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Lesson planningLesson planning
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GROUPING
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Board RaceBoard Race
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LESSONLESSON PLANNINGPLANNING
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Fame 1 dIrector 2 Lights 1 roMance 2 actresS 3 l Total 9 point 9 points !!!
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GROUPING
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Lesson planningLesson planning Why write lesson plans?Why write lesson plans?
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Lesson planning Makes Acts as Ensures Helps to
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Ensures You have researched language point and have enough information You can use it again next time you teach the lesson You have highlighted the particular language skill to be taught The focus remains on the aim \ objective of the lesson Appropriate timing Substitute teachers can refer to the lesson plans You have something for future reference
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Helps to Prepare, anticipate problems and come up with solutions Achieve coherent lesson – easier to check for balance of activity, interaction and interest Achieve clarity of purpose Save time in lesson as you know exactly what you are doing and how long it will take Plan materials Plan for a range of abilities Give a clear idea about what will take place in the lesson Plan suitable activities
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Makes Execution easier Self –appraisal easier
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Acts as A record of what you planned to do An aide memoire
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Lesson planningLesson planning Lesson plan content.Lesson plan content.
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What the headings and subheadings could be in the written lesson plans Do the activity… Check against your own school lesson template. Elicit differences and similarities.
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Lesson planningLesson planning Lesson aims and learning outcomes
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Aims are what teachers (and learners) want to achieve in a lesson or a course. Read more at: www.teachingenglish.org.uk\knowledge- database\aims
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Outcomes are what learners should be able to do or have done at the end of the class or a course. Outcomes are similar to aims but are more focused on end results and often describe what actually happened rather than what the teacher intends to happen.
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4.1 Decide on the aim of the task. Which is the best and why?
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A- is not thinking of the detailed lesson aim. Instead he \ she is seeing it as a lesson in the book that has to be taught. B- demonstrates the language aim to be taught in the lesson but doesn’t say how \ what learners will do. C- has the clearest idea of the lesson aim; it not only includes the language to be taught, but also what learners will learn to do in the lesson
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Card language point learning outcome Find a partner to match learning outcomes and language points. -May I open the window? (door, book…etc) By the end of the lesson students will be able to ask for permission to do something)
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GROUPING
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Lesson planningLesson planning Lesson planLesson plan
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By the end of the lesson, learners will be able to: 1. say their name and ask others for their names (Hi, my name is…What’s your name?) 2. understand and produce the spoken form of five sports and the verbs that collocate with them (play cricket, swim…etc) 3. ask and answer questions about what learners can do (What can you…? I can…)
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Lesson planningLesson planning Tips for lesson planningTips for lesson planning (watch a video and make notes)(watch a video and make notes)
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Lesson planningLesson planning SWOT analysisSWOT analysis
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S- strong W –weak O – opportunities T- threats
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Lesson planningLesson planning THANK YOU!!!!THANK YOU!!!! THE ENDTHE END
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