Thursday, August 23, 2012
Survey for Graduates of Intensive English Programs
If you have exited an Intensive English Program, I'd like to hear what you have to say about your experience. How did your IEP prepare you for your academic program? In what ways could your IEP experience have been improved? What did you really enjoy about your IEP experience. Click below to offer your advice!
Click here to take survey
Monday, August 13, 2012
The Cardinal is Ohio's State Bird. I used the following worksheet in a 1st Grade ESL class, but it could be used in many different situations, such as teaching infinitives. First, students work in pairs to identify the various parts of a cardinal pictured on the worksheet. Feet. Beak. Wings. Tail. Legs. Review these answers with students. Then, ask students to write the first half of each sentence individually. Review answers as a class. It will be helpful explain certain verbs to students, such as steer, perch, etc. Expansion activities can include charades or pictionary with some of the new vocabulary learned.
A Cardinal Uses Its
Friday, July 27, 2012
Example Persuasive Speech--Run a Marathon!
I used this power point as an example persuasive speech in my listening and speaking class today. I asked the students to discuss why people might not want to run a marathon. I countered these points and used them as points in favor of running a marathon. Enjoy! And why not run a marathon yourself. Try it! It'll be fun!
Run a marathon! from blueparachute.
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Professor Plumb Murder Mystery Activity -- Past Modals for Specualtion
For a high-intermediate grammar class, I used the power point presentation and the worksheet that follows to create a context in which students can use modals plus the present perfect to talk about past speculations. Students listen to the power point, which tells a murder mystery story. While they listen, they take notes on the four suspects in the case. After they've taken notes, they write sentences that make speculations about "who done it." Lively class discussion follows. I used this over the past two days in class, and it was really fun. I suggest dividing it into two days to leave students wondering who the real murder is. Enjoy! If you use it, let me know how it works. I'd love to get feedback.
P.S. As an expansion activity, I used www.polleverywhere.com to create online polls. Each poll contained a modal plus present perfect sentence that speculated about the murder mystery. Students could vote whether they agreed or disagreed with the speculative statement via text message or email on these polls. Students enjoyed being allowed to use their phones in class! I highly recommend this as an expansion activity.
Professor Plumb Murder Mystery Activity.docx
Labels:
Education,
ESL,
Grammar,
Modals,
Mystery,
Present Perfect,
Speculation
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Beginning Grammar Jeopardy Game
This is a Jeopardy Power Point that I've used in Beginning Grammar classes as a review. It's fun! Try it! You can use the template below to create your own version of the game.
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Confused vs confusing
Learning the difference between past participles used as adjectives and present participles used as adjectives can be difficult. Remember, with -ing adjectives, the subject CAUSES a feeling. With -ed, or past participle adjectives, the subject RECEIVES a feeling. This power point helps to explain this difference visually.
View more presentations from Kyle Hildebrandt.
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