TeachingEnglish Lesson plans



Similar documents
TeachingEnglish Lesson plans. Conversation Lesson News. Topic: News

Elicit Me too and Me neither by asking students if they have a sister or brother (or dog, cat ) and then responding appropriately.

I use several different introductions when it comes to calling purchased leads or leads that I have generated on my own through different ads.

How to open an account

LESSON 7. Managing the Trump Suit. General Concepts. General Introduction. Group Activities. Sample Deals

Grades 5 & 6 (B1): choosing a Topic

INTERVIEW TIPS 1. PREPARING BEFORE THE INTERVIEW PRINT OFF YOUR JOB APPLICATION RESEARCH THE COMPANY PLAN YOUR JOURNEY

Fun for all the Family 3- Quite a few games for articles and determiners

Share Aware Lesson 2 - Lucy

Chapter 16: law of averages

How To Proofread

Club Accounts Question 6.

ESP MARKETING TEACHER S NOTES

PET Speaking Part 2 teacher s notes

No problem, Alicia. Everything smells wonderful; I m sure your in-laws visit will go just fine.

Hi-tech. Language focus. First conditional. Second conditional. eat. 'd give / wouldn t

TeachingEnglish Lesson plans. Mobile phones. Topic: Mobile phones and text communications

Primes. Name Period Number Theory

MA 1125 Lecture 14 - Expected Values. Friday, February 28, Objectives: Introduce expected values.

ESOL Customer Service Training: Unit 1 1: 1 Student Book. Unit 1: Talking With Your Customer

Tenses and verb forms above will be accepted as different even when their form is the same, e.g. imperatives and infinitive with to.

School. Lesson plan. Topic. Aims. Age group. Level. Time. Materials. School, school objects, rules, subjects, rooms and uniforms

Emergency calls LEARNING OUTCOMES

Someone at the door Electricity meter reading Teacher s pack. English in my home Someone at the door. Unit 1a Electricity meter reading

Asian Handicap Basics

Chapter Four: How to Collaborate and Write With Others

How to Use the Auction Effect to Sell Your House Faster

Min. Art.No.: RIO524 Made in Germany Copyright

Conditional Sentences Third Condition (Past Time - Unreal/ Contrary to Fact)

A Short Course in Logic Zeno s Paradox

How to make the most of ebay Motors.

SCOTTISH RESOURCES. First Level/Second Level Autumn Tuesdays and 23 September BBC Radio 4 digital (terrestrial, cable, satellite)

How To Buy Stock On Margin

Contents. Using stories to teach Science Ages 5-6 5

OUR PAST THROUGH FILM

IN A SMALL PART OF THE CITY WEST OF

Anytime Adviser New Car Buying Coach

Young Learners English

PRE-TOURNAMENT INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT: Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Dear Friend: I have a very important question to ask you

school resource CREATE DEBATE THE

Guidance on how to apply successfully for a teaching post

4. Go over an unknown/difficult vocabulary with the class.

Everything You Need To Know About Middle School. This planning guide belongs to:

The complete guide to becoming a mortgage advisor

!DEPARTAMENTO DE CIÊNCIAS DA SAÚDE Medicina Dentária

Mortgage Guide and Helpful Tips

Teacher's notes. Embedded question drill (indirect questions)

AutoSalesTraining. The Road to Success. Supplement included: Ten Step Road to the Sale

Fruit Machine. Level. Activity Checklist Follow these INSTRUCTIONS one by one. Test Your Project Click on the green flag to TEST your code

Someone on the phone An emergency Teacher s pack. English in my home Someone on the phone. Unit 2c An emergency

BBC Learning English Talk about English Business Language To Go Part 6 - Telephone language 1

HANDY HINTS FOR RUNNING A SUCCESSFUL RACENIGHT

Thinking of having a private screening test? If you live in England, there are some important facts you need to know before you make a decision

Your guide to using new media

Gambling games. Lesson 6

Test of English for Aviation. Guide for: Test-takers & Teachers

Game Programming CS233G / Winter 2012 / PCC

Would You Like To Earn $1000 s With The Click Of A Button?

Proficiency Evaluation Test Intermediate to Advanced

Topic Task: Preparing Students for Conversation in the Topic Task At a glance

How To Plan At A Tribe Of People

Lesson Plans for ESL Kids Teachers

Lesson Plan. General Information: Level: Secondary 1 Number of students: 40 Time: 35 minutes Topic: Present Perfect Tense

Lesson Plan Talking about advertising

Kaufmännische Berufsmatura im Kanton Zürich Aufnahmeprüfung 2009 Englisch Serie 2 K E Y - K E Y - K E Y 100 MARKS

+ Social = Success

END TIMES Week 2: Let Your Understanding Shape Your Life 1. LEADER PREPARATION

2 Mathematics Curriculum

ADDRESS TO NEW MEMBERS MAY 16, 2005 THE MEANING OF LIFE, THE UNIVERSE, AND ALL THAT

Prospecting Scripts. 2 keys to success in Real Estate

Stepping Outside the Box: Some Additional Thoughts Part II Robert Brooks, Ph.D.

Student s Worksheet. Writing útvary, procvičování

Whatever s special about your family life, make sure you protect it

Class Facilitator s Guide

Colored Hats and Logic Puzzles

Verbal boxing by Matt Bryer

Perfect Pizza - Credit Card Processing Decisions Gail Kaciuba, Ph.D., St. Mary s University, San Antonio, USA

How To Appeal To The Supreme Court In North Carolina

The Notebook Software Activity Guide

Intro Lesson (Ages 8-14)

THE NEXT AD BIDDING GUIDE AN EASY GUIDE TO HELP YOU OPTIMISE YOUR BIDDING STRATEGY

Worksheet English is GREAT. Task 1 What is the common link between all these words?

FACT A computer CANNOT pick numbers completely at random!

How to Outsource Without Being a Ninnyhammer

Forex Trading. What Finally Worked For Me

1. Provide a knowledge base 2. Create an atmosphere 3. Present a stimulus 4. Generate questions 5. Facilitate a discussion

Best Practices for Helping All Students Get Ready for the SAT. Prepared for Idaho SDE January 2014

Sales Lead Brokerage Profit Plan Bonus Document

How to Meet EDI Compliance with Cloud ERP

SOCIAL SECURITY OVERPAYMENTS:

Marketing Automation And the Buyers Journey

GOD S BIG STORY Week 1: Creation God Saw That It Was Good 1. LEADER PREPARATION

ESP MARKETING TEACHER S NOTES

Interviewer: Sonia Doshi (So) Interviewee: Sunder Kannan (Su) Interviewee Description: Junior at the University of Michigan, inactive Songza user

ONE DOLLAR AND EIGHTY-SEVEN CENTS.

Advising mothers on management of diarrhoea in the home

Transcription:

Topic: Talking About the Future - a one-hour revision lesson Aims To help students talk about the future To review 4 ways to talk about the future To help students choose the most appropriate future tense To develop students communication skills Level: B1 Introduction In this simple lesson you will allow students chance to speak freely about different aspects of their future life while guiding them (with their help) to the best available grammar forms in order to do so. It is intended as a revision hour, maybe useful ahead of a programme of study involving the future forms in which you introduce new language beyond that they will have learned at A2. Materials and Preparation You will need some strips of paper with future functions on, ideally with some blu tac on the reverse. See Stage 2. You can also make copies of the grammar auction worksheet or choose your own items, see Stage 5. Procedure Stage 1 Open discussion Put students in pairs, and direct their attention to the board where they will read the following: Talk for a minute about each of the following: Your arrangements for this evening Your intentions for the rest of the year Your predictions for the planet for 2020 By means of a gesture get them to start. I don t offer the slightest insight into what I want nor expect from them. I don t interject nor correct (unless they re well off track), I just want them to talk. By this level they have already met all the tenses we are going to be using, so there will be no actual teaching, but as very often they misuse the forms to some considerable degree, there will be plenty of opportunity for revision. Stage 2

Matching functions to grammar As they are talking, I quickly draw a simple diagram on the board representing the four main forms of the future that B1 students are familiar with, thus: Present Simple Going to + infinitive Present Continuous ill + infinitive ithout drawing reference to the previous activity, I draw their attention to this table and then hand them, in their pairs, a set of situations/functions each on separate strips of paper with blu tac on the reverse. Their job now is to pair the situations/functions to one of the grammar forms and they do so physically, by coming to the board and sticking them on. The situations are usually along these lines (with suggested answers in case the ambiguity of the English future tenses has extended to teachers too ). Be sure to mix the order, and give all of them to each pair. Timetabled events, e.g. TV programme or train departure Personal arrangements Predictions (when you can see the evidence) Predictions (based on no evidence) General future intentions (not arranged) Decisions made at the time of speaking Promises Decisions already made Offers, refusals PS PC GT GT GT You may choose not to include all of these, or add more. Have students come and stick the situations on the board in the right box (or the wrong box).

hen the board is full, ask the class to correct, by moving any misplaced items, and then let them study it for a few moments. Deal with questions as they arise, but don t ask any yourself. Stage 3 An improved version of Stage 1 Now, without any further input from you, change the original pairs and tell students that they are going to repeat Stage 1, but this time using the correct (or should I say, recommended?) grammar forms. They should tell their new partner what they told the first one but this time, where it s a personal arrangement, they should now be using the present continuous. Any prediction for 2020 could surely not be based on evidence, so they need to be using will. hile they do it this time, I monitor and correct. Stage 4 Group feedback At this point, perhaps another ten minutes later, I bring the class together and we talk about what s been said, in the third person. One of the pair will tell the class what their partner said after prompting from me, for example I might ask, and what are Aizhan s arrangements for this evening, Erik? to which Erik would hopefully reply somewhere along the lines of she s eating out with some friends this evening. I never know whether to correct people when they say, she s going to eat out this evening because as such, it s not wrong, but still lies contrary to the focus of this lesson. I suppose there s no exact science in this regard, and although I generally suggest the modification to the present continuous, it pays to play it by ear. After this group discussion, which can last up to fifteen minutes (especially if we develop the prediction section), we are ready to focus a little more on the technicalities of the grammar, but still without involving formal study.

Stage 5 Grammar Auction There are variations on the game and some of them are less teacher-centred than my approach. I ll offer you the basic version and invite you to adapt it to suit. 1. Put students into groups of three or four. I d say a maximum of six groups is best, although when I played it with seven it went OK, so see how it feels in your classroom. 2. Introduce the idea of an auction, including teaching words such as auction, item, lot, bid. If you have the internet in your classroom, you could find a clip of an auction on YouTube to show them to make sure they ve got the idea. 3. Tell them they are going to attend an auction and bid for items. The items are English sentences to talk about the future. Make it very clear to them that they must ONLY bid for sentences that they think are grammatically correct. (The winners are those who buy the most correct sentences. In the event of a tie, the victory is determined by who has most money left.) 4. Hand out the lists of sentences, below (or write your own) and ask the students to study them to decide which are correct, i.e. which they want to buy, and why they are right or wrong (although you don t ask them for this during the auction itself. Nor should you confirm or deny if they are right at this stage, wait until later). Do not let them broadcast their choices or share answers with other teams. 5. Allocate $10,000 to each team. Before bidding starts, remind them (you may need to) that they should not attempt to buy sentences they believe to be incorrect. Add that they can only increase bids in $500 increments, or they will try to bid single dollars which is pointless. 6. Take your copy of the sentences and cut them up. These then become individual items which you take in random order. 7. Begin the bidding. I m no auctioneer but the more spirit you put into this, the better it will go. Start each item at $500 and take it from there. Remember to deduct money from the starting total after each sale. 8. hen all the sentences have been sold, ask each group to count their sentences and then they can be checked. I check by asking the group with least to start. They read the sentences in turn, and I write them on the board. Then I ask everybody if they are correct, and as a group we discuss the grammar and the reasons for using it.

This is where I become more the traditional teacher, explaining anything where necessary. However I have always found that for a relatively strong group who only need reminding of the correct forms, this lesson is a very good way to tidy up the basic future tenses. hen this is over, you will see who has won. I don t always do this, but a bit of chocolate is a nice reward for their endeavours, and obviously they are encouraged to share it out. See suggested Items below. (Brief note: Although according to the grammar some of the sentences above could be considered incorrect, they may pass as correct depending on modern English usage. This has to be the teacher s decision. I m not a total purist, but I see the value in grammar and therefore I m never smoking again, although acceptable, would be better replaced with I m never going to smoke again in that it is an intention and not a personal arrangement. The case continues...) To finish the lesson, I ask them quite interestedly what they are doing that evening. And they almost always tell me correctly.

Grammar Auction 1. I m going to eat at my friends house this evening. 2. Look at that man on the roof. He ll fall! 3. These black clouds tell me it s going to rain. 4. The train will leave at seven o clock. 5. Next Sunday I will play golf with Bill Clinton. 6. Italy will win the orld Cup in 2014. 7. I m washing my hair tonight. 8. This year I m going to read more. 9. hat will you do tonight? 10. I m never smoking again. 11.I go to university next year. Grammar Auction 1. I m going to eat at my friends house this evening. 2. Look at that man on the roof. He ll fall! 3. These black clouds tell me it s going to rain. 4. The train will leave at seven o clock. 5. Next Sunday I will play golf with Bill Clinton. 6. Italy will win the orld Cup in 2014. 7. I m washing my hair tonight. 8. This year I m going to read more. 9. hat will you do tonight? 10. I m never smoking again. 11.I go to university next year.