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  • unhitchedfern
  • Waygookin

    • 11

    • April 04, 2011, 07:38:54 am
    • Chungju, Cheongchungbukdo, South Korea
(대교 Daegyo) Grade 3, Lesson 11 - "Do You Have an Eraser?"
« on: October 14, 2011, 09:04:39 pm »
I hope I did this right, but at the last minute before class I made up an activity to play with the kids.

It's essentially a spy game. We review the targeted language (Do you have an eraser, etc.). Then we divide the class into 2 groups (boys vs. girls) and we made everyone close their eyes and we would walk around the room and tap 2 boys, or 2 girls depending on whose turn it was. Then everyone opens their eyes and figures out who is the "spy." They choose two students and ask the targeted language, "Do you have an eraser?" and the student will either say, "Yes I do," if they are they spy, or, "No I don't," if they aren't. They only get two chances to guess and if they guess right, they will get a point.

This game is really flexible with the number of groups, number of vocab to use and the number of guesses, but working with 3rd graders, we opted to keep it as simple as possible. Hope this helps.
« Last Edit: November 22, 2012, 10:25:07 am by taeyang »


  • lpaek
  • Waygookin

    • 20

    • August 29, 2011, 08:21:40 pm
    • Gangwon-do, South Korea
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #1 on: October 21, 2011, 11:22:37 am »
A game that you could do is play go fish with material cards.

You can have sets of eraser, glue, notebook, etc flash cards and have the kids ask Do you have an ...." and answer " No, i dont" or "Yes, I do"


  • Maureen
  • Veteran

    • 191

    • October 27, 2010, 11:48:32 am
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #2 on: October 24, 2011, 11:00:36 am »
Here is a ppt for the first period.

Happy Teaching!
« Last Edit: October 26, 2011, 11:53:19 am by Maureen »


  • Maureen
  • Veteran

    • 191

    • October 27, 2010, 11:48:32 am
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #3 on: October 24, 2011, 11:15:58 am »
Here are some motivational videos

a clip of a song from we are busy beavers
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u_nL1x9DqJY

a clip of the Do you have (positive)?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KZEijLsw9M

a clip of Do you have (neg)?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SE9-VjahXUY&feature=relmfu



Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #4 on: October 28, 2011, 04:30:44 pm »
Group Guessing Game: Make 4 or 5 teams. Tell the first team to put their heads down. Don’t look! (See the attached PowerPoint slides, but you can play without the PowerPoint too.) Click the slide to show the rest of the class 3 pictures. (for example: crayon, pencil, ruler) The first team wakes up and guesses altogether, “Do you have ____?”  The rest of the class answers altogether, “Yes, I have ____.” Or “No, I don’t have _____.” If correct they get a point. If not correct, guess one more time. Click to the next slide for the second team and play again.

Slap Game: Use the lesson 11 cards from the back of the textbook. Play in a circle of 6 students. place cards in the middle. Call out a card. The first person to slap it wins the card. Students take turns calling out a card.

Cowboy game: Use the lesson 11 cards from the back of the textbook. Play in a circle of 6 students. One student holds all the cards. Shoot a student, “BANG” and show a card. The student to the left and the student to the right must answer very fast. The first student to answer correctly wins the card. Pass the cards to the next student… “BANG”, left and right students answer.  It might take awhile for the kids to learn this game, but once they know it's quiet fun and good practice. You can play this game with any target English.

Train Wreck Game: Everyone sits in a big circle. Use the lesson 11 cards from the back of the textbook. Pass out all the cards, so that every student has 2 different cards. The teacher stands in the middle of the circle to start the game. Show all the objects(cards) on the board. Choose one object and ask "Do you have ____?" Everyone who has that card must change seats. The person in the middle sits down too. The last person standing without a seat is in the middle and chooses another object to ask. After awhile allow the person in the middle to choose 2 objects (or more if you decide). If the person yells, “train wreck” or "Do you have everything?" then everyone changes seats.



  • Maureen
  • Veteran

    • 191

    • October 27, 2010, 11:48:32 am
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #5 on: October 31, 2011, 10:17:19 am »
Have the students get out white boards and markers and write what they think is the first letter of the word. Give themselves a point for every slide they get right. At the end, the students will the most points can get a sticker or a prize.


  • Mene12
  • Waygookin

    • 17

    • October 02, 2011, 04:42:34 pm
    • South Korea
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #6 on: November 02, 2011, 10:50:20 am »
I try to come up with different activities and add them to whatever is in the textbook. Sometimes I do half of what's in the book and half I come up with it. So here are some activities for this lesson.

11-1: guess the dialogue. After listening to the first dialogue and asking a few questions, I ask Ss to repeat any phrases they heard.
Prep: Print slide number 2 so that you have the asnwers.
Play: When a students says one of the phrases, if it was part of the dialogue, click on the number and it will appear. If it takes you to another slide with a picture, that student gets a coupon. So it becomes a guessing game. Some of the phrases are too easy, which encourages the lower level Ss to participate.

11-2: play "go fish" with the cards from the textbook.

11-3: Whenever they "learn" new letters, I put the Ss in groups and have them come up with a list of words that start with each letter (I say "learn" because they already know all the letters by now). So for this lesson, there are 5 new letters, so we play 5 rounds. At the end of each round, I collect the piece of paper where they wrote their list, and count. The winner gets a coupon (or use whatever reward system you have). I usually give them 1min30secs, but you can modify this of course (I use the onlinestopwatch). I don't care about spelling to encourage the lower level Ss to participate. I also let them use their textbook, but I don't let them get out of their seats (otherwise you'll have Ss running around looking for words). For each round, I have them choose a different "writer". Tthe first time I played this game with the Ss, they went babanas for it! Simple, but it's a winner!

11-4: instead of the activity in the book, I made up a "Find your partner" game.
-Prep: Print and cut the squares from the "find your partner" doc.
-Each student gets one card.
-Without showing their cards to others, each student must find the person with the same pics using “do you have..” and answering “no I don’t have..” or “Yes, I have…” (if there is an odd amount of Ss, odd Ss gets coupon!)
-After finding partner, Ss have to put together a set using “do you have..” and answering “no I don’t have..” or “Yes, I have…”
-First set wins!
-Make sure to explain what a set is.
*Disqualified if show pics to others, and if I hear Korean

11-4: clap game

=)


  • MattyDub
  • Adventurer

    • 51

    • March 08, 2011, 02:33:20 pm
    • Seoul
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #7 on: November 03, 2011, 03:10:59 pm »
Here's a WORKING VERSION of Angry Birds that I have updated for this lesson.  All of the vocabulary and target language is covered in this game, including a few vocab items from previous units.  I hope this will be helpful for some people out there.  I plan on using this game in the 4th period as a reward. 

To view the answer, you must click on the question portion of each slide. 

You can have up to 8 teams in this game.

Scoring is done by a "drag and drop" system to the teams' score boards.

Have fun!


Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #8 on: November 04, 2011, 03:55:43 pm »
Hey everyone. Looks like some great activities that teachers posted. Hopefully I can try some of them before the lesson is over.

Here is another activity. (See the .ppt attachment.) It's an information gap activity where partners practice speaking to each other. They have practically the same paper, but different items are missing on each one. They need to ask each other about the missing items on their paper.

Example:

A: "Do you have a pencil case?"
B: "Yes, I have a pencil case."

B: "Do you have a ruler?"
A: "No, I don't have a ruler."


  • kayladb
  • Adventurer

    • 27

    • September 24, 2011, 05:40:42 pm
    • Gyeongsangbuk-do, South Korea
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #9 on: November 10, 2011, 01:41:42 pm »
In my school, I only do part 2 and 3 of each lesson!

Here is what I did for this one:

For part 2, I played Go Fish with cards that I had in my class - I made it so that there weren't a set number of pairs (I had 30 pairs (60 cards) but only passed out 50 cards, all shuffled) That way the game lasted longer. Also, to make it harder, I made them have to have 2 pairs before they could win.
The top 3 winners got a prize, I just wrote their names on the board, switched a few of their cards, and let them keep playing while the slower kids caught up. They were all happy just to get pairs!
Obviously, I made them use the key expressions, and I just walked around and helped initiate some.

For part 3, I used this PPT, and played Bingo with them - it takes about 25 minutes to get a couple good games in, with enough time for them to write their own words. In the Bingo PPT, I forgot the letter T for my word list, so you might want to change it.
*The first slides of part 3 have the arrows - its to remind the kids that when you point up, they say the letter, point down, they say the phonetic sound, and point in the middle for the word. I have fun with that because I like to do them out of order and trick the kids. They usually like it, and it helps them remember the sounds.

*The main PPT has a fill in the blank portion that I use for backup, where I have the key letters on the board, the picture comes up, and 1 kid from each team has to run and slap the letter on the board. When I point to them, they have to say the phonetic sound, as well as the word.


  • Shehara
  • Waygookin

    • 14

    • September 16, 2011, 08:08:13 am
    • Gumi City, Gyeongsanbuk-do
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #10 on: November 11, 2011, 02:09:00 pm »
Here is a PPT I used to practice the vocab. and then play a game for period 2.

The first part is practice. Ask "What do you have" and the students will answer "I have ____"

To slowly introduce how to play the game I first had the students look at the cards in the back of their book and then I held one to my forehead and said "I have _____." The students had to guess if what I said was true or a lie. You can also say "I don't have ____" and have them guess.

Then I had them pick 4 of the 8 cards to use and put their books away. Students had to do the same thing to each other only if they guessed 'true' or 'lie' correctly then they get to keep the card the student is holding to his/her forehead. The point is to try and collect all 8 different items.


  • glb0b
  • Expert Waygook

    • 601

    • July 06, 2010, 03:02:56 pm
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #11 on: November 17, 2011, 08:35:49 am »
Here is a clap game for A-U concentrating on big letters (I did small letters for a-p).

Also a bunch of games using classroom objects as pictures which can be used to practice either "I have ..." or "do you have ...?"

For the last period I am playing a fill your pencil case game. For each student I have printed a pencil case, pen, pencil, eraser, ruler, glue and scissors. They are all coloring pictures. I will give each student a pencil case and 6 of the same picture (e.g. 6 pencils). They then have to walk around the classroom and collect a complete pencil case set (1 of each) by asking "do you have a ..." and answering "yes, I do" or "no, I don't". If they have only 1 of an item they will answer "no, I don't" but if they have more than 1 they will answer "yes, I do. Here you are" and pass the item over to the student. When a student has 6 different objects they will sit down and color the pictures and glue them on to their pencil case.

I also made instructions for "go fish" but I probably won't end up playing the game.



  • Shehara
  • Waygookin

    • 14

    • September 16, 2011, 08:08:13 am
    • Gumi City, Gyeongsanbuk-do
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #12 on: November 17, 2011, 03:19:21 pm »
Here's a board game I made for tomorrow.

To make it more interesting (and to slow the game down) I am telling my students that if they roll a 6 they lose their turn and if they roll a 5 they do not move but roll again. Hopefully it'll play out ok.  ;)
 


  • K04
  • Veteran

    • 235

    • September 07, 2010, 02:34:04 pm
    • Incheon South Korea
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #13 on: November 18, 2011, 02:50:37 pm »
Hi,

   Attached is a Mario game to go with the lesson.  I also added a few review questions from last chapter.
   Thanks to the original creater of the Mario game!


  • ManFromScene24
  • Waygookin

    • 24

    • September 01, 2011, 10:39:15 am
    • Chungcheongbuk-do, Eumseong-gun, Keumwang-eup
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #14 on: December 06, 2011, 03:17:50 pm »
A game that you could do is play go fish with material cards.

You can have sets of eraser, glue, notebook, etc flash cards and have the kids ask Do you have an ...." and answer " No, i dont" or "Yes, I do"

Attached are rules for a Go Fish game using the cards from the book. The game went over really well, but it takes some slow, deliberate explaining at first. It helps if your co-teacher can repeat the directions in Korean. After that, it went really well and the kids really enjoyed it.


  • ManFromScene24
  • Waygookin

    • 24

    • September 01, 2011, 10:39:15 am
    • Chungcheongbuk-do, Eumseong-gun, Keumwang-eup
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #15 on: December 06, 2011, 03:40:52 pm »
For my third period of teaching this lesson, I would up doing a fly swatter game.
A member of each team comes to the front of the class, facing the board, and each are given a fly swatter (available for cheap in grocery stores). I wrote the uppercase and lowercase letter pairs on the board really big (Qq, Rr, Ss, Tt, Uu). I also included the sample vocabulary words. All of the letters and words were in random positions on the board.

I started by saying a letter and the first one to hit the correct letter scored a point for their team.
Then I included the words.
After that, I erased the words and just had the letters. I began saying words that started with those letters. This makes it so they really have to listen carefully and associate the sound with the letter they see written. (All of the Uu words make the same sound)
Here are some of the words I pulled from:

Quiz             Red                Sad                    Tree                 Up
Queen         Rain                Snail                  Tiger                 Under
Quiet           Rocket            Sock                  Ten                    Ugly
Quick           Robot              Ship                  Turtle                Umbrella
Quilt            Rabbit             Square              Train                 Uncle


One class was doing particularly well, so I started using long words off the top of my head, reminding them to only listen to the first letter.


  • nicoleleeann
  • Adventurer

    • 41

    • March 09, 2011, 01:22:26 pm
    • Busan, South Korea
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #16 on: February 21, 2012, 08:41:40 am »
Two beaver videos, one positive and one negative.
Allow students to watch the videos, ask volunteers to say the sentences that they hear, and then do the corresponding worksheet. For both worksheets, students must circle the objects that the beavers have.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KZEijLsw9M - Positive
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SE9-VjahXUY&feature=relmfu - Negative


Find your partner/Dice Game:
T: Let’s practice. Can you find your partner? I will give you a card. Don’t look at it yet! It’s a secret. Please ask your friends, “Do you have a __________?” Do not show them the card!
Your friend will say, “Yes, I do” or “No, I don’t.”
When you find your partner, please come to the front of the room. Stand in two lines. You must roll the dice. You must roll a 1 or 6. When you roll a 1/6, you can sit down. The first group to have everyone sitting is the winner.

Change Seats Game:
Students have arranged their seats in a circle in the center of the room. There is one seat missing.
T: Let’s play a game. Each person will have two cards. Please say a sentence that matches your card.
S: I have a _________.
T: Now, let’s move the desks and set the chairs in a circle. One chair will be missing. The first person will pull a card and say, “Do you have a _______?” If you have that card, say, “Yes, I have a _________,” and change seats with another person who has a __________. The last person to grab a seat is the loser and must choose the next card.





Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #17 on: October 29, 2012, 02:00:41 pm »
Took Xavier912's Guessing game and added 2 more "rounds" for a total of 3 rounds. Thanks Xavier!

Best for 1st or 2nd period


  • rlmackie06
  • Explorer

    • 7

    • July 23, 2012, 09:44:03 am
    • Geochang, South Korea
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #18 on: November 13, 2012, 11:47:21 am »

For the last period I am playing a fill your pencil case game. For each student I have printed a pencil case, pen, pencil, eraser, ruler, glue and scissors. They are all coloring pictures. I will give each student a pencil case and 6 of the same picture (e.g. 6 pencils). They then have to walk around the classroom and collect a complete pencil case set (1 of each) by asking "do you have a ..." and answering "yes, I do" or "no, I don't". If they have only 1 of an item they will answer "no, I don't" but if they have more than 1 they will answer "yes, I do. Here you are" and pass the item over to the student. When a student has 6 different objects they will sit down and color the pictures and glue them on to their pencil case.

Hi glb0b I really like the sound of this game. Where did you print the colouring pictures from?


  • dlow88
  • Adventurer

    • 27

    • March 05, 2012, 11:48:22 am
    • Mokpo, South Korea
Re: Unit 11 - Do You Have an Eraser?
« Reply #19 on: November 13, 2012, 06:38:45 pm »
For period 1... I hardly ever use the cars in the back of the book, but for this one I did a simple matching game - students says the first card eg "I have an eraser". If they get a pair, they say again "I have an eraser"... if the cards don't match, they say (for the second card) "I don't have an eraser"

Nice game because it avoids the necessity for the question "Do you have..." that the other games on the post require...