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  • A woman at a computer working

    Introducing the PTE Teacher Hub

    By Magda Woodham
    Reading time: 2 minutes

    Your new home for PTE Teaching Support

    Teaching PTE requires staying up to date, being confident in your scoring and being equipped with resources that accurately reflect the test – so you can help your students prepare for success and ease some of their test-day worries. To make that easier, we’re pleased to introduce you to the new PTE Teacher Hub, your dedicated space designed specifically for teachers preparing learners for PTE Academic and PTE Core.

    Everything you need to teach PTE, in one trusted place

    The PTE Teacher Hub is an authenticated, teacher‑first platform that brings together everything you need to teach PTE effectively. Instead of searching across multiple channels, you now have a single, reliable source for official updates, classroom‑ready resources and professional development – direct from Pearson.

    Official updates and ready‑to‑use resources, all in one hub

    At launch, the Hub focuses on the two core areas that teachers told us matter most. PTE News and Updates provides a trusted channel for timely information on Pearson news, PTE updates, information on upcoming webinars and events, assessment insights and community highlights, helping you stay confident that the guidance you give learners is accurate and up to date.

    PTE Resources offers an exclusive library of ready‑to‑use, PTE‑aligned lesson plans and materials, saving preparation time and supporting both in‑class and online teaching.

    Built to support teachers at every stage of their PTE journey

    Beyond day‑to‑day teaching support, the PTE Teacher Hub is designed to support your ongoing professional growth. Teachers can access guidance and insights at any time, deepen their understanding of the PTE test portfolio and strengthen their teaching practice with official Pearson materials.

    Whether you’re new to teaching PTE or an experienced educator, the PTE Teacher Hub is your central destination for clarity, confidence and connection.

    Log in, bookmark the page, and make it your go‑to home for PTE teaching.

  • A woman and man working together on laptop in library

    AI in Language Education: What educators should use (and what to avoid)

    By Charlotte Guest
    Reading time: 5 minutes

    AI is changing language classrooms fast, but not every tool adds value. The best teachers use AI as a partner, supporting planning, feedback and differentiation, while keeping key moments of teaching human.

    Here’s what works, what to avoid, and how to use AI responsibly in ESL classrooms.

    How AI is transforming language teaching

    AI is transforming how teachers work, but it doesn't replace them.

    At its best, AI enhances three core areas:

    • Planning efficiency: Generate lesson outlines, activities and scaffolding in minutes
    • Differentiation at scale: Adapt materials for mixed-level classrooms instantly
    • Feedback loops: Provide faster, more frequent feedback on writing and practice tasks

    But the key shift is pedagogical. AI aligns naturally with:

    • Learner-centered methods: Students engage more actively with adaptive content
    • Teaching like a coach: Teachers guide, refine and personalize rather than deliver everything directly
    • Modern teaching methodology: Blended, flexible and responsive instruction

    When used effectively, AI allows teachers to concentrate on the most important aspects of language learning: interaction, communication and human connection.

  • Students working outside at a wooden bench looking over papers

    Re-engaging learners after the mid-term slump

    By Charlotte Guest
    Reading time: 7 minutes

    Midway through a language course, many teachers observe a common shift: students who were eager to participate at the start become less active and find it harder to initiate speaking activities.

    This phase, known as the mid-term slump, is a typical part of the learning process. As the novelty wears off, workloads increase and students may struggle to see their progress. However, effective teaching strategies can quickly boost motivation again; by modifying classroom activities, reconnecting with students’ motivations and realigning goals, teachers can help students regain their interest in language learning. Here are practical methods for language educators to re-engage students after any mid-semester decline.

    How do you recognize the mid-term slump in language learning?

    Look out for these common signs of the mid-term slump:

    • Reduced participation in speaking activities
    • Lower homework completion rates
    • Less willingness to take risks when speaking
    • A noticeable drop in classroom energy

    Recognizing these signs early allows teachers to introduce new strategies that help students regain focus and motivation.

    Why do students lose interest mid-term?

    Students often experience falls in motivation, enthusiasm and engagement halfway through a course as the initial excitement of learning something new fades, especially if progress feels slow. Although they may be steadily improving, students can easily get frustrated when they cannot yet communicate fluently. Any combination of the following factors can cause or exacerbate a mid-term slump, and understanding them helps teachers respond effectively.

    1. The novelty effect wears off

    At the start of a course, everything feels new and exciting. By mid-semester, routines are established and lessons can begin to feel repetitive.

    2. Cognitive fatigue

    Language learning requires sustained mental effort. After weeks of learning new vocabulary, grammar and pronunciation, students may feel mentally tired.

    3. Unclear progress

    Many students struggle to recognize how much they have improved. If learners cannot see their progress, they may believe they are not advancing.

    4. Competing priorities

    Mid-semester often coincides with exams or assignments in other subjects, which can shift students’ attention away from language study. Acknowledging these challenges helps teachers design strategies that address motivation directly.

    Strategies for keeping students interested in language learning

    Small changes to classroom routines can make a big difference in engagement. The strategies below are especially effective during the second half of a course.

    1. Reset learning goals with students

    Mid-semester is an ideal time to revisit learning objectives. Ask students what they hope to achieve before the course ends.

    For example, learners might aim to:

    • Hold a five-minute conversation
    • Master a set number of vocabulary words
    • Improve pronunciation confidence

    Clear, short-term goals help restore motivation and give students something concrete to work toward.

    2. Introduce gamified review activities

    Games bring energy back into the classroom while reinforcing key concepts.

    Examples include:

    • Vocabulary competitions
    • Quiz-based team challenges
    • Role-playing scenarios
    • Language trivia games

    Gamified activities provide a review without feeling repetitive, which helps combat routine fatigue.

    3. Rotate collaborative learning formats

    Changing how students interact can refresh classroom dynamics.

    Consider introducing:

    • Pair interviews
    • Small group debates
    • Rotating conversation partners
    • Problem-solving tasks in the target language

    These formats encourage social learning, which increases participation and confidence.

    4. Connect lessons to real-world language use

    Students stay motivated when they see how language skills apply outside the classroom.

    Try activities such as:

    • Analyzing song lyrics or film clips
    • Planning a fictional trip abroad
    • Ordering food through role-play scenarios
    • Discussing current events

    Real-world contexts make language learning more meaningful and memorable

    5. Revisit student learning preferences

    Different students engage with language in different ways. A mid-semester check-in can help teachers adapt lessons.

    Ask learners questions like:

    • What classroom activities help you remember vocabulary best?
    • When do you feel most confident speaking?
    • What topics would you like to discuss in class?

    This feedback allows teachers to adjust instruction and create more engaging lessons.

    6. Celebrate small progress milestones

    Students often underestimate their improvement.

    Highlighting progress can boost confidence and motivation. Teachers might:

    • Recognize vocabulary milestones
    • Celebrate improved pronunciation
    • Showcase successful conversations
    • Track weekly progress charts

    Acknowledging growth reminds students that their effort is paying off.

    Brain-based strategies that boost engagement

    Research on learning and cognition shows that certain teaching techniques improve motivation and retention.

    Novelty: Introducing new formats, topics or activities stimulates attention and curiosity.

    Social learning: Students learn more effectively when interacting with peers through discussion and collaboration.

    Movement: Short physical activities or role-playing exercises can re-energize learners and improve focus.

    Spaced practice: Reviewing material regularly in smaller sessions helps students retain vocabulary and grammar more effectively.

    Applying these principles can help sustain engagement throughout the semester.

    Questions teachers can ask to re-engage learners

    Mid-term feedback helps teachers understand what students need to stay motivated.

    Consider asking students:

    • Which classroom activities help you learn the most?
    • What part of language learning feels most challenging right now?
    • What topics would you enjoy discussing in class?
    • What skills would you like to improve before the course ends?
    • What type of practice helps you remember vocabulary best?

    These conversations strengthen teacher-student relationships and ensure lessons meet learners’ needs.

    How SMART goals help restore momentum

    One effective way to overcome the mid-term slump is to set SMART goals, objectives that are specific, measurable, achievable, relevant and time-bound.

    For example:

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* Global online survey on Learner's Voice among just over 2,000 respondents including teachers and learners of English, decision makers in educational institutions and companies, Jan-Mar 2022.