coursebook? Haven't written one for my own teaching yet - Thank God, you say! LOL).
Not really. I think it would be an extremely light (paperwise) publication. You would be commended by environmentalist EFL teachers world over.
:lol:A slimmer tome would certainly beat e.g. poring over a stack of Dave's stuff.
but I do think that a good course will help students get things "just so" first time round and help them avoid ambiguity, endless checking and discussion etc.
Again, and as always, you seem to focus on, revert to discussion on, lower levels. Haven't they allowed you to work with higher levels yet?
Those that I've met who consider themselves at, or indeed already are at, a very servicable level, don't seem that interested in discussing the language itself; they seem to consider my main responsibility to be one of 'response-ability'. But then, Japan especially has always had its fair share of "English bandits" (even among those of the paying kind - maybe the reaction against "grammar" among non-teachers has just been that much stronger here (to be replaced with much so-called "communicative" stuff i.e. the dregs of CLT)), and I do ultimately have to respect their demand for "conversation", this general avoidance of (much in-depth analysis of) texts among my "students" (but I'm not sure that I'd want them to be too "inquisitive" - ever-questioning - either. Do you get, or end up with, more than your fair share of obssessives, metal? In my experience, that is what happens when teachers pose too many questions
in class: the students stop developing and moving on in other senses (and I'm talking about students, not trainee teachers)). I often get the impression that your lessons are like here on Dave's, endless questions but little in the way of concrete answers, like you get others to do all the thinking for you but rarely seem to plump (or even let others plump) for an answer lest you ever appear to be "wrong"...
Well, I did imply that this adult is rather sedentary. Chances are if they'd started playing soccer they'd simply say something like '(I didn't (use to) play (soccer >) at school but) I've started playing soccer';
To me, your implication was that the past simple and "used to" are equivalent forms, that they have for the same function. Is that not your implication?
They are clearly
different forms, yet with some overlap in function. My concern has simply been that 'not use to' not be mindlessly taught as some sort of "simple" default without first looking through a wider range of examples. I guess you just don't read too well then (and if further evidence were needed, how about the fact that I'd already alluded to the possibility of rephrasing:
metal wrote:Also, in the same dictionary, we get this:
Quote:
2 used to forms negatives and questions in the same way as modal auxiliary verbs:
When we were younger, we used not to be allowed to drink coffee.
What would be the aspectual difference, if any, between these, IYOs?
When we were younger, we used not to be allowed to drink coffee.
When we were younger, we were not allowed to drink coffee.
Before that, I wrote:Only three out of a total of thirteen relevant examples in the dictionaries mentioned earlier have a strong "past directionality/orientation":
CCED: He didn't used to like anyone walking on the lawn. (=didn't like)
CIDE: When we were younger we used not to be allowed coffee to drink. (=weren't allowed)
MED: We didn't use to earn much.(=didn't earn)
The other ten examples all explicitly show or strongly imply a connection to a later time in which the state of affairs is the opposite of that of the past.
This isn't the first time that you've completely ignored the possible import of what others have had to say (the import here being the obvious redundancy/inefficiency/wordiness of the one phrasing compared to the other; but perhaps examples where BE can substitute as the main verb shouldn't be our focus, especially not when you so disliked 'I wasn't always here in the mountains', hmm does 'He wasn't always this selective' do it for you, then? If so, any idea why?)).