Lessonplansvol 3
Lessonplansvol 3
Lesson
Plans
Elementary Level
Past Modals………………………………………………………………………………………..…………………..10
Sentence Building…………………………………………………………………………………..……………….14
Writing a Letter To A Pen Pal…………………………………………………………………………………..17
Articles……………………………………………………………………………………………..…………………….20
Writing Activities…………………………………………………………………………………………..………..29
How Questions…………………………………………………………………………………………..…………..34
Shopping………………………………………………………………………………………………………..….……37
Would Like To…………………………………………………………………………………………………..…....40
Can For Permission………………………………………………………………………………………………….43
Lesson Plan: Auxiliary Verb ‘Do’ for Asking Questions……………………………………..……..48
Skills-Based Lesson: Sting……………………………………………………………………………………..…51
Asking For Permission……………………………………………………………………………………………..53
Present Continuous…………………………………………………………………………………………………56
Intermediate Level
Simple and Perfect Tenses v Continuous Tenses……………………………………………………..59
Yes/No Questions……………………………………………………………………………………………………66
Adjectives using “-ing” and “-ed”…………………………………………………………………………….68
Have to/Has to/Had to for obligation…………………………………………………..………………...71
Question Tags…………………………………………………………………………………..…………………….74
Reported Speech…………………………………………………………………………………………..………..77
Superlative Adjectives……………………………………………………………………………………..……..80
Comparatives: “_____ as _____ as _____” …………………………………………………..………..83
Comparatives – Using Adverbs………………………………………………………………………………..87
Comparatives with Adjectives………………………………………………………………………..……….90
Present Perfect Question Forms……………………………………………………………………..………94
Gerunds & Infinitive Forms…………………………………………………………………………………..…99
Giving Advice…………………………………………………………………………………………………………103
Relative Clauses using ‘That’, ‘Which’ and ‘Who’…….…………………………………………….106
Using Modal Verbs to Make Invitations…………………………………………………………….....109
Riddle of the Thing in the Sky (Skills-based lesson)………………………………………………..112
The University of Life (Skills-based Lesson)…………………………………………………………...114
Intermediate Level
Past Perfect……………………………………………………………………………………………………..……116
Crime and Punishment…………………………………………………………………………………..……..122
The Future in The Past – Part One………………………………………………………………………...124
The Future in The Past – Part Two…………………………………………………………………………129
Martin Luther King Jr. (Skills-based Lesson)…………………………………………………..……...132
Health and Safety Rules Stop Tea and Toast: Skills Based Lesson……………………..…..134
Lesson Plan: She’s Leaving Home………………………………………………………………………....136
Beginner level
Objective:
To introduce and practice simple structures using the Present Tense.
It is likely that your learners have already done work on this - you will know your class and
how much new vocabulary you want to introduce / elicit from your learners and how many
of the structures introduced in this lesson plan your learners can cope with in one lesson.
Level:
Beginner to Elementary
Take your time with really low-level learners
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 - 90 minutes (depending on
how many practice activities you decide to do in your lesson)
Materials:
Handout
Target Language:
Question forms:
Like
Enjoy
Have (for possession)
Play
Want
Elicit
Write some information relating to you on the board as in the example below and see if your
learners can ask you suitable questions for these answers:
1. Mark
2. 35
3. English teacher
4. 1.85m
5. South Yorkshire, England
6. Playing the piano
7. Amy and Chloë
At this level you will need to do a lot of drilling. Keep the intonation bright and crisp, using
different forms of pronunciation that make drilling fun.
Ask the learners to introduce themselves to each other: name - age - live - hobbies - tall etc.
Make sure that you move your learners around as much as possible getting them to
introduce themselves to as many people as possible.
Practice:
Find someone who (one handout for each student):
First practice the question forms from the handout making sure your learners are
familiar with them. You can change the handout questions to suit your class.
Now do the milling activity.
Don't forget to feedback.
Extension Questions:
If there is time you may wish to introduce some of the following:
Overview:
This is a grammar-based lesson focused on expressing likes and dislikes.
Level:
Beginner to Elementary, although you can do this as a review lesson with Lower
Intermediate learners by introducing more vocabulary and a faster, more natural pace.
Lesson Length:
60 – 90 minutes depending on the level of your learners.
Assumed Knowledge:
This is one of the first lessons your learners will have when learning a new language. It is
useful as it deals with an easily-communicable target language and focuses attention on the
personal feelings of your learners, giving them a reason to communicate. Take your time
with Beginners and pre-teach a lot of vocabulary, which they will need to communicate with.
Target Language:
Do you like ____________________?
Yes, I like _____________________.
No, I don’t like _________________.
Elicit:
Using realia, pictures or miming, make sure that the learners have enough vocabulary to use
and vary the structure of the TL.
First of all, mime that you like eating / drinking / playing something and that you like a film
or sports personality. This will help your learners to understand the meaning of like and
don’t like something.
Elicit the following statement first (or model at Beginner level): “I like ______________.”
Then elicit the question form: “Do you like _______________?
For Lower Intermediate learners you can introduce: “What _________ do you like?
At the end of this lesson plan you will see some suggestions for extending this dialogue,
which you may wish to use at Lower Intermediate level.
Prompts:
Coffee
Tea
Milk
Biscuits
Eggs
Apples
Sport
Athletics
Football (soccer)
Tennis
Badminton
Table tennis
Swimming
Film Stars
Brad Pitt
Tom Cruise
Cameron Diaz
Matt Damon
Leonardo DiCaprio
Keira Knightley
Infinitive forms
Gerunds
Don’t forget that you ask the same question (“Do you like _______?”) for either:
Extension Questions:
You may wish to do this with Lower Intermediate learners
Past Modals
Objective:
There are 11 modal verbs in the English language. They don't have a past tense form, a
present participle form (-ing) or a past participle form. However, they can be used to talk
about a possible past, usually spoken with regret.
Level:
Elementary, though you may try this with your Pre-Intermediate learners.
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 - 90 minutes, depending on
how many practice activities you decide to do.
Materials:
Handout
Target Language:
You should have ___________.
You shouldn't have ____________.
If you had ______________ you wouldn't have ________________.
Elicit:
There are many ways to elicit this target language. Here is one suggestion:
Elicit the story of a young man or woman at university. They are studying Music (choose
your own subject). You can use flash cards:
Now show a list of his grades at the end of the year. You can show this on a handout or on
the board:
Music History E
Music Analysis E
Music Performance E
Composition E
Conducting E
Orchestration E
Counterpoint E
Elicit the problem and ask your learners to make the following sentences. Write them on the
board as you elicit (or get your learners to write them on the board):
If he hadn't gone to the pub every night, he would have passed his exams.
If he hadn't slept in, he would have passed his exams.
If he hadn't played so many video games, he would have passed his exams.
If he hadn't missed his classes, he would have passed his exams
If he hadn't gone to the pub every night, he wouldn't have failed his exams.
If he hadn't slept in, he wouldn't have failed his exams.
If he hadn't played so many video games, he wouldn't have failed his exams.
If he hadn't missed his classes, he wouldn't have failed his exams
There are many ways to express regret using modal verbs. Try introducing could, might and
may:
Give your learners the following prompts or get them to use their imagination:
Rich
Happy
Successful
Living in Hawaii
A good life
A happy future
A secure future
A successful job
A good wage
A window cleaner
An English teacher
Work 10 hours every day
Practice Activity 1:
Ask your learners to work with a partner and give them handout cards. They must explain
their problem to their partner and their partner must make observations using a variety of
different sentences. Here are a few suggestions:
Practice activity 2:
I'm very sad - my dog left me for another owner. Why?
Try to get your learners to make sentences similar to the following. Depending on the level
of your learners and their imagination, you may wish to give some clues.
Practice Activity 3:
Find someone who should have…
You can create your own handout for your learners based on what you know about your
class using the plan below. It is important to give thought to the questions your learners will
ask each other. For example:
Question 1:
Practice Activity 4:
Put your learners in pairs and get them to practice the following dialogue. Give prompts to
the learners at first and then let them come up with their own ideas:
A. Oh dear!
B. What's the matter?
A. I _________________________.
B. You should have _____________________.
A. Yes, if I had _______________, I wouldn't have ______________.
B. And you shouldn't have _____________________.
A. That's right. If I hadn't __________________. I would have _______________.
could have _______________.
might have _______________.
Practice Activity 5:
Make up a story of something you have done that was wrong. An example could be not
observing the customs of a country you have visited. Now get your learners to make
sentences about your situation. Here is a suggested plan:
When I went to Japan for the first time in 1996 I didn't understand the Japanese customs.
Objective:
This is an all-purpose lesson designed to help your learners make sentences by clause
building. You can do this lesson with large or small classes, and adapt it for young children
or adults.
Level:
Elementary to Advanced: Children / Teenagers / Adults
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 – 90 minutes
Materials:
Writing paper
To get the learners to create and join clauses together using adjectives, adverbs and noun
phrases in order to make long complex sentences.
Elicit:
The dog ran for the ball.
How can you turn this sentence of six words into a longer sentence without changing the
meaning? Is it possible to create a sentence of fifty words? Put your learners in pairs or
groups.
You may have to give your class a lot of hints, depending on their level. You will know what
your learners are capable of so don’t be afraid to stretch their abilities.
As a teacher you need to be aware of labelling words such as adverb, adjective and noun
phrase and you will need to be able to identify subordinate clauses and how the main verb
in each clauses is treated.
You can use any sentence to start with. Be prepared for what sentences your learners might
create. Here is a sentence that your Upper Intermediate or Advanced learners should be
able to cope with:
The large, wildly excited dog, which was a cross between a Border Collie and a
Labrador, ran in a frenzied manner across the park near my home, for the small
rubber ball, which sailed through the air at great speed as if it had been shot from a
cannon. (50 words)
With lower level learners, this is an excellent opportunity to introduce new adjectives and
adverbs and show your learners how to use this new vocabulary in context. Of course, the
sentence length must be appropriate for the level of the learner.
With your initial sentence do feedback on the board, perhaps getting your learners to write
their sentence on the board one at a time. If the sentence is grammatically incorrect, get
your class to give feedback and elicit the correct sentence form.
Now give your learners more examples.
Practice:
Part 1: Pairwork
Put the following sentences on the board and let the learners see who can make the longest
sentences. These sentences are only suggestions - feel free to use your own. For lower level
learners, don’t give so many sentences and make sure that they are easily understandable.
Remember to do feedback with your class. Is it possible to put some of these long sentences
together to make a paragraph, so that a story is being told?
Part 2: Pairwork
Now do the exercise the other way around. Give your learners a long complicated sentence
and see if they can take out all the unnecessary words to make a small sentence without
changing the meaning. Here is one example, used for (possibly) Upper Intermediate or
Advanced learners, but please feel free to create your own.
An unkempt teacher, with wild staring eyes, black horn-rimmed glasses perched on
the end of his nose and a shock of unruly hair, which looked as if it hadn't been
brushed for a week, came rushing into the classroom, carrying an unorganised pile
of half marked papers and essays and a large and battered brown briefcase tucked
under his arm, and tried unsuccessfully to organise himself before the class.
A teacher came rushing into the classroom and tried to organise himself.
Make up other sentences and get your learners to identify the unnecessary (but useful and
interesting) information. Make sure that the sentences you give your lower level learners are
not too difficult. Start with short sentences and build up to longer ones.
You may find your learners reaching for their dictionaries to help them understand the
meanings of the adverbs and adjectives. Stop them from doing this! Instead, get your
learners to try and guess the meanings of the words through the context of each sentence. If
they can’t guess, give clues using gestures, mime and board work. Only when they still don’t
understand, allow them to use their English to English dictionaries. If that fails then they can
use their English to native language dictionaries.
This is a fun and creative lesson, which will build up the confidence of your learners and
push them to use what they already know in a different way. Have fun!
Writing a Letter To A Pen Pal
Objective:
This is a low level skills-based lesson focussing on a reading activity, followed by a writing
activity. This lesson can be used with large classes and the language used is focused on
young children. The ideas and handouts presented here can be adapted to older children or
even adults.
Level:
Elementary: Children / Teenagers
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 – 90 minutes
Materials:
Letter handout which you need to prepare
Writing paper
Elicit:
Your learners are going to read a letter from Chloë, a twelve-year-old girl living in the UK. By
the end of the lesson, your learners will hopefully be able to write a letter to her. If you have
a young sister, brother, son or daughter, you may wish to substitute Chloë for someone you
know.
To create interest and introduce the topic here are some questions you may wish to ask your
class:
What is it?
Who wrote this letter?
Show a picture of a young girl. Try to get your learners to ask YOU some questions about
her, such as:
Prompt the class to ask you. Let them use their imaginations.
In pairs or small groups get the class to look at the letter to see if they can find information
about Chloë. You may have to pre-teach words such as pen pal, hamster and guinea pig.
Monitor the groups and do feedback with the class on the board.
Read the letter slowly but clearly to your class. It is important for them to hear the rhythm,
stress and intonation as you read it. Now ask some concept questions, such as:
Practice:
Now get your learners to do the handout you have prepared. It is important to consolidate
what they have learned by writing. Monitor your learners as they do this activity giving help
where needed. If you have a large class you may decide to have your learners do this activity
in pairs.
It is time for your learners to write their own letter. To prepare for this, get your learners to
decide what they could write about. If they are working in groups make sure you change the
groups around for every activity. Here are some suggestions:
Age
Where they live
Siblings
Pets
Parents
Their country or town
Their school
Their friends
Their hobbies
A lot depends on the age and the language level of your learners and adapt accordingly.
You may wish to pay attention to the conventions of letter writing, showing where to place
the address, the date and paragraphing.
You will need to be aware of the simple tense constructions you use, such as:
Be careful not to say too much yourself, but rather elicit as much as you can from your
learners.
Depending on the size of the class you may even wish to display some of their work on the
wall for a week or two.
Articles
Objective:
This is a grammar lesson focusing on the various ways in which we use the definite and
indefinite articles. It is also one of the most problematical areas for our learners. It is likely
most of your learners will have covered articles before. However this is one of the few times
where you will be creating a system of rules to help learners use them accurately.
Remember this important point. Try not to tell or lecture your learners but rather get them
to discover HOW to use articles correctly.
Level:
Elementary to Upper Intermediate learners. You may wish to spend time on this with your
Advanced learners, if you feel they need to focus on their accuracy of this Target Language.
The greater the English level, the faster you will go through this lesson plan and the more
practice activities you will want to do in class. You may wish to spend time constructing
further practice activities.
Lesson Length:
There is enough in this lesson for a lesson of up to 90 minutes
Target Language:
The and A are determiners. They are also called articles:
Elicit:
This is not easy to either elicit or teach. However, here is one suggestion. Start with a text
with all the articles removed. In pairs your learners must replace the missing articles. Here is
a suggested text for Intermediate learners. Ten sentences are usually sufficient for this
activity:
I have visited many countries, including Solomon Islands, Netherlands, British Isles
and Bahamas.
Best way to learn English is to find yourself boyfriend or girlfriend whose first
language is English.
Cola war between two biggest cola companies, Pepsi and Coca Cola, is far from
over.
You could give this as a handout (one sheet between two, otherwise they may end up
working individually).
However, you could start the class by doing a running dictation. An exciting activity will
capture the attention of your learners, especially if they are young:
Place the text somewhere inside or outside the classroom. Put your learners into pairs, one
writing and one running. They take turns to run (or walk quickly) to the text and remember
one sentence, return to their partners and whisper it into their partner’s ear, who writes it
down. This activity is very good for practising the four main skills: Reading, Listening,
Speaking and Writing. It is also a great pronunciation exercise and you will need to
encourage your learners to speak clearly. There are many things to consider when setting up
this activity:
If you cannot do this activity, can you think of other ways of getting your learners to write
down this text without you giving it to them?
Once the running dictation activity is finished, check to make sure that the sentences they
have written are correct. Now, ask your learners what words are missing. Establish that they
are articles. With their partner, they have to insert the missing articles, the and a/an. During
this activity monitor your learners and try to establish rules that you will do feedback on
later. It is important that you as a teacher are aware how articles are used, therefore you
need to be familiar with the following…
A Set of Rules for Articles:
An apple
A banana
A song
An English class
A cup
A person
An accident
A beach
A week
We use the indefinite article when an uncountable noun has been put into a
container or thing:
A cup of coffee
A packet of cornflakes
A bowl of soup
A basket of shopping
A plate of beans
A bag of rice
A bottle of beer
A drop of water
A loaf of bread
A lot of work
A piece of advice
A piece of music
Words beginning with a silent “h” are preceded with an:
An hour
An heir
An honourable man
An honest gentleman
We use the indefinite article to say what kind of thing a person or a thing is:
A spider is an insect.
A cat is an animal.
Mark is an optimist.
Martin is a driver.
Catherine is a manager.
Chris is a projectionist.
I bought a book yesterday. It's about a man who gets abducted by an alien. The
man manages to escape from the alien, but he is trapped on a strange planet and
can't escape. Also the planet is in a different galaxy. This is the best book I have
read in ages.
There are only 700 spaces in the car park at Leeds University.
We use the definite article when we talk about oceans and rivers and mountain
ranges, but not individual mountains:
The Himalayas
We use the definite article when we talk about countries that have been divided
into islands, states or areas or have become a Republic (ie. They have a plural
form):
The Netherlands
The Bahamas
Some nouns and adjectives beginning with the letter u may be preceded by either
a or an depending on the way they are pronounced:
An unusual man
An uninteresting book
A unanimous decision
We use the definite article when it is clear what we are talking about, not the
indefinite article:
(Sometimes we don't have to use an article: I'm going to watch television later.)
We use the definite article when referring to a service or a system:
We use the definite article when we make general statements about people or
groups:
The rich
The poor
The young
The old
The unemployed
The starving
The dying
Church
The church at the end of my street opens every Sunday for mass.
Experience
Hair
Hospital
Sea
Room
As you monitor the class, as they do this exercise, elicit certain rules and ask your learners to
write them on the board. It is far better to elicit than to tell.
I have visited many countries, including The Solomon Islands, The Netherlands, The
British Isles and The Bahamas.
The best way to learn English is to find yourself a boyfriend or a girlfriend whose
first language is English.
The ocean between The Philippines and The United States is called The Pacific.
Have you ever been in hospital? (This sentence is all right if you are talking about
an experience in the past where you were treated there as a patient. If you use the
sentence “Have you ever been in a hospital?” you are usually talking about an
experience in the past of visiting a hospital, not specifically as a patient.)
The cola war between the two biggest cola companies, Pepsi and Coca Cola, is far
from over.
Mark stopped a/the car at the corner of a/the street. (The context of this sentence
is important. If it’s a specific car already mentioned it is “the”. If it’s a specific street
already mentioned it is “the”.)
Practice:
Either in pairs or in groups, get your learners to brainstorm a set of further rules on when
and when not to use the articles.
Handouts (attached)
Gap fill
Correcting sentences
Feedback
Writing Activities
Introduction:
Of the four skills we teach our learners, writing, along with speaking, is productive and is
usually done towards the end of a lesson.
This is not a lesson plan as such but rather three writing activities that can be used at most
levels that can act as fun alternatives to the usual writing tasks that many learners are given
such as:
Write an essay
Write a story
Write a report
Write a diary
Write a list of instructions
Write a letter
The teacher writes a sentence and secretly shows it to student A in the class.
For example: "The cat climbed up onto the table."
Student A has to draw it.
Student A gives their drawing to Student B who looks at the picture and writes their
own description of what they see.
Student B gives their written description to Student C who draws it and so on.
Now do feedback and see how far from the original sentence your learners have
come.
There are positive and negative things about this activity, which as a teacher you need to be
aware of:
Positive points:
Negative points:
Depending on the size of your class you could put your learners into small groups of
four or five.
Give a time limit to the drawer and the writer.
Do this activity twice, making sure that each student in the class has an opportunity
to do writing as well as drawing.
Put the original sentences on a small card, which you show only to the first student
in a group.
Make sure that the learners in each group cannot see the drawing and the sentences
until it is their turn. You may need to move learners to different parts of the class in
order to accomplish this. Perhaps when it is the student's turn to draw or write, they
have to come to the front of the class to do it, so that the teacher can monitor.
Perhaps you could do this on large sheets of paper. When a drawing is done or a
sentence is written, just fold the paper over, making sure no one else can see it.
Make sure that the language is appropriate to all levels.
Make sure to do feedback on all the activities.
Prepositions: to, in
You can't change any of the words (past tense verbs remain past tense verbs).
You can't add your own words.
You can repeat them.
You must make five sentences that make sense.
Can your learners link the sentences together so that they make sense?
Although this is a controlled practice activity, your learners will find it fun and challenging.
Think about how you are going to arrange your class. Will your learners work alone or with a
partner? You know your class well enough. Is it possible to put a weaker learner with a
stronger learner?
Remember to do feedback with the class looking at all the work your learners have done.
You could also award points to your learners for the most interesting or most accurately
constructed sentences.
Write or type a list of sentences on a sheet of paper and place it somewhere on the wall in
the classroom. If you are brave enough, and you think you won’t disturb other classes, place
the sheet of paper somewhere outside the classroom. Make sure that it is placed at eye
level, as you will want your learners to be able to read these sentences without difficulty.
Put your learners into pairs and make sure they have a blank sheet of paper and a pen or a
pencil between them. Now get them to decide who will be the first "Writer" and who will be
the first "Runner".
Explain to your learners that one person from each team will run to the paper (wherever it is
situated) and look at the first sentence and memorise it. Then they have to return to their
partner and whisper the sentence to him or her, who writes it down. When finished, the
writer becomes the runner and the runner the writer until all the sentences have been
transferred from your sheet of paper to the pad on which your learners are writing.
The first to complete all the sentences will receive a prize (it's up to you to decide
what you will give them).
The person that is running can’t write. This is important and all those who cheat will
be disqualified.
Your learners must whisper (or speak softly) as clearly as possible so that their
partner can understand what to write down.
Your learners must write the sentences down in the same order as you have written
them.
Accuracy is an important feature of this activity so spelling and punctuation is very
important.
Your learners must not cheat. They can’t touch the paper they run to or prevent
others from seeing the paper. This is a strange point to make, but you'd be surprised
how many want to cheat in this game.
Tell your running learners to be careful when running. You don't want them collide
into each other, especially if they are running out of the classroom and down the
hall if you have placed your sheet quite a distance away.
An alternative to this activity is to place everyone in the middle of the class (make sure that
all desks and chairs have been removed first) in a circle looking out. The runner runs to
various points of the classroom wall where you have blu-tacked various cards with sentences
on them.
How you set up this activity depends so much on the size of the class and the teaching
environment.
Before doing this activity you need to think carefully about what you write on the sheet of
paper.
Get a story or a magazine or newspaper article and put each sentence out of order.
After the running dictation activity, your learners will have to write out the
sentences in their correct order. Remember things like paragraphing. If you are
creative, you can write your own story or article.
Write sentences using different tenses. After the running dictation activity, your
learners can work with a partner and decide which tense is being used.
Write sentences using different functions. After the running dictation activity, your
learners can work with a partner and divide the sentences into their different
functions. You may have to give your learners a few hints and do some examples on
the board.
Write a collection of "Conditional" sentences. After the running dictation activity,
your learners can work with a partner and write out the sentences into four
columns, each column representing the four different Conditional forms. During
feedback, your learners can decide which tense each clause uses. This activity is not
good for lower level learners as many of them may not have been introduced to
Third Conditional structures.
If you prepare a handout for your learners and the photocopy machine has broken,
you can do the running dictation activity instead of writing it out on the board. It's
much more fun and interesting than having your learners copying down from the
board in the traditional teaching fashion.
This activity practices all the four main skills:
Reading
Writing
Speaking
Listening
In addition, you are getting your learners to use their memory and you get them out of their
seats instead of having them sat still for 90 minutes.
Conclusion:
These are just three fun writing activities you can do with your learners. Use your
imagination and see what you can come up with. Remember, it is important to focus on the
reason why you are doing this activity. There has to be a purpose and as a teacher you need
to focus on what you intend to achieve in your class. Make sure that you always do feedback
and that all of your learners can benefit from the writing activities you do.
How Questions
Objective:
This is a fairly simple grammar lesson that focuses on the way we use the word “how” to find
out specific information. This is a fun lesson with a lot of interesting facts and figures.
Level:
Elementary to Intermediate learners. The greater the English level, the faster you will go
through this lesson plan. You may wish to spend time constructing further practice activities
for higher levels.
Lesson Length:
There is enough material for a lesson of up to 90 minutes at Elementary level.
Materials:
Handouts
Pictures
Assumed Knowledge:
It is likely many of your learners will be familiar with this structure. This lesson therefore
provides a way of practising this target language.
Target Language:
Elicit:
If, when asking your learners these questions, they don’t know, ask them: “Have a guess.”
Ask your learners to guess before you tell them the answer. Then drill with the class.
Ask your learners to guess before you tell them the answer (make sure you know –
you can always check facts and figures on the Internet). Then drill with the class.
Use a map:
Ask your learners to guess before you tell them the answer (make sure you know –
you can always check facts and figures on the Internet). Then drill with the class.
Use an object:
Ask your learners to guess before you tell them the answer. Then drill with the class.
Ask your learners to guess before you tell them the answer. Then drill with the class.
Practice:
Guessing game:
Write some brief facts about yourself up on the board and get the learners to ask you
questions.
Running Quiz:
Use a prepared question sheet. If there are odd numbers, get one of the brighter learners to
be the quizmaster.
Objective:
Sometimes you will want to practice dialogues with your learners in order to give them
confidence, for example when they want to go shopping on holiday, especially when they
have an extended stay in an English-speaking country. When practicing these dialogues you
will undoubtedly cover many simple grammar targets. This shopping dialogue covers making
requests and how to handle countable and uncountable nouns.
Level:
Elementary – Lower Intermediate. This lesson is suitable for teenagers and adults in classes
of all sizes.
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 – 90 minutes.
Materials:
Realia: looking at clothes people are wearing
Pictures / flash cards: clothes
Clothes in catalogues
Target Language:
Elicit:
Start the lesson by asking your learners what they are wearing. Ask them to describe to the
class. The general rule is to start from the top and work down.
Now elicit a situation where a shopkeeper and customer interact. Do not tell the learners
what each person would say. Rather, do your best to elicit what each character might say.
Ask your learners if there are other ways of saying the same thing.
The level of your learners will determine how many different forms you will want to elicit.
Remember to start with open pairwork and do a lot of drilling. You can use the following
dialogue as a model and add and subtract as much as you like depending on what you feel
your learners are capable of.
Shopping For Clothes:
C = Customer
SA = Shop Assistant
C Hello.
C Blue or red
I’m looking for a red pair of socks
I’d like a green T-shirt
C I’m a medium
I’m a size ten
My size is extra large
SA Thank you
C Thank you
Pair work:
Low-level learners will want as much practice as possible. Remember to swap partners at
regular intervals. Monitor your learners closely. Make sure that your learners are not
reading from the board or a handout. Wipe off as much as possible until all that remains is a
basic writing frame.
You may wish to do a cloze activity at the end of your lesson to consolidate what your
learners have practiced. You can base this on the above possible dialogue.
Would like to …
Objective:
This is a grammar lesson focusing on how to use the modal verb “would” to give and accept
an invitation and how to express a wish.
Level:
Elementary to Lower Intermediate learners. The greater the English level the faster you will
go through this lesson plan. You may wish to spend time constructing further practice
activities.
Lesson Length:
There is enough in this lesson for a lesson of up to 90 minutes at Elementary level.
Assumed Knowledge:
It is likely most of your learners will be aware of the existence of the modal verb “would”,
one of the eleven modal verbs that exist in the English language. They may have already
been taught this structure before, in which case you can use this lesson to practice the
structure. You can use the learners who are familiar with this structure to elicit the Target
Language. If your learners are a very low level you may have to model the target language.
Target Language:
We use the expression “would like to” to give and accept an invitation:
Elicit:
If this structure is new to your learners, you will need to provide a context. First, it might be
good for you to review likes and dislikes. Remember that you often use the gerund form
when we talk about the act of doing something.
Now invite A student to the cinema with you. You can do this using body language, tone of
voice and a diary (you can draw a calendar on the board to indicate one evening) to arrange
for a time and place to meet and to see a specific film. If you take a list or programme of
films showing at the local cinema, you can create a realistic dialogue for you to practice.
Depending on the level of your learners you may wish to introduce another modal verb:
“shall”
Practice 1:
Pair work
Elicit a dialogue like the one below. You may wish to write it on the board at first but after a
while wipe out most of the words so that only a dialogue frame remains. You want to avoid
your learners just reading a script. Encourage your learners create their own dialogue.
Yes, I do.
Sometimes we need to provide some prompts for our learners. Here are a few suggestions:
Go for a walk
Go swimming
Go to the theatre
Visit a place of interest
Play a game of cards
Go to the pub
Go out for lunch
Go to a party at my house
Practice 2:
Now introduce the concept of using “would like to” to express a wish. The context of your
questions should make it evident that you are not making an invitation. You can use pictures
of famous people or flash cards to do this. The following questions can be used to start a
dialogue. Feel free to use your own questions.
Would you like to eat French food in a very expensive restaurant? (Italian food?)
Objective:
To introduce to your learners to different ways of asking for permission and making rules
Level:
Elementary to Pre-Intermediate
Take your time with lower level learners
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 - 90 minutes (depending on
how many practice activities you decide to do in your lesson).
Materials:
Handout (or cards for mix and match game)
Target Language:
To get the learners to be able to ask for things politely and to refuse politely:
Elicit:
Ask student if you can borrow/have something. Make sure all your learners hear each
student's response. Get learners to ask each other.
Prompts:
Make sure that your learners know how to use 'polite' intonation when asking each other
questions. You may have to model this to your Elementary learners. Elicit other forms of
asking permission using other modal verbs:
May I …?
Could I …?
Would you mind if I? (Whether you teach this will depend on the level of your
learners)
Elicit the number of different replies for both affirmative and negative responses.
Positive
Sure.
No problem.
That's fine by me.
Of course you can.
Negative
Practice 1:
Write a list of verbs and nouns on the board and get the learners to make collocations:
Verbs:
Borrow
Have
Listen to
Look at
Open
Shut
Play
Read
Turn up
Turn down
Turn on
Turn off
Use
Watch
Nouns:
Apple
Camera
Chocolate
Computer
Dictionary
Door
Piano
Light
Magazine
Money
Walkman
TV
Window
You may need to concept check with your lower level learners.
Practice 2:
Learners match questions to negative answers (see attached handout - you may want to cut
these into cards for a mix and match activity)
Practice 3:
One group is going to have a young English boy or girl stay at their home. They have to write
a list of rules of what they can and can't do.
The other group are going on a host stay with a family in the UK. What questions will they
need to ask?
Prompts:
Practice 4:
Get a map of the town (you can use an imaginary one if you like) and elicit places in the
town. Ask your learners what you can and can't do in the following places:
Bookshop
Library
Park
Police Station
Department store
Petrol Station
Butchers
Newsagents
Town Hall
Handout:
Please look at the following ten questions and match them with the correct answers:
E. Oh, it crashed yesterday. I'm waiting for my friend to come and fix it.
Objective:
To show your learners how to use the modal auxiliary verb “do” to ask and answer questions
in present simple.
Level:
Elementary
Target Language:
Do you like ______________________? Yes, I do. / No, I don’t.
Where do you ____________________?
When do you _____________________?
What do you______________________?
Elicit:
You will need to do a lot of miming and use a lot of pictures to elicit vocabulary and
meaning. Pictures of food and celebrities are valuable in this lesson, as long as they know
these famous people.
Bananas
Apples
Oranges
Spaghetti
Chicken
Fish and chips
Brad Pitt
Johnny Depp
Angelina Jolie
Badminton
Football
Rugby
Next teach the meaning of like using gestures and mime. It is easy to show that you enjoy eating
some food or drinking a beverage.
Get your learners to ask you and then each other in open and then in closed pairs before you put
the form on the board.
Move slowly from like to like + gerund (like watching / like listening to).
Spend adequate time making sure that your learners use the correct pronunciation - a lot of drilling
will be necessary.
Then try the ‘Wh’ questions, which have a slightly different structure:
Practice 1:
Do you like __________________?
food
film stars
pop stars
sporting personalities
Tennis / football
a musical instrument
to music
to the radio
films
TV
Do you like going to __________________?
the theatre
concerts
the park
the cinema
the beach
Practice 2:
This is simply an extension of question and answer building from the previous activity. Depending on
the level of the learners you can introduce the ‘Wh’ – Questions:
Using “Where”
come from?
live?
go to school?
Using “When”
Using “What”
for breakfast?
for lunch?
for supper?
do _____________________?
after school?
after work?
at the weekend?
at the weekend?
on your day off?
in the summer?
in the winter?
Skills-Based Lesson: Sting
Level:
Elementary
Create Interest:
Ask learners about what music they like and why.
Pre-teach Vocabulary:
Look through the text and see if there are any words or expressions your learners may not be
familiar with. Here are some examples:
Pre-Set Questions:
What was Sting doing before he became a famous musician?
What are the names of some of his hits?
Apart from singing and composing music, what else does Sting do?
Reading Activity:
Do the activity, silently or reading aloud.
You may wish to do this as a listening activity so YOU will have to read it aloud.
Feedback:
Go through the questions, making sure the learners understand the text. You should ask additional
questions, particularly concept questions, to encourage STT. Ask the learners for their own opinions
and ask why they feel this way.
Follow-on Activity:
Why not listen to a Sting song? Make sure that the song is appropriate for the learners and be sure
to observe cultural norms.
Text: Sting
Sting was born in Wallsend, in the north of England in 1951 and lived there for over 20 years. As a
child he learned to play the piano and the guitar.
He worked as a teacher in Newcastle until 1977 and moved to London where he created the group
The Police with his friends Stewart Copeland and Andy Summers. He wrote most of the songs and
played bass guitar in the band. They had hits with Roxanne, Message in A Bottle and Every Breath
You Take. The Police released five albums and performed together until 1984.
After that, Sting decided to follow a solo career and received awards for several songs. Sting writes
many songs in different styles, such as, jazz, reggae, classical, new age and worldbeat. He has won
many awards and has even been nominated for three Oscars.
Sting started his acting career in 1982 in the film Brimstone and Treacle and has appeared in many
films since, such as Dune, The Bride, Plenty, Stormy Monday and Lock, Stock and Two Smoking
Barrels.
Sting spends a lot of his time working for Amnesty International. He is very interested in helping
people understand world hunger and human rights. He does many charity concerts to raise money
for these.
Asking For Permission
Level:
Elementary
Target Language:
Can I .... + verb + noun?
May I ...
Could I ...
Would you mind if I…
Would it be all right if I…
Elicit:
Ask one of your learners if you can borrow / have something. Make sure all your learners hear each
student's response. Get learners to ask each other. If a learner doesn’t understand you, get them to
ask you the same question. Make sure that the learner takes the object for a specified time so your
learners understand the concept of borrowing. Don’t forget to include polite forms (please and thank
you).
Prompts:
It is always a good idea to have a few prompts especially for low-level learners. Notice that there are
a variety of verbs.
After eliciting the structure, show the form clearly on the board.
Make sure that your learners understand that they should use 'polite' intonation when asking each
other permission.
Elicit a variety of different replies for both affirmative and negative responses.
Practice 1:
Create a mix and match activity on a handout where the answer is appropriate to the item being
borrowed (or not). You may have to pre-teach some vocabulary especially at Elementary level, such
as poor (I have no money), broken (the computer is broken) or fixed (repair). Here are a few
examples:
May I use the bathroom? Oh, I’m going out later and I want to
Can I open the window? listen to music.
Could I borrow some money from I’ve got a headache. I’d prefer it dark
you? right now.
May I play your guitar? You can’t. One of the strings is
May I borrow your iPod? missing.
Can I use your computer? I’d rather you didn’t. It’s a bit cold.
Would you mind if I read this book? Oh, it doesn’t work. The IT man’s
Can I switch on the light? coming later.
Sorry. My wife’s in the shower just
now.
Sorry. I’m afraid I’m poor myself.
Sorry, I haven’t finished it myself yet.
Practice 2:
Write a list of verbs on one side of the board and nouns on the other side and get the learners to
make question-form collocations. Think about how you will do this activity in your class. Split the
class into two teams and award points for correct answers. Here are some prompts:
Verbs:
Nouns:
Practice 3: Situation
Imagine that your learners are staying at a host family’s home in Britain or the US. Elicit situations
where they would have to ask permission to do something.
Try to get your learners to come up with ways of asking permission, though it is always good for you
as a teacher to have prompts ready:
As a teacher you will need to think about the different ways our learners ask permission in different
circumstances, i.e. from their boss, from their family or from their best friend.
Present Continuous
Objective:
To introduce and practice ways to:
In this lesson you will be using just one tense: The Present Continuous
Your learners may already have done some work on this. You will know your class and how much new
vocabulary you want to introduce to / elicit from your learners. It may be that your learners have
already been introduced to this tense. They will need a lot of practice and this lesson provides just that.
Level:
Elementary
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 - 90 minutes (depending on how many
practice activities you decide to do in your lesson).
Materials:
Flash cards / Pictures
Part One
Target Language:
I'm / He's / She's + verb + -ing (for what is happening now)
Elicit:
There are many ways to elicit this tense. One of the easiest is to do some kind of mime (for example a
card trick). Try to elicit the question and the answer from your learners.
Practice:
For lower level learners you will need to do a lot of practice, first in open and then in closed pair work.
Concentrate on the way your learners pronounce the structures. Listen carefully as you monitor your
learners during closed pair work. You may have to provide a few prompts. You can do this with flash
cards or mime.
* Use action pictures - a person doing something, playing a sport or some activity. Get your learners to
ask both the question and answer.
Eating
Running
Drinking
Standing
Sitting
Swimming
Sleeping
Cleaning
Doing housework
Making his bed
Cooking
Listening to music
Studying
Reading
Taking (having) a shower/bath
Watching a film
Doing a card trick
Playing (games or sports or a musical instrument)
In pairs, give a flash card or a card with a continuous verb written on it to a student without showing
their partner. Then ask them to mime it to their partner.
What am I doing?"
You are _______________."
Part Two
Target Language:
I'm / He's / She's + verb + -ing (for what will happen in the future)
To indicate a future meaning, you need to add at the beginning or at the end of this structure, a phrase
such as:
Tonight
Next week
On Wednesday
In a couple of weeks
Tomorrow
Elicit:
Your learners will understand that you can use the Present Continuous for something that is happening
in the present. You now need to elicit a different meaning: Making plans and talking about the future.
You can elicit this by miming a telephone conversation. Try to elicit the complete dialogue from your
learners:
A: Hello.
B: Hello.
A: What are you doing?
B: I'm working / eating / shopping.
A: What are you doing tonight at seven o'clock?
B: I don't know / I'm going out with my friends / I'm eating my dinner.
Many of your learners may already be familiar with the use of this tense. To concept check this you may
wish to draw a time line on the board and show the "doing" now (in the present) and the "doing" later
(at seven o'clock tonight).
Do choral and individual drilling of this simple dialogue with your learners and write the form clearly on
the board.
Now elicit forms of invitation. At Elementary level perhaps a simple "Would you like to come?" will
suffice. If you can't elicit it, you may have to model the form.
Depending on the level of your learners you may wish to elicit (or model) some of the informal phrases
that lend themselves to making arrangements. Remember to elicit the dialogue structures first, drill and
put the form on the board. Do not allow your learners to just read from the board. You can always
create a gap fill (cloze) by removing certain words so that they have a dialogue frame to work from at
first.
If you have time you could extend this dialogue to include where to meet and at what time. This will
depend on the length of your lesson and the level of your learners.
Practice: Pairwork
A: I'm …
… having some friends round for a party.
… listening to some music.
… going shopping for _______.
… going to the supermarket.
… playing tennis.
B: Yeah, sure.
OK.
Why not?
Yes, I'd love to.
Simple and Perfect Tenses v Continuous Tenses
Overview:
This is a grammar-based lesson that focuses on the difference in meaning between simple tenses and
progressive (continuous) tenses. This is the kind of lesson you may wish to do with learners who are
about to take a grammar-based English examination such as Cambridge First Certificate or Cambridge
Certificate of Advanced English.
Level:
Intermediate - Advanced
Lesson Length:
60 - 90 minutes depending on the level of your learners.
Assumed Knowledge:
Learners at this level will be familiar with the different simple, perfect and progressive tenses. Usually as
teachers we elicit the meaning of the structure before the form, but as your learners are looking at not
just practicing their English, but at understanding the nuances of English grammar in preparation for an
exam, you will need to elicit the subtle differences between the simple and the progressive forms.
Elicit:
Task One:
You may wish to start your lesson by writing the following sentences on the board:
Now ask your learners what the difference is between the two. If they need some encouragement, you
may wish to ask the following concept questions:
It is sometimes good to put your learners in pairs or groups to brainstorm the answers. Hopefully they
will come to the following conclusion:
Here are some concept questions you may wish to ask your learners:
Sentence One: Is this a regular event? Do I usually eat dinner at the same time every day?
Sentence Two: When did I may this decision?
Now do the same with the following sentences on the board. Encourage your learners to identify the
clauses, the tense used in each clause and the difference of meaning between the sentences:
Task Three:
Task Four:
Task Five:
Task Six:
Task Seven:
Task Eight:
Practice 1:
Give the attached handout to your learners. Encourage your learners to work with a different partner.
Monitor your learners and see how they get on. Remember to leave enough time to do feedback at the
end of the lesson.
Answers:
Look at the sentences and rewrite them so that they are correct. One of the sentences does not need
changing.
1. While I was driving along in my car, I realised that I had left my bag at home.
2. The last time I saw my friend Chris, he was catching the bus to work.
3. Dinner is usually served in the refectory, but today it is being served in the canteen.
4. You can find me in the refectory at lunchtime as I usually have my dinner there.
6. Next weekend, I am planning a trip to the countryside for my learners. But what will we do if it starts
to rain?
7. Who does this textbook, which lies on the desk, belong to?
8. My daughter Chloë hated vegetables when she was a child, but now she enjoys eating them whenever
she has them.
9. Will you be waiting for your guests to arrive on Wednesday evening this week? [Correct]
10. How long have you been studying English and how many words do you think you have in your
vocabulary so far?
11. I once walked 120 kilometres in less than 48 hours, which I found most tiring.
12. The traffic in Leeds is being diverted because of the new bridge that is being built.
Practice 2:
Complete the following sentences using one of the verbs. Make sure to use the correct aspect of each
tense. What tense is being used in each clause?
Practice 1:
Look at the following sentences and rewrite them so that they are correct. Please make sure to use the
correct aspect of each tense.
1. While I drove along in my car, I realised that I had left my bag at home.
_________________________________________________________
2. The last time I saw my friend Chris, he caught the bus to work.
_________________________________________________________
3. Dinner is usually being served in the refectory, but today it is served in the canteen.
_____________________________________________________________________
4. You can find me in the refectory at lunchtime as I am usually having my dinner there.
_____________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
6. Next weekend, I plan a trip to the countryside for the learners, but what will we be doing if it starts to
rain?
_____________________________________________________________________
7. Who is this text book, which lies on the desk, belonging to?
_______________________________________________________________
8. My daughter Chloë was hating vegetables when she was a child, but now she's enjoying eating them
whenever she has been having them.
_____________________________________________________________________
9. Will you be waiting for your guests to arrive on Wednesday evening this week?
_____________________________________________________________________
10. How long did you study English and how many words do you think you have been getting in your
vocabulary so far?
_____________________________________________________________________
11. I once have walked 120 kilometres in less than 48 hours, which I found most tiring.
_____________________________________________________________________
12. The traffic in Leeds was being diverted because of the new bridge that was built.
_____________________________________________________________________
Practice 2:
Complete the following sentences using one of the verbs. Make sure to use the correct aspect of each
tense. What tense is being used in each clause?
3. Most days I ____________ my friends for lunch, but today I'm ______________ through without a
break.
4. I ________________ pancakes with lemon and sugar, but I ___________ ___________ them with
honey or syrup.
6. The man started to _______ when he was ________ a can of diet Pepsi and nearly _______.
Yes / No Questions
Objective:
This is a fun lesson that concentrates on speaking practice rather than having a specific grammar focus.
It is fun in that your learners have to find different ways of agreeing, disagreeing and responding to
closed questions using expressions other than 'yes' or 'no'.
Level:
Lower Intermediate to Advanced learners
Take your time with lower level learners but go quite fast with Advanced learners, introducing a wide
range of vocabulary in your questions.
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 - 90 minutes, depending on how many
practice activities you decide to do in your lesson.
Target Language:
Yes:
I agree.
That's right.
That's correct.
Of course.
That's true.
That's perfectly correct.
That's absolutely true
No:
That's wrong.
That's not right.
That isn't right.
That's not correct.
That isn't correct.
Of course not.
That isn't true.
I disagree.
I don't know.
I'm not sure.
I'm not certain
Elicit:
Get learners to agree or disagree about something (make sure they understand that they can't say
either 'yes' or 'no'):
Practice:
Student Dialogue:
Here are a few suggested questions you can elicit from your learners. Get them to ask each other:
1. What's your name? / How old are you? / Where do you come from?
2. Did you say ____________? (Repeat phrases that the learners say for confirmation)
3. You're 30 years old, aren't you? (Tag Questions)
4. How are you? Do you feel well? Are you happy?
5. Are you sure?
6. Do you like your job?
The rules of the game: You can't say "Yes" or "No". You can't nod or shake your head.
Board Game:
For example:
You will need to give thought to how you will award points to the teams and how you will set up your
class for this activity.
Adjectives using “-ing” and “-ed”
Objective:
This is a fairly simple grammar lesson that focuses on how we use adjectives. However, even up to
Intermediate and sometimes Upper Intermediate level you may find that your learners will become
confused between using the –ed and the –ing form.
Level:
Elementary to Lower Intermediate learners. The greater the level of your learners, the faster you will go
through this lesson plan. You may wish to spend time constructing further practice activities.
Lesson Length:
There is enough material for a lesson of up to 90 minutes at Elementary level.
Materials:
Pictures
Assumed Knowledge:
It is likely most of your learners will have already been taught this structure before. However, this is a
great opportunity to introduce a number of new adjectives for them. This lesson plan and the attached
handout give a few suggestions, but think of others you may wish to use.
Target Language:
Elicit:
Elicit different adjectives from your learners by asking questions about HOW they feel about things. Try
to make your questions as natural as possible. Think about how you would naturally ask these questions.
Here are some suggestions:
Yes, I do.
I love it.
I go every week.
No, I don’t.
I never go.
I hate the cinema.
I’d rather watch a film on DVD.
I’m not into it.
*Even at Elementary level you can introduce interesting turns of phrase or idiomatic English. You will
know what your learners can cope with.
What films have you seen recently? What did you like about it? How did it make you feel?
It was _________________ (interesting, exciting, boring, moving).
I was __________________ (interested, excited, bored, moved).
I was genuinely moved when I saw The Shawshank Redemption.
*Depending on the level of your class you can start collocating adjectives with adverbs. However,
expressions, such as, “I was genuinely bored” and “I was genuinely not interested” don’t really work.
Which do your prefer, watching films at the cinema or watching films on DVD at home? Why?
Yes, I do.
No, I don’t.
I think that horror films are ______________ (frightening, disturbing, terrifying, horrifying,
shocking…)
I get (I am) __________________ (frightened, disturbed, terrified, horrified, shocked) when I see
horror films.
Yes, I do.
No, I don’t.
* Be careful when you need to collocate some adjectives with prepositions, which you may want to do
with higher level classes:
I am amazed at …how much I can learn. / …how much I have learned / …how complex the
English language is.
It is amazing how much I have learned.
I am fascinated with…
It is fascinating how much I have learned so far / this year.
I am satisfied with… my progress so far.
* Be careful with sentences your learners may say: I am satisfied with studying English, which sounds
unusual.
What do you think about this picture? (Use one that shows something beautiful, terrible or
unusual)
Practice activities: It might be good (depending on the level of the class) to elicit a list of adjectives you
want to introduce to your learners to use in this lesson or in the following practice activities. You may
wish to get your learners to write the words on the board. Make sure that your learners understand the
meaning of these words before they are written on the board. Here are some suggestions:
Get your learners to think about questions they can ask each other.
Now get them to move around the room and interview each other. They may wish to take notes so that
they can give feedback to the class later.
Have to / Has to / Had to for Obligation
Objective:
This is a fairly simple grammar lesson that focuses on regular routines - how to describe the things that
we are obliged to do every day. It focuses on the present, the past and the immediate future.
Level:
Elementary to Lower Intermediate learners. The greater the level of your learners, the faster you will go
through this lesson plan. You may wish to spend time constructing further practice activities for higher
levels.
Lesson Length:
There is enough material for a lesson of up to 90 minutes at elementary level.
Materials:
Handout (enclosed)
Pictures
Assumed Knowledge:
It is likely most of your learners will have already been taught this structure before. There are many uses
of “have” in the English language and our learners need as much practice as possible so that they can
differentiate between have for possession, have to receive something or have used as an auxiliary verb
in the present perfect tense to describe experience.
Target Language:
I have to go to work every day at eight o’clock on week days.
I have to do the washing up after dinner.
Mark has to look after his daughter Chloë.
Catherine has to cook dinner for her husband.
I had to get up at six o’clock this morning.
I had to do my homework last night.
Elicit:
Ask your learners the following questions and then encourage them to ask each other, first in open pairs
and then in closed pairs.
What things do you have to do every day? (today, tomorrow, at the weekend, next Saturday)
I have to ________.
What things did you have to do today? (yesterday, last night, last Saturday)
I had to _________.
What did ____________ (use one of your learner’s names) have to do last night?
He / She had to ______________.
You can use occupation flash cards or pictures of celebrities or sports personalities (these are always
available on the Internet) to elicit responses from your learners.
What does he / she have to do every day?
He / She has to _______________.
Depending on the level of your learners, you could introduce the following:
Practice:
It is up to you how you set up your classroom for these activities. Give thought to where your learners
are sitting, whether they will be in groups or in pairs or whether you want to do a running dictation
game. It’s up to you.
Occupations:
Police office / Maths teacher / Architect / Farmer / Tennis Player
What do they have to do?
Dialogues
Can you come out tonight?
No, I’m sorry. I can’t. I have to ________________.
Interview:
This is an alternative FSW activity but much more complicated than the last. This is a milling activity,
where your learners have to interview at least two members of the class. The attached handout has a
number of different questions so each class member will have to spend some time with their partner.
Again think about how you will arrange the class and the rules. For example: if you interview someone,
they can’t interview you! Remember to monitor this activity.
Question Tags
Objective :
To show the different ways that question tags can be used using a variety of verbs.
Level:
Elementary to Intermediate learners. The greater the level of your learners the faster you will go
through this lesson plan.
Lesson Length:
There is enough in this lesson for a lesson of up to 90 minutes at Elementary level.
Assumed Knowledge:
It is likely many of your learners will have already been taught this structure before. You can use the
learners who are familiar with this structure to elicit the Target Language.
Target Language:
Question tags are either positive statements with a negative question tagged onto the end or a negative
statement with a positive question tagged onto the end.
Or
Pronunciation and stress plays a very important role when teaching this lesson because the stress on the
question tag will indicate the meaning of what you say. Here are the two different things to think about:
If you asking a question to someone and you are not sure of something, the inflection at the end of the
sentence goes up.
If you asking a question to someone and you want confirmation about something that you already
know, perhaps when there is an audience present, the inflection at the end of the sentence goes down.
Elicit:
Present Tense:
Can:
Like / Love:
Future:
Should:
Past:
Suggestions:
Imperatives:
Proper nouns:
You’re Yuki, aren’t you?
You’re Brad Pitt, aren’t you?
You aren’t famous, are you?
I’m late, aren’t I? (Aren’t = am I not?)
Practice:
On tables or on the floor get your learners to put the correct question tag to each sentence. You can
make this into a race to see which pair or which group finishes first.
This is a fun activity and should be left until the end of the class. Get your learners to write out the name
of a famous person on a small piece of paper. Tell them to stick or pin it to the back of a fellow student.
They are not allowed to look at the name of the person. Now get your learners to mill about and ask
questions about themselves.
Remember to set rules to all games that you play. For example:
Objective:
This may seem like a fairly simple grammar lesson, focusing on the ways we relay information from one
person to another through reported speech.
Level:
Elementary to Intermediate learners. The greater the level of your learners the faster you will go
through this lesson plan. You may wish to spend time constructing further practice activities.
Lesson Length:
There is enough in this lesson for a lesson of up to 90 minutes at Elementary level.
Materials:
Handout (enclosed)
Assumed Knowledge:
Your learners need to be able to leap between past, present and future tense forms. It is likely most of
your learners will have already been taught this structure before. You can use the learners who are
familiar with this structure to elicit the Target Language. If your learners are a very low level you may
have to model the target language.
Target Language:
1. I will go to Spain.
2. I feel ill.
3. I am feeling sick.
4. I rarely go out in the evening.
5. Please visit me in England.
6. Be quiet!
7. I saw my friend Martin last summer.
8. I went to see my friend last night.
9. I have bought a new motorbike.
10. Have you done your homework?
Grammar Rules:
For present tense and future plans you use the past simple tense:
For past tense sentences (completed actions) you can (if you wish to) use the past perfect
tense:
For present perfect sentences you use the past perfect tense:
10. Direct Speech: Mark said: “Have you done your homework?”
Reported speech: Mark asked if we had done our homework. Mark demanded if we had done
our homework (or not).
Elicit:
There are a number of different ways to elicit this target language. One way is to stick a picture
of someone on the board. Next draw a speech bubble and write something inside. Now ask
your learners:
If he or she is famous, you can have some fun. Here are some examples:
Warning: Be aware of culture and be careful that you don’t offend anyone.
Practice:
Interviewing people:
Imagine you a Journalist. What questions would you ask the following people:
Brad Pitt
Your teacher
Your girlfriend/boyfriend
Homer Simpson
The Pope
Samuel L. Jackson
You can choose from a list of your own making. Look for pictures of people on the Internet. Perhaps you
could give a picture to different groups in your class and get them to write down the questions they
would ask these people as a journalist.
Now create new groups and get your learners to interview each other pretending to be the person they
had prepared questions for. Using role play in your lesson in this way will create a fun atmosphere.
Here are some examples of some questions you may wish to use as prompts with your learners:
Now get your learners to write the answers to the questions using reported speech. Don’t forget to do
feedback.
Feedback:
Objective:
To introduce to your learners and practice using adjectives that describe the biggest, the tallest, the
greatest (etc). It is likely that your learners have already done work on this – you will know your class
and how much new vocabulary you want to introduce and elicit from your learners.
Level:
Elementary to Pre-Intermediate. Take your time with lower level learners.
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 – 90 minutes (depending on how many
practice activities you decide to do in your lesson).
Target Language:
Elicit:
There are many ways to elicit this target language. Here are a few suggestions.
Get the learners to stand up. Choose the tallest and shortest and get your learners to make a sentence
about him/her.
Ask everyone his or her ages. Pick the oldest and youngest and get your learners to make sentences.
Using pictures, get your learners to identify objects, places or people. You can find a lot of pictures on
the Internet. Make sure your learners are familiar with these people or places. You MUST be able to
make a sentence with a superlative adjective about them. Here are a few examples (you can think of
your own):
Try to elicit as many different forms of superlative adjectives as you can. Use your imagination to make
as many sentences as you can and do your best to elicit them. Once your learners are used to the
structure, get them to make sentences using a person or a thing. The examples above deal with “in the
world”. You can widen (or shorten) the parameters by using the expression “in this classroom”. If your
learner is expressing an opinion it is important to say “I think______” or “I think that ______”.
Practice:
A Running Quiz:
Objective:
To introduce to your learners ways of using adjectives and adverbs to compare things using the above
structure.
Your learners may already have done some work on this - you will know your class and how much new
vocabulary you want to introduce to / elicit from your learners.
Level:
Elementary to Intermediate
Take your time with lower level learners.
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 - 90 minutes (depending on how many
practice activities you decide to do in your lesson).
Materials:
Handouts
Rules:
1. Question forms:
Adjectives:
Adverbs:
Adjectives:
Adjectives:
Adverbs:
4. To describe the situation up to a certain point in time using the perfect tense:
Elicit:
Make a list of things (objects / people / animals) on the board and get your learners to make sentences
(try to make them all different sizes):
Practice:
Gap-fill handout
Your learners can work together to create sentences using prompts from a worksheet.
Get your learners to make comparisons about their family, their town, the difference between
their country and your own.
Handout 1: Gap-fill
Beautiful
Cold
Dangerous
Exciting
Fast
Many
Much
Quickly
High
Well
4. Japanese men ______ lose their hair ___ __________ ____ English men.
Rules:
* You must use both words in each question.
* You must use the verb (is / do / have) in brackets.
* When you see a question mark (?) you must write a question.
Hints:
* The verb "be" (is / isn't / are / aren't) uses a comparative adjective.
* The verb do means that you must use an adverb and supply an appropriate verb.
1. Brad Pitt and Tom Cruise (isn't).
Objective:
To introduce your learners to using adverbs to compare things.
It is likely that some of your learners may have already done work on this - you will know your class and
how much new vocabulary you want to introduce to / elicit from your learners.
You need to be careful not to get confused between adverbs and adjectives.
Level:
Elementary to Intermediate
Take your time with lower level learners.
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 - 90 minutes (depending on how many
practice activities you decide to do in your lesson).
Materials:
Handout
Target Language:
better ~ worse ~ more carefully ~ more dangerously ~ more slowly ~ more quickly ~ more carefully ~
more carelessly ~ more cheaply
Elicit:
Get your learners to make sentences using prompts that you give them (such as pictures and flash
cards):
Mark fell off his bike twice last year. Peter fell off his bike seven times last year.
Mark rides his bike more carefully than Peter.
Peter rides his bike more dangerously than Mark.
Peter plays tennis every day. Mark plays tennis every month.
Peter plays tennis better than Mark.
Mark plays tennis worse than Peter.
Mark types letters very fast and often makes mistakes. Chloe types letters quite slowly but
never makes mistakes.
Mark types letters more carelessly than Chloe does. / Mark types letters more quickly than
Chloe.
Chloe types letters more carefully than Mark does. / Chloe types letters more slowly than Mark.
(To make the English sound more natural you could say Chloe types more carefully than Mark.)
Pat is 67 years old. Amy is 23 years old. They like hiking in the mountains.
Amy climbs up mountains - faster / much quicker / more quickly - than Pat.
Pat climbs up mountains - slower / more slowly / - than Amy.
Mark works hard every day. He gets up at 6.00am and finishes at 9.00pm.
Chloe sleeps until 10.00am and sometime works at the weekend.
Mark is richer than Chloe. [adj.]
Chloe is poorer than Mark. [adj.]
Mark works harder than Chloe. Mark earns more money than Chloe.
Chloe doesn't work harder than Mark. Chloe earns less money than Mark.
Extension:
How old is Mark? (I'm 45) Gasp! Shock! Horror!
Mark is much older than - we first thought / he looks / we imagined.
more cheaply
1. Mark fell off his bike once last year. Catherine fell off her bike seven times last year.
_____________________________________________________________________
2. Yuki plays the piano every day. Mark plays the piano every month.
_____________________________________________________________________
3. Amy types letters very fast and often makes mistakes. Chloe types letters quite slowly but never
makes mistakes.
_____________________________________________________________________
4. The train fare to Manchester costs £13. The coach fare to Manchester costs £5.
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
6. Pat is 67 years old. Amy is 23 years old. They like hiking in the mountains.
_____________________________________________________________________
7. Amy gets up at 7.00am and works until 5.00pm. Chloe sleeps until 10.00am and sometimes works at
the weekend.
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
9. Three months ago your English was ok. Now, it is very good.
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
Comparatives with Adjectives
Objective:
To introduce your learners to using adjectives to compare things.
It is likely that your learners have already done work on this - you will know your class and how much
new vocabulary you want to introduce to / elicit from your learners.
Level:
Elementary to Pre-Intermediate
Take your time with lower level learners
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 - 90 minutes (depending on how many
practice activities you decide to do in your lesson).
Materials:
Handouts
Target Language:
Elicit:
Make a list on the board (try to make them all different sizes) and get the learners to make sentences:
For example:
A spider
bigger smaller
dirtier cleaner
taller shorter
faster slower
quieter noisier
colder hotter
harder softer
The Rules:
A small word that end in 'g' & 't' add another 'g' or 't' (ie. hotter ~ bigger).
A word ending with 'y' becomes '-ier'.
A long adjective with three or more syllables often doesn't have the traditional -er on the end.
Instead you put the words 'more' or 'less' in front of them, as in 'more beautiful' or 'less
hardworking'.
Practice:
Gap-fill handout.
Your learners can work together to create sentences using prompts from a worksheet.
Get your learners to make comparisons about their family, their town, the difference between
their own country and yours.
Small Tall
For example:
1. Brad Pitt and Tom Cruise.
Objective:
To get your learners to practice question forms using the present perfect tense but to make a clear
distinction and compare:
Level:
Elementary / Pre-Intermediate - you may even wish to do this at Intermediate level to practice a tense
that your learners should already be familiar with. You may find that some learners even at
Intermediate level will be unfamiliar with using present perfect to check if something has been done or
not.
Lesson Length:
There is enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 – 90 minutes depending on how many practice
activities you employ during your lesson and depending on the level of the learners in your class. At
Elementary level, this lesson plan can be stretched over two lessons.
Materials:
Handouts that you can make and photocopy.
Target Language:
Meaning:
In sentences one and two, the questions are to check that something has been done.
In sentences three and four, the questions are to ask about a person’s experience.
Form:
This question form structure uses the auxiliary verb have (or has) + the past participle form of the verb
(do – call - visit – eat):
Auxiliary verb (has / have) + subject + past participle form of the main verb + object
Show your learners a picture of a young couple. If you don’t have a picture, draw one in the board. Elicit
their names and what they do and how old they are:
Let’s call them Chris, who is 28 and Amy, who is 25. Chris is a cinema projectionist and Amy works in an
office.
It’s a special date: 15th December.
1. birthday cake
2. invitations
3. extra chairs
4. balloons
5. music
6. party hats
7. alcohol
8. food (sausage rolls)
9. ashtrays for the smokers
It is now the day of the party. Amy wants to make sure that Chris has done all the preparation for her
party. What questions is she going to ask him? [This is where you can elicit the target language]
You will need to drill this two or three times. Make sure that all your learners are making an effort and
pick on a few to do individual drilling.
You may wish to do invisible drilling, that is you wipe off the picture from the board and point to the
empty space. Your learners will remember what was in the space.
There may be some problems with the verbs in the examples above as some of them are irregular. Look
at these irregular verbs:
However, it is good to have a variety of regular and irregular verbs to give your learners a chance to use
a lot of vocabulary and introduce different kinds of verb forms. With lower level learners you may wish
to stick to the regular verb forms.
Practice 1:
Chris has drunk a lot of beer at the party. When he wakes up Amy has gone to work. She has left a note
for Chris. You can give this to your learners as a handout or you can use the OHP.
Dear Chris,
Can you:
Don’t forget to apologise to Chloe. Tell her that you didn’t mean what you said.
Amy
When Amy is taking her lunch she calls Chris. What questions do you think you she will ask Chris?
Talking about an experience you had in the past but remember in the present
Chris and Amy have been going out for a few months and they have decided to go on their first holiday
together. They have never been away together before and are deciding where to go. What questions do
you think they ask each other? When eliciting, you may need to give hints to elicit these and similar
questions:
Notice that there are a variety of past participle verbs used in these questions. Try to get your learners
to practice this structure using a variety of different verbs. For example, your learners can ask a question
with the same meaning. Ask your learners if you can ask the same question using a different verb:
Potential problems:
Some question forms use an additional preposition (been to / swum in / toured around /
trekked in).
Remember to be aware of the problems irregular verbs pose.
Practice 2:
Find someone who…
See the attached handout and use the examples shown or you can make up your own handout based on
your own knowledge of your class. Please be careful to ask questions that are appropriate to the
learners in your class and are appropriate to the culture in which you teach.
Level:
Pre-Intermediate
Target Language:
There are a handful of words in the English language that look like verbs. However, they are not. They
are nouns. Look at the following sentences
It is easy to confuse the highlighted words in these sentences with the –ing form of verbs (sometimes
referred to as the present participle), because they look like verbs. However, if you look closely at where
these words are in the sentence, you will see that they operate as nouns.
…“smoking” and “swimming” operate as the subject of the sentence. They appear before the main verbs
“kills” and “is”.
…“running” and “eating” operate as the object of the sentence. They appear after the main verbs “love”
and “prefer”. These types of nouns are called gerunds.
The water in the Dong Nai River is too dirty for swimming in.
Boris felt wonderful after visiting the beach.
I decided to raise money by selling my car.
Sometimes gerunds can be replaced by the infinitive (to + verb) form. Look at the following sentences:
Please note that the main verbs in these sentences are “love”, “stopped” and “like”. These verbs are
followed by the infinitive form: “to swim”, “to rest” and “to play”.
Elicit:
Ask your learners what they like doing? Ask them what they don’t enjoy doing? Concentrate on the
verbs 'like' and 'enjoy':
Gerunds:
Infinitive forms:
Here are some more gerunds (it is good to go prepared to class with prompts):
Watching TV Exercising
Smoking Skiing
Swimming Ballroom dancing
Being interviewed Skating
Practice 1:
Please choose from the appropriate verbs and write them as gerunds in the sentences below. You MUST use
the main verbs suggested at the end of each sentence. Be careful to use the correct form of the tense.
Which of these sentences can you use with the infinitive form?
Practice 2:
Get the learners to make two lists: Things that are good for you and things that are bad for you.
Level:
Pre Intermediate
Target Language:
There are many ways of giving advice. Many of the following use modal verbs:
You should...
You could…
You ought to…
You’d better…
How about...?
Why don’t you…?
Why don't you try...?
Have you tried… ing?
Have you considered… ing?
Have you thought about… ing?
If I were you, I’d…
Elicit:
There are many ways to elicit this target language. One way that works well is to elicit a situation using
pictures, realia or mime and get the learners to give YOU advice.
The story about your boyfriend / girlfriend being unfaithful works well and captures the attention of
your learners:
1. Use a photograph or a picture show your learners what your girlfriend / boyfriend looks like
2. Elicit things about her (beautiful / handsome) and how you feel about her
5. Your girlfriend was not alone in her house – you catch her with her ex-boyfriend
Elicit a list of advice from your learners and write it on the board. They may give you advice without
preceding it with the target language (see above) or simply use the modal verb ‘should’.
Think about how you would use the board. Make sure you leave enough room on the left of your list
so that you can later elicit the different ways of giving advice.
Next you need to elicit different forms of giving advice by asking learners to precede the advice with
different forms of the target language. As you do this, write the form on the board:
At lower levels you will need to do a lot of drilling to get the intonation and the rhythm of the
sentences correct.
You may need to make a distinction between suggestions, advice and commands.
Practice 1:
Ask your learners to work in pairs so that they can listen to and give advice using all forms of the target
language using prompts that you give them. Make sure that you get your learners to exchange
partners regularly.
As teacher, you will need to provide many prompts for giving advice to problems. This is not only
because people don’t wish to chat about their own problems, but many of our learners at lower levels
need prompts because their English (or imagination) is not good enough. Here are a few. Some are
outrageous, so be careful who you teach these to – and try to make prompts of your own:
Black smoke started coming out of your car as you drove here this morning.
You can’t unscrew the lid off the top of this jar of peanut butter.
Your brother has joined a religious cult and he is always with his new friends.
Your daughter wants to get married to a man she met last week. She is only 18 years old. You
are obviously concerned.
You are still in love with your boyfriend (or girlfriend), even though he (or she) left you for
someone else. A year has passed and you still keep thinking about him (or her).
Your brother is unsure of his sexuality and is considering a sex change but has no idea of the
risks involved.
Now get your learners to give advice to a partner who doesn’t know your problem. See if he or she can
guess what it is.
Do open-class feedback with your learners. Get them to relate the advice they were given back to the
class. See if anybody in the group can guess the problem.
Practice 2:
Discuss with your learners what a ‘Problem Page’ in a magazine is. What kind of problems can you
read about in problem pages?
Ask your learners to write a letter to a magazine outlining an imaginary problem. Learners can work
together in pairs of small groups. When they have finished this, get your learners to pass the letter to
another group. They have to write a reply using the Target Language.
Extra:
Reported Speech:
Further prompts:
Umbrella in England
Book seats well in advance
Regular visits to the dentist
Lock your bicycle
Drive slowly in the rain
Wear a crash helmet on a motorbike
Leave a key with a neighbour when you go on holiday
Take a bath or shower regularly
Set the alarm clock
Wash up after dinner
Wash clothes regularly
For example:
You ought to carry an umbrella when you travel in England because it rains almost every day.
You'd better book the tickets in advance as the show is usually packed.
Relative Clauses using ‘That’, ‘Which’ and ‘Who’
Level:
Pre-Intermediate
Target Language:
Things / Objects:
People:
The above suggestions are just the tip of the iceberg. Use your imagination to create your own
sentences. The sentences above can easily be elicited using flash cards, realia and mime. You can get
your learners to make many sentences with one thing:
Elicit:
Using inanimate objects:
Pretend to be an alien (this will amuse your learners, children as well as adults). Pick up a chair and
ask: "What is it?"
When you learners tell you it’s a chair ask: “What’s a chair?"
A chair is something that you sit on.
Using people:
You will need flash cards or pictures that show people in their various roles at work such as police
officer, fire fighter, baker, tennis player, etc. Make sure there is a difference between that for an
object and who for a person. If you don’t have any flash cards, draw on the board. Then ask your
learners what they or their parents do for a living.
Who is this?
Once your learners are happy with the structure and you have drilled enough for pronunciation, write
the form on the board.
Practice 1:
Making Sentences:
You could do this on the board or in a handout. Give your learners two sentences. Working with a
partner (to promote speaking in class) they have to put them into one sentence using ‘that’, ‘which’ or
‘who’. Ask the learners to take turns writing the sentences.
Here are three examples of adjective clauses, which you can elicit from your class (get your learners to
work in pairs):
Put the learners into teams of three or four, making sure that one of the learners in each team has his
or her back to the board
Write a word on the board or show them a card
The learners must describe the word to the student with his / her back to the board without actually
saying the word itself or a related word. For example:
English Teacher:
Get your learners to think of their own words (nouns) and make their own hints. This will make the
activity more of a free practice than controlled.
Again it is always good to prepare prompts for your learners, although wait to see how your learners
do first. Here are a few:
Think in advance about the examples you will use and encourage your learners to come up with a
variety of different sentences.
Using Modal Verbs to Make Invitations
Level:
Elementary
Target Language:
We use the expression “would like to” to give and accept an invitation:
Yes, I would.
No, I wouldn’t.
Elicit:
If this structure is new to your learners, you will need to provide a context. First, it might be good for
you to review likes and dislikes. Remember that you often use the gerund form when we talk about
the act of doing something.
Now invite your learners to the cinema with you. You can do this using body language, tone of voice
and a diary (you can draw a calendar on the board to indicate one evening) to arrange for a time and
place to meet and to see a specific film. If you take a list or programme of films showing at the local
cinema, you can create a realistic dialogue for your learners to practice.
Depending on the level of your learners you may wish to introduce another modal verb: shall. Shall is a
modal verb that we don’t use so much these days, though we still use it to make invitations.
Drill the learners for pronunciation and write the form of the language structure on the board. Make
sure that you use contractions in the reply: “Yes, I’d love to.”
Practice 1:
Elicit a dialogue like the one below (try to make it as natural as possible) and write it up on the board
so that the learners can see it clearly.
A: Would you like to ___________________________? (go to the coffee shop with me)
Sometime we need to provide some prompts for our learners. You can write these on the board or you
could give them as prompt cards to your learners. Here are a few suggestions:
Go for a walk
Go swimming
Go to the theatre
Visit a place of interest
Play a game of cards
Go to the pub
Go out for lunch
Go to a party at my house
Practice 1:
To make the dialogue more interesting and challenging, you may wish to incorporate other
grammatical items, such as, introductions, like and dislikes, and “how often do you_____?”
B Yes, I do.
Extra:
Making excuses:
Level:
Pre-Intermediate
Create interest:
Here are some questions you could discuss:
Pre-Set Questions:
How did people describe the thing?
What was the argument about?
What did the Ministry of Defence say it was?
Reading Activity:
Do the activity, silently or reading aloud. Get your learners to answer the questions with a partner.
How many times will your learners read the text? Who will read it? You may wish to do this as a
listening activity so YOU will have to read it aloud.
Feedback:
Go through the questions, making sure the learners understand the text. You should ask additional
questions, particularly concept questions, to encourage STT. Ask the learners for their own
opinions and ask why they feel this way.
Follow-on Activity:
Writing:
Imagine that you saw something strange in your back garden last night. Write a letter to your local
newspaper explaining what it looked like and what you think it was. Make sure that you add
details such as who you were with and how long you saw the strange object for.
Mr. Ivor Beeston described the thing as round and circular, when he saw it in Manchester. He said,
“I saw it move behind a cloud, but it was so bright it shone right through. Then it moved off at a
very high speed.”
Over Guildford, Surrey, the thing was a “white ball”. Over Weybridge in the same county, it had
suddenly spouted flames.
UFO watchers at Tavistock, Devon said it was “yellowish-white”. At Bude, Cornwall, police said it
was “a blue blob”.
No one seemed to agree on what it looked like, let alone what it was. The UFO experts were
determined the thing was not of this world.
But the Ministry of Defence came up with the theory that it could have been a vapour cloud
reflecting sunlight. They were backed by officials at a Glasgow weather centre. They said: “It was a
chemical fluorescent cloud at a height of about 50 miles which came from a meteorological
research rocket launched from South Uist, in the Hebrides.”
Mr. Arthur Tomlinson, the co-ordinating officer of the DIGAP (Direct Investigation Group, Aerial
Phenomena) said: “The Ministry are idiots. You can’t find a cloud that is seen by everyone around
Britain and moving at different speeds.”
Mr. Omar Fowler, another UFO expert, said: “There is no earthly explanation. I checked with the
Royal Aircraft Establishment, Farnborough and they said the sightings had nothing to do with
rockets, clouds or Russian satellites.” He added, “After this little lot, it’s highly likely we will
organise a nation-wide search.”
The University of Life (Skills-based Lesson)
Level:
Pre-Intermediate
Create Interest:
Ask learners about the education system in their country?
At what age do you attend ____________? (Primary / Elementary / Junior High / Middle
School / Grammar School / High School / College / University).
What kind of subjects do you study?
Do people in your country take a year out?
How much time are you allowed off from your studies?
Pre-teach Vocab:
Look through the text and see if there are any words or expressions your learners may not be
familiar with. Here are some examples:
A gap year
The university of life
‘A’ levels
Broaden your horizons
Pre-Set Questions:
Why are many learners choosing to take a gap year?
What are some of the things you could do in a gap year?
What are the benefits of taking a gap year?
Reading Activity:
Do the activity, silently or reading aloud. Get your learners to answer the questions with a partner.
How many times will your learners read the text? Who will read it? You may wish to do this as a
listening activity so YOU will have to read it aloud.
Feedback:
Go through the questions, making sure the learners understand the text. You should ask additional
questions, particularly concept questions, to encourage STT. Ask the learners for their own
opinions and ask why they feel this way.
Follow-on Activity:
With a partner, or in a group, ask your learners to think of what they would like to do in a gap
year. Where would they like to travel to? What work would they like to do? What kind of
experience would they like to have? Don’t forget to do feedback with the class.
Text: The University of Life
Young people are often exhausted after finishing their A-levels. They have been busy
revising for their examinations, getting projects in on time and looking for a university
where they want to study. But they are tired of studying; they have been studying for
thirteen years or more and many of them want a rest from academic life.
Many learners these days are deciding that they would like a year off from studying, and
take a gap year. Learners often find a full-time job so that they can gain financial freedom
or sometimes get experience through voluntary work. However, some learners decide to
travel, so that they can broaden their horizons. They learn about other cultures and
languages and learn how to live in other societies different from their own. Many learners
decide to teach English to people as they travel. It not only helps them financially, but
helps them cultivate many qualities that teachers need, such as patience and self control.
Many people refer to this experience as the University of Life.
If you have decided to take a gap year, it is good to let your university know about your
decision. Perhaps you could tell them about the plans you have made and what you
intend to accomplish during your gap year. It would not be good to tell them that you are
simply taking a year off because you need a rest and intend to do nothing. Universities
seem to be happier with an enrolled student who has experience with life, rather than a
student who has only just left home for the first time and is inexperienced with life.
Many who have taken a gap year and have studied at the University of Life, will tell you
that the experiences that they have enjoyed will last in their minds forever. If you decide
that you will take a gap year, what will you do with and where will you go?
Intermediate
Past Perfect
Objective:
To introduce to your learners ways of using the Past Perfect. This is one of the last of the tense
structures to be taught. It is complicated as it refers to two past times and generally requires the
use of two clauses.
Level:
Elementary to Intermediate
Take your time with lower level learners
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 - 90 minutes (depending on how
many practice activities you decide to do in your lesson).
Materials:
Music (including CD)
Poster
Picture (it can be anyone, but for the purpose of eliciting he/she will be your best friend).
Flash card or picture of an old car (or you can draw it)
Handouts
Target Language:
Elicit:
In order for the learners to understand the meaning of past perfect they need a context to
understand it. Spend time at the beginning of the class to set up a scenario.
Here is one example:
Play some of Sting's music to your learners and ask them what they thought. It is not important for
them to like it, just to realise that Sting is a singer-song writer. If you want to use another
performer please feel free when creating your own teaching materials.
Tell your learners that you are going to tell them a story about something that happened
last week.
Use a poster to elicit that you were aware of a Sting concert in Roundhay Park.
Make it clear that he was the support act and that he goes first. George Michael was the
main act and that he went last.
Elicit that it was too expensive (£50) and you couldn't afford to go (poor English teacher!).
Show your learners a picture of your very good friend John and elicit that he is rich and
could afford and he was happy to pay for you. (Do your learners understand 'treat'?)
Elicit that you live a long way from Roundhay Park and that you had to travel in your car.
Now show a picture of your car. It is old and it broke down on the way to the concert
You were late for concert by 1 hour!
Now get your learners to make a sentence with the verb start (give gradual hints if your
learners have difficulty with making this structure).
Practice:
Once your learners have practiced and drilled this structure you can introduce the following ideas
for them to do further practice using the same context.
* An unlucky day
Write the following events on the board and explain to your learners that all these things
happened to you last week. Your learners have to find out the order in which these events
happened in one day by getting them to ask you questions such as …
Did you lose your key after your learners had fallen asleep in the class?
Here is a list of hints, if you need to give any to your learners. Remember that you have to know
the order in which things happened so write them down in your lesson plan.
This is a free practice activity where your learners can make their own list of good and bad things.
It can be a lucky day where many good things happened or a bad day where many bad things
happened (like you) or a mixture of both.
There is a handout (with answers) that you may wish to end the lesson with, where your learners
have to complete or rewrite sentences.
Past Perfect
Please rewrite these sentences using the past perfect form using the hints provided.
2. You went back to your own country after living in England. It wasn't the same.
3. You went to the cinema last Thursday, but you arrived late.
5. I played tennis with Catherine yesterday. She was a very good player.
7. A student walked into the room. She was a complete stranger to me.
____________________________________________________________. (meet)
______________________________________________________________. (be)
_____________________________________________________________. (see)
10. I took Chloë to Japan with me, but she was very nervous. It was her first flight.
______________________________________________________________. (fly)
11. Christopher Columbus sailed to America in 1492 and altered the course of world history.
12. John Logie Baird invented the Television giving us something to do in the evenings.
13. The man driving the car had an accident and as a result was injured.
Answers:
2. You went back to your own country after living in England. It wasn't the same.
It had changed.
3. You went to the cinema last Thursday, but you arrived late.
5. I played tennis with Catherine yesterday. She was a very good player.
7. A student walked into the room. She was a complete stranger to me.
10. I took Chloë to Japan with me, but she was very nervous. It was her first flight.
11. Christopher Columbus sailed to America in 1492 and altered the course of world history.
If Christopher Columbus hadn't sailed to America in 1492, world history would've been different.
12. John Logie Baird invented the Television giving us something to do in the evenings.
If John Logie Baird hadn't invented television, what would we have done in the evenings?.
13. The man driving the car had an accident and as a result was injured.
If the driver had driven more carefully, he wouldn't have been injured.
You can do this as an additional lesson for Intermediate learners. If your learners are particularly
good or if you have a lesson that lasts for two hours or more, you may wish to use this as
additional material in the practice part of your lesson.
This is called the Third Conditional or the "would - have" conditional and your Intermediate
learners will be ready to handle this difficult structure. We use this when we are imagining what
might have happened. We are dreaming of a different past. The form:
Depending on the level of your learners, you may decide to do this as a separate lesson. You need
to set up the scenario and elicit sentences from your learners using the above structure. There are
five hints under each situation. You will need to give careful consideration to each scenario.
Don't forget to highlight how to make contractions to make the English sound more natural. These
sentences are ideal for showing these.
* Reverse order
Remember that sentences with two clauses or more can be reversed. Here are some examples
with the 'if' structure now in the middle of each sentence.
A gap fill exercise or cloze would consolidate practice and encourage accuracy at the end of your
lesson.
Crime and Punishment
Objective:
This lesson introduces your learners to language specific to crime, punishment, law and order. It is
primarily a skills-based lesson centred on discussion rather than a focus on a specific grammar
target language, though some of the activities lend themselves to giving opinions and advice.
Level:
Intermediate to Advanced
This lesson is suitable for late teenagers and adults though you probably won’t get through all the
material in this lesson plan with Intermediate or even Upper Intermediate classes.
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 – 90 minutes
With Intermediate classes there is enough here for two lessons
Materials:
Handouts:
Fifteen crimes and their explanations – to be cut up and used as a mix and match activity
Gap-fill handout and answers
Additional handout
Target Language:
The language of crime and punishment
Giving opinions
Introductory Questions:
These questions are designed to get you to start of a discussion on crime and punishment. You
don’t have to keep to these questions – you may decide to ask questions of your own depending
on how well you know your class.
1. Brainstorming Crimes:
Work with a partner and brainstorm a list of the various types of crimes you can thing of i.e.
murder. As you monitor the class get your learners to describe the meaning of each crime. Also try
to introduce various crimes by describing them. They may know the name in their own language.
It’s up to you to decide whether they are allowed to use their dictionaries or not.
Get your learners to work in pairs or groups and ask them to match the crimes with the
explanations using cards that you have created from the attachment to this lesson plan. During
this activity, monitor your learners and encourage them with hints. Depending on how much they
already know, you could turn this into a race. Answers are here. ((Where are these activities?))
Get your learners to imagine that they are on a jury. Now look at the following situations and
discuss them with your partner. Think about the following questions:
1. A 14-year-old boy lives on the streets of London with his younger brother. The rest of his family
is very poor and lives in the countryside. He hasn’t seen them for months. He works as a
dishwasher in a restaurant. Whenever nobody is looking he steals food to give to his brother. One
day he gets caught. What should happen to him?
2. For many years a man has beaten his wife and their two children. The wife is afraid that if she
reports her husband to the police, he will hurt her and the children even more. During an
argument, the husband threatens to kill the wife. The eldest son hears this, picks up a knife and
stabs him. His father later dies. What should happen to the son?
3. A 75-year-old man is suffering from a terminal illness and is in great pain. When he first learned
of this illness he made his wife promise that she would take his life if his suffering became great.
One day she puts poison in his food and he dies. An autopsy is later done on the body and she is
found out. What should happen to the wife?
4. A well-off couple does not pay all the taxes they owe the government. Last year they cheated
the government out of £10,000. The Inland Revenue finds out. What should happen to the couple?
The Future in The Past - Part One
Objective:
To get your learners to understand and practice different ways of talking about the future at some
time in the past
Level:
Pre-Intermediate to Upper Intermediate
Take your time with lower level learners
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 - 90 minutes
Materials:
Pictures or board work / board game with dice / paper for your learners to write on
Target Language:
A given point in the past and an event or events that still lay in the future, whether they happened
or not.
2. I meant (intended / had intended) to call you, but I couldn't find a phone.
(A more formal excuse /apology - could be used in a written form)
Some simple + infinitive constructions also express future in the past.
The last two are formal forms that you can introduce to your learners at a higher level if you have
the time. It would be good to elicit and use these in the context of a business arrangement.
Elicit:
This is a difficult concept to get across to your learners so it would be best to elicit a situation or
context for them to understand the structure. You can choose your own scenario. However, the
following is one suggestion.
Start by introducing your learners to Bob (or whatever name they give him). Bob could be a
picture or a stick man on the board.
Elicit the following information from your learners (note that many of the following questions act
as concept questions):
2. It didn't happen:
Draw a grid on the board or give your learners a handout: 6 x 6 - put prompts in each square - or
even better, depending on the level of your learners get them to brain storm the prompts and
write them in themselves.
Divide the learners into two teams. Throw the dice twice to determine which square: First dice for
across / second dice for down. Alternatively you could use two dice but they must be different
colours (i.e. green for down and red for across).
Team A must make a perfect question: "Wasn't Chloe going to look for a new job last year?"
Team B has to explain why this didn't happen: "Well, she was going to, but then she got a pay
rise."
3. Writing Stories:
Start the learners with a couple of sentences that they have to complete i.e. "Last Sunday I
decided to study all day. I was going to get up early but…"
Then get them to write the next prompt and hand it to the next group using 'was going to' /
'intended to' / 'meant to'.
Go round the class once or twice. You can do this as a class or in small groups of four or five. Then
compare the stories from each group.
The Future in The Past - Part Two
Objective:
To introduce your learners to different ways of talking about an event or events that would take
place in the future from the perspective of a past time. You use these expressions in the following
situations:
Level:
Pre-Intermediate to Upper Intermediate
Take your time with lower level learners
Lesson Length:
There should be enough material here for a lesson lasting 60 - 90 minutes
Materials:
Paper / The Internet
Target Language:
This style of writing is often used to narrate someone's life story from the position of hindsight.
Although the future events of these famous people were not planned, this style of writing
sometimes gives the impression that these events were destined to occur.
He was born in 1947 as Reginald Kenneth Dwight, and would later become famous as the
rock and roll songwriter and artist, Elton John.
Modal verbs very rarely have a past tense form. In this sentence the modal verb "would"
represents a past version of "will".
Elicit:
You could start with a picture of someone famous and elicit from your learners the things they
know about them. It could be a movie star or a pop star or someone in the media.
Alternatively you could elicit the structure by introducing it in a reading activity. The context of the
text should help your learners understand the structures used. You could create your own text,
such as the one below. Keep in mind the levels of your learners when creating the text and try not
to introduce too much new vocabulary that will confuse your learners.
Reading activity:
David Beckham was born in 1975 in Leytonstone in London, and would later become an
internationally famous football player. From an early age he showed a great deal of skill on the
soccer pitch and would later join Manchester United as a midfield player in 1993.
He would later become a member of the World Cup team in 1998 and the Euro 2000 squad and
was to become the England captain in the lead up to the 2002 World Cup.
David married Victoria Adams in 1999 and was to become the father of her three children. In
2001, he would be voted BBC Sports Personality of the Year.
Concept questions:
Practice:
Famous lives:
For example:
Albert Einstein was to become the man who would invent the famous equation E=mc squared.
Learners can present the lives of these people as feedback to the class.
Writing Stories:
Your learners, in teams or with a partner, invent some of the things that they would like to happen
in their own future lives. They will need to brainstorm some ideas then form them into sentences
using the target language. Remember that your learners will be talking in an imaginary future
about an imaginary past that is yet to happen.
The higher the level of your learners, the more language and examples they will be able to
produce.
For feedback you can get your learners to read what they have written to the class. For lower level
learners perhaps they will need to write it up for homework, in which case you will need to do
feedback in a later class.
Martin Luther King Jr (Skills-based Lesson)
Level:
Intermediate
Create Interest:
1. Start off with a picture of someone famous and elicit why you admire him / her.
2. With a partner, learners brainstorm other famous people and explain why they are famous
and why they admire them.
3. Do feedback with the class.
It should be easy to pre-teach these words as they should lead naturally from the above
discussion:
Pre-Set Questions:
Where was Martin Luther King, Jr brought up?
What was the situation in Atlanta at that time?
Why did he win the Nobel Prize for peace?
Reading Activity:
Do the activity, silently or reading aloud. Get your learners to answer the questions with a partner.
How many times will your learners read the text? Who will read it? You may wish to do this as a
listening activity so YOU will have to read it aloud
Feedback:
Go through the questions, making sure the learners understand the text. You should ask additional
questions, particularly concept questions, to encourage STT. Ask the learners for their own
opinions and ask why they feel this way.
Follow-on Activity:
Learners can do research on someone they admire. If your school has access to the internet you
can give your learners 15 - 20 minutes to do research, make notes and return to the class to do
presentations on what they have discovered. Learners should work with a partner to maximize
STT.
But not many people know about much about King's childhood. Martin Luther King, Jr was born in
1929 in his grandfather’s house on Auburn Avenue in Atlanta, Georgia. His grandfather, the
Reverend A D Williams, had bought their home on Auburn Avenue in 1909, twenty years before
Martin Luther King, Jr was born. The Reverend Williams played an important role in the
community, because so many people's lives centred around the church. He allowed his church and
his home to be used as meeting places for many organizations that were dedicated to the
education and social advancement of black people.
Martin Luther King, Jr's childhood was not especially eventful. His father was a minister and his
mother was a musician. He was the second of three children and he attended an all-black school in
a black neighbourhood. His neighbourhood was not poor, rather it was area of banks, insurance
companies, builders, jewellers, tailors, doctors, lawyers and other businesses and services owned
by black people. Despite the fact that Atlanta was segregated, the black and white people not
mixing socially, the district thrived.
Martin Luther King, Jr never forgot the community spirit he had known as a child and neither did
he forget the racial prejudice that kept black people in Atlanta from mingling with whites. This is
the reason why he spent his life working for the civil rights of everyone and he believed that both
blacks and whites would one day live together in peace and as equals.
In 1964, Martin Luther King, Jr became the youngest person to receive the Nobel Peace Prize for
his work to end racial discrimination and racial segregation. He did this through civil disobedience
and other nonviolent means.
By the time of his assassination in 1968, he had started working hard to end world poverty and put
a stop to the Vietnam War. Sadly, Martin Luther King, Jr was assassinated on 4th April 1968 in
Memphis, Tennessee. He was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1977
and The Congressional Gold Medal in 2004. In 1986 the US government established a federal
holiday in his name: Martin Luther King, Jr day.
Health and Safety Rules Stop Tea and Toast: Skills-Based Lesson
Level:
Intermediate
Create Interest:
1. Sometimes we have to use public buildings: Which ones have you used?
Schools / hospitals / government buildings / concert halls / hotels
2. When using a public building (such as a school or a hotel), what are some of the things we
have to learn about?
Where everything is: toilets, fire escape routes, where to meet outside, fire extinguishers etc.
Playgroup (n.)
Local Council (n.)
Session (n.)
Snacks (n.)
Set a Task:
What is the ‘Pat-a-Cakes’ group?
Why does the group have to stop making tea and toast?
How do the mothers feel about this?
Reading Activity:
Do the activity, silently or reading aloud. Get your learners to answer the questions with a partner.
How many times will your learners read the text? Who will read it? You may wish to do this as a
listening activity so YOU will have to read it aloud.
Feedback:
Go through the questions, making sure the learners understand the text. You should ask additional
questions, particularly concept questions, to encourage STT. Ask the learners for their own opinion
and ask why they feel this way.
Follow-on Activity:
Role Play
Learners can create and act out a dialogue between Mrs Julie Brown and a local council officer.
Julie Brown is upset that the council have forbidden them to make tea and toast and
wants the council to change their decision as the tea and toast is made in a room away
from the children. She believes that the new health & safety laws are stupid.
The local council officer needs to explain that if one of the children is hurt, they cannot be
held responsible, so that they have to enforce new health and safety laws to prevent this
from happening.
However, the local council told the mothers that they have to stop making tea and toast because
of health and safety. The group, which looks after ten children, are no longer allowed to have
snacks during their weekly sessions. If they don’t stop making tea and coffee, they could lose their
free playtime at the library.
Julie Brown, a 44 year-old mother of two children, who runs the group, said: “We have been told
the ban on tea and toast is to do with the council's health and safety policy. They are worried that
the children could be hurt when the mothers make the tea and coffee. But the kettle and toaster
are in another room. There is no danger to the children and there has never been an accident.
There are many parents there to help look after the children. Tea and toast are very popular and
the children love a slice of toast. We are only a small group but we do a good job. It would be so
sad if we had to close down.”
Unless the Pat-a-Cake group do what the council tells them to, they could be classed as a private
group and forced to pay for the room which they can’t afford.
Lesson Plan: She's Leaving Home
Level:
Intermediate
Create Interest:
You are going to listen to a song about a girl leaving home and the situation surrounding that
event.
Pre-teach Vocabulary:
Here is a short list of 'unusual' vocabulary that appears in the song.
handkerchief
dressing gown
sacrifice
motor-trade
deny
snore
* Apart from the word 'sacrifice', included in the introduction questions, it can be difficult to pre-
teach these without going off your subject. A suggestion would be to tackle the new vocabulary
when they appear in the lesson.
Put the learners into groups of three to four. Give them the lyrics to the song on strips of
card that are all mixed up. As they listen to the song, they are to put the strips in order. This
is a good reading as well as listening activity. It can be done on desks or on the floor (if the
floor is clean).
Put the learners into pairs. Give them a handout. On each line of the song there is a missing
word (you will need to doctor the lyrics sheet). As the learners listen to the song they have
to listen carefully to the song to identify the missing word. This is a good writing as well as
listening activity.
Feedback:
Get the learners to discuss the pre-set questions with a partner. Then you can get the learners to
give feedback to the class.
Follow on activity:
Roleplay
Put the learners in groups of four and give them a role card each (these have been prepared for you
– see attached handout). One student will take the role of the father, one will be the mother, one
will be the young girl Lydia and one will be the boyfriend Mike.
Monitor each of the groups. Praise the learners for their inventiveness. Encourage the learners to
have heated discussions. There are many clues on each of the cards to help them with what to say.