Why should I write a plan? The best option is always to be prepared. Once you have prepared your lesson you will feel much more confident walking into the classroom and you will soon be able to relax.

Author
Jo Bertrand

Points to consider when writing the plan

  1. What is the main topic of the lesson? If the activities in the lesson have a logical link then the learners will be able to follow you and the lesson, more easily.
  2. How can I arouse their interest? Begin the lesson by involving the children straight away. Show them a picture, photo or object to capture their attention and indicate which topic the lesson is based on.
  3. How can I challenge them? Every learner, whatever their age or level needs to be challenged. If there's no challenge then there's no learning. If there's no learning, there's no motivation. Think about what they already know and make sure your lesson isn't just teaching them the same thing.
  4. How much should I review what they've already done? Having said you should challenge them, you can and should review previous words and work in general. Teaching a word one lesson doesn't mean that all the learners have actually learnt it for the next. Incorporate previously taught language in new situations to give the learners more practice.
  5. What are the objectives of the lesson? It's vital to always think about 'why' they are doing an activity, game or song. Everything on your plan should be educational. If you don't know what an activity is teaching the learners then take it off your plan.
  6. What vocabulary do I want to teach them? If you prepare beforehand exactly what words you are going to concentrate on and how you are going to present them you will be better equipped to explain them clearly to the children.
  7. How can I explain the activities? You should prepare, at least mentally, how you are going to explain each activity. Explanations should be short, clear and visual. Don't forget to demonstrate and check their understanding by getting one or two of them to demonstrate for you. Also decide how you are going to write on the board. You can draw a diagram on your plan to remind you so that it's clearer for the learners.
  8. How much detail do I need on my plan? If you're working from a book then don't forget page numbers. As a guideline, imagine that someone else has to cover your class. They should be able to read your plan and teach your lesson.
  9. What order should I teach the activities in? As a very general rule you can start with an introduction to the lesson, introduce the new language, give the children some controlled practice and move onto freer practice. Finally review what they've done and get feedback from the children themselves about what they did.
  10. What problems might I have? If you're not sure if an activity will work; if you think it's too hard or too long then take time before the lesson, at the planning stage, to think about how to resolve any problems that could arise. Problems could be activity related or time-table related, student related or even teacher-related. Taking those extra minutes when planning to think about possible solutions could avoid you having a disastrous lesson.

Extra tips

  • Have a lesson plan template that you can just fill in and print off.
  • Have your plan to hand at all times during the lesson.
  • Tick the activities that worked well as you do them.
  • Make any extra comments at the end of the lesson about what worked and what didn't to help you plan your next lesson.
  • Plan a series of lessons that are linked to the same theme to have coherence to your lessons.
  • Have extra activities ready just in case they finish early. This can be for both mid-lesson for quick finishers or at the end of the lesson if your plan is shorter than you imagined.
  • Remember to allow time for preparation, action and reviewing.
  • An example of controlled practice is when you provide sentences with missing words. The learners need to fill in the gap to talk to their partner and in this way everyone produces similar language. Freer practice is when you set up the situation, for example meeting someone new, and you let the children decide on their own role-play language using what they know and what they have recently learnt. You will probably do more 'freer practice' with older primary learners than the younger ones who have limited language at their disposal.

Check-list of what to include

  • Materials
  • Objectives
  • Procedures
  • Estimated time for each activity
  • Explanations
  • Board work
  • Page numbers (if working from a text book)
  • Extra activities
  • Follow-on activities
  • Lesson evaluation – what you would do differently next time or what went well

Example lesson plan

Group: CM2
Date: 02/11/07
Lesson: 4
Topic: My favourite food
Objectives
1. By the end of the lesson learners will be able to say what their favourite food is.
2. Learners will be introduced to nouns; 'lettuce, cucumber, …
3. Learners will review verbs 'eat', 'like'…
Materials
1. A3 paper (one per table)
2. Flashcards
3. Three tennis balls
4. Plastic food
Procedures   Time
Introduction Place a piece of plastic food on each table before the lesson. Brainstorm names of food from each table. Get other tables to help if need be. Introduce new words using plastic food.  

Stage 1

I like

I don't like

Activity 1 5-10 mins
  Activity 2  

Stage 2

Asking Questions

Activity 1  
  Activity2  

Stage 3

My favourite food is .....

Activity 1  
  Activity 2  
Extra activities    
Follow up and homework    
Lesson evaluation    

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 07/26/2022 - 11:39

Hi Lesiak,

Good point, but nothing stays still so the lessons we teach don't either ( we use different materials, technology, the children have different needs, the curriculum changes etc) so I think we can always benefit from thinking through the lesson, 'planning it' - even 'in your head'. What do others here think?

Anne

TeachingEnglish team

Submitted by Lesiak on Mon, 07/25/2022 - 14:35

It’s really cool to have a plan of the lesson when you are a young teacher and you need some kind like a guide of the lesson. I also agree that a teacher should prepare for the lesson. But do you really need a plan when you have been working with children for 20 years. All the material is in your head, you just need equipment and nothing else.

Submitted by Petitemolly on Thu, 03/14/2019 - 17:00

Thanks very much for this article. As a New teacher,I found it very useful and I am going to apply all these tips !

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