How to Write Effective Lesson Plan Aims
And why they’re essential for language teaching.
Without lesson aims you might as well give up and go home, because you suck.
Yet for an embarrassingly long time, I didn’t write any aims for my lesson plans. Sure, I learned all about them on my TEFL course. Yeah, they made sense. But I was busy, and had been told to follow the course book (“two pages of the class book every lesson in class, and one page from the student’s book for homework!”). Surely my aims had just been set for me, for every class?
Oops.
For the sake of a minute to set my aims for each class, I could have become such a much better teacher, so much faster.
To avoid my cringe-worthy mistakes, and catapult yourself into realms of teaching awesomeness, grab a cup of tea and carry on reading.
What is a Lesson Aim & Why Should I Care?
An aim can be anything you want your students to achieve in your class.
Having aims will make you a better teacher, delivering better lessons, whilst your students learn whilst all of you have more fun.
I like to choose an aim for my students and a personal aim for myself (see later). This can be flexible and could depend…