Helping Students Feel They Belong

CPD points: 1

Helping international students feel that they belong is central to their academic success, engagement, and retention. When students experience connection, respect, and inclusion in the classroom, they are more confident, more willing to participate, and better positioned to thrive.

This professional learning module explores practical, research-informed strategies that teachers can use to strengthen belonging in culturally diverse classrooms. Through a focus on cultural responsiveness, classroom community building, and structured peer interaction, you will develop concrete approaches that can be applied immediately in your own teaching context.

This is a self-paced, interactive module designed to support reflection and practical action.

Course Structure and Content

This module includes a short preparatory activity followed by four lessons:

Before You Begin: Activating Your Knowledge
Engage with selected short videos and readings to activate prior knowledge about belonging and inclusion in culturally diverse classrooms. You will also complete a brief diagnostic quiz to reflect on your current understanding and experiences. This activity is designed to frame your learning and prepare you for the core content.

Lesson 1: Creating Culturally Responsive Classrooms
Explore what cultural responsiveness means in practice and identify strategies to integrate diverse perspectives and experiences into teaching and classroom norms.

Lesson 2: Building a Classroom Community
Examine how intentional community-building fosters trust, collaboration, and participation, and learn practical ways to strengthen connection from the first week of a course.

Lesson 3: Peer Interaction and Structured Support
Consider the role of peer relationships in belonging and explore strategies to structure group work and intercultural interaction more effectively.

Lesson 4: Reflection and Action Planning
Consolidate your learning and identify three practical actions you will implement to strengthen belonging in your next course.

Each section includes short video content, guided reflection prompts, and a short knowledge check quiz.


What to Expect

This is a self-paced online module combining:

  • Short instructional videos
  • Practical classroom strategies
  • Reflection prompts
  • Section quizzes to consolidate understanding
  • A final action-planning task

You will be encouraged to pause and reflect throughout. While reflections are not submitted, they are designed to support meaningful application in your own context.


Time Commitment

The total time commitment for this module is approximately 30 minutes, including video viewing, reflection, and completion of quizzes.

You may complete the module in one sitting or work through it in smaller segments at your convenience.


How to Get the Most Out of This Course

To maximise the value of this module:

  • Engage actively with the reflection prompts.
  • Consider specific examples from your own classroom context.
  • Identify small, realistic adjustments rather than large-scale changes.
  • Write down your three action steps at the end of the module and revisit them when planning your next course.

Belonging is strengthened through consistent, intentional practice. Even small changes can have a meaningful impact on student experience.


Who Is This Course For?

This course is designed for teachers and trainers working with international students, particularly in adult learning environments.

It is suitable for:

  • English language teachers
  • VET and higher education trainers
  • Academic managers seeking to strengthen inclusive practice
  • Educators working in culturally diverse classrooms

No prior training in cultural responsiveness is required.


Support and Assistance

If you experience any technical difficulties accessing the module or completing quizzes, please contact your NEAS support representative or the LMS administrator.

For questions related to the content of this module, you may contact the NEAS Professional Development team.

We encourage you to revisit the module materials at any time to support ongoing reflection and implementation.

Student Engagement and Academic Motivation

CPD points: 2

Engagement and motivation sit at the heart of effective teaching — but sustaining them can be challenging, particularly in busy, assessment-driven learning environments. This course explores practical, research-informed strategies for recognising disengagement early, responding to academic fatigue, and creating learning conditions where students feel motivated, supported, and willing to participate.

Rather than focusing on quick fixes or surface-level activities, this course takes a deeper look at why learners disengage and how teachers can respond in ways that are realistic, inclusive, and sustainable.


What You Will Learn (Learning Outcomes)

By the end of this course, you will be able to:

  • Recognise the early warning signs of academic fatigue in learning environments
  • Understand common causes of disengagement, including curriculum overload and disconnected content
  • Design lesson openings that spark curiosity and cognitive engagement
  • Use a range of participation strategies to support diverse learner preferences
  • Reduce cognitive overload by structuring tasks and assessments more effectively
  • Build motivation through relevance, feedback, and strong teacher–student relationships
  • Create psychologically safe learning environments that encourage risk-taking and persistence

Course Structure and Content

This course is structured into a short introductory lesson, followed by five focused lessons and a concluding section:

  • Before You Begin – Activating Your Knowledge
    A brief reflective lesson designed to surface prior knowledge and set the foundation for the course.
  • Lesson 1: Academic Fatigue
    Identifying warning signs of disengagement and understanding underlying causes.
  • Lesson 2: Curiosity and Participation
    Using lesson starters, curiosity hooks, and inclusive participation strategies.
  • Lesson 3: Help-Seeking and Silent Participation
    Supporting help-seeking behaviours and offering low-pressure ways for students to participate.
  • Lesson 4: Workload and Relevance
    Managing cognitive load, structuring large tasks, and making learning meaningful.
  • Lesson 5: Relationships and Feedback
    Strengthening motivation through personalised feedback and teacher–student connections.
  • Conclusion and Key Takeaways
    A synthesis of core ideas, plus a bibliography and suggestions for further reading and professional learning.

Each lesson includes a short video and a brief quiz to consolidate key ideas.


What to Expect

  • Short, focused videos that expand on key ideas rather than reading slides aloud
  • Practical classroom strategies that can be adapted to different contexts
  • Reflective questions to help you connect ideas to your own teaching practice
  • Low-stakes quizzes designed to reinforce learning, not test memory

Time Commitment

The total time commitment for this course is approximately 60–90 minutes, depending on how much time you spend reflecting on and applying the ideas to your own context. The course is self-paced and can be completed in multiple short sessions.


How to Get the Most Out of This Course

To maximise the value of this course, you are encouraged to:

  • Complete the Before You Begin lesson before moving into Lesson 1
  • Reflect on your own teaching context as you progress through each lesson
  • Try one or two strategies in practice rather than attempting everything at once
  • Use the quizzes as opportunities to consolidate understanding, not as assessments

Who This Course Is For

This course is designed for:

  • English language teachers and educators
  • Academic managers and coordinators
  • Professional development leaders
  • Teachers working in ELICOS, higher education, or related learning contexts

No specialist background knowledge is required.


Support and Assistance

If you experience any technical issues or have questions about the course content, please contact NEAS Professional Development via the NEAS website or your usual NEAS contact.


When you’re ready, you can begin with the Before You Begin – Activating Your Knowledge lesson.

Scaffolding Content in a Second Langauge

CPD points: 1

Supporting learners in a second language environment requires more than content knowledge — it requires thoughtful design. This course will guide you through practical scaffolding strategies that make academic content more accessible, reduce cognitive load, and build learner confidence. Whether you teach English for Academic Purposes, foundation studies, high school subjects, or vocational training, these tools will help you create lessons where all learners can succeed.


What You Will Learn (Learning Outcomes)

By the end of this course, you will be able to:

  • Explain what scaffolding is and why it is essential in second language teaching.
  • Apply three core scaffolding strategies — chunkingmultimodal support, and vocabulary scaffolds — to help learners process and engage with complex content.
  • Integrate these strategies into real lessons through practical, step-by-step examples.
  • Reflect on your own teaching to identify where scaffolding can improve learner comprehension and confidence.
  • Gradually release support so students become more autonomous and capable in academic English contexts.

🧭 Course Structure

This course is divided into short, focused lessons designed to be completed at your own pace:

  1. Before You Start – Activating Your Knowledge
    A short quiz to warm up your thinking and connect the course to your current practice.
  2. Lesson 1 – Understanding Scaffolding
    What scaffolding is, why it matters, and how it supports multilingual learners.
  3. Lesson 2 – Core Strategies
    How to use chunking, multimodal support, and vocabulary scaffolds to reduce language load and improve comprehension.
  4. Lesson 3 – A Practical Example
    How these strategies work together as part of a real lesson sequence.
  5. Lesson 4 – Applying Scaffolding in Your Teaching
    A guided demonstration followed by a short planning task.
  6. Conclusions & Key Takeaways
    Final insights, plus a bibliography and directions for further learning.

What to Expect

  • Short videos you can watch on any device
  • Clear, practical explanations
  • Examples drawn from real classroom scenarios
  • Reflection questions and short quizzes
  • A final summary to help you apply the strategies immediately

Our goal is to give you tools you can use in tomorrow’s lesson — not theoretical concepts that gather dust.


⏱ Time Commitment

The full course can be completed in 30–45 minutes, depending on how deeply you engage with the reflection tasks.
You are welcome to pause, revisit sections, or return anytime.


How to Get the Most Out of This Course

  • Take the initial knowledge activation quiz with an open mind — it helps surface your current assumptions.
  • Watch the videos in order, as each lesson builds on the last.
  • Try at least one scaffolding strategy in your next lesson — even a small change makes a noticeable difference.
  • Use the reflection prompts to connect the content to your own teaching context.
  • Download or bookmark the bibliography at the end for further reading.

👥 Who Is This Course For?

This course is ideal for:

  • EAP and ELICOS teachers
  • School and VET educators working with multilingual learners
  • Subject specialists teaching learners in English-as-an-additional-language contexts
  • Early-career teachers wanting practical support
  • Experienced teachers seeking fresh strategies or validation of current practice

If you work with learners who are juggling both language and content, this course is for you.


✉️ Need Assistance?

If you need help with the course, have technical issues, or want to discuss how scaffolding fits into the NEAS Quality Framework, please contact:

NEAS Teacher Learning Support
✉️ neas@neas.org.au

Teaching Grammar and Sentence Structure

CPD points: 1

Welcome to Teaching Grammar and Sentence Structure in an Easy Way — a short, practical professional-development course designed to help you make grammar clearer, more meaningful, and more engaging for your learners.

Grammar can often feel overwhelming, both for teachers and students, but it doesn’t have to be. In this course, we explore simple, research-informed strategies that make grammar instruction more intuitive, more connected to real communication, and much easier to teach confidently.

Whether you’re new to teaching, returning after a break, or looking to refresh your approach, this course will give you practical tools you can apply immediately.


What You’ll Learn

By the end of this course, you will be able to:

  • Apply contextualised grammar teaching techniques, using real communication rather than isolated rules.
  • Explain functional grammar in a way that highlights meaning, purpose, and authentic language use.
  • Design scaffolded learning activities that guide learners from supported practice to independent mastery.
  • Model sentences effectively, demonstrating how grammar choices shape meaning.
  • Use sentence starters and frames to build confidence and reduce cognitive load for learners.
  • Support learners through the gradual release of responsibility, moving from “I do” → “We do” → “You do.”
  • Strengthen learners’ sentence construction skills using practical, classroom-ready techniques.

Course Structure

This course is fully self-paced and divided into short, focused lessons:

  1. Introduction & Orientation
  2. Contextualised Grammar Teaching
  3. Functional Grammar Overview
  4. Scaffolding Ideas for Grammar and Sentence Structure
  5. Course Wrap-Up

Each lesson includes a short video and a quick knowledge check to reinforce your understanding.


Time Commitment

The course takes approximately:

  • 30–40 minutes to complete the videos and quizzes
  • Slightly longer if you choose to explore the optional reflection prompts or try out sample activities in your own teaching context

You can stop and resume at any time.


How to Get the Most Out of the Course

  • Bring a notebook, or have a Word document open, to jot down techniques you want to try.
  • Think about learners in your current context — the examples will be easier to visualise.
  • Complete the quizzes as you go; they’re short, low-stakes, and designed to reinforce—not test—your learning.
  • After completing the course, consider choosing one or two strategies to implement in your next week of teaching.

Small changes can make a big difference.


Who This Course Is For

This course is designed for:

  • English language teachers
  • ELICOS instructors
  • Adult education trainers
  • Early-career teachers
  • Experienced educators looking to refresh their practice

No prior knowledge of grammar theory is required — just curiosity and a willingness to try practical strategies.


Ready to Begin?

When you’re ready, start with Lesson 1 and let’s make grammar easier, clearer, and much more enjoyable to teach.

Building a Culture of Quality

CPD points: 1

A strong culture of quality is the foundation of every high-performing ELT centre. This course guides you through the principles, behaviours, and systems that create sustainable excellence — not just during audits, but every day in every classroom, office, and student interaction.

Whether you’re a teacher, coordinator, professional staff member or manager, this program helps you understand the “why” behind quality and empowers you to contribute meaningfully to your centre’s improvement journey.


Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course, participants will be able to:

  • Explain how NEAS defines quality and why “fit for purpose” matters in ELT.
  • Identify key stakeholders and understand how their needs shape quality decisions.
  • Distinguish between basic compliance and a true culture of quality.
  • Describe the three essential ingredients of quality: leadership, systems, and continuous improvement.
  • Analyse how organisational culture develops using Schein’s model.
  • Recognise toxic culture indicators and understand their impact.
  • Apply practical tools to strengthen culture, including leadership behaviours, messaging, peer accountability, and shared ownership.
  • Use NEAS Quality Area D as a guide for improving administration, management, staffing, and professional development.

What’s Covered

This course is structured around the six key lessons from the NEAS webinar Building a Culture of Quality:

  1. Introduction to NEAS & Quality Assurance
    • NEAS mission, history, and stakeholder-driven feedback model
    • The NEAS Quality Assurance Framework
  2. What We Mean by Quality
    • Fit-for-purpose quality
    • Stakeholders and their needs
    • Leadership and “walking the talk”
  3. Systems & Policies
    • Compliance vs quality
    • Continuous improvement
    • Data-informed decision-making
  4. Understanding Organisational Culture
    • Schein’s three-level model
    • Artefacts, values, assumptions
    • Why culture matters
  5. Tools for Building Culture
    • Leadership
    • Messaging
    • Peer involvement
    • Cultural ownership
  6. NEAS Resources & Quality Practices (Area D)
    • Organisational structures
    • Recruitment
    • Communication processes
    • Professional development alignment
  7. Final Quiz & Reflection
    • Pulling everything together
    • Understanding how to apply quality concepts to your own centre

How Long Will It Take?

This course is designed to be concise but meaningful.

  • Total time: ~45–60 minutes
  • 7 stages:
    • Pre-course check
    • 6 short lessons
    • Final quiz
  • Each lesson takes 5–8 minutes to complete.

Perfect for completing in one sitting or spreading across a day.


What You Can Expect

  • Short, focused lessons — no fluff, just what you need.
  • Check-in quizzes to help reinforce your understanding.
  • Clear examples from real ELT environments.
  • Practical, actionable steps you can apply immediately.
  • A final quiz and certificate of completion through the NEAS LMS.

Whether you’re new to NEAS or strengthening your centre’s internal culture, this course gives you the mindset, language, and practical tools needed to help build — and sustain — a culture of quality.