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I use this activity as practice for using narrative tenses, particularly past simple and

progressive/continuous with pre-intermediate students. It is a very structured activity in which


students write a short newspaper article about a robbery.

Procedure

 Tell students they are going to write a newspaper article about a robbery in a public place.

 Elicit the kind of information the students think they would need to write the article and
write questions up on the board as they give you ideas. At this point the teacher
formulates the questions as the focus is on the students creating the content of the story
and not an exercise in grammar.

 Write these questions on one side of the board and leave them there as students will need
them again in stage 5 of this activity. Typical questions could be:

1. Where was the robbery?

2. When did it take place?

3. How many robbers were there?

4. Were they wearing disguises?

5. Were they armed?

6. How many robbers were there?

7. What did the workers and customers do?

8. Was anybody injured?


9. What did the robbers take?

10. How did they get away?

11. Who called the police?

12. When did the police arrive?

13. Have the robbers been caught yet?

 Help students out with your own ideas if they are not very inspired at this point.

 In pairs or small groups ask students to answer each question using their imagination.
Make bilingual dictionaries available and move round the class assisting with vocabulary.

 Once the groups have the basic information for their story, you can discuss the
organisation of the text. As this is a newspaper article, talk about how the first paragraph
would contain a summary of what the writer feels the reader would most like to know
about the incident, and the rest of the article would tell the story in full. Of course, the
most important/interesting facts may vary from story to story but would most likely be
what the robbers took, whether anyone was injured and whether the robbers have been
caught. Get students to show their plan by drawing a box for each paragraph and putting
key words in.

 Ask students to write their texts and tell them that they should focus on communicating
their story clearly and on using the past simple and past progressive/continuous
correctly. At pre-intermediate level students can’t be expected to write a perfect
newspaper article but by giving them achievable aims within the task the teacher needs
only mark the text against the criteria given and will not need to correct every mistake as
this could be very demotivating. Give students a time limit of about 15 to 20 minutes for
this task.

 Students now swap round their finished texts with other groups. The new group reads the
article and answers the questions on the board that were produced in stage 1 of this
activity.

Follow-up activity

 In open class ask students to talk about events that have been happening recently in the
news. You may want to ask them to choose a current event to talk about briefly in the
next class and, depending on your curriculum and the interest of the students, you could
get students to plan an article on a real news event in a future lesson. Take in the finished
articles. You can correct the use of the past simple and progressive/continuous and give
them a grade or comment as to how clearly they told their story.

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