The United Nations has declared July 11th to be World Population Day. You might be interested in The Best Resources For Learning About Our World’s Population Of 7 Billion.
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  1. July 11th Is World Population Day – Here Are Teaching & Learning Resources
  2. July 18th Is Nelson Mandela International Day – Here Are Teaching & Learning Resources
  3. A Look Back: Here’s My Short Unit On Folktales – Including Student Handouts
  4. Around The Web In ESL/EFL/ELL
  5. 2026’s Best Posts On Teaching English Language Learners – So Far
  6. More Recent Articles

July 11th Is World Population Day – Here Are Teaching & Learning Resources

geralt / Pixabay

 

The United Nations has declared July 11th to be World Population Day.

You might be interested in The Best Resources For Learning About Our World’s Population Of 7 Billion.

     

July 18th Is Nelson Mandela International Day – Here Are Teaching & Learning Resources

 

The United Nations has declared July 18th to be Nelson Mandela International Day:

On 18 July every year, we invite you to mark Nelson Mandela International Day by making a difference in your communities. Everyone has the ability and the responsibility to change the world for the better! Mandela Day is an occasion for all to take action and inspire change.

You might be interested in:

The Best Sites For Learning About Nelson Mandela

The Best Resources Honoring Nelson Mandela At His Passing….

     

A Look Back: Here’s My Short Unit On Folktales – Including Student Handouts

For the next several months, each week I’ll be republishing posts from the past that I think readers might still find useful.  This post first appeared in 2019.

 

Merio / Pixabay

I’ve previously shared posts about specific writing units I do with ELLs (and non-ELLs) that have shared detailed instructions and student-handouts:

* On writing a story (see A Look Back: “Here’s My Entire ELL Beginners Seven-Week Unit On Writing A Story (Including Hand-outs & Links)”

* On writing about a growth mindset (see Student Written Growth Mindset Stories)

* On students writing about their immigration journeys and sharing them with non-immigrant students (see A Look Back: “What ELLs Taught Our School In A Week-Long Empathy Project”).

*On students writing bout their home cultures (see HOME CULTURE PROJECT – WITH NEW EXAMPLES & STUDENT HANDOUTS!).

Of course, I’ve also shared many other resources about writing specific types of essays and other genres. You can see them all here.

 

Today, I thought I’d share a very simple lesson I’ll be doing in my Long-Term ELL Support class next week (by the way, we should have preliminary data on its success or lack of success next month – assuming that we’re not out on strike).

Their Ethnic Studies class will soon be looking at folktales from the Native American communities from our area.  To support those lessons, after first discussing the definition of a folktale,  we’ll read a simple Native American folktale and they will write a one-sentence summary for each of its paragraphs.

Next, they’ll find a folktale from their own cultural tradition and do the same process (ending up with about ten sentences or so).  They can search online or go directly to A Beginning List Of The Best Folklore & Myth Sites to find one (if you scroll towards the bottom, you can find them divided by cultural tradition).

Then, they will turn those sentences into online books with Adobe Spark (they used that tool before to create videos of odes they had written).

After those are complete and shown to the class, it will be time for them to write their own!

ArtsEdge at the Kennedy Center has a nice “Writing Folktales” lesson, including several handouts.  I won’t use them all, but will introduce the handouts in this sequence:

Types of Folktales

Qualities of Folktales

The second page of this handout, called Outline For Writing A Story.

Then, I’ll give them a couple of graphic organizers to choose from (if they want to use them to plan their folktale):

Fables and Folk Tales Graphic Organizer

Folktale Graphic Organizer

Depending on how long all this takes, students will either use Adobe Spark to turn their folktales into videos or make them into paper “books” to share physically and verbally with their classmates.

As usual, this plan will be modified based on what happens in class, and I’m very open to hearing from readers about how to make it better (this blog post is not meant to imply that I’ve put an enormous amount of thought into it!).  I’ll share the end results, including student videos (included with permission).

Addendum: Check out Video: Student Folktale.

     

Around The Web In ESL/EFL/ELL

Eight years ago I began this regular feature where I share a few posts and resources from around the Web related to ESL/EFL or to language in general that have caught my attention.

You might also be interested in all my Best lists on teaching ELLs.

Also, check out A Collection Of My Best Resources On Teaching English Language Learners.

In addition, look for our latest book on teaching ELLs, The ELL Teacher’s Toolbox 2.0.

Here are this week’s choices:

Sentence-Level Scaffolds That Foster English Learners’ Independence and Growth appeared in Edutopia. I’m adding it to both The Best Scaffolded Writing Frames For Students and to The Best Resources On Providing Scaffolds To Students.

3 Zero-Tech Ways to Gamify Vocabulary is from Helping Multilingual Learners Thrive.

Multilingualism Is a Strength. Why Isn’t Curriculum Designed That Way? is from The 74.

ELL students could watch these five videos and then talk/write about what they saw:

 

 

 

 

 

DIY Master’s in Second Language Teaching: A Reading List is from The Backseat Linguist.

Building an MTSS That Actually Works for Multilingual Learners is from the Collaborative for Inclusive Education.

The 17 Most Common Mistakes Made by Heads of World Languages Departments is from The Language Gym.

     

2026’s Best Posts On Teaching English Language Learners – So Far

 

I’m continuing with mid-year “Best” lists.

You can see my previous ELL posts at There Are Tons Of Resources On This Blog To Help Educators Teach ELLs – This Post Is A Good Place To Start:

“Kids Tales” Looks Like A Good Free Site For Beginning Readers

“My AI Toolkit: Studio” Is An Exceptional Resource For ELL Teachers

What Is “Statistical Learning,” Why Do Some Researchers Say It’s The Best Way To Learn A New Language, & What Could It Look Like In A Classroom?

The Best Free Sites For YOUNG ELL Beginners

“How to Use Artificial Intelligence With English Learners—According to Teachers”

The “Best” Resources For Learning About The “Dogme” Approach To English Language Teaching

I Like This Ideas Of Language “Upgrading” Instead Of Language “Correction”

Google Translate’s “Practice” Feature Finally Makes Itself A Useful Tool For Language Learning – It Now Assesses Your Pronunciation!

The Best Resources Highlighting What English Language Learner Students Want From Their Teachers

Every ELL Teacher In The U.S. Will Want To Read These Results From An Ed Week Survey On Teaching English Learners

Infographic On ELLs In California – Here’s The Prompt I Used If You Want To Create One For Your Own State

Duolingo Opens Up Premium Content For Free, But It Won’t Help Schools Since They Won’t Sign Student Data Privacy Agreements

U.S. Dept. Of Ed Announces It Plans To Shut Down Its Office Supporting English Language Learners

If You’ve Wondered How Many New Words To Teach In One Lesson (& What ELL Teacher Hasn’t?), Then You Want To Read This!

The Best Resources For Using The “Spot The Difference” Strategy With English Language Learners

Even MORE Research Finding That Reclassifying ELLs Isn’t The Preferred Goal That It’s Cracked Up To Be

This Is A VERY Interesting & Useful Study On The Use Of Collaborative Writing In An ELL Classroom AND I Think It’s Findings Can Be Applicable With English-Proficient Students, Too

The Best Resources For Learning About Accents

“Dulink” Translates Any Article AND They Make It Look Nice

“Write In English” Is A New & Free AI Tool I Created That Is A Rough Approximation Of Something That Could Be Very Effective In Helping ELLs

How Did I Not Know About YouTube’s “Ask About This Video” Feature? It Can Be An Excellent Tool For ELLs

We’ve Begun Work On A Third Edition Of “The ESL/ELL Teacher’s Survival Guide”

“Speak Free” Is A Decent – & Free – Tool for Practicing English Pronunciation

Are State English Tests For ELLs Like WIDA & ELPAC Actually Valid? For What It’s Worth, Here’s What Google Gemini & ChatGPT Say

This Is Interesting: Foundations Putting A Bunch Of Money Into Creating AI Tools For English Language Learners

Here Are My Google Slides Sharing Each Day’s Plan For My ELL Newcomer Class

In Many Ways, I Think “ESLvideo” May Now Be One Of The Best Examples For AI Education Use On The Web

The Best Resources For Teachers, Especially Those Teaching ELLs, To Learn About Google’s NotebookLM

“Spot Different” Could Come In Very Handy For ELL Teachers

“Instrument Playground” Would Be A Good Tool For Students Learn About Different Musical…Instruments

Who’d Have Thought? Students Who Prompt AI To Create Texts They’re Interested In Are More Likely To Want To Read Them

Study Finds That Speaking An Additional Language Can Keep You Healthier Physically

This Guide To FAFSA If You Have Undocumented Parents Is Great, Though It Might Be Too Late For Many This Year

Google Just Created A New AI Tool That Is Perfect For Teachers Of ELL Newcomers

Great Free Curriculum For ELL Newcomers

“Vocab.top” Seems Like A Particularly Good Multilingual Dictionary

Wow! How Have I Never Heard Of These Videos For English Language Learners From Chasing Time English?

“Odyssey” Is An AI-Powered Video Tool That Could Be Useful To English Language Learners

“LineSpeak” Is An AI Tool To Assess Pronunciation & It Seems To Have A Generous Free Plan

“LingoLingo” MIGHT Have A Lot Of Potential For English Language Learners

New Study Finds Learning Another Language Slows Down Ageing Of Your Brain

“Uttered” Might Become A Decent Video Option For English Language Learners

Another Article On Using Visualization To Help Further Success

“LangTwo” Seems Like A Decent AI-Powered Language Tool & It’s Free (For Now, At Least)

“Spelly” Looks Like A Good Free Tool Where ELLs Can Get Their Pronunciation Assessed

The Best Ways For Modifying Assessments & Supporting ELLs

I Love This Idea Of “Espresso Dialogues” For English Language Learners

The New Yorker’s New Word Game, Shuffalo, Is Great For ELLs

Two New (To Me, At Least) Sites For Excellent Free Lesson Plans

“News In Simple” Has The “Same” News Content At Three Different English Levels

Lots Of Good Zero-Prep Activities For The ELL Classroom

“Mock Talk” Looks Like A Good – And Free – Tool Where ELLs Can Practice Speaking

“Talk To Dai” Seems Like A Decent AI-Powered Language Learning Tool, & It’s Free (At Least, For Now)

I REALLY Think Secondary ELL Teachers Should Consider Radically Restructuring Classes, But I’m Not Sure If They Are

It Seems To Me That These Survey Results Indicate That A Fair Number Of Teachers May Be In The Wrong Profession

Here’s The Video & Resource List From Our Webinar On Assisting Content Teachers To Work With ELLs

Check Out Google’s “Language Explorer”

A Collection Of The Best Resources To Help Content Teachers Make Their Lessons More Accessible To ELLs – And Everybody Else, Too!

“Hello Nabu” Looks Like One Of The Best Free AI-Powered Language Learning Tools That I’ve Seen So Far

Video: The Epic Of Gilgamesh In Spanish

The Best Resources For Teaching Clines, Or Word Spectrums

How Much More Pressure Can ELL Students & Others Take Until They “Break”?

“Alphadots” Is A Cool Idea For A Student Word Game

What Should Schools Do As The Numbers Of ELL Newcomers Decrease?

New Study Finds ICE Raids Are Hurting Lots Of Students, ‘Regardless Of … Immigration Status’

“To Teach (and Reach) English Learners, Center Their Identity”

“10 Ways to Scaffold Instruction for English Learners”

“Minnesota Students Are Living in Perilous Times”

“Teachers Have to Be ‘Gatekeepers of Safety’ in Minnesota Since Killing of Renee Nicole Good”

“‘Survival Mode’: A Minnesota Teacher of the Year Decries Immigration Crackdowns”

“Teaching English Learners Is Complex. Here Are Some Tested Strategies”

“ICE Turns North Carolina Schools ‘Upside Down’”

 

 

     

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