Daily schedule
Sunday 3 - Saturday 16 August 2025
This two-week programme provides over 40 hours of tuition, comprising:
- 8 x 90-minute lectures/seminars
- 30 hours of workshop meetings (7.5 hours per course)
Timetable
Monday - Friday (both weeks 1 and 2):
09:15 - 10:45 Workshop
10:45 - 11:15 Tea/coffee break
11:15 - 12:45 Workshop
13:00 - 13:45 Lunch
14:00 - 15:30 Lecture/Seminar
Workshops
As the workshop sessions incorporate a large amount of interaction with colleagues, all teachers are invited to contribute proactively to group discussions.
You choose two morning workshops per week.
Week 1 workshops (4-8 August 2025)
Week 2 workshops (11-15 August 2025)
Please note that we will make every effort to ensure you can participate in your workshops of choice. However, pleases will be allocated on a first-come first-served basis. If your choice of workshop is full, then we would be happy to place you on a waiting list in case a place should become available.
Lectures
After lunch we invite you to join us for a stimulating and informative plenary lecture:
- Visual Literacy for the Language
Class - Adrian Underhill
- Stories of our professional learning: sowing the seeds of our international learning community - Hanna Kryszewska
- Are your students ready to connect? - Shaun Wilden
- Building a culture for learning:
exploring teachers’ social-emotional competences - Anna Hasper
- Dyslexia and Learning English:
Literacy and Wider Issues - Jon Hird
-
Feedback: The Learner’s View - Elaine Boyd
-
Ako - same old or something new? - Robert McLarty
-
Taking this experience back home - Adrian Underhill
A synopsis of each lecture can be viewed online here.
ELT publishers' book display
During the Seminar, representatives from leading ELT publishers will be present to showcase current and forthcoming ELT publications.
Meals and receptions
Resident participants:
Breakfast, lunch and dinner are provided in the college's dining hall on weekdays. Only breakfast will be served on Saturday 9 and Sunday 10 August. We invite you to join us for a welcome drinks reception and dinner on Sunday 3 August and for our formal farewell drinks reception and gala dinner on Friday 15 August.
Non-resident participants:
Lunch is provided in the college's dining hall on weekdays. We invite you to join us for a welcome drinks reception and dinner on Sunday 3 August and for our formal farewell drinks reception and gala dinner on Friday 15 August.
Social programme
We've carefully tailored your social programme to allow you plenty of free time to explore and enjoy Oxford. We've also arranged a number of optional activities (all at no extra cost) during your course which may include the following:
- Guided walking tour of Oxford
- Cultural exchange evening
- Punting on the River Cherwell
- Oxford scavenger hunt
- River and canal walk
- Quiz night
- Pub visit with tutors
Participants (both resident and non resident) who would prefer not to join in any of our evening activities are most welcome to relax in the College Common Room or in one of Brasenose's beautiful quads.
As well as being on hand to help with any course and college-related questions, your summer school assistants will be happy to provide you with information about Oxford and places to visit.
Course Director
Assistant Director of the Department (Professional and Open Access Courses)
Tutors
Principal tutor - Adrian Underhill
Pronunciation, Performance and Poetry and Well-being in the Classroom
Adrian Underhill is series editor of the Macmillan Books for Teachers and author of Sound Foundations: Learning and Teaching Pronunciation, and its associated phonemic chart. He was trainer and director of the International Teacher Training Institute at International House in Hastings until 1999, since when he has worked internationally as an independent ELT consultant with a focus on teacher training, professional and organisational development, and school leadership. He is a past president of IATEFL and is principal tutor on the Oxford University ELT Summer Seminar.
Jon Hird
Exploring Grammar: Words, Clauses, Sentences and Beyond and Teaching a Changing Language: Aspects of Contemporary English
Jon Hird is a teacher, teacher trainer and ELT materials writer based in Oxford. He teaches at the University of Oxford and frequently gives teacher-training talks and workshops in the UK and overseas. He has written and contributed to many ELT publications for a number of publishers. His most recent publications include Oxford Learner’s Pocket Verbs and Tenses (OUP) and components of the Language Hub, Roadmap, Navigate, Keynote, Oxford EAP and Life course book series. He has also written and adapted a range of materials for learners with dyslexia.
Robert McLarty
Creating Classroom Materials and I'm sure you can manage
Robert is an experienced teacher and trainer who has worked in the UK, France and New Zealand. Editor of Modern English Teacher, he is interested in materials writing and developing speaking skills. In his spare time he plays golf, paints and walks.
Hanna Kryszewska
Linguistic Mediation in the Secondary School Classroom: Skills, Strategies and Activities (B1 and above) and Towards Mastery: Ideas for Inspiring Advanced Learners (C1 and above) of English
Hanna Kryszewska is a teacher, teacher trainer, trainer of trainers and mentors, author of resource books and course books and former senior lecturer at the University of Gdańsk, Poland. She has co-authored: Options for English (PWSiP, 1991), Learner-based Teaching (OUP, 1992), Reading on Your Own (PWN, 1995), Towards Teaching, (Heinemann, 1995), Stand-by Book, S. Lindstromberg, Ed. (CUP, 1996), Observing English Lessons - A Video Teacher Training Course, and The Company Words Keep (DELTA, 2012).Since February 2006, she has been the editor of website magazine Humanising Language Teaching.
Shaun Wilden
Harnessing Generative AI: A practical Guide for the ELT teacher and Escape the classroom! Using puzzles, games and gamification in education
Shaun is an education technologist who teaches on both face-to-face and online courses. In the Department for Continuing Education he teaches digital literacy, as well as short courses in mobile learning and teaching online. His latest book, Mobile Learning, was published by Oxford University Press.
He is the academic director for online courses for the International House World Organisation overseeing their suite of asynchronous teacher development courses and is a consultant to a number of educational organisations to assist them in their synchronous and asynchronous course provision. His current area of interest and research is learner expectations in peer to peer social presence within asynchronous courses.
Anna Hasper
Igniting the Fire Within: Motivating Learners in the English Language Classroom
Anna Hasper is a writer, course designer and teacher educator. She is DELTA & CELTA tutor and assessor for Cambridge English Assessment and delivers both online and face-to-face teacher training courses around the world. Anna holds a DELTA and a Masters in Education and is currently researching teacher motivation for her PhD. She has worked with pre- and in-service teachers in over 30 countries for organisations such as the British Council, International House, NILE, local ministries and leading publishers and is a regular speaker at global ELT conferences. She is a writer and a resident blogger for Modern English Teacher and the author of Supplementary activities for English Language teaching: large classes and low resource contexts and most recently Activities for Social-Emotional Learning: Developing social-emotional competences in the ELT classroom.
Elaine Boyd
Improve your assessment literacy
Dr Elaine Boyd is a teacher trainer, writer and researcher who specialises in English language assessment. She has worked in the field for over 30 years for a range of international exam organisations, including Cambridge, Pearson, the British Council, Trinity College London and Oxford University Press. She has also worked with teacher educators in developing and delivering courses in assessment literacy in Europe, India and SE Asia and has published a number of articles in this field. Elaine has also authored several exam coursebooks for a range of age groups, including the Gold Experience series for Pearson. She is an Associate Lecturer on the M.A. Linguistics/TESOL at the Institute of Education, University College London.