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+01 424 645 5957

+39 347 378 8169

Needs Analysis for TEFL Teachers

How To Teach English

The Needs Analysis is a simple concept and an extremely important one at the same time. It is the cornerstone of teaching English and its importance cannot be underestimated.

Essentially it is the process of assessing the needs of your students (or student if you are doing this for a 1-to-1‏‎ lesson). In other words, what they know already, what they want to know, and finally what interests them.

Once this has been established, the syllabus and individual lessons can be designed to suit those needs. Put basically, you find out what your students need to learn and then teach them this.

Assessing Students

You need to find out about your students. The first thing to ask is:

  • Why are you learning English?
  • What do you want to do with your English?
  • How will you use English in the future?

There are many reasons why people learn English: to go to an English speaking university, to do business with foreign companies, to live in an English speaking country, to go on holiday to England, to watch Hollywood movies in the original language… This will simply lead you to teaching them what they need to know whether that be Business English‏‎ or English for Academic Purposes‏‎ or English for Special Purposes‏‎.

The next thing you need to know is what your students already know – there’s no point teaching them the ABCs when they can read and understand Shakespeare.

To find this out one common technique is to give the students a placement test. This is merely a series of questions on English grammar‏‎ and vocabulary‏‎ which get progressively harder and more advanced. Where the student begins to falter is where their level is. After a test like this you will be able to place your students roughly into the right level from beginner to advanced.

In some cases of course placement tests aren’t practical especially in the cases of private English lessons with just one or two students. An alternative here is simply to talk to the student about general topics. By doing this you’ll get a rough idea of how good that student knows English. Of course it isn’t perfect but experienced teachers are often able to understand very quickly the level a student is at.

Teacher Tip: note that asking a student how good their English is is pretty much a waste of time. It’s very difficult if not impossible for most people to make an accurate assessment of their own language abilities!

The final step is to find out the interests of your students. For example, if you ask class of teenagers then you’ll likely hear subjects like music, fashion, movies and so on. If you ask a class of business people you may here things like politics, travel, current affairs and so on.

After the Needs Analysis

Once you have made the needs analysis you can prepare useful and accurate lessons for the class. This may be as simple as choosing the right level and kind of coursebook‏‎ for them, or it might mean creating a whole syllabus for the year and each lesson within that.

Whatever you do, taking good note of the needs analysis will mean:

  • Your lessons will teach your students language they need to know: this could be exam students practicing old exam papers, business people having telephone practice or a General English‏‎ class talking about their favorite sports stars.
  • The content of your lesson will be of the right level: you will not be trying to teach a Beginner’s class the third conditional‏ and likewise you won’t be teaching your advanced class to tell the time.
  • The content of the your lessons will also be interesting to your class. When you know that your class all follow the international music scene avidly you can use songs to practice certain grammatical or functional points; when you know your older class enjoys discussing current events you can use clippings from the news as a basis for some activities.

Conclusion

Every single new class or student needs a needs analysis. This will make sure that what you teach them:

  1. is of the right level
  2. is useful to them
  3. is of interest to them

And to reiterate what was said at the beginning of this article, the importance of the needs analysis cannot be overlooked.

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6 Comments

  1. Jayne Swinbourne

    This is an basic aspect which no teacher should overlook. It has to be the starting point for all courses.

  2. simona

    just to let u know there’s a typo : To find this out one common technique is to give ………………. Where the student begins to falter is where there THEIR level is.

    • Pete West

      Oops! Well done for spotting that typo, Simona. And thank you very much for letting us know.

      • midwestslp

        There are a couple of typos you may want to correct. You have the word “beginner” underlined. A box appears when you hover the mouse over it. “The” should be “They” and the word “all” is missing.

        Thanks for the article.

        • Pete West

          Well spotted! Many thanks.

  3. Danielle

    Any online recommended placement tests?