Richard Chinn is an experienced teacher and teacher trainer based at International House London and a Teaching Associate on the MA TESOL and MA Applied Linguistics and ELT courses at Kings College London. He has taught English and worked with teachers in several contexts around the world in Asia, Central and South America, Europe, and Africa. He is an experienced tutor on CELTA and Delta courses and has also worked on PGCE courses. Richard holds an MA in ELT and Applied Linguistics from Kings College London with his dissertation focussing on Emergent Language and teacher development (distinction). He is an experienced conference speaker and workshop leader, and his professional interests are in language teaching methodology, classroom interaction, reflective practice, and language teacher development. Danny Norrington-Davies has 25 years experience as an English language teacher and 15 years as a teacher trainer. His qualifications include the Cambridge Cert TEFL (1995), Cambridge DELTA (1999) and an MA in English Language Teaching and Applied Linguistics (2013), for which he received a distinction. He is also an experienced conference speaker and have written articles on aspects of teaching and teacher training for ETP, Folio (the magazine of MATSDA, the Materials Development Association), HLT magazine and the Teacher Trainer. Dannys first book, Teaching Grammar: From Rules to Reasons was published by Pavilion in 2016 which quickly became a best seller, and was shortlisted as a British Council ELTon Innovations in Teacher Resources Award in 2018. He now works on CELTA and DELTA courses as well as running training courses in UK and overseas.
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Description
Introduction Part 1: What is emergent language? Why work with emergent language? Creating the right conditions How to work with emergent language Exploring choices Part 2: Teacher development and emergent language Development tasks and commentaries Part 3: Working with emergent language in different teaching contexts Bibliography Acknowledgements