⭐ Builders: The Experience Collector
A fully interactive B1.1 Builders' Studio reading lesson that teaches two transferable strategies inside the Present Perfect module: form-mining (hunting a text for one grammar shape) and inference (reading between the lines). Students begin with four warm-up questions about bucket lists and finding information quickly, then study a two-tool Reading Toolkit: Tool 1 shows how to mine a text for present perfect (has/have + past participle), with a panel of signal words to hunt for (ever, never, just, already, yet, so far, in my life); Tool 2 defines inference as clue + what you know = a smart guess, and warns that a guess with no clue is only an opinion. Ten key words (collection, bucket list, experience, adventure, goal, inference, clue, achieve, so far, tick off) appear in a scrollable table with full B1 definitions and examples, six as review flashcards. The reading, 'The Woman Who Collects Experiences', is a Studio blog post in which Priya interviews her Aunt Meera, who has swum with dolphins, slept in a desert and cooked in three countries; the text is dense with perfect forms (has visited, haven't been yet, has just begun) and carries one clear inference (she values experiences over objects). Practice offers 8 contextualised fill-in-the-blanks drawn from the text (swum, has, yet, just, never, list, inference, so) with live green/red validation, hints and a running score; a speaking section with five bucket-list prompts and a six-line model dialogue between Sam and Aylin; a guided 40-70 word writing task in which students draft their own bucket list with a four-point checklist and live word counter with auto-save; and a full 8-question quiz (six on perfect forms and inference, two on the reading) with a progress bar, per-question explanations, a conic-gradient result circle with tiered feedback, and localStorage persistence.
Lesson Plan
- 4 questions about bucket lists, unfinished dreams and reading for key information
- Silent thinking or pair-share format — no writing required
Key Vocabulary
Grammar Points
- Present perfect for experience: has/have + past participle (she has visited, I've swum)
- Negatives with 'yet': I haven't been to the mountains yet
- Signal words: ever, never, just, already, yet, so far, in my life
- 'So far' and 'up to now' point to the present perfect, not the past simple
- Form-mining: locate the helper (has/have) first, then the participle
- Inference: combine a text clue with prior knowledge to reach a guess the writer never states
Prerequisites
हमारी कक्षाओं में शामिल हों!
हम मानते हैं कि सही प्रश्न सही उत्तर लाते हैं। चाहे आपके पास अपनी अंग्रेजी सीखने की यात्रा के बारे में कोई प्रश्न हो, हम हमेशा यहां हैं।