How to Teach the Passive Voice – While Being Active!

Students need to be as “active” as ever and fully engaged in their learning. But it is the teacher who must engage them. How do you get students actively engaged in learning something as tedious as the passive voice? With action, of course! 

By showing them that there is plenty of action involved, but that the focus is not on the actor, the one who is carrying out the action, but rather whoever or whatever is acted upon.

Here is one of the best ways to teach the passive voice:

Passive Voice: Active Approach

passive voice

1. Carry out an action!

Stand in front of your class. Drop a pen on the floor. Ask your students to tell you what has just happened and ask them to begin the sentence with your name. Someone should be able to say: “Ms. Rodriguez dropped a pen on the floor.” Write this sentence on the board. Ask students to identify the subject and the verb in this sentence; they should say the subject is “Ms. Rodriguez” and that the verb is “dropped”.

2. Repeat the action – Introduce the passive voice

Drop your pen on the floor one more time. Tell your students that you’ll tell them what has just happened, but this time your sentence will begin with, “The pen…” Go to the board and write, “The pen was dropped on the floor.” Ask your students to identify the subject; they should say it is the “pen”. Ask them to identify the verb; they should say it is “was dropped”.

3. Compare the two sentencesPoint to the first sentence and ask if the subject is doing the action. They should say it is. Make sure they understand that the subject is active, the one responsible for carrying out the action.
Point to the second sentence and ask if the subject is doing the action. They should it isn’t. Make sure they understand that the subject is passive, the one who is being acted upon.
Compare what happens to the verbs. Ask students what tense they see in the first example. They should recognize the past simple. Show students what happens in the second sentence: the auxiliary verb “to be” is used in the past tense (“was”) with the past participle, in this case “dropped”.

activities

4. Give an example with “were”

This time drop several pens at the same time. Ask students to tell you what has just happened. Tell them to start the sentence with “The pens…” See if students figure out they should use “were” instead of “was” this time.

5. Practice with more passive voice examples

Carry out more actions and encourage students to describe what has happened in the passive voice:
Teacher puts some books under a chair.
S: Books were put under a chair.
Teacher closes a book.
S: A book was closed.
Teacher writes some words on the board.
S: Some words were written on the board.
Give enough examples to make students comfortable with the use of the past simple in the passive voice.

6. Practice passive voice with negative statements

discuss

Continue carrying out actions around the classroom, but this time challenge students to make negative statements followed by affirmative statements:
Teacher drops some papers on the floor.
S: Pens weren’t dropped on the floor. Papers were dropped.
Teacher closes a door.
S: A window wasn’t closed. A door was closed.

7. Practice questions in passive voice

Carry out actions and have students ask questions:
Teacher opens a window.
S: Was the dictionary opened? What was (just) opened?

8. Place the passive voice in a real life context – DiscussionAsk students to brainstorm the types of things that the government does for the population. The government repairs streets, cleans monuments, builds schools and hospitals, etc…Make sure students see that sometimes when we talk about actions, we’re not interested in the actor, either because we know who it is (in this discussion we are clearly talking about the government), or because we’d like to emphasize the results, in other words what was accomplished. Discuss what things were done in the last year by the local government. Encourage students to use the passive voice.
S: Streets were repaired. A new hospital was opened. The park benches were painted. Trees were planted. Etc…

Briefsource: Busy Teacher

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