Adjectives: brand new; colourful; expensive; lovely; great; cheap; different.
Comparatives: smaller; more expensive; slightly higher; a little bit cheaper; completely different; a lot easier.
Bella and Tom meet their friend Kelly at the coffee shop. They notice her new red shoes and are surprised that Kelly paid a lot for them. They talk about their shopping habits. What do they like to do when they go shopping? Do they prefer online shopping or going to stores? Find out more about their shopping habits!
To check students’ understanding of the video, sensitising them to the lexical set relating to shopping through comprehension questions, and helping them in developing their speaking skills by encouraging full and extended answers to comprehension questions.
Click the link: ACTIVITY 1a
Click the link: ACTIVITY 1b
There are 2 activities focussing on:
Both activities can be run individually, in small groups or as a whole class.
Click the link: ACTIVITY 1a
Click the link: ACTIVITY 1b
Task 1a (True/False)
Task 1b (Matching opinions)
To integrate skills and help students in practicing collocations relating to shopping, pronunciation of shopping-related words and collocations, giving opinions in the context of shopping, comparative adjectives, and using intensifiers and mitigators with comparatives.
Click here to start the activity: ACTIVITY 2a
Click here to start the activity: ACTIVITY 2b
- Spin the wheel
- Click on ‘Single name’ to read the prompts
- Start by saying ‘We think that …/ We believe …’, etc. Make your opinions stronger by adding a little, slightly, much, a lot.
- Explain why you think your opinion is correct.
- Ask the rest of the class if they agree with it (What is your opinion? Do you agree with us?)
Here are 2 activities focussing on:
Both activities should be run in pairs, small groups or as a whole class. Avoid individual work for these tasks as the aim is to encourage students to collaborate, share ideas and speak.
Collocations: Target lexis review and extension
This activity helps students to focus on and review collocations from the video. The task also introduces further collocations that students will practise in the follow up activities.
Step 1: Spin the wheel
Step 2: Click on ‘Single name’ to read the prompts:
📍Accept other possible combinations, e.g. ‘spot on’, ‘keep on’, ‘spot offers’, etc. but insist on finding the intended collocations above as these will be used in the next activities.
spot | a bargain |
window | shopping |
money | |
in | the sales |
try it | on |
queue | up |
shop for | tech gadgets |
special | offers |
sold | out |
📍Multiple answers possible, e.g. Online shopping is much more popular than real shopping; Online shopping is a little bit more popular than …; Online shopping is a lot less popular than …; etc.
online shopping / real shopping (popular) |
online shopping / real shopping (safe) |
shopping with friends / shopping alone (good) |
older shop assistants / younger shop assistants (friendly) |
online shopping / real shopping (easy to spot a bargain) |
shopping for clothes / shopping for tech gadgets (cheap) |
window-shopping / real shopping (enjoyable) |
shopping in a local shop / shopping in a shopping centre (interesting) |
To practice the pronunciation of key words related to shopping, further practice and drill the target language from the video and previous activities, and sensitize students to connected speech and chunking, the schwa and weak forms, as well as silent letters.
Listen to the audio and repeat.
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To help students in reviewing the target language, personalise it by practicing shopping collocations in the context of their lives, reviewing and practicing the use of “Have you ever…?” for discussing life experiences, as well as the past simple tense, and developing their speaking skills.
Click here to start activity: Activity 4a
Click here to download the worksheet: Activity 4b
There are 2 activities focussing on:
Activity 4a
Click here to start the activity: Activity 4a
Activity 4b
This activity helps students to personalise the target language through a mingle task.
To help students in integrating speaking skills and life competences, such as collaboration, teamwork, negotiation, and critical thinking, as well as practising and personalising the target language in the context of shopping tips for teenagers, ultimately aiming to develop their presentation skills.
You are going to work in small groups to design a poster helping teenagers shop safely and responsibly. Before you start working on your own poster, have a look at some ideas presented by other students.
Click here to see the sample poster: Boost-shopping-tips-poster
The activity for the students is to design a poster ‘ Top 10 Tips for Shopping- Tips for Teens By Teens’
1. To set up the activity, show students a sample poster and elicit the ideas covered in the poster (i.e. Before you go shopping; At the store; Back at home).
📍Don’t spend too long discussing the ideas presented in the poster. Go over all the points/ideas very quickly so students can’t just copy them. The poster is only meant to demonstrate what is expected of the students and show them that it is not going to be that difficult to design it.
📍Ensure there is some time left for the presentation stage – each group should get around 3 min to present their posters. Perhaps the best 5 tips could be identified- this could be set as homework.
📍As a follow up, ask students if they think online shopping is easier/safer than real shopping.
2. Explain that you think it’s very easy to go wrong and make a mistake when shopping online. To demonstrate this, show students this worksheet below:
3. Have students/pairs choose two online shopping disasters they think are funniest and most interesting.
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The BOOST Project (Building Open Online Series for Teaching) aims to improve the digital readiness of teachers of English as a foreign language to students aged 8 -14 by providing an open-access series of engaging native-speaker content videos linked with a Resource Pack of ready-made activities to stimulate production of the language in online learning.