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1. IMPLEMENTATION OF LESSON PLAN

SUBJECT                :   ENGLISH LESSON

TOPIC        :   EXPRESSION OF CONGRATULATION, COMPLIMENT, AND GRATITUDE

CLASS/SEMESTER        :   X /2

TIME                         :   3 x 45 minutes

        

Standard Competency        :   To master the expression of congratulation, compliment, and gratitude (thanking) within daily transactional conversation.

Basic Competency        :        To respond the meaning nuance within transactional conversations (to get things done) that contains of congratulating, complimenting, and thanking.

Indicators        :        1. Students are able to carry out transactional conversation involving the acts of congratulating, complimenting, and thanking.

                2. Students are able to carry out conversations for interpersonal purposes/social interaction (without specific outcomes)

                3. Students are able to master the expression of congratulation, compliment, and gratitude.

  1. Teaching Material        :        Congratulating, Complimenting, and Thanking
  2. Source of Material        :        Look Ahead 1
  3. Supporting Media        :
  1. Class Preparation                :
  1. Types and Tools of Evaluation:

  1. Learning experience/Steps of teaching:

Time

Instruction Method/Activity

Student Activity

15’

INTRODUCTION/PRE TEACHING

  1. Greeting
  2.  Teacher explains the objectives of learning and teaching

  1. Students listen to what the teacher asks them what to do.

90’

MAIN ACTIVITIES

  1. Teacher shows the expressions of congratulating, complimenting, and thanking.
  2. Teacher picks the students randomly to perform the dialogs that contain of congratulating, complimenting, and thanking, to give the example of congratulating, complimenting, and thanking.
  3. Teacher asks the students to mention once again the expressions of congratulating, complimenting, and thanking.
  4. Teacher asks the students to make their own conversation using the expressions of congratulating, complimenting, and thanking.
  1. Students pay attention to the text given seriously.
  2. Students perform the conversation in front of the class.
  3. Students mention the expression of congratulating, complimenting, and thanking.
  4. Students do the assignment.
  5. Students perform their own dialogue/conversation.

30’

  1. Teacher asks the students to act out the dialogue/conversation they have made.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF MATERIAL

Several expressions of congratulating, complimenting, and thanking:

Congratulating:

Complimenting:

Thanking:


3. IMPLEMENTATION OF LESSON PLAN

SUBJECT                :   ENGLISH LESSON

TOPIC                        :   SURPRISES AND DISBELIEFS

CLASS/SEMESTER        :   X/2

TIME                         :   2 x 45 minutes

        

Standard Competency        :   To master the meaning within daily transactional or interpersonal conversations.

Basic Competency        :        To respond the meaning within transactional conversations (to get things done) that contains the expressions of surprises and disbeliefs

Indicators        :        1. Students are able to identify transactional conversations involving the acts of expressing surprises and disbeliefs.

                2. Students are able to respond transactional conversations involving the acts of expressing surprises and disbeliefs.

                3. Students are able to carry out conversations for interpersonal purposes/social interaction using the expressions of surprises and disbeliefs.

  1. Teaching Material        :        Surprises and Disbeliefs
  2. Source of Material        :        Look Ahead 1
  3. Supporting Media        :
  1. Class Preparation                :
  1. Types and Tools of Evaluation:
  1. Learning experience/Steps of teaching:

Time

Instruction Method/Activity

Student Activities

±10

minutes

INTRODUCTION/PRE TEACHING

  1. Greeting
  2.  Teacher asks some students, to mention the expressions of surprises and disbeliefs they are familiar with
  3. Teacher explains the objectives of learning and teaching ‘surprises and disbeliefs’ and show some exampes

  1. Students reply the greeting
  2. Students do what the teacher instructs them to do
  3. Students listen to the explanation

\

±70

minutes

MAIN ACTIVITIES

  1. Teacher asks the presentation group to present the materials they have prepared
  2. Teacher adds the explanation of the expressions when necessary
  3. The group go on with the role like asking some students to demonstrate a dialogue of expressing surprise and disbelief based on the situations given
  4. Teacher asks the students to repeat or explain the material given and give reward (if any) to those who can perform perfectly
  5. Teacher gives the students chances to ask questions
  1. Teacher assigns the students exercise to do

Teacher shows the expressions of surprises and disbeliefs.

  1. Teacher asks some students, to mention the expressions of surprises and disbeliefs they are familiar with
  2. Teacher asks the students to make their own conversation using the expressions of surprises and disbeliefs.

  1. Students pay attention seriously

  1. Students listen to the explanation carefully
  2. Students perform what the teacher asks

  1. Students do what the teacher instructs them to do

  1. Students are expected to ask something

  1. Students do the exercise

10’

  1. Teacher asks the students to act out the dialogue/conversation they have made.

CLOSING

  1. Teacher asks the students to collect  the exercise and then briefly summarizes the material
  2. Teacher closes the meeting

  1. Students collect the exercise and then listen carefully
  2. Students reply the closing greeting of the teacher

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF MATERIAL

  To express surprise or disbelief:

Example of expressing  surprise:

A: How can you say that?

B: Well, that’s the fact.

Example of expressing  surprise:

A: I can’t believe it!

B: That’s true.

When you got a surprising fact, you can say:

You can respond to the surprising fact using these expressions:


3. IMPLEMENTATION OF LESSON PLAN

SUBJECT                :   ENGLISH LESSON

TOPIC                        :   INVITATION

CLASS/SEMESTER        :   X/2

TIME                         :   3 x 45 minutes

Standard Competency        :   To master the meaning within daily transactional or interpersonal conversations.

Basic Competency        :        To respond the meaning within transactional conversations (to get things done) that contains the expressions of inviting.

Indicators        :        1. Students are able to use transactional conversations involving the acts of inviting.

                2. Students are able to respond transactional conversations involving the acts of accepting an invitation.                

  1. The Aim of teaching        :        1. Students are able to listen to the transactional conversation.

                2. Students are able to discuss the expressions of surprises and disbeliefs and how to respond those statements.

                3. Students are able to carry out the conversation to perform a dialog which contains the expression of invitation.

  1. Teaching Material        :        Invitation
  2. Source of Material        :        Look Ahead 1
  3. Supporting Media        :
  1. Class Preparation                :
  1. Types and Tools of Evaluation:
  1. Learning experience/Steps of teaching:

Time

Instruction Method/Activity

Student Activity

15’

INTRODUCTION/PRE TEACHING

  1. Greeting
  2.  Teacher explains the objectives of learning and teaching

  1. Students listen to what the teacher asks them what to do.

90’

MAIN ACTIVITIES

  1. Teacher explains and shows the students kinds of invitation.
  2. Teacher asks students to carry out dialog where one student is going to be invited by other students.
  3. Teacher asks the students to identify kinds of invitation from the example that the teacher gives.
  1. Students pay attention to the explanation given seriously.
  2. Students actively participate in the teaching learning process.
  3. Students act out the dialog in front of the class.
  4. Students identify and hopefully could differentiate the forms of invitation.
  5. Students perform their own dialogue/conversation.

30’

  1. Teacher asks the students to work in pairs to make a dialog of invitation and how to accept and decline it.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF MATERIAL

Invitation:

To invite someone

To accept an invitation

To refuse/decline an invitation


4. IMPLEMENTATION OF LESSON PLAN

SUBJECT                :   ENGLISH LESSON

TOPIC        :   NARRATIVE TEXT

CLASS/SEMESTER        :   X /2

TIME                         :   3 x 45 minutes

        

Standard Competency        :   To master the meaning of short functional text and monolog in form of simple narrative, descriptive, and news item that have contextual in habitual activities to access knowledge.

Basic Competency        :        To respond the meaning within simple monolog text that uses the variety of writing accurately, fluently, and used in habitual activities to access knowledge in narrative text.

Indicators        :        1. Students are able to identify the main idea of the text.

                2. Students are able to identify the part of narrative story.

                3. Students are able to identify the characters of the story.

  1. Teaching Material        :        Narrative Text
  2. Source of Material        :        Look Ahead 1  (Pakar Raya), Look Ahead An English Course 1 (Erlangga)
  3. Supporting Media        :
  1. Class Preparation                :
  1. Types and Tools of Evaluation:
  1. Learning experience/Steps of teaching:

Time

Instruction Method/Activity

Student Activity

15’

INTRODUCTION/PRE TEACHING

  1. Greeting
  2.  Teacher explains the objectives of learning and teaching

  1. Students listen to what the teacher asks them what to do.

90’

MAIN ACTIVITIES

  1. Teacher shares or reads a simple descriptive story.
  2. Teacher asks the students once again to read the text one by one.
  3. Teacher asks the students to point out the main idea, characters, and which paragraph has generic structures of orientation and descriptions.
  1. Students listen carefully to the text being read.
  2. Students read the text; one sentence for each student until period and continue by the other students.
  3. Students actively discuss and mention the main idea, characters playing in the story, and determine which paragraph is orientation and descriptions.
  4. Students do the assignment.
  5. Students read their own story and identify the main idea, characters, and the generic structures of the story.

30’

  1. Teacher asks the students to find or make a simple/short descriptive text.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF MATERIAL

Snow Maiden


Once upon a time there lived a couple in a village. They had got married for a long time, but so far they did not have a baby yet. Every single minute they prayed to God, begged for a baby, but it never came true.
One day, they went to snow mountain. They made a girl from snow and they dressed her beautifully. When it got dark, they decided to go home and left the snow girl alone. The following morning, someone knocked the door. "Any body home?” she said. The old woman inside opened the door and asked, "Who are you?" The girl said "I'm Snow Maiden, your daughter". The old woman was surprised and happy, "Oh, really? Thanks God! Come in, please!" Since that meeting, they lived happily.
Snow Maiden was beautiful, kind, diligent and helpful. Her parents and all of her friends loved her very much. One day, Snow Maiden played with her friends. They played fire. At first, Snow Maiden just looked at their play. Suddenly, her friends asked her to jump on the fire. Of course she refused it because one thing that made her afraid was the fire. It's because Snow Maiden was made of snow, so she should avoid the fire. But her friends kept on forcing her to jump on. Finally, she could not do anything then she did it. She jumped on the fire and she melted. Her friends were so sorry about this, they cried and cried hoping Snow Maiden could live again, but it was useless. Snow Maiden would not be back anymore. Her mother tried to entertain Snow Maiden's friends and asked them to make a new Snow Maiden. They went to a snow mountain and started making it. They expected to have the new Snow Maiden. Days passed but their dreams never came true.
Poor them!

Narrative text        is a text which contains about story (fiction/non fiction/tales/folktales/ fables/myths/epic) and in its plot consists of climax of the story (complication) then followed by the resolution.

Generic Structures: Orientation - Complication - Evaluation (optional) - Resolution


Orientation: it is about WHO, WHEN, and WHERE the story happened.
Evaluation: is optional; it is usually used to make the story more interesting.
Complication: it is about the conflict or the big problem of the story. Complication is the part of the story in which there is a conflict among the characters of the story (it is possible to make more than one conflict in a complication), and it is the climax of the story (the big problem in the story). A story can have more than one complication.
Resolution: it is the solution of the problem. It can be a happy or sad ending. In Resolution, the solution or the way out of the conflict/ the big problem must be written.

Coda: it is the change of one of the character or two, or the meaning of the story that can be caught as a moral value of life.

Example: The story of Cinderella, Snow White, Snow Maiden, The Little Pear Girl, The Ugly Duckling, etc.


5. IMPLEMENTATION OF LESSON PLAN

SUBJECT                :   ENGLISH LESSON

TOPIC        :   NEWS ITEM

CLASS/SEMESTER        :   X /2

TIME                         :   3 x 45 minutes

        

Standard Competency        :   To master the meaning of short functional text and monolog in form of simple narrative, descriptive, and news item that have contextual in habitual activities to access knowledge.

Basic Competency        :        To respond the meaning within simple monolog text that uses the variety of writing accurately, fluently, and used in habitual activities to access knowledge in reading text: news item.

Indicators        :        1. Students are able to identify the main idea and social function of the text.

                2. Students are able to identify newsworthy events, background events and the sources.

                3. Students are able to carry out a monologue to convey the news

                4. Students are able to write a news item text by finding current news in week’s paper.

  1. Teaching Material        :        News Item
  2. Source of Material        :        Look Ahead 1 , KBS Online Kota Jogja, Play with Genre
  3. Supporting Media        :
  1. Class Preparation                :
  1. Types and Tools of Evaluation:
  1. Learning experience/Steps of teaching:

Time

Instruction Method/Activity

Student Activity

15’

INTRODUCTION/PRE TEACHING

  1. Greeting
  2.  Teacher explains the objectives of learning and teaching

  1. Students listen to what the teacher asks them what to do.

90’

MAIN ACTIVITIES

  1. Teacher explains about the social function of news item, and then briefly mentions the generic structures of news item and significant grammar features.
  2. Teacher writes a news item text on board starting from the newsworthy event part first followed by background events and supported by the source.
  3. Teacher asks the students altogether make another news item based on the current events or news in this week’s paper or from television, etc.
  1. Students listen carefully to the explanation.
  2. Students read the news item and identify the generic structures of the news item.
  3. Students actively contribute their own ideas to make a news item directed by the teacher.
  4. Students discuss together in group.
  5. Students present their own news item.

30’

  1. Teacher asks the students discuss to find or make another news item and then read their news item in front of the class.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF MATERIAL

News Item:        is factual text which informs the readers about events of the day which are considered newsworthy or important.

        

Social function of news item is: to inform readers, listeners or viewers about events of the day which are considered newsworthy or important.

Generic structure:

Significant Grammar Features:

There are some rules that can help to make newspaper headlines more comprehensible.

  1. The passive voice is used without the appropriate form of “be”.

Example:  Town ‘Contaminated’

Complete Sentence:  Town is contaminated.

  1. It is unusual to find complex forms, generally the simple present form is used

Example:  Fire Destroys over 2,511 acres of Forest in 2003-2004

Complete Sentence:  Fire has destroyed over 2,511 acres of forest in 2003-2004.

  1. The present progressive tense is used, usually to describe something that is changing or developing, but the auxiliary verb is usually left out.

Example:  World Heading for Energy Crisis

Complete Sentence:  The world is heading for an energy crisis.

  1. To refer to the future, headlines often use the infinitive.

Example:   Queen to Visit Samoa.

Complete Sentence:  The Queen is going to visit Samoa.

  1. Headlines are not always complete sentences.

Example:  More earthquakes in Japan.

Complete Sentence:  More earthquakes happened in Japan.

News Item:

A Korean Force of Nature

Newsworthy event

In just three years, Korean pop star Rain Has built a huge domestic following of (mostly) female fans with a string of chart-topping singles, and now he’s ready to branch out overseas.

Background events

Rain picked up MTV Asia prizes this year, played his first solo concert in Japan in July and has lined up sold-out gigs in Hong Kong and Tokyo. But the engine of Korean pop-culture dominance in Asia is the soap opera, which is why Rain is forecast for TV this fall. The decidedly boyish singer will play a macho K-1 fighter who falls for his brother’s lover in a series tentatively titled A Loved to Kill. Though the show is set to air first in Korea this October, the astounding popularity of Korean TV dramas around the region means that the pop star could soon become a familiar face throughout Asia.

But why stop there? Rain’s managers believe he could be the first Korean star to break into the U.S. market. Park Jin Young, the pop impresario who discovered and trained Rain, is a talented dancer and songwriter who has worked with U.S. artists like Mase and Will Smith. Since setting up camp in Los Angeles last year, Park has been shopping his protégé around to U.S. production companies. Rain almost managed to score a track on rapper Lil’ Kim’s latest album–but the plan fell apart after Kim was convicted of perjury and had to start serving a jail term, according to Jimmy Jeong, an executive at Rain’s management company.

Sources

Just a minor setback, says Jeong: “We’re targeting the global market. Rain’s too big for Asia.”

Dogs to Herd Geese From Central Park

Newsworthy event

NEW YORK (AP) -- City officials will use border collies to drive geese away from Central Park's lawns and meadows next month.

Background events

A Howell, N.J., company, Geese Police Inc., employs dog handlers who are educated on the behavior of Canada geese and their migratory, nesting and breeding habits. The collies, bred to herd sheep, have a natural instinct to round up geese.

The Geese Police pilot program, funded by the New York City's Department of Parks and Recreation and the Central Park Conservancy management organization, will last through April.

As with all wildlife that inhabit or migrate through city parkland, Canada geese are protected from hunting and attack by humans, parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe said Monday. But their increasing presence can damage grass and leave parks fouled by droppings, Benepe said.

Sources

"The Geese Police pilot project is an innovative and humane effort to manage the growing geese population in Central Park," he said.


6. IMPLEMENTATION OF LESSON PLAN

SUBJECT                :   ENGLISH LESSON

TOPIC        :   PASSIVE VOICE

CLASS/SEMESTER        :   X /2

TIME                         :   3 x 45 minutes

        

Standard Competency        :   To master the meaning of short functional text and simple essay in form of narrative, descriptive, and news item that have contextual in habitual activities to access knowledge.

Basic Competency        :        To respond and express the meaning and rhetoric steps within simple essay accurately, fluently, and used in habitual activities to access knowledge in reading text: narrative, descriptive, and news item.

Indicators        :        1. Students are able to identify the form of passive voice in simple tenses: simple present, simple past, and future, and in present continuous and present perfect.

                2. Students are able to make the newsworthy event by using passive sentence.

                3. Students are able to make their own news item text based on the events or phenomenon happened around us today.

  1. Teaching Material        :         Passive Voice
  2. Source of Material        :         Look Ahead 1
  3. Supporting Media        :
  1. Class Preparation                :
  1. Types and Tools of Evaluation:
  1. Learning experience/Steps of teaching:

Time

Instruction Method/Activity

Student Activity

15’

INTRODUCTION/PRE TEACHING

  1. Greeting
  2.  Teacher explains the objectives of learning and teaching

  1. Students listen to what the teacher asks them what to do.

90’

MAIN ACTIVITIES

  1. Teacher defines about passive voice and the general structure of passive sentence.
  2. Teacher writes a news item text on board starting from the newsworthy event part first followed by background events and supported by the source.
  3. Now teacher asks the students altogether make another news item based on the event that has just happened recently; it could be from television, etc.

  1. Students listen carefully to the explanation.
  2. Students read the news item and identify the generic structures of the news item.
  3. Students actively contribute their own ideas to make a news item directed by the teacher.
  4. Students discuss together in group.

30’

  1. Teacher asks the students discuss to find or make another news item and then read their news item in front of the class.
  1. Students present their own news item.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF MATERIAL

Passive Voice

1.

Simple present

Active

passive

We

OB on RCTI

watched

is watched

OB on RCTI

(by us)

everyday.

everyday.

2.

Simple past

Active

passive

Rita

A letter

wrote

was written

a letter

by Rita

yesterday.

yesterday.

3.

Simple Future

Active

passive

My family

A villa

will rent

will be rent

a villa

by my family

for holiday.

for holiday.

When rewriting active sentences in passive voice, note the following:

  • the object of the active sentence becomes the subject of the passive sentence
  • the finite form of the verb is changed (to be + past participle)
  • the subject of the active sentence becomes the object of the passive sentence (or is dropped)

Agent

In a passive clause, we usually use a phrase beginning with by if we want to mention the agent - the person or thing that does the action, or that causes what happens.

Examples:

My mother   makes   sandwich every morning.

   Subject     verb1+s/es      O            C (adv. of time)

Sandwich  is made  by my mother every morning.

   Subject     to be+V3      Agent               C (adv. of time)

present continuous : [ S + to be + being +V3 (past participle)

present perfect: [ S + has/have + been + V3 (past participle)

present continuous

Active

Passive

A young boy is catching a butterfly.

A butterfly is being caught by a young boy.

present perfect

Active

Passive

Yano has returned the book to the library.

The book has been returned to the library by Yano.

If you want to change an active sentence which has two objects into its passive forms, there are two ways:

  1. Make its indirect object into the subject of the passive sentence.
  2. Make its direct object into the subject of the passive sentence.

Examples:

Active:  

John  is giving  his girl-friend  a bunch of flower.

                         indirect object      direct object

Passive:

The indirect object as the subject

John’s girl-friend     is being given         a bunch of flower.

Passive:

The direct object as the subject

A bunch of flower    is being given     to John’s girl-friend.

7. IMPLEMENTATION OF LESSON PLAN

SUBJECT                :   ENGLISH LESSON

TOPIC        :   INTRODUCTORY ‘IT’

CLASS/SEMESTER        :   X /2

TIME                         :   3 x 45 minutes

        

Standard Competency        :   To master the meaning of short functional text and simple essay in form of narrative, descriptive, and news item that have contextual in habitual activities to access knowledge.

Basic Competency        :        To respond and express the meaning and rhetoric steps within simple essay accurately, fluently, and used in habitual activities to access knowledge in reading text: narrative, descriptive, and news item.

Indicators        :        1. Students are able to identify sentences using the pattern of introductory it in the text type being learned

                2. Students are able to make their own sentences based on the events.

  1. Teaching Material        :         Introductory it
  2. Source of Material        :         Look Ahead 1
  3. Supporting Media        :
  1. Class Preparation                :
  1. Types and Tools of Evaluation:
  1. Learning experience/Steps of teaching:

Time

Instruction Method/Activity

Student Activity

15’

INTRODUCTION/PRE TEACHING

  1. Greeting
  2.  Teacher explains the objectives of learning and teaching

  1. Students listen to what the teacher asks them what to do.

90’

MAIN ACTIVITIES

  1. Teacher explains about the social function of news item, and then briefly mentions the generic structures of news item and significant grammar features.
  2. Teacher writes a news item text on board starting from the newsworthy event part first followed by background events and supported by the source.
  3. Now teacher asks the students altogether make a simple sentence using the pattern

  1. Students listen carefully to the explanation.
  2. Students read text containing introductory it and identify the generic structures of the it
  3. Students actively contribute their own sentences.
  4. Students discuss together in group.
  5. Students present their sentences

30’

  1. Teacher asks the students discuss to find or make their own sentences

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF MATERIAL

A       To understand this lesson is easy.

B                                      It    is easy to understand this lesson.

In this pattern, it has no meaning. It is used only to fill the subject position in the sentence. Thus, it is called introductory “it”.

A and B mean the same thing, but sentence B is more common and useful than A. A was introduce mainly to make the meaning of C easier to understand.

Introductory “it” can fill the position both of the subject and object.

Introductory “it” as a subject:

To watch musical programs is pleasant.

It is pleasant to watch musical program.

To play football must be fun.

It is fun to play football.


8. IMPLEMENTATION OF LESSON PLAN

SUBJECT                :   ENGLISH LESSON

TOPIC        :   DESCRIPTIVE TEXT

CLASS/SEMESTER        :   X /2

TIME                         :   3 x 45 minutes

        

Standard Competency        :   To master the meaning of short functional text and monolog in form of simple narrative, descriptive, and news item that have contextual in habitual activities to access knowledge.

Basic Competency        :        To respond the meaning within simple monolog text that uses the variety of writing accurately, fluently, and used in habitual activities to access knowledge in descriptive text.

Indicators        :        1. Students are able to identify the main idea of the text.

                2. Students are able to identify the generic structures of descriptive story.

                3. Students are able to identify the characters of the story.

  1. Teaching Material        :        Descriptive Texts, Play With Genre
  2. Source of Material        :        Look Ahead 1
  3. Supporting Media        :
  1. Class Preparation                :
  1. Types and Tools of Evaluation:
  1. Learning experience/Steps of teaching:

Time

Instruction Method/Activity

Student Activity

15’

INTRODUCTION/PRE TEACHING

  1. Greeting
  2.  Teacher explains the objectives of learning and teaching

  1. Students listen to what the teacher asks them what to do.

90’

MAIN ACTIVITIES

  1. Teacher shares or reads a simple descriptive story.
  2. Teacher asks the students once again to read the text one by one.
  3. Teacher asks the students to point out the main idea, characters, and which paragraph has generic structures of identification and descriptions.

  1. Students listen carefully to the text being read.
  2. Students read the text; one sentence for each student until period and continue by the other students.
  3. Students actively discuss and mention the main idea, characters playing in the story, and determine which paragraph is identification and descriptions.
  4. Students do the assignment.
  5. Students read their own story and identify the main idea, characters, and the generic structures of the story.

30’

  1. Teacher asks the students to find or make a simple/short descriptive text.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF MATERIAL

The aim of descriptive text:        to describe the characteristics of particular person, thing, or place.

Text Structure:

Grammatical Features:

Example of Descriptive Text:

Identification

                                        My Pets

We have three family pets: a dog, a cat, and a tortoise.

Descriptions

The dog’s name is Benjamin. He is big golden Labrador. He is beautiful. He has big brown eyes and a long tail. He is very friendly dog, but he is sometimes a little stupid. Dogs are expensive to keep but they are fun to play with.

Our cat is named Martha. She is quite young, but she is not a kitten. She is very pretty. She has black and white fur and green eyes. She’s smart, too and very clean.

The tortoise’s name is Rocky. He has short, fat legs, a long neck, and a very hard shell. He is also very old and slow. He’s ugly and dirty, but I like him.


9. IMPLEMENTATION OF LESSON PLAN

SUBJECT                :   ENGLISH LESSON

TOPIC        :   DIRECT AND INDIRECT SPEECHES

CLASS/SEMESTER        :   X /2

TIME                         :   3 x 45 minutes

        

Standard Competency        :   To master the meaning of short functional text and monolog in form of simple narrative, descriptive, and news item that have contextual in habitual activities to access knowledge.

Basic Competency        :        To respond the meaning within simple monolog text that uses the variety of writing accurately, fluently, and used in habitual activities to access knowledge in reading text: narrative, descriptive, and news item.

Indicators        :        1. Students are able to use reported speech sentences to inform the news.

                

  1. Teaching Material        :        Reported Speech (Direct and Indirect Speech)
  2. Source of Material        :        Look Ahead 1 , Headlight An Extensive Exposure to English Learning for SMA Students, Learn English Network (LEO)
  3. Supporting Media        :
  1. Class Preparation                :
  1. Types and Tools of Evaluation:
  1. Learning experience/Steps of teaching:

Time

Instruction Method/Activity

Student Activity

15’

INTRODUCTION/PRE TEACHING

  1. Greeting
  2.  Teacher explains the objectives of learning and teaching

  1. Students listen to what the teacher asks them what to do.

90’

MAIN ACTIVITIES

  1. Teacher gives the examples of each direct and indirect speech.
  2. Teacher asks the students to identify which one is direct speech and which one is indirect.
  3. Teacher explains what are direct and indirect speech, the tense change, and the change of adverb of time.

  1. Students watch carefully to the example given.
  2. Students identify the reported speech and analyze together with the teacher.
  3. Students listen to the teacher’s explanation, after that they may discuss it with the teacher.
  4. Students do the exercises and identify which sentences are direct and indirect ones.

30’

  1. Teacher gives some exercises and a short story text to the students

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF MATERIAL

Direct Speech        refers to reproducing another person’s exact words or saying exactly what someone has said (sometimes called quoted speech).

We use quotation marks (“______________”) and it should be word for word.

For example:

                Nicky said, “It’s hot”.        

                        Or

                “It’s hot,” Nicky said.

Indirect speech        refers to reproducing the idea of another person’s words that doesn’t use quotation marks to enclose what the person said and it doesn’t have to be word for word.

        Indirect speech is sometimes called reported speech.

        The tense usually changes when reporting speech. This is because we are usually talking about a time in the past and obviously the person who spoke originally spoke in the past.

        The verbs therefore usually have to be in the past too.

  • Note: The reporting verbs that are usually used to report imperative sentences are:

        Tell, order, command, ask, warn, remind

  • Don’t forget to mention the indirect object.

Father warned me not to drive fast.

For example:

Direct speech                                        Indirect speech

Present simple                                        Past simple

Vita said, “I eat fried rice”.                                Vita said that she ate fried rice.

Past simple                                        Past Perfect

Mother said, “I went to market yesterday”.                Mother said (that) she had gone to market the day before.

Future simple                                        Past Future

Lea said, “I am going to wash my clothes”.                Lea said (that) she was going to wash her clothes.

Dave said, “I will buy an I-Pod next week”.                Dave said (that) he would buy an I-Pod the week after.

Present continuous                                Past continuous

Gama said, “I am playing football”.                        Gama said he was playing football.

Past continuous                                        Past perfect continuous

She said, “I was teaching earlier.”                        She said she had been teaching earlier.

Example:        My mother said that she got up at 4 o’clock.

Example:        She will tell you

                She says                    (that) she doesn’t know.

                She has just said

In time expressions and pronouns

Direct speech

Indirect speech

Now

Today/tonight

Yesterday

Tomorrow

Last week

Next week

Ago

Then

That day/that night

The day before/the previous day

The next/following day

The previous week

The following week/the week after

Before

This/these

Here

Pronouns

That/those

There

They change according to the context

Sometimes we need to report someone’s questions. The reported question are introduced with the verb ask, inquire, wonder, want to know, etc.

Type

Form

Examples

Yes-No questions

Ask                    +  if/whether  +  subject  +  verb

Wonder etc.      

“Do you speak English?”

- He wondered if I spoke English.

Wh-questions

Ask                    +  question word + subject +  verb

Wonder etc.      

“What are you watching?”

- She asked what I am watching.


10. IMPLEMENTATION OF LESSON PLAN

SUBJECT                :   ENGLISH LESSON

TOPIC        :   SIMPLE PRESENT

CLASS/SEMESTER        :   X /2

TIME                         :   3 x 45 minutes

        

Standard Competency        :   To master the meaning of short functional text and monolog in form of simple narrative, descriptive, and news item that have contextual in habitual activities to access knowledge.

Basic Competency        :        To respond the meaning within simple monolog text that uses the variety of writing accurately, fluently, and used in habitual activities to access knowledge in reading  text; narrative, descriptive, and news item.

Indicators        :        1. Students are able to know the form and functions of simple present tense.

                2. Students are able to make simple present sentences.

                3. Students are able to use simple present sentences into descriptive text.

  1. Teaching Material        :        Simple Present Tense
  2. Source of Material        :        Look Ahead 1 , Understanding and Using English Grammar (Betty Schrampfer Azar)
  3. Supporting Media        :
  1. Class Preparation                :
  1. Types and Tools of Evaluation:
  1. Learning experience/Steps of teaching:

Time

Instruction Method/Activity

Student Activity

15’

INTRODUCTION/PRE TEACHING

  1. Greeting
  2.  Teacher explains the objectives of learning and teaching

  1. Students listen to what the teacher asks them what to do.

90’

MAIN ACTIVITIES

  1. Teacher gives examples of simple present sentence on whiteboard and asks the students to analyze the sentences together.
  2. Teacher explains the functions, the form/pattern of simple present.
  3. Teacher asks the students to make their own sentence based on the example given, but now they should create their own sentence and write on the whiteboard.

  1. Students notice the example given.
  2. Students listen to teacher’s explanation carefully and may ask further information to the teacher about simple present tense.
  3. Students make their own sentences and write their sentence on the whiteboard.
  4. Students read text and analyze the sentence using simple present tense by identifying the form of verbs.

30’

  1. Teacher gives the students exercise to identify the simple present sentences in a descriptive text.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF MATERIAL

Simple Present:

                                                       

Past                                      Future

The simple present is used to indicate a situation that exists right now, at the moment of speaking.

  • I smell something delicious.
  • Jane needs a glass of water right now.
  • They have a big house.

Past                                      Future

The simple present says something was true in the past, is true in the present, and will be true in the future. It is used for general statements of fact.

  • Monkey swings from branch to branch.
  • Kind words make people happy.
  • God loves us.

   

                                                                                                                         Past      ?                       ?      Future

The simple present is used for habitual or everyday activity.

  • I watch TV three hours every night.
  • English class begins at 7am.
  • Father usually reads newspaper every morning.

Simple Present Pattern:

1. Nominal:

        (+) She is a nurse.

                 S  + To be + Compliment

        (-) He is not a teacher.

                S  + To be + not + Compliment

        (?) Are they students?

                To be  +   S   +  Compliment + ?

When using word questions (W/H questions such as What, Who, When, Why, Where, Which, How), we simply put the question word in the beginning of the sentence and followed by the form of question pattern above.

        Example:

                Why  is  she  angry?

        W/H question + to be  +   S   +  Compliment + ?

2. Verbal:

        (+)        S + Verb1 -s/es + O / C / adv        

                        I  study English every day.

                        He  plays  basketball every Tuesday and Thursday.

        (-)        S + Do/Does+not+Verb1 + O / C / adv

                        They do not eat meat.

                        She does not borrow comics everyday.

        (?)        Do/Does+ Subject + Verb1 + O / C / adv

                        Do you drink beer?

                        Does she understand the lesson?

Spelling of third person singular forms

Most verbs:

Add -s to infinitive

work  works

drink  drinks

meet  meets

Verbs ending in consonants + y:

Change y to I and add -es

Fly  flies

Cry  cries

Rely  relies

Verbs ending in -s, -z, -ch, or -x :

Add -es to infinitive

Miss  misses

Buzz  buzzes

Watch  watches

Push  pushes

Fix fixes

Exceptions:

Have  has

go  goes

do  does


11. IMPLEMENTATION OF LESSON PLAN

SUBJECT                :   ENGLISH LESSON

TOPIC        :   NOUN PHRASES

CLASS/SEMESTER        :   X /2

TIME                         :   3 x 45 minutes

        

Standard Competency        :   To master the meaning of short functional text and monolog in form of simple narrative, descriptive, and news item that have contextual in habitual activities to access knowledge.

Basic Competency        :        To respond the meaning within simple monolog text that uses the variety of writing accurately, fluently, and used in habitual activities to access knowledge in reading  text; narrative, descriptive, and news item.

Indicators        :        1. Students are able to know the noun phrase definition and the function of noun phrases.

                2. Students are able to make sentences using noun phrases.

                3. Students are able to identify noun phrases in narrative text.

  1. Teaching Material        :        Noun Phrases
  2. Source of Material        :        Look Ahead 1 , Term: Noun Phrases (UsingEnglish.com)
  3. Supporting Media        :

  1. Class Preparation                :

  1. Types and Tools of Evaluation:
  1. Learning experience/Steps of teaching:

Time

Instruction Method/Activity

Student Activity

15’

INTRODUCTION/PRE TEACHING

  1. Greeting
  2.  Teacher explains the objectives of learning and teaching

  1. Students listen to what the teacher asks them what to do.

90’

MAIN ACTIVITIES

  1. Teacher gives examples of simple noun phrase.
  2. Teacher explains the functions of noun phrases.
  3. Teacher asks the students to mention the other examples of noun phrases one by one.

  1. Students notice the example given.
  2. Students listen to teacher’s explanation carefully and may ask to the teacher about noun phrases.
  3. Students try to make their own noun phrases and mention or write them on whiteboard.
  4. Students analyze and identify the noun phrase and underline the noun phrases in the text.

30’

  1. Teacher gives the students exercise to identify the noun phrase in a news item text by underlining the noun phrases in the text.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF MATERIAL

Noun phrase

A noun phrase is either a single noun or pronoun or any group of words containing a noun or a pronoun that function together as a noun or pronoun, as the subject or object of a verb.

For example, ‘they’, ‘books’, and ‘the books’ are noun phrases, but ‘book’ is just a noun, as you can see in these sentences (in which the noun phrases are all in bold)

Example 1:

Shaggy: Do you like books?

Bean    : Yes, I like them.

Shaggy: Do you like books over there?

Bean    : Yes, they are nice.

Shaggy: Do you like the book I brought yesterday?

Bean    : Yes, I like it.  (Note: ‘It’ refers to ‘the book’, not ‘book’)

Example 2:

Nicko was late.

(‘Nicko’ is the noun phrase functioning as the subject of the verb.)

Some noun phrases are short:        The students

Some are long:                        The very tall education consultant

Structures of noun phrases:

The structure of this noun phrase contains three sections:

Pre-modifier

Head noun

Post-modifier

A beautiful old

painting

on the wall

A beautiful old

painting

-

-

painting

on the wall

This is the table of the adjectives that are combined with the nouns:

Determiner

Opinion adjectives

Descriptive adjectives

Nouns

General

specific

size

shape

age

colour

nationality

material

A

Lovely

comfortable

big

-

-

-

-

Wooden

chair

The

Cheap

-

-

-

new

black

German

-

car

Large

round

-

-

-

metal

table

When you use a noun in front of another noun, you never put adjectives between them. You put adjectives in front of the first noun.

Example:  We just spoke with a young American boy.

Noun phrase can be in form of gerund (Vbase+ing) or gerund and other nouns compounding.

Example:        passing the exam                watching TV

                preparing the equipment        sliding down a rope

                going to school                        diving board

12. IMPLEMENTATION OF LESSON PLAN

SUBJECT                :   ENGLISH LESSON

TOPIC        :   FINITE VERBS

CLASS/SEMESTER        :   X /2

TIME                         :   3 x 45 minutes

        

Standard Competency        :   To master the meaning of short functional text and monolog in form of simple narrative, descriptive, and news item that have contextual in habitual activities to access knowledge.

Basic Competency        :        To respond the meaning within simple monolog text that uses the variety of writing accurately, fluently, and used in habitual activities to access knowledge in reading  text; narrative, descriptive, and news item.

Indicators        :        1. Students are able to know the definition of finite verb.

                2. Students are able to know the form of finite verbs.

                3. Students are able to identify finite verbs in reading text.

  1. Teaching Material        :        Finite Verbs
  2. Source of Material        :        Look Ahead 1 , Finite Verbs from Wikipedia
  3. Supporting Media        :
  1. Class Preparation                :
  1. Types and Tools of Evaluation:
  1. Learning experience/Steps of teaching:

Time

Instruction Method/Activity

Student Activity

15’

INTRODUCTION/PRE TEACHING

  1. Greeting
  2.  Teacher explains the objectives of learning and teaching

  1. Students listen to what the teacher asks them what to do.

90’

MAIN ACTIVITIES

  1. Teacher gives examples of finite verbs in a short text.
  2. Teacher explains the functions and kinds of finite verbs.
  3. Teacher gives another example on the whiteboard, and students identify the finite verbs together.

  1. Students notice the example given.
  2. Students listen to teacher’s explanation carefully and may ask to the teacher about noun phrases.
  3. Students try to find which ones are the finite verbs.
  4. Students analyze and identify the noun phrase and circle the finite verbs in the text.

30’

  1. Teacher gives the students a reading text and asks them to identify and circle the finite verbs in the reading text.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF MATERIAL

A finite verb is a verb that is inflected for person and for tense according to the rules and categories of the languages in which it occurs. Finite verbs can form independent clauses, which can stand by their own as complete sentences.

Every grammatically correct sentence or clause must contain a finite verb; sentence fragments not containing finite verbs are described as phrases.

Some interjections can play the same role. Even in English, a sentence like Thanks for your help! has an interjection where it could have a subject and a finite verb form (compare I appreciate your help!).

In English, as in most related languages, only verbs in certain moods are finite. These include:

A verb is a word that expresses an occurrence, act, or mode of being. Finite verbs, sometimes called main verbs, are limited by time (see tense), person, and number.

The finite verbs are highlighted in the following sentences:

The bear caught a salmon in the stream.

Who ate the pie?

Stop!

A nonfinite verb form - such as a participle, infinitive, or gerund - is not limited by by time (see tense), person, and number.

Verb forms that are not finite include:

In linguistics, a non-finite verb (or a verbal) is a verb form that is not limited by a subject; and more generally, it is not fully inflected by categories that are marked inflectionally in language, such as tense, aspect, mood, number, gender, and person. As a result, a non-finite verb cannot generally serve as the main verb in an independent clause; rather, it heads a non-finite clause.

By some accounts, a non-finite verb acts simultaneously as a verb and as another part of speech; it can take adverbs and certain kinds of verb arguments, producing a verbal phrase (i.e., non-finite clause), and this phrase then plays a different role — usually noun, adjective, or adverb — in a greater clause. This is the reason for the term verbal; non-finite verbs have traditionally been classified as verbal nouns, verbal adjectives, or verbal adverbs.

English has three kinds of verbals: participles, which function as adjectives; gerunds, which function as nouns; and infinitives, which have noun-like, adjective-like, and adverb-like functions. Each of these is also used in various common constructs; for example, the past participle is used in forming the perfect aspect (to have done).

Other kinds of verbals, such as supines and gerundives, exist in other languages.

Example:

The finite verbs are the underlined words.

The Crow and the Fox

One day a crow finds a tasty piece of cheese. She picks it up, flaps her wings, and flies to a high branch of a tree to eat it.

…………….

Source: International story


13. IMPLEMENTATION OF LESSON PLAN

SUBJECT                :   ENGLISH LESSON

TOPIC        :   MODALS IN THE PAST FORM

CLASS/SEMESTER        :   X /2

TIME                         :   3 x 45 minutes

        

Standard Competency        :   To master the meaning of short functional text and monolog in form of simple narrative, descriptive, and news item that have contextual in habitual activities to access knowledge.

Basic Competency        :        To respond the meaning within simple monolog text that uses the variety of writing accurately, fluently, and used in habitual activities to access knowledge in reading  text; narrative, descriptive, and news item.

Indicators        :        1. Students are able to know the modals in the past form.

                2. Students are able to know the function of each modal.

                3. Students are able to make sentences or dialog by using modals in the past form.

  1. Teaching Material        :        Modals in the Past Form
  2. Source of Material        :        Look Ahead 1 , A Practical English Grammar
  3. Supporting Media        :
  1. Computer
  1. Class Preparation                :
  1. Checking computer and LCD facilities
  2. Preparation language laboratory
  1. Types and Tools of Evaluation:
  1. Pencil and paper test
  2. On going test
  3. Written test
  1. Learning experience/Steps of teaching:

Time

Instruction Method/Activity

Student Activity

15’

INTRODUCTION/PRE TEACHING

  1. Greeting
  2. Teacher explains the objectives of learning and teaching

  1. Students listen to what the teacher asks them what to do.

90’

MAIN ACTIVITIES

  1. Teacher show or write the past form of modal verbs.
  2. Teacher explains the functions of each past modal verb and gives the examples.
  3. Teacher asks the students to make their own example.

  1. Students notice the form of modals in the past form.
  2. Students listen to teacher’s explanation carefully and may ask to the teacher about noun phrases.
  3. Students make their example and answer orally.

30’

  1. Teacher gives the students exercise to make a dialogue by using modals in the past form.
  1. Students create the dialogue for each modal.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF MATERIAL

Modals in the past form

Modals

present

Past

can

could

will

would

shall

should

may

might

1. Could + Verb base

          to offer suggestions or possibilities

                Example:        Patrick                :  Oh, no! I left my shorts.

                                Spongebob        : Don’t worry, Patrick. You could borrow my shorts.

                                Asmi                : I’m having trouble with English.

                                Randah        : Why don’t you ask Agnes? Perhaps she could help you.

          to indicate that the ability existed in the past but doesn’t exist now.

                Example:        Tasya                : Ras, can you climb the durian tree?

                Rasya        : Well… I could climb durian tree when I was so young. But I think I’m   too heavy to climb it.

                Mia        : Grandpa, what could you do when you were younger?

                Grandpa        :  When I was younger, I could swim across the big river very well and faster.

          to express polite requests

                Example:        Could I borrow your pencil (please)?

                                Could you lend me your jacket now?

                                Could you please close the door?

                                Could you pass the salt?

2. Would + Verb base

         for an action that was repeated regularly in the past

                Example:        When I was a child, I would visit my grandparents every weekend.

                                On Sundays, when I was a child, we would all get up early and go fishing.

         insert rather into the pattern and use this expression to express preferences

                Example:        Justin    :  What would you rather do in the weekend, go to the party or stay home?

                                Eminem :  I would rather go to the party than stay home.

        

                                Angel           :  Which country would you rather visit?

                                Maria           :  I would rather visit Italia than Somalia.

         to express polite requests

                Example:        Andi        :  Would you mind cycling with me, Kala?

                                Kala        :  No, not at all. It would be nice.

                                Mikola         : Would you please pass the helmet, Bella?

                                Bella         :  No problem.

3. Should + Verb base

         to give definite advice (advisability)

                Example:        Bunda  :  Putri, you should study tonight. You will have English test tomorrow, won’t you?

                        Putri        :    I will, Bunda.

                        Debby        :    You should paint your door, Bobby. It looks terrible.

                        Bobby        :    Yes, I know I should.

Example:        You should practice for more than an hour.  (to musical friend)

        They shouldn’t allow parking here; the street is too narrow.

        Application should be sent before March 25th.

4. Might + Verb base

         to tell possibilities

                Example:        David                :   Where is Deddy?

                        Copperfield        :   He might be in the studio with Kalina.

         To express polite requests

                Example:        Tian                :   Might I borrow your coat?

                        Ringgo                :   I’m afraid not. It has been brought by Donny for weeks and I don’t know when he’ll return it.