Scott Thornbury is a teacher and writer who works in English language teaching. This field is often called ELT for short. He was born in 1950 in New Zealand. Thornbury has spent over thirty years teaching English and training other teachers. He has worked in many countries, including Egypt, the United Kingdom, and Spain. He still lives in Spain. He earned a master's degree from the University of Reading in England. Today Thornbury is an Associate Professor at The New School, a university in New York. He teaches on an online course that trains English teachers. He is also the editor of a well-known series of handbooks for language teachers. Thornbury is famous for his books. He has written more than a dozen, many of them aimed at helping teachers do their job better. Well-known titles include 'How to Teach Grammar' and 'How to Teach Vocabulary'. His writing is clear, practical, and often funny. He is best known for one big idea. With another teacher, Luke Meddings, he helped create an approach called Dogme ELT. This approach asks teachers to rely less on textbooks and more on real conversation in the classroom. Thornbury also writes a popular blog and speaks at conferences around the world.
Thornbury matters because he helped change how English teachers think about their work. For a long time, the textbook was the centre of the lesson. The teacher followed the book, page by page. Thornbury asked a simple but powerful question: what if the textbook gets in the way?
With Luke Meddings, he developed Dogme ELT. The name comes from a film movement that used few props and simple methods. Dogme ELT asks teachers to put the textbook aside and build lessons from the language that learners themselves produce. The students talk, and the teacher works with what really comes up. Lessons become more personal and more alive.
Thornbury also matters because of how clearly he writes. He takes difficult ideas from research and turns them into practical advice that ordinary teachers can use on Monday morning. His 'How to Teach' books are used by teachers all over the world.
He matters as a connector too. He links serious research about how people learn languages to the daily reality of the classroom. His blog and talks keep teachers thinking and questioning. Thornbury made teacher development feel exciting, honest, and within everyone's reach.
For a first introduction, Thornbury's 'How to Teach Grammar' and 'How to Teach Vocabulary' are clear, practical books that show his style and thinking. His blog, 'An A-Z of ELT', is freely available online and explains many ideas in short, readable posts. His many talks at teaching conferences, available online, are a friendly way to meet his ideas in his own voice.
For deeper reading, 'Teaching Unplugged' (2009), written with Luke Meddings, is the key book on Dogme ELT and explains the approach in full. 'About Language' is a well-known book that helps teachers understand the language they teach. 'An A-Z of ELT', in book form, is a clear reference guide to the terms and ideas of the field.
Dogme ELT means teachers should never use textbooks or materials at all.
This is too strong. Thornbury's point is not a total ban on materials. It is that materials should not control the lesson, and that teachers should rely more on real conversation and the learners themselves. Materials can still be used when they genuinely help. Thornbury has also described Dogme ELT as a frame of mind rather than a strict rule. Treating it as 'never touch a textbook' turns a flexible attitude into exactly the kind of rigid rule it was meant to question.
Dogme ELT is the easy option, because the teacher just lets students chat.
It is actually demanding, not easy. Teaching without a textbook asks a great deal of the teacher. They must listen very closely, notice what learners are ready to learn, and shape useful teaching from it in the moment. This needs confidence and experience. Thornbury himself notes that Dogme ELT can be hard for new teachers. Letting students 'just chat' is not Dogme ELT. Skilfully building a lesson from real talk is difficult, careful work.
Thornbury believes Dogme ELT is the best approach for every teacher and every class.
He does not claim this, and he has discussed its limits openly. Dogme ELT can be difficult with very large classes, with very low-level beginners, and for teachers who are new or unsure. Some learners and parents also prefer the security of a clear book and syllabus. Thornbury presents Dogme ELT as a valuable approach and a useful frame of mind, not as a single right answer that fits every situation. Honest accounts include these limits.
Thornbury is only a popular writer, not a serious figure in language education.
This understates him. Thornbury has over thirty years of experience teaching and training teachers, holds a master's degree in the field, and is a university professor who trains English teachers. He edits a respected series of handbooks for language teachers and engages closely with research on how people learn languages. His writing is clear and popular, but it rests on serious knowledge and experience. Being accessible did not make his work less serious.
For research-level engagement, 'Scott Thornbury's 30 Language Teaching Methods' offers his sceptical, informed survey of the long history of teaching methods. His academic papers and his more reflective blog posts discuss the debates around Dogme ELT, including its honest limits and the question of whether it is a method or a frame of mind. Readers should also follow how other teacher-educators have responded to and built on his work.
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