Encouraging Social Language in Online ELT for Young and Working Adults: Reflections from the British Council’s TeachingEnglish Course
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Introductory
Note to the Reader This paper emerges from my engagement
with a module from the TeachingEnglish: Organising the Classroom
course. While I found the content insightful and well-structured, many of the
ideas presented are closely tied to primary school contexts. Rather than
approaching this as a limitation or a point of criticism, I have chosen to
reframe it as a reflective opportunity: what can I do with these ideas when
adapting them to an online classroom for young and working adults? This question has guided my reflective
journaling throughout the module. As I engaged with the material, I began to
identify ways in which its recommendations could be meaningfully transferred
to my own teaching practice. In doing so, I have found myself implementing
small but deliberate changes, particularly in how I encourage learners to
engage in social language during class. These adjustments, though subtle,
have begun to reshape the dynamics of interaction in my online lessons,
reinforcing the value of reflection as a tool for pedagogical growth. Jonathan
Acuña Solano |
Encouraging
Social Language in Online ELT for Young and Working Adults: Reflections from
the British Council’s TeachingEnglish Course
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Abstract This
paper explores the role of social language in English language teaching (ELT)
through a reflective analysis of a professional development module from the
TeachingEnglish platform. While the course content is primarily designed for
primary and secondary education contexts, this study examines how its
principles can be adapted to online instruction for young adults and working
professionals. Drawing on personal teaching experience, the paper identifies
key barriers to informal interaction, including cultural expectations,
learner affect, and contextual constraints. It further analyzes how
strategies such as rapport-building, task integration, and the use of digital
tools can foster meaningful social interaction in virtual classrooms. The
discussion is supported by theoretical perspectives from sociocultural and
second language acquisition frameworks. Ultimately, the paper argues that
social language, when thoughtfully adapted, plays a crucial role in enhancing
learner engagement, lowering affective barriers, and promoting communicative
competence in adult online ELT environments. |
Keywords Social
Language, Online Learning, Adult Education, Classroom Interaction, Affective
Filter, Communicative Competence, Reflective Practice, British Council |
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Resumen Este trabajo explora el papel del lenguaje social en
la enseñanza del inglés mediante un análisis reflexivo de un módulo de
desarrollo profesional de la plataforma TeachingEnglish. Aunque el contenido
del curso está principalmente orientado a contextos de educación primaria y
secundaria, este estudio examina cómo sus principios pueden adaptarse a la
enseñanza en línea dirigida a jóvenes adultos y profesionales. A partir de la
experiencia docente personal, se identifican barreras clave para la
interacción informal, como las expectativas culturales, los factores
afectivos y las limitaciones contextuales. Asimismo, se analizan estrategias
como la construcción de rapport, la integración de tareas y el uso de
herramientas digitales para fomentar una interacción significativa en
entornos virtuales. El análisis se apoya en marcos teóricos socioculturales y
de adquisición de segundas lenguas. En conclusión, se sostiene que el
lenguaje social, cuando se adapta de manera adecuada, desempeña un papel
fundamental en el fortalecimiento del compromiso del estudiante, la reducción
de barreras afectivas y el desarrollo de la competencia comunicativa en
contextos de enseñanza en línea para adultos. |
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Resumo Este trabalho explora o papel da linguagem social no
ensino de inglês por meio de uma análise reflexiva de um módulo de
desenvolvimento profissional da plataforma TeachingEnglish. Embora o conteúdo
do curso seja principalmente voltado para contextos de ensino fundamental e
médio, este estudo examina como seus princípios podem ser adaptados ao ensino
on-line para jovens adultos e profissionais. Com base na experiência docente
pessoal, são identificadas barreiras importantes à interação informal, como
expectativas culturais, fatores afetivos e limitações contextuais. Além
disso, são analisadas estratégias como a construção de rapport, a integração
de tarefas e o uso de ferramentas digitais para promover uma interação
significativa em ambientes virtuais. A discussão é fundamentada em
perspectivas teóricas socioculturais e de aquisição de segunda língua. Por
fim, argumenta-se que a linguagem social, quando devidamente adaptada,
desempenha um papel essencial no aumento do engajamento dos alunos, na
redução de barreiras afetivas e no desenvolvimento da competência
comunicativa em contextos de ensino on-line para adultos. |
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Introduction
Social
language, the informal, relational use of language that builds rapport and
community, has long been associated with classroom climate, class culture, and
learner engagement. In Module 2, Unit 3 (“Encouraging social language”) of the
British Council’s TeachingEnglish: Organising the Classroom course, EFL teachers
are invited to reflect on barriers to informal interaction and strategies for
strengthening it in their contexts. While many examples provided in the course
are designed for primary and secondary language classrooms, the principles
underlying social interaction remain highly relevant for instructors working
with young adults and working professionals in online environments.
As an
online university and adult education instructor, I (Jonathan Acuña Solano)
approach these ideas from a context distinct from child-centered classrooms.
This essay critically reflects on the British Council course content, situates
it within adult ELT pedagogy, and integrates theoretical support from scholars
such as Lev Vygotsky, Stephen Krashen, and Malcolm Knowles to examine how
social language can enhance cognitive, linguistic, and affective development
among adult learners.
Barriers to Social Interaction: Cultural and
Affective Dimensions
The
British Council (n.d.) course highlights several barriers to informal
interaction: learners’ age, proficiency level, school culture, and teacher
identity. While some obstacles, such as “learners are too young to communicate
clearly” (British Council, n.d.), are not applicable in adult contexts, others
remain highly relevant. For instance, the course notes that learners may be
reserved, reluctant to share personal details, or believe the teacher should
“concentrate on teaching” (British Council, n.d.).
From
my +15-year online teaching experience, shyness can be a decisive ingredient:
“Shyness can be another factor that can prevent students to participate in some
sort of social language. Additionally, learners may not be interested in
engaging in conversations with their teacher for cultural or personal reasons”
(Acuña Solano, 2026).
In
intercultural contexts, such as when teaching Taiwanese, South Korean, and
Costa Rican learners, I observed that some students were “very reserved at the
beginning,” gradually becoming more open as trust developed (Acuña Solano, 2026).
In Costa Rican classrooms, reservedness is less culturally pronounced, though
individual shyness persists. Importantly, I have learned to recognize moments
when interaction may threaten learners’ privacy. In such cases, “I’d rather
refrain from interacting with learners to avoid making their affective filter
move up” (Acuña Solano, 2026).
This
reference to the “affective filter” draws directly from Krashen’s (1982)
hypothesis that emotional variables such as anxiety, embarrassment, or low
self-esteem can block language acquisition. Social interaction must therefore
be intentional, respectful, and sensitive to learners’ psychological
boundaries. It does not have to be perceived as something learners are forced
to hop in but a personal choice where students can test what they have learned.
Social Language and Cognitive Development
The British
Council’s (n.d.) course suggests that “some theories suggest that social
development can aid cognitive development.” This assertion aligns strongly with
Vygotsky’s (1978) sociocultural theory, which posits that learning is
fundamentally mediated through social interaction. Language is not merely a
vehicle for expressing thought but a tool for shaping it.
For
adult English learners, either in online or face-to-face learning settings,
this insight is particularly relevant. Unlike children, adults bring complex
professional identities, prior knowledge, and established communicative
patterns to the classroom. Social language in this context does not simply
build “social skills”; it activates prior experiences and situates learning
within meaningful interpersonal exchanges linked to their everyday routine
personal or corporate life, or both.
For
example, when I introduce a lesson topic by asking about learners’ work
routines or professional challenges, I am not merely engaging in small talk. I
am activating schema and creating what Vygotsky would describe as a socially
mediated zone of proximal development. The conversation with my learners becomes
a scaffold for academic language use. Thus, social interaction is not
peripheral to learning—it is constitutive of it.
Adapting Primary-Level Techniques to Adult
Online Contexts
Through
the British Council’s (n.d.) course, several techniques are proposed such as
greeting learners, asking about their day, drawing on the board, and building
dialogues slowly through whole-class drills. While these are particularly
suited to younger learners, their underlying pedagogical intention, confidence-building
through structured interaction, remains valuable for any type of age group.
In my
online teaching scenario, adaptation is essential. I “always greet first
comers,” though I cannot interrupt a live online session to greet late arrivals
individually (Acuña Solano, 2026). Rather than drawing on a board, I provide
visual scaffolding through digital slides and shared screens.
With
lower-level adult learners, the course suggests topics such as personal
information, family, daily routines, and food. I adapt these by embedding them
into professional contexts. For working adults, discussions about daily
routines naturally expand into workplace communication. For university
students, family and routines can segue into topics about time management or
cultural expectations.
However,
I have also noted that “the ideas proposed by the British Council” are quite
appealing “if I were to teach in a primary school level. Many of their ideas
don’t fit much with my young adult and working adult learners because of their
level of mastery of English and due to their ages” (Acuña Solano, 2026).
This
observation resonates with Knowles’ (1984) theory of andragogy, which argues
that adult learners are self-directed, goal-oriented, and internally motivated.
They expect relevance and practicality. Therefore, social language activities
must respect their maturity and professional identity.
Increasing Interaction Through Task Design
The British
Council’s course includes testimonies from teachers such as Wyll, Halsina,
Stella, and Roland, who emphasize research-sharing, professional development
sessions, daily check-ins, and think-pair-share strategies. Although these
examples come from primary and secondary contexts, Roland’s emphasis on
designing academic tasks that naturally generate informal interaction is
particularly transferable.
In my
online classes, breakout rooms serve this function. During communicative tasks,
I make brief “interventions” by asking each participant a slightly more
personal follow-up question. This technique subtly blends academic and social
language. It allows me to learn more about students while reinforcing
spontaneous speaking.
Such
practices align with Long’s (1996) interaction hypothesis, which posits that
negotiation of meaning during interaction facilitates language acquisition.
Informal exchanges during structured tasks often produce authentic
clarification requests, reformulations, and elaborations.
Additionally,
digital platforms, recommended by the British Council as tools for promoting
less direct or even anonymous interaction, are especially effective in online
adult education. Discussion boards, collaborative documents, and chat features
enable learners to share opinions without the pressure of immediate oral
performance. For some reserved learners, written social interaction becomes a
bridge toward oral participation.
Building Class Culture and Rapport
One of
my key reflections in designing an action plan for social language was: “How
this can help build and boost the class culture” and “Getting to know your
learners is a maxim to foster learning” (Acuña Solano, 2026). Rapport has been
consistently linked to motivation and engagement in adult education (Dörnyei,
2001). In online environments, where physical presence is absent, intentional
rapport-building becomes even more critical. A short check-in question, a
shared anecdote, or recognition of a learner’s professional achievement can
significantly humanize the virtual space.
Importantly,
I have not experienced institutional discouragement of informal interaction in
Costa Rica. However, I recognize that in other cultural contexts, hierarchical
norms may discourage teacher-student familiarity. In such cases, demonstrating
professional warmth, rather than excessive familiarity, may help reconcile
institutional expectations with relational pedagogy.
A
“sign of friendship and true interest,” as I noted, can resolve interaction
barriers (Acuña Solano, 2026). Yet this friendship must remain pedagogically
grounded, avoiding oversharing or boundary crossing. Adult learners value
authenticity but also professionalism.
Integrating Social Language Throughout the
Lesson
The British
Council’s course invites teachers to consider when social language can be
integrated beyond beginnings and endings of lessons. In online adult classes,
opportunities arise:
- During
breakout-room monitoring
- In
chat-based quick polls
- In
feedback sessions
- Through
asynchronous discussion boards
- In
reflective exit tickets
These micro-moments allow
social language to coexist with academic objectives. Rather than isolating
“social time” from “learning time,” integration ensures that relational
interaction enhances linguistic practice. For example, after a formal
presentation task, asking, “Was this topic connected to anything you experience
at work?” transforms evaluation into dialogue. The academic task becomes
personally meaningful.
Implications for Adult Online ELT
Encouraging
social language in adult online ELT requires:
1.
Affective sensitivity
(Krashen, 1982)
2.
Social mediation awareness
(Vygotsky, 1978)
3.
Respect for adult identity and autonomy
(Knowles, 1984)
4.
Task-based interaction design
(Long, 1996)
5.
Intentional rapport-building
(Dörnyei, 2001)
Unlike children, adults do not
require simplified routines to develop social competence. Instead, they require
meaningful, relevant opportunities to use language relationally within
professional and academic contexts.
The British Council course provides foundational strategies. However, their successful implementation depends on contextual adaptation. For online instructors of young and working adults, social language should not resemble primary-school circle time. It should resemble authentic professional and interpersonal discourse.
Conclusion
The
British Council’s TeachingEnglish: Organising the Classroom course
underscores the pedagogical value of social language. While many examples are
tailored to younger learners, the underlying principles, rapport,
confidence-building, and social mediation, are equally applicable to adult
online education.
My
reflections reveal that encouraging social language requires cultural
awareness, affective sensitivity, and task integration. When thoughtfully
implemented, informal interaction lowers anxiety, activates prior knowledge,
strengthens class culture, and enhances communicative competence.
Ultimately,
social language is not an optional embellishment to adult ELT. It is a
relational infrastructure that supports cognitive and linguistic growth. In
online environments especially, intentional social interaction transforms
digital spaces into learning communities.
San
José, Costa Rica
Saturday,
March 21, 2026
📚 References
Acuña Solano, J.
(2026). Personal
reflections on TeachingEnglish: Organising the classroom (Module 2, Unit
3). Unpublished course notes.
British Council. (n.d.). TeachingEnglish: Organising the
classroom (Module 2, Unit 3: Encouraging social language). https://open.teachingenglish.org.uk/Team/UserProgrammeDetails/699499?stepId=2
Dörnyei, Z. (2001). Motivational strategies in the
language classroom. Cambridge University Press.
Krashen, S. D. (1982). Principles and practice in second
language acquisition. Pergamon.
Knowles, M. (1984). The adult learner: A neglected
species (3rd ed.). Gulf Publishing.
Long, M. H. (1996). The role of the linguistic environment
in second language acquisition. In W. Ritchie & T. Bhatia (Eds.), Handbook
of second language acquisition (pp. 413–468). Academic Press.
Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in society: The development
of higher psychological processes. Harvard University Press.
Encouraging Social Language in Online ELT for Young and Working Adults by Jonathan Acuña
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