Wednesday, March 18, 2020

For teachers: Online teaching: Writing


     Planning my writing lessons is often a challenge for most EFL as well as EAP teachers. Keeping lessons interesting while making sure that students walk out of your class with a satisfactory level of understanding of the writing task, its layout and its target language can prove slightly challenging. The fact that this is now coupled with the unfamiliarity with the online teaching environment certainly won't make things easier. Therefore, over the past few days, I have been trying to gather as much information as I could on the topic of teaching EFL writing online and decided to share my findings with my fellow teachers in the hope of making our virtual sessions run more smoothly.

- Students must write at home

At the end of every face-to-face class, I used to ask students to start working on their essays while I walked between them to make sure that they understood the task and were headed down the right path. Unfortunately, this cannot be done in a virtual classroom. My suggestion here is to divide the writing task into smaller tasks, allowing students to complete a single piece of writing over multiple tasks. Although this method may take longer to complete the final piece, it allows students to pay more attention to the teacher's feedback and make corrections accordingly.

That being said, you may want to elicit some ideas on how to begin a certain paragraph and what structure(s) works best to achieve the goal of the paragraph.

- Your Time in Class: Model paragraphs are essential

Just like in a face-to-face class, you are likely to show students a model as an example of what their writing should look like. This can be either copied from the textbook or modified to suit your students' levels and needs.

You may also want to spend your time in class to focus on sub-skills of writing such as punctuation and outlining and organising paragraphs. This can be done through multiple choice, gap fill and reordering exercises.

- Giving Feedback


It is up to you whether to give in-class or after class feedback. Whatever you decide to do, be mindful of the tool(s) you use to provide feedback to students. You can of course give in class, collective feedback by using the virtual interactive whiteboard but you have to consider the its limited space. Choose your examples carefully and make sure that they are representative and illustrative of common patterns such as, for example, a common grammar or punctuation mistake. On the other hand, if you are giving offline feedback to be viewed by students after class, word processing documents that enable track changes are your best bet. Track changes allow you to correct errors and write comments to explain your suggested changes. However, one disadvantage of using track changes is that students may accept your changes without reading them. In this case, if you notice that certain students keep repeating their mistakes, talk to them directly and ask them to join you in your virtual office hours.

- Taking advantage of added affordances: Using corpus and corpus-like methodology

While online classes do take away some aspects of face-to-face meetings, they also provide teachers with new affordances that are not available in conventional classrooms. Since students now submit their work electronically, you can create a small text corpus (structured set of texts) of all your students' writings and use either corpus software (such as #lancsbox: http://corpora.lancs.ac.uk/lancsbox/) or any other word processing software to perform different kinds of analysis on students use (and misuse) of language. I am currently in the process of studying students correct and incorrect use of the definite article (the) and its relation to their mother tongue.

At the end of this essay, I would like to recommend taking the Future Learn online course on Teaching English Online (https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/online-tutoring) for more information on teaching writing along with other skills through a virtual medium.


Saturday, March 14, 2020

Online Class #1: Slides





Dear students,

A very big thank you to those of you who attended today. Here is a copy of the review slides we used today. I hope to see a bigger number tomorrow!

Click HERE to view powerpoint slides

Friday, March 13, 2020

COVID-19 Break: What can we do? (part 1)

Dear students,

I hope you are staying safe amid this global madness! As you probably know, we will not be meeting until after the 24th of March or later. So what can we do to stay busy and increase your productivity during the break?

Practice reading and comprehension in English

I know you are probably bored of teachers telling you to grab a book, any book, or any English text and start reading immediately. While that can actually be helpful, it is very vague and it is more helpful if you get some guidance first. Inspired by this global crisis, I have collected a few articles and videos discussing different aspects related to the outbreak of the coronavirus.


1. BBC news: Safety on Public Transport


This BBC article discusses the risk of infection when using public transport methods such as busses, trains and planes. I have also included a short quiz that you can complete to insure that you have understood the main points of the article and hopefully gained new information about safe travel during an outbreak.

Take quiz HERE

2. Kuwait Times: Fear, panic is real as number of coronavirus cases rises


This second article is a more local one. It reports the opinions of locals on the recent changes in policies due to the spread of the virus. I love this article because it is short and concise and it encourages the public to voice their opinions on what is going on. I have also included a short quiz to help you practice your reading and comprehension skills.

Take quiz HERE

3. Global Disruptions to Education

Tens of governments, including ours, have decided to shut down schools and universities. This is an article from the New York Times discussing the effects of those disruptions on multiple levels from using online methods of teaching and how it burdens women and families and forces them to rearrange their daily routines.


For more practice, you can always reflect on the information you read by writing a summary of the information you have gained from reading these articles or other ones. Feel free to share your writing with me. If you find any interesting articles, please do not hesitate to share them with us.

Stay home, stay safe and stay sane

I will leave you with this video that was taken in Siena, Italy of people singing together from their apartments to lift spirits. These times can be difficult, scary and all together depressing but let us try and focus on the positive aspects of humanity..



Much love to all of you <3
Ms Tasneem

Friday, January 31, 2020

Second Term Welcome Post 2020


Happy new year and welcome back everyone! I hope the first month of 2020 went well for you. I am excited to be teaching again at AOU! (:

This semester, I will be teaching EL111 and EL117

My office hours will be 

Saturday 1:10 to 2:00

Tuesday 8:00 to 8:50

Thursday 1:10 to 2:00

Shall you need help or guidance with the material, please feel free to contact me or visit me during my office hours.

Good luck everyone! Make this semester your best one yet!

Tuesday, July 17, 2018

Latin abbreviations we still use in English


The Roman Empire was one of the most fascinating civilisations in history. With an area of +4 million km², it covered most of Europe (in addition to parts of Africa, the Balkans and the Middle East). The official language of the Empire was Latin, which was considered the language of the educated elite. Despite the fact that Latin is classified as an extinct or dead language today, it still lives through the Romance language such as Italian, Spanish and French. And even though English is not a Romance language, Latin still makes up to 30% of its vocabulary.


Since Latin was the language for science and education (while English was an everyday language), most of the English words we use in Academia today have been derived/borrowed from Latin. Because it would be extremely difficult to go through all Latin-derived words in English (approx 50500 words), I chose to list some of the most common abbreviations that we see and use on a daily basis and sometimes wonder their origin.

1. E.g. before examples

Have you ever wondered why the abbreviation for example is e.g. instead of something like e.x.? Yep, you guessed it! It comes from the Latin phrase "exempli gratia" meaning 'for the sake of example'


2. Is it 12 AM or PM?


Those two abbreviations have caused me a lot of trouble over the years 😩 The 'm' in both of them stands for "meridiem" which means before noon. The A in AM stands for "ante" which is a prefix meaning before. (see words antebellum and antedate). The P in PM, however, stands for "post" which is another prefix that means after and it is widely used in the English Language. Postpartum, exempli gratia😛, means after childbirth.


3. P.S. I love you

Completed a long letter (or sent a long text) and had a thought to add after? No problem! Just write P.S. under the text and add your thought. P.S. stands for "post scriptum". Post, like you already know, means after and scriptum means the writing, and together they mean 'that which comes after the writing'

P.S. 'P.S. I love you' is a movie worth watching

4. %Per cent%

Percentages are commonly used in both Academic and everyday contexts. Per cent (or percent) comes from the Latin phrase "per centum" which translates to 'for each hundred'. It is worth mentioning that the letter C in Latin is always pronounced as a /k/ sound (as in cat) so the word for hundred in Latin is pronounced KEN.TUM.


5. i.e.

This abbreviation is mostly used in Academic writing to explain your idea in another way or in other words. I.e. stands for "id est" which means 'that is'. Try not to confuse i.e. with e.g. The first is used for clarification while the latter is used for examples.

6. ...etc.

Can't think of more examples? Just add etc. and let us think there is more. Etc. stands for "et cētera" which means 'and the others'. ET.KAETE.RAH in Latin and ET.SETE.RAH in English is only used for inanimate objects and never for people. For people we used 'et al' instead.


Monday, June 4, 2018

Review Files For the Final


Dear students,

First of all, kudos to you for being able to attend lectures and take exams in Ramadan! I know it has not been easy.

To help you out with your final exam preparations, I have included links to some review files since we did not have enough time to go over them in class. Please do keep in mind that some of the questions are outdated and are no longer relevant to our curriculum so do not freak out :D

Kindly leave your questions in either a comment on this blogpost or a message on LMS.

Best of luck!





P.S. A mock version of the final exam is now available on LMS. You can access it following the same steps you would do for the MTA/final exam.

Saturday, May 26, 2018

Quiz 2 Sample

Dear students,

To view a sample of Quiz 2 (theme four), click here!

Best of luck (: