Our MA TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) is a highly practical course with firmly imbedded theoretical study, designed to equip you with everything you need for careers in fields such as, teaching English, education management, curriculum development, materials design, or an advisory role in education or research. From answering questions such as “who owns English, and what does it mean to teach it, speak it, learn it?”, to teaching live classrooms to non-native students. MA TESOL graduates emerge from the course with a strong theoretical and practical foundation, ready to shape the future of English language teaching and qualified to step into a teaching job or related employment.
The University of Chester is an approved training centre, authorised by Cambridge English. So, through our unique delivery, you’ll have the rare opportunity to gain two internationally recognised qualifications simultaneously on our full-time course: the Master’s in TESOL and the prestigious Cambridge English Certificate in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (CELTA). You will explore the foundations of pedagogy, modern teaching methodologies, and emerging debates in language teaching, such as English as a Lingua Franca (ELF, or ‘universal language’) and global perspectives on language ownership. The MA TESOL also features a specialist module in phonology, led by a published expert in pronunciation teaching, Mark Hancock.
Although our course options focus primarily on teaching English to speakers of other languages, you will be equipped with teaching techniques that are widely used in TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language), and in teaching younger learners. Alongside this, you will gain a greater understanding of how language systems work, through studying syntax, verbs, tenses, language structures and meanings, and even how apostrophes work!
We firmly believe in the global nature of TESOL at Chester, and you will join a diverse and inclusive community of learners, teachers and lecturers from around the world, bringing different cultural perspectives to discussions on language education.
Some of our recent students have authored their 15,000-word primary research projects on subjects such as: the impact of AI on English Language learning; attitudes towards non-native English teachers; foreign language learning anxiety in Chinese learners; and the introduction of communicative language teaching techniques to schools in rural Pakistan.