Too Tired to Teach? 7 Tips to Detox, De-stress and Regain Your Energy

Presenting our 2012 ESL Hall of Fame!
Did you know that you put in a comma in your writing whenever you take a breath? (I assume that means while reading aloud.) How about a period? Well, I guess that’s a deeper breath...
Verb tenses receive a lot of attention in English instruction—in fact, they receive perhaps more attention than any other aspect of grammar...
No ESL teacher is perfect, no matter if you’ve been teaching for 20 minutes or 20 years (present company included!) Anyone can make mistakes, most of which are results of our trying too hard or being too impatient...
Reading is one of the most important aspects of most English language teaching programs, but it can also be one of the toughest for you and your students...
You are probably familiar with the scenario: you at the front of the room, in the middle of lecturing on some important grammar point, when someone raises his hand...
Being an effective speaking teacher requires more than just talk. You need to know how to encourage your students to speak when they...
Putting a blank piece of paper before someone and asking her to write can be intimidating, and the clean white page can actually hinder the words from coming...
The process of reading, being able to connect semantic input with the letters on the page, does not mean much if language learners cannot understand what they have read...
The alarm goes off, and you groan. Getting out of bed is a feat of sheer will. You love teaching, and you enjoy the time you spend with your ESL students – most of the time. But they are not the problem. The problem is that you are so tired...
Your class is a quiet class. Your students file in at the beginning of a session, quietly take their seats, obediently take notes, and then get up and leave at the end, also quietly. Sure, sometimes a student falls asleep, and there is the occasional flash of hostility between students, but that’s all okay in the balance, right, of such a quiet and obedient class? Well, no, actually...