais-attempted-chat-up-lines-tell-us-about-computer-generated-language-159660

ii) how companies are spying on home workers https://theconversation.com/remote-working-has-led-to-managers-spying-more-on-staff-here-are-three-ways-to-curb-it-159604

iii) has the human race reached peak intelligence? https://theconversation.com/iq-tests-are-humans-getting-smarter-158837

4. If I could have made the link work, I’d have included some rather good British Council Nepal radio programmes, but I couldn’t, so please forgive me a piece of self-indulgence: me – 1’28” in – and my daughter Emily – 59’15” in – talking about living between two cultures, Britain and Croatia https://youtu.be/5iL5sOAVFP8

5. And, finally, Dive into some Scottish Ballet https://youtu.be/vPhiQxNYpsc

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Thursday, 6th May

1. Very short notice of tonight’s Edinburgh International Booker Prize event, which can also serve – that’s my excuse, at any rate – as a reminder of the series as a whole: tonight at 19:30 UK time sees translator Megan McDowell and Argentinian journalist, novelist and short story writer Mariana Enriquez discussing Marian’s new collection of short stories, The Dangers of Smoking in Bed, with writer, editor and translator Daniel Hahn: https://www.edbookfest.co.uk/the-festival/whats-on/mariana-enriquez-megan-mcdowell-with-daniel-hahn/player

More info on the rest of the series here https://www.edbookfest.co.uk/news/the-international-booker-prize-2021-shortlistee-events-announced

and a previous event with Mariana Enriquez here https://youtu.be/a8JG0uj-qQY

2. A National Geographic Learning webinar next Tuesday, 11th May, Developing Confident Communicators for the Real World, with John Hughes https://webinars.eltngl.com/4-maydeveloping-confident-communicators-for-the-real-world/ Once at 09:00 UK time and again at 14:00 UK time.

John says “even learners with an intermediate or advanced level of English can sometimes struggle to get their message across in public – not because they don’t have the English they need, but because they lack the inward and outward confidence” – and the webinar is about helping them develop the confidence to do themselves justice.

3. Next Tuesday, 11th May at 13:00 UK time sees the launch of Reforming Education and Challenging Inequalities in Southern Contexts at the REAL (Research for Equitable Access and Learning) Centre here in Cambridge. The book is a tribute to Maurice Colclough and offers in-depth analyses of education and social inequality in Southern contexts, using data from Ethiopia, Ghana, India, Pakistan and Uganda.

More info and registration here https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/book-launch-reforming-education-and-challenging-inequalities-tickets-148177989355?aff=ebdsoporgprofile and a PDF of chapter 1 below. Several other chapters are also available to download free.

4. And, finally, I’m not quite sure to expect from this one, the launch of Ilana Halperin’s There is a Volcano Behind My House exhibition at Mount Stuart on the Isle of Bute in Scotland at 15:30 UK time on Saturday, 8th May https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/there-is-a-volcano-behind-my-house-launch-tickets-152480899475

I visited Mount Stuart some years ago and found it a beautiful place. I hope they capture some of that magic online https://www.mountstuart.com/ Here’s Mount Stuart on the map https://goo.gl/maps/UKaByLNjfDQcy54P7

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Wednesday, 5th May

1. Nik Peachey is showing his age, I reckon – Mario Rinvolucri and Paul Davis’s ‘Dictation’ was one of my very favourite books too, back in the day. Good blog post from Nik on dictation here https://peacheypublications.com/3-dictation-activities-for-the-remote-and-physical-classroom

2. All the recordings from the English UK Teachers Day on 22nd April can now be found here https://www.englishuk.com/en/about-us/news-press/english-uk-news?newsId=3177 – well worth a rummage around!

The day included two very well received plenaries: the first, on The native factor and the last five years by Silvana Richardson with Chia Suan Chong, is here https://youtu.be/SuZ4mJhFYYo and the second, on Climate action in language education with Colm Downes, Christopher Graham and Dianna Torosyan, is here https://youtu.be/yGlRo8OxMlY

3. Pretty sure I’ve not included anything from Costa Rica before. Starting tomorrow at 17:00 UK time and more or less weekly thereafter is the University of Costa Rica’s seminar series on ‘Linguistic Policy, Linguistic Planning and Evaluation in Central America and the Caribbean: Realities and Needs’.

More info here https://inil.ucr.ac.cr/seminar-on-linguistic-policy-linguistic-planning-and-evaluation-in-central-america-and-the-caribbean-realities-and-needs/

and registration link here https://udecr.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZErd-CppjwpG9EGfDRGh-SBbGdSS6ETGPgG?timezone_id=Europe%2FLondon

4. Here’s an interesting recent report on textbook use conducted for the UK Publishers Association by Public First http://www.publicfirst.co.uk/how-do-teachers-use-textbooks.html The report’s findings – possibly not very surprising, given who commissioned it, but nonetheless thought-provoking – include a) without textbooks, teachers would spend an additional 5.7 hours a week planning their lessons; b) without textbooks, the UK state education system would require an additional 52,250 teachers to function, which would cost nearly £3 billion a year. PDF below.

5. This week’s phobia is amychophobia, and here’s a wonderful short film that I’ve just discovered – but some of you may know already as it’s been around for a while – about a Belgian man who clearly does NOT suffer from it https://youtu.be/6F513pM5YdQ

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Tuesday, 4th May

1. NATESOL have very kindly offered four free places at their annual conference on Saturday, 15th May. The programme includes Language change and the learner: from buzzwords to basics and Challenging change: Exploratory Practice, Mentoring and Quality of Life in Language Teaching. PDF with details below. If you’d like one of those free tickets, please send me an e-mail or a WhatsApp by 17:00 UK time on Monday 10th May, and I’ll put your name in the virtual hat!

2. Here’s another, more musical take on ‘growth mindset’ from C. J. Luckey, courtesy of my colleague Amy who was shown it by her children’s primary school in Delhi – love it! https://youtu.be/J6CnrFvY94E

3. Another friend has drawn my attention to Carol Dweck’s work on mindset, and here’s a good Farnam Street (FS) blog post on Carol’s work https://fs.blog/2015/03/carol-dweck-mindset/ which also includes a link to her ten-minute-long TED talk on the topic https://youtu.be/_X0mgOOSpLU

FS is a new one on me – I’ll explore and report back. I’ve spotted another post called Efficiency is the Enemy which appeals ….

4. The next webinar in the Essex, Botswana, Dar es Salaam and Zambia ‘Language and Sustainable Development Series’ at 12:00 UK time on Friday, May 7th is on Inclusive multilingual literacy: the LILIEMA model and will be presented by Friederike Lüpke, Jérémi Fahed Sagna and Miriam Weidl. “LILIEMA seeks to overcome the exclusion and minoritisation of speakers and their repertoires resulting from language-based multilingual education programmes, where some languages, lects, or written representations are always excluded.”

More info and registration link here https://essex-university.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJwucOusrjMqHdaIqxK1E10wvyFHIloKrJ3G and more on the series here https://multilingual-learning.com/webinar-series/

5. And, finally, I’m reasonably confident that I know what ‘DnB’ is, but I’m less sure what ‘Jungle’ is – and I’m absolutely sure I couldn’t distinguish between the two, if put on the spot. I’m going to listen to the latest episode of The Selector with my mindset switched to ‘growth’ https://music.britishcouncil.org/selector-radio

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Friday, 30th April

1. First up, a chance to win a copy of a recent Multilingual Matters (MM) publication: Ethical and Methodological Issues in Researching Young Language Learners in School Contexts, edited by Annamaria Pinter & (Harry) Kuchah Kuchah, or Assessment for Learning in Primary Language Learning and Teaching by Maria Britton. Send me either an e-mail message or a WhatsApp message by 19:00 UK time on Wednesday, 5th May, specifying which book you’d like and which format (PDF or paperback), and I’ll put your name in the virtual hat for Harry to make the draw before the webinar with the authors that MM have organised at 16:00 UK time on 6th May.

Webinar link here https://zoom.us/webinar/register/6316185683047/WN_36W58D15R52CuMGggmCafA

More detail on the two publications here https://www.multilingual-matters.com/page/detail/Ethical-and-Methodological-Issues-in-Researching-Young-Language-Learners-in-School-Contexts/?k=9781800411418

and here https://www.multilingual-matters.com/page/detail/Assessment-for-Learning-in-Primary-Language-Learning-and-Teaching/?k=9781800410633

2. Three pieces from the latest World Economic Forum newsletter next.

First, what a surprise, most people don’t want to go back to the office after the pandemic https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2021/04/survey-65-of-remote-workers-do-not-want-to-return-to-the-office/ Most teachers think differently, I’d imagine.

Second, 6 African cities leading the way to a green future – care to guess which six before reading the article? https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2021/04/africa-cities-renewables-ren21/

Third, a scientific paper offering a guideline to limit indoor airborne transmission of COVID-19 https://www.pnas.org/content/118/17/e2018995118 I can’t understand very much of it, but the summary’s good and clear and bad news for gym bunnies and singers: “To minimize risk of infection, one should avoid spending extended periods in highly populated areas. One is safer in rooms with large volume and high ventilation rates. One is at greater risk in rooms where people are exerting themselves in such a way as to increase their respiration rate and pathogen output, for example, by exercising, singing, or shouting. Since the rate of inhalation of contagion depends on the volume flux of both the exhalation of the infected individual and the inhalation of the susceptible person, the risk of infection increases as Q2b. Likewise, masks worn by both infected and susceptible persons will reduce the risk of transmission by a factor p2m, a dramatic effect given that pm≤0.1 for moderately high-quality masks (74, 75).” PDF below for those of you keen to work out what Q2b is.

3. Some weekend viewing: a good recent Chatham House discussion of Joe Biden’s first 100 days. The panellists explore the implications of Biden’s first 100 days for the future of US foreign policy – and the implications of that policy for the rest of us around the world https://youtu.be/4aYRwbvK8AU

4. Earlier today, I was about to begin an e-mail to three women colleagues with ‘Hey, guys!’ and then thought better of doing so. (I need to ask Marta, Amy and Ellen what they would have thought, had I done so!) Here’s a piece on the subject from The Atlantic https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2018/08/guys-gender-neutral/568231/

5. And, finally, this week’s Prime Minister’s Questions was a classic. Watch Boris Johnson getting red in the face as Keir Starmer, the leader of the Labour Party opposition, questions him about who paid for his wallpaper https://youtu.be/gzNAeFSqOyI

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