INTRODUCTION - Themework
”The Hotel Mystery” I årskurs 5 läser vi just nu ”The Hotel Mystery”, eller ”Hotellmysteriet” av Martin Widmark. Vi analyserar innehåll, berättarteknik och upplägg. Och skriver sedan egna hotellmysterier i åtta kapitel. Så fokus ligger på att kunna skriva egna texter på engelska. Jag har läst ”The Hotel Mystery” flera gånger och kan berättelsen. LEKTION 1 Jag visar boken för eleverna och frågar o någon känner till Lasse Majas Detektivbyrå. LEKTION 2 Nu berättar jag att jag har ”snott” Widmarks upplägg och skrivit ett eget hotellmysterium som heter ”The Ellington Hotel Mystery” (klicka på länken för att läsa kapitel 1-3). LEKTION 3 Med hjälp av Widmarks och min egen storyboard gör eleverna nu egna storyboards. LEKTION 4 Nu är det dags att skriva första kapitlet. LEKTION 5 Vi jobbar vidare med Chapter 1 så att alla har kommit igång och förstått vad som ska finnas med i första kapitlet och hur det ska skrivas. FORTSÄTTNING FÖLJER… Vi kommer att skriva klart alla åtta kapitel innan jul.
http://themework.se/the-hotel-mystery/introduction/
Related: Engelska
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Teaching Packs Topic Guides
Here are Teaching Packs, we produce popular packs of quality resources for teachers, parents and home educators. We are also building this section of topic guides to support you! Each of our topic guides shares teaching ideas to help you teach a particular topic. There are also links to related resources, fascinating facts to explore, educational videos to watch, fiction and reference books to enjoy and links to other useful sites. Many of the guides are also accompanied by a collection of knowledge organisers that your children can use as handy reference resources when they are learning about each topic. You can download all of these in our popular Knowledge Organisers pack!
How To Use "Have Been" "Has Been" "Had Been"?
What is the difference between have been, has been and had been? Are you struggling to use the correct form when you’re speaking or writing in English? In this lesson we’ll learn about the difference between have, has and had been. Remember the best way to be learning grammar is using it! When you make practice, you will able to develop better understanding the use of each grammatical structure and apply this to your everyday life when you are speaking or writing in English.
Kom igång med en normkritisk undervisning · Mia Smith
Under Pride höll ämnesspanare Mia Smith , Annika Sjödahl och Robin Smith
3 Useful YouTube Tricks, a Video Listening+Speaking Activity. A Flipgrid Proposal.
Unit 1 of my textbook is dedicated to questions. All sorts of questions: indirect, with prepositions at the end, negative interrogative questions, echo questions, question tags… etc. Yeah, I know. Lots of teaching here.
Dsxyliea
A frnied who has dsielxya desrciebd to me how she epxereencis rdeaing. She can raed, but it takes a lot of ctaceotrnoinn, and the lterets semes to “jump auornd”. I rebemmered reidang aubot typoglycemia. Wouldn’t it be poslibse to do it iiteractnevly on a webtise with Javascript? Srue it wuold. Feel like mankig a barkmkoelot of tihs or somnehitg?
Past simple – regular verbs
The past simple is the most common way of talking about past events or states which have finished. It is often used with past time references (e.g. yesterday, two years ago). Please explain past events or states! A past event could be one thing that happened in the past, or a repeated thing. I stopped at a zebra crossing. We carried on with the test.
Spraktrollet - Reading (and listening strategies)
Search this site Reading (and listening strategies) The importance of reading
A Compiled List of Collective Nouns
A group of ants is called a colony. A group of aunts is called a book club. A group of sparrows is called a host. A group of men named James is called late-night hosts.
Learn English and Legal Vocabulary with Suits - English4Good
The show is about business and legal matters. If you want to sound more natural in your speaking, you definitely will like this activity. Suits is a legal drama show set in a New York City Law firm that hires only the best students from Harvard. Plot
Word on the Street - Murder Mystery
Stephen: Er, Ashlie, what are you doing? Ashlie: Looking for clues of course. Stephen: But we haven’t started yet. We’ve come away for a Murder Mystery Weekend.
Sherlock Holmes
Wendy: The streets of London are full of history. But not all the famous characters associated with this city were real. More than a hundred years ago when people travelled by horse and cart and the foggy streets were lit by gaslight, one famous detective was leading the fight against crime.
The CRAAP test - how to evaluate sources
Currency: the timeliness of the information • When was the information published or posted? • Has the information been revised or updated? • Is the information current or out-of date for your topic? • Are the links functional?
Word on the Street - Murder Mystery
Ashlie: Look, Stephen! Another murder. We need to find the killer before he strikes again.
6 Google Jamboard activities your students willl love! – The TEFL Zone
One thing I miss about face-to-face teaching is my whiteboard. I miss writing on it, drawing, watching my students play whiteboard games or draw funny pictures! Whiteboards are a great learning tool not just for students, but teachers as well. Taking photos of my daily whiteboards really helped me reflect on my teaching when doing Delta Module 2.
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