The student will be able to confidently choose between the Past Simple and Present Perfect to describe past events based on their connection to the present.
Past Simple: Used for finished actions at a specific, stated, or implied time in the past (e.g., I visited Paris in 2019.).
Present Perfect: Used for actions at an unspecified time in the past or actions with a result in the present (e.g., I have lost my keys.).
Time Expressions: Past Simple uses finished time words (yesterday, last week, ...ago). Present Perfect uses unfinished time words (today, this week) or words connecting to the present (for, since, already, yet).
The student will be able to talk about actions that started in the past and are still continuing, or have recently stopped and have a present result.
Form: Subject + have/has been + verb-ing (e.g., I have been working all day.).
For Unfinished Actions: Describes the duration of an action, often with for and since (e.g., She has been studying for three hours.).
For Present Results: Explains a current situation by referencing a recent, continuous activity (e.g., The ground is wet because it has been raining.).
Objective: The student will be able to clearly describe an action that happened before another specific action or time in the past.
Key Concepts:
Form: Subject + had + Past Participle (e.g., He had finished his work.).
Purpose: To show the order of two past events, clarifying which one happened first (the "earlier past").
Signal Words: Often used with expressions like by the time, already, after, or before (e.g., By the time I arrived, the train had already left.).
Objective: The student will be able to describe actions that will be in progress or will be completed by a specific time in the future.
Key Concepts:
Future Continuous (will be + verb-ing): Describes an action that will be in progress at a future moment (e.g., This time next week, I'll be relaxing on a beach.).
Future Perfect (will have + Past Participle): Describes an action that will be completed before a future moment (e.g., By 2030, she will have finished her PhD.).
Time Markers: Use specific future time markers to anchor the sentence (e.g., at 8 PM tomorrow, by the end of the year).
Objective: The student will be able to talk about hypothetical, improbable, or impossible situations in the present or future.
Key Concepts:
Form: If + Simple Past, ...would + base verb.
Use: To imagine a different present reality (If I had more money...) or to give advice (If I were you, I would apologize.).
The Verb 'be': Using were for all subjects (I, he, she, it) in the if-clause is common and correct for expressing the hypothetical nature.
Objective: The student will be able to talk about past habits, routines, and states that are no longer true in the present.
Key Concepts:
Positive Form: Subject + used to + base verb (e.g., I used to live in London.).
Negative Form: Subject + didn't use to + base verb (e.g., I didn't use to like vegetables.).
Question Form: Did + subject + use to + base verb? (e.g., Did you use to play the piano?).
Objective: The student will be able to use the correct verb form (-ing or to + verb) after common verbs, adjectives, and prepositions.
Key Concepts:
Gerunds (-ing): Use after prepositions (interested in learning), as the subject of a sentence (Swimming is fun), and after common verbs like enjoy, finish, avoid, and suggest.
Infinitives (to + verb): Use after many adjectives (it's important to learn) and after common verbs like want, decide, hope, plan, and offer.
Basic Rule: The choice of gerund or infinitive depends on the word that comes before it.
Objective: The student will be able to use the passive voice in the present and past simple to shift focus onto the receiver of an action.
Key Concepts:
Core Structure: The correct form of the verb to be + Past Participle.
Present Simple Passive: am/is/are + Past Participle (e.g., English is spoken here.).
Past Simple Passive: was/were + Past Participle (e.g., The window was broken last night.).
Objective: The student will be able to add essential information to a sentence to identify exactly which person or thing is being discussed.
Key Concepts:
Purpose: The information is necessary to understand the sentence. No commas are used.
Pronouns: Use who for people, which for things, and that for either. Use whose for possession.
Omitting the Pronoun: The pronoun (who, which, that) can be omitted if it is the object of the clause (e.g., The book I'm reading is interesting.).
Objective: The student will be able to understand and use common separable and inseparable two-word phrasal verbs.
Key Concepts:
Definition: A verb combined with a particle (adverb or preposition) that creates a new meaning (e.g., look up a word).
Separable: The object can go between the verb and the particle (e.g., turn the light on / turn on the light). If the object is a pronoun, it must go in the middle (turn it on).
Inseparable: The object must always come after the particle (e.g., look after the baby).