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Teacher's Corner: Progressive Form
This month in the Teacher’s Corner, we will examine the progressive (continuous) verb form. In this week’s activity, students practice the present progressive while asking for directions.

The progressive is a useful but sometimes tricky verb form for students. This verb form allows English speakers to express actions in relation to time without reference to a specific time. For example, we can use the progressive to denote an action that is occurring now or will occur in the near future. The progressive can also be used to describe actions that occur over a long period of time, in the present, past, or future. This month we’ll examine how the progressive tense can be used with a variety of activities. These activities can help learners better understand how this flexible and functional verb form can be used to provide richer detail in their speaking and writing.

Present Progressive is used to describe an action in progress at the moment of speaking.
Time expressions: now, right now, at the moment.
Ex. Ellen is speaking on the phone right now.

  1. Present progressive is used to describe a temporary action in progress or an action that is changing. Time expressions: these days, this month, this week, this year, etc.
  2. Ex. This semester I am taking Math 101.

  3. Present progressive is used with another present progressive to describe two actions in progress happening at the same time in the present.

  4. Present progressive is used with temporary situations.
  5. Ex. I am staying home today because I am sick.

  6.  Present progressive is used to express trends.
  7. Ex. More students are studying online.
    Ex. I am reading a book, and my husband is watching TV. 

  8. Stative or non-action verbs often are not used in present progressive. Simple present is used instead.
  9. Ex. I am owning a red car. I own a red car.

Past Progressive is used to describe an action in progress happening at a specific time in the past.

Ex. I was cooking dinner at 7pm last night.

  1. Past progressive is used with simple past to describe an action in progress interrupted by another action in the past.
  2. Ex. I was doing my homework when somebody knocked on the door.

  3. Past progressive is used with another past progressive to describe two actions in progress happening at the same time in the past.
  4. Ex. While I was reading a book, my husband was watching TV last night.

  5. Stative or non-action verbs often are not used in past progressive. Simple past is used instead.
  6. Ex. I was understating my teacher’s explanation in class yesterday. I understood my teacher’s explanation in class yesterday.  

Future Progressive is used to describe an action in progress at a specific time in the future. 

Ex. Tonight at 8pm, I will be reading my book. 

  1. Future progressive is used to describe an action in progress interrupted by another shorter action in the future.
  2. Ex. I will be waiting for you at the airport when you arrive. 

  3. Future progressive is used with another future progressive to describe two actions in progress happening at the same time in the future.
  4. Ex. I will be studying tonight, and you will be making dinner for the family. 

  5. Stative or non-action verbs often are not used in future progressive. Future simple is used instead.
  6. Ex. I will be being at home tomorrow night. I will be at home tomorrow night.

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Table of Contents

Activities for the Present Progressive: "I'm Standing on a Corner"Expand

Level

High-Beginner to Advanced

Language Focus

Speaking, writing, grammar (primary focus); listening (secondary focus)

Goals

Students will increase their understanding of the present progressive tense in two activities. The first activity places students in the role of party host and a lost guest where students will develop both their speaking and listening skills through a map reading exercise. In the second activity, students will practice their writing skills through writing a letter home about their study abroad in the United States.

Materials

  • Teacher: whiteboard/chalkboard, markers or chalk, infographic (Appendix 1), city map (Appendix 2), location cards (Appendix 3), a timing device.
  • Students: pencils or pens, notebooks or writing paper.

Preparation

  1. Read through all the materials carefully.
  2. The first activity is a speaking activity. The second activity is a writing activity. These activities can be done in the same class, or you can choose one activity depending on the needs of your classroom.
  3. Students work in pairs for the first activity. Print one map (Appendix 2) and one set of location cards (Appendix 3) for each pair of students. If you plan to do the activity twice, with students switching roles, have enough copies of the map and location cards so that each student receives one of each
  4. The speaking activity has an opportunity for expansion. If you decide to do this expansion students will choose a local landmark that they can describe to their partner. Prior to class brainstorm some locations with which students are familiar. If students have trouble deciding on a landmark, they can choose from those prepared prior to class.
  5. This activity uses pair/group work. If you would like to learn more on how to pair or group students see the April 2015 Teacher’s Corner.

Activity 1 Procedures

  1. Place the Present Progressive Infographic (Appendix 1) on the board. Point to the green box on the infographic highlighting actions happening now. Ask the students:
    • What are you doing right now?
      • In their answers stress the use of will + be+ verb(ing) “I am studying English.”
  2. Have the students practice the form by brainstorming an action. For example: riding a bike. Tell the students to keep their action a secret.
  3. Have a volunteer come to the front of the class and act out their action to the class.
  4. The other students should guess the action using the present progressive “You are riding a bicycle.”
  5. After students have had time to practice the present progressive structure, have the students brainstorm a location in the city that is well known. Tell the students to keep the location a secret.
  6. Next, have the students stand-up if possible to move around the room and form pairs. If not, have them pair up with a partner sitting nearby. In each group, designate one student as A and the other student as B.
  7. Pass out the map (Appendix 2) to student A. On the map are a number of empty spaces. Have each student A choose an empty space and mark it as their house. Instruct them to keep it secret from student B.
  8. Give a location card to each of the students in role B. This card should be kept secret from student A.
  9. In this activity, student A is having a party. The party has begun, but student B has yet to arrive.
  10. In each pair, Student B got lost on the way to the party! Now Student B needs to call their partner on the phone to help them get directions!
  11. Have the students role play as party host (student A) and the lost guest (student B). Student B can use the clues on the location card to communicate their location to student A. Student A can then find the location on the map and then give directions to student B to find their house.
  12. Encourage students to use the progressive tense as they engage in the role play. For example:
    • Student A: “Where are you? We are having a party.”
    • Student B: “I was walking to the party and got lost! Can you help?”
    • Student A: “Can you describe where you are?”
    • Student B: (looking at location card) “Well, people are sitting outside drinking coffee and tea.”
    • Student A: “Oh, you are near the coffee shop! I live next to Pleasant View Apartments across the street!”
  13. For an added challenge, have the students face away from each other and rely on voice alone like in an actual phone call.
  14. Once students have finished, have them switch roles. Pass out new maps and location cards and do the activity again.
  15. Optional Expansion: For additional practice have students brainstorm a location in their own town. They can then repeat the activity without a map and location cards and instead do the activity based on their own community.

Activity 2 Procedures

  • This activity can be completed in class or used as a homework activity to practice the present progressive.
  • Have the students brainstorm a location in the United States where they would like to complete a study abroad.
  • Write a date in the near future on the board. Inform the students that they will leave for the United States on this date.
  • Next, write a date six months from the first date on the board. Inform the students that they have been in the United States for six months now and they are going to write a letter home to their family or a friend.
  • In the letter the students should describe what they are currently doing in the United States. They should include what they are doing in school as well as any hobbies or activities they are doing outside of school as well.
  • Encourage students to be as creative as they can using as many details and activities as possible.
  • Once students have written their letter, they can “send” it to a classmate. After they have traded letters and read them, the students can they report on the activities of their friend in the United States to provide extra speaking opportunities.
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Cops and Robbers: "We Were Watching a Movie at the Movie Theater" Expand

Level
High-Beginner to Advanced

Language Focus
Grammar, speaking (primary focus); listening, writing (secondary focus)

Goals
Students will use the past progressive tense to increase fluency using the past progressive while speaking. Students will take notes during the questioning and compare those notes with other groups at the end of the activity. Students will practice critical thinking and deduction skills to draw conclusions.

Materials

  • Teacher: whiteboard/chalkboard, markers or chalk, picture (Appendix 1), past progressive infographic (Appendix 2), a timing device.
  • Students: pencils or pens, notebooks or writing paper.
  • Infographic: Found in Appendix 1 with a higher quality version included at the end of the activity materials.

Preparation

  1. Read through all the materials carefully.
  2. Consider the number of students in your class and the best way to divide the students. This activity will require two groups. Group A will be the robbers and should be a small group. Group B will be the police and should be a larger group. Ideally, the robbers are ¼ of the class (for example, in a class of 12 students 3 are suspects and 9 are police officers). If you have a large class you may want to consider dividing the class into two large teams and from these teams make Groups A and B.
  3. This activity will encourage students to be detailed oriented and ask specific questions. The goal of each group is to outwit the other group. Encourage the suspects to be specific in their alibi and encourage the police to ask very specific questions to the suspects.
  4. During this activity students will role play the police and suspected robbers of a bank. Vocabulary useful for this exercise are:
      a. Suspect - a person thought to be guilty of a crime or offense.
      b. Alibi - a claim or piece of evidence that proves one was elsewhere when an act, typically a criminal one, is alleged to have taken place.
      c. To arrest – to seize by legal authority and take into custody.
    1. d. Cop – an informal word for police officer. This word is used frequently in spoken English as is not considered impolite.
      e. Robber – a person who takes property unlawfully from a place or another person by force or by threatening force.

Procedures

  1. Place the Past Progressive Infographic (Appendix 1) on the board. Point to the purple box on the infographic highlighting actions at specific times. Ask the students:
      a. What were you doing at 6:00pm (18:00) last night?
        a.i. In their answers stress the correct formation of the past progressive: was + verb(ing)
  2. Ask the students a few more questions using the past progressive form. After a few questions of practice ask them:
      a. Was anyone robbing a bank last night?
  3. Place the pictures from Appendix 2 on the board and ask students what is happening in each of the pictures. Tell the students that today they are going to role-play as cops and robbers.
  4. Divide the class into two groups. One group will be the police and one group will be the suspects in a robbery. Encourage students to volunteer to be the suspects and have them come to the front of the classroom.
  5. Explain to the students that last night there was a bank robbery. Tell the students who volunteered to be robbers that they are suspects (the police believe they robbed the bank) in the crime. Ask them:
      a. Do you want to get caught by the police?
  6. Inform the suspects if they do not want to get caught they need to have a good alibi.
      a. A good alibi should have a detailed account of what they were doing last night.
  7. Have the suspects move to a corner of the room or, if possible, leave the classroom. Give them 5 to 10 minutes and as a group create an alibi, or story, about their activities last night. They want to convince the police that they were not involved in the crime.
  8. While the suspects work on their alibi, have the police break into smaller groups. Ideally there is one group of police officers for each suspect (for example: if there are three suspects, then there should be three groups of police). Have the police write down questions to ask the suspects during their interview.
  9. Have the suspects come back into the room and have one suspect go to a team of police. Have the police question the suspect. For example:
      a. Police Officer: Where were all of you last night?
      b. Suspect: We were watching a movie at the movie theater.
  10. Have the police take notes on what the suspect says. After 5-7 minutes have the suspects rotate so that each is questioned by a new group of police officers. Encourage the police to ask more detailed questions to try and find holes (gaps in the logic of the story) in the suspect’s alibi. For example:
      a. Police Officer: What color shirt was Susan wearing?
      b. Suspect: She was wearing a blue shirt.
    When the police question the suspect Susan, they can ask questions to see if she gives the same answer. Encourage the police to underline or highlight answers the suspects give that are different.
  11. After the police have questioned the suspects have the suspects come to the front of the room and give the police time to compare notes. Did the stories of the suspects match well? Police can determine if the stories match enough to suggest innocence. If the stories do not match they can place the suspects under arrest! Just be sure to tell the police to treat the suspects kindly – even criminals have rights!
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The President's Schedule: The President will be attending a meetingExpand

Level
High-Beginner to Advanced

Language Focus
Grammar, speaking (primary focus); listening, writing (secondary focus)

Goals
Students will orally use the future progressive tense to ask and answer questions regarding the United States President’s schedule on an upcoming visit to their country. Students will take notes during the questioning and use those notes to complete a newspaper story.

Materials

  • Teacher: whiteboard/chalkboard, markers or chalk, infographic in Appendix 1, President’s schedule in Appendix 2, newspaper story in Appendix 3, a timing device.
  • Students: pencils or pens, notebooks or writing paper.
  • Infographic: pencils or pens, notebooks or writing paper.

Preparation

  1. Read through all the materials carefully.
  2. This activity is an information gap activity where student B will ask questions to student A to fill in a newspaper story of the President’s schedule. For more information on using information gaps in the classroom see June’s Teacher’s Corner: Click here
  3. In this activity students will be in pairs. Student A will be the President’s Press Secretary. This student will have the President’s official schedule to deliver to newspaper reporters. Student B will be a newspaper reporter who needs information to complete the story. Print enough copies of the schedule in Appendix 2 and the newspaper story in Appendix 3 for each student.
  4. Read through the President’s schedule and newspaper story carefully.
      a. a. In the President’s schedule student A must fill in the missing information. This information has been left blank so students can fill in information specific to their country.
      b. b. In the newspaper story students must use the verb in parentheses and write the correct verb tense. For example, “The President _____(attend)____________________” can be completed as “The President will be attending”.

Procedures

  1. Place the Future Progressive Infographic in Appendix 1 on the board. Point to the green box on the infographic highlighting actions at specific times. Ask the students:
      a. What will you be doing tomorrow from 18:00-19:00?
        a.i. In their answers stress the use of will + be+ verb(ing)
  2. Ask the students a few more questions about their upcoming schedules using the future progressive tense.
  3. After the students have practiced progressive tense have the students remain in their pairs or have them form new pairs.
  4. In each pair give student A the President’s schedule (Appendix 2) and give student B the newspaper story (Appendix 3).
  5. Give student A several minutes to fill out the information in the schedule. Students can use information specific to their town or country to fill out the form.
  6. While student A is filling out the schedule, have student B read the newspaper story and begin preparing questions they will ask student A.
  7. Once the students are ready, have student B begin asking the questions needed to fill out the information in the newspaper story.
  8. Monitor the students as they complete the information gap activity and provide help as needed in constructing questions using the future progressive tense.
  9. Once students have completed the activity have them switch roles and fill out new schedules and new news reports. Encourage students to role the play by using formal introductions and act out the role of Press secretary and newspaper reporter.
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Progressive Tense: "He is Looking for Emma Fields"Expand

Level

High-Beginner to Advanced


Language Focus

Writing, listening, grammar (primary focus); speaking (secondary focus)


Goals

Students will increase their listening, speaking and writing skills through a comprehensive review of the progressive tense. Students will also practice note-taking skills to complete a jigsaw activity.


Materials


Preparation

  1. Read through all the materials carefully.

  2. This activity uses the Trace Effects video game. If you are unfamiliar with the game, it may be helpful to access the game and accompanying Teacher’s Manual here: http://americanenglish.state.gov/trace-effects

  3. This activity uses Trace Effects Chapter 1. It is recommended that you play the chapter prior to introducing it in class.

  4. Copy and cut out the Trace Effects Chapter 1 Comic Jigsaw pieces (Appendix 1). Make sure there are enough copies for your students in pairs/small groups.

  5. This activity is a review of the past, present, and future progressive tenses covered each week of this month’s Teacher’s Corner. The infographics used in the previous weeks’ materials are recommended if students need a review of the progressive tense.


Procedures


Part 1 – Trace Effects Intro Video

  1. Begin the activity by playing the Trace Effects Chapter 1 Intro video. Repeat the video if students need more listening practice.

  2. After watching the video have students write a timeline of Trace’s activities in the video using the progressive tense. For example: “Trace was touring the university when he activated the time machine.” “Eddie was eating lunch when Trace appeared.”

  3. Have the students work in pairs and write down as many sentences as they can about the video.

  4. Review the sentences as a group by having the students read their sentences out loud.

Part 2 – Trace Effects Chapter 1

  1. Now that students have watched the introduction video have them begin playing Chapter 1 of Trace Effects. Give the students three minutes to play the game.

  2. After three minutes, call STOP and have the students stop their game play.

  3. Tell the students to write down what Trace is doing at that moment. For example: “Trace is talking to Eddie in the Science Building.” Have them number this as sentence #1.

  4. Give the students three more minutes of play time. After the time is up, call STOP.

  5. Again, have the students write down what Trace is currently doing and number this sentence #2. Next, have the students return to sentence #1 and change the verb to the past progressive tense. Ask the students, “What will Trace be doing next?” and have them make predictions as to what Trace will be doing in the near future. For example: “Trace will be looking for Kit.”

  6. Give the students three more minutes of game time. Once time is over, have them stop and repeat the sentence writing process.

    • Depending on class time and student level, reduce the play time to two minutes or increase it to five minutes.

  7. Continue the process of writing a present progressive sentence, changing the previous sentence to past progressive, and then writing a future progressive prediction until the students have completed the chapter.

    • If your classroom does not have computers for students, play the game as a class on the teacher’s computer stopping the game play when you desire.

  8. Have the students form pairs or small groups and review their sentences. Depending on how the students played the game their sentences may vary. Have them compare their sentences and discuss what they did that was the same and what was different.

Part 3 – Comic Book Jigsaw Optional

  1. Keep the students in their pairs/small groups and pass out the Trace Effects Chapter 1 Comic Jigsaw (Appendix 1).

  2. With the sentences they wrote in Parts 1 and 2 for assistance, have the pairs/small groups place the comic book panels in the correct order.

  3. Once the pairs/small groups have finished, review as a class by having students read out the dialogue in the comics in the correct order.

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