You teach English. Your students hear English from you, in the classroom. Then they leave the room and they hear no more English until tomorrow. Their families speak L1. Their friends speak L1. The market, the bus, the radio — all in L1. English exists only inside the school walls.
This is the situation for most English learners in the world. Not just a few struggling students — the whole class.
Many teachers feel they should ban L1 from their classroom. “English only” sounds professional. But research shows the opposite: thoughtful, planned use of students’ L1 helps them learn English faster and more deeply.
In this lesson, we will look at how to teach English when nobody hears it outside the room — and how L1 can become your most powerful tool, not your enemy.
Q2: Which of these challenges affect your English teaching? (Tick all that apply)
For most teachers reading this, your situation is the same:
You teach English in a country where English is not the home language. Your students hear English only in your classroom. The textbook is in English. The exam is in English. But the world your students live in is not.
This is called EFL (English as a Foreign Language). It is the situation of more English learners worldwide than any other. It comes with one core challenge: students get very little exposure to English outside class. Everything about how you teach should respond to this fact.
The shift research asks teachers to make:
Stop seeing students’ L1 as a problem to push out of the classroom.
Start seeing it as a resource that helps them learn English faster.
When students use L1 thoughtfully, they think more deeply, ask better questions, help each other, and feel safer to try English. None of these things happen when L1 is banned.
Be honest. Many teachers say “English only” but quietly use L1 anyway. That is not failure — that is your instinct working.
Drag each statement to the box, or tap a statement and then tap the box. Some have been said by teacher trainers for years — but the research tells a different story.
Think about a real lesson or topic. Concrete is better than general.
| Strategy | Your specific idea |
|---|---|
| Pre-teach key vocabulary in L1 before reading | |
| Allow planning in L1, output in English | |
| Use L1 quickly for instructions, then English for the task | |
| Build “mini-exposure” moments inside class | |
| Connect English to students’ lives |
| Strategy | How it can work |
|---|---|
| Pre-teach key vocabulary in L1 before reading | Before a reading text, write 4–5 key English words on the board with a quick L1 gloss. Students start the text knowing the hardest words. Reading is faster, deeper, and more confident. Then the rest of the lesson stays in English. |
| Allow planning in L1, output in English | For a speaking task, give students 2 minutes in pairs to plan in L1 (“What do you want to say?”), then they perform in English. The L1 stage means they bring their best ideas to English — not just simple ones. |
| Use L1 quickly for instructions, then English for the task | For a complicated activity, give the instructions in L1 in 30 seconds. Students start the task in English with no confusion. Far better than 4 minutes of confused English instructions where half the class is lost. |
| Build “mini-exposure” moments inside class | Since students get no English outside class, every classroom minute matters. Read aloud in English while they listen. Play short audio. Have an English-only routine for the first 5 minutes. Many small contacts add up. |
| Connect English to students’ lives | Students learn faster when content matters to them. Ask: “In English, tell your partner about your favourite food / family member / dream job.” Their lives, in English. Memorable, personal, motivating. |
Q6. Watch the video below. Think about which change is easiest for you to try first.
Host: We have just looked at how to teach English when nobody hears it outside the classroom. Now listen to three teachers. They share their problems first, then the changes they made.
Teacher 1: I taught English in a strict English-only school. The rule was no L1, ever. I followed it for years. My students were silent. They were terrified of making mistakes. The clever ones could not show how clever they were because they did not have the English yet. The weaker ones just gave up.
Teacher 2: My students could fill in any gap-fill exercise. They could match words to pictures. But ask them to actually say something in English and they froze. They were learning English on paper, but they could not use it in real life.
Teacher 3: I used to feel guilty every time I said anything in L1. I thought I was a bad teacher. So I would explain a complicated activity in English for five minutes. Half the class was lost. They sat there confused. I felt I was failing.
Teacher 1: I changed my rule. Now L1 is allowed for two things: planning before a speaking task, and asking me a clarification question. Everything else stays in English. The students started talking. Their English got better — not worse.
Teacher 2: I started giving students 2 minutes to plan in L1 before any speaking task. Just two minutes. Now when they speak in English, they have something real to say. Their sentences are longer. Their ideas are richer. They are not just giving the easy answer because their English was limited.
Teacher 3: I started giving complicated instructions in L1 quickly — 30 seconds — then the whole task is in English. The students start the task immediately. No confusion. More time on actual English practice. I stopped feeling guilty — the students are learning more, not less.
Host: None of these teachers gave up on English. They all teach English most of the time, in English. They just stopped fighting their students’ L1 — and started using it as a tool. The English classroom became a place where students felt safe enough to actually try.
Q7. For each strategy, choose the option that best describes where you are now.
Be specific. Which lesson? Which moment? Why is L1 the right choice in that moment?
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