Total: 568 Digital Lessons
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Shortening Relative Clauses: A Free ESL Lesson Plan

Shortening Relative Clauses: The Basics This lesson focuses on reducing subject relative clauses as well as shortening relative pronouns. An example of reducing a subject relative clause might be removing “who is” from the sentence, “the man who is standing over there.” In that example Relative pronouns include that, which, who, whom, what, and whose. An example might be “He doesn’t like the shirt that I bought.” In defining relative clauses, when the relative pronoun (that) is the object of the clause (I bought)we can drop the relative pronoun.

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How To Teach Relative Clauses: An ESL Lesson Plan

How to Teach a Relative Clause Each teacher knows that first, students must master the construction of basic sentences. Basic sentences provide the building block for communication. For example, a student might write, “This is a dog.” A relative clause or adjective clause can be joined together to give more information about something. That is to say, it gives more information about the noun. As an example, the student might write, “This is a dog that is eating a bone.” To introduce a relative clause, include a relative pronoun (such as who, that, whose) or a relative adverb (when, where, why).

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The Shapes of a Story

Students will engage in multiple forms of media to learn about the most popular structures of modern storytelling.

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Mariana Trench

This is a short presentation on the Mariana Trench

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Candy Math Final

Counting candies and identifying colors

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Sequencing with The Very Hungry Caterpillar.

Sequencing Patterns through Reading

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IOA End Punctuation game 1-4 (W.1.11.b Use end punctuation for sentences.)

(W.1.11.b Use end punctuation for sentences.)

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Some And Any – Free ESL Lesson Plan

When should you teach the Some and Any lesson? The lesson suits CEFR A2 (WIDA: Emerging) students and can be taught to children, teenagers, and adults. Some recommended prerequisites to this lesson are the use of a/an, singular/plural regular nouns, and countable and uncountable nouns. If you want additional lesson plans and support, including teachers’ notes, be sure to register for a free Off2Class account.

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Candy Math

Counting candies and identifying colors

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