Grammar Lesson Plan
Present Progressive
Objective:
Materials Needed:
Learning/Teaching Activities: Introduction:
Inductive discovery of principle - 10 minutes Play a recording of a 2-3 minute segment of commuter news radio. It should contain many instances of the present progressive, such as "It's 6:30 am, and traffic is flowing fine." "Well, we're seeing a sunny day with no sign of clouds." "KJLC-playing the best hits for you." Have students listen to the recording a few times, trying to hear instances of the present progressive. After, ask them to tell what they heard. Have them guess what the form means.
Explanation - 5-10 minutes (adapted from Swan 496-497)
Hurry up! We are all waiting for you. The present progressive is often used to talk about developing or changing situations.
The weather is getting better and better. The present progressive is used to talk about temporary situations. It is not used to talk about permanent situations, or about regular happenings or habits. For these, we generally use the present simple tense. Compare:
My sister is living at home for the moment.
Why is that girl standing on the table?
I am seeing a lot of Monica these days.
I think the cat is going mad. The present progressive is not the normal tense for narrative (story-telling). In present-tense stories and commentaries, we usually use the present simple to talk about the things that happen.
Practice - 25 minutes They are fighting." Then the student replaces them face down. This process is repeated, in turn, by the participants, the aim being to remember where the different cards were located and to turn up a matching pair-which then becomes the property of the one who found them. The winner is the one who has the most pairs at the end.
Conclusion/Homework - 5 minutes Assign students to find two examples of the present progressive in something they read or hear. Note them down in two sentences and bring them in to the next class.
Contingency Plan:
Bibliography Rinvolucri, M. (1981). Grammar Games. New York: Cambridge University Press. Swan, M. (1980). Practical English Usage. New York: Oxford University Press.
Lesson Modifications Based on Peer Review: My original lesson plan was one to teach the present progressive to express habitual action. I chose that as a subject largely because I found what I thought was a neat activity to practice it. My peers helped me realize that I would have to be very careful teaching the present progressive to express habitual action, because ESL/EFL students often overuse the present progressive for that purpose. In reality, we normally use the present simple tense to express habitual action, and teaching them too much about using the progressive for habitual action would probably just reinforce something they would try too much, anyway. That's why I reworked the whole lesson to be an introduction to the present progressive for temporary action. Explanation of my Lesson: I thought it would be good to introduce a new verb test through an inductive lesson. I wanted to have them read a passage and highlight the instances of present progressive, then talk together about what it must mean, from the context. Inductive learning would help them see real-life instances of a "boring" grammatical context. Then I discovered that the present progressive is not that easy to find in print! Since it's used more often in conversation and other immediate interaction between people, I thought it would be better to present it through a taped news radio segment. The immediacy of the news radio genre reinforces the lesson that this is a grammatical form used for temporary action. Although it's more difficult to listen for grammatical forms than to read for them, I tried to compensate for this by playing the passage a few times, and preparing them for what to look for beforehand. It's also a good exercise in practicing listening skills and therefore pronunciation. The "Remembering Pairs" game is basically like the game "Concentration," and can be used to teach many things. I think it's a good way to reinforce images of people doing things, to associate those with the present progressive.
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