guess-who
DESCRIPTION
guess-whoTRANSCRIPT
TEACH-THIS.COM
Guess Who
Is he watching TV? Yes, he is. Is he wearing a T-shirt? No, he isn't. Is he George White? Yes, that's right. Your turn.
George White
watching TV
jeans T-shirt trainers
Terry Woodall
listening to music
trousers shirt
shoes
Kim Wong
watching TV
jeans sweater trainers
Al Green
listening to music
shorts T-shirt trainers
Tim Kobayashi
watching TV
jeans shirt
shoes
Matthew Smith
reading an email
shorts T-shirt trainers
Tom Black
watching TV
jeans T-shirt trainers
Michael Keegan
reading an email
trousers shirt
shoes
David Jones
reading an email
jeans T-shirt trainers
Paul White
watching TV
trousers shirt
shoes
Willard Elliot
reading an email
trousers shirt
shoes
Kerry Lee
listening to music
shorts sweater trainers
Terry Fernandez
reading an email
trousers sweater shoes
Pablo Reno
listening to music
shorts T-shirt trainers
Simon Flower
watching TV
jeans sweater shoes
James Brown
reading an email
trousers shirt
shoes
Ralph Smith
reading an email
shorts T-shirt trainers
Chris Newton
listening to music
shorts sweater trainers
James Hewitt
watching TV
jeans shirt
shoes
Mike Kendall
listening to music
trousers sweater shoes
TEACH-THIS.COM
Guess Who
In this challenging speaking task, students use present continuous yes/no questions to guess who their partner is thinking about. Before class, make one copy of the worksheet for each student. Procedure Divide the students into pairs and give each student a copy of the worksheet. Tell the class that you are thinking of one of the people on the worksheet. Have the students ask you present continuous yes/no questions to try to find out which person you are thinking about. Tell them they can ask up to five questions and then they must guess who the person is. Example: Q: Is he watching TV? A: Yes, he is. Q: Is he wearing a shirt? A: No, he isn't. Q: Is he wearing jeans? A: Yes, he is. Q: Is he George White? A: That's right! Have the students take it in turns to choose one person from the chart. They must not say who it is. Their partner asks up to five questions to try to find out the other student’s secret person. A correct answer wins one point. The student with the most points at the end is the winner.
Written by Teresa O'Brien for Teach-This.com ©2014