Giving Directions- Coin Games

A LESSON PLAN FOR ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHERS

Simple and more complicated directions practice through a fun coin game, including checking the instructions and giving directions by email.

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Lesson Plan Content:


Giving directions coin games

Work in pairs, taking turns to be Student A and Student B. Choose one section from sections A to J below or look at the section that your teacher tells you to use. Student A flips a coin and asks for directions matching the instructions for that section. If Student B can’t answer the question, do the same for another place. Then switch roles and do the same. Your teacher will tell you if/ when you should change sections. You can describe imaginary locations/ directions if you can’t think of anything true.

 

A: Places 1

Heads = inside this building (e.g. the cafeteria or the smoking area)

Tails = outside this building

 

B: Places 2

Heads = you can see the place from this room (through the window or from the open doorway)

Tails = you can’t see the place from this room (because it’s on the other side of the building, on another floor, etc)

 

C: Places 3

Heads = Student B can explain the position just with relation to other places which Student A already knows (e.g. that it’s next to a restaurant that they know)

Tails = Student B needs to explain both the position and directions for how to get there from here

 

D: Places 4

Heads = from here

Tails = to here

 

E: Places 5

Heads = from here (= the starting point is where you are now)

Tails = from somewhere else

 

F: How to get there

Heads = on foot

Tails = on public transport

 

G: Checking/ Clarifying 1

Heads = Student A understands Student B’s instructions straightaway

Tails = Student A needs to check something about Student B’s explanation

 

H: Checking/ Clarifying 2

Heads = Student A checks Student B’s instructions back and gets everything right

Tails = Student A checks Student B’s instructions back but gets something wrong

 

I: Checking/ Clarifying 3

Heads = Student A thinks they know where the place is but wants to check

Tails = Student A has no idea where the place is

 

J: How to communicate

Heads = ask directions by email

Tails = ask for directions on the phone

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