Showing posts with label Giving Instructions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Giving Instructions. Show all posts

Monday, 17 September 2012

Design a game

You are going to
  • look at game instruction videos
  • practise zero conditional, imperatives, language for explaining
  • invent, design and make a game (inc. game rules)
  • present and explain your game to others







1) Discuss
Think of some games (board games, computer games, word games, card games…)
  • How do you play the game? (instructions, rules)
  • What do you need to play the game? (dice, cards, pieces…)
  • What do you have to do in the game? (answer questions, throw dice….)
  • How do you win the game? (score points, win money…)











2) Watch Video 1 - How to play Monopoly
  • Have you ever played Monopoly?
  • How do you play it?
  • What do you need to play it?
Watch and find out






3) Do the matching exercise. 
Put the instructions in order.











4) Watch Video 2 - How to play Scrabble
  • Have you ever played Scrabble?
  • How do you play it?
  • What do you need to play it?
 Watch and find out






5) Do the gap-fill exercise. 
Fill in the gaps with the correct phrase.



Printable worksheets here



6) Grammar
Look at "How to play Scrabble" again
  • Can you find any imperatives?
  • Can you find any conditionals? What kind?
  • What happens to the verb after "by"
  • What words do you use to state a purpose?







7) Group activity
Design a game competition
In groups you are going to INVENT, DESIGN and MAKE a game.
It MUST be ORIGINAL (not a copy of an existing game)
  • give it a NAME
  • MAKE it (all the pieces, board, cards, dice etc)
  • write some RULES and INSTRUCTIONS for it and then 
  • DEMONSTRATE, EXPLAIN and SHOW how to play it to the rest of the class.
  • Everyone votes for the best game
  • Try and use some of the language you have seen in the lesson (imperatives, Zero Conditional, so that....)


GOOD LUCK and may the best team win!






More
Online Scrabble
http://www.hasbro.com/scrabble/en_US/scrabbleGame.cfm

http://www.quadplex.com/










Wednesday, 5 September 2012

What's cooking? - 2. Strawberry jam / A full English breakfast

You are going to
  • watch some food recipe videos
  • practise the language of cooking
  • practise sequencers and time expressions
  • practise giving instructions
  • do some gap-fill exercises and a food vocabulary crossword
  • write a recipe






Discuss
  • Do you like cooking?
  • Do you know how to cook?
  • What's your favourite recipe?
  • What are the ingredients?
  • How long does it take to prepare and cook?
  • Where did you learn to cook it?
  • Do you know how to make strawberry jam?
  • Do you know how to make a full English breakfast?





List
Write a list of all the cooking words you can think of in 60 seconds






    Starter
    Watch the strawberry jam recipe
    • How do you make strawberry jam?
    • What are the ingredients?
    • How many words from your list did the presenter use?










    B) Watch again. 
    Look at this gap-fill exercise and fill in the gaps with one of the words from the list











    Main course
    Watch "How to make a traditional full English breakfast"
    Find out
    • What are the ingredients?
    • What utensils do you need?






    http://www.videojug.com/film/how-to-make-a-traditional-full-english-breakfast



    A) What words do we use to say when or in what order things happen?
    eg After that, then... They are called sequencers. Can you think of any more?





    B) Look at this gap-fill exercise and fill in the gaps with one of the words from the list









    Write
    Write a recipe of a food you know how to cook
    • List the ingredients
    • Write the instructions
    • Use some of the sequencers, time expressions and verbs in the exercises






    Dessert
    Do the cooking crossword. 
    Too easy? Try this more difficult crossword here


    Printable crosswords here (Int) and here (U.Int)
    Printable exercises here





    More
    Sequencers
    http://esl.about.com/od/grammarintermediate/a/sequence.htm
    Adverb Clauses with Time Expressions
    http://esl.about.com/od/grammaradvanced/a/adverb_clauses.htm


    The British breakfast
    http://designerlessons.org/2012/07/04/esl-lesson-plan-a-full-english-breakfast/

    British Food 
    http://istudyabroad.wordpress.com/2012/09/01/exploring-british-food/


    Activities
    Esolcourses Food and Drink activities

    Quiz-Busters - Food Quiz With Pronouns

    BBC Lingo - Food and cooking


    Recipes
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/

    http://foodupload.com/text_photo_recipes


    Don't eat too much!
    http://efllecturer.blogspot.co.uk/2012/07/what-is-weight-of-human-race.html






    No more...


    Tuesday, 4 September 2012

    What's cooking? - 1. "Bubble and Squeak"

    You are going to
    • watch a food recipe video
    • practise the language of cooking
    • practise imperatives
    • do a gap-fill exercise
    • do a food vocabulary crossword
    • write a recipe




    1) Discuss
    • Do you like cooking?
    • Do you know how to cook?
    • What's your favourite recipe?
    • What are the ingredients?
    • How long does it take to prepare and cook?
    • Where did you learn to cook it?
    • Do you know what "Bubble and Squeak" is?





    2) List
    A) Write a list of all the cooking words you can think of in 60 seconds







      3) Watch "How to make Bubble and Squeak"

      Find out

      • What is "Bubble and Squeak"? 
      • What are the ingredients?
      • Does the presenter use any cooking words from your list?

      .
      Watch the video. 
      Click on this link  http://video.about.com/britishfood/How-to-Make-Bubble-and-Squeak.htm and the video will open in a new tab.





      4) Watch again
      A) Look at the list of cooking words below.  Do you know all of them? Look up the words you don't know.
      Watch the video again. How many of the words in the list do you hear? Put "Yes" or "No"









      B) Look at this recipe and fill in the gaps with one of the expressions from the list








      5) Write
      Write a recipe of a food you know how to cook
      • List the ingredients
      • Write the instructions
      • Use some of the verbs in the exercise






      8) Do the vocabulary crossword


      Printable exercise here
      Printable crossword here




      More
      Now try this one
      What's cooking? - 2. Strawberry jam / A full English breakfast  British Culture, Crossword, Differentiated Exercises, FCE, Food, IELTS, Imperatives, Instructions, Intermediate, Listening, Recipes, Sequencers, Time Expressions, Upper Intermediate 


      Other Food Activities
      Making a sandwich with Mr Bean

      Esolcourses Food and Drink activities

      Quiz-Busters - Food Quiz With Pronouns

      BBC Lingo - Food and cooking

      Recipes
      http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/

      http://foodupload.com/text_photo_recipes




      Sunday, 22 January 2012

      Air New Zealand All Blacks Flight Safety Video

      You are going to
        1) Discuss flying and air safety procedures
        2) Watch a flight safety video and do some comprehension activities
        3) Look at and practise the following grammar points;
           a) the zero conditional with an imperative
           b) "should" and "were to" in conditionals to express improbability eg "If something should / were to happen..."
           c) language for advice, instructions and obligation
        4) Write an instruction / advice leaflet
        5) Adapt your leaflet into a powerpoint presentation or film

            Teacher's notes; 
            1. Answers are in the powerpoint presentation at the bottom of the post
            2. The All Blacks are the New Zealand rugby team.


            1) Discuss
            • How often do you fly?
            • Do you pay attention to the flight safety demonstrations?
            • Do you know what to do in an emergency?
            • Make a note of any vocabulary you need to explain what to do. For example; take off, land, exit, signs, seats, fasten, seat-belt, life-jacket, oxygen mask, overhead compartments, evacuate


            2) Video 
            a) Do you know..?
            You are going to watch a flight safety video. How many of these questions do you know the answers to?
            1. Where should you store your baggage?
            2. What should you do if the seat-belt sign is switched on?
            3. If an oxygen mask should drop down in front of you, what would you do?
            4. What should you make sure of before you help anyone?
            5. If an emergency were to happen during take-off or landing, what should you do?
            6. How do you put on the life-jacket?
            7. Where can you smoke?
            8. How will you find the exit if there is no light?
            9. What should you count?
            10. What should you do with your mobile phone?

            2b) Watch the video to check your answers


            Air New Zealand - 'Crazy About Rugby' Safety Video from CDow on Vimeo.


            2c) After you watch. How much can you remember? 
            Finish the sentences.

            1. Even if you fly with us often, please keep your eyes on the briefing.
            2. Make sure all your baggage is stored away…
            3. Whether you’re in the front row or the back…
            4. We recommend you keep your seat-belt fastened throughout the flight, but…
            5. If the seat-belt sign is switched on…
            6. If an oxygen mask should drop down in front of you…
            7. If there are young ones around you…
            8. If an emergency were to happen during take-off or landing…
            9. If you find yourself needing to smoke on this flight…
            10. If you need to find your way out even if it’s All Black…
            11. Should we need to evacuate…
            12. Mobile phones can interfere with aircraft systems and mustn’t be used in flight unless...


            Can't remember them all?
            Try the matching exercise below




            3) Discuss Grammar
            1. What do these sentences have in common?
            2. What's the difference between them?

               A) If an oxygen mask drops down in front of you, use it to breathe.
               B) If an oxygen mask were to drop down in front of you, use it to breathe.
               C) If an oxygen mask should drop down in front of you, use it to breathe.
               D) Should an oxygen mask drop down in front of you, use it to breathe.

            3. Which 3 are the most unlikely? 

            Practise
            If + "were to... "  http://www.englishpage.com/conditional/wereto.html
            http://www.englishpage.com/conditional/conditional11.htm

            Conditionals - Alternative forms http://esl.about.com/cs/advanced/a/gr_cond_alt_2.htm



            4) Writing
            Use the information from the video to write a flight safety advice leaflet.
            or
            Write a leaflet advising people what to do in an emergency
            For example - A fire
            Does your school or college have fire drills?
            Do you know what to do and where to go if there was a fire?

            Use some of the language from the video
            • If the alarm were to ring...
            • If the alarm should ring...
            • Should the alarm ring...
            • Make sure you...
            • All students must...
            • We recommend (that) you + verb

              5) Speaking
              Turn your leaflet from part 4 into a presentation or film.
              Make a powerpoint presentation
              or
              direct and act in an instructional film telling people what to do in an emergency



              6) Sporting vocabulary
              This Air New Zealand video features the New Zealand All Blacks Rugby team. There are many sporting expressions in the video. Read the transcript here http://lybio.net/air-new-zealand-crazy-about-rugby-safety-video/travel-events/  or watch the video again. How many can you find?

              Make a note of any other vocabulary in the film that you find useful


               
              More air safety videos http://www.carhire.org/blog/funny-flight-safety-videos


              Powerpoint presentation (containing answers)
              Click to start


              Air safety from David Mainwood




              More