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Leveraging Strategic Warm-Ups and Gamification in the ESL Classroom
The Affective Filter and the Cognitive "Cold Start" In the field of Second Language Acquisition (SLA), one of the most significant barriers to student production is the Affective Filter, a psychological "screen" composed of anxiety, lack of self-confidence, and low motivation that can prevent linguistic input from reaching the brain’s acquisition center (Krashen, 1982). For adult learners, particularly those navigating the pressures of the Canadian professional space, enterin
Olatunde Raji
Apr 184 min read


Stop Translating, Start Thinking: Unpacking the Cognitive Load of the First Language (L1).
One of the most pervasive hurdles for intermediate English learners, particularly those integrating into the high-stakes Canadian professional environment, is the Internal Translation Loop. This is a cognitive process where a learner hears an English stimulus, translates it into their native language (L1), formulates a response in the L1, and then attempts to output it back into English. While this is a natural stage in early acquisition, maintaining this habit into professio
Olatunde Raji
Apr 184 min read


The Future of Fluency: Synergizing AI with Task-Based Language Teaching (TBLT)
For decades, the pedagogical landscape of English as a Second Language (ESL) was dominated by the "Grammar-Translation" method, which is a deductive approach that prioritized linguistic accuracy over communicative competence. ( Jeremy, 2001.) Evaluating the Canadian context, newcomers must rapidly integrate into professional environments. TBLT is not merely a classroom strategy; it is a survival mechanism. The emergence of Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) has intro
Olatunde Raji
Apr 184 min read


Stop Asking "Do You Understand?" — The Power of CCQs in the ESL Classroom
One of the most dangerous phrases in an ESL classroom is: "Do you understand?" As teachers, we’ve all been there. We finish explaining a complex grammar point like the Present Perfect, look out at a sea of nodding heads, and ask that fateful question. The students, eager to please or too shy to admit confusion, chorus a collective "Yes." Then, five minutes into the practice activity, it becomes clear that nobody understood at all. This is where the ESL Plug comes in. To tru
Olatunde Raji
Feb 283 min read
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