ESL Writing – Editing Worksheets

As a university writing teacher, I wonder what is the best way to help my students see, correct and avoid writing mistakes.

Slowly, I am coming to the conclusion that the old teaching style is not very effective. The old way, for me, is a writing lesson that goes like this: the teacher gives a writing assignment, the student writes it, the teacher goes home with a bag filled with 50 papers, spends part of the weekend making corrections, hands the papers back on Monday, the students try to decode the teacher’s scribblings, the students re-write the paper, the end.

Better Writing Lessons

For a lot of reasons, the old way has to stay. But I’ll do it less. My goal is to teach students how to see, correct and ultimately avoid basic writing errors. And, the old is not the only way.

What is a basic writing error? For Korean students, most writing errors fall into six categories:

  • word choice
  • verb tense
  • prepositions
  • articles
  • subject-verb agreement
  • conventions (e.g. spelling and punctuation)

Self-Editing

Peer review is one way for students to quickly learn how to detect and maybe avoid errors. The idea is simple. Student A writes something. Student B finds the errors. Student A re-writes. Like many teaching ideas in the ESL world, it sounds great in theory but doesn’t always work well in the classroom.

Editing exercises seem to offer more hope for student achievement. They teach the students what to look for and how to correct the errors.

Editing Worksheet

So, for our next class, dear students, download these editing worksheet and try to find most of the writing errors. Then re-write the paragraphs.

Update: here are the answers for the editing worksheet questions: esl-writing-editing-worksheets.

ESL Speaking – Review Sheet

This ESL worksheet helps English students review and practice some of the key vocabulary which we have studied in class.

Worksheet Download

This worksheet reviews the language, ideas, skills and text (LIST) which we have studied in the past week or so.

Students can download the ESL review worksheet here: esl-review-worksheet.

ESL Vocabulary – Symmetry

Need a lesson to build up your vocabulary quickly? Try this video lesson.

In English, there are groups of words that have a natural partner. We use these groups of words in literal situations.

We also use these words as idioms. In linguistics, I think these kinds of natural groupings of words are called collocations. Here is an example: salt and pepper.

Read more

ESL Writing – A Surprising Day

In previous classes, students finished several writing exercises about a person’s daily life experience and neighbourhoods. These writing exercises use real life experience to help shape and guide the student’s descriptive writing.

This assignment asks students to blend their daily life experience with a creative surprise.

Video Writing Prompt

Watch the video called Tomorrow (GPS). It’s a story about a man and woman. Their lives follow a n0rmal routine. Then one day, there is a surprise.

Use the ideas from this video to help to think about how a surprise might change your life. Write a short story, maybe two paragraphs, that describes a normal daily life and a big change.

Expansion: Write a one paragraph summary of this story.