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nurinz03
2

hi, i plan to make a basic english class in my organisation twice a week. anybody hve a module/slide presentation for this programme? pls send to me...... tq
From Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur
murali.erp
3

Hi,
In English Training instead we make the course content..better understand from trainees/with your assessment what they are lacking and prepare the modules. In such programmes participation is important. This will create interest and will be effective.
Murali.

From India, Hyderabad
meenakshi.pawar
4

Hi,

I run similar kind of sessions in my organization by name "Impressive speech sessions". The entire agenda of these classes has been divided in two categories:

1. Language Skills

2. Pronunciation & Confidence building

Now I do not have any set module or presentation, however the structure is as follows:

1. For Lanugauge skills

parts of speech

Tenses

Prepositions

Articles

Subject Verb Agreement

Active Passive Speech

Direct Indirect Speech

2. For pronunciation I follow a presentation from my previous company.

Sounds of P T K

Th sounds

V sounds

Practicing for day to day word usage.

Refer to below mentioned materila for tenses:

About Tenses

In English, only two tenses can be distinguished in the verb alone: the simple present tense and the simple past tense. All other forms use extra words, called auxiliaries, to distinguish tenses.

Simple Present:

Current action or condition: I hear you. Here comes the bus. General truths: There are thirty days in September.

Habitual feeling or action: I like music. I run on Sundays. Future Time: The train leaves at 4:00.

Present Progressive:

Activity in progress: I am playing soccer now. Verbs of perception: He is feeling sad.

Simple Past:

Completed action: We visited the museum yesterday. Completed condition: The weather was bad yesterday.

Past Progressive:

Past action that took place over a period of time: They were climbing for twenty-seven days. past action interrupted by another: We were eating dinner when she told me.

Simple Future:

Action that will take place in the future: I will walk to school across the country. I won't be spending a lot of money.

Present Perfect:

With verbs of state that began in the past and lead up to and include the present: He has lived here for years.

To express habitual or continued action: She has worn glasses all her life.

With events occuring at an indefinite time in the past (with ever, never, before): Have you ever been to Tokyo?

Present Perfect Progressive:

To express duration of an action that began in the past, has continued into the present and may continue into the future: Laura has been working for two hours, and she hasn't finished yet.

Past Perfect:

To describe a past event or condition completed before another event in the past:

When I arrived home, he had already called. Jane had seen the movie before I asked her to go.

Past Perfect Progressive:

To express duration of an action that began and ended in the past, in relation to another event in the past:

She had been walking when a car hit her.

Future Perfect:

To express action that will be completed by or before a specified time in the future:

By next month we will have finished the job.

Future Perfect Progressive:

To express ongoing action that is taking place in relation to another future event:

By the time Kate flies to Mexico City, Rob will have been driving for eighteen long hours.

Past Participles and the Perfect Tenses

As the examples above show, the prefect tenses always use the auxiliary infinitive verb to have along with the past participle of the main verb in the sentence. The past participle is often exactly the same as the past-tense form of the verb, but there are a large number of irregular past participles. In either case, the past participle remains constant, whether the tense is present perfect, past perfect, or future perfect. The distinction between the tenses is made by the form of the auxiliary verb to have, which can appear as has, had, or will have.

List of Common Past Participles

Infinitive Past Participle Infinitive Past Participle

bring brought brought bite bit bitten

buy bought bought break broke broken

fight fought fought choose chose chosen

seek sought sought drive drove driven

think thought thought forget forgot forgotten

freeze froze frozen

bet bet bet get got gotten

burst burst burst give gave given

cost cost cost hide hid hidden

hit hit hit ride rode ridden

hurt hurt hurt speak spoke spoken

let let let steal stole stolen

put put put take took taken

quit quit quit write wrote written

read read read eat ate eaten

set set set

shut shut shut be was been

become became become

begin began begun blow blew blown

drink drank drunk do did done

ring rang rung draw drew drawn

shrink shrank shrunk go went gone

sing sang sung grow grew grown

sink sank sunk run ran run

spring sprang sprung see saw seen

swim swam swum throw threw thrown



have had had shine shone shone

hear heard heard spin spun spun

make made made string strung strung

pay paid paid win won won

say said said mean meant meant

hold held held bend bent bent

bleed bled bled build built built

deal dealt dealt

lead led led feel felt felt

speed sped sped keep kept kept

sell sold sold leave left left

stand stood stood lend lent lent

tell told told light lit lit

dig dug dug lose lost lost

swing swung swung send sent sent

sting stung stung shoot shot shot

slide slid slid sit sat sat

wake woke woke weep wept wept

sleep slept slept

bind bound bound sweep swept swept

Table for the same is attached.

What ever I have on this subject is attached herewith.

Regards,

Meenakshi

From India, Pune
Attached Files (Download Requires Membership)
File Type: doc direct_and_indirect_speech_rules_114.doc (66.5 KB, 2182 views)
File Type: doc prepositions_198.doc (57.0 KB, 1781 views)
File Type: doc verb_tense_overview_with_examples_756.doc (33.0 KB, 1766 views)

meenakshi.pawar
4

some more ppts Please feel free to ask me, if you need anything else. :D Regards, meenakshi
From India, Pune
Attached Files (Download Requires Membership)
File Type: ppt email_ettiquette_131.ppt (517.5 KB, 1408 views)
File Type: ppt subject_verb_agreement_134.ppt (285.5 KB, 1228 views)

sankar_mba
Hi Meenakshi !
Amazing Work ! Will be very useful to many.
Thanks a Lot for sharing
Actually In our organisation also we just started conducting english classes
for our employees and for near by communities- I found your materials
very useful !
and one more request - you have any assessment format - for
individuals before starting the english course..if u have please
share with me !
thanks in advance
tk care
bye
sankar

From India, Madras
kishore0307
Meenakshi The info provided by you is great. I had a word doc on email writing and Presentation skills, which might be of some help..
From India, Bangalore
Attached Files (Download Requires Membership)
File Type: doc effective_presentation_skills_222.doc (49.0 KB, 1203 views)
File Type: doc 20_rules_of_writing_effective_business_emails_104.doc (29.0 KB, 1921 views)

varsha101
Hi Minakshi,
The english module, you are implementing is really a systematic one.
i am now going to use this for my own. thanks for sharing this type of information with all the members. specially for those, which are freshers on their role.
Regards
Varsha


deepshika
1

Hello,

I also conduct english classes in my organisation.find herewith schedule:

Day1



Exercise 1

Present Tense

all the trainees will have to repeat each sentence in his/her own words-presnet tense

Exercise 2 Vocabulary

Write synonms of the words

Exercise 3 Essay(written communication)

Trainees will write an essay in their own words

Exercise 4 Essay(oral communication)

Trainees will read an essay



Day2

Exercise 1

past tense all the trainees will have to repeat each sentence in his/her own words-past tense

Exercise 2 synonms

Write synonms of the words

Exercise 3 reading test

Trainees will read an essay given on day 1



Day 3

Exercise 1 Future TENSE

Exercise 2 plural and singular presentation

Exercise 3 test

Test on plural and singular presentation

Exercise 4 reading test read topic given by trainer and read it out



Day 4

Exercise 1 vowel a and an

Exercise 2 test vowel exercise a and an

Exercise 3 tenses usage has or have

Exercise 4 tense test exercise has or have

Exercise 5 reading test read on topic given on day 3



Day 5

Exercise 1 Usage of in,on at'



Day 6

Exercise 1 prounciation s and sh

Exercise 2 reading test

Exercise 3 tense-Past tense question

Attached Files (Download Requires Membership)
File Type: ppt deepshikha_noun_746.ppt (1.38 MB, 823 views)

nikkyblue
14

Dear All
This is my 2nd day in the new office. I have just come to know a lady is charging us around Rs 100,000 for a similar course and she is equipped with linguaphone and all..Is it worth the hype and expenditure??
cheers
Nikhil

From India, Mumbai
nikkyblue
14

Dear all
Lotus books-an agency for Linguaphone are conducting a basic english course in my organisation
rough dtls about the course are
BASIC LEVEL
grammar
words etc
FLUENT LEVEL
sentence construction
CONFIDENCE LEVEL
conversational
COMMAND LEVEL

From India, Mumbai
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