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    Jonathan Acuña Solano, Post Author
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Illusion, Commodity, and Moral Disenchantment

Bourgeois Society, Characterization, Eça de Queirós, Imagery, Literary Analysis, Literary Criticism, Narrative Structure, Portuguese Realism 0 comments

 

Bourgeoise disillusionment
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in March 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     After reading O Mandarim by Eça de Queirós, I felt the need to continue exploring his ars literaria and to deepen my understanding of his narrative craft. One of the qualities that most fascinates me about Queirós’ writing is the way he treats seemingly mundane moments of everyday life from a peculiar and often revealing perspective. His stories rarely rely on extraordinary events; instead, they expose how ordinary situations can become morally and psychologically significant.

     This idea is something I have often shared with my students in literature classes: authors tell us stories lived by people like you and me. The characters that inhabit literary plots experience situations that many human beings have lived through in real life, moments of love, ambition, deception, disappointment, or discovery. What literature does is not invent humanity but illuminate it.

     In Singularidades de uma rapariga loura, Queirós offers a subtle but powerful illustration of this principle. The story presents us with Macário, an infatuated young man whose romantic fascination gradually transforms into disillusionment. What begins as admiration for the beauty and charm of Luísa, the blonde young woman of the title, ultimately reveals something far more troubling: the fragile moral foundations hidden beneath appearances. Through a seemingly small episode, the theft of a ring, Macário confronts the collapse of the idealized image he had constructed.

     This article explores how Queirós constructs that disillusionment through characterization, narrative structure, and symbolic imagery. By examining these elements, we can better appreciate how the author transforms an ordinary social episode into a revealing reflection on illusion, desire, and the complexities of human character.

Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano


Illusion, Commodity, and Moral Disenchantment:

Character Architecture, Plot Consciousness, and Symbolic Imagery in Singularidades de uma rapariga loura by Eça de Queirós

 

Abstract

This article analyzes the short story Singularidades de uma rapariga loura by Eça de Queirós through three complementary literary lenses: character construction, narrative arrangement, and symbolic imagery. Drawing on analytical frameworks for character analysis, plot structure, and imagery interpretation, the study examines how Queirós transforms a seemingly simple romantic episode into a reflection on illusion and moral disillusionment within bourgeois society. Special attention is given to the protagonist Macário and his idealization of Luísa, whose outward beauty contrasts with the moral ambiguity revealed through the theft of a ring. The analysis also considers how visual and material imagery reinforce the themes of appearance, deception, and the fragility of romantic idealization. By situating the story within the broader aesthetics of nineteenth-century realism, the article demonstrates how Queirós exposes the tension between social appearances and ethical substance in everyday life.

Keywords:

Eça de Queirós, Portuguese Realism, Characterization, Narrative Structure, Imagery, Bourgeois Society, Literary Analysis, Literary Criticism

 

 

Resumen

Este artículo analiza el cuento Singularidades de uma rapariga loura de Eça de Queirós a partir de tres ejes de estudio: la construcción de los personajes, la organización de los acontecimientos narrativos y el uso de la imaginería simbólica. Mediante marcos analíticos para el estudio del personaje, la estructura del argumento y la interpretación de imágenes literarias, el trabajo examina cómo Queirós transforma un episodio aparentemente simple de carácter romántico en una reflexión sobre la ilusión y el desencanto moral dentro de la sociedad burguesa. Se presta especial atención al protagonista, Macário, y a su idealización de Luísa, cuya belleza exterior contrasta con la ambigüedad moral que se revela en el episodio del robo de un anillo. Asimismo, se analiza cómo las imágenes visuales y materiales refuerzan los temas de la apariencia, el engaño y la fragilidad de los ideales románticos. Al situar el relato dentro de la estética del realismo del siglo XIX, el artículo muestra cómo Queirós expone la tensión entre las apariencias sociales y la sustancia ética en la vida cotidiana.

 

 

Resumo

Este artigo analisa o conto Singularidades de uma rapariga loura, de Eça de Queirós, a partir de três eixos principais: a construção das personagens, a organização dos acontecimentos narrativos e o uso da imagética simbólica. Utilizando modelos analíticos para o estudo das personagens, da estrutura do enredo e da interpretação de imagens literárias, o estudo examina como Queirós transforma um episódio aparentemente simples de natureza romântica numa reflexão sobre a ilusão e o desencanto moral no contexto da sociedade burguesa. Particular atenção é dedicada ao protagonista, Macário, e à sua idealização de Luísa, cuja beleza exterior contrasta com a ambiguidade moral revelada no episódio do roubo de um anel. Além disso, o artigo analisa como as imagens visuais e materiais reforçam os temas da aparência, do engano e da fragilidade dos ideais românticos. Ao situar o conto no contexto do realismo do século XIX, o estudo demonstra como Queirós evidencia a tensão entre as aparências sociais e a substância ética na vida quotidiana.

 


José Maria Eça de Queirós’ Singularidades de uma rapariga loura (1874) stands as one of the most refined early expressions of Portuguese Realism. Though brief in length, the story condenses within its structure a complex meditation on illusion, bourgeois morality, and the instability of romantic idealization. Through disciplined narrative economy, psychologically revealing gestures, and symbolically charged imagery, most notably the theft of the ring, Queiróz exposes the fragility of aestheticized love when confronted with ethical reality.

This essay deepens theoretical engagement with Realism and Naturalism, and explicitly grounds the analysis in the methodological frameworks developed by Jonathan Acuña Solano (n.d.-a, n.d.-b, n.d.-c). The study proceeds through three interrelated axes: (1) character architecture, (2) arrangement of events and narrative structure, and (3) imagery and symbolic condensation, especially the ring as commodity and moral fracture. Engagement with Erich Auerbach, Georg Lukacs, and Emile Zola situates Queirós within broader European literary currents.

I. Character Architecture: Surface Radiance and Moral Exposure

Acuña Solano’s (n.d.-a) tripartite character model, physical, social, and psychological, proves particularly effective in examining Queirós’ restrained yet incisive characterization. The author avoids overt psychologizing; instead, character emerges through social positioning, gesture, and action.

Macário: The Bourgeois Subject of Illusion

Macário is introduced within a coach, narrating his past experience to a fellow traveler. The frame establishes reflective distance and positions Macário as both protagonist and interpreter of his own disenchantment.

Physical and Social Dimensions

Macário belongs to Lisbon’s middle-class commercial milieu. He works in his uncle’s warehouse and depends economically upon him. His social identity is thus structurally subordinate. As Lukács (1962) insists, the realist character is inseparable from socio-economic totality; Macário’s romantic trajectory cannot be detached from his material conditions.

His bourgeois respectability shapes his moral expectations. Marriage represents not passion alone but social stability. When his uncle objects to the engagement, Macário chooses love over financial security, revealing both romantic idealism and limited foresight.

Psychological Construction: Love as Projection

Macário’s love originates visually. He first sees Luísa framed at a window:

“Era uma rapariga loura, muito branca, com uns olhos grandes e suaves.”

The visual emphasis, loura, branca, olhos grandes, foregrounds aesthetic perception. He does not describe conversation, intelligence, or character; he describes appearance. The window functions symbolically as a frame: Luísa is seen as image before being known as person.

Auerbach (1953) observes that nineteenth-century realism confers existential seriousness upon everyday perception. Here, a glance initiates life-altering commitment. Yet that seriousness rests upon unstable ground: sight precedes knowledge.

Macário’s psychological structure is thus defined by projection. He invests the image with moral purity. His super-objective, in Acuña Solano’s (n.d.-a) terminology, is marriage founded upon idealized beauty. His will appears strong when defying his uncle, yet weak in discernment. He interrogates neither Luísa’s character nor the economic fragility of her household. His retrospective narration suggests subdued self-awareness. He recounts events without dramatic rhetoric, reinforcing the tone of disenchantment rather than tragedy.

Luísa: Angelic Exterior, Vacant Core

Physical Radiance and Social Performance

Luísa is consistently described through luminous visual imagery. Her blondness becomes emblematic. The narrator recalls her presence at the window, framed by light, almost pictorial. She appears as aesthetic object, an embodiment of bourgeois femininity.

Her family occupies a precarious social position: genteel but economically diminished. The domestic interior conveys faded respectability. Social performance masks instability.

Psychological Revelation Through Theft

Queirós withholds interior monologue. Instead, psychological truth emerges through action. The pivotal moment occurs in the jewel shop, when Luísa appropriates a ring. The narration is restrained yet devastating:

“Vi-a, claramente, meter o anel na luva.”

The verb meter is blunt, concrete, devoid of euphemism. The act is not dramatized; it is observed. The clarity, claramente, eliminates ambiguity. The image is tactile and visual simultaneously: the ring, the glove, concealment.

From the perspective of Naturalism, as articulated by Zola (1880/2004), behavior reveals underlying determinism. Yet Queirós refrains from attributing the act to poverty or compulsion. The theft appears casual, almost aesthetic. The absence of desperation intensifies moral vacancy.

Applying Acuña Solano’s (n.d.-a) psychological categories, we get the following results:

  • Moral Standards: Internally inconsistent; appearance of propriety without ethical substance.
  • Ambitions: Social ascension through marriage.
  • Peculiarity: Disjunction between luminous exterior and covert transgression.
  • Abilities: Social charm and performative innocence.

The theft reconfigures Luísa’s entire symbolic identity. Her blondness no longer signifies purity but superficiality.

II. Plot Architecture: Frame, Progression, and Epiphany

Acuña Solano’s (n.d.-b) structural framework emphasizes sequence, conflict type, climax, and interrelatedness. Queirós’ story demonstrates remarkable structural coherence.

Frame Narrative and Temporal Consciousness

The coach setting establishes narrative mediation. Macário recounts past events in the presence of a listener. This frame introduces reflective distance and situates the story within memory. The embedded narrative then unfolds chronologically.

The cause-and-effect chain is precise:

1.    Visual encounter.

2.    Romantic fixation.

3.    Uncle’s opposition.

4.    Economic rupture.

5.    Engagement.

6.    Jewel shop visit.

7.    Theft revelation.

8.    Immediate dissolution.

The progression of the story’s plot exemplifies realist discipline: no digressions, no melodramatic excess.

Conflict Typology

Using Acuña Solano’s categories (n.d.-b), the story includes:

  • Individual vs. Individual: Macário vs. Luísa (moral incompatibility).
  • Individual vs. Society: Economic authority of the uncle.
  • Individual vs. Self: Macário’s internal conflict between illusion and evidence.

The climax occurs at the jewel shop. There is no extended confrontation. Instead, recognition produces immediate resolution. The falling action is minimal; epiphany is subdued. Macário’s final awareness is encapsulated in his silent decision to end the engagement. The revelation is existential rather than theatrical.

III. Imagery and Symbolic Condensation: The Ring as Commodity and Moral Sign

Acuña Solano’s (n.d.-c) imagery model emphasizes sensory categories, symbolism, emotional impact, and thematic interplay. The ring scene provides a concentrated site for such analysis.

Visual Motif: The Window

The recurring image of Luísa at the window symbolizes threshold and mediation. The window separates interior from exterior, private from public. Macário’s love begins with sight, reinforcing the primacy of visual imagery.

The narrative implicitly questions the reliability of sight. What appears luminous may conceal hollowness; Macário’s veil over his eyes is now gone and is able to see what has been hiding from him.

The Ring: Circularity, Commitment, and Commodity

The ring traditionally symbolizes eternity and union through its circular form. In bourgeois culture, it also represents economic exchange and property transfer. However, its theft at the shop inverts these associations in the plot narrative. The symbolic circularity, unity and continuity, becomes rupture and concealment.

The moment is understated:

“Ela estava muito pálida… e sorria.”

The pallor and smile coexist. Emotional ambiguity deepens symbolic density. The ring, intended as emblem of commitment, becomes object of appropriation.

Lukács (1962) argues that realism reveals the mediation of human relations by material objects within capitalist society. The ring embodies this mediation. A romantic promise is inseparable from commodity exchange. By stealing the ring, Luísa exposes the commodified substratum of courtship and the end of Macário’s illusion over the girl at the window.

Sensory and Emotional Impact

The tactile dimension, the cold metal hidden in a glove, creates physical immediacy. The absence of overt drama intensifies emotional void. There is no outcry. Silence dominates.

Auerbach (1953) emphasizes that realism elevates everyday scenes to existential significance. A minor theft becomes the axis of moral collapse. The symbolic power of the ring lies in its ordinariness.

IV. Theoretical Density: Realism, Naturalism, and Irony

Queirós participates in the broader European realist movement. His method aligns with Auerbach’s notion of serious everyday representation. The story lacks aristocratic grandeur; it dwells in commercial Lisbon.

Naturalist echoes appear in behavioral revelation without authorial moralizing. Yet unlike Zola’s deterministic fatalism, Queirós preserves moral agency. Macário chooses to break the engagement. Disillusionment becomes ethical clarity.

It can then be stated that irony permeates the plot’s narrative. The title’s “singularities” reduce extraordinary beauty to banal moral deficiency. The understated tone intensifies critique.

V. Commodity, Gender, and Bourgeois Fragility

The ring functions not only symbolically but socio-economically. Engagement, within bourgeois culture, merges affective and transactional dimensions. The jewel shop scene literalizes this fusion. Luísa’s theft destabilizes both romance and commerce. She appropriates without exchange. The moral contract underlying both love and market is violated.

The blondness motif highlighted by Queirós, rapariga loura, signals European aesthetic ideals. Its subversion critiques superficial standards of desirability. Beauty, in this particular context, becomes mask rather than moral indicator.

VI. Epiphany Without Catharsis

The story concludes quietly. Macário narrates his experience as finished episode. There is no reconciliation, no dramatic punishment. The effect is sober disenchantment.

The ring’s circular symbolism, eternity, ironically contrasts with the abrupt end of engagement. Continuity collapses into discontinuity. Macário’s epiphany is negative knowledge: beauty does not guarantee integrity. The girl in the window frame, as an idealized master painting, is shattered to pieces as it metaphorically broke. The Realist commitment to exposure replaces Romantic transcendence.

Conclusion

Singularidades de uma rapariga loura exemplifies Eça de Queirós’ mastery of realist economy and symbolic precision. Through disciplined characterization, coherent plot progression, and concentrated imagery, the story dismantles romantic idealization within bourgeois society.

Jonathan Acuña Solano’s analytical frameworks illuminate the text’s architecture:

  • The character model clarifies the disjunction between physical radiance and psychological vacancy.
  • The plot structure model reveals causal coherence and restrained climax.
  • The imagery model exposes the symbolic density of the ring as commodity and moral sign.

The theft of the ring condenses the narrative’s thematic tensions into a single gesture. What appears luminous proves hollow. What symbolizes unity becomes emblem of fracture. In this quiet but incisive exposure, Queirós affirms the Realist conviction that truth resides not in spectacle but in the revelation of everyday illusion.

San José, Costa Rica

Saturday, March 7, 2026



📚 References

Acuña Solano, J. (n.d.-a). Character analysis worksheet [Unpublished instructional document].

Acuña Solano, J. (n.d.-b). The arrangement of events in a story [Unpublished instructional document].

Acuña Solano, J. (n.d.-c). Analyzing imagery in literature [Unpublished instructional document].

Auerbach, E. (1953). Mimesis: The representation of reality in Western literature. Princeton University Press. https://press.princeton.edu/books/paperback/9780691135568/mimesis

Britannica, T. Editors. (2024). Eça de Queirós. Encyclopaedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Eca-de-Queiros

Lukács, G. (1962). The historical novel. University of Nebraska Press. https://ia601307.us.archive.org/21/items/in.ernet.dli.2015.65818/2015.65818.The-Historical-Novel.pdf

Queirós, E. de. (2000). Singularidades de uma rapariga loura. Project Gutenberg. https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/

Zola, E. (2004). The experimental novel (Original work published 1880). Project Gutenberg. https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/



Illusion, Commodity, And Moral Disenchantment by Jonathan Acuña



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Saturday, March 07, 2026



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

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



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