ENTRY 6 - PORTFOLIO - ORAL DEVELOPMENT
Lesson Plan Based on Book
Jobs This lesson plan was based on the course book Speak out Intermediate Unit 4 - Jobs
Objective Students will be able to describe jobs, talk about personal qualities, and express obligation using must, have to, and should.
1. Warm-up
Teacher shows pictures of different professions
and asks:
What jobs are popular in
Mexico?
What is your dream job?
Which jobs are difficult? Why?
Students
discuss in pairs.
Vocabulary
Presentation Teacher
introduces vocabulary about personal qualities.
Ambitious reliable
competitive motivated risk taker punctual
creative hard-working
Students match: qualities + jobs.
Example:
creative → designer punctual
→ nurse ambitious →
entrepreneur
Teacher
explains: must have to should
Students complete sentences:
A firefighter ______ brave. A receptionist ______organized. A lawyer ______ wear formal clothes.
Speaking Activity - Students receive speaking cards with
jobs.
Task: Describe the qualities needed for each
profession. Example:
A police officer must be responsible
and should stay calm under pressure.
Follow-up:
Students discuss: Would you like
this job? Why or why not?
Closing Activity - Students write: My ideal job.
Include:
job title, qualities, responsibilities, and reasons.
Students share answers orally.
Reflection
I felt comfortable and confident designing this lesson plan because the structure from the book is clear, and I felt motivated to see that most of the students doing this activity will easily connect the topic to their own lives by talking about their dream job.
How this helps me as a future teacher
This lesson plan helps me become a better teacher because I learned how to use a course book effectively without just following it page by page. I can add my own activities like speaking cards and pair discussions. In class, I learned that students need to connect grammar and vocabulary to real life, like describing qualities for a job they want. As a future teacher, I will design lessons that are practical, interactive, and meaningful for my students.
This lesson taught me that teaching grammar does not have to be boring. By using jobs and personal qualities, students learn structures such as must, have to, and should in a natural context, which will help them speak and write about their future careers more confidently.
I think you can add a review of the common errors at the end of the class. This would be very useful to check both the pronunciation and grammar errors made by students during the session
ResponderEliminar