My final post for 2025. A Happy New Year to you all! I daresay this is not an original task, but it's one that I hadn't designed before! It's a variation on the traditional 'text with exercises' resource. In this case, there is a source text — the example below is for level B1/2 and is about so-called intangible cultural heritage in France ( patrimoine immatériel ). French readers will understand the task from the instructions, but I'll explain the principle here so that you can design your own, similar task, maybe with the help of AI. In my example, I used Deepseek to help with the the production of the text and exercises. In total, the resource took around 35 minutes to produce. Instead of students seeing the text from the start, they must reconstruct the main elements of it by asking the teacher questions provided to them. (They could actually start from scratch without questions, but it would be quite a challenge — one for a very able Y13 group perhaps.) So ...
I asked Chat GPT to produce a summary of topics I looked at on my blog this year. My prompt requested a first person account, written as me (Steve Smith). Chat GPT did a very decent job. What I Covered on Language Teacher Toolkit in 2025 During 2025, my writing on Language Teacher Toolkit continued to focus on what has always mattered most to me as a language teacher and teacher educator: what actually helps students learn languages in classrooms . Across the year, my blog posts explored practical classroom activities, listening and vocabulary pedagogy, task design, grammar and cognitive theory, assessment and curriculum issues (especially GCSE), and the careful use of technology and AI. Throughout, I aimed to connect research insights with everyday classroom practice. What follows is a reflective overview of the main themes I addressed during the year. 1. Practical Classroom Activities and Resources As in previous years, a large proportion of my posts in 2025 w...