English
Rob Whyte ESL speaking and writing class lessons, activities and worksheets for English students who want to learn and improve their English communication skills.
Learn English Writing, Basic Class: Week 2
Learn English Writing, Week 2
This weeks’ plan.
- Last week you wrote a short story about a boy and his mother after watching the video Howl. This week please rewrite the second draft and give it to me to read.
- Learn about the Six Traits of good writing.
- Two or three writing exercises.
- Review answers from chapter 1 of the textbook.
- Here are some answers for Unit 1 in the textbook.
- Let’s do some more editing: try the second and third paragraphs.
- Here is a warm up exercise that helps students students write a good paragraph. It’s called looping.
UPDATE (Friday the 13th)
This week, most students completed two or three short writing activities, as described below. I have read all of the student writing and offer these general comments on patterns of errors that I hope we can correct over the next few weeks (or sooner).
There are two categories of errors: conventions (e.g. basic grammar, spelling, punctuation, etc) and style (i.e. how well the meaning is expressed through vocabulary, sentence fluency and organisation).
In general, here are three ways to improve your writing:
- think before writing
- think while writing
- slow down – it’s not a race
The first or second draft always has a few problems. Nobody ever writes a perfect story the first time. Please review these comments and use them to help you when rewriting your stories.The idea is to get better with each draft.
Conventions
- BE verb plus second verb that doesn’t match (e.g. I’m was watching the window)
- poor prepositional phrases
- wrong order of verb and adverb
- confuse he and his (subject and pronoun)
- wrong use of articles The and A
- incorrect use of ED and ING endings on adjectives
- confuse so and such
- confusing verb tense (use present tense and past tense)
Style
- forget to use paragraphs
- not enough details or explanations to support ideas
- many ideas left unspoken (e.g. It was the best day of the summer. – why best?)
- sentences in wrong order
- sentences too wordy
- repeat same word in one sentence
- not enough synonyms
Six Traits of Good Writing
This week we will learn about Six Writing Traits. It’s a framework to help teachers evaluate student writing. It also helps students understand what makes good writing. This is important to know because good writing is more than good grammar.
- IDEA: a clear message and story. Good writing shows, it does not tell.
- ORGANISATION: There is a beginning and an end.
- VOICE: The writing shows a little bit about you. There is a person writing, not a robot. There is feeling, humor, personality.
- WORD CHOICE: Use words that describe people, places, things and actions very well. Great words paint a picture.
- SENTENCE FLUENCY: Sentences have rhythm just like music. Writing with long and short sentences is one way to create rhythm.
- CONVENTIONS: The mechanics of writing, which includes spelling, punctuation, capitalization, grammar and paragraphing.
ESL Writing Exercise 1: Six Sentences
The Idea
This controlled writing activity helps students write clear sentences by focusing their attention on every word.
Step 1
Write a six-sentence paragraph with three rules.
- Do not repeat any word, including contractions and articles.
- The paragraph must tell a story.
- The final product should be a structured paragraph (i.e. there is a topic sentence and cohesion).
Step 2 – The Example
I went to school today. My backpack was full of stuff. It had binders and pencils inside. They were used for class work. Brittany is in first period with me. She has a bag filled with things as well.
Step 3
Students write. When completed, these short passages can be used as the base text for a small group dictogloss exercise.
The Skill
Improve clarity of meaning by reinforcing proper use of antecedents and expand student vocabulary through synonyms.
ESL Writing Exercise 2: Adding Your Voice
Click here to get that writing lesson activity about adding voice to a text
ESL Writing Exercise 3: Word Choice, Voice and Articles
The Idea
This writing activity helps ESL students learn to add their voice to a story along with word choice and one grammar point; watch carefully how students use definite articles – the, a, an.
Step 1
Look at the pictures on this worksheet. The story is called Dog and Sausage.
Step 2
In the story, I want you to be one of the characters, either the boy or the dog. Write the story from that perspective.
Step 3
The key point here is to use use a variety of verbs to describe actions, places and senses. Add details.
The Skill
Improve the ESL students’ ability to describe places with details and add their own voice to the story.
Learn English Extensive Reading Intro
Extensive Reading
This is the introduction to an Extensive Reading program for the teacher training program. The overall goal is to help the teachers improve reading fluency and, by extension, language learning through sustained reading and related activities.
Week 1 Activities
Explain purpose and structure of Extensive Reading.
- it’s a fun, enjoyable experience
- it’s not studying
- it’s not difficult – students understand 95% of the words, no need for a dictionary
- choose a graded reader – genre, author, title, etc – that looks interesting to you
EPER – Reading Level Test
Implement the Edinburgh Project on Extensive Reading test. With this baseline score, students will have a good understanding of their English reading level and will be able to focus on level appropriate readers.
Explain to teachers how to translate EPER score into publisher gradings. This sheet explains how to make publisher comparisons.
Quick Book Genre Activity
This quick read and listen activity provides trainees with an easy review of different book genres.
SSR – Sustained Silent Reading
Introduce concept of sustained reading. Establish target of 30 pages per week. Demonstrate tracking sheets.
Learn English Conversation: Week 1
Learn English conversation.
Here is the plan for this week’s English conversation.
- Let’s begin by looking at the conversation class syllabus.
- Look at the textbook.
- Simple past tense review exercises.
- Which one is different speaking and thinking exercise.
- Imagination speaking exercise.
SPEAKING ACTIVITY 1
Here is an ESL speaking activity that requires you to speak and think.
- Each partner gets one worksheet.
- Read four words on one line.
- Your partner has to listen and then explain why one word is different.
- Listen. is that answer logical?
- Do you have a different answer?
SPEAKING AND IMAGINATION
This ESL speaking activity and worksheet requires you to use your imagination. Your brain power. And sentences that start with “It looks like …. ”
- Work with a partner.
- Look at a picture.
- Ask your partner, “What does that look like?
- Partner answers (for example) “It looks like an eye. here is the white part of an eye and here is the black part.”
- Ask your partner to explain more.
- Then say your idea.
THINKING, SPEAKING REVISING
This is a pair work jigsaw speaking activity that asks you to make a story, tell the story, make it better and tell it again.
- With a partner, look at the picture with a man and a boat.
- Put the pictures in order and make a story. Use one or two sentences per picture. Write the sentence down in your notebook.
- Change partners. Tell your story. Your new partner will listen. Then your partner will speak to you.
- Your job is to listen to your new partner’s story and copy words or phrases that make your story better. Rewrite your story.
- Come back to your original partner. Tell him/her your new story. Try to say it faster than the first time.