Lesson Plans Only
Lesson Plans Only
Lesson Plans Only
You can prepare great lessons – you don’t need a course book. Let’s get 3 hours + of material out of one four-minute song!
Preparation:
My Example:
• I used the song “Gold Can Turn To Sand” (3:24) from Kristina: the Musical (At Carnegie Hall)
• Level: Intermediate – Upper Intermediate
• Target vocab (20 items): brother, one another, springtime, beside, guide, godforsaken, shared, mad, believed,
company, desert, foolish, desperate, to will sby along, rest, grave, poisoned, fell, eyes, watch
• Idioms of fortune and risk:
o for luck to run out o fortune favours the brave
o good luck! o to strike gold
o to take a risk o all that glitters is not gold
o to seek your fortune o to risk life and limb
... and so on
Lesson Plan:
• Follow the outline below, using your song as the text; you don’t have to do every stage
• Timings are approximate. Of course you can spend longer or shorter time with any of the sections. My
example is for two 90-minute lessons, which could be on separate days
Warmer (00)
• Discuss the general topic: taking risks; following your dreams; dangers of greed
Vocabulary (10)
• Target vocab (gap-fill words; new words; stress & vowel sounds; rhyming words; song structure); try to
predict the story from the target vocab
Warmer (00)
• Act out the story of the song in mime (without speaking!)
• Or, act out the story of the song with only one of the gap-fill words, e.g. “Guide... guide... guide...” (using
different intonation and mime to convey the story)
Pronunciation (15)
• Sentence stress; study one or more sentences from the lyrics – identify content words, stressed syllables, and
stressed vowel sounds; notice different stress (rhythm) because it’s a song; notice more deliberate phrasing
and clear SP accent; watch a performance of the song in its original language – Swedish. Note that both
English and Swedish are stress-timed languages. What similarities and differences do you notice?
• Connected speech; SS identify passages written phonetically in Clear Alphabet; listen to the audio normal
speed, then slowed down; discuss what happens and why (note: sound connections, especially cv which
means consonant moves forward):
o hi man Mee (him and me)
o Dreem so Fgeu twer Grand (dreams of gold were grand)
o hii Sheir din mai Dreem (he shared in my dream)
o wi w Foo li shan dun Weir rii (we were foolish and unwary)
o i n Leun lii Greiv (in a lonely grave)
o fro m Wel (from a well) ... and so on
Writing (Homework)
• SS write up one of their role plays (or both) as a dialogue or story; focus on using past verb forms
• Or, write the last will and testament of one of the main characters (both die!)
• SS find more idioms on the topic of risk and fortune, then write a text (e.g. an informal email) including all
of them; write the text again using literal English instead of idioms; what’s the difference?
Further Study
• SS research the period described in the song: 1850s Gold Rush in California; then present their findings or
create a multimedia account, e.g. imagining they are involved and recording their experiences with
audio/video/photography/theatre, etc.
No. Phonemic ID Old IPA Symbol Old Spelling New Spelling Type
1. a // bat Bat v/s
2. ai /a/ time Taim d
3. aiy /aə/ hire Haiy d
4. ar /ɑ/ star Star v/l
5. au /aυ/ cow Kau d
6. auw /aυə/ power Pauw d
7. b /b/ bag Bag c/v
8. ch /tʃ/ cheese Cheez c/u
9. d /d/ dice Dais c/v
10. e /e/ leg Leg v/s
11. ee /i/ three Ttree v/l
12. ei /e/ plane Plein d
13. eir /eə/ pear Peir d
14. er // shirt Shert v/l
15. eu /əυ/ home Heum d
16. f /f/ frog Frog c/u
17. g // glass Glars c/v
18. h /h/ head Hed c/u
19. hh /x/ loch Lohh c/u
20. i // dish Dish v/s
21. ii /i/ happy Ha pii v/s
22. iy /ə/ here Hiy d
23. j /d/ jam Jam c/v
24. k /k/ kit Kit c/u
25. l /l/ lake Leik c/v
26. m /m/ music Myoo zik c/v
27. n /n/ nurse Ners c/v
28. ng /ŋ/ ring Ring c/v
29. o /ɒ/ sock Sok v/s
30. oo /u/ shoot Shoot v/l
31. or /ɔ/ ball Borl v/l
32. oy /ɔ/ toy Toy d
33. p /p/ pig Pig c/u
34. r /r/ road Reud c/v
35. s /s/ snow Sneu c/u
36. sh /ʃ/ shop Shop c/u
37. t /t/ taxi Ta ksii c/u
38. th /ð/ brother Bru th c/v
39. tt /θ/ thousand Ttau znd c/u
40. u // cup Kup v/s
41. uh /ə/ arrive uh Raiv v/s
42. uu /υ/ pull Puul v/s
43. uuw /υə/ pure Pyuuw d
44. v /v/ van Van c/v
45. w /w/ week Week c/v
46. y /j/ yoghurt Yo gt c/v
47. z /z/ zip Zip c/v
48. zz // revision r Vi zzn c/v
_ /ʔ/ football Fuu_ borl
Key – v = vowel sound: s = short l = long d = diphthong | c = consonant sound: v = voiced u = unvoiced
Topic: _______________________________________
1. 2. 3. 4.
5. 6. 7. 8.
Topic: _______________________________________
1. 2.
3. 4.
5. 6.
7. 8.
9. 10.
11. 12.
13. 14.
15. 16.
17. 18.
19. 20.
2. Write six interesting and random words connected with this topic:
3. Underline the stressed syllable in each and write the stressed vowel sound using Clear Alphabet.
4. Think of a word that collocates with each word to make a phrase, adding other words if necessary (e.g. articles, prepositions). Write six phrases:
5. Choose a verb form: ____________________. What time is it? ___________________________________. What is the auxiliary verb? __________________. Write one
sentence in that form using a collocation:
6. Correct your sentence (e.g. check articles, verb forms), then extend them, if possible, using conjunctions and relative clause words, and improve vocabulary using
higher-level words (e.g. synonyms, adjectives). Write the improved sentence below:
7. Underline the stressed syllables and write the stressed vowel sounds using CA (the sound spine).
8. Draw vertical lines to divide each sentence into syllables; then write the sound connections between each pair of syllables. Show how to make either vc or friendly
connections.
9. Translate your sentence into Clear Alphabet. Practise saying it out loud. 10. Check your work carefully before giving it to your teacher.
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1. Do you believe that it is right to / that…? (ethical issue) Why? / Why not?
2. Rank (e.g. 10 things)… in order of preference / importance / etc.
3. Describe a typical day for…
4. When did you last…? (experience) Why… What… How… When…? etc.
5. What would life be like without…? Could you live (in a world) without…? How
would life be different if…? What would you do… if you no longer had…? / …if there
were no more…?
6. What five words come to mind when you hear the word x? Tell me more.
7. Tell me about a time when…
8. Invent your own… (e.g. sport, car, clothes, dessert, TV channel, etc.) Consider the
following elements…
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Take any word set and focus on the vowel sound in each word and how it is spelled. Discuss which statements apply
to which words and match the cards with the statement. Say why the exceptions are different, and then put the words
in each group into sound or spelling subgroups.
1. Short vowel sounds are written with one vowel letter. These words are often phonetic.
In words of more than one syllable: the vowel letter will represent a short vowel sound when
followed by two or more consonant letters.
3. You can tell a word has a long vowel sound by the presence of two vowel letters which are
the same: ee or oo.
4. Long vowel sounds are written with two different vowel letters (a vowel digraph).
5. When you see vowel + consonant + e the vowel will say its alphabet name.
In words of more than one syllable: this can apply with other vowel letters too, not only e.
7. Diphthongs are written with two different vowel letters (a vowel digraph).
8. Other consonant letters like w, y, and gh count as part of long vowel sounds or diphthongs
in spellings, rather than consonant sounds; other consonant letters can occur as silent letters,
e.g. b in “debt”.
Exceptions:
Say why they don’t fit into any category.
Generally, a word is stressed on the nearest strong syllable to the end. A strong syllable is one with a long
vowel sound (e.g. ar, ee), a diphthong (e.g. ai, ei), or a short vowel sound (not a schwa) plus consonant (e.g. in one-
syllable words: big, hat). A weak syllable has the pattern: v (vowel) or cv (consonant-vowel) or cvc (with a schwa).
Take any word set and find the stressed syllable in each word. Discuss which statements apply to which words and
match the cards with the statements; then put the words into groups according to the spelling and sounds
statements.
A. The final syllable is strong: often in two-syllable verbs (avoid, receive) and when the suffix is stressed
(engineer, Chinese). One-syllable content words are stressed on the whole word (buy, cow).
B. The penultimate (next to final) syllable is strong: often in words with suffixes, which are not usually stressed
(plumber, information).
C. The antepenultimate (next to penultimate) is strong: if the final and penultimate are both weak
(cinema, emergency). If this syllable is also weak, we have to keep moving back until we find a strong syllable.
E. Both parts of phrasal verbs are stressed: (wake up, put on).
G. A small group of words (homographs) are spelled the same but have different stress depending
on the type of word: record (noun), record (verb); produce (noun), produce (verb).
Exceptions:
Say why they don’t fit into any category: (hero, reptile).
_______
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Bingo!
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Bingo!
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Bingo!
Note: questions 1-40 are for the competitive games, whilst questions 41-50 (in grey type) are only for the
non-competitive activities. These questions cannot be used during the competitive games because the
answers would reveal the identity of the word!
Note: the questions in grey type are only for the non-competitive activities. These questions cannot be
used during the competitive games because the answers would reveal the identity of the word!
Minimal pairs are words that have the same sounds, apart from one sound. All of the words below have three sounds, so we can group these minimal pairs by: first sound different,
middle sound different, and final sound different. SS could try to find more words in each group, or write a sentence containing all three words from a group:
? /5
+
? /5
?
/5
+
? /5
Total: / 20
Write the different options along the top row and the names of the people you ask down the left-hand column.
Options
Names
TELL ME
MORE WHY? SO...?
ABOUT [...]
Change topic
1. 2.
3. 4.
met a famous person met a famous person from history
5. 6.
bought something very expensive bought an exotic pet
7. 8.
passed an important exam passed my driving test
9. 10.
arrived home after an amazing trip got back from the seaside
11. 12.
bought some new clothes seen myself on TV
13. 14.
won an important match written a song
15. 16.
seen a UFO been dancing
17. 18.
had a tattoo had plastic surgery
19. 20.
been jogging been to a birthday party
1. 2.
3. 4.
returned from a war eaten too much
5. 6.
heard some bad news been to a funeral
7. 8.
dropped my phone down the toilet walked into a lamppost
9. 10.
stolen something humiliated myself in public
11. 12.
lost some money been sunbathing for too long
13. 14.
been bitten by a dog had a row with my partner
15. 16.
upset somebody been told I have
two months to live
17. 18.
watched a really boring film had a loan application rejected
19. 20.
been turned down for a job been to the police station
I’m feeling...
1. 2. 3. 4.
5. 6. 7. 8.
angry happy shocked up
1. 2. 3. 4.
5. 6. 7. 8.
trustworthy unreliable optimistic pessimistic
1. 2. 3. 4.
5. 6. 7. 8.
describe part reply attack
1. 2. 3. 4.
5. 6. 7. 8.
sell accept pardon express an
opinion
9. 10. 11. 12.
choose prefer wish well curse
These picture cards can be used in lots of different ways in the classroom. Here are a few ideas:
• T writes simpler vocabulary on the blank cards and SS match them with the pictures. For
example, instead of ‘crushed’ there could be the word ‘sad’. Or SS could write their own
adjective, or any word, to describe each feeling
• SS match the pictures with noun forms of each simpler adjective, e.g. ‘sad’ -> ‘sadness’
o positive feelings
o negative feelings
• Using the picture cards with adjectives, SS match the vocabulary cards with the pictures
o 16 negative feelings:
o 8 positive feelings:
• SS think of their own adjective or any word that better describes each picture
• Using the blank cards, SS write an idiom that matches each picture, e.g. ‘overjoyed’ -> ‘over the
moon’ or ‘on top of the world’; or T prepares this as a matching game
• SS discuss reasons why each person could feel the way they do, then role play possible situations
• Using the blank cards, SS write a caption for each picture as if it is part of a newspaper story, then
role play or write up the story
• SS match pictures to noun forms of each adjective, e.g. ‘anxious’ -> ‘anxiety’, etc.
• Focus on the stressed syllable and stressed vowel sound in each word; then discuss how the
vowel sound is spelled. Do you notice any patterns?
Both Levels:
o When did you last feel like...? Why? What happened? (past simple)
o When do you usually feel like...? Why? What causes this feeling? (present simple)
o Have you ever felt...? When? (present perfect)... and so on
• Use the people as inspiration for role plays. Use the role play activities in this book to guide you
(e.g. p.84). You could add some of the other cards as well, i.e. mood cards (p.128), character cards
(p.129), and function cards (from p.130).
• Guess who game: put all of the cards out on the table; somebody chooses a picture, but keeps it
secret; the others in the group have to guess who it is by asking yes/no questions. The student
who chooses the picture can only answer yes or no. For example, “Is it a woman?” “Yes.” So take
away all the men. “Is she wearing blue?” “No.” So take away all the women who are wearing
blue... and so on, until somebody guesses correctly
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You Are The
Course Book –
Lesson Plans
Teach English without a course book
This book contains a new collection of original lesson plans for teachers who want to
teach English without a course book. To provide a balanced programme of learning, the
lesson plans fall into 5 main categories:
• Vocabulary
• Text
• Verb Forms Revision
• Pronunciation
• Free Practice
Each lesson plan is written in an easy-to-follow step-by-step way and this book contains
all the necessary materials to teach English the way you want to – without a course
book.
Matt Purland is an English teacher and writer. He has a BA Honours degree in Drama
from the University of Wales and a Postgraduate Certificate in Further Education from
the University of Derby.
Now he prefers to teach English without formal resources. This book will show you
how.
You Are The Course Book Method
Notes
• The syllabus represents everything that T wants the SS to learn during the course, while at
the same time allowing SS to create the majority of the content (60%), and enabling T to
introduce new important concepts (e.g. sentence stress and connected speech).
• Each lesson lasts for 90 mins and there is one lesson per week. The timings of another
course may vary.
• The time allocated for each activity is approximate and may vary.
• This is a sample syllabus. T can choose different topics, modes, warmers, activities, tenses,
input lessons, and so on, to suit the needs of their SS.
• The page numbers refer to You Are The Course Book – Lesson Plans 1.
• While variety is important, especially to cater for different learning styles, repetition and
reinforcement help SS to remember. The syllabus deliberately includes repetition of activities
and concepts, e.g. tenses, pronunciation, etc., to provide reinforcement of learning.
• SS should be assessed before the course to make sure they are at the right level.
• Modes 1 and 2 are truncated versions; to do each mode in full requires at least 2 x 90 min
lessons. I have tried to vary the activities in these particular lessons over the 10 weeks, in
terms of verb forms revision, pronunciation, and free practice.
• It provides a firm foundation for further study in General English using YATCB Method.
1
Purland, Matt. You Are The Course Book – Lesson Plans. Ostróda: English Banana.com, 2014. Hardback. Available for free
download: https://purlandtraining.com/
Course Details
Level: Elementary
No. SS per class: 8-15
Age of SS: 15 and above
Lessons: 10 x 90 min lessons = 20 x 45 min lesson hours
Modes: Mode 1 x3
Mode 2 x2
Mode 3 x2
Input Lesson x2
Elementary Topics: Chosen by SS: x2
Chosen by T: x5: Food and Drink, Shopping, Health, Transport, Family
Mixed Activities: Warmer x9: team building activities: x4; improvisation games: x3; introductions: x1; test: x1
Vocabulary x7
Text activity x5
Grammar point x5
Verb forms revision x4
Free practice x4
Pronunciation x3 (+ 2 input lessons)
Test x3
Homework x9
Texts: Created by SS: x3 an informal email, an email of complaint, a newspaper report
Chosen by T: x2 a magazine article, extract from fiction
Vocabulary: 30 interesting and random words (Mode 1) (upgraded if required)
40 keywords from texts (Mode 2)
80 vocab words (Mode 3)
5 Different ways of teaching the vocabulary session:
• Mode 1
• Standard
• with Quick Questions
• with Clear Alphabet
• with Big Word Game
Grammar: SS errors addressed (bespoke): every lesson, but especially Modes 1 & 3 = 5 lessons
6 elementary tenses studied: present simple/present continuous; past simple/present perfect;
future simple/future with going to
Also: parts of a sentence
Writing: Homework assignments:
• Write final draft x3 lessons
• Write up class work x2 lessons
• Write more sentences x2 lessons
Elementary 19 (+ as dictated by 2 real texts):
Functions advise, agree, apologise, arrange, ask, compare, correct, criticise, debate, describe,
Practised: give opinions, introduce, make an appointment, negotiate, plan for the future, suggest,
summarise, tell the time, thank
Pronunciation: Focus on:
The 48 Sounds of English with Clear Alphabet x3 lessons
Sentence Stress x2 lessons
Connected Speech x2 lessons
Homework: Writing x7
Prepare for a test x2
Testing: Pre-course assessment x1
Vocabulary test x1
Verb forms revision test x1
End of course test x1
SS-Created Lesson 60% over the whole course
Content:
T Preparation Time: varies: none (x3); 10; 20; 30 x2; 40 x2; 80 (creating the end of course test); total: 4 hrs 10 mins
(250 mins); avg: 25 mins preparation per lesson
Input: varies (see each lesson for a breakdown of student/teacher input, out of a maximum of 5)
Skills Practised: varies (see each lesson for level of skills practised, out of a maximum of 5 for each skill)
USPs: no course book; SSs create lesson content – SS input predominates; focus on speaking;
focus on SS grammar errors; focus on concepts not normally covered by the course book,
e.g. sentence stress, connected speech, phonics, improvisation, etc.
10-Week Spoken English Course – General English (90 mins x 10)
T Preparation: 30 mins: find text, prepare vocabulary words and pronunciation sentences; print text Speaking:
Listening:
Student Input: Reading:
Teacher Input: Writing:
10-Week Spoken English Course – General English (90 mins x 10)
T Preparation: 20 mins: print and cut up discussion word cards; prepare quick questions Speaking:
(if necessary) Listening:
Reading:
Student Input: Writing:
Teacher Input:
T Preparation: 40 mins: print handout(s); prepare notes on Clear Alphabet; be clear about the topic Speaking:
Listening:
Student Input: Reading:
Teacher Input: Writing:
* See also Clear Alphabet Dictionary, p.41 for a sample lesson plan for this input lesson. Purland, Matt. Ostróda: English Banana.com, 2012. Hardback. Available for free download:
https://purlandtraining.com/
10-Week Spoken English Course – General English (90 mins x 10)
T Preparation: 30 mins: find text, prepare vocabulary words and 20 different words for listening Speaking:
practice; print text Listening:
Reading:
Student Input: Writing:
Teacher Input:
10-Week Spoken English Course – General English (90 mins x 10)
T Preparation: 10 mins: print and cut up discussion word cards; prepare Big Word Game Speaking:
Listening:
Student Input: Reading:
Teacher Input: Writing:
T Preparation: 40 mins: print handout(s); prepare notes on Connected Speech; be clear about topic Speaking:
Listening:
Student Input: Reading:
Teacher Input: Writing:
* See also Talk a Lot Foundation Course, pp.79-92 for more information about connected speech. Purland, Matt. Ostróda: English Banana.com, 2011. Hardback. Available for free
download: https://purlandtraining.com/
10-Week Spoken English Course – General English (90 mins x 10)
Homework: none
T Preparation: 80 mins: prepare and print test based on course content; prepare and print feedback forms; Speaking:
plan some discussion questions for course summary and next steps Listening:
Reading:
Student Input: Writing:
Teacher Input: