Friday, February 26, 2010
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Business English: Communicative Writing Activities
The Reformatting Chains Approach.
It goes without saying that business people write as a reaction to a circumstance or to bring a measurable result to the benefit of their companies. With this in mind, teachers of Business English need to approach writing tasks in way that can bring business-like circumstances onto classrooms.
One way to achieve that goal is through designing some communicative classroom activities that eventually lead to a given writing task. ‘Prove that you can use the language’ approach that many teachers adopt may at times prove unsuccessful. However, if the same tasks are approached differently, motivation will be injected and the writing activity will be more enjoyable. Crudely put, in business English classrooms, writing should have communicative purposes.
To put this idea into practice, let’s look at the following writing topics. The latter can either be approached conventionally (teacher asks students to write without any pre-designed activities) or through other communicative activities. The latter approach is referred to as the reformatting chains approach.
A memo informing staff of a management decision.
A letter confirming the details of the deal.
A letter offering someone a job.
A letter asking a salesman to come to your company to demonstrate his product.
Unfortunately, after the demonstration you changed your mind. Now write:
A letter thanking someone for their product demonstration, but informing them that you don’t intend to purchase
Friday, February 12, 2010
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Click here to download the lesson of functions :Expression Opinion, Agreeing and Disagreeing-Unit1.
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War of Words Click Here to start
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Picture Dictionary
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Use this Venn diagram to compare and contrast silica and carbon black