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    Jonathan Acuña Solano, Post Author
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Reimagining Board Work in Online ELT: Pedagogical Functions, Digital Affordances, and Reflective Practice

Board Work, British Council, Classroom Organization, Corrective Feedback, Digital Pedagogy, ELT, ELT Methodology, English Language Teaching, Learner Attention, Noticing Hypothesis, Online Language Teaching 0 comments

 

Blending classroom boards into virtual teaching
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in March 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     I continue to have fun with my reflective journaling by reimagining the use of a board in a virtual classroom. Although the course offered by the British Council focuses largely on face-to-face teaching contexts, I decided to explore how these ideas actually look in my own synchronous online classes. In doing so, I reflect on my teaching practice with young adult and working adult learners at the two institutions where I currently teach English.

     This short reflective essay is therefore both an academic response to the course materials and a personal pedagogical exploration. By revisiting traditional classroom tools, such as the board, and adapting them to digital environments, I attempt to illustrate how online teachers can reinterpret familiar strategies to maintain clarity, engagement, and interaction in the virtual language classroom.

Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano


Reimagining Board Work in Online ELT: Pedagogical Functions, Digital Affordances, and Reflective Practice

 

Abstract

   This essay reflects on the pedagogical value of board work in English Language Teaching (ELT), drawing on the ideas presented in the course TeachingEnglish: Organising the Classroom offered by the British Council, particularly Module 1, Unit 2: “How to use your board.” Through a synthesis of course content and personal reflections derived from my experience as an online instructor, the essay analyzes how the traditional functions of the board—focusing learners’ attention, managing the class, giving instructions, encouraging discussion, saving paper, and highlighting important information—can be effectively adapted to virtual teaching contexts.

   The discussion incorporates relevant theoretical perspectives, such as the “Noticing Hypothesis” proposed by Richard Schmidt, as well as sociocultural principles of learning, in order to support the pedagogical practices described. Through the use of digital tools such as presentations, annotation features, and multimedia resources, the essay demonstrates that the “digital board” can play an equivalent—and even expanded—role when compared to the traditional classroom board.

   Ultimately, it is argued that board work, whether physical or digital, should not be understood merely as a classroom organization strategy but rather as an essential mediating tool that guides learners’ attention, structures interaction, and facilitates meaningful learning in contemporary language teaching contexts.

Keywords:

Board Work, British Council, Online Language Teaching, Classroom Organization, Learner Attention, Noticing Hypothesis, Corrective Feedback, English Language Teaching, ELT Methodology, Digital Pedagogy, ELT

 

 

Resumen

   Este ensayo reflexiona sobre el valor pedagógico del uso de la pizarra en la enseñanza del inglés como lengua extranjera (ELT), a partir de las ideas presentadas en el curso TeachingEnglish: Organising the Classroom de la British Council, particularmente en el Módulo 1, Unidad 2: “How to use your board”. Mediante una síntesis del contenido del curso y reflexiones personales derivadas de mi experiencia como instructor en línea, el ensayo examina cómo las funciones tradicionales de la pizarra, enfocar la atención, gestionar la clase, dar instrucciones, fomentar la discusión, ahorrar papel y resaltar información clave,  pueden adaptarse eficazmente a contextos de enseñanza virtual.

   El análisis integra perspectivas teóricas relevantes, como la hipótesis del “noticing” de Richard Schmidt, así como principios socioculturales del aprendizaje, para fundamentar las prácticas pedagógicas descritas. A través del uso de herramientas digitales como presentaciones, funciones de anotación y recursos multimedia, el ensayo demuestra que la “pizarra digital” puede desempeñar un papel equivalente, e incluso ampliado, en comparación con la pizarra tradicional.

   En última instancia, se argumenta que el trabajo con la pizarra, ya sea física o digital, no constituye simplemente una estrategia de organización del aula, sino un instrumento mediador fundamental que orienta la atención de los estudiantes, estructura la interacción y facilita el aprendizaje significativo en contextos contemporáneos de enseñanza de lenguas.

 

 

Resumo

   Este ensaio apresenta uma reflexão sobre o valor pedagógico do uso do quadro na área de ensino de inglês como língua estrangeira (ELT), tomando como ponto de partida as ideias apresentadas no curso TeachingEnglish: Organising the Classroom da British Council, particularmente no Módulo 1, Unidade 2: “How to use your board”. Por meio de uma síntese do conteúdo do curso e de reflexões pessoais baseadas na minha experiência como professor on-line, o ensaio analisa como as funções tradicionais do quadro, focar a atenção, gerenciar a aula, dar instruções, incentivar discussões, economizar papel e destacar informações importantes, podem ser adaptadas de maneira eficaz para contextos de ensino virtual.

   A discussão incorpora perspectivas teóricas relevantes, como a hipótese do “noticing” proposta por Richard Schmidt, bem como princípios socioculturais da aprendizagem, a fim de fundamentar as práticas pedagógicas descritas. Através do uso de ferramentas digitais como apresentações, funções de anotação e recursos multimídia, o ensaio demonstra que o “quadro digital” pode desempenhar um papel equivalente, e até ampliado, em relação ao quadro tradicional.

   Por fim, argumenta-se que o trabalho com o quadro, seja físico ou digital, não é apenas uma estratégia de organização da aula, mas sim um instrumento mediador essencial que orienta a atenção dos alunos, estrutura a interação e facilita a aprendizagem significativa nos contextos contemporâneos de ensino de línguas.

 


Introduction

Board work has long been a foundational component of classroom organization and instructional clarity in ELT or in any other subject being taught. In the British Council course TeachingEnglish: Organising the Classroom, teachers are encouraged to reconsider how boards can provide structure, focus, and learner engagement. While much of the guidance assumes a face-to-face setting, the rapid expansion of online teaching invites educators to reinterpret the board’s pedagogical functions through digital and videoconferencing platforms.

As I have reflected in the course by the British Council, “Since I began to work as an online instructor some fifteen years ago, I have used my laptop screen as a reliable board while using videoconferencing platforms” (Acuña Solano, 2026). Through this essay I explore how the traditional purposes of board work can be transferred and even enhanced in online contexts, supported by relevant scholarship in applied linguistics and educational theory.

The Board as a Tool for Focus and Attention

The course highlights that boards “provide a variety of ways to focus and manage the class” and are “a good way to focus your learners and attract their attention” (British Council, n.d.). In physical classrooms where teachers and learners meet, this might involve writing objectives, drawing mind maps, or displaying images. In online contexts, attention is mediated by screen-sharing functions, slides, and annotation tools.

In my own practice in online contexts, I project communicative objectives at the beginning of each lesson and use PowerPoint slides to structure presentation, practice, and production stages. This visual consistency guides learners cognitively and procedurally, a step-by-step sequence that allows for scaffolding. As I noted, I use the screen “to project the communicative objectives of the lesson, to project controlled activities, to play audio and video activities, [and] to share exercise answers” (Acuña Solano, 2026).

This procedural and cognitive arrangement of practice activities aligns with Schmidt’s (1990) Noticing Hypothesis, which posits that conscious attention to language forms is necessary for acquisition. By highlighting key structures using annotation tools, teachers increase the salience of target forms, thereby facilitating noticing. Visual emphasis, whether through colored chalk or digital highlighting, serves as a cognitive cue directing learners’ awareness to essential linguistic elements.

Managing the Class Through Structured Visual Design

Effective board organization also supports classroom management. The British Council (n.d.) materials emphasize that having instructions on the board makes them clearer, often requiring only key words.

In online teaching, structured slide decks serve this managerial function. For instance, my presentations contain all lesson content and include multiple speaking activities of increasing difficulty. This scaffolding ensures that fast finishers remain engaged while others complete essential tasks. By visually sequencing tasks, the digital board becomes a roadmap for the lesson.

From a theoretical standpoint, this practice reflects Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory (1978), particularly the concept of scaffolding within the Zone of Proximal Development. Clear visual instructions reduce cognitive overload and support learners as they transition from controlled to freer practice. The board, physical or digital, thus acts as a mediational tool bridging teacher guidance and learner autonomy.

Giving Instructions and Supporting Autonomy

Instruction clarity is a recurrent theme in classroom research. Scrivener (2011) argues that concise, visible instructions prevent confusion and reduce unnecessary teacher talk. The British Council (n.d.) course similarly recommends that “just a few key words may be enough.”

In my online lessons, instructions are embedded in each slide and remain visible after I model the task (Acuña Solano, 2026). This permanence allows learners to refer back independently, promoting autonomy. The board, therefore, becomes a silent co-teacher, reinforcing expectations without repeated verbal explanation. Moreover, projecting instructions in breakout rooms ensures consistency across groups. In synchronous remote contexts, where monitoring is more complex, the shared visual anchor maintains coherence across simultaneous interactions.

Encouraging Whole-Class Discussion

Boards also facilitate collaborative thinking. The British Council’s course suggests creating mind maps, displaying images, adding useful phrases, or playing word games. In digital spaces, screen-sharing enables similar practices.

For whole-class discussions, in my current teaching scenario, I always project prompts visible to all participants. In breakout rooms, my slides serve as “mini-boards,” ensuring task clarity for my students. Visual prompts stimulate interaction and reduce silence, particularly in online environments where conversational flow can falter (Acuña Solano, 2026)..

This collaborative use of the board resonates with communicative language teaching principles. Harmer (2015) notes that visual prompts can lower affective filters and provide linguistic support during interaction. By adding functional phrases to slides, teachers scaffold discourse, enabling more meaningful participation.

The Board as an Eco-Friendly and Resource-Efficient Tool

One of the teacher’s opinions in this course remarks, “I use the board because it saves a lot of paper!” In remote language learning contexts, this function is fully amplified. As I reflected on this topic, “In an online setting, paper and trees are saved every class. Only digital documents are shared with learners” (Acuña Solano, 2026).

Beyond environmental considerations, digital boards centralize materials, reducing logistical challenges associated with photocopying. They also enable immediate modification, annotation, and archiving, making learning more dynamic and adaptable.

Highlighting Information and Facilitating Noticing

The strategic highlighting of vocabulary or grammar structures is central to effective instruction. The British Council (n.d.) suggests keeping a list of key phrases at the side of the board and adding to it throughout the class.

Digitally, annotation features in platforms such as Zoom or Teams replicate and extend this practice. Highlighting, underlining, or circling forms directs learners’ attention, reinforcing Schmidt’s (1990) assertion that noticing is a prerequisite for intake. Furthermore, maintaining a visible vocabulary bank throughout the lesson supports cumulative learning. Learners can visually track linguistic growth within a single session, strengthening retention and metacognitive awareness.

Peer Correction and Error Treatment

Board work is particularly powerful in error correction. The British Council course advises highlighting typical errors without identifying individual learners, thereby focusing attention on language rather than the learner. In my practice, I compile authentic student errors, often from Spanish-speaking learners, and transform them into editing exercises. I also project anonymized errors from breakout room activities, inviting learners to identify and correct them collaboratively.

This approach reflects Lyster and Ranta’s (1997) research on corrective feedback, which underscores the effectiveness of prompts that encourage learner repair. By displaying errors publicly but anonymously, the board becomes a collective problem-solving space. Learners shift from passive recipients of correction to active analysts of language.

Overcoming Common Challenges

Teachers often report difficulties with board work: illegible handwriting, slow student writing, boredom during copying, or lack of drawing skills. Digital platforms mitigate many of these issues. In my context, multiple learners can annotate simultaneously, reducing delays. Assigning roles, such as “typists” or “monitors”, transforms potential boredom into purposeful engagement. As I reflected, “As soon as learners are assigned a role… they become responsible for what is being typed on the screen.”

Regarding visuals, online teaching offers access to high-quality images and diagrams. Rather than relying on drawing skills, teachers can curate or create digital resources. Visuals enhance comprehension, particularly for lower-level learners, supporting multimodal learning principles (Mayer, 2009).

Conclusion

Board work, whether physical or digital, is far more than a surface-level teaching technique. As the British Council course demonstrates, it plays a central role in focusing attention, managing instruction, encouraging collaboration, and supporting feedback.

Through reflective practice, I have come to view my laptop screen as an evolved form of the traditional classroom board, one that integrates multimedia resources, collaborative annotation, and real-time interaction. By aligning board practices with theoretical insights such as Schmidt’s Noticing Hypothesis, Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory, and research on corrective feedback, teachers can ensure that visual classroom tools serve not merely organizational but transformative pedagogical functions.

Ultimately, effective board work, physical or digital, is intentional. It shapes what learners notice, how they interact, and how meaning is constructed in the classroom. In this sense, the board is not simply a surface for writing; it is a space where language becomes visible, negotiable, and learnable.

San José, Costa Rica

Friday, March 6, 2026

 


📚 References

Acuña Solano, J. (2026). Personal reflections on board work in online ELT. Unpublished manuscript.

British Council. (n.d.). TeachingEnglish: Organising the classroom – Module 1: Understanding board work, Unit 3: Activities on the board. TeachingEnglish. https://open.teachingenglish.org.uk/Team/UserProgrammeDetails/699499?stepId=2

Harmer, J. (2015). How to teach English (2nd ed.). Pearson. https://ia600407.us.archive.org/21/items/HowToTeachEnglish/How%20to%20Teach%20English%20Harmer%2C%20Jeremy.pdf

Lyster, R., & Ranta, L. (1997). Corrective feedback and learner uptake. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 19(1), 37–66. https://www.scirp.org/reference/referencespapers?referenceid=476628

Mayer, R. E. (2009). Multimedia learning (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511811678

Schmidt, R. (1990). The role of consciousness in second language learning. Applied Linguistics, 11(2), 129–158. https://nflrc.hawaii.edu/PDFs/SCHMIDT%20The%20role%20of%20consciousness%20in%20second%20language%20learning.pdf

Scrivener, J. (2011). Learning teaching (3rd ed.). Macmillan. https://www.scribd.com/doc/175301180/Scrivener-Jim-Learning-Teaching-3rd-Edition-2011-PDF

Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psychological processes. Harvard University Press. https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctvjf9vz4?turn_away=true


 

Reimagining Board Work in Online ELT: Pedagogical Functions, Digital Affordances, and Reflective Practice by Jonathan Acuña



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Friday, March 06, 2026



Paideia in English Language Teaching: Toward a Holistic Vision of the Language Teacher

Critical Thinking, ELT, English Language Teaching, Ethics, Holistic Education, Intercultural Awareness, Learner Agency, Paideia, Plutarch 0 comments

 

Minds through timeless paideia
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in March 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     As an educator and language teacher, paideia is not merely an interesting classical concept but a compelling vision of what should ultimately result from the student’s learning process. In the context of English Language Teaching (ELT), language instruction cannot be reduced to the mechanical teaching of grammar structures and vocabulary lists. Rather, it must aspire to something broader and more transformative. Teaching a language means guiding learners toward critical thinking, cultivating cultural awareness of other people’s viewpoints and worldviews, fostering agency in communication, and nurturing a sense of ethics that they can apply in both their personal and professional lives.

     My encounter with the idea of paideia deepened significantly after reading Parallel Lives by Plutarch. In these biographical narratives of Greek and Roman leaders, education appears not as mere intellectual accumulation but as the formation of character, judgment, and civic responsibility. The moral and philosophical undertones in Plutarch’s portraits illuminate education as a shaping force that influences both private virtue and public action. This realization led me to reflect more consciously on my own pedagogical practice.

     Since engaging with Plutarch’s work, I have become increasingly aware that my lesson planning must move beyond linguistic objectives alone. While grammatical accuracy and lexical development remain essential components of language learning, they should serve as vehicles for broader intellectual and ethical growth. In this sense, paideia becomes a guiding framework: language lessons can become spaces where learners interpret ideas, question assumptions, compare cultural narratives, and articulate informed perspectives.

     Therefore, this work is grounded in the conviction that language education should participate in the holistic formation of the learner. The teacher’s responsibility extends beyond facilitating communicative competence; it includes encouraging reflective thinking, intercultural sensitivity, and responsible agency. Inspired by the classical tradition of paideia, I seek to integrate these dimensions intentionally into my planning, classroom discourse, and assessment practices.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


Paideia in English Language Teaching: Toward a Holistic Vision of the Language Teacher

 

Abstract

This paper explores the classical concept of paideia as a guiding philosophical framework for English Language Teaching (ELT). Drawing inspiration from Plutarch and his educational insights in Parallel Lives, the study argues that language education should transcend grammar and vocabulary instruction to embrace holistic learner formation. Grounded in the classical understanding of paideia as intellectual, moral, and civic development, the paper proposes that ELT teachers function not merely as linguistic instructors but as facilitators of critical thinking, intercultural awareness, ethical reflection, and learner agency. The discussion situates language teaching within a broader humanistic tradition, suggesting that communicative competence is inseparable from reflective and ethical engagement in both personal and professional contexts. By integrating paideia into lesson planning and pedagogical design, educators can contribute to the comprehensive development of learners as thoughtful and responsible global citizens.

Keywords:

Paideia, Plutarch, English Language Teaching, ELT, Holistic Education, Critical Thinking, Intercultural Awareness, Learner Agency, Ethics

 

 

Resumen

Este trabajo explora el concepto clásico de paideia como marco filosófico orientador para la Enseñanza del Inglés como Lengua Extranjera (ELT). Inspirado en las reflexiones educativas presentes en Parallel Lives de Plutarch, el estudio sostiene que la enseñanza de idiomas debe trascender la instrucción gramatical y léxica para abrazar una formación integral del estudiante. Desde la comprensión clásica de la paideia como desarrollo intelectual, moral y cívico, se propone que el docente de lengua no sea únicamente un instructor lingüístico, sino también un facilitador del pensamiento crítico, la conciencia intercultural, la reflexión ética y la agencia del aprendiz. El análisis sitúa la enseñanza del idioma dentro de una tradición humanista más amplia, sugiriendo que la competencia comunicativa es inseparable del compromiso reflexivo y ético tanto en el ámbito personal como profesional. Al integrar la paideia en la planificación y el diseño pedagógico, el docente puede contribuir al desarrollo pleno de estudiantes como ciudadanos globales críticos y responsables.

 

 

Resumo

Este trabalho explora o conceito clássico de paideia como um referencial filosófico para o Ensino de Inglês como Língua Estrangeira (ELT). Inspirado nas reflexões educativas presentes em Parallel Lives de Plutarch, o estudo defende que o ensino de línguas deve ir além da instrução gramatical e lexical para promover uma formação integral do aprendiz. Com base na compreensão clássica de paideia como desenvolvimento intelectual, moral e cívico, propõe-se que o professor de língua atue não apenas como instrutor linguístico, mas também como facilitador do pensamento crítico, da consciência intercultural, da reflexão ética e da agência do estudante. A discussão situa o ensino de línguas dentro de uma tradição humanista mais ampla, sugerindo que a competência comunicativa está intrinsicamente ligada ao engajamento reflexivo e ético na vida pessoal e profissional. Ao integrar a paideia no planejamento e na prática pedagógica, o educador contribui para a formação de cidadãos globais críticos e responsáveis.

 


Education is most powerful when it educates the whole person, not merely the mind or a set of discrete skills. In its original Greek sense, paideia referred to an all-encompassing system of learning that shaped citizens’ intellects, morals, bodies, and capacities for civic life. As defined in authoritative sources, paideia is “training of the physical and mental faculties in such a way as to produce a broad enlightened mature outlook harmoniously combined with maximum cultural development” (Merriam-Webster, 2026, para. 1). Similarly, paideia was “a system of education and training in classical Greek and Hellenistic cultures that included such subjects as gymnastics, grammar, rhetoric, music, mathematics, geography, natural history, and philosophy” (Britannica Editors, 2026). These holistic roots of paideia can enrich contemporary English Language Teaching (ELT) by framing language educators as facilitators of intellectual, cultural, ethical, and communicative development, not just linguistic form.

This essay explores how the classical ideal of paideia can inform what an English teacher should be in the context of ELT today, grounded explicitly in scholarly definitions and interpretations. Rather than viewing language instruction as a sequence of grammatical points, a paideic ELT paradigm views teachers as mentors of whole-person competence, practitioners who develop learners’ linguistic skills alongside their critical thinking, cultural awareness, autonomy, and ethical sensibilities.

The Classical Ideal of Paideia

The concept of paideia originated in ancient Greece as a comprehensive model of education aimed at forming the “ideal citizen.” In the words of a leading dictionary, paideia referred to the cultivation of the physical and mental faculties “to produce a broad enlightened mature outlook harmoniously combined with maximum cultural development” (Merriam-Webster, 2026). This definition highlights the cultural breadth and integrated development that distinguishes paideia from narrow vocational or skills-only training.

Britannica’s editors summarize the classical meaning as a system of education and training comprising physical disciplines like gymnastics, intellectual fields such as rhetoric and philosophy, and musical and mathematical studies, all aimed at shaping a well-rounded individual (Britannica Editors, 2026). Importantly, classical paideia was not limited to the classroom; it involved moral formation, ethical reasoning, physical training, and engagement in public life, a broader conception of education than the technical transmission of facts.

For modern educators, these authoritative definitions suggest that paideia is not simply about teaching more content but about integrating multiple dimensions of human growth, cognitive, ethical, social, and cultural. What if English language teachers embraced this unified vision? What if ELT aimed not merely at proficiency levels but at forming communicators who think deeply, act ethically, and participate fully in the global community?

Paideia and the Teacher’s Identity in ELT

In classical paideia the teacher was more than a deliverer of knowledge. Education was understood as preparation for life and citizenship, not just classroom success. Modern language teachers can learn from this emphasis on character and citizenship as inseparable from linguistic competence.

When teachers view their work through a paideic lens, they become facilitators of dialogic inquiry, cultural understanding, and autonomous learning. Although paideia in its original Greek context included many subjects beyond language, all were united in the aim of shaping wise and capable human beings. In ELT, language functions not as an isolated skill set but as a tool for meaning-making, cultural participation, and social engagement.

This stance aligns with Adler’s Paideia Proposal for education reform, which argues that genuine learning arises “from the activity of the learner’s own mind” and that education should cultivate understanding rather than mere rote memorization (Adler, 1982/1998, as cited in Google Books preview). Adler’s model emphasizes three kinds of learning: organized knowledge, intellectual skills, and deeper understanding of ideas, a framework directly relevant to ELT teachers aiming to cultivate critical language awareness not just linguistic forms.

Thus, a paideic ELT teacher is first an intellectual coach, guiding learners to think through language tasks with reflection and purpose. They also function as a mediator of culture, helping learners engage respectfully and insightfully with texts, dialogue, and discourse communities beyond formulaic exercises. Finally, they are developers of learner autonomy, fostering metacognitive habits that enable students to learn how to learn, a key aspect of lifelong language development.

Teacher as Cultivator of Critical and Cultural Capacities

A paideic orientation in ELT underscores that language is not neutral: it carries cultural values, worldview perspectives, and rhetorical traditions. Thus, language teachers should engage learners with texts and tasks that stimulate critical reflection and cultural awareness. For example, dialogic teaching methods, rooted in Socratic questioning and reflective dialogue, resonate with the intellectual dimensions of paideia. As explained in educational theory, paideia in dialogue contexts involves asking thought-provoking questions that challenge assumptions and belief systems, leading students to deeper comprehension and self-reflection (Adler 1998, as cited in dialogic learning literature). This approach moves beyond teaching linguistic items to engaging learners in meaningful inquiry, where language becomes a tool for reasoning and ethical engagement.

In practice, this dialogic methodology could mean structuring discussions around authentic materials that raise social issues, ethical dilemmas, or cross-cultural perspectives, rather than only isolated grammar drills. In this way, the ELT classroom becomes a space where learners develop both communicative proficiency and critical literacies, capacities closely aligned with paideia’s goal of forming intellectually capable citizens.

Such an approach also aligns with modern perspectives on pedagogy that situate language learning within broader cultural and cognitive contexts: language teachers should consider not only what learners say but how and why they engage with language, fostering interpretation, negotiation of meaning, and contextual awareness. These practices embody the paideic commitment to broad human development rather than narrow linguistic performance.

Teacher as Facilitator of Lifelong Learning and Autonomy

A key implication of paideia for ELT is the cultivation of learner autonomy. Classical paideia did not end at school dismissal; it was understood as a lifelong process of growth. Similarly, today’s language learners should develop the metacognitive strategies and self-directed learning skills that enable them to continue evolving beyond formal instruction.

Adler’s philosophy underscores this point: he argued that education is “never completed in school or higher institutions of learning, but is a lifelong process of maturity for all citizens” (Adler, 1998). When applied to ELT, this perspective suggests that teachers should help learners build habits of reflection, self-assessment, and independent pursuit of language goals. Practically, this means embedding opportunities for learners to set goals, monitor progress, evaluate outcomes, and reflect on cultural and communicative growth. Teachers can model and scaffold metacognitive strategies that learners will carry with them throughout their language lives, far beyond the classroom.

This approach also reframes assessment: instead of privileging discrete test scores, paideic assessment values learners’ ability to use language ethically, critically, and contextually in real-world settings. It encourages teachers to design performance-based tasks, portfolios, and self-reflection activities that reveal learners’ evolving capacities as whole communicators.

Challenges and Opportunities

Adopting a paideic orientation in ELT inevitably presents challenges. Modern education systems often prioritize standardized outcomes and quantifiable proficiency metrics. These external pressures can make it difficult to allocate adequate classroom time to reflective dialogue, cultural inquiry, or metacognitive training. Nevertheless, paideia’s holistic ideals provide a compelling framework for teacher identity in ELT, one that transcends narrow skills lists and embraces the full richness of human communication. Teachers who invest in dialogic inquiry, cultural exploration, and learner autonomy contribute not only to linguistic competence but to learners’ capacity to act meaningfully and ethically as citizens of a globalized world.

Moreover, a paideic approach aligns with current calls for critical language pedagogy and communicative learning that prepare learners to participate in diverse sociocultural landscapes with insight and agency. Its emphasis on integration rather than fragmentation of educational aims enriches both teacher preparation programs and classroom praxis.

Conclusion

In the light of reliable academic definitions, paideia represents a holistic educational ideal encompassing intellectual, moral, cultural, and lifelong growth. In ELT, this translates into a vision of the language teacher as a mentor, facilitator, cultural mediator, and coach, a professional who cultivates not only linguistic skills but also critical thought, cultural awareness, autonomous learning, and ethical engagement.

By anchoring teaching practice in the integrated aims of paideia, ELT practitioners honor the ancient Greek ideal of educating whole human beings and prepare learners to use English not merely as a code but as a vehicle for reflection, participation, and meaningful connection in the world.

San José, Costa Rica

Sunday, March 1, 2026



📚 References

Adler, M. J. (1998). The Paideia Proposal: An Educational Manifesto. Simon & Schuster. (Original work published 1982)

Britannica Editors. (2026). paideia. In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved from https://www.britannica.com/topic/paideia

Merriam-Webster. (2026). Paideia. In Merriam-Webster.com dictionary. Retrieved from https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/paideia


Paideia in English Language Teaching by Jonathan Acuña



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Sunday, March 01, 2026


Location: San José Province, Guadalupe, Costa Rica

The Pedagogical Value of Board Work in Contemporary English Language Teaching

Board Work, British Council, ELT, ELT Pedagogy, online teaching, Reflective Practice, Virtual Classroom Management, Visual Scaffolding 0 comments

 

Clarity and engagement in online teaching
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in February 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     After completing my first course with the British Council through their TeachingEnglish platform, I decided to enroll in a second one. Some may argue that these courses are basic. In a sense, that may be true. However, when one genuinely engages with their content and reframes it within one’s own teaching reality, a deeper and more transformative reflection begins to take place.

     As an educator who has not taught in a brick-and-mortar classroom for a considerable period of time, and whose current practice is fully online, I find that many of the themes addressed by the British Council are not directly explored in depth within the mainstream literature on online teaching. Topics such as board organization, spatial management of information, visibility, sequencing, and visual scaffolding are often discussed in the context of physical classrooms. Yet, in fully synchronous virtual environments, these same principles must be reinterpreted.

     Because I have not used a physical board in years, my laptop screen has effectively become my board. Whether through PowerPoint slides, screen sharing, annotation tools, or breakout room collaboration, the digital interface is now the primary visual anchor of my lessons. This shift demands intentional management. Just as a cluttered whiteboard can confuse learners, a cluttered screen can overload them cognitively. Therefore, effective screen organization is not merely aesthetic; it is pedagogical. It directly affects clarity, engagement, and learning outcomes.

     This paper emerges from that reflection: a reconsideration of “board work” not as a traditional classroom artifact, but as a transferable pedagogical principle that remains central in online ELT contexts.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


The Pedagogical Value of Board Work in Contemporary English Language Teaching

 

Abstract

This paper examines the pedagogical relevance of board work in contemporary English Language Teaching (ELT), particularly within fully online synchronous environments. Drawing on the British Council’s TeachingEnglish course Organising the Classroom, Jeannine Dobbs’ (2001) foundational work on board use, and reflective practice in virtual teaching contexts, the paper argues that board work remains a central instructional tool despite technological shifts. The study reframes the traditional concept of the board to include digital interfaces such as shared screens, presentation slides, and virtual whiteboards. Through theoretical grounding in sociocultural theory and reflective pedagogy, the paper demonstrates that effective board organization supports classroom management, scaffolding, learner autonomy, and interactional competence. The discussion concludes with practical implications for teachers seeking to improve clarity, structure, and learner engagement in online classrooms.

Keywords:

Board Work, Virtual Classroom Management, ELT, ELT Pedagogy, Reflective Practice, Visual Scaffolding, Online Teaching, British Council

 

 

Resumen

Este trabajo examina la relevancia pedagógica del uso del pizarrón en la enseñanza contemporánea del inglés (ELT), especialmente en entornos sincrónicos completamente virtuales. A partir del curso Organising the Classroom de la plataforma TeachingEnglish del British Council, del trabajo de Jeannine Dobbs (2001) y de la práctica reflexiva en contextos de enseñanza en línea, se argumenta que el uso del pizarrón continúa siendo una herramienta central de instrucción a pesar de los cambios tecnológicos. El concepto tradicional de pizarrón se amplía para incluir interfaces digitales como pantallas compartidas, presentaciones y pizarras virtuales. Con base en fundamentos socioculturales y en la pedagogía reflexiva, el artículo demuestra que una organización efectiva del pizarrón favorece la gestión del aula, el andamiaje, la autonomía del estudiante y la competencia interaccional. Finalmente, se presentan implicaciones prácticas para docentes que buscan mejorar la claridad, la estructura y la participación en clases virtuales.

 

 

Resumo

Este artigo examina a relevância pedagógica do uso do quadro na prática contemporânea de ensino de inglês (ELT), especialmente em ambientes síncronos totalmente virtuais. Com base no curso Organising the Classroom da plataforma TeachingEnglish do British Council, na obra de Jeannine Dobbs (2001) e na prática reflexiva em contextos de ensino online, argumenta-se que o uso do quadro continua sendo uma ferramenta central de instrução, apesar das mudanças tecnológicas. O conceito tradicional de quadro é ampliado para incluir interfaces digitais como compartilhamento de tela, apresentações e quadros virtuais. Sustentado por fundamentos socioculturais e pela pedagogia reflexiva, o artigo demonstra que uma organização eficaz do quadro favorece a gestão da aula, o andaime pedagógico, a autonomia do aprendiz e a competência interacional. O texto conclui com implicações práticas para professores que desejam aprimorar clareza, estrutura e engajamento em aulas virtuais.

 


Introduction

In English Language Teaching (ELT), classroom tools often fall in and out of favor as technology evolves. Among these, the board, whether a traditional blackboard, a whiteboard, an interactive whiteboard (IWB), or a virtual shared screen, has sometimes been dismissed as outdated in technology-rich environments. However, recent pedagogical discussions suggest that boards remain a central instructional tool when used intentionally. The British Council’s TeachingEnglish: Organising the Classroom course revisits board work not as a relic of past teaching practices, but as a dynamic space for interaction, classroom management, and learner engagement (British Council, n.d.). This essay examines the pedagogical value of board work in contemporary ELT by drawing on course materials, Jeannine Dobbs’ foundational work, reflective teaching practice, and established scholarship in language pedagogy.

Boards as a Public and Pedagogical Space

Boards provide what Dobbs (2001) describes as a “public writing space” that is immediately accessible to both teachers and learners. This shared visibility allows teachers to highlight key content, scaffold learning, and make language salient at critical moments of instruction. According to the British Council (n.d.), boards can be used to present new information, record learner contributions, and support classroom management, thereby structuring the lesson both cognitively and procedurally.

Harmer (2015) reinforces this view by arguing that boards function as an “external memory” for the class, enabling learners to revisit language items without interrupting communicative flow. This is particularly relevant in language classrooms, where learners benefit from repeated exposure to form, meaning, and use. The board, therefore, is not merely a display surface but a mediational tool that supports noticing and retention.

Relevance of Boards in Technology-Mediated Classrooms

Despite increased access to digital tools, boards have not lost their relevance. As I have found myself reflecting on this topic (Acuña Solano, 2026), boards continue to be “a pivotal element of a class where students’ eyes and, consequently, their attention is fixed on,” regardless of whether they take the form of physical whiteboards, IWBs, or virtual boards in platforms such as Zoom or Microsoft Teams. This observation aligns with Scrivener’s (2011) claim that effective teaching tools are defined not by their novelty, but by how meaningfully they are integrated into lesson design.

In synchronous online teaching, shared screens and virtual whiteboards replicate many functions of traditional boards while adding new affordances, such as annotation, collaborative writing, and instant sharing of materials. These tools allow teachers to orchestrate lessons much like conductors, guiding learners through stages of controlled practice and freer production (Acuña Solano, 2026). Thus, technology does not replace board work; rather, it expands its pedagogical potential.

Board Work and Classroom Management

One of the most underestimated functions of board work is its role in classroom management. The British Council (n.d.) emphasizes that boards help learners understand “what’s happening in the lesson,” which reduces uncertainty and increases learner confidence by guiding them through the different stages of the lesson. Writing lesson aims, checklists, or activity sequences on the board allows learners to anticipate transitions and remain oriented throughout the lesson.

From a sociocultural perspective, this transparency supports learner autonomy. Vygotsky (1978) argues that learning is mediated through tools and signs, and the board functions as a visual mediator that structures interaction within the learner’s zone of proximal development. When learners can see lesson objectives and progress markers, they are better positioned to evaluate their own learning and participation; they can know where they are standing in terms of their own learning.

Learner Use of the Board and Agency

Board work is not exclusively a teacher-centered practice. Dobbs (2001) highlights that learners also benefit from using the board themselves, particularly when recording ideas, brainstorming, or sharing language. In online contexts, this learner involvement takes the form of screen sharing, collaborative document editing, and annotation tools. As I have noted for a long time, training learners to use these features in breakout rooms increases their responsibility for the learning process and encourages collaborative problem-solving (Acuña Solano, 2026).

Walsh (2011) argues that such interactional practices promote “classroom interactional competence,” allowing learners to participate more actively in meaning-making. When learners contribute to the board, their ideas gain legitimacy, fostering a sense of ownership and engagement. This practice also aligns with communicative language teaching principles, which emphasize learner-centered interaction.

What Teachers Add to the Board

Effective board work requires careful selection of content. The British Council (n.d.) lists items commonly added to boards, including lesson aims, useful language, learner ideas, instructions, and homework. My very personal reflections demonstrate strong alignment with this framework, particularly in the use of PowerPoint-based lesson plans that include objectives, grammar “cheat sheets,” dialogue frames, and task instructions (Acuña Solano, 2026).

This structured approach supports different proficiency levels. For A1 learners, for instance, projecting dialogue frames provides linguistic scaffolding that enables participation in communicative tasks. Ellis (2003) notes that such scaffolding is essential in form-focused instruction, as it reduces cognitive load while maintaining communicative intent.

Organizing the Board for Clarity

Disorganized board work can hinder learning rather than support it. Reflecting on my early teaching experiences, I must acknowledge that my untidy boards initially created confusion (Acuña Solano, 2026). Over time, deliberate division of board space, for dates, vocabulary, explanations, and reminders, improved clarity and learner accessibility (Acuña Solano, 2026). This evolution mirrors Scrivener’s (2011) recommendation that teachers plan board layout as carefully as lesson stages.

The British Council (n.d.) suggests dividing the board into reusable sections and permanent information areas, allowing teachers to manage cognitive focus effectively. In virtual environments, this principle remains relevant, as clean slides and well-organized shared screens help learners process information sequentially.

Common Pitfalls in Board Work

The British Council (n.d.) identifies several common issues that can undermine effective board work, including overcrowding, illegible writing, poor visibility, and excessive time spent writing. These pitfalls can be particularly problematic for learners who process information linearly, as disorganized notes may obscure key relationships between ideas (Acuña Solano, 2026).

Reflective practices, such as photographing the board at the end of lessons and discussing layout with colleagues, are recommended as professional development strategies (British Council, n.d.). Schön’s (1983) concept of the reflective practitioner supports this approach, emphasizing that teachers improve through systematic reflection on action.

Conclusion

Board work remains a fundamental component of effective ELT, regardless of technological context. As demonstrated through the British Council course materials, Dobbs’ foundational insights, and reflective teaching practice, boards function as cognitive, interactional, and managerial tools that support language learning. When thoughtfully organized and intentionally used, boards enhance learner engagement, scaffold understanding, and promote autonomy. Rather than being eclipsed by technology, board work has evolved alongside it, reaffirming its central role in both physical and virtual classrooms. For contemporary language teachers, revisiting and refining board work is not a step backward, but a pedagogically sound move forward.

Conclusion

Board work remains a fundamental component of effective ELT, regardless of technological context. As demonstrated through the British Council course materials, Dobbs’ foundational insights, and reflective teaching practice, boards function as cognitive, interactional, and managerial tools that support language learning. When thoughtfully organized and intentionally used, boards enhance learner engagement, scaffold understanding, and promote autonomy. Rather than being eclipsed by technology, board work has evolved alongside it, reaffirming its central role in both physical and virtual classrooms. For contemporary language teachers, revisiting and refining board work is not a step backward, but a pedagogically sound move forward.

San José, Costa Rica

Saturday, February 28, 2026

 


📚 References

Acuña Solano, J. (2026). Reflective notes on board work in synchronous online ELT contexts. Unpublished manuscript.

British Council. (n.d.). TeachingEnglish: Organising the classroom – Module 1: Understanding board work. https://open.teachingenglish.org.uk/Team/UserProgrammeDetails/699499?stepId=2

Dobbs, J. (2001). Using the board in the language classroom. Cambridge University Press.

Ellis, R. (2003). Task-based language learning and teaching. Oxford University Press.

Harmer, J. (2015). How to teach English (2nd ed.). Longman.

Schön, D. A. (1983). The reflective practitioner: How professionals think in action. Basic Books.

Scrivener, J. (2011). Learning teaching (3rd ed.). Macmillan.

Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psychological processes. Harvard University Press.

Walsh, S. (2011). Exploring classroom discourse: Language in action. Routledge.


 Virtual Board Work Checklist [handout] 

Virtual Board Work Checklist [Handout] by Jonathan Acuña



The Pedagogical Value of Board Work in Contemporary English Language Teaching by Jonathan Acuña



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Saturday, February 28, 2026


Location: San José Province, Guadalupe, Costa Rica

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