Posted in Conversation Classes, Listening Classes, Writing Classes

Reality TV Conversation Class

reality-tv

This is a conversation class for higher levels (high B2 +) the main reason for the level specification is that uses clips from the UK version of the reality show “Wife Swap” which lower levels might find difficult to follow. Then again, you never know, it might be a good challenge.

Brainstorm reality TV shows

Have your students brainstorm all the reality TV shows they have in their country. Encourage students to describe the formats of the shows. If you have a mixed nationality group encourage the students to compare reality shows from their different respective countries.

Discussion

Either put students in small groups (3-4) or discuss the following questions as a class:

  1. How long do you spend in front of the TV on an average day?
  2. What shows do you watch?
  3. What your favourite / least favourite shows?
  4. What are the most popular shows on TV at the moment? Are any of them reality shows?
  5. Do you watch any reality shows? Which ones?
  6. Why are they entertaining?
  7. Would you ever go on a reality show? Why? Why not? If so which one?
  8. What about talent shows like “The X Factor” or “American Idol”?

Have students report back to the rest of class.

Write “Wife Swap” on the board. Tell students that it is the name of a reality show in the UK and the US. Have them guess the format of the show from the name (two wives swap families for a week, each has to live the others life; do their job, look after their kids etc), then ask them the following:

  • Do you have this show in your country?
  • Do / Did you watch it? If you did would you watch it?
  • What do you think would be some entertaining swaps? Brainstorm entertaining swaps with reasons.

Tell students that they are going to watch part of an episode of wife swap, first you need to pre-teach some expressions that will help them understand the clip. Put the following expressions and vocab on the board and have students try to guess the meanings.

  1. a country pile – a big country house / mansion
  2. to go to the dogs – to deteriorate / get into a bad state. Old people in England often say: “This country has gone to the dogs.”
  3. I can’t hack it – I can’t bear it / I can’t cope with it / I can’t tolerate it
  4. council house – a government owned house rented by low-income families
  5. to do jackshit – to do nothing
  6. to be on benefits – to be receiving financial help from the state; unemployment money for example
  7. to be stuck in a rut – expression meaning to be in a boring lifestyle that never changes
  8. to roam – to walk / move with no fixed objective
  9. a hoover – a vacuum cleaner
  10. a man / woman of leisure – a person who spends all their time doing things they enjoy, usually a rich person.
  11. a hooker – a prostitute
  12. to see eye to eye – to agree
  13. slack / slovenly – lazy
  14. give him an inch and he’ll take a mile – expression meaning that someone will exploit you / take advantage of you if you give them the opportunity

Show students video of part 1 of wife swap UK until 00:38 (this is just the introduction of the two participating families)

Put them in groups and have them make predictions about what sort of problems and conflicts the two families are going to have and also to make comparisons between the two families. Students report back to class.

Now show students the whole of part 1, it’s about 10 minutes. Before showing them tell them to listen out for the expressions you have pre-taught then go through them afterwards. Students report back the context of each one of the pieces of vocabulary.

Ask students what they thought of the show:

  1. Was it entertaining?
  2. Do you want to know what happens next?
  3. Which family did you prefer?
  4. Which family would you prefer to spend a week living with?

Homework

Students watch the rest of the episode for homework and make notes on what problems the two wives encountered. In the next class students can report and discuss this. If you are preparing your students for a Cambridge exam (FCE, CAE, CPE) you can have them write a review of the show as this format often comes up in part 2 of the writing paper of these exams. A review task type idea could be:

An English language television magazine has asked for readers to send in their reviews of the first episode of wife swap. Reviews should:

  • Give a brief description of the show
  • Comment on the shows entertainment value
  • Say if the writer would recommend the show to other viewers.
  • If they would recommend it, who would they recommend it to?

FCE word limit – 120-180

CAE – 220-260

CPE – 280-320

Let me know how it goes in the comment, especially if you try it with FCE levels.

Posted in Recommended Websites, Writing Classes

Zombie Apocalypse Training 101, with Steven Seagal

seagalandthezombies

Need help getting teenage students to produce compositions? Why not try this great warm up game from my friend Magistra Monson. The idea is you take clippings from real news stories and use them as a jumping off point for creative or argumentative writing. The class works as a team adding a paragraph each to the story with hilarious consequences. Definitely an idea I’m gonna use in my next teen class, or even with adults. You can download different introductory paragraphs from Magistra’s blog.

This has actually helped inspire a pipe dream I have for a new blog based around crowd sourced short stories. The working title at the moment is “Crowd Shorts” watch this space………………………. and pay attention to big Steve, that guys knows his onions.

freeenglishlessonplans.com

Posted in Writing Classes

Follow up: Homework composition about travelling

travelwriter

This is a homework activity written to follow my previous lesson plan about holidays and traveling here is the link to the original lesson plan:

http://freeenglishlessonplans.com/2013/01/30/holidays-and-travelling-conversation-class/

Here is a link to download the handout for homework:

https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=79CFF252BEEA0A7D!300&authkey=!AMJLj8z2NbQgFFI

A travel magazine is running a competition for travel articles about different types of holidays / ways to travel for young people.

Choose 1 type of holiday / way to travel from the class handout and write an article about why it’s good for young people. Include:

  • An interesting introduction to catch the reader’s attention. Include direct questions.
  • Pros and cons of your chosen subject.
  • Reasons why you recommend it to other young people.
  • You can include (invented) anecdotes.

freeenglishlessonplans.com

 

Posted in Exam Preparation Class

CAE Study Guide

exam_1464481c

This post will give students who are about to sit the CAE exam a rough guide of what to study and links to helpful online tools.

Vocabulary sets for CIC 607 CAE students:

https://quizlet.com/144482326/flashcards

http://www.cram.com/flashcards/607-vocabulary-7433047

Here you have a link to sets of flashcards I have made on the website quizlet.com. There are 39 different sets focusing on various different parts of the use of English section:

http://quizlet.com/join/vwMDp6Qe6

Here are individual links to different quizlet sets that will help you prepare for the use of English paper, use the flashcards to study then try clicking on “learn” or “test” at the top, you can also play the games “scatter” and “gravity”:

https://quizlet.com/144514233/verbs-with-preps-short-flash-cards/?new – verbs with prepositions.

https://quizlet.com/99435871/inversion-revision-flash-cards/ – Inversions

https://quizlet.com/84053293/cae-letter-of-complaint-flash-cards/ – Letter of complaint

https://quizlet.com/32210011/cae-gerundinfinitivebare-infinitive-flash-cards/ – Gerund or infinitive

https://quizlet.com/96177238/flashcards – 82 different key word transformations

https://quizlet.com/29838781/cae-use-of-english-part-4-flash-cards/ – more key word transformations

https://quizlet.com/16987300/flashcards – even more key word transformations

https://quizlet.com/56139712/flashcards – use of English revision

https://quizlet.com/60219071/flashcards – word formation

https://quizlet.com/128430288/flashcards – reporting verb patterns

https://quizlet.com/5740189/flashcards – phrasal verbs

https://quizlet.com/123807629/flashcards – more phrasal verbs

https://quizlet.com/8192472/flashcards – word formation

 

Other useful websites include:

http://www.flo-joe.co.uk

http://www.examenglish.com/CAE/

You can also download the CAE handbook here, it contains 2 test papers with the answers.

Where there are online tests and loads of other useful features.

Use of English

There are Use of English papers you can use to practice here:

http://www.flo-joe.co.uk/cae/students/tests/index.htm

There are 3 different papers, do 1 a day, make notes on your mistakes and redo the same paper, it helps to make the information stick.

Part 1: Multiple choice cloze

Study Quizlet sets on Collocations, verbs / adjectives with prepositions etc. Then try a practice paper from flo-joe.

Part 2: Open Cloze

Past papers on flo-joe or go back over your notes. Quizlet sets on verbs / adjectives with prepositions and collocations also help.

Part 3: Word formation

There are lots of sets on quizlet for word formation. Also you can download a word formation list here:

https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=79CFF252BEEA0A7D!190&authkey=!ACS0L7Fi2v-suyo

Then do past papers on flo-joe.

Part 4: Key word transformations

There are lots of key word transformation sets and phrasal verb sets on quizlet and past papers on flo-joe.

Also check flo-joe’s daily word bank for new vocabulary:

http://www.flo-joe.co.uk/cae/students/wordbank/index.htm

Here is a link to quizlet set of 82 Key Word Transformations:

http://quizlet.com/38840080/cae-use-of-english-part-5-key-word-transformation-flash-cards/

Extra resources:

Collocations practice:

https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=79CFF252BEEA0A7D!194&authkey=!AIDza1OWzb6yBCc

Or lexical phrase list from here:

https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=79CFF252BEEA0A7D!197&authkey=!AH-GLrI0X_c_wGs

Exam practice collocations:

http://www.tukudoo.com/exam-practice/cae-collocations/

Writing

Here is an exhaustive collection of useful phrases for writing tasks:

CAE Writing (useful language) (1)

Download the examples of each different writing task and check out the page on the my wiki called CAE writing text types explained.

Examples of each task type:

http://timsenglishclasses.wikispaces.com/CAE+Writing

Explanation of task types:

http://timsenglishclasses.wikispaces.com/CAE+Writing+text+types+explained

Remember part 1 is compulsory and it will be a formal essay. In part 2 you can choose from 3 different options. The possible options are: a letter (formal or informal), a report, a proposal and a review.

Also check out flo-joe’s writing class:

http://www.flo-joe.co.uk/cae/students/writing/index.htm

There are lots of activities for linking words and expressions, formal / informal language etc.

Reading

There’s only 1 Reading paper on flo-joe but it’s better than nothing.

Listening

If you want to practice listening you can use this website:

http://www.elllo.org/english/level-7-advanced.htm

There are a lot of different listening exercises with comprehension questions and vocabulary questions. Try some.

freeenglishlessonplans.com

Posted in Writing Classes

Composition: Short story, Nighthawks by Edward Hopper

nighthawks

This is a homework exercise to practice past narrative tenses for intermediate to advanced students (B1-C1) based on the picture above. Nighthawks by Edward Hopper.

Download the handout here:

https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=79CFF252BEEA0A7D!294&authkey=!AJdNI7pP–88YxQ

Composition short story

Write a short story (120-150 words) based on this picture.

  • Who are these people?
  • Where is the story set? When is it set?
  • What are they doing?
  • What has happened before this moment?
  • What happens next? (think of an exciting ending)

Generally stories are written in the past so use a selection of past tenses:

  • Past continuous to describe the scene, “The couple were sat at the bar talking and drinking.”
  • Past simple to describe actions in sequence: “The man paid his bill, put on his jacket and left the bar.”
  • Past perfect to describe actions that happened before this moment: “The man had been drinking in another bar before”
  • Mixture of past tenses to describe different actions: “As the man was putting on his jacket, the phone rang…..”

Competition!!!

Open to teachers or students. If you are a teacher send your best student’s story, or if you are a student your story to me at: tim_rd_warre@hotmail.com and I’ll post it to my page for all to see!

Posted in Conversation Classes, Reading Classes

Proficiency book club, lesson 1: The Destructors by Graham Greene

short stories

This is the first in a series of lesson plans for proficiency level students based around short stories from the book:

The Oxford Book of English Short Stories edited by A. S. Byatt.

Short stories are perfect for the ESL classroom because as the name suggests they are short. They are also an excellent way to introduce students to a wide range of authors and literature. This particular collection contains works from some of the greatest English writers. Including Charles Dickens, Rudyard Kipling, Virginia Woolf and the author with which I’m going to start this series Graham Greene.

The hope is that by introducing students to these authors in this short format (some of the stories run to only 4 or 5 pages) their interest will be piqued and they will go on to attempt the longer, more well-know works. Even if they don’t these stories are a fantastic way to introduce vocabulary and stir discussion.

Class structure

This series works, as the title suggests, like a typical book club: Each week you set a different story for homework to discuss the following week. The majority of the stories can easily be read in under half an hour

The Destructors

If you haven’t bought the book don’t worry because somebody has helpfully posted  a pdf of the story:

Click to access destructors.pdf

I chose to start with Graham Greene’s “The Destructors” for the simple reason that he is one of my favourite authors. It is also a story which stirs a lot of opinions. The main theme is the mental scars left on the survivors of the the London blitz during the second world war.

A good analytical essay of the story can be found here:

http://www.helium.com/items/1389999-analysis-of-graham-greenes-the-destructors

The essay: “The effects of war in The Destructors, by Graham Greene” by Holly Huffstutler gives a good analysis of the socio-political background of the story. Here is a link to a copy with some key parts underlined:

https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=79CFF252BEEA0A7D!284&authkey=!ANvo-Ct70jFmtb0

Lesson Plan

The students will have read the story for homework so start the class by asking for any queries on vocabulary. Some examples of things that might come up are listed below:

  • (pg 311) Ignoble
  • (pg312) crippled, lav – toilet, to pinch – to steal, to be in a bleeding funk – to be stressed or angry)
  • (pg 313) bribe, to draw lots.

Then put the students into groups and give out the following discussion questions:

https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=79CFF252BEEA0A7D!285&authkey=!AD2MBt2sCAB27pQ

  • What was your initial reaction to the story?
  • What’s the story about? What happens?
  • Describe the different characters.
  • Where and when does the story take place?
  • What are your feelings about the boys at the end of the story?
  • What good qualities do the delinquents have?
  • Explain Blackie’s motivations for re-joining the gang after losing the leadership.
  • What does Mr. Thomas (Old Misery) represent in the story?
  • Why are the boys suspicious of Mr. Thomas’ generosity with the smarties?
  • What are Trevor’s reasons for wanting to destroy Mr. Thomas’ house?
  • How do you explain the burning of the money and the way they treat Mr. Thomas?
  • What is the importance in the ending of “The Destructors”?
  • Does “The Destructors” portray a world without hope?
  • In what ways are the boys in “The Destructors” by Graham Greene isolated?
  • Is destruction a form of creation?

After the discussion have a feedback session so students can share their opinions. You may want to explain a little about the London Blitz:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Blitz

You might like to point out that the story features in the film “Donnie Darko” in one of the first English class scenes. You could show a clip of the scene to the students and see if they agree with the main character’s assessment of the story.

Next week: Solid Objects by Virginia Woolf

 

 

 

 

Posted in Writing Classes

Future Composition

303-thirtieth_birthday_balloon

This is a simple homework exercise for teenagers to practice some future tenses.

Download the handout here:

https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=79CFF252BEEA0A7D!273&authkey=!APnXkGeFZZa4pPk

Composition

Title: Me at 30

Write 120 words about how your life will be when you are 30 years old.

Use:

  • The future continuous for activities in progress at a specific time in the future:
  •  I will be living in a small flat in Madrid. I will be working in a music shop.
  • The future perfect for actions completed between now and your 30th birthday:
  •  I will have finished university. I will have married a nice man / woman.
Posted in Vocabulary Classes, Writing Classes

Spelling Practice Powerpoints

spelling-bee-isllustration[1]

2 powerpoint presentations to practice spelling some tricky words.

https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=79CFF252BEEA0A7D!258&authkey=!AIL_LU1IDGcXPhs

https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=79CFF252BEEA0A7D!257&authkey=!AKE4k6YQGB4Fz2A

First you dictate the words to the students, maybe put them in pairs to make it a competition, then show the powerpoints for them to check their answers.

 

Posted in Writing Classes

FCE Formal Letter Template

formal letter

This is a formal letter homework composition task for FCE students.

Here is the handout to download:

https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=79CFF252BEEA0A7D!255&authkey=!ACDsTegJ0jAHuF4

Paragraph plan:

  1. Why are you writing? I am writing……………………………..
  2. Personal details and relevant experience.
  3. Reason for applying and why you would be good for the job.
  4. Availability for interview.

If you know the person’s name finish with Yours sincerely, if you don’t finish with Yours faithfully,

Read the following sample letter first and base yours on it.

Dear Mrs Sykes,

I am writing in connection with your advertisement displayed in the local youth centre and I would like to apply for the post of Activities Co-ordinator.

I am 18 years of age and I am used to working with children because I babysit my neighbour’s sons regularly. I train in the gym twice a week and I often go hiking to the countryside with my friends. In addition to this, I have a lifesaving certificate and have enjoyed swimming since I was a child.

My reason for applying for this position is that I am keen on combining my experience in swimming with my wide knowledge of the countryside which I think it will be interesting for the children.

I would be available to attend an interview on any day at your earliest convenience.

Yours sincerely,

PAULA M. SIBILIN

Task: You see this advertisement in an English language magazine.

Global Music shops

Rock Classical Pop Jazz

We are looking for people to work in our international music shops for three months in the summer.

  • Are you interested in music?
  • Do you have any useful experience?
  • Is your level of English good?

Apply to our manager, Mr. Boston, saying that you think you are suitable for the job in one of our music shops.

Write your letter of application (120-180 words). Do not write any postal addresses.

Posted in Writing Classes

FCE film review composition task

This is a homework task for FCE students based around film reviews.

Here is the handout to download:

https://skydrive.live.com/redir?resid=79CFF252BEEA0A7D!253&authkey=!AFM9pLBigh4FSh0

Here you have a template:

Paragraph 1: Describe genre, actors and a personal opinion

“The Matrix is one of the most entertaining science fiction films I have seen.”

“It has great special effects and action sequences”

“It stars Keanu Reeves as Neo.”

Paragraph 2: Talk about setting, brief plot description and opinion on acting.

“the film is set in the future, in a world controlled by machines”

“the plot is a little complicated and confusing”

“Keanu Reeves is surprisingly good as Neo.”

Paragraph 3: Talk about Special effects or action sequences.

“the special effects are stunning”

“the action scenes are very well choreographed”

Paragraph 4: Would you recommend this film? Who to?

“I would recommend this film to anyone who likes science fiction because…….”