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Past Modals of Deduction: The Hangover
This is a lesson plan based around the theme of hangovers in which students get to grips with past modals of deduction, and question formation.
Introduction
What is hangover?
Do you get hangovers?
When was the last time you had one?
What’s the worst hangover you can remember?
Do any specific drinks give you a worse hangover?
Part 1:
Give out the situation handout.
Read out the situation and clear up any vocabulary issues.
You wake up on your sofa with a very sore head. Your friends are all sleeping on the floor of the living room. One of your friends is wearing a wedding dress. You have a big bruise on your knee. There is an unfamiliar cat walking around the room. The room smells of vomit. Your car is not outside.
What happened last night???
Possible past actions | Could/might/may have + past part.
|
My friend might have got married! |
Almost certain past actions
|
Must have + past part. | We must have got really drunk. |
Impossible past actions
|
Can’t have + past part. | I can’t have driven home. |
Expressing regret
|
Should/shouldn’t have + past part. | We shouldn’t have drunk so much. |
First brainstorm the questions for the mysteries.
Where did I leave the car?
Where did the cat come from?
Why is my friend wearing a wedding dress?
Why did I fall asleep on the sofa?
Why does my head hurt?
How did I hurt my knee?
Why does the house smell like vomit?
Part 2
Tell students you are going to show them a clip from the film “The Hangover” that contains a similar situation. Tell them that while they watch they should make a note of the different mysteries.
After watching brainstorm the mysteries, putting all of them on the board paying special attention to question formation.
Then have students speculate on the mysteries using past modals of deduction.
Follow up
Put students in groups and have them write new hangover situations with lots of mysteries, they then exchange situations with another group and speculate about each other’s situations.