Sample First Lessons
Sample First Lessons
Sample First Lessons
Jeff Mohamed
____________________________________________________________________________________
Jeff Mohamed
9.
10.
11. 12.
Jeff Mohamed
13.
Elicit the sentences and write them on the board in a substitution table: What's this? chair. pen. book. etc. Make sure they realize that "It's a" goes with every noun. It's a
14.
Get the students to copy down this table and walk around checking their spelling and writing.
Note: This lesson may take more than an hour if you are dealing with a large class of true Beginners. If you are going to run out of time, simply cover fewer nouns. Then start the next lesson by dealing with the rest of the nouns on the worksheet.
____________________________________________________________________________________
2.
3.
4.
5.
From this point onwards, you should be able to follow the units in any good Beginner coursebook.
Jeff Mohamed
Jeff Mohamed
Jeff Mohamed
____________________________________________________________________________________
Jeff Mohamed
For each answer on the board, elicit one appropriate, correct question. (You may well have to help the students to produce these, particularly if it is a lower level class.) Do oral modeling and drilling of each question. After drilling each question, elicit it onto the board and let students copy it down. Then erase the board.
Tell students to work in pairs, speaking only English. They have to ask their partner questions like the ones they have just practiced together about you. Give them a simple worksheet to work from:
Student: ______________ From? ______________________________________ Married? ______________ Lives with? __________________________________ Likes?______________________________________ Dislikes? ___________________________________ etc.
Make up your own sheet. Include perhaps 6-7 items for an Elementary class through perhaps 12 items for a high Intermediate class.) Tell the students to write down only short answers not complete sentences.
Students work in pairs asking and answering questions while you go around the class monitoring their work and helping if necessary.
Ask each student to tell you and the class one thing about his/her partner. (Be careful not to ask questions here. Instead say, "Tell me one thing about ----." This leads students naturally into producing full sentences rather than just giving short answers.)
Jeff Mohamed
After or during Stage 5, focus on a couple of common mistakes or mistakes with something that you drilled earlier. Elicit and briefly drill the correct versions.
STAGE 7 (Homework)
Tell each student to write a brief description of his/her partner, based only on the answers on their worksheet grid. To show them what you want, do an example with them. Elicit onto the board two sentences about you and write them on the board. (Or you could hand out a previously prepared description that you have written about someone, so that the students can use this as a model for their writing.
Note: If you prefer and have time, the written descriptions could be done in class, with you monitoring the work and helping individuals. In this case, take in the descriptions at the end of the lesson and mark them at home. Give them back, with corrections noted, in the next lesson.
____________________________________________________________________________________