Apart the book I wrote for Routledge, Becoming an Outstanding Languages Teacher, all the other books I’ve written, or co-written with Gianfranco Conti (and recently Steve Glover) have been independently published through the Amazon platform called KDP (Kindle Direct Publishing). There have been some good reasons for doing this. 1. If you are already well known to teachers by reputation or on social media you are not building a reputation from scratch so you can market your work without a publisher. Both Gianfranco and I had already been blogging and writing language teaching resources before we wrote The Language Teacher Toolkit in 2016. This is, by the way, still our best selling book, now in its second edition. 2. Royalties are a lot higher with KDP than with a publisher. A typical publisher may offer you 10% for an education book. With KDP the royalty is up to 70%. That is a huge difference, especially if you are co-authoring. While the main reason for writing teach...
I listened to Dr Liam Printer's new Motivated Classroom podcast this morning. It's a nice listen, as usual, and reminds us language teachers that thinking about language teaching can evolve over time. It would be weird if it didn't, don't you think? He asks the question "Is input enough" and essentially puts forward the idea that it may be in theory, but that communication/output is needed, as much as anything else, for motivation and engagement. I hope I got that right. So here are my own feelings about this question, with some references to standard research which you might find useful if you are learning about additional language acquisition. Nearly all language teachers would reply to the question "Is input enough? with "Of course not." We assume that to get better at speaking, you need to speak, and to get better at writing, you need to write. This is not an unreasonable response. After all, in general, we get better at what we practise. ...