English Lesson Plans For Grade 9: Lessons in This Section
English Lesson Plans For Grade 9: Lessons in This Section
English Lesson Plans For Grade 9: Lessons in This Section
for Grade 9
Lessons in this section
9.1
254
9.2
259
9.3
263
9.4
266
271
9.1
Objectives
Grade 9 curriculum
standards 5.5, 5.2, 4.3,
4.4, 4.5
Presentation
Resources
OHT 9.1a
Vocabulary
(to) go bankrupt
(to) close down
(to) threaten
(to) thrive
savings
Students say
no money
no farms
no shops,
cinemas, cafes
Because the farms go bankrupt, the local shops, cinemas, and cafes
close down. (There arent enough customers.)
no jobs and
nothing to do
Because the shops, cinemas and cafes close down, there are no jobs
and theres nothing to do.
no young people
Because there are no jobs and nothing to do, the young people leave
the village and go to the big city.
no savings
no visits home
Because they have no savings, they dont go back home to the village
to visit their families.
no help for
the old
Because they dont visit, theres no help or support for the old people.
no community
Because theres no support for the old, the community breaks up.
no village life
Elicit positive and negative sentences with the second conditional through the
questions below. Get students to practise saying the sentences aloud, correct
pronunciation and then write the model sentences on the board.
Example question:
Model sentence:
Get students to copy the model sentences into their exercise books.
Concept check
Practice
Resources
Teachers resource 9.1a
Does the verb after if look like a past tense verb? Yes But is it? No
Which sentence is more real, more likely to happen: If there are jobs
young people will stay or If there were jobs, young people would stay?
The first sentence
So when do we use this second type of conditional? When things are unlikely
/ unreal / wished for / hypothetical future
Can we use might instead of would? Yes How about could? Yes Can we use
could in the if clause too? Yes Give me an example with if / borrow /
money / turn their farm into a guest house. If they could borrow the money,
theyd turn their farm into a guest house.
They would turn their farm into a guest house or Theyd turn their
farm into a guest house? Wheres the stress, on would or on turn? (on
the modal verb or the main verb?) On turn/on the main verb.
Use the word cues on the board to create a chain of second conditional sentences.
Practise as a whole class and then in pairs.
Word cue
Students say
no money
no farms
no shops, cinemas,
cafes
no young people
Chain game
What would happen if they opened a water park near the village?
Thered be a lot of new jobs.
There might be a water shortage.
There wouldnt be enough water for the farmers.
They could sell their land to the water park company.
Etc.
Put students in groups of four or five and get them to sit in a circle. Give each
group a set of question cards (prepared from teachers resource 9.1a). The first
student in each group turns over a question card and answers it with a full second
conditional sentence.
Card 1
What would happen if the
water park used up all the
water?
The second student takes the would clause, turns it into an if clause and makes a
new sentence. The third student in the circle transforms the new sentence in the
same way, and the chain continues until the idea and its hypothetical consequences
are exhausted. Then the group turns over a new card and the process is repeated,
starting with the second student.
Card 1
What would happen if the
water park used up all the
water?
Card 2
What would happen if the
farmers didnt want to sell
their land to the water park
developers?
Monitor and correct for accuracy. Input ideas into the chain if any of the groups or
individuals within the group seem stuck.
Production
Resources
OHTs 9.1b, 9.1c
Teachers resource 9.1b
Feedback
Roleplay
Using OHTs 9.1b and 9.1c, tell the class that they are preparing for a village
meeting to decide whether they want a water park to be built in their village or not.
Some of them think its a good idea, some disagree, and some are not sure. Give
out role cards (prepared from teachers resource 9.1b) and get students to
individually think about their role and prepare what they are going to say. Put
students with the same roles in pairs or small groups and get them to share ideas
and work together to build up as many things to say as possible to support their
position. Then get them to practise presenting their point of view to each other,
using a variety of arguments and examples. When they are ready, put students into
groups of ten, so that each of the ten roles is represented in each group. Get the
Mayor to chair the meeting. Get the developer to begin by presenting the plan for
the proposed water park. Remind them to use their second conditionals. Ensure
each student expresses his or her point of view clearly, according to role, argues
the case and tries hard to persuade the group. Encourage other villagers to agree or
disagree, and question ideas, using known structures. Monitor for clarity of
argument, ability to defend a position, ability to speak at length as well as for
accuracy. Note examples of good ideas and common errors to use for the feedback
session without interrupting the flow of the roleplay. Use the roleplay
diagnostically to note down how much further practice students need in expressing
a point of view, using persuasive language, and speaking strategies for group
discussions. When everyone has had their say, get each group to vote for or against
the water park proposal.
Find out how many of the classroom villages voted to build a water park and how
many voted against and get them to say why. Use your record of good ideas to
elicit from individual students specific arguments. Deal with the most common
spoken errors orally.
9.2
Objectives
Grade 9 curriculum
standards 7.6, 7.1, 5.5
Pre-reading
Resources
Internet pictures
Worksheet 9.2a
Vocabulary
ecology
eco-groups
a building boom
a shortage
a rubbish tip
Use a picture of Tiger Woods (from any image archive on the Internet e.g. Yahoo
Images, or via Google) or anyone playing golf to introduce the topic of golf and
how all over the world people are building golf courses. Talk about environment
versus golf tourism and link the discussion to the previous lesson on village versus
water park. Pre-teach the vocabulary, relating the new words to the topic.
Open prediction
Elicit one or two ideas from the whole class about what the negative effects of
building golf courses might be. Write one of their examples on the board.
It uses up too much land.
Get students to copy it. If they want to say, Its bad for the environment, tell them
this is too general they have to predict specifically how its bad for the
environment. Get students to write their own list of three negative effects that they
think will be mentioned in the text they are about to read. Put students into groups
of four and get them to share ideas and build a larger list from their individual lists.
Then hand out worksheet 9.2a and get them to quickly read it and check off which
of their predictions were correct.
While reading
Resources
Worksheet 9.2b
Comprehension exercises
Hand out worksheet 9.2b. Get students to find examples from the text to support
the dangers of golf and the benefits of golf (exercise Reading for the main ideas).
Tell them to summarise each example and write it in note form in the table. Get
them to fill in the line number in the text where the example came from.
Answer key
Reading for the main ideas
The dangers of golf
Line
Line
fish die
89
56, 26
21
3, 13
wildlife returns
23
15
16
25
27
Check students answers through monitoring, not in front of the whole class.
Get students to read the text another time and then do the remaining exercises on
worksheet 9.2b. Have students work individually and then compare/discuss their
answers with a partner. Monitor and guide students towards the right answers by
pointing to specific parts of the text. Get them to reference their own answers from
the text in this way too, quoting specific line numbers where possible. Correct
answers through monitoring, not in front of the whole class.
Answer key
Reading for facts
1
Golf has become fashionable because Tiger Woods is young and fun to watch, so
thousands of people now want to play golf before it was a game only for the old and
rich.
Its almost a desert so even more water is needed to keep the grass alive.
(Line 4)
(Line 8)
(Line 14)
(Line 15)
(Line 15)
Fact
9
9
Not clear
Opinion
Sum up these exercises in front of the whole class by pointing out any common
misunderstandings, problems or omissions only.
Text analysis
Dangers of golf
Benefits of golf
3
4
title
9?
3 benefits; 7 dangers.
The opening paragraph proposes the point of view, the closing paragraph repeats that
point of view for emphasis. The middle paragraphs give the arguments for and against.
The for and against examples are both mentioned but not balanced because the
audience has to be persuaded to choose one rather than the other.
It might look too opinionated and put readers off. The slightly unclear for-or-against
feeling because of the question mark and the play with words (green as in golf course,
green as in environmentally friendly) entice and persuade the reader to read on.
(a) News last week , use of the present perfect for things that have just happened,
use of the present continuous for things that are happening now;
(b) Clint Eastwood is battling , hotting up, Imagine then ,
thrown off perfectly good farmland , what was once is now the playground of
businessmen and politicians.
Post-reading
Resources
Worksheet 9.2b
The title (see above), talking about famous people such as Clint Eastwood and Tiger
Woods, the idea that this problem is close to home not just in South East Asia the
article is written for Europeans and Americans: it starts with whats happening in
America and says Even in places like Spain
Get students to look at the sentence stubs in the exercise Grammar practice on
worksheet 9.2b. Elicit a few completed sentences from the whole class.
If Paul Allen preferred fishing to golf, there wouldnt be a water problem / the
fish would survive / hed still be killing fish.
If Tiger Woods werent so popular, there wouldnt be a golf course building
boom
Put students into pairs and have them hypothesise on the rest of the sentence stubs.
This is a speaking exercise; they dont have to write anything down although
writing out their ideas could be set for homework or follow up. Remind them to
use their second conditionals because its an unreal future. Monitor and correct
for accuracy.
Feedback
Ask students if they were persuaded that golf is a danger to the environment. Get
them to give you their reasons why or why not.
Summary for students
In the lesson about the water park development, you practised expressing a point of
view and you had a go at persuading your friends to agree with it. In this lesson,
weve read a persuasive text about why golf is dangerous for the environment.
Weve looked at some of the features of a persuasive text. They are:
an opening statement which states the writers point of view and a closing
statement that reinforces it;
a lot of statements which are opinion rather than fact, but enough facts to make
the argument believable.
You have seen persuasive texts in advertisements before. Persuasive texts, like this
one, are also written about current events and controversial issues. Some
persuasive texts are stronger than others the language of persuasion in
advertisements is usually stronger than in journalistic articles. This one is not very
strong because it is more journalistic the writer is selling an idea rather than a
product so the message is not as direct as in an advertisement.
Unless youre motivated by the topic, you wont get involved. The text uses certain
language to hook you in this case playing with words in the title, using tenses
for immediacy, quoting famous people, using dramatic language, bringing the issue
home to the reader.
In the next lesson, were going to have a go at writing our own persuasive texts.
9.3
Objectives
Grade 9 curriculum
standards 9.4, 5.5
Pre-writing
Resources
Worksheet 9.3a
OHT 9.3a
Network
As a continuation of the two previous lessons, introduce the proposal that some
water park developers want to build a new water park near the school. In pairs, get
students to brainstorm advantages and disadvantages of this. Have students refer to
the last two lessons for ideas. Put a network like the one below on the board and
get students to share their ideas and write them as notes on the board.
Jobs
Environment
Should we
allow a water
park?
young
people
stay
Good
covers rubbish tips
new trees, parks, grass
wild life increases
Bad
water shortages
people lose their land
old buildings destroyed
chemicals and pollutants
Culture
inappropriate
only for tourists
Guided writing
Tell students they are going to write a letter to their urban development council,
supporting the idea of building a water park near the school. Their job is to
persuade the councillors to build the park. Elicit from them the features of a
persuasive text:
the conclusion should reinforce the point of view in the opening statement.
Hand out worksheet 9.3a and get students to recognise the features of a persuasive
text through the category headings in the table. During steps 15 below, monitor,
point out errors, provide new vocabulary and get students to self correct and
redraft.
1
Elicit an opening statement to the letter that says students support the water park.
Refine the statement and write it on the board. Get students to copy it into the
table.
We support the plan to build a new water park near our school because it would
provide jobs and be good for the environment.
2
Get students to choose from the network three supporting ideas and one objection.
Get them to copy the notes or key phrases from the board into the left-hand column
of worksheet 9.3a. Elicit suggestions for a counter-argument for the objection and
get them to fill in the counter-objection box in the left-hand column.
Use salt water from the sea
3
Divide the class into groups of eight and subdivide the eight into four sets of pairs.
Assign each pair to work on one idea for the letter. (Objection and counterobjection count as one idea.) Get pairs to transform the notes into second
conditional statements and write their sentences in the middle column of the table.
If we allowed the water park to be built, it would provide jobs for young people
and stop them from leaving the area.
If it were built on top of the rubbish tip, it would make good use of that land.
4
Get students to add an example, evidence or result to their statement and fill in
their section of the third column.
As well as jobs in building the water park, there would be jobs for lifeguards,
sales assistants, waiters and administration staff.
This has been done before with building golf courses in the UK and the USA.
5
Put students into groups of four with one representative of each idea in each group.
Get them to dictate their sentences to each other and complete the whole table.
Have them decide on the order the ideas should be presented in the letter. Get them
to brainstorm a conclusion.
We should go ahead with the plans. The whole community will benefit.
Show students OHT 9.3a and get students to compare or improve their own from
it.
While writing
Resources
Worksheet 9.3b
Writing frame
Tell students they are now ready to write their persuasive letter to the head of the
Urban Development Council. Hand out worksheet 9.3b. Get students to look at the
skeleton letter and identify which phrases which:
Working individually, get students to transfer their sentences from their writing
plan in worksheet 9.3a to the context of a letter using the writing frame in
worksheet 9.3b.
Monitor for accuracy and provide any vocabulary, or sentence structures as
necessary.
Post-writing
Resources
OHT 9.3b
Show students the letter on OHT 9.3b. Point out the underlined words where you
have refined the sentences with better vocabulary or formal written constructions.
Get students to improve their letters from it.
Get students to go through the whole process again, this time to write a letter
persuading the Urban Development Council not to build the water park. Tell
students to complete the letter for homework and hand it in to you on an agreed
date.
Feedback
9.4
Objectives
Grade 9 curriculum
standards 3.1, 3.2, 3.3,
5.2, 5.3
Pre-listening
Resources
Worksheet 9.4a
Tape or tape script 9.4
Vocabulary
(to) decorate / redecorate
(to) do (it) up
(to) see (it) through
interior design
taste (in)
style
Listening to an argument:
painting Johns room
Listen and understand two people arguing; one trying to persuade, the other not
being convinced.
True?
John wants to borrow money from his mother to paint his room.
John wants to paint the room orange.
At the moment, he doesnt spend a lot of time in the room.
While
listening
Resources
Worksheet 9.4a
Ordering
Answer key
Vocabulary
Order
Order
interior design
12
personal style
a rubbish tip
(to) decorate
talent
11
10
appropriate colours
Pyramid
Get students to recall the main ideas or themes behind the arguments John uses to
persuade his mother and the objections she uses. Have them work individually,
then share ideas in pairs. Get them to check their list by looking at the middle
column (Topic) of the table in exercise 3, worksheet 9.4a. Get them to listen to the
conversation a third time but now working in pairs with A listening for Mums
objections, and B listening for Johns arguments. Get students to summarise each
argument or objection, picking out key phrases and writing notes in the appropriate
columns in the table (A fills in the left-hand column, B fills in the right-hand
column). They work individually, then in pairs and then groups, remembering
details and building up their information from what others have remembered and
written in the table. Let them listen to tape 9.4 one more time to check answers and
fill in any missing information.
Answer key
Proposal: John would like to redecorate his room in the summer holidays
Mums objections
Topic
Money
Neglect
Style
Interest
Care,
Completion
Post-listening
Resources
Worksheets 9.4a, 9.4b
Get students to use the notes theyve made for John in worksheet 9.4a exercise 3
to prepare a persuasive speech, as if they were John. Elicit the structure they used
for their persuasive letters in Lesson 9.3. Hand out worksheet 9.4b and get them to
identify the same features in this speaking frame: the opening statement, the logical
sequence of arguments supported with examples or evidence or a result, anticipated
objections which are then refuted and a re-expression of their point of view in a
closing statement. Ask the following eliciting questions to emphasise the language
they should use.
Get students to fill in the speaking frame with notes only. Dont let them write
whole sentences or their speech will simply become a reading-aloud exercise and
they will loose any sense of directness or persuasion. Get them to rehearse their
presentations aloud in small groups, taking it in turns to be John. Listeners can use
Mums arguments to prompt speakers when they falter.
What about the cost?
How can I be sure youll finish off the job properly?
Monitor, make suggestions, take notes of the most common errors but dont
interrupt the flow of the presentations.
Feedback
anticipating the listeners objections and building these into your argument
with phrases like before you say anything, let me explain, you may think, dont
jump to any conclusions, dont worry that;
using connectives such as now, at the moment, as you know, so, finally.
You need more practice in producing persuasive texts. Your next assignment will
be to write a letter to your own parents, persuading them to give you permission to
redecorate your bedroom, turning the speaking frame into a writing frame.
Tape script
9.4
John:
Mum?
Mum:
John:
You know you said were not going away this summer? Well, I
was thinking
Mum:
Im listening. Go on.
John:
Mum:
John:
No it wont, Mum. I can buy the paint and stuff from the hardware
store. They usually have a sale on there. It wont come to much.
Mum:
John:
Mum:
John:
I think its never been the way I want it to be thats why Ive
never looked after it before. Its all from you your colours, your
choice of furniture, your taste. I want it to be me. If you let me do
it up my way, Ill want to keep it clean and tidy, youll see.
Mum:
Thats what you say now, but I know you. Itll look like a rubbish
tip in no time!
John:
Mum:
Huh! So now youre an interior designer, are you? I dont see you
getting good marks for your art and design classes.
John:
Mum, thats not fair. Ive always been interested in interior design.
Remember that school project I did on Icons of twentieth-century
design? Even Dad thought that was good. And youve always said
I have great taste in the clothes I buy.
Mum:
But your taste changes all the time! I cant let you go and paint the
ceilings and walls orange, just because its the in colour this year.
When you redecorate, you really have to use neutral shades. You
have to choose appropriate colours because youre going to have to
live with those colours for a long time.
John:
No-one said I was going to paint it bright orange, Mum. Thats just
you jumping to conclusions again. I know the colours should blend
in. I was going to go for black and white actually.
Mum:
Why go to all that trouble to make it look nice when you never
spend any time in your room anyway?
John:
Maybe if it did look nice Id want to spend more time there. Maybe
if I really thought it was my room
Mum:
No, John. Its just going to be way too expensive and having spent
all that money youll give up half-way. I know you!
John:
Mum!
Mum:
Thats right. Youll get bored. Or youll spill paint all over the
furniture. Paintings an art. It takes talent as well as practice, and it
always takes much longer than you think. I can see it now. Ill be
the one who ends up doing all the work! I just dont have the time
or the energy for this right now.
John:
Thats not fair Mum. I wouldnt ask you unless I was prepared to
see it through. Like I said, Ill pay for it with my own money and
of course Ill finish it off properly. Look! Ive got all that spare
time in the holidays to do it in, especially if were not going away
anywhere. You wont have to do a thing. Youll see!
Mum:
No, John.
John:
Mum!
Mum:
I said No!
John:
Mum: