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English Grammar - Future Perfect Continuous - Teaching Ideas - Teach English Overseas

 

http://www.teflcourse.net The future perfect continuous is not used a lot in everyday English usage. However, it does come up in when your EFL students get more advanced and if you plan to teach English overseas it is important to have an understanding of the less frequently used tenses. As the future perfect continuous is not often used it can be a struggle to think up teaching ideas for it. The trainer in this video shows us one idea that can be used for the tense. For this activity the students conduct a survey to find out how long someone will have been doing something by a certain point in the future. For example: Student A: How long will you have been learning English by the end of next month? Student B: I will have been learning English for three years. To find a course that will help you to teach English overseas check out the link above. There you will find a number of courses tailored to meet the needs of most people wanting to become English teachers. Are you ready to live and teach abroad? Click here and get started today: https://www.teflcourse.net/?cu=YTDESCRIPTION


Below you can read feedback from an ITTT graduate regarding one section of their online TEFL certification course. Each of our online courses is broken down into concise units that focus on specific areas of English language teaching. This convenient, highly structured design means that you can quickly get to grips with each section before moving onto the next.

One of the most important lessons of this course without a shadow of a doubt. In my opinion, a lesson plan is essential mainly for unexperienced teachers who will need a guide to help them manage their classes and even experienced ones should make lesson plans in case they get lost or forget something.Future tense has several different layers including two present tenses. As I have shown in previous test I am a bit rusty with grammatical tenses. However I noticed that future tense was somewhat easier for me. All things considered the future tenses have simple rules that guide us through its uses.



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