Day 22 of 60 · Modern ELT — Learner-Centred Teaching

Needs Analysis: Know Your Learner – Before You Teach
Day 22: Needs Analysis — Know Your Learners Before You Teach | ELT Masterclass
Week 4 · Day 22 of 60 · Modern ELT — Learner-Centred Teaching

Needs Analysis:
Know Your Learner
Before You Teach

“Teaching without needs analysis is like a doctor prescribing medicine without a diagnosis. You might help some people. You will definitely waste everyone’s time.”

Needs Analysis Target Needs Learning Needs Necessities · Lacks · Wants Hutchinson & Waters Course Design
Part 1 — What Is Needs Analysis and Why Does It Change Everything

Before Day 1 of any course, before you write a single lesson aim, before you select a coursebook or design a warmer — you need to ask one question. Not “what grammar should I teach?” Not “what’s the right level?” But this:

┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ W H Y do these specific people need to learn English? ── Hutchinson & Waters (1987): “English for Specific Purposes” ── Cambridge University Press (the most cited ELT research text) └──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

This question is the foundation of needs analysis. And it is not just an ESP technique. It is the foundational act of any serious teacher at any level.

Needs Analysis
“Needs analysis is the process of establishing the what and the how of a course. It is neither unique to language teaching nor, within language teaching, unique to ESP. The difference is that in ESP, needs analysis is made explicit, rigorous, and ongoing — rather than assumed.”
→ Cambridge ELT: Curriculum Design & Needs Analysis research collection
Why Needs Analysis Matters for All Teachers
“Needs analysis is fundamental to any language course. All courses are based on a perceived need — the question is whether that perception is the teacher’s assumption or the learner’s reality. The gap between these two is where most teaching failures live.”
→ Cambridge: Language Teaching Journal — Needs Analysis in Language Teaching

The problem this solves: A teacher designs a 12-week Business English course packed with meetings vocabulary, email writing, and formal presentations. She delivers it with enthusiasm. Halfway through, she discovers her students are all hotel receptionists who need tourist English, telephone phrases, and complaint handling. The course was expertly taught — and completely wrong. Needs analysis prevents this.

Part 2 — The Hutchinson & Waters Model: The Framework That Changed ELT

In 1987, Tom Hutchinson and Alan Waters published English for Specific Purposes (Cambridge University Press) — still the most cited text in ESP and needs analysis. Their model divides needs into two categories, and within the first category, three subcategories. This framework is the one used in CELTA, DELTA, and most professional teacher training worldwide.

╔══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╗ HUTCHINSON & WATERS NEEDS ANALYSIS FRAMEWORK (1987) ╠══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╣ ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ TARGET NEEDS (language USE in the target situation) │ │ │ NECESSITIESLACKSWANTS │ what they │ gap between │ what learners │ │ MUST do │ now and │ FEEL they need │ │ to function │ necessity │ (may differ from above) │ └─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘ + ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ LEARNING NEEDS (HOW they will learn best) │ │ │ │ Learning strategies · motivation · resources available │ │ preferred learning styles · time constraints │ └─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘ ╚══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╝

Click Each Need Type to Understand It

Each card below explains one component. Click to open. The three target needs are what most teachers focus on — but learning needs are equally critical and far more often ignored.

● Necessities

The objective, externally-defined requirements of the target situation. What the learner must be able to do to perform effectively in that context, regardless of what they want or think they need.

Example: A hotel receptionist must be able to handle check-in/check-out, respond to complaints, give directions, and describe room facilities. These are necessities regardless of what the receptionist finds interesting or enjoyable to practise.
Key question to ask: “What does this person have to be able to do with English in their real life, right now?”

● Lacks

The gap between necessities (what learners need) and the learner’s current proficiency (what they already know). This is the most teachable component — it defines exactly what your course needs to cover.

Example: The hotel receptionist needs to handle complaints (necessity). She currently uses only formal, scripted responses and cannot manage unscripted disagreements (current ability). The lack is: unscripted complaint management using polite but direct language.
Key question: “What is the gap between what they currently know and what they need to know?”

● Wants

What learners feel they need — their subjective perception, which may or may not align with their necessities. Wants are not less valid, but they can conflict with objective needs. The teacher must navigate this conflict carefully: ignoring wants kills motivation; following only wants misses necessities.

Example: The receptionist wants to practise formal presentations because she finds them impressive. But her actual situation never requires presentations. Her wants and necessities diverge. A skilled teacher acknowledges the want while redirecting towards necessities.
Key question: “What does this learner think they need? Does that match their target situation?”

● Learning Needs

How the learner learns best. This is separate from target needs. Two learners with identical necessities and lacks may learn in completely different ways. Learning needs include: preferred learning strategies, learning style preferences, motivation type, available time, access to resources, group vs individual preferences, and tolerance for ambiguity.

Example: Learner A prefers structured grammar explanation with clear rules. Learner B prefers discovery through authentic texts. Both need the same language. But their learning needs require different approaches. A one-size-fits-all methodology fails one of them.
Key question: “How does this specific learner learn most effectively? What conditions support their progress?”

The critical distinction: Target needs are about the end point — what learners need to be able to DO. Learning needs are about the process — how they’ll get there. Excellent course design addresses both. A course that targets necessities but ignores learning needs may fail because the methodology doesn’t match the learners. A course that focuses on learning needs but doesn’t address necessities produces engaged students who still can’t do their jobs.

Part 3 — Classify These Learner Statements

Below are 9 real learner statements. Each one reveals a specific type of need. Classify each statement into Necessity, Lack, or Want by clicking the statement then the correct zone. Immediate feedback shows when you’re right or wrong.

Classify Each Learner Statement

Tap a statement, then tap the zone where it belongs. All 9 must be placed correctly to complete the activity.

NECESSITY
must do
LACK
gap to fill
WANT
feels needed
Part 4 — How to DO a Needs Analysis: Four Methods

Knowing the framework is not enough. You need to know how to actually collect the needs data. There are four main methods. Each has strengths and weaknesses. In practice, professional teachers triangulate — using at least two methods to cross-validate findings.

METHOD OVERVIEW ══════════════════════════════════════════════════════ ① Questionnaire → fast · scalable · surface-level risk ② Interview → deep · slow · interviewer bias risk ③ Observation → authentic · time-intensive · Hawthorne effect ④ Language Audit → data-rich · requires corpus skill ══════════════════════════════════════════════════════ Best practice: TRIANGULATE — use at least two methods
QUESTIONNAIRE — the most widely used method
A questionnaire collects structured data from learners (and sometimes employers or line managers) before the course begins. It can be delivered digitally, on paper, or via interview. The key is asking the right questions in the right order.
Sample questions for a B2 Business English questionnaire:
“What is your job title and main responsibilities?” · “In what situations do you use English at work?” · “Rate your confidence in: writing emails / telephone calls / meetings / presentations / small talk (1–5)” · “What is the most urgent thing you need to improve?” · “How many hours per week can you study outside class?”
✓ Strengths
  • Fast to administer
  • Works for large groups
  • Easy to quantify and compare
  • Can reach learners before first class
✗ Limitations
  • Surface-level answers
  • Learners may not understand their own needs
  • Translation issues at lower levels
  • Response bias (social desirability)
INTERVIEW — the deepest method
A structured or semi-structured interview with the learner (and ideally their employer or line manager) gives you nuanced, contextualised data. You can probe vague answers, follow unexpected leads, and observe non-verbal communication. This is the gold standard but it is time-intensive.
Interview technique: Start broad (“Tell me about a typical day at work”), narrow down (“In which of those situations do you use English?”), then probe (“Can you give me a specific example where your English felt inadequate?”). End with priorities (“If we could only focus on one thing this term, what would give you the most benefit?”).
✓ Strengths
  • Deeply contextualised data
  • Can identify needs learners can’t articulate themselves
  • Builds teacher-learner relationship
  • Reveals learner’s actual language use
✗ Limitations
  • Time-intensive
  • Interviewer bias
  • Not practical for large groups
  • Data is qualitative and harder to compare
OBSERVATION — the most authentic method
Observing learners in their actual target situation (their workplace, their classroom, their daily interactions) produces the most authentic needs data. You see what language they actually encounter — not what they think they encounter. The limitation is the Hawthorne Effect.
Observation protocol example: Spend two mornings at a hotel where your students work. Note every English interaction: at check-in, with restaurant guests, on the phone, reading menus, emails, or signage. Record the actual language used. This is your target corpus — the course should teach THIS language.
✓ Strengths
  • Maximally authentic data
  • Reveals unconscious language needs
  • Grounds course in real contexts
✗ Limitations
  • Hawthorne Effect changes behaviour
  • Requires access to target situation
  • Very time-intensive
LANGUAGE AUDIT — the data-driven method
A language audit analyses the actual texts, documents, emails, recordings, and language samples from the target situation. It is used primarily in ESP and academic contexts. You read the contracts, emails, reports, or transcripts your learners actually encounter and derive the lexical, grammatical, and functional requirements from the text itself.
Example: Collect 50 emails sent by the company. Run them through a corpus tool (e.g., AntConc — free from antlab.net). Identify the most frequent vocabulary, the most common discourse structures, and the most frequent grammatical patterns. Build the course from THIS data — not from a generic Business English coursebook.
✓ Strengths
  • Most objective and data-driven
  • Reveals frequency-weighted priorities
  • Produces corpus-based syllabus
✗ Limitations
  • Requires corpus analysis skills
  • Access to authentic texts needed
  • Technical and time-intensive
Part 5 — Build Your Needs Analysis Questionnaire

This interactive tool lets you select a learner category, then choose which questions to include in your questionnaire. At the end, you’ll see a complete, formatted questionnaire you can copy and adapt for real use.

Questionnaire Builder

Step 1: Select your learner type. Step 2: Tick the questions you want to include. Step 3: Generate your questionnaire.

Step 1 — Learner Type
Step 2 — Select Questions
Part 6 — Four Scenarios: What Would You Do?

Each scenario presents a teaching situation. Read it, decide what you would do, then reveal the professional response. These are based on real teaching contexts.

Scenario 1

The Disagreeing Manager

Your learner (B2, business professional) tells you she needs to improve her presentations skills. Her company has asked you to focus on report writing. Her wants and the company’s necessities directly conflict.

Professional response: Conduct a brief needs analysis interview with BOTH the learner and the line manager. Identify specific situations where each skill is needed. Then design a course that covers report writing (necessity + company priority) while incorporating presentation micro-elements — e.g., presenting a written report verbally. Communicate your rationale to both parties. Neither stakeholder should feel ignored.
Scenario 2

The Silent Questionnaire

You email a needs analysis questionnaire to 15 new adult learners. 3 reply. 12 don’t. Your course starts in 4 days.

Professional response: Use Day 1 of the course as a “live needs analysis” session. Build a questionnaire into a speaking activity (learners interview each other). Use a brief diagnostic writing and speaking task to assess present situation. Reserve the first 20 minutes for a whole-class discussion of learning goals. Document everything. Your first week of planning is provisional — adapt it after Day 1.
Scenario 3

The Hidden Gap

A learner says: “I just want to improve my general English. Everything.” After 3 weeks, you notice she always avoids writing tasks and produces very short written output compared to her strong speaking.

Professional response: Conduct a mid-course needs check-in. Privately: “I’ve noticed you often prefer speaking tasks. Can you tell me more about how you use written English in your daily life?” The learner may reveal a hidden lack (and possibly a negative association with writing from previous education). Adjust the course to scaffold writing, making her needs explicit. This is a classic case where wants (“general English”) masked a specific lack that only observation revealed.
Scenario 4

Needs Change Mid-Course

Week 6 of an 8-week course. Your learner has just been promoted and now attends international board meetings weekly. The original course focus (written correspondence) is no longer adequate.

Professional response: This is exactly why needs analysis is described as “ongoing” by Dudley-Evans & St John. Conduct an immediate informal needs analysis interview. Document the new target situation. Negotiate a revised course outline for the remaining 2 weeks. If possible, agree an extension to cover the new requirements. The most important principle: needs analysis is not a one-off form completed before class starts — it is a continuous cycle of inquiry.
Part 7 — Needs Analysis vs. Assumptions: What Changes in Your Teaching
Teaching decision Without needs analysis With needs analysis
SyllabusGeneric coursebook chapters in sequenceCustom sequence based on identified lacks and target situation
MaterialsTextbook activities and teacher’s resource bankAuthentic texts, emails, calls from learner’s actual target situation
Grammar focus“B2 learners need conditional sentences”“These B2 hotel managers need passive voice for formal complaint responses”
VocabularyHigh-frequency word lists for the levelLexis specific to learner’s job domain, identified via language audit
Error correctionAll errors corrected equallyErrors that affect target situation communication prioritised
AssessmentStandard test of grammar and vocabularyTask-based performance in simulated target situation
MotivationTeacher assumes what is interestingTopics and tasks connected to learner’s own identified wants and goals
Part 8 — Knowledge Check

Needs Analysis Quiz

6 questions covering all of today’s content. Immediate feedback with explanation.

Part 9 — Your Practice Tasks
Practice 1 Design a 10-Question Needs Analysis Questionnaire 10–15 min

Design a complete needs analysis questionnaire for the following learner profile: A group of 8 nurses at a private hospital in your city. Level: B1. The hospital is planning to expand its international patient base. Course length: 20 hours.

Your questionnaire must include questions that reveal: (a) target situation necessities, (b) learners’ lacks, (c) learners’ wants, and (d) learning needs. Include 10 questions minimum with clear rationale for each.

Model 10-Question Questionnaire — Nursing Context
  1. What are your main duties when caring for international patients? (target situation — identifies necessities)
  2. How often do you interact with English-speaking patients per week? (frequency data)
  3. Describe the most challenging English communication situation you’ve faced at work. (reveals lacks through narrative)
  4. Rate your confidence in: giving medical instructions / taking patient history / explaining procedures / writing patient notes / talking to family members (1=not confident, 5=very confident) (present situation analysis across skill types)
  5. Which is most urgent for your work: speaking, listening, reading, or writing? (skill priority within target situation)
  6. Do you currently use any English resources for self-study? If yes, which? (learning needs — current strategies)
  7. How many hours per week can you study outside of class? (learning needs — time constraints)
  8. What do YOU feel is most important to learn this course? What would most improve your daily work? (wants — explicit)
  9. Do you prefer learning through: grammar explanations / role plays / authentic texts / listening exercises / a mix? (learning style preferences)
  10. Is there anything about your work context that the teacher should know before starting the course? (open-ended — catches needs not addressed by other questions)
Practice 2 Classify and Justify: Necessity, Lack, or Want? 5–8 min

For each of the 5 learner statements below, classify it as a NECESSITY, LACK, or WANT. Then write one sentence explaining your classification and one sentence explaining how you would address it in lesson design.

  1. “I need to write better emails to suppliers.”
  2. “I always make mistakes with articles (a/the).”
  3. “I’d like to sound more like a native speaker.”
  4. “My job requires me to chair weekly meetings in English.”
  5. “I want to learn idioms so I can be funnier in conversations.”
Model Answers
  • 1. “Better emails to suppliers” — NECESSITY (if this is confirmed by the target situation). Address by: analysing real supplier emails, identifying the specific register and formulaic phrases, building a lesson sequence around authentic email templates from their field.
  • 2. “Mistakes with articles” — LACK. The learner has identified a gap in their own knowledge. Address by: presenting the article system with CCQs, providing controlled practice with texts from their field, building in peer correction during freer production.
  • 3. “Sound more like a native speaker” — WANT (and often an unrealistic one). The research-backed goal is intelligibility, not native-speaker accent. Address by: reframing the goal as clear, confident communication; focusing on connected speech features that affect comprehension; celebrating progress towards intelligibility rather than nativeness.
  • 4. “Chair weekly meetings” — NECESSITY. This is externally-defined and directly job-required. Address by: whole course should include meeting language, turn-taking, asking for clarification, managing disagreement, summarising — with realistic role-play simulations of actual meeting scenarios.
  • 5. “Learn idioms to be funnier” — WANT. High-frequency idiomatic language is worth teaching, but the motivation (being funny) may not match the target situation. Address by: include high-frequency idioms that appear in the learner’s actual context; manage expectations around humour in a second language (register, timing, and cultural context all affect what’s funny).
Practice 3 The Ongoing Needs Analysis — Design a Mid-Course Check-In 8–12 min

Dudley-Evans & St John (1998) argue that needs analysis is not a one-off event but an ongoing process. Design a mid-course needs check-in for a 10-week General English course at B1 level. The check-in should take no more than 15 minutes of class time, involve students actively (not just filling in a form), and produce actionable data you can use to adjust the final 5 weeks of the course.

Model Mid-Course Needs Check-In

Name: “Progress Gallery” — 15 minutes, Week 5

Stage 1 — Individual (4 min): Each student gets a blank card. They write: (a) ONE thing they feel they’ve genuinely improved this term. (b) ONE thing they still want to work on. (c) ONE activity type they want MORE of. Cards are anonymous.

Stage 2 — Gallery (5 min): Cards are posted on the wall. Students read each other’s cards silently while teacher reads them too. Students put a dot sticker on any card they agree with. This creates instant visualisation of priorities without discussion pressure.

Stage 3 — Summary & negotiation (6 min): Teacher summarises the most-dotted responses aloud: “It looks like 7 people want more speaking practice, and 5 of you want more work on writing. The most common thing you feel you’ve improved is vocabulary. Here’s what I’m going to adjust in the next 5 weeks…” Students feel heard; teacher has actionable data; course improves.

What makes this excellent: It’s active, not passive. It’s anonymous, so learners answer honestly. It takes exactly 15 minutes. It produces quantifiable data (dots = frequency) and qualitative data (the card content). And it demonstrates to learners that their views shape the course — which improves motivation.

Part 10 — Free Resources — Exact URLs
Day 22 · The Core Principle

Needs analysis is not a form you fill in before Day 1. It is a mindset that questions assumptions throughout every course you teach.

The Hutchinson & Waters framework gives you the vocabulary: necessities (what they must do), lacks (the gap), wants (what they feel), and learning needs (how they learn). Together, these four lenses replace assumption with evidence.

Every teaching failure caused by “the wrong course for the right people” is a needs analysis failure. Every course that truly transforms a learner’s capacity to communicate was built on a thorough, honest, ongoing needs analysis.

Day 23
Tomorrow

Carl Rogers & Humanistic Learning Theory — The Teacher as Facilitator

“Rogers didn’t write about classrooms. He wrote about therapy. And then he realised the conditions that allow people to grow in therapy are exactly the conditions that allow people to learn in a classroom.”

Part of the 60-Day ELT Masterclass by Sourov Deb · New episode every day · Free forever

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top