Planning (Monday/Wednesday)
Course code: PRI-01-01-16W
Date: 25/01/2025
Resources: Pages to work with:
Book: Everybody Up 3 For subjects like I/you/we/they, use do/don’t.
Unit 1: Things to eat For singular subjects like he/she/it, use
does/doesn’t.
Objectives:
Question: What + do/does + subject?
Vocabulary: Food (snacks, drinks, desserts)
Affirmative: Subject + want(s) + some + noun.
Gum/ Popcorn/ Peanuts/ Potato chips/ Chocolate
Negative: Subject + don’t/doesn’t + want + any +
Soda/ Water/ Juice/ Milk/ Coffee noun.
Cake/ Ice cream/ Cookies/ Pie Example:
Grammar: Simple present statements-questions using What do you want?
the verb want and quantifiers: some/any
I want some gum.
Quantifiers indicate the quantity of a noun. Quantifiers
in English are always placed before the noun. I don’t want any gum.
We use some and any when we want to express an Activities: Pages 4-5 (student book)
indeterminate quantity when referring to a noun, but
we do not want to say exactly what that quantity is. Homework: Pages 4-5 (workbook).
Some: is used in affirmative and interrogative Games:
sentences. "Some" is used in positive sentences with
both countable and uncountable nouns. (Algunos-as/ Waves. (Each student will sit in a chair, the
Un poco de) teacher will say the words "left" or "right" and the
students should move to the chair that is in that
Any: although its meaning is the same as some, any is direction. The student who sits in the wrong chair
mainly used in interrogative and negative sentences. must answer a question.)
"Any" is used with both countable and uncountable
nouns in negative contexts. (Ninguno-a/Nada de)
The verb "do" functions as an auxiliary verb in English,
which means it helps form questions.