Detailed Sample Task:
Stage I

CLB 3 - Writing
Interacting with Others

Education and Learning

Writing Icon

Real-World Task

Write a short, simple message to a classroom assistant to thank them for helping you one on one during the term.

Planning Context

Vocabulary and Grammar

Knowledge and Strategies

Activities and Tasks

Sample Skill-Building Activities:

  • In groups, brainstorm ways a classroom assistant could help you, using prompts
if needed.
  • Elicit thank you phrases that you already know. Read 3-4 examples of thank you phrases and compare your ideas.
  • Read or listen to an explanation of when we thank people. In groups or pairs, practice doing small actions and thanking each other, for example, “Thank you for opening the door for me.”, “Thanks for giving me a pencil”, and so on. Practice writing the thank you phrases down.
  • Look at an example of a thank you note with the different parts labelled, the greeting, title and name, purpose statement, sign-off, and so on. Look at
a new example and add labels.
  • Learn about calling people by their preferred names and titles. Learn about different titles in Canada and their meaning, such as “Ms./Mr./ Mrs./ Mx.” Match titles to pictures / descriptions of people.
  • Learn about sign-offs in a thank you
note. Practice adding a sign-off to a thank you note.
  • Learn about the importance of proofreading your writing for mistakes. Practice correcting some simple errors in an example thank you note.

Sample Skill-Using Tasks:

  • Write a simple message to a classroom assistant to thank them for helping you one on one with your reading during the term.
  • Write a simple message to your teacher to thank them for helping you over the term.

Sample Assessment Tasks:

  • Write a simple message to a classroom assistant to thank them for helping you one on one with your speaking during the term.

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.