Next I was bombarded with materials. And I mean bombarded. Most of it was completely unnecessary.
First I was advised to purchase the following:
Learning Teaching (ISBN 1405013990), Jim Scrivener (Heinemann)
Practical English Usage (ISBN 0194420981), Michael Swan (Oxford University Press)
A Concise Grammar for English Language Teachers (ISBN 0953132315), Tony Preston (TP Publications)
Then I was sent four more teaching methodology 'booklets' - about 50 pages each.
Then the CELTA pre-course task which contained another list of books.
You may find one of the following grammar books useful for reference:
Aitken, R - Teaching Tenses (Nelson)
Bolitho, R & Tomlinson, B – Discover English – 2nd edition (Macmillan)
Leech, Cruickshank & Ivanič – An A-Z of English Grammar & Usage (Longman)
Murphy, R – English Grammar in Use (CUP)
Parrott, M – Grammar for English Teachers (CUP)
Swan, M – Practical English Usage (OUP)
Swan, M & Walter, C – How English Works (OUP)
Thornbury, S – How to Teach Grammar (Longman)
If you want to do some additional reading:
Gower, Walters & Philips – Teaching Practice Handbook – 2nd edition (Macmillan)
Harmer, J. – How to Teach English – 3rd edition (Longman)
Kenworthy, J – Teaching English Pronunciation (Longman)
Lewis, M & Hill, J – Practical Techniques for Language Teaching (LTP)
Riddell, D - Teaching English as a Foreign/Second Language (Teach Yourself) (Hodder Arnold H&S)
Scrivener J – Learning Teaching (Macmillan)
My short- cuts?
The books
Firstly, the only book from this list I purchased was Raymond Murphy, but to be honest I didn't really use it on the course, but have used it in normal lessons.
I searched on-line and found free pdf versions of many of the others, but these were the only ones I used:
Practical English Usage (Swan)
A Concise Grammar... (Preston)
Teaching Tenses (Aitken)
How to teach English (Harmer)
How English Works (Swan) - I had this copy already but found a pdf version to save on luggage weight.
You could probably get away with just first one, but you are supposed to refer to others in various assignments. If you are organised enough, you can probably just borrow a book and find a suitable quote.
I bothered to read the shorter texts, but it was a waste of time.
I purchased a Kindle which was a great investment as, once the pdfs were downloaded, I could work on the trip to and from school.
The pre-course task
The point of this was not really explained to us. Basically, it covers just about everything on the course. What you need to do, is work your way though it, with a reference book to hand. DO NOT SPEND TOO LONG ON SECTIONS ONE OR FIVE! These are subjective and question 50 has no answer. It DOES go into you final folder (though one tutor on my course said it wouldn't) so needs to be readable :) Do it in several sessions otherwise it will send you to sleep. Look up what you need to and write your answers. I typed mine but as a short cut would not spend long typing out questions as once you have finished, you get to mark it with the key, the idea being by the end of it you have done quite a bit of reading and most of it serves as a useful reference document. It also shows you which bits you don't know so which bits you need to read more carefully! Once you have marked it, we had to submit it so the tutors could check that we had marked it correctly.
That's it: I would not waste any other time reading as it did not have much bearing on anything we were 'taught' on the course.