🔗 Explorers: The Story Relay
A fully interactive A2.2 Kids speaking lesson that turns connectors into a live team game: master explorers build one shared oral story where every new speaker must open their turn with a connector. Students begin with four warm-up questions, then learn a speaking-strategy toolkit in two blocks: The Golden Rule (speaker 1 starts, each next speaker adds a connector + a line, with a worked three-speaker example) and Choose Your Opener (a table matching what you want to add — next event, surprise, difference, result, reason, one more thing — to Then/After that, Suddenly, But, So, Because and And). Ten key words (relay, turn, opener, continue, pass, suddenly, adventure, wise, cheer, together) appear in a scrollable table with kid-friendly definitions, and six become detailed review flashcards. The reading is a magazine-style Master File — 'The Dragon Relay', a 100-word model in which Team Compass builds one story and every part opens with a connector — with key words highlighted on hover. Practice includes eight fill-in-the-blank relay lines (then, so, because, and, after, before, connector, but) with live green/red validation, hints and a running score; the main speaking section runs the full relay with five staged prompts and a five-line model dialogue; a guided 30-50 word writing task captures each learner's relay lines with a four-point checklist and a live auto-saving word counter, ready to rehearse for the festival; and a full eight-question multiple-choice quiz mixing relay rules, connector jobs and two reading-comprehension questions, with a progress bar, per-question explanations, a conic-gradient result circle and localStorage persistence.
Lesson Plan
- 4 questions about relays, passing turns and connector openers
- Silent thinking or pair-share format — no writing required
Key Vocabulary
Grammar Points
- Live connected narration: building one story across many speakers
- The golden rule: open every new turn with a connector
- Choosing an opener by function: Then/After that (next), Suddenly (surprise), But (difference)
- So (result) and Because (reason) as turn openers in a story
- Story frames: Once / One day to begin, Finally to end
- Cohesion in speaking: each line joins to the line before it