Detailed Sample Task:
Stage I

CLB 1 - Speaking
Sharing Information

Canada

Speaking icon

Real-World Task

Answer 2 to 3 questions about your journey to Canada such as what
countries you have lived in and when you arrived.

Planning Context

Vocabulary and Grammar

Knowledge and Strategies

Activities and Tasks

Sample Skill-Building Activities:

  • Display an image that represents diversity and multiculturalism such as a mosaic or a quilt. In simple terms, discuss how Canada is a diverse, multicultural country and how people have been immigrating to Canada for many years and many reasons.
  • Display a large map of the world. Ask each learner to show and tell the country(ies) they lived in before they came to Canada by asking the same simple question to each learner (E.g.Where are you from?; Where did you live before?). Help learners find the country(ies) on the map if needed. Help them with pronunciation if needed. Have all learners repeat and practice saying the country names.
  • Write the question, Where are you from? OR Where did you live before? on the board/ screen. Elicit a response from a learner. Copy their response on the board/screen. Continue to model and practice the question/ answer until everyone has listened and responded 
to the question.
  • Share/ show a large calendar. Write the question, When did you come to Canada? on the board/ screen. Elicit 
and record the response.
  • Demonstrate how to say the year by saying the whole number (two thousand twenty-four) or in chunks (twenty/twenty-four). Have learners practice telling a partner the year they came to Canada.
  • Consider teaching how to say the date including the month and day in addition to the year.
  • Review and practice 1 or 2 strategies
to use when you don’t understand.
  • Prepare a large class chart on a worksheet with the questions in large print at the top of the page. Have learners walk around the class or work in a breakout room asking and answering questions about where they lived and when they came to Canada as they fill in the answers to complete the class chart. Consider posting a list of commonly named countries in the classroom or on the worksheet for learners to copy. Consider having a list of years posted in the class or on the worksheet to assist learners who are having communication challenges.
  • Create a short, simple instructor-made story on the topic, and have learners listen as the instructor reads, following with their finger. Have learners repeat after the instructor to match intonation and fluency. Finally, have learners read the story as a group, and then individually. These activities practice vocabulary in context, show relevancy of the language and improve fluency.

Sample Skill-Using Tasks:

  • Provide learners with a set of 3 to 4 cards with questions about their journey to Canada printed on them. While learners take turns asking their partners questions, circulate around the room listening to learners’ answers and making note of their strengths and areas of improvement. Provide feedback to learners individually or as a class.

Sample Assessment Tasks:

  • Ask each learner 2 to 3 questions about their journey to Canada. Use a rubric to assess the criteria for the tasks and provide action-oriented feedback.

Teaching Considerations

Resources

Detailed Sample Task

This exemplar is aligned with the Canadian Language Benchmarks (CLB) and is designed to guide and inform your lesson and module planning. Consult the Canadian Language Benchmarks English as a Second Language for Adults for detailed performance descriptors at this benchmark and skill.

The information in this document is not exhaustive and can be expanded on. As well, you can use
more learner-friendly language in your materials and assessments.

This is NOT a lesson or module plan.