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  • sheila
  • Moderator - LVL 2

    • 1480

    • November 23, 2009, 08:32:58 am
    • Gangnamgu, Seoul
Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« on: February 08, 2013, 02:18:28 pm »
This is a thread for any lesson material for Judy Yin (전재교육 2013 edition) Middle School English 1 Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?. Please share your contributions here. Be sure to explain exactly what you are posting and please do not post multi-level materials in this thread. Also, any review lessons or materials should be posted in the review section for this grade.  Best of luck in your lesson planning!
Hard work beats talent when talent doesn't work hard!
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Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #1 on: March 25, 2013, 10:22:50 am »
Here are the materials I'm using for the Speaking section of L2: What Do You Do at Home. 

The LP is pretty straightforward.  I modify some activities given the different levels of my students.  "Prepositions locations C.doc" is the same as "prepositions location.doc", which I use for A's and B's, except the text isn't chunked. 

Also, "location prepositions.doc" is the LP and the ppt includes a simple version of Connect 4 that I created for my classes.  Also, the Busy Beaver image and the Connect 4 image should be hyperlinked to Youtube videos that, respectively, play a Busy Beaver location preposition song and a 1990's commercial of Connect 4 that I used to explain the game to my classes.

Let me know if you have any questions.

Cheers!


  • BrittanyB
  • Adventurer

    • 39

    • March 04, 2012, 06:53:31 pm
    • Gwangju
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #2 on: March 25, 2013, 02:32:44 pm »
Here is my lesson. At my school I do the communicative task section in the book. Okay so go through the ppt. The first short game is Thisisabedroom. I got this from the Epik orientation but changed it to fit this lesson. Have the students make a sentence with every category. When every student has a sentence have them stand up. Roll a die to eliminate a possible part of each category (just go in order-who, how often, what). The students must sit down if they have that part in their sentence. To make the boxes disappear just click on the box. The last one or two people standing win a piece of candy or another reward. I do three rounds and have the students write a new sentence each time. Winners must share their sentence. For the preposition game I have them get in pairs and to make it quick tell them that A will be the taller person of the pair and B is the other person. For the last section of the communicative task I have them write about their ideal Sunday. If the students share I give them a reward, or if no one wants to share I pick at random and reward the best stories.


  • hrl707
  • Adventurer

    • 26

    • February 25, 2013, 09:07:44 am
    • Gyeongbuk, South Korea
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #3 on: March 26, 2013, 12:11:40 pm »
Here is my lesson. At my school I do the communicative task section in the book. Okay so go through the ppt. The first short game is Thisisabedroom. I got this from the Epik orientation but changed it to fit this lesson. Have the students make a sentence with every category. When every student has a sentence have them stand up. Roll a die to eliminate a possible part of each category (just go in order-who, how often, what). The students must sit down if they have that part in their sentence. To make the boxes disappear just click on the box. The last one or two people standing win a piece of candy or another reward. I do three rounds and have the students write a new sentence each time. Winners must share their sentence. For the preposition game I have them get in pairs and to make it quick tell them that A will be the taller person of the pair and B is the other person. For the last section of the communicative task I have them write about their ideal Sunday. If the students share I give them a reward, or if no one wants to share I pick at random and reward the best stories.

AWESOME stuff, thank you so much


  • bmaret
  • Adventurer

    • 25

    • September 02, 2012, 08:40:34 pm
    • Hadong (Gyeongnam Province)
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #4 on: March 28, 2013, 06:14:46 pm »
Thanks, Brittany, for a great lesson.

I modified it a bit for my students, taking out the prepositions (I have a different prepositions lesson) and changing the game a little.

The word doc is for the game at the end.

I always appreciate collaborating with other waygook users. Thanks again!


  • philby1985
  • Expert Waygook

    • 662

    • March 05, 2013, 09:10:49 am
    • Daejeon
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #5 on: March 28, 2013, 07:46:17 pm »
Attached are the slides and lesson materials I have been using this week. I can honestly say I am immensely happy with how well every class has gone. All the students are getting involved and practicing their English no matter what their level is.

There is a little bit of preparation work but I think it is well worth the effort for the simple fact that I have found it to be so successful.

So the basic principle is this. I show some pictures of activities people do at home. We talk about the pictures and what the person is doing in the picture and then I read a sentence about the picture and get them to make the sentence using the cut out words (see pdf file).

The attached pdf file needs to be printed and each word cut out. I have been running this activity by putting students into groups of 4.

I get a real kick out of hearing students using English (repeating the words I just read out over and over again as they try to build the sentence). They rarely get the sentence right the first time round, but that is the best part. They then keep practicing and trying different variations of the sentence and move words around.

For lower level classes I give them some hints before I read the sentence. I might tell them “for this sentence you need toothbrush, toothpaste, clean and teeth”. The pictures in the slide also help to reinforce the sentence.

So far I have found I don’t need to go to my final activity (what chore do you hate), doing an introduction (Australian slang) and building sentences takes the full 45 minutes.

When you show a new picture (for the next sentence) the students will start looking in front of them for words they can use to build a sentence and stop listening to you. Force them to stop and look at the front of the room. Make them put their hands on their heads if you have to.

Oh, and in slide 9 (cooking) that is me. The students get a kick out of seeing me in my home cooking. I would suggest replace my picture with your own.

Cheers
Phil
http://gdaykorea.blogspot.kr/
« Last Edit: March 28, 2013, 08:04:02 pm by philby1985 »


  • joosa
  • Newgookin

    • 2

    • September 03, 2012, 02:38:56 pm
    • South Korea
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #6 on: March 29, 2013, 11:52:11 am »
My two-part powerpoints and related document for this lesson ;D.


  • ammislan
  • Waygookin

    • 14

    • September 09, 2012, 06:26:44 am
    • Jinan
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #7 on: April 01, 2013, 08:40:31 am »
Here is a Pororo board game I modified from another post. Works to review simple vocabulary. After the player rolls, the rest of the group asks "Do you do any housework?" and the one who rolled answers using the picture they landed on. Pretty simple.

The first slide is the game, the rest of the slides I printed and reviewed the vocabulary before we broke into teams and played the game.


  • nzer-in-gyeongnam
  • Moderator - LVL 3

    • 783

    • August 07, 2010, 01:23:29 pm
    • Gyeongnam-do
    more
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #8 on: April 05, 2013, 01:02:58 pm »
So after looking through all the stuff on prepositions, here on Waygook, I found a ppt that looked pretty good, and I made some changes, added a few things, took some away kinda thing.

I've come out with a lesson that should be more than enough to fill the 45mins, it's a case of if there's too much, great! If your students are very high in level, there should be enough to cover them too.

Start off by a review of some prepositions they know, and practice them using the pictures and sentence prompts. (this part was already in the PPT).

Next, there is a listening activity (using https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=byszemY8Pl8 if it doesn't load on the embedded file on the ppt... although I hope it does), and have students follow through the handout and fill in the spaces. There's a list of translated words for understanding at the end of the song, as some words may be a bit too ambitious for students to understand, although the song itself is fairly clear. There's a wordbank as well of all the prepositions in the song so students can find them if they need help with spelling.

After they've done the listening, and you've checked it through with them (answers on ppt as well), the reverse side of the sheet (if you're printing back to back) has a Hidden Pictures activity. The ppt guides students in how to find one of the items and then asks them to find the rest themselves. Give them about 5-10mins to find as many as they can, you can make it a contest if you like. The answer for the hidden pictures is also in the ppt too.

IF you've still got time after all of this, There is a picture of a circus, if you're focused solely on speaking/listening, have one student ask their partner where to find things and the other tell them using prepositions learned, and on the slide that follows, if you're wanting students to write as well, give them a copy of the picture (copy it from the slide - I'm using speaking although it says writing) and give them time to write.

After this, if you've still got time, have students then draw pictures of their bedrooms and then describe them to their partners and have their partners draw what they heard, and then compare.

I hope this lesson works for you as well as it is for me.
"It's better to have tried and failed, than never to have tried at all!"
Teach this to your students... they'll thank you for it later!


  • Cwbatson
  • Adventurer

    • 62

    • March 04, 2013, 09:18:14 pm
    • Gwangju, South Korea
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #9 on: April 08, 2013, 09:50:03 pm »
Here is mine. I I just added a lot of different peoples together into something that I'd like to teach for my second lesson. It's mostly work on prepositions with some review from the last section. It's absolutely too long but I prefer to be way over prepared.


Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #10 on: April 09, 2013, 01:07:14 pm »
excellent! thanks!! :)


  • Sarah102205
  • Waygookin

    • 13

    • January 24, 2012, 04:07:31 am
    • Incheon, South Korea
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #11 on: April 11, 2013, 11:48:37 am »
Lesson 2: What do you do at Home?

Week One: Housework and Chores

Fill in the blank worksheet for reference, drilling, calendar practice, dialogue practice and charades.
We watched the video (posted above) to reinforce the key dialogue
Each student receives one Fill in the Blank, and one Calendar (returned to the teacher)
Charades, if time allowed.

For my lower level classes, I excluded some chores.
« Last Edit: April 11, 2013, 11:56:36 am by Sarah102205 »


  • Sarah102205
  • Waygookin

    • 13

    • January 24, 2012, 04:07:31 am
    • Incheon, South Korea
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #12 on: April 11, 2013, 11:54:54 am »
Lesson 2: What do  you do at home?

Week Two: Prepositions
Fill in the blank worksheet for reference, Hidden Picture Game, Carnival Toss Review.

I gave each student a Hidden Picture worksheet and asked students questions while they were working individually. I also gave them hints "The cake is under the bench, next to the man." When most of the students were near the end, I asked for volunteers to tell me where an item was. (I gave these volunteer teams a bonus throw for the following game)

How to Play carnival toss: Each team gets 1 minuted to describe each picture (I reviewed some of the items prior to each round with the students). I sentence = 1 throw. Everyone in the team must speak to award points.
I used a smartboard, but in the past I've simply drawn a series of circles on the blackboard. Both have been successful.
« Last Edit: April 11, 2013, 01:21:01 pm by Sarah102205 »


  • dunwon
  • Newgookin

    • 2

    • April 12, 2013, 10:50:46 am
    • South Korea
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #13 on: April 12, 2013, 10:52:08 am »
My two-part powerpoints and related document for this lesson ;D.

Awesome lesson, joosa! Thanks a lot  :azn:


  • bmaret
  • Adventurer

    • 25

    • September 02, 2012, 08:40:34 pm
    • Hadong (Gyeongnam Province)
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #14 on: April 16, 2013, 09:35:34 pm »
Thanks to waygook user "nzer-in-gyeongnam" for the guts of this lesson. I only changed photos, added gifs, went PPT crazy (as I usually do) and substituted some things.

This lesson is a mostly a review of prepositions- meant to follow an introductory lesson on them. (I have one posted if you scroll up and need one.)

BRIEF HOUSEWORK REVIEW
PREPOSITION REVIEW (with dog photos)
ADDITIONAL PRACTICE
PARTNER DRAWING GAME

Let me know if you have any questions.


Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #15 on: May 07, 2013, 01:56:13 pm »
Lesson 2
C Speak Out #1
I clean my room everyday.
PowerPoint presentation


Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #16 on: May 07, 2013, 02:00:47 pm »
Lesson 2
C Speak Out #2
Page 31
It's on the desk.

PowerPoint presentation.
For the game:
Students make a sentence. You click on the circle that they made a sentence about. If there is a monkey there, I gave them one candy. No monkey, try again (next student)

Extra PPT
This one I made last year.
Find Pikachu. Super easy, kids make a sentence and you click.


  • johmi958
  • Waygookin

    • 24

    • February 12, 2014, 06:33:35 am
    • Daegu
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #17 on: December 09, 2014, 10:25:21 am »
This is my lesson for Unit 2 Part 1 on housework. I used some materials from others so a big thank you to all of you for that. The lesson should be fairly straightforward. There's a sentence scramble and worksheet and well as speaking activities.


  • johmi958
  • Waygookin

    • 24

    • February 12, 2014, 06:33:35 am
    • Daegu
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #18 on: December 09, 2014, 10:31:05 am »
Here's my lesson for Part 2 of this unit - Prepositions. I used the template for the Connect 4 game from another user so thank you for that. The students really love this game. I found using objects in the classroom to get the students practicing worked quite well.
« Last Edit: December 09, 2014, 10:33:38 am by johmi958 »


  • Kingeudey
  • Veteran

    • 244

    • December 16, 2010, 08:57:02 am
    • Korea
Re: Lesson 2: What Do You Do at Home?
« Reply #19 on: February 27, 2015, 01:52:13 pm »
My two-part powerpoints and related document for this lesson ;D.

These are nice, but you are using a different tense than is in the book, and that's our goal (ideally).  Yours are working present continuous and chapter 2 is simple present. 

So instead of "Cinderella is sweeping"

it should be

"Cinderella sweeps".

Does that make sense?

I suppose this was posted a long time ago, so maybe the point is moot, but perhaps others that download it won't make the same mistake.