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Feel free to send your ideas to my email: mariazabalapena@gmail.com / englishforeso@yahoo.es. To use the lesson plans in my blog, you do NOT need photocopies for students. You MAY need to print instructions or to use a projector and/or a computer.

For ESL VOCATIONAL TRAINING LESSON PLANS go to my other blog HERE
Browse LABELS to the right, underneath to find prompts and tasks.New!! VIDEO BLOGS on English for Communications and on English for Office Applications (Computers). See links below.

* English for Communications. Click HERE. By Beatriz Papaseit Fernández and myself, María Zabala Peña

* English for Office Applications (Computers :Word 2007 and more). Click HERE. By Beatriz Papaseit Fernández and myself, María Zabala Peña

Sunday, February 28, 2021

Expert-approved tips to tackle parenting in a pandemic/lockdown



Wondering how to handle sibling fights? Parenting expert Alyson Schafer checks in with The Morning Show to answer your lockdown parenting questions. 8 min video 

Level:
medium to upper
Procedure
  • Students make sure they understand the expressions/words from the list. 
  • Students answer the questions themselves
  • Students compare their answers with those  provided by Alyson Shaffer
A) Expressions and vocabulary
**Read the following expressions and vocabulary before listening. Make sure you understand them in context  when you watch the video. . 

To be at each other’s throats
Cry for help
Kerfuffle (British for commotion)
Throw one another under the bus
To grow mold
To win teenagers buy-in
Take the door off the hinges
Find like-minded people
To get the wheels back on track (on parenting)
Get a handoff (children have a sleepover for the weekend)
Let the tears flow

B)  Think of your  answers to the following questions
  1. Why do teenagers tend to fight when the parents are busy?
  2. What is the reasonable amount of time to allow teens to be alone in their room?
  3. What can parents do if they run out of patience, are cranky, and snap at their children?
  4. How can parents ensure teens are not lying and going behind their back to see their friends?

C) Now listen to The Morning Show (8min video). Compare your answers with the expert's advice


 

Tuesday, February 16, 2021

Different ways to practice mixed future tense practice by Alex Case

 Level: low  to intermediate 

Source: Alex Case  at TELF net. Click here for the original post 


Actually

People often respond to future questions with a different tense or structure, e.g. “Are you meeting your girlfriend tonight?” “Actually, she’s going out with some friends of hers so I’m going to stay at home and watch some videos that she doesn’t like.” In this example, the different structures are because the person imagines that their friend must have an arrangement but in fact, they have only a plan. The same is possible for any pairing of future tenses. 

You can exploit this by asking students to respond to every future question with a different tense in this way. Students will probably need some help with the original questions (e.g. “Are you going to try to give up smoking again this year?”) and some sentence stems for the answers (e.g. “I don’t have any plans but…”) Most answers will need to be imaginary in order to match the available tenses.

Plan/arrangement/prediction
This activity can help students avoid difficult conversations like those in Actually above by choosing a tense that is more probably right in their questions.
Give students a list of future events, each of which could be an arrangement, a plan, or just a thing that they can predict (e.g. birthday party, retirement, exercise, and window shopping). 

A student picks one and guesses whether their partner already has an arrangement or a plan, or can only make a prediction. After their partner has confirmed which one it is, they then try to make a true sentence in the right tense, e.g. “You are having a birthday party this weekend” (arrangement), “You aren’t going to bother with a birthday party this year” (plan) or “Your family will probably arrange a surprise party for you” (prediction).

Discussion questions

Discussion questions can be used to practice tenses in two ways – giving the question in a particular tense (e.g. “How will this city change in the next twenty years, do you think?”), or designing the question so that a particular tense is supposed to come up in the answer (e.g. “Tell us about your plans for next weekend”). For more controlled grammar practice, students can then fill in gapped versions of the same questions or example answers.

Future tenses Ask and tell

Give students a list of topics and vocabulary that can be connected to the future, e.g. “retirement” and “ambition”. You should also include some that are a bit more risqué like “remarry”, “bet” and “holiday romance”. Students pick one word or topic (either their own choice or random, depending on how you want them to play the game) and then make a future question from it. They can make any question they like, e.g. “What would you do if your husband lost all your money betting on the horses?”, but they might have to answer the question themselves. This is decided by a flip of a coin. Heads mean that they can ask their question to one other person in their group, but tails (= tell) means that they must answer their own question.

Mixed video predictions
The easiest and most fun video prediction task is a well-known one – pause the video and ask the students to predict what happens next. You can use this for a mix of both “going to for predictions with future evidence” and “will for predictions” by picking moments where the present evidence is clear (e.g. someone being about to bump into something) and the consequences are also possible to predict. Students can then use “going to” for the first sentence and “will” for the latter.

You may use this dinner  scene from the Joy Luck Club:
 http://mariavocationaltraining.blogspot.com/2011/09/intercultural-awareness-manners-at.html


Plans and spontaneous decisions helping game
The easiest way of practicing these meanings of “going to” and “will” is for someone to say what their plan is (maybe from a list of suggestions like “You are going to have a housewarming party”), and other people to offer to help with sentences like “I’ll bring the booze” and “I’ll help you tidy up afterwards”. The last person to speak when everyone else has run out of ideas is the winner.

Plans and spontaneous decisions hindering game
In this game, when someone says what their plan is (e.g. “I’m going to take the train to the seaside tonight”), the other people have to think of a reason why that plan is impossible (e.g. “The last train leaves at noon” or “The weather forecast says that there will be a tidal wave”). The first person then has to say how they will change their plans, e.g. “Really? In that case I’ll go to the mountains instead.” The other people then have to think of a reason why that new plan is impossible. This continues until either side runs out of ideas.