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Backward Design in ESL: Plan With the Outcome in Mind


šŸŽÆ Introduction:

What do you want your students to be able to doĀ by the end of the lesson? That’s the question backward design starts with. Unlike traditional planning that starts with textbooks or activities, backward designĀ puts learning outcomes at the center — making your lessons more focused and purposeful.


šŸ” What Is Backward Design?

Backward design is a 3-stage planning method:

  1. Identify Desired ResultsStart with your objective: What should students know or do after the lesson?

  2. Determine Acceptable EvidenceHow will students show they've learned it? (e.g., written answer, discussion, activity outcome)

  3. Plan Learning Experiences & InstructionOnly after steps 1 & 2 do you plan the actual lesson content, materials, and methods.


🧠 Why TEFL Teachers Should Use Backward Design

  • Avoids filler activities — every step supports the goal

  • Helps you assess students more clearly

  • Builds student confidence through focused progress

  • Aligns with curriculum expectationsĀ and real-world communication


āœļø Sample: Teaching Comparatives

  • Goal: Students will describe and compare two items using ā€œ-erā€ adjectives.

  • Assessment: Students write 3 comparative sentences (e.g., ā€œApples are cheaper than oranges.ā€)

  • Activities:

    • Warm-up: Comparing classmates

    • Vocabulary intro

    • Pair work: Compare food items from a menu


šŸ’” Pro Tip:

Always share the goal with your students (ā€œToday we’ll learn how to compare two thingsā€). It boosts motivation and gives them a clear sense of progress.

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