Lesson Note on English Language SS1 First Term
SCHEME OF WORK
WEEK 1: SS1 ENGLISH LANGUAGE FIRST TERM: REVIEW OF WORD CLASS (PARTS OF SPEECH); ORAL: REVIEW OF VOWEL AND CONSONANT SOUNDS
WEEK 2: SS1 ENGLISH LANGUAGE FIRST TERM: NOUNS – MEANING, TYPES; SPOKEN ENGLISH: MONOPHTHONGS
WEEK 3: STRUCTURE: ADJECTIVES AND ADVERBS; ORAL: TRIPHTHONG
WEEK 4: SS1 ENGLISH LANGUAGE FIRST TERM; VOCABULARY: WORDS ASSOCIATED WITH FISHING; STRUCTURE: KINDS OF SENTENCE
WEEK 5: SS1 ENGLISH LANGUAGE FIRST TERM: WORDS ASSOCIATED WITH AGRICULTURE; COUNTABLE AND UNCOUNTABLE NOUNS; DIPHTHONG
WEEK 6: SS1 ENGLISH LANGUAGE FIRST TERM: STRUCTURE- PHRASES
WEEK 7: SS1 ENGLISH LANGUAGE FIRST TERM: TYPES AND FUNCTIONS OF CLAUSES; SYLLABIC CONSONANTS: /L/ AND /N/
WEEK 8: INTRODUCTION TO ANSWERING COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS; NOMINALIZATION OF ADJECTIVES AND VERBS
WEK 9: SS1 ENGLISH LANGUAGE FIRST TERM: IRREGULAR VERBS; READING TO PICK TOPIC SENTENCES
WEEK 10: SS1 ENGLISH LANGUAGE FIRST TERM: VOCABULARY ASSOCIATED WITH LIBRARY AND FIGURES OF SPEECH
English Language Lesson Note For SS1 (First Term)
Below are the 2022 complete SS1 First Term English Language Lesson Note
Week 1
Topic: Review of Word Class (Parts of Speech); Oral: Review of Vowel and Consonant Sounds
Introduction
The indispensable aspect of a language you cannot ignore if you want to be an authority in the language are the Parts of Speech.
A part of speech is a category into which words are placed according to the work they do in a sentence. Every word that makes up a sentence, phrase or clause belongs to a part of speech. The eight parts of speech are presented to you on a platter of gold, with their definitions, types, functions, examples and how to use them. Just click on the links to see everything you want to know about the different part of speech. To learn more, Click here
Parts of Speech
Grammar Clinic: Part Of Speech (Noun)
Grammar Clinic: Part of Speech (Pronoun)
Grammar Clinic: Parts of Speech (Adjective)
Grammar Clinic: Part of Speech (Verb)
Grammar Clinic: Part of Speech (Adverb)
Grammar Clinic: Part of Speech (Preposition)
Grammar Clinic: Part of Speech (Conjunction)
Grammar Clinic: Part of Speech (Interjection)
Week 2
Topic: Nouns: and Spoken English: Monothongs
What is a Noun?
A noun is often defined as a word which names a person, place or thing. Here are some examples of nouns: boy, river, friend, Mexico, triangle, day, school, truth, university, idea, John F. Kennedy, movie, aunt, vacation, eye, dream, flag, teacher, class, grammar. John is a noun because it is the name of a person; Mexico is a noun because it is the name of a place, and boy is a noun because it is the name of a thing. Noun has different forms and functions.
Types of Noun Forms and Functions
Abstract Noun: A noun (such as courage or freedom) that names an idea, event, quality, or concept. (e.g Love is an irresistible desire to be irresistibly desired)
Concrete Noun: A noun (such as chicken or egg) that names a material or tangible object or phenomenon–something recognizable through the senses.(e.g A little baby sleeping in a cot)
Note: an abstract noun refers to an action, concept, event, quality, or state (love, conversation), whereas a concrete noun refers to a touchable, observable person or thing (child, tree)
Animate Noun and Inanimate Noun
Animate Noun: A category of noun, referring to a person, animal, or other creature. (e.g The European hunted for presents for his wife and the women on his staff back home) To learn more, Click here
Week 3
Topic: Countable and Uncountable Nouns; Diphthong
Vocabulary Development: Words Associated with Agriculture
A) | Acres, Advances, Affect, Agrarian, Agriculture, Ailment, Animals, Arable, Arid, Attitude |
B) | Barn, Bison, Brawn, Breed, Bureau, Business |
C) | Capital, Cattle, Chemicals. chickens, Chores, Climate, Collective, Commercial cotter, Compounds, Conditions, Conservation, Consume, Consumers, Cooperative, Cotton, Cows, Crocodiles, Crops, Cultivation, Culture |
D) | Dairy, Degree, Demands, Dependence, Development, Disease, Disk, Diversity, Domestication, Drainage, Drought, Ducks. edible |
E) | Effort, Emus, Environment, Equipment, Erosion, Experiment, Extensive |
F) | Farm, Farmers, Feed, Fertile, Fertilize, Fiber, Food, Forage, Fruit trees, Fungicide, Fungus, Fur, Furrow |
G) | Gather, Geese, Genetic modification, Goal, Grange, Graze, Ground, Grower |
H) | Hard, Harmful, Harness, Harvest, Hectare, Help, Heritage, Holdings, Homestead, Horses, Husbandry, Hybrid |
I) | Ideal, Impoverished, Improvement, Industry, Insects, Intensive, Irrigation |
J) | Jaded, Joyous |
K) | Kibbutz, Knowledge |
L) | Labor, Laborer, Land, Lease, Livestock, Llamas. loan, Location
|
To learn more, Click here
Week 4
Topic: Adjectives and Adverbs; Oral: Triphthong
What are Adjectives?
Adjectives are the part of speech (or word class) that modify a noun or a pronoun. They are added to nouns to state what kind, what colour, which one or how many. In this light, therefore, it is important to note however that adjective do not just modify nouns but are also necessary to make the meanings of sentences clearer and more exact.
In addition to their basic (or positive) forms (for example, big and beautiful), most descriptive adjectives have two other forms: comparative (bigger and more beautiful) and superlative (biggest and most beautiful).
Adjectives are classified into different categories as you can see below-
Absolute Adjective: An adjective, such as “supreme” or “infinite,” with a meaning that is generally not capable of being intensified or compared.
Examples: In a world of prayer, we are all equal in the sense that each of us is a unique person, with a unique perspective on the world, a member of a class of one.
As in ‘his unique son,’ no degrees of uniqueness are possible, as unique in this sentence means one, so it cannot be said as, ‘his more unique son’. To learn more, Click here
WEEK 5
Vocabulary: Words Associated with Fishing; Structure: Kinds of Sentence
Words Associated with Fishing and Animal Husbandry
Here is a list of words associated with fishing-
1.Hooks, 2.Nets, 3.Fish 4.Traps, 5.Season, 6.Buoys, 7.Cables, 8.Industries, 9.Small-scale, 10.Coastlines, 11.Economy, 12.Sophisticated, 13.Mesh, 14.Refrigerator, 15.Trawler, 16.Bait, 17.Stocks, 18.Catch.
Countries with long ..1.. and good harbours are usually those that have the best-developed fishing …2., and fishing makes an important contribution to the Nigerian ..3..
There is a great deal of ..4.. fishing along Nigeria’s coast, using traditional methods such as ..5.., spear-fishing and hand-held fishing ..6..
However, deep water fishing requires quite ..7.. fishing boats. The commonest type of fishing boat is called a ..8.. These boats drag long nets along the sea bed to collect the fishes in their path. The net is like a huge somewhat flattened, cone-shaped bag attached to the boat by steel towing….
Many modern trawlers have a large ..9.. so that the ..10.. can be deep frozen. Another method is LINING. Several kilometres of lines with baited ..11.. are laid on the sea bed. Their position is marked by ..12.. floating on the water. The fishes are removed from the hooks and new ..13.. is put on. For drifting, shoals of fish swim into the nets and are caught in the .14…To learn more, Click here
Week 6
Topic: Structure – Phrases
Structure – Phrases
A phrase is a group of words that stand together as a single unit, typically as part of a clause or a sentence.
A phrase does not contain a subject and verb and, consequently, cannot convey a complete thought. A phrase contrasts with a clause. A clause does contain a subject and verb, and it can convey a complete idea.
Principal Types of Phrases
1. Adjective Phrase: A word group with an adjective as its head. This adjective may be accompanied by modifiers, determiners, and/or qualifiers. Adjective phrases modify nouns. They may be attributive (appearing before the noun) or predicative(appearing after a linking verb), but not all adjectives can be used in both positions. To learn more, Click here
Week 7
Topic: Types and Functions of Clauses; Syllabic consonants: /l/ and /n/
Introduction to Clauses
A clause is a group of related words containing a subject and a verb or a subject and a predicate. A clause may be either a sentence (an independent clause) or a sentence-like construction within another sentence (a dependent or subordinate clause). A clause can be usefully distinguished from a phrase, which is a group of related words that does not contain a subject-verb relationship, such as “in the morning” or “running down the street” or “having grown used to this harassment.
1. Main Clause
The main clause is a group of words that include a subject and a finite verb. It is not a part of another clause, or dependent on another clause to form a sentence. It can stand independently as it makes a complete statement. A sentence must have a main clause. Each of the following is a group of words that does not qualify as a main clause as they are incomplete statements and so cannot stand on their own.
- That you are my closest friend.
- When all of us sat beneath the giant olive tree. To learn more, Click here
Week 9
Topic: Irregular Verbs
What Are Irregular Verbs?
Irregular verbs are verbs that don’t take on the regular –d, -ed, or -ied spelling patterns of the past simple (V2) or past participle (V3). Many of the irregular V2 and V3 forms are the same, such as: cut – cut, had – had, let – let, hurt – hurt, fed- fed, and sold-sold. Irregular verbs are also often described as strong verbs. Here are nine that are used more often than the rest. These nine irregular verb examples also happen to be among the most commonly used words in the English language. They are:
- Go
- Get
- Say
- See
- Think
- Make
- Take
- Come
- Know
Some of these examples show how irregular verbs are used in sentences. Some sentences contain more than one example.
- Go get your brother. It’s time to eat dinner.→ In this example, all three irregular verbs (go, get, and eat) are in base form.
- I want to build a sand castle like the one we built last year.→ In this example, the irregular verb build is in base form. The irregular verb built is the past simple form of “build”. When you look at the complete list of examples, you’ll notice that built is also the past participle of the irregular verb “build”.
- He bet me that I couldn’t run five miles without stopping. I proved him wrong; I ran seven miles before I had to catch my breath.→ In this example, bet is a past simple form. When you look at the complete list, you will see that all three forms of “bet” are the same. Next, in the same sentence, the irregular verb run is in base form. In the next sentence, ran is the past simple form of “run” and had is the past simple form of “have.” Meanwhile, catch is base form. To learn more, Click here
Week 10
Topic: Introduction to Answering Comprehension Questions and Nominalization of Adjectives
Introduction to Answering Comprehension Questions
Comprehension reading requires that the reader understands a certain part of a passage or a paragraph. The main purpose of comprehension is to understand the meaning implied by any given passage and be able to answer the questions based on such passage; albeit accordingly. Comprehension reading is mainly used in schools and colleges where it is used to test the reading and understanding capability of the students. For students preparing to write their O-Levels and JAMB, comprehensions are inevitable. Students are therefore expected to read through the passages, understand the essay and try to answer questions based on the given paragraph or article. Below are some tips on how to effectively read, comprehend and answer questions based on comprehension passages.
How to Answer Comprehension Questions
1. Try to understand the reading passage:
- This is one of the most common reasons that many students complain about. Keep in mind that it is not expected of every student to understand all the lines and words of the given paragraph. No one is expecting you to study all the lines and paragraphs and understand each and every sentence.
- Try to understand the summary of the paragraph given and try to understand what meaning it is implying to. Though it may seem contradictory but when simply put, just try to eliminate all the common words, sentences and phrases and understand the true meaning of the given paragraph. Try to keep focus and attention on the keywords and the turning points of the paragraph. This helps you to understand the questions even better and makes it easier for you to answer. To learn more, Click here