Lesson Plan - Homes and Furniture PDF
Lesson Plan - Homes and Furniture PDF
Lesson Plan - Homes and Furniture PDF
Aims
To practise (depending on stages chosen):
vocabulary: homes, rooms, furniture, animals, animal homes
structure: prepositions of place
curricular work: green houses
skills: integrated skills (listening, speaking, reading, writing)
Age group
Primary
Level
A1
Time
90 minutes approximately (depending on stages chosen)
Materials
Please note: to access the downloadable worksheets, you need to log in separately to LearnEnglish Kids.
1. Game: Rooms hangman
http://learnenglishkids.britishcouncil.org/en/word-games/hangman/rooms
2. Song, activity sheet, answers and lyrics: Animal house
http://learnenglishkids.britishcouncil.org/en/songs/animal-house
3. Song, activity sheet, answers and lyrics: The ballad of Lisa the lemur
http://learnenglishkids.britishcouncil.org/en/songs/the-ballad-lisa-the-lemur
4. Grammar video, activity sheet, answers and transcript: Heros adventure
http://learnenglishkids.britishcouncil.org/en/grammar-videos/heros-adventure
5. Game: Bedroom paint it
http://learnenglishkids.britishcouncil.org/en/word-games/paint-it/bedroom
6. Game: Bedroom label the picture
http://learnenglishkids.britishcouncil.org/en/word-games/label-the-picture/bedroom
7. Game: Furniture paint the words
http://learnenglishkids.britishcouncil.org/en/word-games/paint-the-words/furniture
8. Game: Furniture balloon burst spelling
http://learnenglishkids.britishcouncil.org/en/word-games/balloon-burst/furniture
Lesson plan
For a complete list of all Homes and furniture content on LearnEnglish Kids, click here:
http://learnenglishkids.britishcouncil.org/en/category/topics/homes-and-furniture
Introduction
In this lesson, students will be introduced to or review vocabulary for homes, rooms and furniture. They will
sing a song and either invent an animal house or design a poster of various animal homes. Then they will
watch a grammar video and play games to focus on prepositions of place and items of furniture. Finally
they will do a project inventing their ideal room or creating a class house!
Procedure
1. Introduce the Draw a picture of a house on the board. Depending on the level of your students,
topic (5 mins) elicit what students know about houses, for example the parts (roof, windows, etc.)
or the rooms.
Ask students to talk about where they live, for example is it a house or a flat, how
many rooms, what floor, etc.
If your students are familiar with the rooms of the house, you might like to play the
rooms hangman game with your students to review and practise them.
2. Song for Draw an animal inside the house you drew previously on the board. Tell students
younger they are going to listen to a song about lots of animals in a house!
learners (2030 Brainstorm lots of different animals on the board. Play the Animal house song and
mins) ask students to listen and see if any of the animals that were brainstormed on the
board are mentioned in the song. After listening, check answers and see if students
can tell you any more animals that were in the song.
Play the song again and ask students to complete exercise 1 of the activity sheet:
order the animals. As you check answers, practise the names of the animals.
Depending on your students, you could complete exercise 2 of the activity sheet
together as a class or put students in pairs to work together. Encourage them to use
alliteration to help them! As you check answers, practise singing the lines together.
Now play the song again and encourage students to sing along! You might like to
practise the chorus beforehand as well.
Lesson plan
As a follow-up activity, ask students to think of some more animals which could be in
the animal house. They can draw pictures and write sentences. If students can,
encourage them to use alliteration in their sentences. Students can then tell the class
about the animals in their animal house, or you could make a class display, or do a
mingle activity, such as a survey: each student could be assigned a room, e.g.
kitchen, and survey the other students about what animals are in each students
kitchen, then report back.
3. Song for older Show students a picture of a lemur do they know what it is? Do they know anything
learners (2030 about lemurs, for example where they live? Tell them that lemurs live in trees, and
mins) they are going to listen to a song about a family of lemurs and their home.
Ask students to listen to The ballad of Lisa the lemur and decide what the problem
is for the lemur family in the song. After listening, discuss students ideas.
Ask students to try to complete exercise 2 of the activity sheet. Play the song again
to help them finish and check their answers.
Do exercise 1 of the activity sheet as a class. Which animals live where? Display the
transcript on the board and focus only on the choruses. Practise singing the lines of
the choruses, then play the song and sing along.
As a follow-up activity, put students into groups and ask them to design a poster of
different animal houses. They could divide the poster into sections and draw and
write about where different animals live. Encourage them to think of other animals
and homes further to those in the song, for example birds and nests, or spiders and
webs, or rabbits and warrens.
4. Story (2030 Tell students they are going to watch a story about an animal that gets lost in a
mins) room. Ask them to watch the Heros adventure grammar video and tell you which
animal and which room.
After the video, elicit that it was a hamster lost in a bedroom. See if they can
remember the different places that Kitty looked, for example behind the bed and
under the wardrobe.
If you would like to focus on prepositions of place, try exercise 2 of the activity sheet
for the video together with your students. For further practice, they can also do
exercise 3 or 4. Then play the game described in exercise 5. Students can play in
pairs, A and B. You could ask the B students to close their eyes or stand outside
while the A students secretly hide an object, for example a pencil or eraser. Then the
B students ask the A students questions to try to find it.
Ask students about the video again what other furniture did they notice in the
bedroom in the video? Now play a game to elicit and practise more bedroom
vocabulary. With younger students, you could use the bedroom paint it game, and
with older students, you can try the bedroom label the picture game. Play the game
together as a class.
As an extension activity, students can draw and colour a picture of their own
bedroom. Depending on your students, they could either just label the picture or
write sentences describing the room. Some students might like to present their
bedroom to the class or to their group.
Lesson plan
5. Vocabulary Write the names of other rooms in the house on the board. Now brainstorm with the
extension (15 class the typical furniture items you would find in those rooms. Prepare some large
mins) pictures of typical rooms in advance to help elicit vocabulary. Stick them on the
board and label the pictures as they tell you the words.
You could also prepare small picture cards in advance of typical furniture items for
several different rooms. Students can work in pairs or small groups to arrange the
cards in groups according to what room they think they belong in. See what words
the students already know by asking them to tell you whats in each room, and help
them with the words they dont know.
If you also prepare small word cards of typical furniture items in advance, students
can then play a game of Pelmanism in pairs or small groups, trying to match the right
picture and word card.
Once your students are familiar with different items of furniture, you might like to play
the furniture paint the words game or the balloon burst spelling game with your
students to review and practise them.
6. Project 1 (20 A simple project to finish off work on this topic would be for students to plan their
mins) ideal room. They can choose any room in the house, for example the living room or
their bedroom, and they can draw a picture of what their ideal living room or
bedroom would look like and have in it. Brainstorm some ideas as a class first,
seeing if students can also explain or expand on their ideas.
After drawing their room, students can write about it, either just labelling or
describing it, or saying why they chose the things they did. Monitor and help as
necessary.
Finally, they can swap rooms with a partner and ask each other questions about the
room, e.g. Whats this? or Why is this next to the door? or Why did you choose
this? etc.
7. Project 2 (20 For a class project, students could design their own ideal house. Different groups of
30 mins) students can take one room each. As a class, decide how many floors and rooms
the house will have. Then draw a frontal cross-section view of the house on large
paper according to what is decided. Now cut some paper into the same size as the
rooms.
Brainstorm as a class the elements of the room students will need to decide on. You
can choose to limit these if appropriate. They could include furniture, windows and
doors, colour scheme, etc. With older students, you might like to encourage them to
make the house a green house and to plan, for example, solar panels on the roof or
energy-saving appliances, etc.
Once students have planned their room in their groups, they should use the piece of
paper that was cut to the same size in order to produce their room. Monitor and help
as necessary.
When every group has drawn their room, they can be stuck onto the large paper with
the cross-section of the house in the appropriate place. Once you have the finished
house, display it in the room and have each group present their room, saying what
they chose and why.
Lesson plan
8. Project 3 (20 If your students are very creative and like crafts, instead of designing an ideal house
30 mins) on paper, they can create it from boxes! The lids from the boxes that photocopier
paper usually comes in are ideal, or large shoeboxes. The lids or shoeboxes can be
glued or taped together to make a 3D frontal cross-section view of the house when
finished, so make sure students know what orientation to use.
As with the previous project, you should decide how many floors and rooms the
house will have. Brainstorm as a class the elements of the room students will need
to decide on. You can choose to limit these if appropriate. They could include
furniture, windows and doors, colour scheme, etc. With older students, you might like
to encourage them to make the house a green house and to plan, for example,
solar panels on the roof or energy-saving appliances, etc.
Once students have planned their room in their groups, they should take a box and
start creating. They can use coloured or decorated paper for wallpaper and carpet,
and they can either draw the furniture directly on the box or draw it on paper and cut
it out. If your students are able, they can cut an extra tab at the bottom of the picture,
fold it, and then glue the tab to the floor of the room. Otherwise, they can stick the
picture to the wall of the room. Alternatively, if you have lots of small craft items,
such as matchboxes, students could even create the furniture!
Once you have the finished house, display it in the room and have each group
present their room, saying what they chose and why.
9. Round off Students can sing the song again or, for fun, you could play the Clean and green or
activity (510 How green are you? games with them fun games where you have to either tidy up
mins) the bedroom by recycling or answer questions about being green in the house. As
you play, encourage students to talk about the bedroom or house, describing what
they see and saying where things are, e.g. the scrap paper on the desk.
10. Setting Students can watch the story or listen to the song again at home, or play any of the
homework (5 games. If your students are members of LearnEnglish Kids, they can leave a
mins) comment under the song or the story, giving their opinion of it or answering the
question under it. You could also ask them to bring in a photo of one of their rooms
at home to show the class and talk about next lesson.
Contributed by
Rachael Ro