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Objective:
To equip students with the skills to write effective and professional emails, letters, and other forms of
formal communication in a business context.

Lesson Outline:

  1. Introduction to Professional Correspondence
    Goals:
    ļ‚· Understand the importance of professional correspondence.
    ļ‚· Identify different types of professional correspondence (e.g., emails, memos, letters).
    Activities:
  2. Class Discussion:
    o Why is professional correspondence important in the workplace?
    o Share examples of professional communication scenarios.
  3. Categorization Task:
    o Students classify given examples (e.g., email to a client, internal memo, job application
    letter) into correspondence types.
  4. Components of Professional Correspondence
    Goals:
    ļ‚· Recognize the structure and tone of professional communication.
    ļ‚· Learn the standard components (e.g., subject line, salutation, body, closing).
    Activities:
  5. Lecture/Explanation:
    o Key elements of an email: subject line, greeting, opening, body, closing, signature.
    o Tone and formality levels in different scenarios.
  6. Interactive Activity:
    o Provide a poorly written email.
    o Students work in pairs to identify issues and suggest improvements.
  7. Writing Effective Emails
    Goals:
    ļ‚· Write clear and concise emails.
    ļ‚· Avoid common mistakes (e.g., unclear subject lines, overly casual tone).
    Activities:
  8. Example Analysis:
    o Share examples of well-written and poorly-written emails.
    o Discuss what makes an email effective or ineffective.
  9. Writing Task:
    o Provide scenarios (e.g., requesting information, responding to a complaint).
    o Students draft professional emails based on the scenarios.
  10. Peer Review:
    o Exchange drafts with a partner for feedback.
  11. Writing Formal Letters
    Goals:
    ļ‚· Understand the format of formal letters.
    ļ‚· Write professional letters with appropriate language and structure.
    Activities:
  12. Lecture/Explanation:
    o Standard formal letter format (e.g., date, recipient’s address, salutation, body, closing).
    o Discuss situations requiring formal letters (e.g., cover letters, complaint letters).
  13. Group Activity:
    o In groups, students write a formal letter responding to a specific scenario (e.g., a job
    application or a service complaint).
  14. Common Pitfalls and Best Practices (15 minutes)
    Goals:
    ļ‚· Identify and avoid mistakes in professional correspondence.

ļ‚· Master proofreading and editing techniques.
Activities:

  1. Error Spotting Task:
    o Present emails or letters with deliberate errors (e.g., grammar, tone, format).
    o Students identify and correct the errors.
  2. Checklist Creation:
    o As a class, create a checklist for professional correspondence (e.g., clear subject line,
    proper salutation, concise message).
  3. Final Task: Comprehensive Application
    Goal:
    ļ‚· Apply learned skills to write professional correspondence tailored to a specific audience and
    purpose.
    Activity:
  4. Scenario-Based Writing:
    o Students choose one of three scenarios:
    ļ‚§ Write an email to a client apologizing for a delay.
    ļ‚§ Draft a cover letter for a job application.
    ļ‚§ Compose a formal letter to a supplier requesting information about a product.
  5. Presentation and Feedback:
    o Volunteers read their correspondence aloud.
    o Class and instructor provide constructive feedback.