Grammar
- Exercises
- Grammar Guides
- Diagnostic Grammar Test: find out your grammar problems and how to solve them - click here
- Needs Analysis
- Materials
- Planning
- Strategies
- Testing
- Further Planning
Exercises
- Adjective order - what order to write or say adjectives in, and a technique to help you to memorise them.
- Apologise / apologises / apologies - the grammar of apologise.
- Articles and Geography - teaches you the correct articles to use before countries, cities, islands, mountains, lakes, seas and oceans.
- Categorisation - this exercise introduces the vocabulary and grammar needed for the function of categorisation, and includes a short exercise to help you check that you understand.
- Cause and Effect - this exercise introduces the vocabulary and grammar needed to describe trends. Includes an exercise.
- Complain / complaint / complained - the grammar of 'complain'.
- Concern - how to use concern correctly
- Conditional Clauses
- Contrast Clauses - in spite of the fact that, etc.
- Contrast clauses - sentence patterns
- Contrast sentences
- Functions Correction Exercise - to help you with the functions of definition, comparison and contrast. Includes an exercise.
- If - Explanation of 'if ' sentences and how to choose which sentence structure to use.
- Important or Importance? Explanation and exercise on which word to use.
- It is because and this is because - an explanation and an exercise
- 'Lack' or 'Lack of '? - an explanation and an exercise
- Modals and tentativity
- Nouns - countable, uncountable and special cases
- Passive Voice
- Problem areas: prepositions
- Prepositional phrases
- The Use of Prepositions in Job Applications
- Prepositions and collocations for job application letters in a Grammar Aliens game.
- Prepositions and Geography - grammar rules and a multiple choice exercise.
- Prepositions - at, in, on. Shoot the aliens to win. Games: 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5. (Internet Explorer only)
- Prepositions - of, for and from. Shoot the aliens to win. Games: 1, 2 and 3. (Internet Explorer only)
- Purpose, reason and result clauses
- Relative clauses
- Relative clauses - an explanation and a practice exercise.
- Satisfaction - choosing between 'satisfy', 'satisfied', 'satisfying' and 'satisfactory', etc.
- Sentence Types - dependent and independent clauses
- Staff or Staffs? Using the right part of speech of staff.
- Subject-verb agreement - an explanation and an exercise.
- That-clauses
- The Plan of the English Verb - how to choose what tense to use.
- Transitivity - transitive and intransitive verbs
- Trends - this exercise introduces the vocabulary and grammar needed to describe trends. Includes an exercise.
Grammar Guides
- Phrasal verbs - Dave Sperling's ESL Cafe section on phrasal verbs
- Searching the Internet to find out how to use words and phrases
- Correction Code - used in CILL to alert you to grammatical problems in your writing
- Diagnostic Grammar Test: find out your grammar problems and how to solve them - if you have a PolyU student ID, or else click here
- BBC World Service Grammar and Vocabulary - explanations: Confusing words and expressions; Prefixes, suffixes, spelling and pronunciation; Determiners, nouns and pronouns; Adjectives and adverbs; Verbs and tenses; Modals and conditionals; Conjunctions and clauses; Prepositions and phrases; Learning and exam skills.
Finds example sentences containing the word you type in this box:
Word comparison - compare two words
Phrase comparison - compare example sentences for two phrases
Needs Analysis
There are four stages in needs analysis:
- what you need to know about a language
- your present problems
- your future needs
- your needs for your course
Click here for a Needs Analysis / Planning / Studying / Assessment Form that you can print out and fill in.
Make a list of the problems that you have with grammar, and the situations where you have these problems. For example:
Example Problem 1: My grammar is not good.
Example Problem 2: Speed - I want to speak and write with better grammar.
Example Problem 3: I don't want to copy large sections from books - I want to paraphrase.
Think about what English you will need in future, for example for your job. Here are some examples:
Example Future Need 1: I will need to write reports and memos.
Example Future Need 2: I will need to give presentations.
Example Future Need 3: I want to work for an international company, so my English, including grammar, must be very good.
If you are a student you probably need to study English to help you with your course work; eg. for writing assignments.
Some example needs are:
Example Course Need 1: I need to write assignments and projects.
Example Course Need 2: I need to give a presentation on my final year thesis.
(Click here to see the English courses that most full-time HKPU students do.)
Planning
You need to decide:
- what materials and resources you want to use (Click here for a video on this, and click here for a diagnostic test)
- whether you want to work alone or with other people
- when you want or need to finish studying; eg. in time for an assignment deadline
- which areas or problems you want to work on first
- how much improvement is necessary
Materials and Resources
Materials can be books, CD-ROMs and handouts
Resources can be teachers, classmates, computers, etc.
Working Alone or With Other People
Reasons for working with
other people on grammar are:
- You get feedback from the other people
- They can suggest improvements
- They can tell you if you make a mistake
- They can encourage you to do better
- Explaining grammar to other people can help you understand better
Reasons for working alone are:
- If you share a task then you might learn only your part of the task, not how to do all of it. Your aim is to learn, not to finish quickly.
Materials
Click here to go back to the list of grammar materials on the Internet at the top of this page.
Grammar Strategies
- Deduction: This means using rules to work out the answer or how to do something. It is especially useful for grammar, for example Rule: To change normal speech to reported speech; eg. for writing minutes of a meeting, move the tenses back one past tense. Example: Mr. Chan - "I will see her tomorrow." Reported speech - 'Mr. Chan said that he would see her the next day.
- Recombination: This
means joining together things you already know to make new things. For example, if you
know that the simple past tense is used to describe things that happened in the past which have finished, and
you know that the present perfect tense is used to describe experience, you can make a sentence that includes both of
them:
"I first visited
America in 1990. Last summer I went there again, so I have been there twice."
- Writing your own grammar book: this can contain rules, examples (e.g. from newspapers or magazines), your notes (e.g. on things you don't understand), lists of exceptions, etc.
- Using new grammar: after you learn some new grammar, use it in conversation or writing, and see what your listener's or reader's reaction is: do they understand you? You can ask "Did I say that right?"
- Get a grammar book: come to CILL or go to a bookshop and look at the different grammar books. Choose one that you understand.
- Read and listen: to see how writers and speakers use English grammar to communicate their ideas.
Testing
You can test your grammar:
- yourself
- with classmates
- with a CILL tutor or
- with a teacher
Testing Yourself
Do some writing; eg. for an assignment. Proof-read the writing, looking to see if you have improved the grammar you have been learning.
You can test yourself with the HKPU Students':
- Diagnostic Grammar Test: find out your grammar problems and how to solve them - use this link if you have a PolyU student ID, or else use this one
Testing with Classmates
Show your writing to your classmates and ask what they think. Discuss their
answers. If you can't agree, check in grammar books.
Testing with a CILL Tutor
If you are a student or staff at H.K. Polytechnic University, you can show or e-mail your
writing to a CILL tutor at . It is very important to tell the tutor what grammar you
have been learning so that they can assess that. If you would like suggestions for other
things to improve, please ask. CILL tutors do not believe that it is good to correct
everything because we know you are not studying everything about writing, that would take
a long time. We believe it is better for you to work on one small area of writing at a time.
Testing with a Teacher
Your English teacher will probably give you assignments, and give you feedback on the
assignments. Read the feedback carefully, and use it to improve next time.
Further Planning
When you have finished your plan you need to test or assess yourself to
see if you have fulfilled your need. Can you do what your Needs Analysis and your plan aimed for?
- If you can, then you can plan to learn another point from your Needs Analysis, or you
can change it because of some new thing that you want to learn. Don't forget to come back and revise later.
- If you can't, you need to study more, so change your plan. You could, for example, do
some of the Alternative Materials or Extra Materials if you are following a learner pathway. If you
are bored you can do something else and come back later.
For more details on how you can test yourself, clickhere. The learner pathways also have details on how you can test yourself. Click here for an example.
Last updated on: Friday, May 28, 2021