Confidence and Connections INTRO Teacher Book - Digital View

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Teacher Book

INTRO TO CONFIDENCE and CONNECTIONS

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Adult ESL The Intercambio Way

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Teacher’s Name____________________________________________________________ Phone & Email_____________________________________________________________

Student(s) Information

Important Contact Information ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________

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Teacher Book

Intercambio Uniting Communities © 2019 Confidence and Connections is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Intro to Confidence and Connections Adult ESL The Intercambio™ Way

collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Intercambio Uniting Communities.

First Edition 2020

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NOT FOR DUPLCATION II

Teacher Book INTRO


CREDITS Intro Writer Mya Shaftel Editors Debbie Goldman and Marcie Smith Consultant Susan Litt

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Design and Layout David Olivares and Bob Walter

Thank you to the following organizations and agencies that support our work and made the development of Confidence and Connections possible. 3Metas Argosy Foundation Jacques M. Littlefield Foundation Red Empress Foundation Schocken Foundation Workforce Boulder County intercambio.org/teachers

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SCOPE AND SEQUENCE #

Title

1

Nice to Meet You

2

3

Alphabetics

By End of Lesson, You Can:

What is your name? My name is Patty.

O o, P p

• Recognize and use basic classroom commands • Introduce yourself and greet people

Spell Your Name

What’s your first/last name? My first name is Rosa. Where are you from? I’m from Mexico.

A a, R r

• Spell your complete name • Say where you are from

What’s Your Phone Number?

What’s your phone number? It’s _______________.

E e, T t

• Say and write phone number and area code • Say, read and write numbers 0 to 10

What’s this/that? It’s ___________. What are these/those? They’re ________________. Is this your pencil? Yes, it is.

I i, N n

• Ask questions with this/that/these/those • Identify items around the room

Review

5

Is This Your Pen?

6

It’s Next to the Books

Where is the pen? It’s next to the box. Where are the books? They are on the table.

B b ,X x

• Identify common items around the room • Say where items in a room are

7

How Many Are There?

How many bananas are there? There are two. What color is the apple? It’s red.

G g, L l

• Read and write colors • Read and write common fruits and vegetables

8

Review and Progress Check

9

What Day Is Today?

When is class? It’s on Tuesday and Thursday. What day is today? Today is Wednesday.

10

What Time Is Class?

What time is class? It’s at 10:00.

11

What’s Your Address?

What’s your address? My address is ______________________.

12

F f, V v

C c, S s, Z z

• Say and write the days of the week • Ask and answer questions about the week

• Ask and answer questions about time

• Read, write and say your complete address

Review

13

Where’s the Bathroom?

14

How Much Is It?

15

How Are You?

16

D d, U u, Y y

Where is the bus stop? It’s across from the bank.

K k, W w

• Ask for and give simple directions • Identify places on a map

How much is a penny? It’s one cent.

M m, Q q

• Identify value and names of coins and bills • Ask and answer how much questions • Write money in dollars $ and cents ¢

How are you? I’m fine.

Review and Progress Check

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H h, J j

• Ask and answer questions about how you feel

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Grammar


Welcome to Intro to Confidence and Connections! WHO THIS BOOK IS FOR This Intro level book is designed for adults who are literate in their native language, but have virtually no English language skills. Students who are literate in their native language can read and write in their native language, even if it is at a very low level. Pre-literate or illiterate adults without reading and/or writing skills in their native language will need additional support to learn English. Intro students may understand a few English words, but cannot communicate in English. They may recognize stop signs, and be able to say hello, but are not able to answer even basic questions in English. Learning any language as an adult is challenging. The goal of the Intro book is to get students ready for level 1. This requires confidence-building and learning English fundamentals. Some students may need or want to repeat the Intro course more than once. This book is designed to be used both with groups and in one-on-one teaching. The Teacher Book includes specific suggestions for both.

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KEYS TO TEACHING INTRO LEVEL STUDENTS Key 1 – Keep it Simple Speak at a normal rate. Use simple words. Avoid idiomatic expressions. Don’t over-explain.

Key 2 – Repeat Repeat new vocabulary multiple times over several classes. Mix things up so that repetition doesn’t get boring. Take advantage of the four review lessons. (Lessons 4, 8, 12, and 16)

Key 3– Model and Use Gestures Students at this level will understand very little of what you say. Show them with gestures and body language. Before starting any activity, model it with a student.

In the the following pages, you’ll find helpful details for teaching adults who are not able to speak or understand English. Modeling and using techniques such as Total Physical Response TPR, will ensure your success.

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ORGANIZATION OF THE INTRO BOOK This book is comprised of 16 90-minute to 2-hour lessons. • Each content lesson is topic-based. (These are lessons 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15.) • Every fourth lesson is a Review. (Lessons 4, 8, 12 and 16) • Lesson 8 and 16 have both a Review and a measurable Progress Check. • The inside front cover presents numbers one-100. The inside back cover provides a full-page alphabet chart as a quick and easy reference.

Look and Listen Every lesson opens with a picture providing context for the listening activity and the vocabulary. Explore the picture with your student(s). Ask simple questions such as “Who?” or “Where?” to allow them to contribute any words they may know. They may not be able to say anything, and that’s okay. In group settings, it’s possible that someone may know one word and another student may know a different one. After going over the picture, introduce the listening track by writing the names of the characters on the board, or labeling them in the book. You may also want to point to the speakers as the track plays. Play the listening track through once. Don’t expect your students to understand it completely. This first listening provides an opportunity for them to listen to the structure and vocabulary of the lesson in context. Vocabulary Every time you present a vocabulary list, check if your students know any of the words before you teach them. Remember that even if they know the meaning, they might not know the pronunciation or how to use it in a sentence. When presenting vocabulary, begin with oral repetition (I say, you say) with the whole class several times. Then, have smaller groups pronounce the word. Finally, have individual students repeat after you—don’t force individual students to repeat to the whole class if they are very insecure. The goal is to help students be understood rather than perfect, so do not spend more than 1-2 minutes on each word. Use the pictures in the book or other visuals to convey meaning. Most vocabulary sections have between 8-10 items. Research shows students cannot learn more than this amount per lesson. The key to learning vocabulary is repetition and review – in the lesson, after the lesson and much later after the lesson. This is why the book has a review after every three lessons. Allow multiple opportunities for all students to repeat the new vocabulary. Simply telling students a new word does not mean they have learned it. They need to use the new words in meaningful contexts many times before they learn them. A great way to increase repetition is to have students make their own flash cards as you introduce vocabulary. This allows students to practice at home and gives you a set to use for a variety of activities in class such as Memory Games, etc.

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Every 6-page lesson follows the same structure. This standardization enables students to know what is coming up in each lesson and decreases anxiety. Page 1: L ook and Listen and Vocabulary Page 2: A lphabetics, Writing and Listening Page 3. L anguage Tool and Practice Page 4: P ractice (Grammar and Vocabulary practice) Page 5: R eal Life: Putting it all together Page 6: Homework


(Vocabulary continued)

Review the new vocabulary during the next class meeting and periodically after that. When you use an expansion activity, be sure to include grammar from the current and previous lessons. In grammar activities, include vocabulary words that have been learned in past lessons. Regular review will help students remember the new words. This is provided through the review lessons in Intro to Confidence and Connections. Alphabetics Some students come from countries, with languages such as Spanish and French, and are familiar with the English alphabet and numbers. Students who come from countries that use other alphabets or writing systems, such as Chinese, Arabic or Russian, will need to learn the English alphabet and numbers and will likely need more practice writing. Every lesson has an Alphabetics activity where students are introduced to 2-3 letters. All students will practice those letters in class, but students who need additional writing practice will use the designated pages in the back of their student book as part of their homework.

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Listening Each lesson (including Progress Checks) has a recorded dialogue. It features: • A male and female voice recorded with strong intonation tied closely to the image on the first page of the lesson • A conversation at normal speed, meaning, it’s not unrealistically slow, nor is it overly fast. It provides a reasonable representation of how people talk and what students will hear in their community • The grammar structure of the lesson and some of the vocabulary words in a realistic setting

You will use the track twice in each lesson. The first time will be on the opening page of the lesson in the Look and Listen section. Each listening activity has a specific task. This is because when we listen we do not listen to every single word being said. Sometimes we listen for general information. Sometimes we listen for important words that provide details. The first time students listen in the Look and Listen section, they listen for general information. In the second listening, which is always located at the bottom of second page of the lesson, students will listen for details. A smaller image from page one is next to the second listening so students can look at it again to help them understand what they are hearing. When you do the Listening section, follow these steps:

Step 1: Explore the picture again. Step 2: Read the instructions aloud. Go over each item in the activity. Step 3: Play the track once through completely. Go over the example answer with the student(s). Step 4: Play the track through again for students to answer the other questions. If teaching in a group, have them check their answers in pairs before sharing with the class. Step 5: Play again, as many times as necessary for students to complete the task. If necessary, you can play segments. Download the free Intercambio App to play listening dialogues from your cell phone. Go to your App Store for easy download. Search for the Intercambio App. Have your students download the tracks as well, so that they can practice listening outside of class. Note that an internet connection is not needed to play the tracks from the app once it has been downloaded.

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Language Tool Chart Rather than focusing on language to describe grammar, Confidence and Connections presents grammar structures in contextualized examples. At this level, we don’t teach grammatical terms such as noun and verb. Intro level students do not need this; instead they need examples. The Intro book focuses exclusively on the present tense of the verb to be, with the exception of the lesson on days of the week, in which they learn the structure Yesterday was. Students will learn other verbs and tenses in Levels 1-5 of Confidence and Connections. To present the Language Tool grammar chart, follow these steps: Step 1: Point out Question and Answer at the top of the chart. Step 2: Read the first question. Ask student(s) to repeat. Point out any words in bold. Step 3: Read the first answer. Ask student(s) to repeat. Continue with the other questions and answers. Step 4: Have student(s) ask and answer the questions in groups, and in pairs.

Real Life (Making it personal!) Before you start the real life page, spend 5 minutes reviewing the homework. That way you can end your class with students talking. This section gives students a chance to use their new language in real life tasks such as filling out a registration form. Lessons end with a conversation that incorporates both the grammar and vocabulary of the lesson. Homework The most common question we are asked is how to get students to do homework. Our students lead busy lives and may not always find the time to do their homework, but they will be more likely to do it if you follow these steps: Step 1: Review the homework before class ends. Step 2: Do the example of each activity so that students see that they know how to do it. Step 3: Go over the homework after the warm up when you start your next class. Review and Progress Checks Every 4th lesson has a 4-page Review. There are a combination of games and written and spoken activities in the review lesson. If you are teaching a group, pair students to do activities. If you are tutoring an individual, you will be a partner in the speaking activities. When time allows, switch roles so that every student has a chance to both answer and ask questions. There are two Progress Checks (lessons 8 and 16). These are cumulative and are easy to grade. • Progress Checks total 25 points – Multiply by 4 to get a score based on 100. • Progress Checks cover listening, minimal reading, writing and speaking. BEGINNING AND ENDING CLASS Begin every class with a warm up. This allows students to put their minds into English-learning mode and provides an important opportunity for review. Don’t forget to go over homework from the previous lesson after the warmup before you begin the new lesson. End your class with student(s) speaking. A great way to check in and get feedback from your students is with an exit ticket. Ask them to write down one new word or sentence they learned in class and hand the paper to you as they leave.

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Grammar and Vocabulary Practice The activities following the Language Tool are designed to give students confidence by allowing them to work on the new structures and vocabulary in simple activities that get progressively more challenging. NOTE: When you see dotted lines …………………………………. it means they should be speaking and do NOT need to write the answers. When you see lines___________________ it means they should write on the line.


YOUR TEACHER BOOK Your Teacher Book is designed to be simple to use and make your classes as engaging and effective as possible. You’ll find a lead page at the beginning of each lesson. This page contains: • The learning objectives for the students (Students will be able to…) • Suggested materials to bring to class • A warm up • Useful notes • Listening transcript • Alphabetic writing instructions In each lesson, you’ll see helpful callouts with activity notes as well as the answers for each activity.

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LEADING ACTIVITIES AT THIS LEVEL: USE FEWER WORDS AND MOSTLY GESTURES At the Intro level, your students have little to no English. Keeping things simple is key. Here are three simple steps you can follow for leading any activity: 1. Read the activity directions out loud. First, open your book to the correct page and show the students which page you are on. Say the page number and point to it. Use gestures to communicate. For example, if they are going to write, demonstrate writing as you say the word; if they are going to listen, put your hand to your ear to indicate listen; if they are going to talk with a partner, bring up a student and demonstrate the exchange. 2. Model the first answer. Do the first answer on the board, or with a student in front of the class. Be sure to use gestures and act it out. If there is still uncertainty, do another activity. 3. Confirm understanding of the directions. Don’t ask, “Do you understand?” because your students will just nod their heads yes. Ask a student to explain it or perform an activity from the set. This way you will know that they understand. MAKING CORRECTIONS AT THIS LEVEL The goal of the INTRO book is to prepare students for Level 1. Students need to increase their confidence in order to move forward. Students appreciate corrections. They want to get it right. Many students feel that if they’re not being corrected, they’re not learning. Before correcting, pay attention to what kind of mistake it is to determine if, when, and how to correct it. With vocabulary and grammar, the focus is on accuracy, so the teacher should give immediate feedback.

Easy tips for making corrections with your student(s): • Allow for self-correction by showing with a gesture or facial expression that there is an error, or by repeating the sentence up to the point of the error and stopping: You are… • Use peer correction. To do this, ask if anyone else in the class can offer the correction. If someone does, then ask the original student to repeat the correct sentence. Do this sensitively by creating an atmosphere where mistakes are applauded as a sign of courageous practice. • If neither self nor peer correction is eliciting the correct response, say the entire sentence aloud while making the correction. Be sure to have the student repeat the full correct sentence, not just the word you corrected. You may even have all students repeat the correction - generally, if one person needs the correction, everyone does. • Be cautious when correcting pronunciation. Many sounds will be difficult for students to produce. Aim for intelligibility rather than perfection. • If the mistake was made during a “fluency” exercise (e.g. during conversation), don’t interrupt. Remember to: • Go around the room listening to students, jot down mistakes you hear. Following the activity, discuss the problem areas without pointing out who made which mistake. • Write the sentence with the mistake, and then talk about the correction or have the group correct it on the board.

Students need to understand that making errors in English will help them learn—especially if they have a chance to selfcorrect and repeat the correction. As a teacher, it is easy to forget this and, instead, simply say the correct word after a mistake is made and then allow the class to continue. Corrections like this may not sink in. intercambio.org/teachers

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TEACHER TOOL KIT

NOTE: It is a great idea to have students make their own flash cards. This not only saves you time, but also gives students extra opportunities to practice! Dictionary • Choose wisely and consider a “learner’s dictionary” which provides level-appropriate definitions. Teach students how to use it! Other items • Photographs, pictures of a variety of people, stuffed animals or dolls—these are especially useful when teaching one-on-one • Magazines, grocery store ads, grocery fliers • Real objects (realia) such as fruits, vegetables, paper, notebooks etc. to demonstrate vocabulary words. • Sticky notes in a variety of colors for labeling classroom objects, etc., • Scraps of paper for sentence strips. • Dice, coins, real or play money • Small ball for Ball Toss •

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Using objects in your class can keep lessons fun and engaging. Fill a tote bag with these objects. Store your teacher book in the bag, and you’ll always have an easy, go-to toolkit for class. Here are some suggestions for your toolkit, as well as ideas for how to use them. Pencil and pen (and/or colored markers) • Bring different colors to create color-coded sentence cards, flash cards, or to make corrections. • NOTE: Many students don’t like making mistakes in their books, yet they may not bring a pencil to class; so, having extra pencils on hand can help. Making mistakes is part of the learning process! Index cards • Word cards: Use the vocabulary from lessons and generate a stack of cards to play various timed games. You can have images on one side and words on the other. • Write the words from grammar charts on individual index cards to arrange into sentences. You can color code these, for example, make pronouns (he, she, they) one color and use a different color card for verbs (is, am, are).


EXPANSION ACTIVITIES We learn best when we are having fun! Try to make class engaging and meaningful for your students by incorporating a variety of activities in class. Below are some low-prep activities. Many of these can be adapted to cover different topics (grammar, speaking, pronunciation, writing), but we have indicated the most common use for each one in parentheses.

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Conversation Rotation or 1-on-1 Exchange (Speaking, Grammar) Students line up across from each other and practice asking and answering specific questions or discussing a topic (e.g. family, celebrations, etc.) with the person across from them. After pairs have a chance to answer the question or discuss the topic, take the first person in line A and move them to the end of line A. Everyone else in line A moves down one space so that they have a new partner. Repeat several times, only moving the person in line A.

Cocktail Party (Speaking, Grammar) This activity mirrors a cocktail party. Students are given a topic and go up to different people and talk about it. It’s often helpful to list some questions on the board to get them started. Students should speak and listen to multiple people during this exercise, which may require some encouragement from the teacher. This can also be a dynamic way to check answers. Line ups A quick way to get students up and out of their seats is to have them line up based on some piece of information. For example, first letter of their name, their birthday, height, etc. Line ups can even be done silently, which works well with low level students. Concentration/Memory Game (Vocabulary) Using vocabulary from previous lessons, write the word on one index card and the definition or a picture on another. Do this for each vocabulary word you want to use. To play, place all the cards face down on the desk in an organized fashion. The students try to find a match by flipping over two cards. If the word and the definition match, they keep the cards and go again. If they’re incorrect, they place the cards face down in the same spot so the next student can use that information to make a better guess. You can play in pairs or as a group.

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Ball Toss (Speaking, Grammar) Form a circle and toss a ball or stuffed animal. For one-on-one, stand across from each other. If working on verbs like to be the teacher can say “I” then toss the ball to a student who should say “am” and toss it back to the teacher. The teacher says “you” and tosses it to another student who says “are”, etc. Alternatively, the teacher asks a question and throws the ball to a student who answers it. Now that student asks a question and tosses it to another student to answer, etc. You can do this to review or to practice the questions in the Language Tools chart.

See the next page for how to begin Lesson 1 and use Total Physical Response (TPR).

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Fly Swatter Game (Vocabulary, Grammar) Write vocabulary words or put pictures on the board. Divide the class into two teams and have one member of each team come to the board, give each person at the board a fly swatter. Give the word or clue and the student that hits the correct word or picture first gets a point for their team. To practice grammar, write verb conjugations on the board e.g., have / has. Say pronouns and have students hit the correct form of the verb.


HOW TO BEGIN LESSON 1: Using Total Physical Reponse (TPR) You will spend 20-30 minutes doing Total Physical Response – TPR. Read the section blow before you teach your first lesson. In the Introduction to Lesson 1, you will spend 20-30 minutes doing each of the words, first with gestures, then without. Total Physical Respond (TPR) is a methodology that uses hand and body gestures to help students get “physically connected” to the words and concepts. We have developed a simplified approach to TPR involving 2-3 basic steps: To begin, have your students stand up. You can have them follow these steps one-on-one or lead as a group.

Step 2: Step 3:

Say and Do. Say the word or phrase multiple times using gestures. For example: Write your name on the board and say the words circle name while you circle your name on the board. Have each student come up to the board and repeat the words circle name while they make a circle on the board (or on paper). Say and Don't Do. This time, you say the word or phrase without making gestures. (This is how you will know if they understand of if they are just mimicking you.) For example: Say, circle name without gestures and see if your student(s) can say and do what you’ve said. Now you will slowly say each of the words you’ve introduced separately in random order and the student(s) will say and do what you’ve said. For example: Say, stand up, (pause). Have students say and do. Now say, sit down, (pause). Have students say and do. Now say, stand up, (pause). Have students say and do. Now say, circle name, (pause). Have students say and do. Now say, point to name, etc.

Another option at Step 3 is to have students take turns saying a word for the other student(s) to say and do.

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Step 1:

Gestures to begin Lesson 1 • Open—from a standing position, put your palms together in front of you in closed position, thumbs facing up. Open your hands (rotating thumbs outward) and say, open. Repeat. •

Close—from a standing position, separate your hands about a foot’s width distance and hold your palms facing up. Bring your right hand on top of the left hand (or left on top of right) and say, close. Repeat.

Point to—from a standing position, point your index finder toward an object and say point to. Repeat but point to another object and again with another object.

Listen—take your right hand and hold it to your right ear in a cupped position. Say, listen. Repeat.

Write—from a standing position, hold your left palm flat in front of you. Put your thumb, index, and middle fingers together on your right hand as if you are holding a pencil. Gesture writing across your left palm with your hand. Say, write. Repeat.

Repeat—Use the index finger from your right hand or a flat palm. Bring your finger or hand in front of your mouth. Make an arc from your mouth out in front of you to gesture words coming from your mouth. Say, repeat. Repeat. [Note: the open palm gesture is similar to the ‘thank you’ sign in ASL]

Stand (up)—Use a chair to demonstrate this. Stand in front of the chair and then sit down. Stand up and say, stand or stand up. Sit back down and repeat.

Sit (down)—Use a chair to demonstrate this. From a standing position in front the chair, sit down and say, sit or sit down. Introduce stand up and sit down together as opposites. intercambio.org/teachers

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Begin your lesson with this introduction using Total Physical Response - TPR.

INTRODUCTION

Listen to your teacher.

LOOK

Patty

Patty

Patty

name

circle

underline

cross out

point to

touch

repeat

stand up

sit down

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Patty

A

IV

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Teacher Book INTRO

open

close

write

listen

Student Book INTRO


LESSON 1 INTRO AND NICE TO MEET YOU By the end of the lesson, students will be able to: • Recognize and use simple classroom commands • Introduce themselves and greet people Grammar What is your / his / her name?

My / his / her name is ____.

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Alphabetics: How to write O o and P p. • Capital O. Say, “the capital O has one big stroke. Start at the top and make a big curve around to the left, touch the bottom line and make a big curve back up around and to right, connect with your starting line.” • Lowercase o. Say, “the lowercase o is formed the same as the uppercase O, only smaller and lower in your writing space.” • Capital P. Say, “the capital P has two strokes. Start at the top and pull straight down, that is 1. Come back to the starting point and make a half circle, that is 2." • Lowercase p. On the board, show students where to start the lowercase p (in the middle on the dotted line). Lowercase p. Say, “the lowercase p is formed the same as the uppercase P, only lower on the page. The lowercase p has a tail that extends beyond the writing line.” What to bring to class • Table tents or name tags for student names • Pictures of famous people • Your standard teacher tool kit

Begin class As student(s) arrive, introduce yourself. Point to yourself and say your name. Ask their names or point to student and have them say their name. NOTE: Lesson 1 has an Introduction page. See the Total Physical Response-TPR page in front of Teacher Book for guidance on how to lead TPR. TPR is a critical teaching strategy for student(s) with virtually no English language skills.

What to expect on the first day Student(s) may not understand anything. This is why you begin the class with Total Physical Response – TPR. Gestures and modeling will be critical. Some students may be very hesitant to speak out loud, especially on the first day. Those that speak may not say words correctly. You can repeat words out loud with gestures to help them, but understand it will take time and confidence. Make the class FUN. Get them laughing to lower anxiety. Listening Track 01. Patty: Hello. My name is Patty. What’s your name? Paco: My name is Paco. Patty: Nice to meet you. Paco: Nice to meet you, too.

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1

NICE TO MEET YOU LOOK AND LISTEN Hold up your book and point to this page. Point and say the name of the lesson, Nice To Meet You. Point to the picture. Ask What or Who? (In a class, you may have a student that can say a word or two – build on that). Write Who? on the board. Play Track 01 completely without stopping. Say, Patty and have student(s) point to the woman. Say, Paco and do the same. EXPANSION: Have them act out the listening dialogue with or without words.

VOCABULARY

A

A. This activity is to familarize student(s) with the alphabet. Each lesson focuses on 2-3 letters. 1. Say and gesture, listen to me. 2. Point to each letter on the page. 3. Say each letter aloud, slowly, 2-3 times. 4. Say and gesture, listen and repeat after me. 5. Read each letter again. Allow time for students to repeat. NOTE: Inside back cover has the alphabet chart for reference.

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LOOK AND LISTEN: TRACK 01

Teacher Book INTRO

Listen to your teacher and repeat.

Aa Bb Cc Dd Ee Ff Gg Hh Ii Jj Kk Ll Mm Nn Oo Pp Qq Rr Ss Tt Uu Vv Ww Xx Yy Zz intercambio.org/students

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Write the letters O o, P p. _________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

O

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

o

P B

Write O o or P p to complete the words. 1. ______pen o

C

p

2. p______int

3. re______eat

Point to the letters in your name. Write your name. My name is __________________________________________.

LISTENING

D

Listen to track 01. Touch the words you hear. name

2

nice

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY B. point, repeat, stand up C. Answers will vary D. All words will be touched.

meet

4. stand u_______

Aa Bb Cc Dd Ee Ff Gg Hh Ii Jj Kk Ll Mm Nn Oo Pp Qq Rr Ss Tt Uu Vv Ww Xx Yy Zz

ALPHABETICS Your student(s) may or may notEknow all or any letters. It’s okay. It will take time. They just need to get familiar with the letters in their name. Say your name. Point to the letter that starts your first name. Have students do the same. Introduce the letters O o P p. Model capital and lowercase o and p on the board. NOTE: See Lead Page for this lesson on instructions for how to write O o and F P p. B. Do first word together. Write it on board, with underline. Point to the word. Show where the o is underlined. Say the letter o. Say the word open. Point and say o again. Do another together if needed. Repeat for letter p. G

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ALPHABETICS

C. Read directions aloud. Act out directions (point). Write, My name is ____on board. Say, My name is ___ and point to each letter as you write each letter to fill in the blank. Say the entire sentence again with your name. Now have the student(s) do it.

D Read directions aloud. Play Track 01 all the way through. Demonstrate touching each word as it is said in the track. There’s no example because they are touching all the words. NOTE: Listening will be challenging. Play the track multiple times.

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4

Teacher Book INTRO

1

LANGUAGE TOOLS

E

TIP:

Listen to your teacher and repeat. QUESTION What

is

What’s

ANSWER

your his her

What’s = What is

My name?

His Her

_________________. name

is

Paco. Patty.

PRACTICE

F

Write your answer. Practice with a partner. name You: 1. Q: What’s your__________________________________________________? A: My name is __________________________________________________.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

E. THE FOCUS IS Learn your, his, her, my and learn what’s = what is. Write Grammar Box on board. Point to word Question at top of box, say, question. Point to the word Answer and Say, answer. Say the question across the box, What's your name? pointing to each word as you say it. Repeat with answer: My name is _____. (Say your own name.) Point to each word as you say it. Go through box using each pronoun: your, his, her Answer using my, his and her. Repeat, using the contraction, What’s. Point out the tip box. Point out your name and my name. F. Point to Q: Say, Question and point to Question in grammar chart. Point to the A: Say, Answer and point to Answer in grammar chart. Select student to be your partner. Say the word partner pointing to student. You and partner model the activity. Do #1 – ask your partner What’s your name? Partner answers My name is ____. Write name. Have partner do #2 - ask you your name. Write your name in the blank. Put student(s) in pairs. If writing is challenging – have students do activity orally. G. Use gestures for read and write. Point to each word and say it. Say the sentence, Nice to meet you and have them write each word on the page. Go up to a student and Say, Nice to meet you, and smile or shake their hand as you say it.

Partner: 2. Q: What’s your__________________________________________________? A: My name is __________________________________________________.

G

Read. Write. Say with a partner.

Nice

to

meet

you.

__________ Nice

____ to

___________ meet

_________. you.

____________________________________________________ Nice to meet you.

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3

Pronunciation Tip: When a word ending in ‘t’ (meet) is followed by a word beginning in ‘y’ (you) the blending of those two sounds produces a new sound— ‘ch’. Point out to students that ‘meet + you’ sounds like ‘meechu’. Practice saying Nice to ‘meechu’. EXPANSIONS: Colored index cards: Write your and my on the same color cards. Use different colors for other words. Lay out the cards on the floor to produce What’s your name? (include cards for ? and .). Have student(s) put cards in order to make the answer. (See EXPANSION ACTIVITIES in front of book.) Ball Toss: Have student(s) stand up. In group class form a circle. Start with a ball (or rolled up paper in a ball). Throw the ball to a student across the circle and ask What's your name? The student who catches the ball answers, My name is ______ and throws ball to another student and asks, What's your name? This may take some time the first time students do it.


I

Match.

1. circle

a.

2. listen

b.

3. repeat

c.

4. underline

d.

5. close

e.

6. stand up

f.

7. cross out

g.

8. open

h.

Point to a picture. Say the word. 4

Student Book INTRO

Paco

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

H

H. Say the word Match. Demonstrate the first answer J holding up your book and tracing the line for #1 to picture labeled c. Have students work independently and check answers in pairs. Go over the answers as a full group.

Paco

Paco

K

I. Model with a partner. Demonstrate that one partner points to a picture and the other partner Say,s the word. Put student(s) in pairs.

ANSWER KEY H. 2. f, 3. g, 4. e, 5. d, 6. a, 7. h, 8. b

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5


BEFORE STARTING THIS PAGE: Walk through homework on next page.

6

Teacher Book INTRO

REAL LIFE

J

K

Look at the pictures. Point and say the names.

TIP:

Use her for a woman Use his for a man

1. What’s her name?

2. What’s his name?

3. What’s his name?

4. What’s her name?

5. What’s her name?

6. What’s his name?

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

J. Write What’s your name? on board. Underline your. Ask What is this word? Elicit your from student(s). Read question under picture together What’s your name? Erase your and write her. Ask What is the question now? Together, practice saying What’s her name? For groups, use a female student in the class to model What’s her name? Her name is _____. For 1-on-1, use pictures of famous people to model his and her. On white board, write her off to the side of the board, then erase her from the sentence What’s her name? Replace her with his. Ask What’s this word? Elicit his from students. Ask What is the question now? Practice asking What’s his name? Use a male student in the class or a picture to model What’s his name? and His name is _________. K. EXPANSION: Cocktail Party Write the conversation on the board or on cards for each student. Have students walk around the room. When you clap your hands, they stop and turn to the person closest and practice the conversation. Model with a student first. (See EXPANSION ACTIVITIES in front of book.)

1

Ask a partner. Write your partner’s name. 1. Q: What’s your name? A: My name is _____________________________________________. Nice to meet you.

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5


L

Complete the words. s 1. a. What’______

M

Lesson 1 • Nice to Meet You

2. a. you______

3. a. nam_______?

b. Wha_______’s

b. yo_______r

b. na_______e?

c. Wh_______t’s

c. y_______ur

c. n______me?

d. _______hat’s

d. _______our

d. ______ ame?

Match. a. 1. open

2. close

3. point to

c.

4. listen

d.

5. write

e.

6. touch

f.

7. stand up

g.

8. sit down

6

b.

h.

Do #1 (example) in each activity to illustrate.

L. In this activity, student(s) LOOK are using theAND sameLISTEN: word TRAC in each column but practicing a different letter in the word. Do the s in What’s as the first example. If needed, do the first word in each column. M. Turn back to Activity H so student(s) can see this is the same type of activity. Do the example together. Trace the line for the first answer.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

HOMEWORK

A

WRITING PRACTICE The back of the student book has letter-writing practice pages. Assign O o and P p as practice if needed. REMEMBER to start the next lesson reviewing this homework after you do a warm up. You can use the Intro of this lesson as a warm up.

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY M. 2 = d, 3 = b, 4= e, 5 = f, 6 =g, 7 = h, 8 = a

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7


LESSON 2 SPELL YOUR NAME By the end of the lesson, students will be able to: • Spell their first and last name • Say where they are from Grammar What's your / his / her first / last name? Where are you from?

My / his / her first / last name is _____. I'm from_____.

What to bring to class • World map for students to point to where they are from Warm up and Homework review Use the TPR from Intro Lesson. Start by leading and then ask a student to lead. Remember to say and do first and have students repeat. Then just say and have students say and do. Go over homework from Lesson 1. Listening Track 02. A: Hi, my name is Adam. What’s your name? B: My name is Sui Lin. A: Oh, what’s your first name? B: It’s Sui Lin. A: Oh, okay, how do you spell it? B: It’s S-U-I L-I-N A: Got it, What’s your last name? B: Pang. A: Pang? P-A-N-G ? B: Yes. You got it.

8

Teacher Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Alphabetics: How to write A a and R r • Capital A. Say, “the capital A has three strokes. Start at the top and pull straight down and to the left, that is 1. Come back to the starting point and draw a second line straight down and to the right, that is 2. Come to the middle of your first line and draw a straight line across to meet your second line, that is 3.” • Lowercase a. Say, “the lowercase a has two strokes. Start in the middle and make a small circle; that is 1. Keep your pencil on the top right part of the circle, then draw a line straight down, that is 2.” • Capital R. Say, “the capital R has three strokes. Start at the top and draw a line straight down, that is 1. Come back to the top and make a half circle on the top right half of the straight line, stop in the middle, that is 2. From the middle, draw a short diagonal line straight down and to the right, that is 3.” • Lowercase r. Say, “the lowercase r has two strokes. Start in the middle and draw a half line straight down, that is 1. Come back to the middle starting point and make a small curved line up and around to the right, that is 2.”


2

SPELL YOUR NAME

LOOK AND LISTEN Hold up your book to point to the first page of lesson 2. Say the name of the lesson, Spell Your Name. Point to the picture. Ask Who? (In a class, you may have a student that can say a word or two – build on that). Write Who? on the board. Play Track 02 completely without stopping. Say, Sui Lin and have student(s) point to the woman. Say, Adam and do the same.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

LOOK AND LISTEN: TRACK 02

VOCABULARY

A

A. Write your name on the board. Say your first name and point to each letter as you say each letter out loud. Say, first name pointing to your first name. Repeat for last name. Have student(s) say and spell the first name and last name in the Marcie Smith name tag. Repeat for the first names in the other pictures for he and she.

Listen to your teacher and repeat. he

his

Marcie Smith she first name

last name her

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7

NOTE: We've limited new vocabulary in order to bring back the letters of the alphabet from lesson 1. Spelling can be challenging. Have students focus on their own names.

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9


ALPHABETICS Introduce the letters A a and R r. Model capital and lowercase a and r on the board. NOTE: See Lead Page for this lesson on instructions for how to write A a and R r.

C. The person's first name is Sui Lin. Her last name is Pang. The joke here is that the man thinks her first name is Sui and her last name is Lin. Read the directions aloud. Play Track 02 all the way through. Demonstrate doing #1 together. Play the track again as many times as needed to complete activity. Compare answers in pairs or as a group. Play the track again if any of the answers are incorrect.

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

A R B

a r

Write A a or R r to complete the words. 1. l______st a

2. n______me

3. ______re

4. ______m

5. you______

6. f______om

LISTENING

C

NOTE: You may need to explain that True = yes. False = no.

10

D

Write the letters A a, R r.

Teacher Book INTRO

Listen to track 02. Circle TRUE or FALSE. 1. Her first name is Sui Lin.

TRUE

FALSE

2. Her first name is Pang.

TRUE

FALSE

3. Her last name is Pang.

TRUE

FALSE

8

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY B. 2. name, 3. are, 4. am, 5. your, 6. from C. 2. False, 3. True

E

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

B. Do first word together. Write it on the board, including the underline. Point to the word. Show where the a is underlined. Say the letter a. Say the word last aloud. Point and Say a again. Do another together if needed. Repeat with the first word that uses the letter r.

ALPHABETICS

F


2

LANGUAGE TOOLS

D

TIP:

Listen to your teacher and repeat. QUESTION

What’s

your his

first

her

last

are

you

Where is

D. THE FOCUS IS Learn to use is for he and she and are for you. Learn contractions - I'm = I am, he's = he is, and she's = she is. Write Grammar Box on the board. Point to the word Question at the top of box and say, question. Point to the word Answer at the top of box and say, answer. Read the question across the box, What's your first name? pointing to each word as you say it. Read the answer from the box My first name is _____. (spell your own name) pointing to each letter as you spell it. Go through each Question and Answer using the pronouns: your, his, her and each Answer using my, his and her. Repeat, using the contractions, I'm, he's, she's. Don't spend time on the countries. Each student just needs to be able to say where he or she is from.

ANSWER

name?

he she

I’m = I am He’s = He is She’s = She is

from?

My His

first

Her

last

name

I’m He’s She’s

Juan. Rosa.

is

Aguilar.

from

Mexico.

PRACTICE

F

Match. 1. What’s your first name?

a. Her last name is Park.

2. What’s her last name?

b. My last name is Aguilar.

3. What’s his first name?

c. My first name is Gracie.

4. What’s your last name?

d. Her first name is Rosa.

5. What’s his last name?

e. His first name is Juan.

6. What’s her first name?

f. His last name is Olivares.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

E

Complete the questions and answers. 1. Q: Where____________you from? are

A: ____________ from Mexico. I’m

2. Q: Where __________ she from?

A: ____________ from Mexico.

3. Q: Where is ____________ from?

A: He’s from Mexico.

4. Q: Where are you from?

A: I’m from _______________________________.

intercambio.org/students

ANSWER KEY E. 2. a, 3. e, 4. b, 5. f, 6. d F. 2. is / She's, 3. he, 4. Answers will vary

9

E. Read directions aloud. Chose a student to be your partner. Model #1 with partner. Point out the key words, your, her, his, so student(s) know what to look for in the answer. Have student(s) complete independently and correct in pairs. Practice asking and answering the questions and anwers from the activity out loud. F. Read directions aloud. Model # 1 together. Point out the pronouns (he/she/your) so they see when the question addresses you, the answer is I. The student should answer #4 with their own information.

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11


H. Read directions aloud. Walk through Bill Johnson's name tag. Point to and say each letter. Draw a name tag on the board. Say My first name is and write your first name saying each letter out loud. Say My last name is and write your last name saying each letter out loud. Have students write their first and last name on the name tag in the book.

G

H

Practice the conversation. A: It’s R-O-S-A.

2. Q: How do you spell your last name?

A: It’s A-G-U-I-L-A-R.

3. Q: How do you spell your first name?

A:……………………..…

4. Q: How do you spell your last name?

A: …………………………

Complete your name tag.

Bill Johnson

I

I. Walk through each passport. Point out the first name, last name and name of country of origin. Do #1 together. Say, Brazil and show where it says Brazil on the passport. Show that Marcos is from Brazil. Ignore surname and given name, etc. They do not need to know this, it's just to make it look real.

Teacher Book INTRO

K

Look at the passports. Circle the correct answer. 1. She / He is from Brazil.

2. She / He is from the United States.

3. Her / His first name is Rosa.

4. Her / His last name is Barros.

Surname/ Last name

Marcos

Given name/ First name

Barros Country

Given name/ First name

Aguilar

United States Brazil

10

Surname/ Last name

Rosa

Country

Brazil

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY I. 2. She, 3. Her, 4, His

12

J

1. Q: How do you spell your first name?

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

NOTE: the ...... line indicates this is a speaking activity. It is not neccessary to write in answers. G. Read directions aloud. Walk through 1 and 2 as the example with a student to model. Put students in pairs to practice. You can rotate the students so they have different partners.

United States


STARTING THIS 2BEFORE PAGE: Walk through

REAL LIFE/YOUR LIFE

J

homework on next page.

Complete the form with your information.

J. Draw the form on the board. Say each section aloud. Complete the form on the board with your information. Have students work individually to do their own form in the book.

Surname/ Last name

_______________________

EXPANSION: In pairs, have student(s) ask each other questions: What's your first name? What's your last name? Where are you from?

Given name/ First name

_______________________ Country

K

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

_______________________

K. This may be challenging. The conversation begins with 1. What's your name? Have student(s) find the response and write 2 next to the corect answer. Continue with the next question. How do you spell it? Option: Write each line of the conversation on separate slips of paper (one per line). Have student(s) put the slips in order.

Put the conversation in order. 3 _________How do you spell it? 5 _________Where are you from? _________It’s S-U-I L-I-N. _________Nice to meet you, too. _________ What’s your name? 1 _________My name is Sui Lin. _________Nice to meet you.

EXPANSION: Students can practice this conversation in pairs..

_________I’m from China.

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11

ANSWER KEY K. The complete order is 3,5,4,8,1,2,7,6

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13


Do examples in each activity to illustrate.

L

Lesson 2 • Spell Your Name

Complete the sentences. Use the words in the box. 1. __________________ your first name? What’s 2. My _______________________ name is Rosa. 3. What’s your ______________________ name? 4. ____________________ last name is Aguilar. 5. __________________________ are you from?

M. This is the first time students are doing this type of activity. Read directions aloud. Point out that the words in bold italic are choices. They need to circle the correct choice. For #1, point to the key word, you, to help them remember which form of the verb "to be" they need to choose. Remind them that they use are for you and is for he and she. N. This is the first time students are doing this activity. It may be challenging. Write the letters m a n e on the board. Underline the n and point to it on the line. Then continue with each letter. They are given the first letter to unscramble each word. You will likely need to do this together when you start your next lesson and review homework.

6. I’m _______________________ the United States.

M

What’s My from first last Where

Circle the correct word. 1. Where is / are you from? 2. He is / are from Mexico. 3. Where is / are she from? 4. I am / is from China. 5. She am / is from the United States.

N

A

Unscramble. 1. mane

____ n ____ a ____ m ____ e

2. stirf

____ f ____ ____ ____ ____

3. salt

____ l ____ ____ ____

4. esh

____ s ____ ____

5. shi

____ h ____ ____

6. reh

____ h ____ ____

12

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY L. 2. first, 3. last, 4. My, 5. Where, 6. from M. 2. is, 3. is, 4. am, 5. is N. 2. first, 3. last, 4. she, 5. his, 6. her

14

LOOK

Teacher Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

L. Read directions aloud. Walk through the words in the box first. Go through #1 together. Point out how the words with capital letters start sentences.

HOMEWORK


LESSON 3 WHAT'S YOUR PHONE NUMBER? By the end of the lesson, students will be able to: • Read, write and say numbers zero-10 • Write phone number and area code and distinquish between the two Grammar What’s your / his / her phone number? What's your / his / her area code?

My / his / her phone number is____. My / his / her area code is ____.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Alphabetics: How to writeE e and T t • Capital E. Say, “the capital E has four strokes. Start at the top and pull straight down, that is 1. Come back to the top and draw a short straight line out to the right, that is 2. Pick up your pencil and come to the middle of your long straight long. Draw another line straight out to the right, matching your second line, that is 3. Pick up your pencil and come to the bottom of the long straight line. Draw a third line straight out to the right, that is 4." • Lowercase e. Say, “the lowercase e has two strokes. Start near the bottom of your writing space. Draw a short line straight out to the right, that is 1. Without picking up your pencil, draw a half circle like the letter “C” up and around to the left, that is 2." • Capital T. Say, “the capital T has two strokes. Start at the top and pull straight down, that is 1. Come back to the top with a little space to the left of the straight line and draw a shorter line side to side on top of the straight line. That is 2.” • Lowercase t. Say, “the lowercase t has two strokes. It starts off the same as the capital T with a straight line from the top to the bottom. Bring your pencil to the middle line and cross the long straight line in the middle.” Emphasize that no part of the lowercase t extends beyond the writing line. What to bring to class • Dice, playing cards, dominos, sticks or toothpicks • Bag of candy for counting

Warm up Have students walk around and introduce themselves. Hello, my first name is _____. I spell it_____. Model first. For 1-on-1 use stuffed animals, puppets or pictures of famous people. Go over homework. The unscramble will likely be a challenge, so focus on that. OPTION: Give everyone a famous person – write the name on tape or name tags. Have them go around and pretend they are that person and introduce themselves.

What to expect with numbers Student(s) may not have a great understanding of numbers. It depends on how much education they had in their native country. For this reason you can use tally lines, dominos, etc. Take your time counting so student(s) get familiar with the order of the numbers and what they mean in terms of quantity. Also focus on the rhythm of numbers. For example, when we say our phone number, we say 3 numbers, pause, 3 numbers, pause and then the final 4 numbers. Listening Track 03. Voice: For a call back, please leave your name and phone number. [beep] Man: Hello. My first name is Sam. That’s S-A-M. My last name is Jones. That’s J-O-N-E-S. My phone number is 360555-0376. Thank you.

intercambio.org/teachers

15


A. Hold up the book and point to the dice. Have students repeat after you: point and Say each number 0-10; point and say 10-zero; point and say numbers randomly. Point to a die, say the number, and then write the number on the board.

LOOK AND LISTEN: TRACK 03

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

LOOK AND LISTEN Hold up your book and point to the first page of lesson 3. Say the name of the lesson, What's Your Phone Number? Point to the picture. Ask Who? (In a class, you may have a student that can Say a word or two – build on that). Write Who? on the board. Play Track 03 completely without stopping. Ask Who? and point to Sam in the picture.

WHAT’S YOUR PHONE NUMBER?

3

VOCABULARY

A

Listen to your teacher and repeat. Point to each number.

zero 0

one 1

six 6

seven 7

two 2

eight 8

three 3

four 4

nine 9

five 5

ten 10 intercambio.org/students

13

EXPANSION: Get physical using TPR. Bring in pieces of candy. Put a group of candies together, for example 3 candies. Point to the group of candies and say 3. Have students repeat. Point to another group of 5 candies and say 5. Have students repeat. Put another group of candies together, point to it and ask How many? You can have them count each candy to get the correct number. Give each student(s) (or group) 10 candies and have one partner put some candies in a group. The other partner Says the number. Then everyone eats the candy! 16

Teacher Book INTRO


Write the letters E e, T t. _________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

E

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

T B

e t

Write E e or T t to complete the words. 1. thr______e e

2. ______ight

3. on______

4. ______wo

5. ______en

6. wha______’s

LISTENING

C

Listen to track 03. Circle the phone number you hear. What’s the phone number? a. (360) 555-0367 b. (360) 555-0376 c. (306) 555-0376

14

B. Do first E word together. Write it on the board, including the underline. Point to the word. Show where the e is underlined. Say the letter e. Say the word three out loud. Point and Say t again. Do another F together if needed. Repeat with the first word that uses the letter t.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

ALPHABETICS

ALPHABETICS Introduce the letters E e and T t. Model capital and lowercase e and t on D the board. NOTE: See Lead Page for this lesson on instructions for how to make E e and T t.

C. Read directions aloud. Read each of the phone numbers out loud before you play G the track. Play Track 03 all the way through for students to circle the correct answer Play the track multiple times if needed.

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY B. 2. eight, 3. one, 4. two, 5. ten, 6. what's C. B

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17


D. THE FOCUS IS your vs. him vs. her and my.

E. Read directions aloud. Write your number and area code on the board to model the activity.

F. Have the student(s) ask another student the questions and have them write that student's answers in their book.

G. Model with a student first. Have student(s) ask another student the questions and have them say the phone number. Have them practice calling the student using the cell phone picture. If approporiate, have students create a classroom list of phone numbers. Have student(s) call each other using their real cell phone. Encourage them to stay in touch with classmates outside of class.

18

LANGUAGE TOOLS

D

Listen to your teacher and repeat. QUESTION

What’s

your his her

phone number? area code?

ANSWER My His Her

phone number

(651) 555-1212. is

area code

(651).

PRACTICE

E

Write your information. 1. My phone number is (___________) _____________________________________. 2. My area code is (___________)

F

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Help students understand area code as the first 3 digits and the phone number as the full 10 digits beginning with area code. Read the questions and answers in the table.

3

Ask a partner. Write the answer. Q: What’s your phone number? A: My phone number is (________)___________________________. Q: What’s your area code? A: My area code is (___________)

G

Teacher Book INTRO

Ask a partner. Listen and write the phone number. You:

What’s your phone number?

Partner: (.......).......-..............

intercambio.org/students

15


Write your area code.

(302) (213)

(281)

I

I. This is a matching activity set up horizontally instead of vertically. Do the example together. Have students work individually. Compare answers in pairs.

Match. a. three

A

J

(407)

b. two

B

c. eight

C

d. five

D

e. nine

E

Listen to your teacher. Write the phone numbers you hear. (507) 555 4674 1. ________________ -- ________________ -- _____________________ 2. ________________ -- ________________ -- _____________________ 3. ________________ -- ________________ -- _____________________

f. seven

F

g. four

Write numbers before you dictate.

4. ________________ -- ________________ -- _____________________

16

G

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

H

H. Read directions aloud. Show an example from the map. For example, pointKto a state you do not live in and show the area code. Ask student(s) to point to where they live and to write in their area code. States have multiple area codes. For this reason, each student should write their area code.

J. Dictation. L Write down the phone numbers in your book before you dictate. Try using the areas codes student(s) provided. Remember to dictate using the appropriate pauses so that they learn phone numbers in rhythm.

Note: we always use 555 so that there are no real numbers to be called.

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY I. b. F, c. C, d. B, e. A, f. E, g. G J. Answers will vary -- Teacher should write the numbers they dictate and review answers.

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19


K. Read directions out loud. Do the Mr. I Fix It card together. You can make a copy of the page, cut it out and pass it around. Walk through each card. Depending on the level of your student(s), you can introduce phone vs. fax.

REAL LIFE/YOUR LIFE

K

Underline the phone numbers on the cards. Read the numbers aloud.

Mr. I Fix It Alex Porto owner

Carlos Suarez Carlos Suarez Carlos Suarez 1 0 0 S o u t h 1 4 t h Av e Ta m p a , F L 3 3 6 0 1

a p o r t o @ I fi x i t . c o m (720)555-4660

EXPANSION: Bring in business cards from local banks, credit unions, and other community members who support your work. Do the same activity but let students know (through gestures) who these people are.

L. Remind students to use ( ) for area code. Read directions aloud. Model #1. Have students work either in pairs or independently. If your student(s) is doing well, have them work alone. If they are still stuggling, have them work in pairs.

3

Is������ K��b���

cell: (813) 555-5505 fax: (813) 555-5500

Halle Jacobs teacher

isa.kimb5578@gmail.com (645) 555-9216

(415) 555-4884 : phone (415) 555-4000 : fax halle.jac4884@hotmail.com

L

Read the business cards in activity K. Write the correct answers. (720) __________ 555 -- ______________ 4660 1. Find area code (720). Fill in the phone number. _________-2. Find area code (415). Fill in the phone number. _________ -- __________ -- ______________ 3. What is Carlos Suarez’s phone number? __________-- ____________ -- _________________ 4. What is Isabelle’s area code?______________________ 5. What is Halle Jacobs’ phone number?__________-- ____________ -- ____________________ 6. Fill in the missing area code. _____________ -555 –5 5 0 5 7. Find phone number (720) 555-4660. What is his first name? ____________________________ 8. Find phone number (645) 555-9216. What is her last name? ____________________________ intercambio.org/students

17

ANSWER KEY 2. (415) 555-4884, 3. (815) 555-5505, 4. (645), 5. (415) 555-4884, 6. (813) 7. Alex, 8. Kimball

20

Teacher Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

BEFORE STARTING THIS PAGE: Walk through homework on next page.


HOMEWORK

N

a. _____ 8 eight

b. _____ one

c. _____ three

d. _____ five

e. _____ six

f. _____ two

g. _____ four

h. _____ seven

i. _____ zero

j. _____ nine

k. _____ ten

l. _____ three

a.

b.

C. six

c.

D. ten

d.

E. one

F. five

A

N. Do letter A. together.

Match

B. zero

O

M. Do letter a. together

Write the number next to its written form.

A. eight

Do examples in each activity to illustrate.

e.

f.

Read the sentences. Write your information. 1. Q: What’s your first name? A. My first name is _________________________________________________.

O. Option: Use this as a speaking warm up to start the next class.

2. Q: What’s your last name? A. It’s _______________________________________________________. 3. Q: What’s your phone number? A. My phone number is (__________) -- ______________ -- _______________________. 18

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY M. b. 1, c. 3, d. 5, e. 6, f. 2, g. 4, h. 7, i. 0, j. 9, k. 10, l. 3 N. B. c, C. f, D. e, E. b, F. d

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21

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

M

Lesson 3 • What’s Your Phone Number?


LESSON 4 REVIEW This is a Review of lessons 1, 2 and 3. There is NO Progress Check, only a Review. This should take the whole class. Timing Note: There are four pages to this Review. You begin and end with an interactive game. The middle two pages contain activities similar to those in the lessons. If you are teaching in a goup, have students work in pairs or small groups as often as possible. This increases their practice time and allows you the opportunity to walk around and listen to how it's going. Take notes, so if you need to review anything specific, you'll know what's needed. Activity A: You will be doing Total Physical Response - TPR. Make notes on your page before saying the commands. What to bring to class • Dice, playing cards, dominos, sticks or toothpicks • Flash cards (or playing cards) with numbers, and vocabulary words • Coins such as penny to play games. Heads - move 1 space, Tails - move 2 spaces • Magazines and/or pictures of famous people

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Warm up: Go over the previous homework before beginning the Review.

22

Teacher Book INTRO


4

REVIEW

A. Use TPR commands. Remember when doing TPR say and do and have student(s) say and do. Then just say, and have student(s) say and do. Select different student(s) to lead as well.

Listen to your teacher.

Have student(s) stand up. Say, touch, underline or circle, etc. the pictures on this page.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

A

.

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19

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23


EXPANSION: Play a memory game using flashcards. Your flash cards should have the numbers written out and as numerals (e.g. two, 2). You can pass out index cards and have students create flash cards to use to play the memory game in pairs. Lay out the cards in a grid. Students turn over two cards at a time. If cards match, the student keeps the cards and continues their turn. If the two cards don't match, they put them back in the same place on the gid.

B

C

E

Match. A. nine

a. 2

B. one

b. 4

C. zero

c. 8

D. seven

d. 6

E. four

e. 9

F. five

f. 1

G. eight

g. 3

H. three

h. 0

I. six

i. 5

J. two

j. 7

Complete the words. a 1. My n______me is John.

F

2. H____w d____ you spell it? 3. Wh____re is sh____ from?

D. Model and have students complete the activity. EXPANSION: Practice the Q and A in pairs or in a conversation rotation or cocktail party. See EXPANSION ACTIVITIES in front of book.

4. Wha____’s his ph____ne numbe____?

D

Circle the correct word. 1. Q. What is / am her phone number?

A. It is / are (970) 555-0472.

2. Q. What is / are your name?

A. It is / are Layla.

3. Q. Where is / are you from?

A. I am / is from the United States.

4. Q. What is / are his last name?

A. It is / are Gomez.

20

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY B. B. f, C. h, D. j, E. b, F. i, G. c, H. g, I. d, J. a C. 2 = How / do, 3. Where / she, 4. What's / phone / number D. 2. Q: is A: is, 3: Q: are A: am 4. Q: is A: is

24

Teacher Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

B. Match


F

pronouns before the activity.

Write the correct word. 1. What’s ___________ name? her

2. What’s ___________name?

3. What’s __________ name?

4. What’s ___________name?

EXPANSION: Bring in a magazine with pictures of famous people. Have students pick 3-4 people from the magazines. In pairs, have them ask each other What's his / her name?

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

E

4 E.Review the his / her

F. Complete the activity. EXPANSION: Bring in other business cards. Hand them out to students to work in pairs. Remind students to use ( ) for area code.

Read the business card. Write the correct answers.

Alex Wu Sparkle Window Cleaning awu@sparkle123.com (617) 555-5986

(617) 555-5986 1. What’s his phone number? ______________________________________________________ 2. What’s his last name?

______________________________________________________

3. What’s his first name?

______________________________________________________

4. What’s his area code?

______________________________________________________ intercambio.org/students

21

ANSWER KEY E, 2. his, 3. his, 4. her F. 2. Wu, 3. Alex, 4. (617)

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25


G This activity is great practice and should be fun and friendly. There is no scoring. Use a coin to flip heads or tails. Heads, move 1 space; tails, move 2 spaces on the game board.

G

Review Game. Play with a partner or in a small group. Put a marker on START. Roll the dice. Move your marker the correct number of spaces. Answer the question.

START

How do you spell your first name?

What’s your phone number?

If time allows, switch pairs and play again.

LOOK

Point to the letter p.

Spell the number 3.

Say a word with the letter a.

Spell your last name.

Stand up. Sit down.

What’s your first name?

What’s your area code?

Say the next number: 4, 5, ___.

Point to the letter e.

Point to the first letter in your name.

Where are you from?

Say a word with the letter p.

Touch the letter r.

Say the number 10.

Say a word with w.

22

26

Teacher Book INTRO

Student Book INTRO

END

Say the next number: 7, 8, ___.

Point to the letter o.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

What’s your last name?

A


LESSON 5 IS THIS YOUR PEN? By the end of the lesson, students will be able to: • Ask questions with this / that / these / those • Identify common items around the classroom or the room where you teach Grammar What is this / that? What are these / those?

It's a pen. They're pencils.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Alphabetics: How to write I i and N n. • Capital I. Say, “the capital I has three strokes. Start at the top and draw a line straight down, that is 1. Pick your pencil up and come to the top of your line and a little to the left. Draw a short straight line across the very top of your first line, that is 2. Pick up your pencil and come to the bottom of your long straight line, again, a little to the left. Draw a short straight line across the very bottom, that is 3." • Lowercase i. Say, “the lowercase i has one stroke and one dot. Start in the middle of your writing space and draw a short line straight down, that is one. Make a small dot on top of the straight line, leaving a little space in between the dot and the line." • Capital N. Say, “the capital N has three strokes. Start at the top and draw a line straight down, that is 1. Pick up your pencil and come back to the start of your first line. Draw a straight line diagonally down to the right, that is 2. Without picking up your pencil, draw a line straight up to the top, that is 3." • Lowercase n. Say, “the lowercase n has two strokes. Start in the middle and draw a line straight down, that is 1. Keeping your pencil on the paper, retrace your short line up. When you come to the top of the short line, make a curved line to the right and then pull straight down to the bottom, that is 2." What to bring to class • Classroom objects: pens, pencils, paper, notebook. Warm up Write some simple math problems on the board. Make sure all answers are between 0 and 10. • 1+2 = 3 (as example) 2+ 4 = ? 5-1 = ? ... • Have students answer the problems on the board. They can create their own math problems as well. Listening Track 04. Male: Is this your pen? Female: No, it isn’t. Male: Is this your pen? Female: No, it isn’t. Male: Is that your pen? Female: Yes, that’s my pen. Thank you.

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27


A. 1.Say and gesture, Listen to me. 2.Point to the vocabulary words on the page. 3.Read each word aloud slowly, 2-3 times. 4.Say and gesture, listen and repeat after me. 5.Read the words again. Allow time for students to repeat. EXPANSION: Have students get up and move around using TPR to point to or touch the items in the room. eg: Say and do, touch the window, point to the book...

IS THIS YOUR PEN? LOOK AND LISTEN: TRACK 04

VOCABULARY

A

Listen to your teacher and repeat.

window

board

door

chair

teacher

paper

student

notebook

box

table

pencil

book

pen

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28

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

LOOK AND LISTEN Hold up book. Point to the 5 in the top corner of the title and say, five and the name of the lesson, Is This Your Pen? Write What? on the board. Play Track 04. Ask What? Point to the pen the man is holding in his hand.

5

Teacher Book INTRO

23


Write the letters I i, N n. _________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

I

i

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

N B

n

Write I i or N n to complete the words. 1. penc______l i

2. cha______r

3. th______s

4. stude______t

5. ______ ame

6. pho______e

LISTENING

C

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

Listen to track 04. Circle the correct words. 1. Is this your pen /pencil ? 2. No, it is / isn’t. 3. Yes, that’s / this is my pen.

24

B. Do first word together. Write it on the board, including the underline. Point to the word pencil. Show where the pencil is underlined. Say the letter n. Say the word pencilE out loud. Point and Say n again. Do another together if needed. Repeat with the first word that uses the letter n.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

ALPHABETICS

ALPHABETICS Introduce the letters I i and N n. Model capital and lowercase i and n on D the board. NOTE: See Lead Page for this lesson on instructions for how to make I i and N n.

C. Read directions aloud. Play Track 04 all the way through to do #1. Play track as many times as needed F to complete the activity. Play again for corrections.

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY B. 2. chair, 3. this 4.student, 5. name, 6. phone C. 2. isn't, 3. that's

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29


Read the questions and answers in the chart. Point to this and that for singular and these and those for plural. Introduce isn't and aren't. This and these are used for things that are close to the speaker. That and those are for things further away. Hold up a single object and say, this. Hold up multiple objects and say, these. Put a single object further away, point to it and say, that. Put a group of objects further away and say, those.

5

LANGUAGE TOOLS

D

QUESTION this? that?

It’s

are

these? those?

They’re

a

this that

Are

these those

your his her

chair. chairs.

QUESTION Is

isn’t = is not aren’t = are not

ANSWER

is What

ANSWER pencil? pencils?

Yes, No,

it

is. isn’t.

they

are. aren’t.

PRACTICE

E

Complete. 1. Q: What is this? A: __________ a chair. It’s 3. Q: What are these? A: _______________ tables.

E. Read directions aloud. In this activity student(s) are practicing using it's and are and isn't and aren't.

5. Q: Is this your pencil? A: No, it ____________________. 7. Q: Are these your pencils? A: Yes, they _________________.

F. Put some objects on a table and ask student(s) the questions in the activity for them to answer. Then have student(s) ask each other.

TIP:

Listen to your teacher and repeat.

F

2. Q: What is that? A: ________________ a notebook. 4. Q: What are those? A: ______________________ chairs. 6. Q: Is that his computer? A: Yes, it ____________________. 8 Q: Are those your students? A: No, they ____________________.

Practice the conversation with a partner. 1. Q: Is this your …………………………? A: ………………………………………. 2. Q: Are these your …………………….? A: ………………………………………. intercambio.org/students

ANSWER KEY E. 2. It's, 3. They're, 4. They're, 5. isn't, 6. is, 7. are, 8. aren't

30

Teacher Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

D. THE FOCUS IS This and that for singular and these and those for plural. Postive and negative - is and isn't and are and aren't.

25


Check off the supplies that are on the list.

3rd Grade School Supply List: paper books

1 backpack 2 boxes of pencils (pre-sharpened) 6 glue sticks

pencils chair pens

3 erasers

notebooks

8 pens 2 boxes of tissues 1 box of markers 5 reams of paper 5 notebooks scissors (optional) headphones to keep at school (optional)

H

Unscramble. What does the student need? 1. nspe

p ____ e ____ n ____ s ____

2. rapep

p ____ ____ ____ ____ ____

3. licpsen

p ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____

4. oebntokso

n ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____

26

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

G

G. Ask students to look at the list on the left. Give them a minute to studyI it. Can they guess what the list is for? Ask Have you seen a list like this? Do you see any words you know on this list? If they don’t know some of the items on the flier, you can explain what they are or see if another student knows them. Say things like, Many schools give students a list of materials they need to start the school year. This is a list of materials. Can you see what grade this is for? Where do you see the grade? Tell students to compare the two lists. Ask What is the same on the school supply list (on the left) and the vocabulary list (on the right)? Say, Make a check next to the words on the vocabulary list that are also on the 3rd grade school supply list. Point out that the first one (paper) has been checked off. H. J Hint: the answers are the same words that were checked above.

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY G. checked items: pencils, pens and notebooks, H. 2. paper, 3. pencils, 4. notebooks

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31


BEFORE STARTING THIS PAGE: Walk through homework on next page. I. Read directions aloud. Model #1 by asking. Does the picture have a single object or multiple objects. Is the object near or far from the hand or finger.

5

REAL LIFE/YOUR LIFE

I

Read the question. Look at the picture. Circle and complete.

notebook 1. Q: What’s this? A: It’s a __________________________________.

2. Q: What’s that? A: It’s a __________________________________.

3. Q: What are this / these? A: They’re ___________________________.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

4. Q: What’s this / that? A: It’s a ________________________________.

5. Q: Is this your _______________________________?

A: Yes, it is / isn’t.

6. Q: Are those your ___________________________?

A: No, they are / aren’t.

J. Here we are practicing the entire lesson: is and isn't, are and aren't, as well as this, that, these and those. Model with a student first.

J

Look around the room. Point. Ask a partner. 1. Q: Is this / that your …………………? A: Yes, is it. / No, it isn’t.

2. Q: Are these / those your ……………? A: Yes, they are. / No, they aren’t.

intercambio.org/students

27

ANSWER KEY I. 2. chair, 3. these / pens, 4. this / book, 5. pencil / is, 6. chairs / aren't

32

Teacher Book INTRO


K

Lesson 5 • Is This Your Pen?

Write the words in the correct box. pens

pencil

notebook

What is this/that?

books

chairs

table

boxes

What are these/those? pens

L

M

Match the question and answer. 1. What is this?

a. No, they aren’t.

2. Are those your books?

b. It’s a notebook.

3. Is this your book?

c. Yes, it is.

4. What are those?

d. Yes, it is.

5. Are these his pencils?

e. Yes, they’re his pencils.

6. Is that your table?

f. They’re boxes.

K. This activity works on LOOK LISTEN: singular andAND plural. Help TRACK students see which box is for the plural words. Point out the words that end in s in the top word box.

L. Point out how this / that will have an answer with it and these / those will have an answer with are.

A

Read the answer. Write the question. Use this or these. 1. Q: ___________________________________________? What is this

A: It’s a pen.

2. Q: ___________________________________________?

A: They’re erasers.

3. Q: ___________________________________________?

A: No, it isn’t his book.

4. Q: ___________________________________________?

A: Yes, they are my pencils.

28

Do examples in each activity to illustrate.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

HOMEWORK

M. Remind students that they are writing the question for the answer.

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY K no s : pencil,notebook, table s: books, chairs, boxes L. 2. a , 3. c or d, 4. f, 5. e, 6. c or d M. 2. What are these? 3. Is this your book? 4. Are these your pencils?

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33


LESSON 6 IT'S NEXT TO THE BOOKS By the end of the lesson, students will be able to: • Identify common items around the room • Say where items are in a room (using prepositions) It's in /on / next to / between the books. They're in /on /next to / between the tables.

Alphabetics: How to write B b and X x • Capital B. Say, “the capital B has three strokes. Start at the top and pull straight down; that is 1. Come back to the top and make a half circle to the right side, stopping in the middle; that is 2. Make a second half circle to the right, stopping at the bottom; that is 3.” • Lowercase b. Say, “the lowercase b has two strokes. Start at the top and pull straight down; that is 1. Keep your pencil on the paper and begin to trace back up the line. Stop just below midway point and draw a circle out to the right; that is 2.” • Capital X. Say, “the capital X has two strokes. Start at the top of your writing space and make a long diagonal line straight down to the right, that is 1. Come back to the top and to the right of your first line. Draw a long diagonal straight line down and to the left, crossing your first line in the middle, that is 2." • Lowercase x. Say, “the lowercase x is formed the same as the uppercase X, only smaller and lower in your writing space.” What to bring to class • Vocabulary objects such as purse, backpack, bag, wallet, cell phone Warm up Bring in a empty bag or box. Take an item from each student such as: pen, book, notebook, pencil. Put all the objects in the bag/box. Pull out an item and ask, Is this your ______? After you do this several times, have student(s) lead the activity. Go over homework. Listening Track 05 A: Hey, Adam. I need to sign this form. Where's my pen? B: It’s on the table. A: It’s on the table? B: Yes, in the box. A: It’s on the table in the box? B: Yep, next to the books. A: Got it. Thanks.

34

Teacher Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Grammar Where is the pen? Where are the books?


6

IT’S NEXT TO THE BOOKS

LOOK AND LISTEN Ask What lesson is this? Elicit 6. Point to the name of the lesson and say, It's Next to the Books.

LOOK AND LISTEN: TRACK 05

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Say and gesture, Look at the picture and listen. Write this question on the board: What is she looking for? Play Track 05 all the way through and point to the question on the board and ask again: What is she looking for? This technique to begin the lesson is preparing the student(s) for how listening is done at higher levels.

VOCABULARY

A

Listen to your teacher and repeat.

purse

in

backpack

bag

on

wallet

between

cell phone

box

next to

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29

A. The first part of the vocabulary is objects. Hold up the objects or point to the pictures in your book. Remember to repeat words 2-3 times. The second part of the vocabulary is prepositions. Demonstrate these words by pointing to objects using the words. Repeat 2-3 times slowly. Place a pen in a box and ask Where is the pen? It's in the box. Place a pencil on top of a book and ask Where is the pencil? It's on the book. Emphasize the prepositions.

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35


ALPHABETICS Introduce the letters B b and X x. Model capital and lowercase b and x on the board. NOTE: See Lead Page for this lesson on instructions for how to make B b and X x.

C. Read directions aloud. Read each of the phrases before you play the track. Play Track 05 all the way through. Hint: you may want to tell student(s) there are 3 correct answers.

D

Write the letters B b, X x. _________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

B

b

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

X

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

x

E B

Write B b or X x to complete the words. 1. _____ox b

2. _____ag

3. _____ackpack

4. bo_____

5. ne_____t

6. fa_____

LISTENING

C

Listen to track 05. Circle the correct answers. Where is the pen? 1. on the table

2. in the box

3. on the books

4. next to the books

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

B. Do first word together. Write it on the board, including the underline. Point to the word. Show where the b is underlined. Say the letter b. Say the word box out loud. Point and Say b again. Do another together if needed. Repeat with the first word that uses the letter x.

ALPHABETICS

F

30

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY B. 2. bag, 3. backpack, 4. box, 5. next, 6. fax C. 1, 2 and 4

36

Teacher Book INTRO


THE FOCUS IS 6D. Using prepositions: in,

LANGUAGE TOOLS

D

on, next to and between. When you read the chart, you may want to demonstrate each answer.

Listen to your teacher and repeat. QUESTION

ANSWER

is

the pen?

It’s

are

the books?

They’re

Where

in

the box.

on

the table.

next to

the books.

between

the table and the chair.

PRACTICE Complete the answer. Use the words in the box. in

on

next to

Where is the pen?

Where is the backpack?

1._________________________ in the box. It’s in Where is the cell phone?

2. _________________________ the chair. Where are the pencils?

3._________________________ the books.

F

between

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

E

E. Read directions aloud. Review the words in the box. Model #1.

4.__________________ the notebook and the wallet.

Point to a picture. Ask and answer the question with a partner. Q: Where is the pen/box?

A: It’s…………….

Q: Where are the pens/books?

A: They’re …………. intercambio.org/students

31

ANSWER KEY B. 2. on, 3. next to, 4. between

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37


G

J

1. Where is / are the pen / pens? 2. Where is / are the pen / pens? 3. Where is / are the phone / phones? 4. Where is / are the book / books? 5. It’s / They’re on the table. 6. They’re / It’s in the bag. 7. It’s / They’re next to the window. 8. It’s / They’re between the table and the window.

H

I. Point out that capital letters are for the first word in the sentence. Look for the word with a period or question mark at the end of the sentence. Model #1. If needed, do another.

Listen to your teacher. Circle the words you hear.

I

Complete the sentences. Use It’s or They’re. 1. Q: Where is the pen?

A:______________on the table. It’s

2. Q: Where is the book?

A:______________ on the table.

3. Q: Where are the pens?

A:______________ in the box.

4. Q: Where are the bags?

A:______________ on the chair.

Unscramble the words to make a sentence. 1. pens? / are / the / Where _______________________________________________________ Where are the pens? 2. is / book? / Where / the ________________________________________________________ 3. the / is / Where / wallet? _______________________________________________________ 4. in / It’s / box. / the ____________________________________________________________ 5. the / next to / bag. / It’s ________________________________________________________ 6. the phone. / and / They’re / between / the pencil ______________________________________________________________________________ 32

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY G. Dictation -- check your answers H. 2. It's, 3. They're, 4. They're I. 2.Where is the book?, 3. Where is the wallet?, 4. It's in the box., 5. It's next to the bag. 6. They're between the pencil and the phone. 38

Teacher Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

G. Dictation. When you dictate, use a normal pace. Do not say sentences too slowly. Students need to hear how people will speak to them in English. Dictate as follows: 1. Where is the pen? 2. Where are the pens? 3. Where is the phone? 4. Where are the books? 5. It’s on the table. 6. They’re in the bag. 7. They’re next to the window. 8. It’s between the table and the window.

K


BEFORE STARTING THIS

6PAGE: Walk through

REAL LIFE/YOUR LIFE

J

homework on next page.

Look at the picture. Circle the correct word.

J. Use this practice to prepare students for speaking below.

1. The books are in / on the table. 2. The pencils are in / on a box. 3. The table is between / next to the chair. 4. The pencil is on / between the notebook. 5. The cell phone is in / on the backpack. 6. The wallet is in / on the books. 7. The computer is on / between the books and the box. 8. The chair is between / next to the table. 9. The wallet is between / on the books.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

10. The computer is next to / between the books.

K

K. Walk through the same picture with your student(s) so they have more confidence to ask each other questions and give answers. EXPANSION: Arrange items on a desk or in the room to get student(s) up and moving around.

Look at the picture. Practice with a partner. Partner 1: Where’s the notebook? ..............................................

Partner 2: It’s on the desk. ............................................... intercambio.org/students

33

ANSWER KEY J. 2. in, 3. next to, 4. on, 5. in, 6. on, 7. between, 8. next to, 9. on, 10. next to

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L. Read directions aloud. Walk through the words in the box. Do #1 together.

HOMEWORK

L

Lesson 6 • It’s Next to the Books

Fill in the missing letters to write the words from the box. between

backpack

purse

next to

phone

in

M

box

1. b____g a

2. ____ackpa____k

3. b_____twee_____

4. _____o_____

5. i_____

6. _____e_____t to

7. ______n

8. _____ho_____e

9. _____u_____s_____

M. This activity is similar to Activity E. Walk through the phrases in the box above the pictures and model #1.

on

bag wallet

LOOK

10. w_____lle_____

Write the answers. Use the words from the box. on the chair

next to the books

in the box

Where is the pen?

between the notebook and the wallet Where is the backpack?

1.__________________________________ 2. _________________________________ in the box Where is the cell phone?

Where are the pencils?

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Do examples in each activity to illustrate.

A

N. Remind student(s) that they are writing the question for the answer. Do #1 together.

3.__________________________________ 4.__________________________________

N

Read the answer. Write the question. 1. Q:_________________________________________________________________________ ? Where is the box A: The box is on the table. 2. Q:_________________________________________________________________________ ? A: The pencil is in the box. 3. Q:_________________________________________________________________________ ? A: The books are next to the pencils. 4. Q:__________________________________________________________________________? A: The purse is between the chair and the table. 34

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY L. 2. backpack, 3. between, 4. box, 5. in, 6. next to, 7. on, 8. phone, 9. purse, 10. wallet M. 2. on the chair, 3. next to the books, 4. between the book and wallet N. 2. Where is the pencil? 3. Where are the books? 4. Where is the purse? 40

Teacher Book INTRO


LESSON 7 HOW MANY ARE THERE? By the end of the lesson, students will be able to: • Read, write and say colors, fruits and vegetables • Count objects Grammar How many are there? What color is the apple.

There is / are two. It's green.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Alphabetics: How to write G g and L l. • Capital G. Say, “capital G has two strokes. Start near the top and make a big curved line up and around to the left, like a half circle, that is 1. Without picking up your pencil, make a very short line straight and to the left, as if inside the circle. That is 2." • Lowercase g. Say, “lowercase g has two strokes. Make a small circle near the bottom part of your writing space, that is 1. From the top right side of your circle, draw a line straight down and below the writing line, then curve the line slightly around to the left, that is 2." • Capital L. Say, “the capital L has two strokes. Start at the top and draw a line straight down to the bottom, that is 1. Without picking up your pencil, draw a short line out to the right, that is 2." • Lowercase l. Say, “the lowercase l has one stroke. Start at the top and draw a line straight down to the bottom.” What to bring to class • Fruits and vegetables

Warm up Use items from the class. Call out a preposition such as, between, and arrange items so that that student(s) can say a sentence using the preposition. The cell phone is between the book and the pen. You can set this up as a competition. Put students into teams. Once you say the preposition, the first group that arranges their objects correctly and can say a correct sentence gets a point. Go over homework. Listening Track 06 Mom: We need potatoes for the roasted vegetables. Son: Brown potatoes or red potatoes? Mom: Brown potatoes. How many brown potatoes are there? Son: There are three. Mom: Great. We need white onions too. Son. Okay, there’s one white onion. Mom. That’s good. Thanks.

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HOW MANY ARE THERE? LOOK AND LISTEN: TRACK 06

This technique to begin the lesson is preparing the student(s) for how listening is done at higher levels.

A. Hold up the objects or point to the pictures in your book. Remember to repeat words 2-3 times. Tomatoes are technically a fruit but we think of them as a vegetable. NOTE: Some languages put colors after the objects (nouns) so remember to focus on where the color goes.

VOCABULARY

A

Listen to your teacher and repeat. Fruits

Vegetables

purple grapes

yellow banana

green apple

blue bowl

orange carrots

brown potato

white onion

red tomatoes

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NOT FOR DUPLCATION

LOOK AND LISTEN Ask What lesson is this? Elicit 7. Point to the name of the lesson and say, How Many Are There? Say and gesture, look at the picture and listen. Write this question on the board: How many people? Play Track 06 all the way through and point to the question on the board and ask again: How many people are there?

7

Teacher Book INTRO

35


ALPHABETICS Write the letters G g, L l. _________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

G

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

B

l

Write G g, or L l to complete the words. 1. ________ rapes g

2. ba________

3. ei________ht

4. ve________etable

5. oran________e

6. b________ue

7. app________e

8. purp________e

9. bow________

LISTENING

C

Listen to track 06. Circle the correct word. 1. We need potatoes / apples for the roasted vegetables. 2. There are three / two brown potatoes. 3. There is one white / yellow onion.

36

B. Do first word together. Write it on the board, including the underline. E the word. Point to Show where the g is underlined. Say the letter g. Say the word grapes out loud. Point and Say g again. Do another together if needed. Repeat with the first word that uses the letter L.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

L

g

ALPHABETICS Introduce the letters G g and L l. Model capital and lowercase g and l on D the board. NOTE: See Lead Page for this lesson on instructions for how to make G g and L l.

C. Read directions aloud. F Read each of the sentences before you play the track. Play Track 06 all the way through to do #1. Play track multiple times to complete activity.

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY B. 2. bag, 3. eight, 4. vegetable, 5. orange, 6. blue, 7. apple, 8. purple 9. bowl C. 2. three, 3. white

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43


D. THE FOCUS IS How many? There is, there are. This could be challenging because the word there has to be used but doesn't neccessarily translate into other languages. For example, an English language learner might say, Are two or Have two instead of There are two. NOTE: When we speak, we often say There's for plurals, but we do not write there's for plurals. How many apples are there? There's six. SPEAKING ONLY.

7

LANGUAGE TOOLS

D

Listen to your teacher and repeat. QUESTION How

many

ANSWER

are

there?

There

is

one.

are

two.

QUESTION is What

color are

ANSWER it?

It’s

green.

They’re

red.

the apple? they? the tomatoes?

PRACTICE

E&F. Have student(s) complete. E focuses on is and are. F focuses on it and they.

Complete the sentences with is or are. 1. Q: How many are there?

2. Q: How many are there?

is A: There_______one.

A: There _______ two.

3. Q: How many apples _________there? A: There _________ one.

EXPANSION: Ask and answer questions orally individually or in pairs. Check answers in pairs. .

5. Q: What color _______________ it? A: It’s yellow.

F

4. Q: How many oranges_________there? A: There _________ four. 6. Q: What color ______________ they? A: They’re purple.

Complete the sentences with it or they. 1. Q: What color are ___________? they A: They’re green. 3. Q: What color are the apples? A. ____________ ’re red.

2. Q: What color is ___________? A: It’s red. 4. Q: What color is the bowl? A: __________’s blue.

intercambio.org/students

ANSWER KEY E. 2. are, 3. are / is, 4. are / are, 5. is, 6. are F. 2. it, 3. They're, 4. It's

44

Teacher Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

E

37


Count using tally marks. Fill in the missing tallies. 1

H

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

What are they? How many are there? Write the food on the line. Write the tally number in the box. a

b

carrots c

d

e

f

K H. NOTE: Point out irregular spelling for tomato and potato when plural: tomatoes, potatoes. They will likely ask why. The answer is that's just the way it is in English. We call this a spelling fact.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

G

G Tally marks: some countries use a different tally system so your J may not be student(s) familar with how to tally. Focus on 4 slashes with the 5th slash going through the other 4. First, teach them how to count making tally marks. Use the chart at the start of this activity to practice. Once they have completed this chart, they can use it for reference in Activity H.

L

I

Practice with a partner. Ask about the food items. Q: How many potatoes are there? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A: There is/are three. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY H. (answers should reflect the correct tally marks) b. 4 potatoes, c. 6 apples, d. 1 onion, e. 8 grapes, f. 7 tomatoes

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BEFORE STARTING THIS PAGE: Walk through homework on next page.

REAL LIFE/YOUR LIFE

J

apple

banana

carrots

grapes

What color is the_____?

onion

potatoes

tomatoes

What color are the _______?

apple

K

Complete the grocery list. Recipe for Roasted Vegetables

K. This reading activity helps student(s) learn to read for very specific information. You do not have to read and explain the entire recipe card. That will defeat the purpose. This is activating critical thinking skills. All we want them to produce is the quantity, color and name of vegetables. Don't explain the unknown words in the recipe card. Just ask them to look at the recipe card to find the information needed for the grocery list. Walk through the first two together.

Write the words from the box in the chart.

Cut up and put in lightly oiled baking pan—three brown potatoes, five orange carrots, seven small red tomatoes, one white onion, and a little salt and pepper.

Grocery List #

color

vegetable

3 _____________ ____ brown

____________________ potatoes

____ _____________

c____ r ____ o t ____

____ _____________

t ____ m a ____ o ____s

____ _____________

____ n ____ ____ n

olive oil Roast in oven at 425󠅁​󠅁​󠅁​󠅁 󠅁​󠅁r 25󠅁​󠅁-35󠅁​󠅁 minutes, or until golden brown.

L

salt pepper

Practice with a partner. Look at the recipe. Ask about the colors of the foods. 1. Q: What color is the …………………………? A: It’s …………………….. 2. Q: What color are the ………………….? A: They’re ………………………. intercambio.org/students

ANSWER KEY J. singular: banana, onion plural: carrots, grapes, potatoes, tomatoes K. 5 orange carrots, 7 red tomatoes, 1 white onion

46

Teacher Book INTRO

39

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

J. Categorizing singular and plural. Point out the verb (is /are) in the sentence: What color is the ___? and What color are the ___? Now, point out the endings on the nouns: onion vs. apples. If it ends in s, that's plural so They are____. Student(s) will only write objects not phrases.

7


HOMEWORK

M

Lesson 7 • How Many Are There?

Circle is or are.

M. Model # 1 together.

A

1. There is / are three brown potatoes. 2. There is / are two green apples. 3. There is / are a yellow banana. 4. There is / are one orange carrot. 5. There is / are many grapes. 6. There is / are one white onion. 7. There is / are seven small red tomatoes.

N. Review how to make tally marks.

Write the numbers or the tally marks. How many are there?

tally a.

O

#

tally

#

e.

6

b.

f.

9

c.

g.

4

d.

h.

7

3

Circle the vegetables. Underline the fruit.

40

1. carrots

2. tomatoes

3. bananas

5. onions

6. apples

7. potatoes

4. grapes

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

N

O. Do #1 together. Remember that we organize tomatoes as a vegetable even though it is technically a fruit.

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY M. 2. are, 3. is, 4. is, 5. are, 6. is, 7. are N. Chart on left: b. 7, c. 10, d. 2 Chart on right: Review tally marks O. vegetables (circle): carrots, tomatoes, onions, potatoes, fruits (underlined): bananas, grapes, apples intercambio.org/teachers

47


LESSON 8 REVIEW & PROGRESS CHECK Timing Notes • The first four pages are the Review. The last two pages are the Progress Check. Manage your time. Use half your class for the Review, then the other half for the Progress Check. • Adapt timing to fit the needs of your particular teaching situation. For example, if the schedule allows, consider doing the Review in one class and the Progress Check in the next. Giving the Progress Check • This is the first Progress Check for your student. This will give you and your student(s) a chance to see how their acqusition of English is coming along. This should not be stressful. If your student(s) seems stressed, try to lower their stress with candy, and breathing and let them know it will be good to know what they need to work on.

Listening Track 7 A: Where's my notebook? B: Your blue notebook? A: No, my yellow notebook. B: Here it is. It's on the table, next to your purse. A: Oh great, thank you. Where's my phone? B: Is it in your purse? A: Ahhh. Good idea. Nope, it's not in my purse. B: Is it in your backpack? A: Humm. Oh. Here it is. Thanks. IMPORTANT FOR GROUP CLASSES Once your students have completed the Listening Check, you will begin to call up one student at a time to administer the Speaking evaluation at the end of the Progress Check. Do not do the Speaking evaluation as a group. Scoring the Speaking evaluation Read the question (1, 2), or point to picture and words to elicit question (3, 4). Repeat the question one time if needed. Do not give prompts to the student. Use the following rubric to score each item: 2 = Understood question, answered question in a complete sentence, AND used correct grammar (from any lesson) 1 = Understood question BUT answered with incorrect grammar and/or an incomplete sentence 0 = Did not understand question, did not give answer, OR answer did not make sense for question NOTE: As long as an answer is grammatically correct (whether it uses the structure taught in this level or not), students should be given full credit.

SCORING THE PROGRESS CHECK 10 points Total points 1st page 15 points Total points 2nd page x4 100 Total points possible 48

Teacher Book INTRO

Note: When grading, do not count examples as correct. Skip them. At the bottom of each Progress Check page is a point scale. Write the number of correct answers for each page (e.g., 10/15 points) Multiply number of correct answers by 4 for final score out of 100

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Progress Check 2 pages, beginning with a listening activity. Play Listening Track 07 as the first activity. See callout instructions on the page. • Do not play the track more than 3 times, no exceptions.


8

REVIEW & PROGRESS CHECK Listen to your teacher.

A. Use TPR. Have students point to, touch, circle, underline and cross out the pictures on the page as you call them out. Remember you can have them do more than 1 command per item.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

A

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49


B

C C. Have student(s) look at the whole sentence to see which words they can pick out right away to spell. Then fill in the words that are more challenging.

D

Match 1. What is this?

a. Yes, they are.

2. Are these your pens?

b. No, they aren’t his books.

3. What are these?

c. It’s a table.

4. Is this your pencil?

d. They’re my pens.

5. Are these his books?

e. Yes, it is.

Complete the words. 1. ____he boo____s ____re o____ ta____le. T k a n th____ e b 2. T___e tab___e is ___ext t___ the wi___do___. 3. The wal___e___ is ___n the pur___e. 4. The bac___pa___k is ___ etween the ___able and the w___nd___w. 5. The pen___il___ are ne___t ___o the ___ooks.

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Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY B. 2. a, 3. d, 4. e, 5. b C. 2. The table is next to the window. 3. The wallet is in the purse. 4. The backpack is between the table and the window. 5. The pencils are next to the books. 50

Teacher Book INTRO

E

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

B. Model # 1 together. Remind student(s) about singular and plural to look for clues.

F


8

E

F

D. Model # 1 together.

Circle the correct answer. 1. phone number

a. (316)

b. (813) 555-5505

2. area code

a. 52801

b. (206)

3. zip code

a. (415) 555-4674

b. 02137

Write there is or there are. Write the number. 1. ______________________ There is

______ one .

2. ______________________

______ .

3. ______________________

______ .

4. ______________________

_______

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

D

Look at the passports. Write the correct answers.

Surname/ Last name

Surname/ Last name

Marcos

Rosa

Given name/ First name

Given name/ First name

Barros

Aguilar

Country

Country

Brazil

United States United States

F. Do #1 together.

Brazil

1. What is her first name?

___________________________________________________ Her first name is Rosa.

2. Where is she from?

___________________________________________________

3. What is his last name?

___________________________________________________

4. Where is he from?

___________________________________________________ intercambio.org/students

43

ANSWER KEY D. 2. b, 3. b E. 2. There are 3, 3. There are 5, 4. There is 1 F. 2. United States, 3. Barros, 4, Brazil

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51


G This activity is great practice and should be fun and friendly. There is no scoring. Use a coin to flip heads or tails for moving forward 1 or 2 spaces on the game board.

G

Review Game. Play with a partner or in a small group. Put a marker on START. Roll the dice. Move your marker the correct number of spaces. Answer the question. START

How do you spell your first name?

Point to the door.

If time allows, switch pairs and play again.

What’s your phone number?

A

Where is the book?

What’s your first name?

Stand up. Spell your first name. Sit down.

How many teachers are there?

What color is the banana?

What’s your last name?

Where is the pencil?

Stand up. Spell your last name. Sit down.

B

Point to the window.

Where are you from?

How many students are there?

Point to the book.

What’s your area code?

What color is the tomato?

Stand up. Say your phone number. Sit down.

Point to a pencil.

What color is the apple?

Where is your teacher from?

Where is the phone?

END 44

52

Teacher Book INTRO

Student Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

How do you spell your last name?

C


8 PROGRESS CHECK

STUDENT NAME:

Total: 25 x 4 = 100

B

Listen to track 07. Circle TRUE or FALSE. (3 points total, 1 each) 1. Her notebook is yellow.

TRUE

FALSE

2. Her notebook is in her purse.

TRUE

FALSE

3. Her phone is in the box.

TRUE

FALSE

4. Her phone is in her backpack.

TRUE

FALSE

Match the color to the picture. (3 points total, .5 each) 1. purple

a.

2. red

b.

c.

3. green

d.

4. brown

e.

5. orange

f.

6. blue

g.

7. yellow

C

IMPORTANT NOTE: If you are teaching a class. Have students continue to do the Progress Check independently while you call up each student one at a time to administer the speaking exercise (Activity F on the next page). Review the lead page of this lesson for scoring the Speaking evaluation.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

A

My score________/ 100

A. Play track 07 once. Go over the example answer in 1. Then play the track again. Play a third time if necessary. Do not play more than 3 times.

Write the number. (4 points total, 1 each) 6 A. 4, 5, ________

six _____________________

B. 0, 1, 2, ________

_____________________

C. 7, 8, ________

_____________________

________/ 10

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ANSWER KEY A. 2. FALSE, 3. FALSE, 4. TRUE B. 2. d, 3. c, 4. b, 5. a, 6. g, 7. e C. B. 3/three, C. 9/nine

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E F. Speaking Evaluation Lesson 8 1 and 2 – YOU ask a question and student answers. 3 and 4, YOU point to the pictures and words on the page to get the student to ask you the question. The teacher should give an answer.

F

1. Teacher asks, How do you spell your first name. Your student should provide a full answer: It's ........... 2. Teacher asks, Where are your from? Your student should provide a full answer: I'm from ............. 3. See the Progress Check Page: Using the picture and words under the picture, elicit the question How many carrots are there? from your student. Give your student a complete answer. There are ___ carrots. 4. Using the picture and words under the picture, elicit the question Where is the chair? from your student. Give your student a complete answer. The chair is next to the window.

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Teacher Book INTRO

Circle the correct answer. (4 points total, .5 each) 1. What are these / this?

They / it are onions.

2. How many is / are there?

There is / are five onions.

3. Where is / are the phone?

It’s / They’re on the table.

4. What’s his / he phone number?

It’s / They’re (615) 555-7776.

5. Where is her / she from?

Her / She is from the United States.

LOOK

Circle the correct answer. (3 points total, .5 each) 1. What’s your first name?

a. It’s a book.

2. Where are you from?

b. There are four.

3. How many pens are there?

c. They’re green tomatoes.

4. What’s his area code?

d. It’s Marcos.

5. What’s that?

e. It’s (970).

6. What are those?

f. It’s purple.

7. What color is the bowl?

g. I’m from Mexico.

Answer your teacher. Ask your teacher. (8 points total, 2 each) Teacher Notes

Score

1.

0

1

2

2.

0

1

2

0

1

2

0

1

2

3.

How many? 4.

Where / chair? 46

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY D. 2. are / are, 3. is / It's, 4. his / It's, 5. she / She E. 2. g, 3. b, 4. e, 5. a, 6. c, 7. f Speaking: See blue box

________/ 15

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

D

A


LESSON 9 WHAT DAY IS TODAY? By the end of the lesson, students will be able to: • Read, write and say the days of the week • Ask and answer questions about the week Grammar: NOTE: This is the only time we will use the past tense in this book What day is today? Today is _____? What day was yesterday? Yesterday was ____. Class is _______. When is class?

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Alphabetics: How to write D d, U u and Y y. • Capital D. Say, “the capital D has two strokes. Start at the top and pull straight down, that is 1. Come back to the top and curve your line out and around to right in a half circle, coming back to touch the bottom of your straight line, that is 2.” • Lowercase d. Say, “the lowercase d has two strokes. Start at the top and pull straight down, that is 1. Retrace the straight line half way up, then make a circle to the left of the straight line, that is 2.” • Capital U. Say, “the capital U has one stroke. Start at the top and pull straight down, curving the line around to on the bottom right, then bring your line straight up to the top." • Lowercase u. Say, “the lowercase u is formed like the capital U, only smaller and lower in your writing space.” • Capital Y. Say, “the capital Y has three strokes." Start at the top and pull your line down to the right diagonally, stop in the middle, that is 1. Pick up your pencil and come back to the top. Draw a second line down to the left diagonally, meeting your first line in the middle, that is 2. Without picking up your pencil, draw a line straight down to the bottom, that is 3." • Lowercase y. Say, “the lowercase y has two strokes." Start in the middle of your writing space and draw a straight line down and to the right diagonally, stop on the bottom line, that is 1. Pick up your pencil and come back to the middle of your writing space. Draw a second line down to the left diagonally, going below the writing line, that is 2." What to bring to class: Planner and/or calendar

Warm up On strips of paper, write questions from the Progress Check that students had difficulty with. Roll the strips into a ball and play Ball Toss. See front of Teacher Book for EXAPANSION ACTIVITIES. Listening Track 08 Woman: What day is today? Man: Today is Thursday. Woman: It’s Thursday? Yesterday was Wednesday. Man: Yes. Yesterday was Wednesday and tomorrow’s Friday. Woman: I see. Today is Thursday, tomorrow is Friday and the start of the weekend. Man: Yes, dear. Woman: Okay.

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WHAT DAY IS TODAY? LOOK AND LISTEN: TRACK 08

A. Say and repeat. Repeat the days of the week for students emphasizing the stress, which lies on the first syllable of each word. We VOCABULARY naturally say the stressed parts of words louder. A Listen to your teacher and repeat. Demonstrate this for students. Tell students to repeat, adding emphasis on the first syllable of each word. • SUN-day • MON-day • TUES-day yesterday • WEDNES-day (sounds like ‘WENS’-day) • THURS-day • FRI-day • SAT-ur-day* (*Saturday is the only day with 3 syllables. The first syllable is still emphasized.) Next, say three days quickly in a row (for example, Sunday-MondayTuesday; Monday-TuesdayWednesday; Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, etc.) and have students repeat quickly after you.

56

Teacher Book INTRO

TIP:

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

LOOK AND LISTEN Point to the 9. Ask students, What lesson is this? Ask what they see and ask How many people? Play Track 08 all the way through and ask again: How many people?

9

a.m. = morning p.m. = evening

today tomorrow

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47


ALPHABETICS Write the letters D d, U u, Y y. _________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

D

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

d u

Y B

y

Write D d, U u or Y y to complete the words. 1. ___ay d

2. Mon___ay

3. Fri___ay

4. to___ay

5. yester___ay

6. We___nes___ay

7. fo___r

8. Sat___rday

9. Th___rsday

10. st___dent

11. Sunda___

12. ___esterday

13. ___our

14. Tuesda___

15. ___es

LISTENING

C

Listen to track 08. Circle TRUE or FALSE 1. Today is Thursday.

TRUE

FALSE

2. Yesterday was Monday.

TRUE

FALSE

3. Friday is the start of the weekend.

TRUE

FALSE

48

B. Do first word together. Write it on the board, including E the underline. Point to the word. Show where the d is underlined. Say the letter d. Say the word day out loud. Point and Say d again. Do another together if needed. Repeat with the first words that use the letters u and y.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

U

ALPHABETICS Introduce letters D d, U u, and Y y. Model capital and lowercase d, u and y on the board. D NOTE: See Lead Page for this lesson on instructions for how to make D d, U u, and Y y.

C. Be sureF to play track 08 all the way through. Do #1 together. Play multiple times if necessary. Remind student(s) True = yes and False = no.

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY B. 2. Monday, 3. Friday, 4. today, 5. yesterday, 6. Wednesday, 7. four, 8. Saturday, 9. Thursday, 10. student, 11. Sunday, 12. yesterday, 13. your, 14. Tuesday, 15. yes C. 2. False, 3. True intercambio.org/teachers

57


D. THE FOCUS IS Present tense, Today is. Past tense, Yesterday was. Present tense, Tomorrow is. In later levels they will learn the past and future tenses.

9

LANGUAGE TOOLS

D

Listen to your teacher and repeat. QUESTION

NOTE: In order to keep things simple, we are teaching Class is ___. rather than Class is on____.

What

is

today? tomorrow?

Today Tomorrow

is

Tuesday Wednesday.

was

yesterday?

Yesterday

was

Monday.

is

class?

day

When

ANSWER

Class

is

Tuesday and Thursday.

PRACTICE

E

Write is or was. 1. What day _______today? is

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

E. Practice is vs. was. Have student(s) complete individually or in pairs. Check answers in pairs.

2. What day __________ yesterday? 3. What day __________ tomorrow? 4. Tomorrow __________ Friday. 5. Today __________ Thursday. 6. Yesterday ________ Wednesday.

F. Remind student(s) that days of the week begin with a capital letter. The biggest challenge for students may be pronouncing Tuesday vs. Thursday. Exaggerate the th sound for Thursday. Students often resist putting their tongue between their teeth to make the th sound so keep it light. They will get more pronunciation practice at the higher levels.

F

Write the missing day. 1. Sunday

Monday

__________________ Tuesday

2. Tuesday

____________________

Thursday

3. _________________

Friday

Saturday

4. Saturday

Sunday

___________________

5. Friday

_____________________

Sunday

intercambio.org/students

ANSWER KEY E. 2. was, 3. is, 4. is, 5. is, 6. was F. 2. Wednesday, 3. Thursday, 4. Monday, 5. Saturday

58

Teacher Book INTRO

49


Listen to your teacher. Circle today. Sunday

H

I

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Answer the questions with Yes, it is or No, it isn’t. Practice with a partner. 1. Is today Sunday?

No, it isn’t. ________________________

2. Is today Monday?

________________________

3. Is today Tuesday?

________________________

4. Is today Wednesday?

________________________

5. Is today Thursday?

________________________

6. Is today Friday?

________________________

7. Is today Saturday?

________________________

8. Is today the weekend?

_________________________

G. If you broughtJ a calendar, hold it up and circle today. Say, Today is ____. Expansion: You can ask additional questions. What day is tomorrow? What day was yesterday? What day is this? (Point to a day of the week listed in the horizontal chart in this activity.) H. Practice Yes, it is. and No, it isn't. Remind students about using the contraction, isn't. for the negative response.

K

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

G

Write the missing words. Ask and answer with a partner. 1. What

______ day

is

_______________? today

2. _________

day

_____________

tomorrow?

3. _________

day

was

_______________?

50

L

I. Remind student(s) that the first word in the sentence begins with a capital letter.

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY H. Answers will vary depending on when you have class. I. 2. What / is, 3. What / yesterday

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59


BEFORE STARTING THIS PAGE: Walk through homework on next page.

9

REAL LIFE/YOUR LIFE

J

Write the answers to the questions. Fill in the calendar. Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

1. What day is today? _____________________________________________________________ 2. Circle today on the calendar. 3. When is the weekend? _________________________________________________________ 4. Make a triangle ∆ on the weekend days. 5. When is English class? _________________________________________________________ 6. Make an X on the days you have class.

K

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

K. These activities are designed to prepare your student(s) to engage in conversation in Activity L. By writing notes down, student(s) will have the written words to ask and answer questions with a partner.

Look at the calendar. Write the answers to the questions. 1. What day is today?

Today is __________________________________

2. What day was yesterday? Yesterday was______________________________ 3. What day is tomorrow?

L

NOTE: At higher levels, the book contains writing activities to give students an opportunity to take notes in preparation for other conversation activities.

Tomorrow is________________________________

Practice the conversation with a partner. 1. Q: What day is today? A: Today is ………………………… 3. Q: What day is tomorrow? A: Tomorrow is ………………………

2. Q: What day was yesterday? A: Yesterday was …………………………… 4. Q: When is English class? A: Class is …………………………………..

5. Q: When is the weekend? A: The weekend is …………………

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ANSWER KEY J& K: Answers will vary depending on when you have class.

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Teacher Book INTRO

51


HOMEWORK

N

Complete the words. 1. _____ S _____ u _____day n

2. M_____ _____ day

3. T_____ _____ _____day

4. W_____ _____ _____ _____sday

5. Th_____ _____ _____day

6. F _____ _____day

7. S_____ ______ ______ ______ day

8. w_____ _____ k _____ _____ d

Write the missing day. 1. Sunday, ____________________________________, Tuesday Monday 2. Thursday, Friday, ________________________________ 3. ____________________________________, Tuesday, Wednesday 4. Monday, _________________________________, Wednesday

M. Point out how many blanks there are so student(s) can see howLOOK manyAND letters they TRAC LISTEN: need to fill in.

N. Days of the week begin with capital letters. Try to have student(s) get a rhythm when saying three days of the week in a row.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

M

Lesson 9 • What Day Is Today?

5. Tuesday, Wednesday, ______________________________________

O

Answer the questions. 1. How many days are in a weekend?

____________ 2

2. How many days begin with the letter T?

____________

3. How many days are in a week?

____________

4. How many days a week do you have English class?

____________

52

O. Complete sentences are not required. This is bringing back previous content Aon How many.

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY M. 2. Monday, 3. Tuesday, 4. Wednesday, 5. Thursday, 6. Friday, 7. Saturday, 8. weekend N. 2. Saturday, 3. Monday, 4. Tuesday, 5. Thursday O. 2. 2, 3. 7, 4. Answers depend on your class schedule. intercambio.org/teachers

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LESSON 10 WHAT TIME IS CLASS? By the end of the lesson, students will be able to: • Ask and answer questions about time • Say, read and write numbers 11- 100 It's at 10:15 / 10:50. It's 11:05.

Alphabetics: How to write F f and V v • Capital F. Say, “the capital F has three strokes. Start at the top and pull straight down; that is 1. Come back to the starting point and make a short line along the top; that is 2. Come to the middle of the long straight line and make another short line straight across; that is 3.” • Lowercase f. Say, “the lowercase f has two strokes. Start at the top. Curve up and around to the left, then draw your line straight down to the bottom; that is 1. Come to the middle and cross the long straight line; that is 2.” • Capital V. Say, “the capital V has two strokes. Start at the top and draw a line straight down to the right, stopping at the bottom line, that is 1. Pick up your pencil and come back up to the top. Draw a second line straight down and to the left, meeting your first line on the bottom line, that is 2." • Lowercase v. Say, “the lowercase v is formed the same as the Capital V, only smaller and lower in your writing space.” What to bring to class: • Analog clock or small white board with face of clock Warm up Option 1: Write the days of the week on cards. Pass one cards to each student and have them line up in order of days of the week. Say, Today is _______. Have them line up starting with today. (1-on-1, use cards on the desk.) Option 2: Have students stand up and form a circle. Toss a ball saying a day and have the student say the next day or the previous day. Practice Today is, Tomorrow is, Yesterday was. Visit the EXPANSION ACTIVITIES page. Listening Track 05 Male: What time is class? FEMALE: It’s at 6:15. Male: Did you say 6:50? FEMALE: No, 6:15. Male: Okay. Thanks. FEMALE: You’re welcome.

62

Teacher Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Grammar What time is class? What time is it?


10

WHAT TIME IS CLASS?

A. Say and repeat each number 2-3 times. Make sure to introduce 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26... These words are written with a hyphen. twenty-one. Make sure they see the pattern on 30, 40, 50, 60...

VOCABULARY

A

Listen to your teacher and repeat. Vocabulary words: time, clock 11

12

13

eleven

twelve

20

30

40

twenty

thirty

forty

14

15

16

fifteen

sixteen

50

60

70

80

90

100

fifty

sixty

seventy

eighty

ninety

one hundred

thirteen fourteen

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

LOOK AND LISTEN Point to the 10. Ask student(s) What lesson is this? Point to the name of the lesson. Say it aloud, What Time is Class? This lesson is the numbers 11 - 100 so we want to reactivate numbers. Play track 09. Ask, Where is he?

LOOK AND LISTEN: TRACK 09

17

18

19

seventeen eighteen nineteen

intercambio.org/students

NOTE: Students often confuse pairs of numbers such as: 13 / 30, 14 / 40. You need to emphasize the t in the -teen words (fourteen) and and the d sound for the t in the -ty words (forty).

53

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63


ALPHABETICS Introduce the letters F f and V v. Model capital and lowercase f and v on the board. NOTE: See Lead Page for this lesson on instructions for how to make F f and V v.

ALPHABETICS

D

Write the letters F f, V v. _________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

F

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

B. Do first word together. Write it on the board, including the underline. Point to the word. Show where the f is underlined. Say the letter f. Say the word four out loud. Point and Say f again. Do another together if needed. Repeat with the first word that uses the letter v.

B

v

Write F f or V v to complete the words. 1. ____our f

2. ____ orty

3. ____ ourteen

4. ____i ____ t een

5. ____ i ____ ty

6. fi ____ e

7. ele____en

8. twel____ e

9. se____ enteen

10. ha____ e

LISTENING

C C. Before you play the track, read the times in the potential answers out loud. Play track 09 once all the way through.Student(s) will hear 6:15 and 6:50. Play again if necessary, so they can hear the difference between the two times that are spoken.

Listen again to track 09. Circle the times you hear.

F

a. 6:50

54

b. 7:15

c. 6:15

d. 6:30

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY B. 2. forty, 3. fourteen, 4. fifteen, 5. fifty, 6. five, 7. eleven, 8. twelve, 9. seventeen, 10. have C. a and c

64

Teacher Book INTRO

E

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

V

f


THE FOCUS IS 10D. Telling time. Notice that

we must use at when we say what time something is. Class is at___. We don't use at when we say the actual time. It's ____.

LANGUAGE TOOLS

D

Listen to your teacher and repeat. QUESTION

What

time

ANSWER class?

It’s

at 10:00.

it?

It’s

10:00.

is

PRACTICE

E

Write the times.

E. 1.Point out the : (colon) between hours and minutes. Students need to learn that when they write time, they must include the : . We've included the : in this activity but in the next activity students write it in themselves.

10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

2 3 4

a._____________ 3:30

F

10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

2 3 4

b.______:______

10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

2 3 4

c.______:______

10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

What time is it?

2 3 4

NOTE: We are not teaching expressions of time using half past, quarter past, quarter of. This will be taught at higher levels. The focus here is on the numbers. Because numbers are challenging to learn, we are not focusing on the words hours and minutes although they may come up.

d.______:______

Practice with a partner. 1. Q: What time is class? A: It’s at………………………… 2. Q: What time is it? A: It’s …………………………… intercambio.org/students

55

ANSWER KEY E. b. 1:00, c. 4:15, d. 5:45

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65


G:

H. Dictation. Have students ask you, What time is it? Then dictate: What time is it? It’s 10:00. What time is it? It’s 1:15. What time is it? It’s 5:00. What time is it? It’s 6:30.

G

H

EXPANSION: practice saying the numbers aloud. I Dictation. Use these times: Remember to say them as numbers) a) 10:00 b) 8:45 c) 1:15 d) 6:30 e) 5:00 f) 2:25 g) 4:50 h) 3:10 i) 7:20 j) 9:40

Match the numbers. A. eleven

a. 17

B. fifteen

b. 12

C. nineteen

c. 70

D. thirteen

d. 11

E. seventeen

e. 15

F. seventy

f. 19

G. twelve

g. 13

H. one hundred

h. 100

Listen to your teacher. Draw the times you hear on the clock. a.

10 9 8

I

11 12 1

7 6 5

b.

2 3 4

10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

c.

2 3 4

10 9 8

7 6 5

d.

2 3 4

10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

a. ___________ 10:00

b. ___________

c. ___________

d. ___________

e. ___________

f. ___________

g. ___________

h. ___________

i. ___________

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY G. B. e, C. f, D. g, E. a, F. c, G. b, H. h

Teacher Book INTRO

11 12 1

Listen to your teacher. Write the times you hear.

56

66

J

2 3 4

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Have student(s) do the activity independently and correct in pairs.

K


STARTING THIS 10BEFORE PAGE: Walk through

REAL LIFE/YOUR LIFE

J

homework on next page.

Read the English class schedule. Answer the questions.

Friends School English Class Schedule Morning

Evening

Monday: 9:00 - 10:00 a.m.

6:00 - 8:00 p.m.

Tuesday: 9:00 - 11:30 a.m.

4:30 - 7:00 p.m.

Wednesday: 9:00 - 10:00 a.m.

6:00 - 8:00 p.m.

Thursday: 9:00 - 11:30 a.m.

4:30 - 7:00 p.m.

J. Reading comprehension. Students need to look at the image to find the correct information. This uses critical thinking skills. Do the first one together as an example.

Friday: 11:00 - 11:30 a.m.

1. What time is class on Monday morning?

________________________________________

2. What time is class on Tuesday evening?

________________________________________

K

4. What time is class on Thursday morning?

________________________________________

5. What time is class on Friday?

________________________________________

What time is your class? Write the time on the calendar. Practice with a partner. SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

WEDNESDAY

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

3. What time is class on Wednesday evening? ________________________________________

I. You can ask questions to help prompt student(s) to write in their class schedule. What day is class? What time is class?

Q: What time is your class? A: My class is on …………………(day) from …………………. to ……………………………. intercambio.org/students

57

ANSWER KEY J. 1. 9:00 - 10:00 a.m. 2. 4:30 - 7:00 p.m., 3. 6:00 - 8:00 p.m., 4. 9:00 - 11:30 a.m., 5. 11:00 - 11:30 a.m.

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67


HOMEWORK

L

M

Lesson 10 • What Time Is Class?

Write the numbers. Use the words from the box. a. 20 ________________________________________ twenty

eighty

b. 30 ________________________________________

fifty

c. 40 ________________________________________

forty

d. 50 ________________________________________

ninety

e. 60 ________________________________________

seventy

f. 70 ________________________________________

sixty

g. 80 ________________________________________

thirty

h. 90 ________________________________________

twenty

Write the time under the clocks. a.

M. Remind student(s) about how to correctly write time using the :

10 9 8

b.

11 12 1

7 6 5

2 3 4

____________ 2:15

N

10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

c. 2 3 4

____________

10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

d. 2 3 4

____________

10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

e. 10 9 8

2 3 4

____________

11 12 1

7 6 5

Answer the questions.

A: It’s ___________________________________________________________. 2. Q: Look at your clock. What time is it? A: It’s ___________________________________________________________.

58

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY L. b. thirty, c. forty, d. fifty, e. sixty, f. seventy, g. eighty, h. ninety M. b. 8:30, c. 6:05, d. 11:00 e. 8:50

Teacher Book INTRO

2 3 4

____________

1. Q: What time is your class?

68

LOOK

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

L. Numbers can be challenging to spell. Make sure to review the word box on the side so they can use it when they do the activity at home.

A


LESSON 11 WHAT'S YOUR ADDRESS? By the end of the lesson, students will be able to: • Read, write and say their complete address Grammar What's your address / city / state / zip code?

My / his / her address / city / state / zip code is ____.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Alphabetics: How to write C c, S s: and Z z • Capital C. Say, “the Capital C has one stroke. Start at the top and make a big curved line up and around to the left all the way to the bottom, making a big arch like a half circle.” • Lowercase c. Say, “the lowercase c is formed the same as the Capital C, only smaller and lower in your writing space.” • Capital S. Say, “the Capital S has one long curvy stroke. Start at the top and bring your line up and around to the left, coming through the middle on the right diagonal, then curve down and around to the left.” • Lowercase s. Say, "the lowercase S is formed the same as the Capital S, only smaller and lower in your writing space.” • Capital Z. Say, “the Capital Z has three strokes. Start at the top and pull your line straight out to the right, that is 1. Without picking up your pencil, draw a straight diagonal line down to the left, that is 2. Without picking up your pencil, draw another straight line out to the right, that is 3.” • Lowercase z. Say, “the lowercase z is formed the same as the Capital z, only smaller and lower in your writing space.” What to bring to class: Envelopes with addresses Warm up Dictate these challenging numbers: 14, 30, 15, 18, 70, 16, 50, 40, 13, 17. Then ask student(s) to spell each number. LESSON REFERENCE Alabama - AL Colorado - CO Hawaii - HI Kansas - KS Massachusetts - MA Montana - MT New Mexico - NM Oklahoma - OK South Dakota - SD Virginia - VA

Alaska - AK Connecticut - CT Idaho - ID Kentucky - KY Michigan - MI Nebraska - NE New York - NY Oregon - OR Tennessee - TN Washington - WA

Arizona - AZ Arkansas - AR California - CA Delaware - DE Florida - FL Georgia - GA Illinois - IL Indiana - IN Iowa - IA Louisiana - LA Maine - ME Maryland - MD Minnesota - MN Mississippi - MS Missouri - MO Nevada - NV New Hampshire - NH New Jersey - NJ North Carolina - NC North Dakota - ND Ohio - OH Pennsylvania - PA Rhode Island - RI South Carolina - SC Texas - TX Utah - UT Vermont - VT West Virginia - WV

Listening Track 10 Banker: What’s your address? Woman: My address is 301 Cherry Street. Banker: What’s your city? Woman: Minneapolis Banker: And your state. What state do you live in? Woman: Minnestota.

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69


A. Say and repeat each word. If you brought envelopes from home, pass them out and have the student(s) touch the vocabulary words as you repeat 2-3 times.

WHAT’S YOUR ADDRESS? LOOK AND LISTEN: TRACK 10

VOCABULARY

A

Listen to your teacher and repeat.

street

Alex Schultz city state

2700 E. Lake St #9

apartment number address

Madison, WI 5󠅁​󠅁3711 zip code

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70

Teacher Book INTRO

59

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

LOOK AND LISTEN Point to the 11 at the top of the page. Ask What lesson is this? Say the lesson title What's Your Address? Ask How many people? Play Track 10 all the way through and ask again: How many people?

11


ALPHABETICS Introduce the letters C c, S s and Z z. Model capital and lowercase c, s and z E the board. NOTE: See Lead Page for this lesson on instructions for how to make C c, S s, and Z z.

ALPHABETICS Write the letters C c, S s, Z z. _________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

C S Z C

B. Do first word together. Write it on board, including the underline. Point to the word. Show where the c is F underlined. Say the letter c. Say the word city out loud. Point and Say c again. Do another together if needed. Repeat with the first words that use the letters s and z.

Write C c, S s or Z z to complete the words. c ity 1. ____

2. ____ apital

3. pen ____ il

4. addres____

5. ____ tate

6. ____ unday

7. ____ero

8. piz____ a

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

B

c s z

C. NOTE: In this lesson we are focusing on the c sound. C has 2 sounds in English. The hard c that sounds like k and the soft c that sounds like s. Before a, o, and u and consonants, c sounds like k. Before i and e, it sounds like s.

Write the words in the correct box. pencil

class

capital

code

city

C SOUNDS LIKE K

circle

carrot

C SOUNDS LIKE S

class

LISTENING

D

Listen again to track 10. Circle the correct answers. 1. What’s your address?

a. 3 Cherry St.

b. 301 Cherry St.

c. 201 Cherry St.

2. What’s your city?

a. Minneapolis

b. Minnesota

c. Mansfield

3. What’s your state?

a. Michigan

b. Montana

c. Minnesota

60

Student Book INTRO

D. G Read directions aloud. Play track 10 all the way through and do #1. Play the track as many times as needed to complete the activity. Correct in pairs. Play track again for corrections.

ANSWER KEY B. 2. capital, 3. pencil, 4. address, 5. state, 6. Sunday, 7. zero, 9. pizza C. sound like K: capital code, carrot sounds like s: pencil, city, circle D. 2. a, 3. c intercambio.org/teachers

71


E. THE FOCUS IS This lesson focuses on helping students learn to say, read and write their address. The grammar is a review of your / my and his / her. See the lead page for all the state abbreviations. Refer students to the back of their books where they have all the states and abbreviations.

11

LANGUAGE TOOLS

E

Listen to your teacher and repeat. TIP:

Use 2-letter abbreviations for states CA–California CO–Colorado NY–New York TX–Texas

QUESTION

ANSWER address?

What’s

address

your his

street?

My His

street

city?

her

state?

Her

state

zip code?

city

is

301 Cherry Street Minneapolis, MN 55111

zip code

PRACTICE

G

Write your state and abbreviation.

His state is

__________________________ Colorado

__ C __ O

My state is

__________________________

__ __

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

F

Write about you. 1. My street is ________________________________________________________________.

G. Student(s) may or may not know their address. It's very important for them to know this. Teach your students how to say their address correctly.

72

Teacher Book INTRO

2. My city is ______________________________________. 3. My state is ____________________________________. 4. My zip code is _________________________________. intercambio.org/students

61


I

1. Q. What’s your address?

A. My address is ……………………….

2. Q. What’s your street?

A. My street is ………………………….

3. Q. What’s your city?

A. My city is …………………………….

4. Q. What’s your state?

A. My state is …………………………...

5. Q. What’s your zip code?

A. My zip code is ………………………

Match the words to the parts of the address.

apartment number

name street

Zac Simpson 2700 E. Cook St #3B Sacramento, CA 55343

zip code

city

J

state

Read Isabelle’s registration form. Complete the sentences.

I & J. These activities are building-blocks for future activities. StudentsL practice decoding the elements of a full address. Later in the lesson they will practice their own full address.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

H

H. Before doing this activity, student(s) may K need coaching on how to correctly pronounce their own address.

Practice with a partner.

SCHOOL REGISTRATION First name: Isabelle

Last name: Kimball

Address: 3311 Longhorn Street City: Dallas

State: TX Zip code: 75󠅁​󠅁001

Phone number: (469) 5󠅁​󠅁​󠅁​󠅁​󠅁​󠅁​󠅁​󠅁-9216 1. Her street is ______________________________________________________________. 2. Her state is ______________________. 3. Her city is ________________________. 4. Her phone number is (_______)________________________. 62

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY J. 1. Longhorn Street, 2. TX, 3. Dallas, 4. (469) 555-9216

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73


BEFORE STARTING THIS PAGE: Walk through homework on next page. J. This activity personalizes the practice. This particular skill of completing a form is critical.

11

REAL LIFE/YOUR LIFE

K

Complete this registration form with your information. SCHOOL REGISTRATION First name:

Last name:

Address: City:

State:

Zip code:

Phone number:

L

Practice with a partner. Ask and answer questions about your form.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

L. In Activity H, the student(s) practiced saying their address out loud using My address is... Here they will use a more natural way for conversing by saying, It's ....

1. What’s your address?................................................................................................................................ 2. What’s your street?................................................................................................................................... 3. What’s your city?................................................................................................................................... 4. What’s your state?................................................................................................................................... 5. What’s your zip code?.............................................................................................................................. 6. What’s your phone number?.................................................................................................................

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Teacher Book INTRO

63


HOMEWORK

M

Lesson 11 • What’s Your Address?

Read the registration form. Circle the correct answers.

M Do the first answer with student(s).

A

SCHOOL REGISTRATION First name: Alex

Last name: Schultz

Address: 2700 E. Lake St. City: Chicago

State: IL Zip code: 60960

N

O

1. His zip code is

a. 60960

b. 2700 E. Lake St.

c. (312) 555-4660

2. His state is

a. Chicago

b. IL

c. 2700 E. Lake St.

3. His street is

a. 60960

b. E. Lake St.

c. IL

4. His phone number is

a. (312) 555-4660

b. Chicago

c. 2700 E. Lake St.

5. His city is

a. Minneapolis

b. IL

c. Chicago

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Phone number: (312) 5󠅁​󠅁​󠅁​󠅁​󠅁​󠅁​󠅁​󠅁-4660

Write c or s to complete the words. 1. addres _____ s

2. _____ity

3. _____apital

4. _____ode

6. _____treet

7. _____tate

Write your information on the application form. APPLICATION First name:

Last name:

Address: City:

State:

Zip code:

Phone number:

64

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY M. 2. b, 3. b, 4. a, 5. c N. 2. city, capital, code, street, state

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75


LESSON 12 REVIEW This is a Review. There is NO Progress Check, only a Review. This should take the whole class. Timing Note: There are four pages to this Review. You begin and end with an interactive game. The middle two pages contain activities similar to those in the lessons. If you are teaching in a goup, have students work in pairs or small groups as often as possible. This increases their practice time and allows you the opportunity to walk around and listen to how it's going. Take notes so if you need to review anything specific, you kow what's needed. Activity A: This is a categorization of many of the words from the previous three lessons. After student(s) complete the chart, you can ask if there are any other words they know that go under the same categories.

Warm up: Go over the previous homework before beginning the Review.

76

Teacher Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

What to bring to class • Dice, playing cards, dominos, sticks or toothpicks • Flash cards (or playing cards) with numbers, and vocabulary words • Coin (such as penny) to play games. Heads - move 1 space, Tails - move 2 spaces


12A.

REVIEW A

Do the first couple of words together so student(s) understands they are categorizing.

Read the word. Check  the correct category. Time 1. twenty

Days of the Week

Numbers

Food

Things

2. Sunday 3. 3:15 4. potato 5. 12:30 6. window 7. Thursday 8. vegetables 9. thirteen

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

10. 6:00 11. 110 12. box 13. Saturday 14. forty 15. wallet 16. 600 17. sixty 18. Wednesday 19. purse 20. grapes 21. 1:15 22. Monday 23. chair 24. door 25. onion intercambio.org/students

65

ANSWER KEY -- Reading the chart down Time: 3:15, 12:30, 6:00, 1:15, Days of the week: Sunday, Thursday, Saturday, Wednesday, Monday Numbers: thirteen, 110, forty, 600, sixty, Food: potato, vegetables, grapes, onion Things: window, box, wallet, purse, chair, door intercambio.org/teachers

77


B

14 + 5 = 19 10 + 10 = ? 6+7=? 20 - 7 = ? 20 - 10 = ? 19 - 4 +? Make a + and - problem for each number in the activity.

C

D

Match. A. nineteen

a. 90

B. ninety

b. 13

C. thirteen

c. 30

D. fourteen

d. 15

E. fifty

e. 19

F. seventy

f. 17

G. thirty

g. 14

H. seventeen

h. 40

I. fifteen

i. 50

J. forty

j. 70

E

Address the envelope. Lopez

Mario

Sunnydale

#2B

94089

1801 Veranda Way

CA

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

B. After student(s) completes activity do some math problems on the board.

F

__________________________________________ __________________________________________ __________________________________________

66

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY B. B. a, C. b, D. g, E. i, F. j, G. c, H. f, I. d, J. h C. Mario Lopez 1801 Veranda Way #2B Sunnydale, CA 94089 78

Teacher Book INTRO


12D.

E

If student(s) is struggling, have them write each day of the week on a strip of paper and put the paper strips in order. Then have them do the activity.

Put the days of the week in order. a. Monday

_______

b. Wednesday

_______

c. Thursday

_______

d. Sunday

_______ 1

e. Saturday

_______

f. Friday

_______

g. Tuesday

_______

EXPANSION: Line ups using the days of the week.

Draw the time on the clocks. a. 6:15 10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

b. 7:00 2 3 4

10 9 8

d. 1:30 10 9 8

F

E. After completing the activity, have a student draw a clock on the board. Have another student shout out a time and another student draw the time on the clock. Erase the time. Repeat, changing up the students.

11 12 1

7 6 5

11 12 1

7 6 5

c. 3:45 2 3 4

e. 8:20 2 3 4

10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

2 3 4

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

D

f. 11:05 2 3 4

10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

2 3 4

Practice with a partner. 1. Q: What day is today?

A: ............................

2. Q: What day is tomorrow?

A: ............................

3. Q: What’s your address?

A: ............................

4. Q: What’s your phone number?

A: ............................

5. Q: How do you spell your first name?

A: ............................

6. Q: What time is it?

A: ............................

7. Q: What’s your last name?

A: ............................ intercambio.org/students

67

ANSWER KEY D. a. 2, b. 4, c. 5, d. 1, e. 7, f. 6, g. 3

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79


G. This activity is great practice and should be fun and friendly. There is no scoring. Use a coin to flip heads or tails for moving forward 1 or 2 spaces on the game board.

G

Review Game. Play with a partner or in a small group. Put a marker on START. Roll the dice. Move your marker the correct number of spaces. Answer the question.

START

What day is today?

How many days are in a weekend?

If time allows, switch pairs and play again. If time allows, do the same Review Games from lessons 4 and 8.

LOOK

What’s your phone number?

How many days are in a week?

What’s your zip code?

Close your eyes and spell Wednesday.

What time is it?

What’s your address?

What’s your first name?

What’s your city?

What day is tomorrow?

Point to a book.

What color is your pencil?

How many days do you have English class?

What’s your area code?

Close your eyes and spell Thursday.

How many days begin with the letter S?

Where are you from?

What day was yesterday?

END

What’s your state?

What time is English class? 68

80

Teacher Book INTRO

Student Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

How do you spell your last name?

A


LESSON 13 WHERE'S THE BATHROOM? By the end of the lesson, students will be able to: • Ask for and give simple directions • Identify places on a map Grammar Where is the....? Where are the ....

It's upstairs / downstairs / across from.... They're upstairs / downstairs / across from....

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Alphabetics: How to write K k and W w • Capital K. Say, “the Capital K has three strokes. Start at the top and pull your line straight down to the bottom, that is 1. Pick up your pencil and come back up to the top. From the right side of your first line, draw a diagonal line down and to the left, stopping in the middle when you meet your first line, that is 2. Without picking up your pencil, draw a straight line diagonally down and to the right, stopping at the bottom, that is 3.” • Lowercase k. Say, “the lowercase K has three strokes and is similar to the upper case K. Start at the top and draw a straight line down to the bottom, that is 1. Pick up your pencil and come half way up. Draw a short diagonal line down and to the left, stopping when you meet your first line, that is 2. Without picking up your pencil, draw a straight line diagonally down and to the right, stopping at the bottom, that is 3.” • Capital W. Say, “the Capital W has four diagonal strokes. Start at the top and draw a straight diagonal line down and to the right, that is 1. Without picking up your pencil, draw a straight diagonal line up and to the right, that is 2. Without picking up your pencil draw another straight diagonal line down and to the right, that is 3. Finally, draw a straight diagonal line up and to the right, that is 4.” • Lowercase w. Say, “the lowercase w is formed the same as the Capital w, only smaller and lower in your writing space.” What to bring to class: • Post it notes to set up the room as a place • (2) Fly swatters for warm up

Warm up Fly Swatter: On the board, write parts of addresses randomly such as: Denver, 114 Main Street, 80303, MI, Jon Doe, #3B Divide students into two teams. Give each team a fly swatter. Call out words such as city, and see which team goes to the board to slap the correct answer first. Listening Track 11 MALE : Excuse me, where’s the bathroom? FEMALE: It’s across from the office. MALE: Thanks…(pause) where’s the office? FEMALE: It’s there. Let me show you. MALE: Thanks a lot. FEMALE: You’re welcome.

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81


13

WHERE’S THE BATHROOM? LOOK AND LISTEN Point to the 13 at the top of the page. Ask What lesson is this? Say the lesson title Where's the Bathroom? Ask, Where are they? Play Track 11 all the way through and ask again: Where are they?

LOOK AND LISTEN: TRACK 11

A. Use objects to introduce the concept of near/far, here/there, across from. You can use random objects in the class: pens, pencils, notebooks, books. If something is near or here it should be touchable. Far and there you would point from further way. Repeat each word 2-3 times.

A

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

VOCABULARY Listen to your teacher and repeat.

far / there

classroom

near / here

on the corner of

bank

across from

store

upstairs

bathroom

downstairs

bus stop intercambio.org/students

82

Teacher Book INTRO

69


Write the letters K k, W w. _________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

K

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

W B

k

w

Write K k or W w to complete the words. 1. boo________ k

2. ban_________

3. bac________pack

4. _________here

5. ________indow

6. _________hat

7. ________ednesday

8. _________allet

LISTENING

C

Listen to track 11. Circle TRUE or FALSE. 1. He’s looking for the bathroom.

TRUE

FALSE

2. The bathroom is upstairs.

TRUE

FALSE

3. The bathroom is across from the office.

TRUE

FALSE

70

B. Do first word together. Write it on board, E the underline. including Point to the word. Show where the k is underlined. Say the letter k. Say the word book out loud. Point and say k again. Do another together if needed. Repeat with the first word that uses the letter w.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

ALPHABETICS

ALPHABETICS Introduce the letters K k and W w. Model capital and lowercase f and v on the board. D NOTE: See Lead Page for this lesson on instructions for how to make K k and W w

C. Read directions aloud. Play track 11 all the way through and do #1. Play the track as many times as needed to complete the activity. Correct in pairs. Play track again for corrections.

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY B. 2. bank, 3. backpack, 4. where, 5. window, 6. what, 7. Wednesday, 8. wallet C. 1. True, 2. False, 3. True

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83


D. THE FOCUS IS

LANGUAGE TOOLS

D

Listen to your teacher and repeat. QUESTIONS Where

ANSWERS

’s is

the bus stop?

It

are

the bathrooms?

They

’s is ’re are

across from the bank. upstairs.

PRACTICE

E

Look at the map. Match. 1. restaurants

a. across from Mario’s Pizza

2. police station

b. near City Park

3. bank

c. on Main St.

4. bus stop

d. on the corner of Main St. and 1st Ave.

5. drug store

e. next to the police station

6. Al’s Fruits and Vegetables

f. between Julie’s Café and Mario’s Pizza

bank

E. This activity may take time. They will need time to look at the map, find the location and then decide which location is the correct match. You could have them do this in pairs.

Friends School police

Julie’s Café Al’s Fruits and Vegeables

City Park

Mario’s Pizza

David’s Market

drug store

intercambio.org/students

ANSWER KEY E. 2. d, 3. e, 4. b, 5. a, 6. f

84

Teacher Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Location words such as: across from, on the corner of, upstairs... They've had Where is and Where are. Focus on singular and plural. NOTE: The mistake they will likely make is confusing singular for plural: It's vs. they're. Where are the bathrooms? It's upstairs. Or Where is the bathroom? They're across from the office. In the answer, point out that they need to use the location word before the place. It's across from the bank.

13

71


F

Write in the missing word. Practice with a partner. 1. Q: Excuse me, where is the ____________________________________? A: It’s here.

F. Do #1 with your students as an example. I They should write the word bathroom in the blank.

2. Q: Excuse me, where is the ____________________________________? A: It’s upstairs.

3. Q: Excuse me, where is the ____________________________________? A: It’s there.

H

G. Point out upstairs and downstairs in the picture. Walk through the signage. In many countries, the gound floor is not thought of as the 1st floor. Teach students that ground floor = 1st floor in the US.

Circle the correct answer.

1. Q: Where are the pens?

A: They’re upstairs / downstairs.

2. Q: Where is the paper?

A: It’s upstairs / downstairs.

3. Q: Where are the books?

A: They’re upstairs / downstairs.

4. Q: Where are the backpacks?

A: They’re upstairs / downstairs.

J

Practice with a partner. 1. Q: Excuse me, where are the pens?

A: They’re upstairs.

2. Q: Excuse me, where are the………..?

A: They’re …………..

3. Q: Excuse me, where is the ……?

A: It’s…….

72

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

G

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY F. 1. bathroom, 2. classroom, 3. bus stop G. 2. downstairs, 3. downstairs, 4. upstairs

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85


BEFORE STARTING THIS PAGE: Walk through homework on next page.

13

REAL LIFE/YOUR LIFE

I I. Walk through the map completely before starting this activity. Select a student to model the conversation, then put the students into pairs. You can rotate pairs to increese the practice. NOTE: Many students do not have experience using a map.

Look at the map. Practice with a partner. on the corner of

between

next to

Example Partner 1: Excuse me. Where’s the bank? Partner 1: Is it far?

across from

near

far

Partner2: It’s next to the Police Station. Partner2: No, it isn’t.

bank

Friends School

police

Julie’s Café

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Al’s Fruits and Vegeables

City Park

Mario’s Pizza

David’s Market

J. If you are teaching in a school, use the school. If you are teaching in the student's home, use the home.

J

drug store

Practice asking and giving directions with a partner. upstairs

downstairs

on the 1st floor

on the 2nd floor

1. Q: Where are the bathrooms?

A: They’re ………

2. Q: Where’s the classroom?

A: It’s ………

3. Q: Where’s the bus stop?

A: It’s ………

next to

across from

intercambio.org/students

86

Teacher Book INTRO

73


HOMEWORK

K

Lesson 13 • Where’s the Bathroom?

Read the answers. Write the questions. Where is the bank 1. Q: __________________________________________? A: The bank is across from the school. 2. Q: __________________________________________? A: The bus stop is on the corner. 3. Q: __________________________________________? A: The bathrooms are upstairs.

K. Where is vs.Where are. Help students by asking, Is the place they are LOOKsingular AND LISTEN: TRA asking about or plural. Note: #3, bathrooms is plural.

4. Q: __________________________________________? A: The classrooms are near the office.

L

Put the conversation in order (number 1-6): a._____ You’re welcome. b._____ 1 Excuse me, where’s the bathroom? c._____ Where’s the office? d._____ Thanks a lot.

L. The student(s) is putting the conversation in the correct order. Begin with the example, 1, and ask students to look for what someone would say next.

f._____ The bathroom? It’s across from the office.

M

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

e._____ It’s there. Let me show you.

A

Unscramble. 1. nbka

____ b ____ a ____ n ____ k

2. oesrt

____ s ____ ____ ____ ____

3. anre

____ n ____ ____ ____

4. rfa

____ f ____ ____

5. eehr

____ h ____ ____ ____

6. rehet

____ t ____ ____ ____ ____

74

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY K. 2. Where is the bus stop? 3. Where are the bathrooms? 4. Where are the classrooms? L. 6, 1, 3, 5, 4, 2 M. 2. store, 3. near, 4. far, 5. here, 6. there intercambio.org/teachers

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LESSON 14 HOW MUCH IS IT? By the end of the lesson, students will be able to: • Understand how to ask and answer how much something is • Use US dollars and cents It's $1.49.

Alphabetics: How to write M m and Q q. • Capital M. Say, “the capital M has four strokes. M is four sticks touching each other—Start at the bottom, come straight up to the top; that is 1. Come down and to the right; that is 2. Come up and to the right; that is 3. Finally, come straight down; that is 4.” • Lowercase m. Say, “the lowercase m has three strokes. Start in the middle and make a line straight down; that is 1. Go back up the line and come around to the right and down to the bottom; that is 2. Go back up the middle line and come around again to the right and down; that is 3.”Capital Q. Say, “the capital Q has two strokes. Start at the top and make a big circle; that is 1. Come to the middle of the circle and draw a straight line down and to the right beyond the circle; that is 2.” • Lowercase q. Say, “the lowercase q has two strokes. Start in the middle and make a small circle; that is 1. Keep your pencil on the top right part of the circle, then draw a line straight down beyond the writing line; that is 2. Some lowercase q’s have a little tail off to the right side.” What to bring to class: • money or play money Warm up Set up the room as a town map and label the places. Have students ask and give directions using across from, on the corner of, near, next to... Listening Track 12 Older woman: Younger woman: Older woman: Younger woman: Older woman: Younger woman: Older woman: Younger woman:

88

How much is the paper? It’s $10.50. Did you say $10.15? No. It’s $10.50. How much are the notebooks? They’re $1.98 each. Oh, that’s great. Thanks. You’re welcome.

Teacher Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Grammar How much is it?


14

HOW MUCH IS IT?

LOOK AND LISTEN Point to 14 and ask What lesson is this? Point to the picture. Ask Where are they? Play track 12 all the way through and ask again Where are they?

LOOK AND LISTEN: TRACK 12

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

NOTE: This track has two women. If students have trouble telling who is talking, point to each woman as she speaks.

VOCABULARY

A

A. All US currency is the same color so it may be challenging for student(s) to differentiate the bills. It's also confusing that a dime is smaller than a nickel and penny. If you brought in money or play money, use it as you introduce the bills and cents.

Listen to your teacher and repeat. coins / cents

1¢ penny

5¢ nickel

erase r 50¢

10¢ dime

bills / dollars

25¢ quarter

pape r $10. 50

$1

$5

$10

$20

note book s $1.9 8 eac h intercambio.org/students

75

intercambio.org/teachers

89


ALPHABETICS Introduce the letters M m and Q q. Model capital and lowercase m and q on the board. NOTE: See Lead Page for this lesson on instructions for how to make M m and Q q.

ALPHABETICS

C. Read directions aloud. Play track 12 all the way through and do #1. Play the track as many times as needed to complete the activity. Correct in pairs. Play track again for corrections.

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

M

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

Q B

m q

Write M m or Q q to complete the words. 1. di__m ___e

2. na _____e

3. _____oney

4. ti_____ e

5. _____ uarter

6. _____uestion

F

LISTENING

C

Listen to Track 12. Circle the correct answer. 1. How much is the paper? A. It’s $10.15

B. It’s $10.50

G

2. How much are the notebooks? A. They’re $1.98

76

B. They’re 98¢

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY B. 2. name, 3. money, 4. time, 5. quarter, 6. question C. 1. B, 2. A

90

E

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

NOTE: The letter q is always followed by the letter u Add this to the spelling facts. B. Do the first word together. Write it on board, including the underline. Point to the word. Show where the m is underlined. Say the letter m. Say the word dime out loud. Point and say m again. Do another together if needed. Repeat with the first word that uses the letter q.

D

Write the letters M m, Q q.

Teacher Book INTRO


14

LANGUAGE TOOLS

D

Listen to your teacher and repeat.

TIP:

QUESTIONS How

much

How

How much = amount

ANSWERS is

it?

It’s

$10.50.

are

they?

They’re

48¢.

much

is

a penny?

1¢.

a nickel?

5¢.

It’s

a dime? a quarter?

NOTE: When we use the symbol for cents, we do not use a decimal point. When we use the $ sign, we use a decimal point before the cents. Students from other countries may use commas.

10¢. 25¢.

PRACTICE Complete the sentences. 1. Q: How much is a penny? A: It’s _________. 1¢ 3. Q: How much is a _____________? A: It’s 10¢.

F

G

2. Q: How much is a nickel? A: It’s ________¢.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

E

D. THE FOCUS IS How much? is / are. We have already presented how many for countable things. Now you are teaching How much for prices.

4. Q: How much is a ________________? A: It’s 25¢.

Circle the correct answer. 1. How much is the book?

It’s / They’re $12.99.

2. How much are the pens?

It’s / They’re 99¢.

3. How much are the bananas?

It’s / They’re 69¢ a pound.

4. How much are the tomatoes?

It’s / They’re 48¢ each.

5. How much are the purple potatoes?

It’s / They’re $3.20 a pound.

6. How much is the green apple?

It’s / They’re $1.00.

Listen to your teacher. Circle the amount you hear. 1. a. $3.50

b. $3.15

2. a. $4.14

b. $4.40

3. a. $6.12

b. $6.20

4. a. $5.80

b. $5.18

5. a. $10.16

b. $10.60

6. a. $2.50

b. $12.50

7. a. $17.10

b. $70.10

8. a $30.75

b. $13.70 intercambio.org/students

ANSWER KEY E. 2. 5, 3. dime, 4. quarter F. 2. They're, 3. They're, 4. They're, 5. They're, 6. It's G. 1. a, 2. a, 3. b, 4. a, 5. a, 6. b, 7. a, 8. a

77

G. Dictation 1. $3.50 Say, three dollars and fifty cents 2. $4.14 Say, four dollars and 14 cents 3. $6.20 Say, six dollars and twenty cents 4. $5.80 Say, five dollars and 80 cents Now say, the numbers differently 5. $10.16 ten sixteen $12.50 6. twelve fifty 7. $70.10 seventy ten 8. $30.75 thirty seventy-five

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91


H

Count the bills and coins. Write the total. BILLS AND COINS

TOTAL

J

$1.36 1. $___________________

3. $___________________

I. Dictation A. $2.50 Say, two fifty B. $ .67 Say, 67 cents C. 12.98 Say, twelve ninety-eight D. $ 7.34 Say, seven thirty-four E. $24.75 Say, twenty four seventy-five F. $15.00 Say, fifteen dollars G. $40. 14 Say, forty fourteen H. $3.99 Say, three ninety-nine

4. $___________________

5. $___________________

I

Listen to your teacher. Write the amount you hear. a. $________

b. $________

c. $________

d. $________

e. $________

f. $________

g. $________

h. $________

78

Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY H. 2. $15.37, 3. $31.22, 4. $7.45, 5. $3.07

92

Teacher Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

2. $___________________


BEFORE STARTING THIS 14 PAGE: Walk through

REAL LIFE/YOUR LIFE

J

homework on next page.

How much is it? Tally the bills and coins. Practice with partner. A

_____ $10.00

_____ $5.00

_____ $1.00

0 _____ 25¢

_____ 10¢

_____ 5¢

0 _____ 1¢

_____ $10.00

_____ $5.00

_____ $1.00

_____ 25¢

_____ 10¢

_____ 5¢

_____ 1¢

_____ $10.00

_____ $5.00

_____ $1.00

_____ 25¢

_____ 10¢

_____ 5¢

_____ 1¢

_____ $10.00

_____ $5.00

_____ $1.00

_____ 25¢

_____ 10¢

_____ 5¢

_____ 1¢

_____ $10.00

_____ $5.00

_____ $1.00

_____ 25¢

_____ 10¢

_____ 5¢

_____ 1¢

cell phon e $17.15 m onth B

J. Do the first example together to remind students how to count with tally marks.

C

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

table $29.75

chair $17.00

D

wallet $8.27

E

banana .59¢ eac h intercambio.org/students

79

ANSWER KEY J. B. 2 tens, 1 five, 4 ones and 1 quarter, C. 1 ten, 1 five, 2 ones D. 1 five, 3 ones, 1 quarter, 2 pennies, E. 2 quarters, 1 nickel, 4 pennies Note: Other correct combinations of coins and bills are possible.

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93


Walk through the examples so student(s) can do the homework.

HOMEWORK

K

Lesson 14 • How Much Is It?

Match.

LOOK

a. 1. $1.00 b. 2. nickel c.

3. pen 4. $5.00

d.

5. book e. 6. quarter

L

M

Read the price. Circle the correct answer. 1. 65¢

a. 2 quarters, 1 dime, 1 nickel

b. 2 quarters, 2 pennies, 2 nickels

2. 85¢

a. 3 quarters, 1 dime, 2 nickels

b. 2 quarters, 3 dimes, 1 nickel

3. 36¢

a. 1 quarter, 1 dime, 1 penny

b. 3 dimes, 1 nickel, 6 pennies

4. $1.07

a. 4 quarters, 1 nickel, 2 pennies

b. 4 quarters, 2 nickels, 2 pennies

5. 73¢

a. 3 quarters, 3 pennies

b. 2 quarters, 2 dimes, 3 pennies

Circle the correct answer. 1. How much is the table?

It’s / They’re $52.15.

2. How much are the pencils?

It’s / They’re 39¢ each.

3. How much are the grapes?

It’s / They’re $3.24 a pound.

4. How much is the onion?

It’s / They’re 55¢ each.

5. How much are the carrots?

It’s / They’re $1.79 a pound.

6. How much is the orange?

It’s / They’re $1.00.

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ANSWER KEY K. 2. a, 3. b, 4. f, 5. e, 6. d L. 2. b, 3. a, 4. a, 5. b M. 2. They're, 3. They're, 4. It's, 5. They're, 6. It's

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f.

A


LESSON 15 HOW ARE YOU? By the end of the lesson, students will be able to: • Ask and answer simple questions about how they feel Grammar How are you / they? How is he / she?

I'm / they're good / okay / fine / tired, etc. He's / she's good / okay / fine / tired, etc.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Alphabetics: How to write H h and J j • Capital H. Say, “the capital H has three strokes. Start at the top and pull straight down; that is 1. Come back to the top with a little space in between and draw a second line straight down; that is 2. Come to the middle of first line, and draw a straight line side to side in between the two long straight lines; that is 3.” • Lowercase h. Say, “the lowercase h has two strokes. It starts off the same as the capital H with a straight line from the top to the bottom; that is 1. Without picking up your pencil, bring your line up to the middle, curve around and down to the right; that is 2.” Emphasize that no part of the lowercase h extends beyond the writing line. • Capital J. Say, “the capital J has one stroke. Start at the top and pull your line straight down, curving around to the left at the bottom.” • Lowercase j. Say, “the lowercase j is formed like the Capital J with one small addition. Follow steps for Capital J, making it smaller and lower in your writing space. Then pick up your pencil and put a dot at the top of the j.” What to bring to class: • grocery store circular

Warm up Have students work in pairs and look at grocery store circular. One student points to an item and say, How much is it? The other student reads the price. Option: Teacher makes a list of items on the board. Student(s) searches for and asks about those specific items. Listening Track 13 CONVERSATION 1 Hi. How are you? Man: Woman: I’m good, really good. How are you? I’m okay. Tired. Man: CONVERSATION 2 Male Voice: Oh no, is he okay? Older woman He’s fine. Thank you. Male Voice: Oh good. CONVERSATION 3 Jenny: Hey. (breathing very heavily) Are you okay? Clark: Jenny: Yah, I’m tired and I’m hot. NOTE: This is the last content lesson before the final Review and Progress Check. Be sure to allow a few minutes to celebrate student learning. Point out what they can do now that they were not able to do when they started this book. Congratulate them for coming to class and encourage them to continue. Some students may need to repeat this book if they are not yet ready to advance to level 1.

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15

HOW ARE YOU? LOOK AND LISTEN: TRACK 13

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

LOOK AND LISTEN Point to 15 and ask What lesson is this? Say the name of the lesson, How Are You? This listening involves three short separate conversations. Point to each picture and ask What? or Where? Play track 13 all the way through and ask again.

VOCABULARY A. Use TPR to model the feelings as you say them. Remember to repeat words 2-3 times. NOTE: good, fine, okay are often interchangeable.

A

Listen to your teacher and repeat.

happy

sad

good, fine, okay

tired

hungry

sick

hot

cold intercambio.org/students

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81


Write the letters H h, J j. _________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

H

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ _______________________ _________________________________

_________________________________ ______________________ _________________________________

J B

h j

Write H h or J j to complete the words. 1. ______appy h

2. ______ot

3. ______ungry

5. ______ohn

6. ______enny

7. ______uan

4. ______ow

LISTENING

C

Listen to track 13. Write the letter of the conversation you hear in each box.

B. Do first word together. Write it on board, including the underline. Point to the word. Show where E the h is underlined. Say the letter h. Say the word happy out loud. Point and say h again. Do another together if needed. Repeat with the first word that uses the letter j. The only J words they learned in this book were names. Make sure they capitalize the J for the last 3 fill ins: John, Jenny and Juan.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

ALPHABETICS

ALPHABETICS Introduce the letters H h and J j. Model capital and lowercase h and j on D the board. NOTE: See Lead Page for this lesson for instructions on how to make H h and J j.

C. Read directions aloud. Play track 12 all the F They way through. will need to write the correct number under each picture. If necessary, play track again, stopping after each conversation for students to fill in the correct number. 82

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ANSWER KEY B. 2. hot, 3. hungry, 4. how, 5. John, 6. Jenny, 7. Juan C. 1, 2, 3

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D. THE FOCUS IS Practicing known grammar using emotions from vocabulary. When we ask questions about how we are, we typically use the full verb when asking the question and the contraction for the answer. How are you? I'm fine. How is he? He's okay.

15

LANGUAGE TOOLS

D

Listen to your teacher and repeat. QUESTIONS are How is

ANSWERS I’m They’re She’s He’s

you? they? she? he?

cold. okay. hot. tired.

PRACTICE

E

Complete with is, are, ’m, ’s or ’re. Practice with a partner. 1. Q: How______________you? are A: I______________fine. 2. Q: How______________she?

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

A: She______________sick. 3. Q: How______________they? A: They______________tired. 4. Q: How______________he? A: He______________happy.

F

Practice with a partner. 1. Q: How are you? A: I’m ……….

cold

hot

sick

fine

hungry

tired

good

okay

happy

sad

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ANSWER KEY E. 1. 'm, 2. is / 's, 3. are / 're, 4. is / 's

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83


Look at the pictures. Write a sentence using He, She or They. 1 She’s happy. ________________________

________________________

________________________

________________________

3

4 ________________________

________________________

________________________

________________________

5

H

I

2

6 ________________________

________________________

________________________

________________________

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

G

How are you? Draw a picture. Share with a partner.

H. Before student(s) draws a picture of themselves, draw youself on the board using a simple stick figure or just your face. We don’t want student(s) to feel that they need to be great artists.

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ANSWER KEY G. 2. She's sad. 3. He's hot., 4. He's hungry., 5. They're tired., 6. They're cold.

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BEFORE STARTING THIS PAGE: Walk through homework on next page.

15 REAL LIFE/YOUR LIFE

I

Look at the pictures. How are he, she, they? Practice with a partner.

I. The pictures here allow for individual interpretation. There are several possible answers. Encourage your students to write down multiple feelings for each picture.

Liam and his dog Rosie Liam is cold. He is happy. 1. ________________________________________ Rosie is tired. She is okay. __________________________________________ __________________________________________

George and Martha 2. ________________________________________ __________________________________________ __________________________________________

3. ________________________________________ __________________________________________ __________________________________________

Jerry on Sunday 4. ________________________________________ __________________________________________ __________________________________________

The Johnson Family: Carlos, Hillary, Mark and Julie 5. ________________________________________ __________________________________________ __________________________________________

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85

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Enrique at the park


HOMEWORK

J

Lesson 15 • How Are You?

Complete the conversations. Use the words in the box. are

hot

good

fine

CONVERSATION A

I’m

J. Read directions aloud. A Read the words in the box. Do conversation A together.

Man: Hi. How are you? Woman: I’m good, really (1) _______________. How are you? good Man: I’m okay. (2) _________________ tired.

CONVERSATION B Man: Oh – is he okay? Woman: He’s (3) _________________. Thank you.

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Man: Oh good. Thank you.

CONVERSATION C Jenny: Hey. Clark: Jenny, (4) ________________ you okay? Jenny: Yah, I’m tired and I’m (5) __________________.

K

Circle the correct answer. 1. How are you?

a. He’s happy.

b. I’m fine.

2. How is she?

a. She’s sad.

b. Nice to see you.

3. How are they?

a. They’re tired.

b. How is she?

4. How are you?

a. She’s sick.

b. I’m okay.

5. How is he?

a. He’s hungry.

b. She’s hot.

6. How are they?

a. I’m cold.

b. They’re good.

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ANSWER KEY J. 2. I'm, 3. fine, 4. are, 5. hot K. 2. a, 3. a, 4. b, 5. a, 6. b

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LESSON 16 REVIEW & PROGRESS CHECK Timing Note: • Manage your time. Use half your class time for the Review. The other half for the Progress Check. • Adapt timing to fit the needs of your particular teaching situation. For example, if the schedule allows, consider doing the Review in one class and the Progress Check in another.

Listening Track 14 Hey Sally, how are you? Lee: I’m really good. How are you? Sally: Lee: I’m tired…hey, when is class? Sally: Class is next Tuesday. Great. What time is it? Lee: Sally: What time is it now, or what time is class? Sorry, I’m so tired. What time is class? Lee: Class is at 9:15. Sally: Lee: Thanks Sally, see you at 9:50. No Lee, 9:15. Sally: 9:15, got it. Lee: IMPORTANT FOR GROUP CLASSES Once your students have completed the Listening Check, you will begin to call up one student at a time to administer the Speaking evaluation at the end of the Progress Check. Do not do the Speaking evaluation as a group. Scoring the Speaking evaluation Read the question (1, 2), or point to picture and words to elicit question (3, 4). Repeat the question one time if needed. Do not give prompts to the student. Use the following rubric to score each item: 2 = Understood question, answered question in a complete sentence, AND used correct grammar (from any lesson) 1 = Understood question BUT answered with incorrect grammar and/or an incomplete sentence 0 = Did not understand question, did not give answer, OR answer did not make sense for question NOTE: As long as an answer is grammatically correct (whether it uses the structure taught in this level or not), students should be given full credit.

SCORING 22 Total points 1st page 28 Total points 2nd page x2 100 Total points possible 102

Teacher Book INTRO

Note: When grading, do not count examples as correct. Skip them. At the bottom of each Progress Check page is a point scale. Write the number of correct answers for each page (e.g., 26/28 points) Multiply number of correct answers by 2 for final score out of 100

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

Giving the Progress Check: • This is the second Progress Check for your student. This will give you and your student(s) a chance to see how their acqusition of English is coming along. This should not be stressful. If your student(s) seems stressed, try to lower their stress with candy, breathing and let them know it will be good to know what they need to work on. Progress Check is 2 pages. It begins with a listening activity. Play Listening Track 14 as the first activity. See callout instructions on the page. • Do not play the track more than 3 times, no exceptions.


16

REVIEW & PROGRESS CHECK Point to each matching pair. Say the word.

30

area code

fifteen

zip code

$1.00

NY

10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

2 3 4

80027

11 12 1

7 6 5

15

2:50

thirty

0

10 9 8

2:15

2 3 4

(206)

3:45

A. Similar to a memory game, students match two boxes: the number 30 with the word thirty. EXPANSION. Make a copy of the page and cut out the boxes. Have students match the pieces.

state

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

A

zero

10 9 8

11 12 1

7 6 5

2 3 4

25¢

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B. The hint for this is that all the words are the days of the week. You could have the students do a quick line up and call out what day of the week they are.

B

Unscramble the days of the week. Put them in order. ____uTasyde

____ T ____ u ____ e ____ s ____ d ____ a ____ y

____taSryaud

____ S ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____

____dnSyua 1

____ S ____ ____ ____ ____ ____

____radyiF

____ F ____ ____ ____ ____ ____

____nydoaM

M ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____

____hdryaTsu

T ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____

____eyenadWsd

W ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____

D

C. Remind student(s) that they are writing the questions for the given answer.

C

Ask and answer questions with a partner. 1. Q: __________________________________________ ? A: Today is Tuesday. What day is today? 2. Q: __________________________________________ ? A: It’s 10:00. 3. Q: __________________________________________ ? A: His last name is Gomez. 4. Q: __________________________________________ ? A: They’re chairs. 5. Q: __________________________________________ ? A: No, it isn’t my pen. 6. Q: __________________________________________ ? A: Your phone is in the purse. 7. Q: __________________________________________ ? A: It’s 75001. 8. Q: __________________________________________ ? A: The bathroom is next to the office.

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Student Book INTRO

ANSWER KEY B. Tuesday, Saturday, Sunday, Friday, Monday, Thursday, Wednesday #'s: 3, 7, 1, 6, 2, 5, 4 C. 2. What time is it? 3. What's his last name? 4. What are those? 5. Is this your pen? 6. Where is my phone? 7. What's your zip code? 8. Where's the bathroom? 104

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E

F


16 D

Count the money. Write the total on each line. How much is it?

A $10.50 It’s_______________

E

How much are they?

B

How much is it?

How much are they?

C They’re

$____________each

D

It’s_______________

They’re

E. Practice It's and They're.

____________¢/lb.

Complete the answers with It’s or They’re. 1. Q: Where are the bathrooms? A: _____________________________________ They’re near the office . (near / office) 2. Q: Where is the bus stop? A: ____________________________________ . (across from / bank)

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

3. Q: Where is the classroom? A: _____________________________________ . (next to / office) 4. Q: Where are the pens? A: ______________________________________________ . (upstairs) 5. Q: Where is the bank? A: _____________________________________________ . (on the corner of / 1st and 2nd Ave.)

F

Unscramble the questions and answers. Practice with a partner. 1. Q: they? / How / are A: fine. / are / They

_______________________________________________________ How are they? _______________________________________________________ They are fine.

2. Q: she? / is / How

_______________________________________________________

A: hot. / She / is

_______________________________________________________

3. Q: are / How / you?

_______________________________________________________

A: tired. / am / I

_______________________________________________________

4. Q: How / he? / is

_______________________________________________________

A: He / good. / is

_______________________________________________________

5: Q: How / they? / are

_______________________________________________________

A: are / They / happy.

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ANSWER KEY D. b. $1.98, c. $10.99, d. 74¢ E. 2. It's across from the bank, 3. It's next to the office, 4. They're upstairs, 5. It's on the corner of 1st and 2nd Ave. F. 2. How is she? / She is hot. 3. How are you? / I am tired? 4. How is he? / He is good. 5. How are they? / They are happy. intercambio.org/teachers

105


G. This activity is great practice and should be fun and friendly. There is no scoring. Use a coin to flip heads or tails for moving forward 1 or 2 spaces on the game board. If time allows, switch pairs and play again.

G

Review Game. Play with a partner or in a small group. Put a marker on START. Roll the dice. Move your marker the correct number of spaces. Answer the question. START

How are you?

What’s your phone number?

A How much is a dime?

How many windows are there?

What’s your zip code?

Close your eyes and spell Wednesday.

Where is the bathroom?

What’s your first name?

Point to a chair.

What’s your last name?

What day is today?

B

How much is a quarter and a nickel?

Where is the office?

How much is a penny?

What’s your area code?

How much is a dime and a penny?

Where is the pencil?

Stand up. Say your phone number. Sit down.

How much is a quarter?

Point to a pencil.

How much is a nickel?

Where are you from?

Spell your city.

END 90

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Teacher Book INTRO

Student Book INTRO

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

How do you spell your last name?

C


16

PROGRESS CHECK

STUDENT NAME:

Total: 25 x 4 = 100

A

B

My score________/ 100

Listen to track 14. Circle TRUE or FALSE. (3 points total, 1 each) 1. The woman feels really good.

TRUE

FALSE

2. The man is tired.

TRUE

FALSE

3. The class is next Thursday.

TRUE

FALSE

4. The class is at 9:50.

TRUE

FALSE

A. Play track 14 once. Go over the example answer in 1. Then play the track again. Play a third time if necessary. Do not play more than 3 times.

Match. (3 points total, .5 each)

IMPORTANT NOTE: If you are teaching a class. Have students continue to do the Progress Check independently while you call up each student one at a time to administer the Speaking check which is the last activity on the next page. Review the lead page of this lesson for scoring the Speaking check.

a. 1. 50¢ b.

3. 48¢ 4. 99¢ 5. 12¢

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

2. 26¢ c.

d.

e.

6. 83¢ f. 7. 9¢ g.

C

Write the missing day. (4 points total, 1 each) A. Sunday, Monday, (1) ________________________, Wednesday Tuesday B. Thursday, (2) ________________________, Saturday, (3) ___________________________ C. (4) _________________________, Tuesday, (5) ________________________, Thursday ________/ 10

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ANSWER KEY A. 2. True, 3. False, 4. False B. 2. c, 3. e, 4. a, 5. g, 6. d, 7. f C. 2. Friday, 3. Sunday, 4. Monday, 5. Wednesday

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E

F. Speaking Evaluation Lesson 16 1 and 2 – YOU ask a question and student answers. 3 and 4, YOU point to the pictures and words on the page to get the student to ask you the question. The teacher should give an answer.

F

1. You ask, What day is today. Expected answer: Today is _____. 2.You ask, What time is class? Expected answer: It's at _____. 3. Elicit the question Where is the bathroom?

Circle the correct answer. (4 points total, .5 each) 1. Q: What day is / are today?

A: They’re / It’s Monday.

2. Q: How are she / you?

A: I’m / She’s fine.

3. Q: Where is / are the bus stop?

A: It’s / They’re on the corner.

4. Q: How is he / they?

A: They’re / He’s tired.

5. Q: What is you / his zip code?

A: His / They’re zip code is 75201.

Match. (3 points total, .5 each) 1. What is your city?

a. It’s $15.50.

2. How much is it?

b. Wednesday.

3. What time is it?

c. It’s 90028.

4. What is your zip code?

d. It’s Los Angeles.

5. What day is tomorrow?

e. It’s 5:15.

6. What is your address?

f. CA.

7. What is your state?

g. It’s 905 Greenvale Ave.

Answer your teacher. Ask your teacher. (8 points total, 2 each) Teacher Notes 1.

0

1

2

2.

0

1

2

0

1

2

0

1

2

3.

Where / bathroom? 4.

What / address? 92

Student Book INTRO

4. Elicit the question What's your/his/her address? ANSWER KEY D. 2. you / I'm, 3. is / It's, 4. he / He's, 5. his / His E. 2. a, 3. e, 4. c, 5. b, 6. g, 7. f

108

Teacher Book INTRO

Score

________/ 15

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

D


WRITING PRACTICE _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________

A a B b C c D d E e F f G g

_______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

_______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________

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_______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________

H h I i J j K k L l M m N n

_______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________

110

Teacher Book INTRO

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_______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________


_______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________

O o P p Q q R r S s T t U u

_______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

_______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________

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_______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________

V v W w X x Y y Z z

_______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________

112

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NOT FOR DUPLCATION

_______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________


QUICK REFERENCE GUIDE Pronouns

Contractions

Days of the week

I

my

I am

I’m

I’m not

Sunday

you

your

you are

you’re

you aren’t

Monday

he

his

he is

he’s

he isn’t

Tuesday

she

her

she is

she’s

she isn’t

Wednesday

they

their

they are

they’re

they aren’t

Thursday Friday Saturday

Alabama - AL

Alaska - AK

Arizona - AZ

Arkansas - AR

California - CA

Colorado - CO

Connecticut - CT

Delaware - DE

Florida - FL

Georgia - GA

Hawaii - HI

Idaho - ID

Illinois - IL

Indiana - IN

Iowa - IA

Kansas - KS

Kentucky - KY

Louisiana - LA

Maine - ME

Maryland - MD

Massachusetts - MA

Michigan - MI

Minnesota - MN

Mississippi - MS

Missouri - MO

Montana - MT

Nebraska - NE

Nevada - NV

New Hampshire - NH New Jersey - NJ

New Mexico - NM

New York - NY

North Carolina - NC

North Dakota - ND

Ohio - OH

Oklahoma - OK

Oregon - OR

Pennsylvania - PA

Rhode Island - RI

South Carolina - SC

South Dakota - SD

Tennessee - TN

Texas - TX

Utah - UT

Vermont - VT

Virginia - VA

Washington - WA

West Virginia - WV

Wisconsin - WI

Wyoming - WY

intercambio.org/teachers

NOT FOR DUPLCATION

State names and abbreviations

113


VOCABULARY door notebook paper pen pencil student table teacher window Lesson 6 backpack bag between box cell phone in next to on purse wallet Lesson 7 apple banana blue bowl brown carrot grape green onion orange potato(es) purple red tomato(es) white yellow

Lesson 9 evening Friday Monday morning Saturday Sunday Thursday today tomorrow Tuesday Wednesday yesterday Lesson 10 clock eighteen eighty eleven fifteen fifty forty fourteen nineteen ninety one hundred seventeen seventy sixteen sixty thirteen thirty time twelve twenty Lesson 11 address apartment number city state

street zip code Lesson 13 across from bank bathroom bus stop classroom downstairs far here near on the corner store there upstairs Lesson 14 bills cents coins dime dollars eraser nickel notebook paper penny quarter Lesson 15 cold fine good happy hot hungry okay sad sick tired

114

Teacher Book INTRO

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Vocabulary Lesson 1 circle close cross out listen name open point to repeat sit down stand up touch underline write Lesson 2 first name he her his last name she Lesson 3 eight five four nine one seven six ten three two zero Lesson 5 board book box chair


Aa Bb Cc Dd Ee Ff Gg Hh Ii Jj Kk Ll Mm Nn Oo Pp Qq Rr Ss Tt Uu Vv Ww Xx Yy Zz

__________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________


Confidence and Connections was developed by Intercambio Uniting Communities to offer practical English language acquisition for adults. The series was designed for both 1-on-1 and group learning environments. The hallmark of this curriculum is its unique focus on building confidence and personal connections between students and teacher. Each lesson culminates with a Connect with Conversation activity, providing students a safe place to practice speaking English while getting to know their fellow students and teacher. In addition, every lesson includes a pronunciation exercise to help students learn and practice the many sounds and rhythm of the language. There are 2 books per level, L (left) and R (right), enabling shorter completion cycles per level. Completing a book builds student confidence and allows a shorter waiting period for a returning student. Together these two books, L and R, complete a level and you can begin with either one. Build your community by teaching and learning English The Intercambio Way™.

Intro to Confidence and Connections is for adult students with virtually no English language skills and/or come from languages with a different alphabet. Repeat the Intro book until your student is ready for level 1.

Intercambio is a 501 (c) 3 nonprofit organization founded in 2001. In addition to our successful and continually advancing program in Boulder Colorado, we support and share best practices with organizations across the country that use our curriculum, training and resources. We are committed to learning from everyone. Please share ideas or feedback with us at www.intercambio.org/comments $18.00 ISBN 978-1-947639-26-3

51800

www.intercambio.org • resources@intercambio.org 9 781947 639263


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