📖 Lesson B1 Grammar📐 Grammar

📰 Builders: Already & Yet

A fully interactive B1.1 teens grammar lesson that continues the JAY module by contrasting already and yet with the present perfect. Students begin with four warm-up questions about chores and surprises, then study the language in three clear blocks: already (done sooner than expected, placed in the middle after have/has, with an 'already signals' panel), yet (up to now, used in questions and negatives, placed at the end), and Position control (a rules table that fixes the golden rule — already in the middle, yet at the end). Ten chore-and-expectation words (already, yet, chore, tidy, finish, expect, task, still, sooner, done) appear in a scrollable table with B1 definitions and examples, and six are revised as flashcards. The reading is a magazine-style Saturday checklist (about 160 words) in which Priya checks jobs before film night: Marco has already set up the chairs, Aylin has already made the posters, but nobody has tested the speakers yet — with seven key words highlighted on hover. Practice includes eight contextualised fill-in-the-blank questions testing already/yet position, negatives, questions and participles, with live validation, hints and a running score; a speaking section with five brag-and-confess prompts and a model six-line checklist dialogue; a guided 40-70 word writing task combining one already-brag and one yet-confession, with a live word counter and auto-save; and a full eight-question multiple-choice quiz with a progress bar, per-question explanations, a conic-gradient result circle and localStorage persistence.

🎒 Teens (11–16) schedule 45 min signal_cellular_alt Medium
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view_agenda Lesson Plan

  • 4 questions about chores, deadlines and finishing sooner than expected
  • Silent thinking or pair-share format — no writing required

translate Key Vocabulary

alreadyyetchoretidyfinishexpecttaskstillsoonerdone

auto_fix_high Grammar Points

  • Already = before now, often sooner than expected; goes in the middle (have already done)
  • Yet = up to now; used in questions and negatives; goes at the end
  • Positive surprise: I've already finished! / You've already cleaned your room?
  • Negative: I haven't tidied my room yet.
  • Question: Have you finished your homework yet?
  • Position contrast: already in the middle, yet at the end

arrow_upward Prerequisites

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