Session 31: Past tense
Session Title |
Past tense |
Objective |
By the end of the session, students will be able to:
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Topics/Concept |
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Material Required |
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Methodology |
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Session Duration |
90 Minutes |
Intro Activity (15 minutes):
“Yesterday,I….”!
- Students want to sit in a circle
- The first student starts by saying a sentence beginning with:
- “Yesterday, I…” and completes it with an activity using a past tense verb.
Example:
- “Yesterday, I played football.”
- “Yesterday, I ate mangoes.”
- The next student must repeat the previous sentence(s) and add their own.
Example:
“Yesterday, I played football, and I watched TV.”
- Continue around the circle. Each student adds one more sentence to the chain, using a new past tense verb.
- If someone forgets or makes a mistake, offer support and gently correct the tense if needed.
Main Topic/ Activity (60 minutes):
What is Past Tense? (20 minutes)
- The past tense is used to talk about something that already happened. It tells us about actions or events that took place before now — yesterday, last week, or even just a minute ago!
Types of Past Tense Verbs:
1. Regular Verbs – We just add -ed- at the end.
walk → walked
jump → jumped
clean → cleaned
2. Irregular Verbs – The spelling changes completely or doesn't follow a rule.
go → went
eat → ate
buy → bought
- Give them more examples of irregular verbs
Story Time (20 minutes)
- Tell the students that the story you are telling about is something that happened yesterday.
Story = “Raju’s Busy Day”
Yesterday, Raju woke up early. He brushed his teeth and ate a banana. Then, he packed his bag and ran to school. At school, he wrote a test and drew a picture in art class. After school, he played with his friends and came home tired. He watched TV, read a book, and finally, he slept.
- Write this story on the board and call students to underline past tense verbs on the board."
Purpose: Children connect deeply with stories. When a story is told in the past tense, it provides a natural, engaging way to introduce and reinforce past tense verb forms without a heavy grammar focus.
Charades: Past Tense Edition (20 minutes)
- Write a mix of regular and irregular past tense verbs on small pieces of paper.
- Fold and place them in a bowl or container.
- Divide the class into two teams.
- One student from Team A comes up and picks a slip from the bowl.
- The student then has 30 seconds to act out the verb without speaking.
- Their team tries to guess the verb in past tense (e.g., “danced”, not “dance”).
- If the team guesses correctly within the time, they score a point.
- If not, the other team gets one chance to guess and steal the point!
- Then it’s Team B’s turn, and the game continues.
Example Verbs to Include:
Regular: walked, cooked, cleaned, smiled, jumped, clapped
Irregular: ate, went, ran, drank, sang, wrote, slept, drove
- The team with the most correct guesses at the end of the game wins!
Follow up Tasks (5 minutes):
Quickly review:
- What are regular verbs?
- What are irregular verbs?
For homework: Ask students to write 5 sentences using simple past tense (3 regular + 2 irregular)
Review Questions/Assessment/Tasks (10 minutes):
Fill in the Blanks” board activity:
- I ___ (go) to school yesterday. → went
- She ___ (play) football. → played
- They ___ (eat) ice cream. → ate
- We ___ (watch) a movie. → watched
Expected Learning Outcome:
Knowledge building:
- Identify the concept of past tense and recognize when to use it in everyday situations.
- Use regular and irregular verbs in simple past tense form while speaking and writing short sentences.
- Differentiate between regular and irregular past tense verb forms (e.g., played vs ate).
Skill building:
- Charades: past tense edition helps students verbally guess past tense verbs ("You danced!").
- Peer interaction and group problem-solving.
- By story time activity students collectively identify the past tense verbs.
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