Wednesday, July 18, 2018

https://drive.google.com/open?id=1f_q2fpEVBpxQ_VkKNJU2FWtlRTlz9jrS

https://drive.google.com/open?id=1f_q2fpEVBpxQ_VkKNJU2FWtlRTlz9jrS
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1f_q2fpEVBpxQ_VkKNJU2FWtlRTlz9jrS

2 comments:

  1. Hi Swim Finn
    Thanks for uploading your week 3 materials. You’ve chosen a good topic because everybody can talk about abilities and this language is important to learn.

    Nice warmer – great photos.
    Uusally we teach ‘I can …’ before we teach ‘Can you …?’ I don’t think it matters that you have it the other way around but I think it would help if you had a modelo n the page as an example. E.g. Can you swim? Yes,I can. / No, I can’t.

    Be consistent with punctuation (look at the instructions in 1. And 2.)

    Ex 2. Nice!

    Ex. 3 Here you teach how to form the question explicitly – but students were forming the question in Ex. 1. I’m not sure this matters – but you might like to rethink your approach to Ex 1. E.g. Tell a partner which of tehse things you can or can’t do.
    Ex 3 is a good task to get studnets speaking and practising the language.
    In the table – I’d change the first column a bit and instead of
    My partner can / can’t draw a square and a circle at the same time.
    Just have
    Draw a square and a circle at the same time.
    You already have the Yes/No column so the extra bit is not necessary.
    OR
    You could eliminate the Yes/No column and just circle can or can’t.

    Really great statememts – motivating and fun.

    Pron section and Reading section are great. I also like the wrap up.
    I particularly like the way you finish off with this short self-reflection task. Well done! (I think this is the frst time I’ve seen it on this course).

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  2. Katherine Bilsborough thank you for the feedback!

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