Unit 2, Lesson 1
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Historical Rights

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Historical Rights




SESSION 1 (80 min) ANTICIPATION

Part 1: Anticipation: Rights Timeline Walk (20 min)

The teacher places simple historical rights situations around the classroom. Students walk around, read each situation, and decide whether the situation shows fairness, unfairness, progress, or regret. The teacher asks: “What could have changed if people had acted differently?” This activates historical thinking before introducing conditional grammar.

Part 2: Vocabulary Development (15 min)

The teacher introduces vocabulary connected to historical rights and consequences.

rights
equality
justice
freedom
discrimination
protest
law
reform
consequence
regret
opportunity
access
education
voting
fairness
protection
community
responsibility
decision
change

Part 3: Grammar Input: Third Conditional (20 min)

The teacher explains the third conditional:

The teacher writes: “If children had received education, they would have had more opportunities.” Students identify the past condition and the imagined result.

Part 4: Regret Cards: “History Could Have Changed” (25 min)

Students receive regret cards and complete oral sentences using the third conditional. This makes grammar practice active and reflective. Students work in pairs: Student A reads the card, and Student B completes the sentence.

Part 1 – Mixed Conditional Human Chain (15 min)

Students form a human chain. One student says a past cause, and the next student says a present result. The teacher explains that mixed conditionals connect an unreal past with a present consequence.

Part 2 – Consequence Switch Game (15 min)

Students receive cards with past situations and present consequences. They must match them and say the complete mixed conditional aloud.

Part 3 – Exit Oral Sentence (10 min)

Each student says one mixed conditional about rights. The teacher corrects structure and pronunciation quickly.

Part 1 – Preparation: Communication Repair Game (15 min)

Students choose one historical rights issue and prepare a short oral explanation. They must include one third conditional and one mixed conditional. They prepare notes, not a full script.

Part 2 – Oral Timeline Stations (50 min)

Students rotate through stations. At each station, one student explains the issue in 45–60 seconds using conditional sentences. The listener asks one follow-up question. This keeps the activity oral, active, and different from previous written consolidations.

Required structure

  • Describe the historical issue.
  • Use one third conditional.
  • Use one mixed conditional.
  • Explain why the issue matters today.

Part 3 – Reflection Vote (15 min)

Students vote for the issue they think had the strongest impact on the present. They must explain their choice in one oral sentence using “because.” The teacher closes by connecting historical rights, consequences, and responsible decisions.


NEE – Agregar el tipo de adaptaciones curriculares

Principio II: Pautas 6.1 – 6.3 – 6.4 
Principio III: Pautas 7.1 – 8.1 – 9.1
ALUMNO 1: Constante monitoreo. Dar tiempo adicional para el desarrollo de la actividad y se reduce el número de ejercicios o se modifican los ejercicios con un nivel de dificultad reducido, de acuerdo con sus necesidades académicas. 
ALUMNO 2: Constante monitoreo, Dar tiempo adicional para el desarrollo de la actividad y se reduce el número de ejercicios o se modifican los ejercicios con un nivel de dificultad reducido, de acuerdo con sus necesidades académicas.
ALUMNO 3: Constante monitoreo. Corroborar que el contenido entregado en clase haya sido comprendido por la estudiante mediante retroalimentación.