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Interview Prep Writing

English • 35 • 14 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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English
35
14 students
10 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

i want my lesson to focus on interview preparation. The teacher is going to be doing a shared writing activity with them on what they would like to know about the gaurds. This will be to prep them fpr interviewing a guard

Interview Prep Writing

Overview

This highly engaging 35-minute lesson is tailored for a class of 14 first-class students, aligned precisely with the Irish Primary Language Curriculum Framework (IE Curriculum). The focus is on developing early oral language, writing, and social competencies by preparing students to interview a school guard through a shared writing activity. This lesson supports the development of students’ curiosity, question formation, and understanding of social roles, setting the stage for confident communication and foundational literacy skills.


Learning Objectives

By the end of the lesson, students will:

  • Oral Language: Formulate simple questions focusing on who, what, where, why, and how to prepare for an interview (IE Curriculum English Oral Language Strand, Strands: Developing Competence and Confidence in Listening and Speaking).
  • Writing: Participate in a shared writing activity to compose questions accurately using capital letters and question marks (IE Curriculum English Writing Strand, Strand Unit: Composition).
  • Social Understanding: Recognise the role and importance of the school guard and the purpose of interviews to gain information (Social Personal and Health Education - strand: Myself and Others).
  • Skills: Demonstrate active listening, turn-taking, and respectful interaction during class discussion and shared writing (IE Curriculum Competence: Working with Others).

Resources Needed

  • Large chart paper or whiteboard
  • Markers/whiteboard pens
  • Picture of a school guard for visual stimulus
  • Student notebooks and pencils
  • Question words flashcards (Who, What, Where, When, Why, How)

Lesson Structure

1. Introduction and Context (7 minutes)

  • Greet students and briefly discuss the important role of the school guard in their school community. Show the picture and ask students what they already know about the guard’s job.
  • Introduce the concept of interviews as a way to learn more by asking questions.
  • Display question word flashcards and briefly explain each (who, what, where, when, why, how), linking them to example interview questions about the guard (e.g., "What do you do?").
  • Curriculum Reference: Supports oral language competence and vocabulary development (IE Curriculum, Oral Language, developing competence and confidence).

2. Shared Writing Activity – Preparing Questions (15 minutes)

  • Invite students to brainstorm together what they would like to ask the guard. Record all their ideas on chart paper or whiteboard.
  • Use modelling guided by the teacher: write each question with correct sentence structure, using capitals and question marks. For example, "What do you do?", "Where do you work?"
  • Encourage students to contribute by suggesting how to phrase questions clearly and politely.
  • Highlight and discuss the use of question words and punctuation.
  • Make sure all students are included; prompt quieter students with supportive questions to build confidence.
  • Curriculum Reference: Encourages writing conventions, sentence construction, and understanding punctuation (IE Curriculum English, Writing Strand).

3. Pair Talk and Role-play (8 minutes)

  • Divide students into pairs to practise asking and answering some of the questions they helped write.
  • One student takes the role of the guard; the other asks questions. Switch roles after 3-4 minutes.
  • Teacher circulates, giving feedback on pronunciation, expression, and respectful listening.
  • Curriculum Reference: Fosters oral communication skills and social interaction (IE Curriculum Oral Language, Social Personal and Health Education).

4. Plenary – Reflection and Connection (5 minutes)

  • Reconvene as a whole class and ask a few volunteers to share one question they liked asking or a new fact they learned about the guard’s role through this activity.
  • Emphasise the value of questions to learn new information and encourage curiosity in everyday life.
  • Set a simple follow-up task: students to think about other people they might like to interview and what questions they could ask next.
  • Curriculum Reference: Supports metacognitive skills and connection to real-world context (IE Curriculum, Literacy - Oral Language).

Assessment

  • Formative: Observation of participation and willingness to ask and write questions during shared writing and pair work.
  • Checklist: Use a simple informal checklist to note if students:
    • Use question words appropriately
    • Include correct punctuation and capital letters
    • Show good listening and turn-taking
  • Review students’ written questions for accuracy and understanding.

Differentiation

  • Support: Provide sentence starters (e.g., "What do you...?", "Where do you...?") for students who need help forming questions.
  • Extension: Challenge advanced learners to write a short introduction sentence for their interview or suggest follow-up questions.
  • Visuals: Use pictures and gestures to support EAL learners or students with additional needs.

Teacher Reflection Prompts

  • Did students engage with the interview topic and question formation?
  • Were students able to follow punctuation and writing conventions with support?
  • How effectively did the pair role play encourage spoken language use?
  • What adaptations worked best for diverse learners?
  • How can this lesson be linked to a future interview visit with the school guard?

This lesson plan ensures students engage in authentic literacy and communication activities rooted in the Irish curriculum, fostering curiosity and confidence as young learners prepare for a meaningful social interaction.

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