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This gallery is dedicated to winner schools that participated in Easter Competition 2024!
We would like to, once again, congratulate and thank our participants for their efforts, hard-work and team building.
Teachers – we thank you for being part of this competition – we are proud of you for being educational treasure seekers.
Please see album of your school, down below:
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This gallery is dedicated to winner schools that participated in Halloween Competition 2023!
We would like to, once again, congratulate and thank our participants for their efforts, hard-work and team building.
Teachers – we thank you for being part of this competition – we are proud of you for being educational treasure seekers.
Please see album of your school, down below:
13:00 – 14:00 session
17:00 – 18:00 session
01:30 – 02:30 session

Kateryna Protsenko is Head of Tutoring at Promova, a one-stop solution for all language learning needs. Having been in English language teaching for over 15 years, Kate has worked as a Cambridge CELTA / Delta trainer, materials writer, manager for several language learning organizations, and has co-authored an exam preparation coursebook. She is passionate about learning and teaching, loves a good challenge, and is constantly looking for ways to expand her horizons and pick up new ideas from various industries.

This gallery is dedicated to winner schools that participated in Easter Competition 2023!
We would like to, once again, congratulate and thank our participants for their efforts, hard-work and team building.
Teachers – we thank you for being part of this competition – we are proud of you for being educational treasure seekers.
Please see album of your school, down below:



English Book Education, Pearson-ის გამომცელობასთან ერთად გიხდით მადლობას მობრძანებისთვის.
ჩვენთვის ეს დღე იყო განსაკუთრებული რადგან, ვისაუბრეთ, დავგეგმეთ და დავათვაიერეთ ახალი რესურსები თუ მასალები
Below you can see, download and view the presentations, information and contact details.

Conference Partners:














Unique Learning offers a wide range of universities and programmes for those wishing to study abroad.
















Zviad Dekanoidze
Vice President of Business Development
E-mail: z.dekanoidze@englishbook.ge
Mobile: +995 577 34 65 89
Direct Line: (+995 32) 200 12 44
Website: www.englishbookeducation.co.uk
Address: #92 Vepkhistkaosani Street, 3 m/r, Didi Dighomi , Tbilisi.

Demetre Magradze
Senior Sales Manager
E-mail:d.magradze@englishbook.co.uk
Mobile: +995 511 13 13 00
Direct Line: (+995 32) 200 12 44
Website: www.englishbookeducation.co.uk
Address: #92 Vepkhistkaosani Street, 3 m/r, Didi Dighomi , Tbilisi.

Mariami Lezhava
Sales Officer
E-mail: m.lezhava@englishbookeducation.com
Mobile: (+995 574) 199 199
Direct Line: 0322 00 12 44 Ext. 1060
Website: www.englishbookeducation.co.uk
Address: #92 Vepkhistkaosani Street, 3 m/r, Didi Digomi. Tbilisi, Georgia

Nini Sikharulidze
Sales Representative
LTD “English Book Education”
E-mail: n.sikharulidze@englishbookeducation.com
Mobile: (+995 579) 000 190
Direct Line: 0322 00 12 44
Website: www.englishbookeducation.co.uk
Address: #92 Vepkhistkaosani Street, 3 m/r, Didi Digomi. Tbilisi, Georgia
After two long years we are coming back! Let’s take language learning to the next level, together.
Attended by approximately 200 ELT professionals from more than 5 countries.
Below you can see, download and view the presentations, information and contact details.

Conference Partners:















Unique Learning offers a wide range of universities and programmes for those wishing to study abroad.



English Book Education conducted TOEFL Olympiad at 51st State School
We had over 300 Candidates



ETS TOEFL






Assess the English-language skills needed to succeed in the Global Workplace

Pipplet
No scheduling needed
40+ languages available
CEFR mapped scores
results within 24 hours human examiners


Versant Online Test
Speaking: Ensure your new hires and students can be easily understood when they communicate with customers, co-workers or other students.
Listening: Check that job candidates and students can understand what they are hearing on the phone with customers, or in class during a lecture.
Reading: Confirm that staff and students understand what they are reading, whether it be customer or co-worker emails, lecture notes or assignments.
Writing: Evaluate how clearly and effectively an employee can write emails or provide real-time chat support to customers.
Level Test







Zviad Dekanoidze
Vice President of Business Development
E-mail: z.dekanoidze@englishbook.ge
Mobile: +995 577 34 65 89
Direct Line: (+995 32) 200 12 44
Website: www.englishbookeducation.co.uk
Address: #92 Vepkhistkaosani Street, 3 m/r, Didi Dighomi , Tbilisi.

Demetre Magradze
Senior Sales Manager
E-mail:d.magradze@englishbook.co.uk
Mobile: +995 511 13 13 00
Direct Line: (+995 32) 200 12 44
Website: www.englishbookeducation.co.uk
Address: #92 Vepkhistkaosani Street, 3 m/r, Didi Dighomi , Tbilisi.

Mariami Lezhava
Sales Officer
E-mail: m.lezhava@englishbookeducation.com
Mobile: (+995 574) 199 199
Direct Line: 0322 00 12 44 Ext. 1060
Website: www.englishbookeducation.co.uk
Address: #92 Vepkhistkaosani Street, 3 m/r, Didi Digomi. Tbilisi, Georgia

Nini Sikharulidze
Sales Representative
LTD “English Book Education”
E-mail: n.sikharulidze@englishbookeducation.com
Mobile: (+995 579) 000 190
Direct Line: 0322 00 12 44
Website: www.englishbookeducation.co.uk
Address: #92 Vepkhistkaosani Street, 3 m/r, Didi Digomi. Tbilisi, Georgia
Conference Gallery | 2023















































































































































































































































































































































After two long years we are coming back! Let’s take language learning to the next level, together.
Attended by approximately 200 ELT professionals from more than 5 countries.
Below you can see, download and view the presentations, information and contact details.

Conference Partners:















Unique Learning offers a wide range of universities and programmes for those wishing to study abroad.



English Book Education conducted TOEFL Olympiad at 51st State School
We had over 300 Candidates



ETS TOEFL


















Zviad Dekanoidze
Vice President of Business Development
E-mail: z.dekanoidze@englishbook.ge
Mobile: +995 577 34 65 89
Direct Line: (+995 32) 200 12 44
Website: www.englishbookeducation.co.uk
Address: #92 Vepkhistkaosani Street, 3 m/r, Didi Dighomi , Tbilisi.

Demetre Magradze
Senior Sales Manager
E-mail:d.magradze@englishbook.co.uk
Mobile: +995 511 13 13 00
Direct Line: (+995 32) 200 12 44
Website: www.englishbookeducation.co.uk
Address: #92 Vepkhistkaosani Street, 3 m/r, Didi Dighomi , Tbilisi.

Mariami Lezhava
Sales Officer
E-mail: m.lezhava@englishbookeducation.com
Mobile: (+995 574) 199 199
Direct Line: 0322 00 12 44 Ext. 1060
Website: www.englishbookeducation.co.uk
Address: #92 Vepkhistkaosani Street, 3 m/r, Didi Digomi. Tbilisi, Georgia

Nini Sikharulidze
Sales Representative
LTD “English Book Education”
E-mail: n.sikharulidze@englishbookeducation.com
Mobile: (+995 579) 000 190
Direct Line: 0322 00 12 44
Website: www.englishbookeducation.co.uk
Address: #92 Vepkhistkaosani Street, 3 m/r, Didi Digomi. Tbilisi, Georgia
Conference Gallery | 2023






































































































































































































































































































































Author: Vaughan Jones
All learning is remembering said Plato… er… or was it Socrates? I forget. Anyway, I’m sure all of us agree that memory plays a central role in learning a foreign language and in particular, learning new words. The first two thousand are easy. As research tells us, approximately 80% of almost any text in English is made up of the 2,000 most frequent words. Students meet these words repeatedly whatever they read or listen to, and whether they like it or not. And presumably they like it. Why? Because we know that repeated exposure is vital for long-term memorisation, so it effectively means that the first 2,000 words come ‘for free’!
But what about the next thousand, and the thousand after that? Researchers suggest that a student probably needs to know about 5,000 words to pass the Cambridge First Certificate Exam and maybe upwards of 10,000 to be considered genuinely C2 level on the CEFR scale. (Just for reference, an educated native speaker will probably have a passive vocabulary of around 20,000 words.) What can we do to help our students learn the thousands of less frequent words in the English language? It’s not easy, that’s for sure. There is no magic bullet. But here are some thoughts based on my own experience of nearly 40 years in the classroom.
Sounds obvious, doesn’t it? But time is always limited, so make sure that the words you are asking your students to learn are the most useful, which probably means the most frequent, for their particular stage in the learning process. Usually your coursebook will do this for you. Vocabulary selection in the different levels of Focus is informed by the frequency criteria of the Global Scale of English. So, in level 1 you might teach ‘silly’ (A1), but you wouldn’t teach ‘preposterous’ (C1). That would be silly.
You never get a second chance to make a first impression. This is as true for words as it is for people. Encountering words for the first time in richly evocative, personalised, meaningful or unexpected contexts can help the memorisation process. The more neurological stimulation, the better.
This should be an ongoing ‘learner training’ aspect of your teaching. Firstly, encourage students to expose themselves to as much English as possible outside the classroom: music lyrics, tweets, blog posts, vlogs, video clips, extensive reading and listening (including podcasts and spoken word), watching films and TV series with English subtitles. These are just a few obvious sources. Secondly, train students how to discover meanings and recognise correct usage: guessing from context; using dictionaries effectively or learning basic meanings of high frequency affixes. Finally, teach your students different ways of recording vocabulary. Encourage them to create paper or digital flash cards; introduce them to mnemonic systems such as the keyword method or simply explore more creative ways of noting words down. There are lots of ideas in the Word Store – a unique feature of the Focus series.
As you can’t guarantee that words outside the top 2,000 will automatically reoccur at conveniently spaced intervals, it is your job to engineer systematic re-encounters with the new words that you teach. A coursebook like Focus incorporates frequent recycling of target vocabulary, but it’s never enough. Also, what about all that vocabulary you taught when, for whatever reason, the lesson took a different direction and you went ‘off-script’ and started scribbling words on the board that weren’t even in the coursebook? My own very low-tech solution to capturing all those words is to institute ‘Class Scribe’. Students take it in turns to be the class scribe. They are given a blank sheet of paper at the beginning of the lesson and their role is simply to record any new language that comes up. This ‘data’, along with the target vocabulary in my coursebook, becomes my learning corpus. Having a class scribe…
So now I know which words I’ve taught, I can make sure that I recycle them at regular intervals. How do I do that? By equipping myself with a repertoire of tried and trusted 5 to 10-minute activities that can be used as lead-ins, warmers or fillers. Activities that require very little or no preparation and can be adapted to cover a wide variety of different lexical areas. Here are my favourite five:
Write down twelve to fifteen words you want to revise on the board. Ask the students to choose five of the words and write them down. When they’ve done that, tell the students that you’re going to read out dictionary definitions of the words in random order and that they should cross out their words if they think they hear the definition. When they’ve crossed out all five words, they shout Bingo! Make sure you keep a record of the word definitions you call out so that you can check the students’ answers.
An old favourite. Think of the vocabulary, pronunciation or grammar point you want to revise. Write five words on the board and ask students which one is the odd one out. The students then explain why. This usually relates to the meaning of the word so in the following example the odd one out is dog.
pink / red / dog / blue / yellow
However, you could have any criteria you like, say, number of syllables. In that case, the odd one out would be yellow. In fact, the more unexpected the criteria, the better. The important thing is that they’re looking at and thinking about the words you want them to revise.
Choose the language you want to review and devise a way of categorising it into preferably two categories. Write the category headings on the board and ask the students to copy them. Then dictate the words (10–12 maximum) slowly and clearly, and ask the students to write them down in the correct category. For example, say you want to revise jobs. Your categories might be jobs you do inside and jobs you do outside.
| Inside | Outside |
Then dictate the words: e.g. a farmer, an archaeologist, a surgeon, an au pair, a vet, etc. The students write down the words in the correct category. When you’ve dictated 10 or 12 words, ask students to compare their lists.
Choose a lexical set you want to revise. Students work in pairs. They’ll need a piece of paper, preferably graph paper with squares on. Choose a topic, for example, school subjects. Student A writes ‘Across’ words, and Student D writes ‘Down’ words. It’s a good idea to provide the first word across, and make sure that it’s a long one. Student D then adds another school subject down the paper from top to bottom. This word must intersect with the school subject written across the page. Student A then writes another school subject across that intersects with the school subject Student D has written down. Students continue taking it in turns to write in their words.

Students build up words like on a Scrabble board until they can’t think of any more school subjects. (You could make it into a game by saying that the last person to write a school subject is a winner.) Note that students must leave one square between each word – this is why it’s better and clearer to use squared paper.
This activity is good for revising any type of vocabulary. Ask the students to call out any seven letters from the alphabet. Write the letters scattered on the board. Then ask the students in pairs to think of a word beginning with each letter on the board. The most obvious criteria is to revise words from a specific lexical set that you have taught recently, e.g. jobs, clothes, food, animals, etc. Alternatively, you could simply ask them for words they’ve noted down in lessons over the past two weeks. Another possibility would be to find the most interesting words they can from the Student Book unit that you’ve just finished. If the lexical set you want them to revise is particularly rich, you could ask the students to think of as many words for each letter as they can in say three minutes: make it into a contest to find the most words.
It’s always worth spending time thinking about how you can help your students to learn words more efficiently and more effectively. Way back in the 1970s the linguist David Wilkins summed up the importance of vocabulary learning thus: ‘Without grammar very little can be conveyed, without vocabulary nothing can be conveyed’.
Source: Pearson
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5 lesson ideas perfect for the holiday season
Author: Joanna Wiseman
It’s December already and many teachers will be preparing for the end of term. This can be a tricky time of year to plan for, as your younger learners start to get excited about their winter (or summer, if you’re in the southern hemisphere) vacation!
In this post we’ll look at a few ideas to help you get through those last few weeks of term with some fun activities suitable for young learners of different age groups.
Your younger learners will love anything related to snow, especially if you live in a warmer country. Snow can seem fascinating to children who have never seen it in real life, and exciting to those who experience it only a few times a year! Make the most of their interest and curiosity, and teach them language through this motivating topic.
Start by teaching winter clothes vocabulary, by having students categorize types of clothing by season. Give pairs or small groups of students flashcards or pictures of clothing and have them classify them into summer and winter clothes.
If possible, bring in some items such as hats, scarves, and gloves, and have a dressing up race where two students put on the garments you call out. This can be a lot of fun!
Have students brainstorm different activities you can do in the snow or in cold weather and mime each action together. Some ideas are:
Finally, you could do a snowy craft with your learners, such as making paper snowflakes or a snowman paper chain. Search online for instructional videos and templates.
If you’re in the southern hemisphere, you could highlight the differences between the winter and summer, and have students come up with activities they can do at the beach, instead.
At this time of year, crazy sweaters abound! Festive sweaters have become a trend in recent years and the more extravagant the better! With older kids, why not try a design activity where they have to come up with their own crazy sweater?
Lots of interesting language can be taught, including adjectives like sparkly, fluffy, baggy, spotted; and the different features students can add to their sweaters, such as pompoms, buttons, zips, and even flashing lights!
Have students write a description of their sweaters, and present to the class. Then have the class vote on their favorite crazy sweater.
Vacation is around the corner and both you and your students will be winding down, getting ready for the end of term. Make this a bit more special and maintain momentum in those last few weeks by making a Countdown Challenge calendar.
Count the lessons you have until the end of term and write a challenge for each one on a card, then place it inside an envelope. Write a number on each envelope, and hang up somewhere in your classroom. You could stick them around the edge of your board, or use pegs to hang them along a piece of string.
Each day, nominate a different student (or group if you have a large class) to take that day’s card and do the challenge. This is a nice routine for ending the lesson.
If your students are older, have them write the challenges themselves. You could use this to review vocabulary and structures students have learned during the term. Some fun challenges could be: name 10 things you wear in winter, act out a famous movie without speaking, or perform a festive song.
In many cultures, gifts are given and received at this time of year. Children often make long lists of toys and games they want, but sometimes the best gifts are those that make us feel special.
Instead of talking about material gifts, focus on positive messages that your students can share with each other.
Give each student a few cards and have them write a kind message to one of their classmates on each one. This could be a compliment, a thank you message, or something they have noticed about that student’s progress and behavior in class, e.g. Thank you for helping me remember new words or You’re always smiling in class.
To make sure that each student receives an equal number of messages, assign names to each student secretly, for whom they have to think of something kind to say. Messages should be anonymous.
You could set up a post box for the messages and then choose a student to be mail deliverer and hand out the messages at the end of the week, or in the last lesson.
Have your students organize a party for the last day of term and work as a team as they do so. When students are involved in a planning task, they are using English to make decisions and really communicate with each other.
Assign a different area of planning to groups of students and give them some time in each lesson leading up to the end of term to discuss their ideas and plan for the party.
Groups could work on:
Food and drink – students make a list of snacks to bring, taking into account any dietary needs (they could write a questionnaire to find out if students have any allergies). Encourage students to think of some healthy alternatives to chips, candy, and soda!
Games – this group chooses which games to play and makes any materials that are required. These could be traditional party games, or typical classroom games.
Decorations – here students decide how they can decorate the classroom and can make posters, paper chains, party hats, and so on.
Music – this group makes a playlist of songs they want to listen to.
Then, throw the party! Students will enjoy themselves so much more when they have participated in the planning process and worked hard to make the party a success.
Source: Pearson
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As teachers, we all want our students to work toward making the world a better place. And through focusing on global citizenship, this drive to change the world is something we can help foster every day in the classroom. In this post, we’ll explore how:
What are global citizens?
A global citizen is someone who knows that they are part of a worldwide community. They understand there are people who have completely different lifestyles, appearances, cultures and routines, but with whom we share common values and responsibilities. Global citizenship encourages tolerance and understanding – and learning about it helps children to become open-minded adults.
Within the context of a primary English classroom, helping students become aware of themselves as citizens of the world will be an introduction to a global way of thinking. And we can do this while also helping them to become familiar with – and proficient – in English.
How can we introduce the concept?
Before students put themselves in a global context, they should get to know themselves as individuals. But they should also get to know themselves as people who are part of their immediate communities.
In the classroom this can be done by encouraging students to think about something personal, such as their likes and dislikes. We can then encourage students to look a little further: what kinds of home do they see in their communities? What makes a house a home to them? What about people working in their communities – what important jobs do they do, and how do they make an impact?
For language teachers, the idea is to combine vocabulary and grammar structures with a slowly widening view of our world. Simply by introducing the concept that we are part of a worldwide community can take the children out of their own experiences, and help them start to consider others.
Tips & activities:
Social media makes it possible for teachers to get in contact with each other across borders, and to set up a collaboration between their schools. Something simple, like organizing a class video call for students after lunchtime and encouraging students in different countries to discuss what they ate in english, can help learners become more globally aware.
How can we teach students to be proactive?
Once students know something, they can progress to putting their knowledge into action. Teachers can foster this by encouraging good habits – a simple example is how we teach very young children to throw their litter in a bin. As they grow older, we can ‘unpack’ these habits. That is, we can help children look deeper into why they’re so important. Using the example of litter again, this could mean making students aware about how their civic responsibility has a real environmental impact.
Let’s look at how we can go from knowing to doing, in simple stages, with a range of topics that are common in the language classroom:
Food:
Buildings:
Jobs:
Technology:
Holidays:
Rise and Shine is a 7-level story-based primary course that combines language learning with global citizenship. It is built on the Global Scale of English, which helps students to understand exactly what they are learning and why.

Rise and Shine is a 7-level story-based primary course that combines language learning with global citizenship. It is built on the Global Scale of English, which helps students to understand exactly what they are learning and why.
The course inspires learners to become confident explorers – they learn English and aim to become responsible global citizens. The series is also designed for use in inclusive and mixed-ability classrooms and supports every learner to achieve and shine.
Source: Pearson
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