Friday, June 6, 2008

Chinese Course - Any recommendations for a general English textbook available on the mainland? - From Beijing Chinese School.com > Studying, Working and Living in China > Living in China > Teaching English in

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Any recommendations for a general English textbook available on the mainland?
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roddy -

I've been asked to help someone to chose a textbook for studying English, but I wouldn't know
where to start without going to a bookshop and looking at books, which is far too time-consuming.

Basically looking for a general textbook series that'll cover a bit of everything, probably
designed for classroom use but also suitable for self-study. Something like the Headway series for
anyone who knows that, although that's not available in China, bar as an import (I think, if it is
available here that would probably be perfect).

I remember a couple from my teaching days but never actually used them so don't know if they're
any good or not. Plus my memory doesn't go as far as names - New Interchange? Something like that?

Any of our active teachers got any suggestions?

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imron -

One I remember being popular from when I was teaching is New Concept English. I don't know what
the content is like though.

BrandeX -

Popular series include: Longman's, New Interchange, New Concept (written in 1967 and still used )
Cambridge, and training center specific ones can be good if you can get ahold of them. ( I have a
set of EF ) It can also depend on the age group you are teaching too. There is a myriad of
chinese-centric produced books, but at least 2 of those that I have contain some engrish or other
mistakes. I have found even small local bookstores will have a section with at least the student
edition of several english training books, it may ultimately be worth spending an hour or two
anyways to peruse them before making a final decision. If I had to suggest general texts I guess
I'd go with Cambridge or New Interchange

self-taught-mba -

Yep. NCE is widely used and there is a plethora of transcripts, electronic versions, and audio
files widely available to download as an augment. I am surprised they haven't heard of it. Or
maybe they have and are looking for something else. Content is fairly solid and systematic albeit
rather typical and boring in many ways.

>>typed.

Rincewind -

Roddy, you didn't say what age the student is. However, I'll assume they are adult or at least
teenage. It would also help to know if they have studied any English before but I'll assume they
haven't.

Interchange English - Published by Cambridge - is the range I use most for my own classes. I've
used it for two years now both at university and at private schools. If studying on one's own
without a teacher then I recommend the student to get the full range of books, especially the
workbook, to compliment the students book. There are DVD's that go with the course plus there are
exercises on the Interchange web site that you can work through.

The vocabulary used in Interchange is useful and builds systematically. I'd say it's a more
practical vocabulary for modern English than the NCE range (below) gives. The grammar is clearly
explained but only briefly and only in English. If you don't have a teacher, you might not
understand the the grammar sections in this book. On the up side, the grammar builds logically
throughout the range of books. The books are well balance with a mix of reading, writing,
listening and talking exercises. Though you would need to be in a classroom setting to make the
most of the talking sections.

New Concept English - This is the standard at every school. It has it's good points and some
distinct bad points. On the plus side it's very thorough. Every element of grammar is covered by
the time you finish book 2. That is also one of it's down sides. It can sometimes spend too long
teaching some rather special grammar in book 2 that could have been left till book 4. The books
have explanations in both English and Chinese so you can read it yourself however, I'd recommend
still taking classes as you will learn faster. The pictures in the books lack the visual appeal of
some other books but are functional. There is a bit too much emphasis on reading and writing
skills and not enough conversation. This is especially true of books 3 and 4 which are basically
just reading comprehension exercises.

I have used some other books, but the are for either young children or for specialist topics or I
don't like them. If your student has already studied some English before and is just wanting to
improve, then I'd give a different set of recommendations to that above.

roddy -

Thanks for those. I think I'll recommend Interchange.

What a useful website this is!

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