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Reading tasks for homework

By Pete on January 11, 2021 • ( 3 )

Hiya, hope online learning is going well.

Here are some random reading tasks I set for homework. Each student chooses one of these to do a week. These are in a big folder on my desk, but they’ll be adapted for online learning now probs. Still, you might find them useful. Ten for fiction, six for non-fiction.

Most of these are well-known, so not all my ideas or anything. Examples:

homework activities in elt

Here’s the doc:

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Categories: Lesson Ideas , other

Tags: eal , ESL , fiction , homework , ideas , non-fiction , reading , tefl

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18+ unmissable resource websites for busy ELT teachers

Where to find engaging lesson plans and other great, free elt classroom resources.

8 September, 2017 George Chilton Teaching English 3

elt english teaching classroom resources

Here is a compilation of 18+ free (and freemium ) ELT resource websites for teachers – from video lessons , to exam preparation , business English and more. We hope that this list will help you find the lesson plans and materials you need to deliver top-notch classes.

This article was last updated 27 February 2024 and is part of our regular series on teaching English .

Aimed at teachers of English as a second language, we aim to showcase the best resources for teaching and learning English .  

Check out Linguabanca’s own free downloadable vocabulary worksheets from our growing selection of TEFL/ESL Teacher resources or read our review of the best (and worst) mobile phone apps for English learners . 

Lessons based on film and video

1. lesson stream – video-based elt classes.

Lesson Stream by Jamie Keddie is an award-winning video-based ELT resource website for teachers looking to step away from the course book. Full of engaging multi-level lesson plans and supporting worksheets, Lesson Stream is a great way to improve engagement and add variety to your English language classes.

Find it here: Lesson Stream

Jamie also has a new project and book, which can be found at Videotelling.com

2. Film English – English classes based on short films

film english learning

Kieran Donaghy’s Film English is another award-winning TEFL website , providing dozens of interesting ESL classes. Kieran’s love of film is clear in these well thought out lesson plans, designed for a range of abilities. Definitely check it out if you want to mix up your classes with movies.

Find it here: Film English

3. TED Ed – lesson plans based on TED videos

ted education

As a fan of authentic materials in the classroom, I can’t recommend this resource highly enough.

Find it here: TED Ed.

3b. Business English 23

Our sister site, Business English 23 , has an advanced video search engine which lets English teachers find exactly the right video for their students. As the name, suggests it has been designed for anyone teaching English in a work environment. Users can search for videos related to Finance and Economics , Human Resources (including job search and interviews), Business Travel, Management strategies and MBAs , plus a range of other relevant subjects.  All videos have been classified by level, using the A-C scale of the EU’s CEFR .

Find it here: Business English 23

Resources and information for ELT teachers,

4. grammar girl – a fun grammar resource site.

This website, from Mignon Fogarty, makes grammar fun, which is no mean feat. As much a resource for teachers as it is for language learners, Grammar Girl outlines the strange and sometimes complex world of English grammar . It’s definitely one to bookmark and explore at your leisure.

Find it here: Grammar Girl

5. Guardian TEFL – articles and insights from a national newspaper

The Guardian is a national newspaper in the UK and has a large education section. Included is a comprehensive TEFL section , which is certainly well worth bookmarking if you’re interested in keeping up with the latest news and events in our industry.

Find it here: The Guardian TEFL

Lesson Plans Based on Current Events

6. one stop english – from lindsay clandfield.

elt classroom lesson plans

Find it here: One Stop English

7. Breaking News English – by Sean Banville

Boasting literally thousands of lesson plans for English teachers, Sean Banville’s site is a must. Each plan focuses on up-to-the-minute news stories and provides a topical focus for your classes.

Find it here: Breaking News English

General Resource Websites

8. bbc learning english.

bbc english bbc

Find it here: BBC Learning English

9. Dave’s ESL Cafe

esl cafe website

Still going strong after many years, Dave’s ESL Cafe has a wealth of resources and information for teachers, as well as a range of lessons plans , tips and advice. The message boards are a good source of information – if you can navigate the labyrinthine threads which go back well over a decade.

Find it here: Dave’s ESL Cafe

10. Busy Teacher

Another gargantuan resource website, Busy Teacher has thousands of printables , worksheets and lesson plans . It’s a top destination for last-minute substitute classes and for when you’re running late! The classes are designed for multiple levels.

Find it here: Busy Teacher

Exam resource Websites

11. cambridge english teacher resources.

cambridge english teaching resources

Find it here: Cambridge English Teacher Resources

12. Flo-Joe – Cambridge exam resources

Self-described as “THE place on the web for Cambridge exam preparation” – it is a great go-to website for teachers running exam courses. With contemporary materials and resources available from the KET to CPE and IELTS , you should bookmark it now.

Find it here: Flo-Joe

13. Easy ISE

This is a helpful website for students and teachers of the Oxford Trinity language exams . The website offers both free and paid resources, and it’s well worth looking into to refresh your knowledge of the exam.

Find it here: Easy ISE

14. Trinity ISE

Trinity College’s own website is also full of useful reference material and guides for teachers and students of the Trinity exams .

Find it here: Trinity College

Business English Resources

15. business english 23.

A site which helps English teachers find relevant business-related videos for their adult students. Business English 23 also creates its own lessons, with a course on English for the telephone and a series of classes on writing the perfect business email in English . The site is part of the Lingubanca network of language portals.

16. Business Balls

Though not specifically designed for business English lessons, Business Balls has a number of resources for professional training , which can be easily adapted to suit your classes.

Find it here: Business Balls

17. Business English Materials – Sean Banville

This is another site from Sean Banville. It’s a great resource bank with 102 Handouts, downloadable listening materials , and online quizzes for business English students.

Find it here: Business English Materials

18. Randall’s ESL Lab

If you can get over its very Web 1.0, 1998 looks, Randall’s ESL Labs is full of great listening resources . Beauty, as they say, is only skin deep and Randall is certainly providing teachers with valuable content for their classes.

Find it here: Randall’s ESL Lab

19. Podcasts in English

podcasts in english

Find it here: Podcasts in English

Editor’s note

George has very humbly missed out his own website,  designerlessons.org , another great resource for ELT lesson plans . Check it out!

Got a suggestion?

Let us know if you have any other favourite TEFL resource websites of your own!

Rate this article on TEFL websites

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http://englishxp.co.uk has a list of grammar points and pronunciation tips including tongue twisters.

I would like to recommend https://www.teachers-zone.com

Teacher’s Zone is the website for primary teachers working with children aged 4-12. It provides support in arranging well-organized lessons.

Teacher’s Zone contains a ready-to-use resource of inspirational vocabulary and speaking activities. A growing collection of free printable flashcards, word cards, posters and worksheets can be found here. Many practical ideas, teaching tips and lesson plans which can be easily adapted in different situations help to involve young learners and teach them effectively.

I would recommend ideas4el.com with a huge number of very interesting ESL games.

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homework activities in elt

Useful sites for homework activities

Homework is a key part of the Fluentify experience, to strengthen students’ knowledge of English.

For this reason, Fluentify tutors often have a bank of go-to websites for homework activities. We have already covered listening and reading comprehension in our 25 Great Homework Resource Sites post.

Now, let’s talk about grammar and vocabulary.

These sites have been collected from tutor contributions to the #sharingmaterials channel on Slack.

Thank you to all the tutors who post on this channel ; your advice, resources and insights are invaluable to help us all teach great classes on Fluentify.

This post is divided into videos, gap-fill exercises and quizzes, phrasal verbs and reading activities.  

At the bottom, you’ll find homework activities divided by parts of speech so that you can quickly find homework materials you need for a particular class.

Grammar and vocabulary videos

homework activities in elt

If you’re student needs more explanation on a language point, you’re sure to find a video about it on Engvid. Ask your student to watch the video on the topic and complete the corresponding quiz for homework.

Link : https://www.engvid.com/english-lessons/

Simple English Videos

homework activities in elt

Again, you’ll find hundreds of videos on grammar, vocabulary, business English and pronunciation on this site. Each video comes with a useful transcript to analyse the language used.

Link : https://www.simpleenglishvideos.com/videos/

ESL Video uses snippets of YouTube videos, TED Talks and TV series to highlight particular language points. Students test their comprehension with a quiz.

Link : https://www.eslvideo.com/

Gap-fill exercises and quizzes

Gap fills and quizzes are great homework activity to reinforce your student’s understanding of a language point.

Perfect English Grammar

This site is great for interactive grammar exercises, with hundreds of activities covering A1-B2 grammar. The student can then check their understanding themselves with the interactive form.

Link : https://www.perfect-english-grammar.com/grammar-exercises.html

ELT Base offers word-ordering and multiple-choice quizzes on a range of grammar and vocabulary points.

Link : https://www.eltbase.com/quizzes

Englisch Hilfen

Englisch Hilfen also has a lot of free worksheets to reinforce grammar. They are not interactive, however, and so the tutor would have to give students both the worksheet and the answer key.

Link: https://www.englisch-hilfen.de/en/worksheets.htm

BBC English

homework activities in elt

BBC English offers, podcasts, videos and short courses on English grammar and vocabulary. Some videos also have a short quiz at the end. Here are some useful links:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/course/upper-intermediate

https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/course/intermediate/unit-6

British Council

The British Council provides grammar and vocabulary lessons with videos and interactive activities.

For vocabulary: https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/vocabulary

For grammar: https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/grammar

Phrasal verbs

Phrasal Verb Demon teaches phrasal verbs by preposition (or particle) rather than the verb. For example, the ‘on’ in phrasal verbs has the meaning of ‘to attach’ (e.g. ‘put on a jacket’) or ‘to continue’, (e.g.‘carry on with your work please’).

Teaching phrasal verbs this way makes much more sense to students. After teaching a set of verbs by preposition, tutors can reinforce the point by asking the student go into more depth with the relevant page on this site. They can also deep-dive into the 101 most common phrasal verbs and test themselves with a quiz.

Link : https://www.phrasalverbdemon.com/index.html

A great way for beginner students to start reading is to read with a parallel text in their own language. Parallel Text allows students to read classic texts such as Jane Ayre or Sherlock Holmes with half the screen in the study language and the other half in their own language.

Link : http://paralleltext.io/

Homework activities divided by language point

Need a homework activity fast? Here are some suggested videos, gap-fills and quizzes for each of the main grammar points.

Present simple

Video :  Carter’s breakfast routine (Simple English Videos)

Link : https://www.simpleenglishvideos.com/carters-breakfast-present-simple/

Activity: Present simple ‘to be’ gap-fill (Perfect English Grammar). Link : https://www.perfect-english-grammar.com/present-simple-exercise-14.html

Activity : Present simple mixed verbs gap-fill (Perfect English Grammar)

Link : https://www.perfect-english-grammar.com/present-simple-exercise-8.html

Present continuous

Video : Present simple or present continuous? (EngVid)

Link https://www.engvid.com/present-simple-or-present-continuous/

Activity : Present simple or present continuous gap-fill (Perfect English Grammar)

Link : https://www.perfect-english-grammar.com/present-simple-present-continuous-1.html

Modal verbs

Video: May, might and could for future possibilities (Simple English Videos)

Link: https://www.simpleenglishvideos.com/modal-verbs-may-might-could-possibilities-1/

Video : How do modal verbs work? (EngVid)

Link : https://www.engvid.com/how-do-modals-work/

Past simple

Video : Past simple tense (Engvid)

Link : https://www.engvid.com/past-simple-tense/

Activity : Past simple irregular verbs 1 & 2 gap-fill (Perfect English Grammar)

Link : https://www.perfect-english-grammar.com/irregular-verbs-exercise-1.html

Link : https://www.perfect-english-grammar.com//irregular-verbs-exercise-2.html

Past continuous

Video : Storytelling – The past continuous and puppies (Simple English Videos)

Link : https://www.simpleenglishvideos.com/storytelling-past-continuous-dog-rescues/

Activity : Past simple or past continuous? Gap-fill (ELT Base)

Link : https://www.eltbase.com/quiz/089_01.htm

Present perfect

Video: Past simple or present perfect? (EngVid)

Link: https://www.engvid.com/past-simple-or-past-perfect/

Activity : Present perfect or past simple gap-fill (ELT Base and Perfect English Grammar)

Link : https://www.eltbase.com/quiz/215_08.htm

Link : https://www.perfect-english-grammar.com/past-simple-present-perfect-3.html

Present perfect continuous

Video: Present perfect or present perfect continuous (EngVid)

Link: https://www.engvid.com/english-grammar-present-perfect-simple-continuous/

Activity : Present perfect simple or continuous? Gap-fill (Perfect English Grammar)

Link : https://www.perfect-english-grammar.com/present-perfect-present-perfect-continuous-2.html

Video: How to use ‘used to’ in English (EngVid)

Link: https://www.engvid.com/how-to-use-used-to-in-english/

Used to and to be used to

Video : I am used to and I used to (EngVid)

Link : https://www.engvid.com/english-grammar-i-used-to-im-used-to/

Activity : Used to, to be used to and to get used to gap fill (ELT Base)

Link : https://www.eltbase.com/quiz/076_01.htm

Will, going to and present continuous for future

Video: Will, going to and present continuous for future (Simple English Videos)

Link : https://www.simpleenglishvideos.com/will-going-to-and-the-present-continuous-3-common-future-forms/

Activity : Future tenses quiz: will, going to, present continuous quiz (ELT Base)

Link : https://www.eltbase.com/quiz/154_01.htm

First conditional

Video: First conditional in action (Simple English Videos)

Link: https://www.simpleenglishvideos.com/first-conditional-in-action-english-grammar/

Activity : First conditional form gap-fill (Perfect English Grammar)

Link : https://www.perfect-english-grammar.com/first-conditional-exercise-1.html

Second conditional

Video : Second conditional in action (Simple English Videos)

Link : https://www.simpleenglishvideos.com/the-second-conditional-in-action-english-grammar/

Activity : Make the second conditional form gap-fill (Perfect English Grammar)

Link : https://www.perfect-english-grammar.com/second-conditional-exercise-1.html

Third conditional

Video : Third conditional in action (Simple English videos)

Link : https://www.simpleenglishvideos.com/the-english-third-conditional-in-action/

Activity : Make the third conditional gap-fill (Perfect English Grammar)

Link : https://www.perfect-english-grammar.com/third-conditional-exercise-1.html

Mixed conditionals

Activity: Mixed conditional quiz (ELT Base)

Link: https://www.eltbase.com/quiz/153_02.htm

Final thoughts

What are your go-to homework resource sites? Tell us about them in the comments below.

  • ESL homework

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Andromeda is a Fluentify English tutor. She has been teaching English in Spain and online since 2012. In addition to teaching, she is a TEFL writer. She recently moved to Edinburgh, Scotland and is currently working on her Scottish accent.

Resources you can trust

Homework ideas

Homework ideas

Some great suggestions for ways kids can revise vocabulary they have learned in class. You may want to translate it into the learners' own language and hand it out, or dip into it yourself for inspiration!

All reviews

Resources you might like.

homework activities in elt

Free English Online

Free online English resources for teaching and learning are available. Improve your English with our free interactive speaking and listening lessons, reading and writing exercises, quizzes, and games. 

Our pages include a variety of online English exercises at various levels, as well as practice for the Cambridge English and IGCSE ESL, plus higher-level courses like the IB English Language B . Our most recent free English online activities, games, and teaching resources are listed above.

Take our free level test if you are unsure of your level. The Junior Level Test is for students aged 6 to 12, and the Senior Level Test is for students aged 13 and up. It only takes 15-20 minutes to determine which English language course to take. You can also choose to have your results emailed to you. So why waste your time? Take the English level test online right now!

If you enjoy our free English online resources and would like to contribute to the site’s upkeep, please consider clicking this link . Our website promises to publish new content on a regular basis throughout the year, so you’ll always find something of interest.

Starters | Beginner | Elementary | Intermediate | Upper Intermediate

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12 Fun ESL Speaking Activities for Teens or Adults

Every language teacher knows that speaking is a core skill to teach and practice, but sometimes it can be challenging coming up with creative or engaging ESL speaking activities and games. You can use them to improve the community feeling inside the classroom , too.

They are designed to be high-quality and enjoyable – and mostly suitable for online lessons, too.

1. Interview Pop

Student level:  Pre-Intermediate to Advanced Type of Lesson:  Group or Individual

Students choose one person they want to interview. It can be anybody of their choice, and the person doesn’t necessarily have to be alive still.

They make a different question using one of their five verbs in each question; these questions are made for the person they want to interview.

While the students are making their questions, go through the class and help students fix the grammatical mistakes.

This is a great activity if you are practicing  question formation  as a grammar topic with your students.

So this means that each student answers the questions from the perspective of the person they wanted to interview, as their partner asks them the questions.

2. Word Racing

A very interactive and high-energy ESL speaking activity. Many students get so into it and excited that they won’t even notice they are speaking in a foreign language and won’t even have time to think about making mistakes.

All you need to prepare for the game is to write down 15-20 vocabulary terms you want to practice with your students, each term is written on a different small slip of paper. Give a stack of these slips to each group.

One player from the first group starts. This student then has one minute to explain or define as many words written on their slips to their own group as they can, without saying the word they have on the card.

Once the minute is over, the next group takes their turn.

After the minute is up, each group counts their points and the group with the most points wins that round.

An example might be that if the word on the card is ‘handcuff’ then they say the word ‘police’ and the other students have to guess the word ‘handcuff’.

In the last round, they act out or pantomime the words on their cards.

Here’s a list with even more fun ESL vocabulary games for adults and kids.

3. Guess Who or What I Am

It’s usually more suitable for lower-level students but can also be used in intermediate or upper-intermediate students, especially for the other variation of the activity described below.

In version one, one student thinks of a person – it could be someone in the class or a famous person, someone that everyone is likely to know – and the rest of the class asks them yes or no questions about the person until they can guess who it is.

In version two, one student goes in front of the door, while the rest of the class decides on a person. Then the student comes back in and has to ask the class yes or no questions until they can guess who the person is.

For example, if one student chooses ‘handcuffs’ they would say something like:

4. Would you rather…

Student level:  Intermediate to Advanced Type of Lesson:  Group or Individual

Go around the class and have a student draw a card, read it aloud, and then call on another student to answer it.

As stated before, you can make up your own. If you are doing a specific topic for your lesson, then you can try to make them as closely related to the topic as possible.

Give each group or pair of students the same card and have each of them state their opinion about the topic on the card.

You can give them a few minutes to take notes on their opinion and what they want to say before starting. Then students go around and say their opinion and support their argument.

In addition to this, you could also assign students to make their own “Would you rather…” topics for the class or other groups. Make sure they keep them appropriate!

Help facilitate the conversations and ask follow-up questions while students are speaking.

5. How-to Presentation

This activity is great for a number of reasons: it’s simple to assign and explain, effective for students to develop speaking, and fun because it’s on a topic they’re interested in.

In order to get students cooperating together, you could also put them in pairs and have them decide on and organize the speech together.

Have students prepare the speech at home or during the lesson, and then have them present their topic during the next lesson.

6. Living Memory

This is a game based on the classic board game “memory” designed for lower-level students.

Two students go out of the room (Student A and Student B). The rest of the class gets together in pairs.

To gain points, Student A starts off and asks any student in the class “What do you like eating?” and that student answers “I like eating…”, and then Student A asks another student what they like to eat.

You can make the game more interactive if students make gestures and movement demonstrating the type of food. For example, they gesture peeling a banana if the food they chose is ‘banana’.

7. Video Talk

Make some preview discussion questions about the topic presented in the video, go through them with students before watching, and then watch the video together.

Using video is effective because it brings the outside world to your students, and they can generate some great discussions in class, inspiring students to speak their mind and share their opinions and ideas.

8. Talk About Your Weekend

You need to be observant with this type of activity. Keep an eye on each student’s talk time. 

If you are finding some students are much more talkative than their partners, maybe set a time limit for how long each student can talk for before switching. This ensures that everyone gets a fair chance to practise.

9. Timed Discussion

This is another simple yet great activity for building confidence in speaking!

The student then has to talk about that topic for a chosen amount of time.

10. Debating Club

Split your students into pairs or small groups (each with an even number of students). Split each groups into two parties. Assign a topic to each group: each party has to hold an opposite view.

Give them some time to prepare arguments for their standpoint. 5 to 10 Minutes should be enough.

The debate is over after a set time – for example 5 minutes – or when the parties stated all their arguments.

After each debate, the whole class votes which party was more convincing and won the debate.

Make sure to prepare topics according to the fluency level of your students. The topics can be rather serious and controversial, or fun and weird.

11. Taboo Words

Now, one student has to take one card and explain the word to the other in their group. Here’s the catch: He must not use one of the words on the card (also, no parts or variations of the words.). He must not use gestures, facial expressions or voices. He has to circumscribe the word using other verbal expressions.

Count the points after each round. Then, the next group has its turn. The game is over, when each student in each group had their turn to explain words. Sum up the points; the group with the most wins.

12. Story Chain

This activity does not only help students develop their speaking and listening skills, it also fosters critical thinking skills, creativity, and imagination.

Jake Young is a creative teacherpreneur from Pennsylvania who lives in Prague, CZ. He’s the brain behind Fluentize.com – a resource dedicated to providing teachers with comprehensive and modern lesson plans based on real-world videos. He’s also a passionate language learner, fluent in Czech language and an intermediate Italian language speaker.

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Great… These activities are really interesting ones and are helping me a lot. Thank You So Much for Uploading….

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5 tips to get students to do homework

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How do you usually give homework to your learners, and what’s its purpose? How do you create the homework activities? What percentage of your learners complete the work you set? What would you change, or would you like to see happen more, if you could?

Homework can be very helpful to students and make the learning process more effective. So why do many students resist or fail to do it? Are we really giving learners the best and most appealing homework activities we can? Watch to discover five tips to get students to do (more) homework.

Please let us know how you get on with Ruben’s latest tips, and if you have others you think should be added to the list, in the comments or via our social media. We would love to hear about your related experiences of homework, both as a student yourself and as a teacher.

Useful references

Heal, J. (2020). ‘ Homework or no homework? That is the question’ . English Teaching professional 127 . Shoreham-by-sea: Pavilion Publishing and Media.

Hirschman, S. (2019). ‘ Learner choice: Giving students options ’. English Teaching professional 124 . Shoreham-by-sea: Pavilion Publishing and Media.

Sarkar, G. (2021). ‘ Rethinking homework: a task-based approach ’. English Teaching professional 136 . Shoreham-by-sea: Pavilion Publishing and Media.

Scott, E. (2015). ‘ Homework or no homework? ’ English Teaching professional 97 .  Shoreham-by-sea: Pavilion Publishing and Media.

Thompson, M. (2004). ‘ Time well spent’ . English Teaching professional 31 . Shoreham-by-sea: Pavilion Publishing and Media.

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homework activities in elt

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Qualities of good homework activities: Teachers' perceptions

Research output : Contribution to journal › Journal article › peer-review

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)300–310
Number of pages11
Journal
Volume75
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2021

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  • 10.1093/elt/ccaa069

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  • Link to publication in Scopus

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  • Homework Arts & Humanities 100%
  • homework Social Sciences 79%
  • School Teachers Medicine & Life Sciences 35%
  • teacher Social Sciences 31%
  • Information Storage and Retrieval Medicine & Life Sciences 22%
  • Teaching Medicine & Life Sciences 22%
  • Language Medicine & Life Sciences 20%
  • Learning Medicine & Life Sciences 18%

T1 - Qualities of good homework activities

T2 - Teachers' perceptions

AU - Moorhouse, Benjamin Luke

N1 - Publisher copyright: © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press; all rights reserved.

PY - 2021/7

Y1 - 2021/7

N2 - Assigning homework is a common practice of teachers internationally. However, we know little about teachers’ perceptions of the qualities of good homework. This article reports on the findings of a study that investigated teachers’ perceptions of good homework activities and their beliefs about homework’s effectiveness as a teaching and learning tool. Data were collected in two stages: a survey of 279 primary-school teachers; and follow-up interviews with 11 of the participants who completed the survey, including collecting samples of homework they assign. The first data source focused on teachers’ practices and beliefs about homework, while the second source provided more in-depth understanding of teachers’ beliefs in relation to their practices. The article presents the salient findings related to teachers’ perceptions of the qualities of good homework activities, as well as contextual factors that limit teachers’ ability to assign good homework. It includes practical implications for English-language teachers.

AB - Assigning homework is a common practice of teachers internationally. However, we know little about teachers’ perceptions of the qualities of good homework. This article reports on the findings of a study that investigated teachers’ perceptions of good homework activities and their beliefs about homework’s effectiveness as a teaching and learning tool. Data were collected in two stages: a survey of 279 primary-school teachers; and follow-up interviews with 11 of the participants who completed the survey, including collecting samples of homework they assign. The first data source focused on teachers’ practices and beliefs about homework, while the second source provided more in-depth understanding of teachers’ beliefs in relation to their practices. The article presents the salient findings related to teachers’ perceptions of the qualities of good homework activities, as well as contextual factors that limit teachers’ ability to assign good homework. It includes practical implications for English-language teachers.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-85112024627&partnerID=MN8TOARS

U2 - 10.1093/elt/ccaa069

DO - 10.1093/elt/ccaa069

M3 - Journal article

SN - 0951-0893

JO - ELT Journal

JF - ELT Journal

  • Corpus ID: 158434282

Out-of-class activities and ELT pedagogy: autonomous homework with a teacher

  • Published 2015
  • Education, Linguistics

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3 Citations

Investigating high school students' use of extramural english: a scale development study., promoting the students’ autonomy learning: news program, an out-of-speaking class activity, extramural english as a new reality in elt: a prisma systematic review, 47 references, understanding the quality of out‐of‐class english learning, dealing with homework in english language teaching: a case of dadeldhura district, self-regulated out-of-class language learning with technology, autonomy, self-direction and self access in language teaching and learning: the history of an idea, essential teacher knowledge: core concepts in english language teaching, a possible path to progress : out-of-school english english language learners in sweden, discrepancies between students' and teachers' perceptions of homework, language-teaching method revisited.

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Rethinking University Teaching: A Conversational Framework for the Effective Use of Learning Technologies. 2nd Edition

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Volume 75, Issue 3, July 2021

Anniversary articles, critical antiracist pedagogy in elt.

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Critical language pedagogy: an introduction to principles and values

Young learners, using metaphor elicitation with pre-primary children learning english, flipped primary efl classrooms: impact, feasibility, and potential, pre-primary teacher talk: l1 use across different activity references, the impact of corrective feedback on english articles, qualities of good homework activities: teachers’ perceptions, retentional effects of notetaking instruction in eap courses, teacher talk in eap classes: transition to post-liminal understanding, esl students’ reverse linguistic stereotyping of english teachers, incorporating reading circles into a task-based eap reading scheme, does compensation strategy instruction work an action research study, readers respond, a plea to stop debating and erasing queer lives in elt, a response to moore, a response to moore: challenging queer erasure, not erasing it, technology for the language teacher, synchronous video computer-mediated communication in english language teaching, the view from here, identity development and elt: a social justice approach, second language writing feedback in second language writing: contexts and issues, bringing forth a world: engaged pedagogy in the japanese university, inklusion und nachhaltigkeit: entwicklungslinien moderner englischdidaktik [inclusion and sustainability: future directions for contemporary elt], surviving and thriving together, email alerts.

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Leninsky District, Moscow Oblast

Leninsky District is an administrative and municipal district, one of the thirty-six in Moscow Oblast, Russia. It is located in the center of the oblast just south of the federal city of Moscow. The area of the district is 202.83 square kilometers. Its administrative center is the town of Vidnoye. Population: 172,171; 145,251; 74,490. The population of Vidnoye accounts for 33.0% of the district's total population.

homework activities in elt

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Coordinates 55°33'25.739" N 37°42'31.371" E

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  1. ELT Activities

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  2. 10 Helpful Homework Ideas and Tips for Primary School Teachers

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  3. 30 Fun and Engaging Activities for Elementary Students

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  4. 5 tips to get students to do homework

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COMMENTS

  1. The role of homework

    The role of homework is hardly mentioned in the majority of general ELT texts or training courses, suggesting that there is little question as to its value even if the resulting workload is time-consuming. However, there is clearly room for discussion of homework policies and practices particularly now that technology has made so many more resources available to learners outside the classroom.

  2. 2 tips on setting homework in the ELT classroom

    Here, we're sharing with you two of the book's 100 hands-on tips across 19 different areas of classroom teaching, based on Penny's comprehensive teaching experience in ELT over the past 40 years. 1. Don't give homework at the end. If you know you have a homework assignment to give, explain it sometime in the middle of the lesson and ...

  3. Qualities of good homework activities: teachers' perceptions

    This article reports on the findings of a study that investigated teachers' perceptions of good homework activities and their beliefs about homework's effectiveness as a teaching and learning tool. Data were collected in two stages: a survey of 279 primary-school teachers; and follow-up interviews with 11 of the participants who completed ...

  4. Reading tasks for homework

    Here are some random reading tasks I set for homework. Each student chooses one of these to do a week. These are in a big folder on my desk, but they'll be adapted for online learning now probs. Still, you might find them useful. Ten for fiction, six for non-fiction. Most of these are well-known, so not all my ideas or anything.

  5. PDF Homework, out-of-class learning activities, and ELT pedagogy

    activities, and ELT pedagogy Presented by Ben Hoyt ETAS 2016 Annual Conference Zurich, Switzerland. ... Homework •I know WHAT •I wanted to know WHY and HOW ... The Practice of English Language Teaching. The role of the learner Autonomous learning Image from Google Image Search.

  6. 18+ unmissable resource websites for busy ELT teachers

    12. Flo-Joe - Cambridge exam resources. Self-described as "THE place on the web for Cambridge exam preparation" - it is a great go-to website for teachers running exam courses. With contemporary materials and resources available from the KET to CPE and IELTS, you should bookmark it now. Find it here: Flo-Joe.

  7. English activities around the home

    1. Label a room. Materials needed: post-it notes For this activity you need a bunch of post-it notes (although just paper will do). Choose a room in the home and label 20 things in it. Simply write the word of the object and place it on it. When you're done, go through and say all the words together.

  8. Ideas For Teaching With Digital Resources

    We often teach a grammar point in class and then set homework on the digital platform. Our students get feedback on their exercises. Sometimes, these feel like separate activities. In the example below, I show how you can use digital self-study exercises as a starting point to engage your learners in grammar discussions.

  9. Useful sites for homework activities

    For this reason, Fluentify tutors often have a bank of go-to websites for homework activities. We have already covered listening and reading comprehension in our 25 Great Homework Resource Sites post. ... ELT Base. ELT Base offers word-ordering and multiple-choice quizzes on a range of grammar and vocabulary points. Link: https: ...

  10. Homework ideas

    ELT: Various topics. Resource type. Homework. Revision. Skills. Vocabulary learning. Some great suggestions for ways kids can revise vocabulary they have learned in class. You may want to translate it into the learners' own language and hand it out, or dip into it yourself for inspiration!

  11. Free English Online Exercises and Activities for all levels

    Our most recent free English online activities, games, and teaching resources are listed above. Take our free level test if you are unsure of your level. The Junior Level Test is for students aged 6 to 12, and the Senior Level Test is for students aged 13 and up. It only takes 15-20 minutes to determine which English language course to take.

  12. 12 Fun ESL Speaking Activities for Teens or Adults

    1. Interview Pop. This is a great one for students to have fun and be creative. Put students in pairs, or you could also carry this one out in a one-one lesson. Students choose one person they want to interview. It can be anybody of their choice, and the person doesn't necessarily have to be alive still.

  13. 5 tips to get students to do homework

    Please let us know how you get on with Ruben's latest tips, and if you have others you think should be added to the list, in the comments or via our social media. We would love to hear about your related experiences of homework, both as a student yourself and as a teacher. Useful references. Heal, J. (2020). 'Homework or no

  14. Qualities of good homework activities: Teachers' perceptions

    However, we know little about teachers' perceptions of the qualities of good homework. This article reports on the findings of a study that investigated teachers' perceptions of good homework activities and their beliefs about homework's effectiveness as a teaching and learning tool. Data were collected in two stages: a survey of 279 ...

  15. Out-of-class activities and ELT pedagogy: autonomous homework with a

    Homework is a topic which is not deeply covered in modern English language teaching (ELT) teacher-training materials. This study investigates the out-of-class learning opportunities independently pursued by students and categorises the activities to build profiles of different learner groups which may be compared and analysed. The categories are based on shared principles of modern ELT ...

  16. Complete Assignments

    Complete the assignments your teacher assigned in MyELT. In MyELT, click the course you want to work on. In Assignments, click Take next to the activity you want to complete. Note. If you started the activity but did not finish, you will see Resume. If you finished the activity, you will see Retake. Follow the instructions to complete the ...

  17. PDF MyELT

    MyELTStudent Quick Start. MyELTUse MyELT to complete assigned homework activities and access course reso. CREATE A. OURSEGo to myelt.heinle.com and click Create an Account You can change the language in the top c. rner.For additional help, click the "How to create a student account" video tut. al. Select S.

  18. How to get your flipped classroom started

    Focussing on 'higher order skills'. Facilitating increased interaction between students. Creating more opportunities for useful feedback. Engagement and attitudes. Addressing classroom management issues. Encouraging learner 'ownership' of learning. Promoting contact between school and parents/carers.

  19. Volume 75 Issue 3

    ELT Journal | 75 | 3 | July 2021. Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide

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    Things to Do in Elektrostal. 1. Electrostal History and Art Museum. 2. Statue of Lenin. 3. Park of Culture and Leisure. 4. Museum and Exhibition Center.

  21. The 10 Best Things to Do in Elektrostal

    1. Bars & Clubs. 11. Papa Lounge Bar. Bars & Clubs. 12. Karaoke Bar. Karaoke Bars. Things to Do in Elektrostal, Russia: See Tripadvisor's 802 traveller reviews and photos of Elektrostal tourist attractions.

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    Hotels near Electrostal History and Art Museum Hotels near Park of Culture and Leisure Hotels near Statue of Lenin Hotels near Museum and Exhibition Center Hotels ...

  23. Leninsky District, Moscow Oblast in Russia

    Leninsky District is an administrative and municipal district, one of the thirty-six in Moscow Oblast, Russia. It is located in the center of the oblast just south of the federal city of Moscow. The area of the district is 202.83 square kilometers. Its administrative center is the town of Vidnoye. Population: 172,171; 145,251; 74,490. The population of Vidnoye accounts for 33.0% of the ...