最新消息

在人工智慧時代提升 英語 Language 教學:為何 GSE 比以往任何時候都更重要

Educators 與學校有共同目標:提供高品質的學習體驗並支持學生成功。隨著人工智慧迅速改變社會,這個目標變得越來越重要。

英語 語言教學現在需要準備學生在全球化、數位化且自動化的環境中茁壯成長。

精選線上研討會

成為培生客戶的益處

成為培生客戶,能夠享受到 Pearson English Academies 優質的資源庫,並得到 Efficacy Team 為學習成效驗證。

為何選擇培生?

我們最新的網誌

  • Two young girls fistbumping eachother in celebration
    • Diversity and inclusion

    Debunking myths about neurodivergence and language learning

    提交者 Charlotte Guest
    Reading time: 5 minutes

    Can neurodivergent learners really learn a new language?

    Neurodivergent people can learn new languages successfully. Often, what seems like an inability is actually due to a mismatch between traditional teaching methods and how different brains process information.

    Research across ADHD, autism and dyslexia consistently shows that language learning is not only possible but can offer cognitive, social and even emotional benefits. The key variable isn’t capacity, it’s approach.

    Common myths about ADHD, autism and dyslexia in language learning

    Myth 1: “People with ADHD can’t focus enough to learn a language”

    Fact: ADHD brains often thrive with novelty, variety and stimulation all of which language learning naturally provides.

    While research on ADHD and language learning is still emerging, scholars highlight that the field is under-researched, not evidence of inability. This gap reinforces that perceived difficulties are often due to teaching methods rather than learner capacity. Traditional methods (long grammar drills, passive memorization) can fail ADHD learners. But when learning includes:

    • Short, varied activities
    • Speaking and interaction
    • Gamified tools
    • Real-world usage

    Attention often improves, not worsens.

    Reframe: It’s not a focus deficit, it’s a method mismatch.

    Myth 2: “Dyslexia makes learning another language too difficult”

    Fact: Dyslexia affects reading and decoding,  not intelligence or the ability to acquire language.

    In fact, many dyslexic learners:

    • Excel in spoken language skills
    • Develop strong pattern recognition
    • Benefit from multisensory input (audio + visual + movement)

    Difficulties usually arise when teaching is overly text-heavy.

    Reframe: Dyslexia changes how language is learned, not whether it can be learned.

    Myth 3: “Autistic learners shouldn’t be pushed into bilingualism”

    Fact: There is no evidence that learning multiple languages harms autistic individuals. Reviews have shown that bilingualism does not have negative effects on autistic children, despite long-standing misconceptions among professionals. In many cases, it can:

    • Support communication flexibility
    • Enhance social connection (especially in multilingual families)
    • Strengthen cognitive processing

    The outdated belief that bilingualism causes confusion has been widely debunked. More recent reviews also highlight cognitive, social and identity-related benefits of bilingualism in autism, challenging deficit-based assumptions. 

    Reframe: Language learning can expand communication,  not limit it.

    Myth 4: “Neurodivergent learners just need more discipline”

    Fact: What looks like “lack of effort” is often cognitive overload.

    Neurodivergent learners may struggle when:

    • Instructions are unclear
    • Tasks rely on one learning modality
    • Pacing is rigid
    • Working memory is overloaded

    Educational research shows that students are very different from each other, and teaching should change to fit those differences.

    Reframe: The issue isn’t motivation,  it’s accessibility.

    Why traditional teaching methods don’t work for every brain

    Most language classrooms still rely on:

    • Heavy text-based instruction
    • One-size-fits-all pacing
    • Passive memorization
    • Limited sensory engagement

    These approaches conflict with what we know about different ways of learning (learner modalities),  the idea that people process information differently (visual, auditory, kinesthetic, etc.).

    The modality principle of multimedia learning shows that people learn better when information is presented through multiple channels (e.g., visuals + audio instead of text alone). This is especially important for neurodivergent learners.

    Bottom line: When teaching adapts to the learner, outcomes improve dramatically.

    How educators and parents can support diverse learners

    Start with this principle: the learner is not the problem; the system might be.

    For educators:

    • Offer multiple ways to engage with content
    • Design activities that include speaking, listening, and movement
    • Avoid equating speed with ability
    • Normalize different learning paths

    For parents:

    • Focus on encouragement, not pressure
    • Choose programs that emphasize communication, not rote memorization
    • Advocate for inclusive teaching approaches in schools
  • A woman holding papers walking through a campus smiling
    • English certification and assessment

    Waiting for English test results? Get your scores faster

    提交者 Abi Fordham
    Reading time: 3 minutes

    Let’s be honest. One of the hardest parts of taking an English test isn’t the test itself; it’s what happens afterward. That strange limbo where the test is over, but your future still feels on hold. You’re waiting, refreshing your inbox, thinking about every question you answered, and wondering how long it’ll be until you can finally move on with your plans. If that sounds like you, just remember: it’s totally normal. Completely normal.

    Why waiting feels so intense (and why it’s not “impatience”)

    The moment you finish a test, your brain jumps ahead to everything that depends on that score:

    • Can I apply this week?
    • Will I meet the deadline?
    • Do I need to prepare a backup option?
    • When can I tell my family?

    It’s not just curiosity. It’s the need for certainty so you can take the next step. Because studying in the USA involves so many moving parts – applications, forms, accommodation, visa timelines – and every one of them depends on knowing your score.

    Fast results aren’t just a nice bonus; they directly impact how smoothly your study plan goes.

    • Diversity and inclusion

    Removing barriers, raising expectations: inclusive strategies for neurodiverse classrooms

    提交者 Laura Broadbent
    Reading time: 4 minutes

    Every classroom is neurodiverse. Learners differ in how they process information, regulate emotions, sustain attention and show what they know. Yet many classroom routines are still designed around a narrow idea of a “typical” learner. The result? Capable neurodivergent students face unnecessary barriers, their confidence is eroded and their potential goes unrealized.

    Our latest research report, Teaching Neurodiverse Students: The Case for a Strengths‑First Approach, challenges this model. It makes a clear case for inclusive teaching that removes barriers without lowering expectations, and it shows why designing for difference benefits every learner in the room.

關注我們以獲取最新獨家消息

加入我們的社群,獲取最新消息、優惠活動和幕後花絮。