Positive and negative question tags

A LESSON PLAN FOR ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHERS

Students use double-sided cards to try to make true example sentences with negative question tags and negative sentences with positive tag questions, and compare them to making yes/ no questions.

By: Alex Case
Level: Beginner
Theme: General
Study Area: Questions
      Page: /

Lesson Plan Content:


Positive and negative question tags speaking card games

 

Instructions for teachers

Cut up the cards only horizontally so that the positive and negative cards are still connected and fold them so that they on are different sides of the card. Give one to each group and ask them to spread them out across the table with the positive side up.

As a warmer, first ask them to ask each other yes/ no questions starting with the words on the cards (not statements plus question tags yet) like “Are there any shops near your home?” and “Can we both sing the same Beatles songs?”, putting each card to one side once they have used it.

Students can then do the same thing with negative statements and those positive question tags like “Your parents aren’t both lawyers, are they?” This time they should turn the cards over as they use them.

They can then do the same thing with positive statements and the negative question tags which are now facing up, as in “You came here last week, didn’t you?” After that, they can mix up the two patterns by taking turns using any of the questions tags which are on the top side of the cards on the table, e.g. the opposite side of the card that their partner just used and turned over.

 

Cards to cut up and fold

are there?

aren’t there?

is there?

isn’t there?

are you?

aren’t you?

are…?

aren’t…?

are we?

aren’t we?

can you?

can’t you?

can…?

can’t…?

can we?

can’t we?

did…

didn’t…

did we

didn’t we

did you

didn’t you

do you

don’t you

do we

don’t we

do…

don’t…

does…

doesn’t…

has…

hasn’t…

have we

haven’t we

have you

haven’t you

have…

haven’t…

is…

isn’t…

was…

wasn’t…

were you

weren’t you

were we

weren’t we

were…

weren’t…

 

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