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Lesson: Improve Your Students' Conjunction Function

conjunction lesson plan

In this lesson we'll be focusing on one of the real heavyweights in the parts of speech universe: conjunctions. With the help of text articles, an infographic, and a video series, we'll discuss coordinating, subordinating, and correlative conjunctions. As a bonus, we'll also go into conjunctive adverbs, which aren't quite conjunctions, but are close. We'll conclude with some reinforcement exercises for your class to engage in when their conjunction lesson has been completed.

Webpage to Examine in Class

PartOfSpeech.org: Conjunction: Definition and Examples

PartOfSpeech.org is not a site that will blow you away with graphic appeal. Its approach is simple but effective. It is a treasure trove of grammatical information and counseling, covering subjects such as adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, prepositions, verbs, and interjections. There is a page for each category, containing sub-pages which drill down every subject into very specific concepts and lessons. Concise and clear-cut definitions and examples are provided to explain every concept, preventing confusion. In this lesson, we will focus on its page about teaching conjunctions.

This resource introduces the definition of a conjunction and also details the three different kinds of conjunctions. Coordinating, subordinating, and correlative conjunctions are all defined and displayed for simple and easy comprehension. The reader learns that coordinating conjunctions are the most frequently used and can be memorized through the acronym FANBOYS (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so). The site goes on to say that this type of conjunction links two grammatically equal elements of a sentence together.

Continuing on, it is explained that subordinating conjunctions link dependent and independent clauses together and that correlative conjunctions always appear in pairs and connect grammatically equal sentences together. However, the site doesn’t explain what independent and dependent clauses are. That’s where the next resource comes in.

Webpage to Discuss in Class

Grammar Book: Clauses and Phrases

Sadly, Jane Straus, the founder of GrammarBook.com, is no longer on this Earth with us. However, we are happy to say that a big part of her lives on through the continued existence and development of her website. It was her desire to help those who struggled with grammar as well as people who wanted to move their grammar mastery up a few notches achieve their goals. The website succeeds in doing this through the use of many lessons that are straightforward and concise in manner.

Resources in GrammarBook.com include guides on punctuation and capitalization, rules for writing numbers, a guide for distinguishing homonyms, and much more, all available at the reader’s convenient disposal. Their page regarding the explanation of clauses and phrases is key to understanding some of the conjunction definitions that are provided by PartOfSpeech.org.

Readers will learn that an independent clause can function as a sentence by itself, but a dependent clause needs to be connected by way of a conjunction or else it will forever remain but a sentence fragment. Succinct demonstrations are given of how these two different types of clauses look and how they work. After this, a quick overview of phrases is given, defining them as a group of words without a subject-verb component that can be used as a single part of speech. If that definition sounds confusing, the confusion will instantly disappear when the working examples are seen.

Bonus Resource

TalkEnglish.com: Conjunctive Adverbs

Much like the two resources we’ve just introduced, TalkEnglish.com goes with a minimalist approach in terms of design. Don’t let the simple appearance fool you though – this is a site that probes very deeply into the world of grammar. In addition to its conjunctive adverb page, which we will describe in just a moment, this site also offers several other pages explaining grammatical concepts along with exercises and quizzes. English speech advice is also imparted in the form of guides to idioms, job interviews, business relations, and traveling abroad.

This resource teaches its readers that conjunctive adverbs are not true conjunctions, though they have a similar function within sentences. When they are used in sentence, they must be preceded by a semicolon and followed by a comma. The following is just one example that the site provides:

            “There are many history books; however, none of them may be accurate.”

Grammar.Net – Coordinating Conjunctions and How to Use Them

Focusing on the coordinating variety of conjunctions, this resource is more visual in nature than the above, but is similar in its concise and easy to understand approach.  It visually demonstrates how coordinating conjunctions work and the ways in which one can employ proper punctuation while using them. A few examples of coordinating conjunctions are shown and detailed as to how they relate to, and can sometimes take the place of, other words. Their role in linking nouns and unrelated clauses is explained graphically and verbally.

coordinating conjunctions

[Infographic provided by Grammar.net]

Video Resources

 

  1. English Grammar: Coordinating Conjunctions

Source: ESL Academy

Run Time 3:45

Grade Level: 7-10

Description: This is the first of three ESL Academy videos we’ll be sharing with you. In this video, some of the most frequently used coordinating conjunctions are shown in the process of linking clauses together in sentences. At the end of the video, a “homework” assignment of writing four sentences with coordinating conjunctions is given. Your class can do this as a group on a blackboard or dry erase board when the video is finished. The same “homework” assignment will be given in each of the next two videos, for subordinating conjunctions and correlative conjunctions, respectively.

  1. English Grammar: Subordinating or Dependent Conjunctions

Source: ESL Academy

Run Time: 4:16

Grade Level: 7-10

Description: This video defines subordinating conjunctions and then engages in sentence diagramming and a fill-in-the-blank exercise.

3. English Grammar: Correlative Conjunctions

Source: ESL Academy

Run Time: 5:49

Grade Level: 7-10

Description: This video explains correlative conjunctions and their use. It explains how correlative conjunctions work in pairs and are useful when one desires to put more emphasis into a sentence.

Reinforcement Exercises

Middle School Worksheet: Print 10 -15 sentences containing various forms of conjunctions onto a worksheet. Have your students circle each conjunction and identify its variety.

High School Worksheet: This worksheet is similar to the middle school worksheet, only the conjunctions will be left blank. It will be up to the students to add and classify them.

By Scott Kalapos, Education World Contributor