Showing posts with label lesson plan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lesson plan. Show all posts

Tuesday, 27 January 2015

Perfect day song lesson (free printable worksheet)

This is one I often get out at the end of term. It's mellow, relaxing and lends itself nicely to a pleasant discussion. Plus, this song is so perfect that I never get sick of it, even if I use it for all of my lessons over a couple of days. You're going to reap just what you sow repeated at the end - at once reassuring and cautionary. Perfect, bittersweet, the languorous piano, the slightly uneasy strings, the strings, the strings.

I probably like it a lot more than the students do. Well, never mind.

Materials
Mp3 or Youtube clip of the song.
1 copy of the worksheet per student.

Time
Approx 45 minutes.

Procedure

1. Lead in. Write "a perfect day" on the board. Ask the students: what's your perfect day? If you had a day where you didn't have to work or go to school, what would you like to do the most?

2. First listen: gist task. The students listen to hear what activities the singer mentions doing on his perfect day. (Going to the zoo, watching a movie, drinking sangria in the park, going home with someone...)

3. Second listen: minimal response task. Hand out the worksheet. The students circle the word that they hear. Check unfamiliar vocabulary, and discuss the meaning of "reaping what you sow".

4. Productive follow-up: Ask the students to imagine that a foreign friend is visiting them this weekend, and plan a perfect day. Where will they go, what will they do? etc.

Click here to get the FREE worksheet.

(Link opens in Google docs, you can then download, save and print as required)

Monday, 17 November 2014

Process writing/present passive video lessons

Process writing can show up as an IELTS writing task, so it's important for IELTS students to know how to describe a process. However, these videos are also handy for reviewing or practicing the present passive with intermediates and up.

Procedure

1. Warmer: I like to use the "X is made from X" warmer. Students in groups of 2-3 have to brainstorm sentences using this model, for example "Cheese is made from milk", "Pencils are made from wood", etc. The group with the most will be the winner.

2. Review the passive form: subject + is/are + v3. Check the meaning. Does the cheese make something or does someone make the cheese? Does it say who makes the cheese? Why not? (The subject does not do the action, but receives it. It is not necessary to say who does the action because we are more interested in the results.)

3. Explain that you are going to watch a video about how something is made. Elicit any predictions or prior knowledge from the students.

4. Students watch the video and take notes on the process, especially any passive sentences they hear.

5. Check unfamiliar vocabulary and watch again if necessary.

6. Students in pairs construct passive sentences describing the process.

7. Have students write their sentences on the board and correct errors with the class.

8. Students write up the process in full to be handed in and marked.

Videos to use

Processes are an ideal context for the present passive, so you can easily find lesson material by typing "how [anything] is made" into YouTube according to your students' interests. Here are some I've tried before.

1. How ice cream is made
A slightly dated educational BBC clip. My students weren't thrilled by it, but it worked for the lesson.


2. How orange juice is made
They liked this one more. Lesson I learnt: don't use clips that are older than your students. 



3. How bread is made
Weirdly hypnotic.


4. How olive oil is made
Delicious.



5. How glass is made
Quite interesting.



Happy process writing!

Saturday, 2 August 2014

The myth of Romulus and Remus - a student-centred lesson on the past passive for pre-intermediate EFL learners

Sharing a worksheet I have made on the past passive that combines reading practice with grammar work.

Before starting, I recommend slicing off the 'grammar bit' so that you can hand it out separately after the students have read and understood the text.

The story of the boys who were raised by wolves lends itself very nicely to teaching the past passive, especially with a little tweaking. Here is the story, graded to pre-intermediate level. There shouldn't be too much new vocabulary. Potential stumbling blocks are abandon, survive, and shepherd. The procedure follows below.


* * *
Romulus and Remus were twin brothers. They were born in Italy before Rome existed. Their mother, Rhea Silvia, was the daughter of King Numitor. But the King’s brother, Amulius, wanted to take power. He fought Numitor and forced Rhea Silvia to abandon her sons.
Romulus and Remus were put into a basket, and the basket was placed into the River Tiber. The basket travelled down the river for some time. Then, further down the river, the twins were discovered by a female wolf. She cared for the babies and fed them milk so that they would survive. Then they were discovered by a shepherd, and the shepherd cared for the boys until they were adults.
When Romulus and Remus became adults, they decided to build a new city. The brothers argued over where the site should be and Remus was killed by his brother. So Romulus was left to build the new city, and he named it Rome.
*    *    * 
Procedure

1. Pre-teach the word 'myth' - a traditional story about the past. It's not usually true. Ask the students about traditional stories in their country.

2. Ask students what they know about Rome. Where is it?

3. Explain that we're going to read the myth of how Rome got its name. Hand out the story and have students read it. Then ask some simple comprehension questions. What happened in the story? Do you believe it?

4. Tell students that we're going to look at a grammar point - the past passive. Write an example sentence and the structure on the board.

5. Hand out the grammar section. Students can work through in pairs or small groups.


6. As a productive follow-up, elicit some sentences from students about things that have happened to them before that can be expressed by the passive (I was bitten by a dog, I was stung by a bee, I was told off by the teacher...). Students form sentences, compare in small groups and then share some with the class.

7. As a filler at the end of the class, I like to walk around the classroom doing various actions and the students call out what I did in the passive (the pen was dropped, the water was drunk, the light was turned off, the book was opened...)

Click HERE to get the worksheet FREE.
Link opens in Google docs and you can then download, save and print as required.