Educational Project Plan: "It's My Life"
Grade: 6th Grade (Primary)
Scenario: Classroom (via Zoom)
Duration: 4 sessions of 60 minutes each
Main Issue: Understanding and describing daily routines, time, and after-school activities; promoting healthy lifestyles through language learning.
Methodology: Problem-Based Learning (PBL)
Axes: Critical Interculturality (respect for diverse lifestyles and routines)
| Stage | Activities / Tasks | Time | Adaptation for 6th Grade |
|---|---|---|---|
| Present | Pose reflection about daily routines and healthy lifestyles | 10 min | Use engaging questions to activate prior knowledge |
| Collect | Students share their routines and habits | 10 min | Use breakout rooms or shared chat for participation |
| Formulate | Define the problem: "How can we describe our routines and promote healthy activities?" | 10 min | Use visual aids and simple language |
| Organize | Form teams, assign tasks (e.g., create routines, identify activities) | 10 min | Clear instructions and roles; use collaborative tools |
| Build | Students create routines, questions, and activities using tools | 15 min | Use Wordwall, flashcards, and online games |
| Verify and Analyze | Present their routines; peer and teacher feedback | 10 min | Encourage reflection on language use and cultural differences |
| Share | Final presentation of routines; discuss intercultural aspects | 5 min | Promote respect and appreciation of diverse lifestyles |
| Stage | Activities | Objectives | Materials/Tools | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present | Show images of different daily routines, ask: "What do you do every day? When?" | Activate prior knowledge, identify common routines | Images, slides, Zoom chat | Use simple language and visuals to engage students |
| Collect | Students share their routines via chat or voice, discuss differences and similarities | Gather prior knowledge, encourage speaking and listening skills | Student sharing, chat, voice | Use guided questions to facilitate sharing |
| Formulate | Introduce the problem: "How can I tell others what I do daily and promote a healthy life?" | Define the problem clearly, focus on routines and health | Chart paper or slides | Make it relevant; connect routines with healthy habits |
| Organize | Divide students into small groups; assign tasks (e.g., write routines, create questions) | Foster teamwork, clarify roles | Breakout rooms, digital collaboration tools | Ensure each team has a clear goal |
| Build | Students develop routines, questions with vocabulary (e.g., "What time do you get up?") and create mini-presentations | Practice the target vocabulary and grammar; engage creativity | Wordwall, flashcards, online games | Use interactive tools to reinforce vocabulary and grammar |
| Verify and Analyze | Present routines; peer feedback; teacher assesses language use and intercultural aspects | Develop critical thinking, intercultural awareness | Presentation platform, feedback forms | Highlight differences and respect for diverse lifestyles |
| Share | Final sharing of routines; discussion on healthy lifestyles and cultural differences | Reflect on learning, interculturality, and healthy habits | Virtual 'show and tell' sessions | Emphasize respect and understanding of diversity |
| Vocabulary | Grammar | Skills | Pages from Book | Tools/Activities |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Daily routines: Get up, have breakfast, go to school, have lunch, go home, have dinner, go to bed | Simple present questions: "What time do you...?"; affirmative sentences with "go", "finish", "study", "teach", "play", "do", "have" | Write about a daily routine, asking and answering questions | Pages 22-29 | Wordwall, flashcards, virtual games, writing tasks, group discussions |
| Stage | Activity | Materials/Tools | Expected Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Present & Collect | Show a video or images of kids doing routines; students describe their routines verbally or via chat | Images, video, Zoom chat | Students identify and share their routines |
| Formulate | Group discussion: How do routines relate to health? Why are they important? | Guiding questions, visual aids | Clear understanding of the link between routines and health |
| Organize | Assign roles: routine describer, question creator, cultural note taker | Collaboration tools (Google Docs, Jamboard) | Teams work effectively and share responsibilities |
| Build | Create digital posters of routines with vocabulary and questions; include times | Wordwall, online drawing tools | Interactive and visual routine representations |
| Verify & Analyze | Present routines; peer feedback; teacher asks intercultural questions ("What is different in your routines?") | Feedback forms, Zoom poll | Critical thinking, intercultural awareness, language use |
| Share & Reflect | Each group presents their routine; discuss differences and similarities with respect | Screen sharing, chat, discussion prompts | Appreciation of diversity, language confidence |
| Type of Assessment | Description | Tools/Methods |
|---|---|---|
| Formative: participation, activities | Engagement during activities, use of vocabulary and grammar | Observation, checklists |
| Summative: final routines presentation | Clarity, vocabulary, correct grammar, intercultural awareness | Rubric, peer and teacher feedback |
| Self-assessment and reflection | Students reflect on what they learned about routines and interculturality | Reflection journals, discussion |
This project promotes active engagement, cultural awareness, language skills, and critical thinking through real-life problem-solving activities aligned with the PBL methodology.