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How To Proceed: Introduce An Action

This document provides 10 steps to introduce and teach the present simple tense to students of English. It covers introducing the tense in the first, second, and third person singular and plural. It also covers the present simple in affirmative, negative, and question forms. Each step builds upon the previous ones with examples and exercises for students. The overall goal is to provide a comprehensive lesson plan to teach all aspects of the present simple tense through examples, questions, and practice exercises.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
33 views

How To Proceed: Introduce An Action

This document provides 10 steps to introduce and teach the present simple tense to students of English. It covers introducing the tense in the first, second, and third person singular and plural. It also covers the present simple in affirmative, negative, and question forms. Each step builds upon the previous ones with examples and exercises for students. The overall goal is to provide a comprehensive lesson plan to teach all aspects of the present simple tense through examples, questions, and practice exercises.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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How To Proceed

1. 1
Introduce an action
Pick up a newspaper and pretend to read it. Ask your students what you're doing. They’ll say,
“You’re reading a newspaper.”
T: “What newspaper am I reading?”
S: “You’re reading The New York Times.”

2. 2
Introduce Present Simple - First person singular
Tell your students, “I read The New York Times every day.” Make a list of the things you do every
day as a routine:

o I have breakfast at 7.
o I go to work at 9.
o I have lunch at 12.
o I go home at 5.
o I watch TV before dinner.

Make sure your students understand that you do this on a daily or weekly basis; these are habitual
actions. Go around the class and have students tell you what they do everyday or what some of
their habits are. They should give more examples in the first person singular.

3. 3
Introduce Present Simple – Second person singular
Say: “I read the New York Times. Sarah, you read USA Today”. Go around the class giving
examples like, “I go to work at 9. You go to school.” Face each of your students and state a
general truth:
T: “John, you live in Queens.”
John (to teacher): “You live in Queens, too.”
T: “Sally, you have a dog.”
Sally (to teacher): “You have a cat”.
Split your students up into pairs and have them give each other statements in the second person
singular.
4. 4
Introduce Present Simple – Third person singular
Say: “I read the New York Times. Sarah reads USA Today”. Make sure students notice that you’ve
added the s for the third person singular. Give more examples with other students, and introduce
the irregular verbs: John goes to work at 8. Sally has lunch at 1. Students provide more examples
from the information previously shared by their classmates.

5. 5
Do the same for the plural persons
Ask who lives in Queens and ask them to stand up. Then point to yourself and those standing and
say: “We live in Queens.” Ask who lives in the Bronx and ask them to stand up. Address those who
are standing and say: “You live in the Bronx”. Point to your group and say, “We live in Queens”.
Ask who lives in Manhattan and point to that group and say: “They live in Manhattan.”

6. 6
Introduce Present Simple – Negative
Make a statement in the affirmative, then make one in negative with don’t.
T: I live in Queens, I don’t live in the Bronx.
Ask students to do the same presenting first an affirmative, then a negative. Practice all persons
except the third person singular.

7. 7
Introduce Present Simple – Negative (third person singular)
Make a statement about a student, then make one in negative form using doesn’t.
T: Alex reads the New York Times. He doesn't read USA Today.
Ask students to do the same by using the information previously shared by their classmates.

8. 8
Introduce Present Simple – Questions
Make a statement about yourself. Then ask a student a question to introduce do.
T: I walk to school. John, do you walk to school?
Walk around the classroom asking students questions and teaching them to answer, “Yes, I do” or
“No, I don't”. Do the same for all persons except third person singular.

9. 9
Introduce Present Simple – Questions (third person singular)
Contrast students’ habits. Make a statement about one, then ask about another student:
T: John walks to school. Does Sarah walk to school?
Walk around the classroom asking questions with does, and teach students to answer “Yes, he
does” “No, he doesn’t”.

10. q
Expand and practice: Present Simple Excercises.
Practice all persons and forms. Ask open-ended questions. Introduce more verbs.
Where do you live?
Where does she work?
How many languages do you speak?
Now’s also a great time consolidate everything that they’ve learned about the Present Simple; this
is a great worksheet that will help them focus on form.

Obviously, you don't have to follow all of these steps in one single lesson; you can spread them over the
course of a week to make sure your students have plenty of time to practice the Present
Simple exercises in all its forms. There are literally hundreds of Present Simple worksheets and lessons
plans available at BusyTeacher.org that you can use for in-class activities or give to your students for
homework for extended practice. Be sure to check them out!
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