For this lesson, I am attaching the following materials:Period 1 -begin with a review of prepositions. After the first parts of the textbook, we will go to the vocab ppt, which reviews key terms and has a vanishing pictures game. Then we'll go back to p. 157 for Listen and Play.Period 2 - a ppt and worksheet I have modified somewhat from Molly's work on waygook.org--thank you. There are more map-reading, direction-giving examples. I also have the usual fill in the blanks worksheet from the Look and Listen conversation. After I completed both worksheets, I realized I could cut the distribution time in half by combining them.Period 3 - Place Your Bets game is a favorite around these parts. Students have to look at the picture and the sentence(s), decide if they match, and decide if everything is correct. Wager points, and earn stamps. Full instructions on PPT.Period 4 - I have a brand new decoding game called Dragon's Lair. The students are knights in search of the dragon's gold. They work in teams to decode the messages in the Book of Secrets to find the lair ... (It's another iteration of the English Espionage and Tomb Raiders activities I made.) You need one code sheet (the Chart of Runic Letters) per team. Yeah, I know it's the cyrillic alphabet, but it looks good. BTW, you don't have to click to advance slides except after something has been read.Period 5 - More map-reading, direction-giving. Based on a vacation I took to Paihia, in New Zealand. You can back up the the directions overlays to have as many students as you like give the directions.Period 6 - Students work in pairrs to match up the directions in a town's "Restaurrant Guide" with the numbered locations on the town map. It uses relative directions w/ prepositions (on 4th Str., next to the school...). I put the handouts in plastic sleeves and have students write the numbers on the restaurant guide with board marker. Then I can just errase it and reuse. These materials came from the website: http://www.bogglesworldesl.com
Quote from: Mr C on September 07, 2015, 01:17:08 PMFor this lesson, I am attaching the following materials:Period 1 -begin with a review of prepositions. After the first parts of the textbook, we will go to the vocab ppt, which reviews key terms and has a vanishing pictures game. Then we'll go back to p. 157 for Listen and Play.Period 2 - a ppt and worksheet I have modified somewhat from Molly's work on waygook.org--thank you. There are more map-reading, direction-giving examples. I also have the usual fill in the blanks worksheet from the Look and Listen conversation. After I completed both worksheets, I realized I could cut the distribution time in half by combining them.Period 3 - Place Your Bets game is a favorite around these parts. Students have to look at the picture and the sentence(s), decide if they match, and decide if everything is correct. Wager points, and earn stamps. Full instructions on PPT.Period 4 - I have a brand new decoding game called Dragon's Lair. The students are knights in search of the dragon's gold. They work in teams to decode the messages in the Book of Secrets to find the lair ... (It's another iteration of the English Espionage and Tomb Raiders activities I made.) You need one code sheet (the Chart of Runic Letters) per team. Yeah, I know it's the cyrillic alphabet, but it looks good. BTW, you don't have to click to advance slides except after something has been read.Period 5 - More map-reading, direction-giving. Based on a vacation I took to Paihia, in New Zealand. You can back up the the directions overlays to have as many students as you like give the directions.Period 6 - Students work in pairrs to match up the directions in a town's "Restaurrant Guide" with the numbered locations on the town map. It uses relative directions w/ prepositions (on 4th Str., next to the school...). I put the handouts in plastic sleeves and have students write the numbers on the restaurant guide with board marker. Then I can just errase it and reuse. These materials came from the website: http://www.bogglesworldesl.comAppreciate all of the materials and sharing them, but just a heads up for anyone else; in the vocab/vanishing pictures powerpoint there's an animated gif of a guy getting hit by a car. My kids all screamed and one was pretty upset. My co-teacher was pretty mad but luckily she'd changed my lesson to this one very last minute so I hadn't had time to prepare and look at the powerpoint before I used it, so she was understanding.I know it's maybe a little over-sensitive for some, but I do think it's elementary school and maybe don't show kids CCTV footage of dudes getting run down.
Thanks for the heads up. Love your other materials Mr C, but I agree that doesn't look like a thing to show grade schoolers. He's limping away!
5min video clip. Koreans (from a TV show) lost in New York looking for directions.