Objective: To pre-teach and practice the pronunciation of key vocabulary needed for the presentation. Many weak students are hesitant to speak because they fear mispronouncing words.
Methodology: This section is directly inspired by the provided phonics workbook. It groups words by common vowel sounds (e.g., /aʊ/, /ɜːr/, /aɪ/) rather than by topic. This helps students see patterns in English spelling and sound, making pronunciation less intimidating and more predictable. By mastering the sounds, they can approach new words with more confidence.
🎯 Skill Focus: Phonics, Pronunciation, Vocabulary Acquisition, Building ConfidenceLet's Learn the Words for Your Presentation!
Good speakers know how to say words clearly. Let's practice some important words together. When you know the sounds, you can speak with confidence!
Start with this common sound. Many students struggle with diphthongs. Explicitly teaching that 'ou' and 'ow' often make the same sound is a breakthrough for them.
Listen for the /aʊ/ sound, like in house or cow. 💡
proud
town
brown
- I am proud to live in Hong Kong.
- I live in a big town called Shatin.
- I have brown eyes.
This is another tricky but very common sound in English. The workbook page shows this exact combination. Highlighting that three different spellings make one sound simplifies the rule for them.
Listen for the /ɜːr/ sound, like in bird or turtle. 💡
birthday
curly
teacher
- My birthday is in June.
- She has curly hair.
- My teacher helps me.
The "magic e" or split digraph is a foundational phonics rule. The words 'like', 'dislike', and 'live' are absolutely crucial for their presentation script. Focusing on this helps them master core sentences.
Listen for the long /aɪ/ sound, like in bike. 💡
live
- I like to play football.
- I dislike spiders.
- I live in Hong Kong.
After finishing the phonics warm-up, praise the students for their great pronunciation work. Connect it directly to the next activity.
Objective: To help students generate simple, personal, and relatable content for their upcoming presentation. This activity serves as the foundational "content gathering" step before you introduce the "Seven Steps to a Well-Structured Speech" from the PowerPoint.
Rationale: For weak ESL learners, the cognitive load of creating content AND learning a new presentation structure simultaneously is too high. By using this familiar "About Me" topic, we lower their affective filter and allow them to focus on the *structure* later, using content they have already prepared and feel confident about.
🎯 Skill Focus: Brainstorming, Scaffolding Content, Building ConfidenceYour Goal: Create a "Fact File" for Your Presentation!
Before we learn how to give a great speech, we need great ideas! Let's find some ideas by talking about someone very special... YOU!
Start with the "People look different" section. Direct students' attention to the two pictures. Your goal is to establish the core idea that being different is good and that each student has unique qualities worth sharing.
People look different
We all look different. We have different physical features, like our eyes and hair.
People have different talents
Use this section to broaden the concept of "special" from just looks to things people can do. This prepares them for the "likes" section in the fact file.
People are good at different things. We all enjoy doing different things. A mixture of people makes life interesting. Everybody is special just because of who they are.
This is the core of the activity. Introduce the "Activities" box as their "Presentation Idea Planner". Go through each item one by one. Click the interactive icon (e.g., '💡') for each point. This will bring up a visual aid with sentence starters. Model the sentence, have the whole class repeat, and then ask a few students to give their own answers. This provides repetition and structured practice.
Activities: Make a 'Fact File' for Your Presentation!
Use these ideas to plan what you want to say about yourself.
- a picture of you (you can use a photo or a drawing) 💡
- your birth date 💡
- age 💡
- height 💡
- hair colour 💡
- eye colour 💡
- three likes 💡
- one dislike 💡
After going through all the fact file points, use the "Check Your Ideas!" button below. A popup will appear with just the icons. Point to each icon and ask students what it means or what sentence they can say. This is a quick, fun way to assess their understanding of the content points before moving on.