9 of 60 – The Three Grammar Frameworks: TTT, Situational, Text-Based

Day 9: The Three Grammar Frameworks — TTT, Situational, Text-Based | 60-Day ELT Masterclass
Week 2 · Day 9 of 60 · Language Systems

The Three Grammar Frameworks:
TTT, Situational, Text-Based

“Three ways to teach the same grammar point. Choosing the right one changes everything — for your students and for you.”

14 min deep read 3 complete lesson flows Side-by-side comparison Decision tool included CELTA framework standard

Why Three Frameworks — Not One?

Foundations

Many teachers — especially those trained with a single coursebook — operate with an implicit assumption: you explain grammar, students do exercises. This is not a framework. It is a habit. And it works poorly for most language items, with most student profiles, in most learning contexts.

The three frameworks in this lesson represent three fundamentally different answers to the question: how should students first encounter new language? Each rests on different assumptions about how language is learned, what prior knowledge students bring, and what kind of processing produces durable acquisition.

The question is not “which framework is best?” The question is always: “which framework is best for this item, with these students, at this moment?”

CELTA Lesson Frameworks · Cambridge ESOL · Official Summary Document
The CELTA course identifies three primary frameworks for presenting new language: TTT (Test-Teach-Test), Situational Presentation, and Text-based (or Reading/Listening-based) Presentation. Each framework specifies a sequence of stages that guides students from initial exposure through to controlled and freer practice. The choice of framework should be driven by the nature of the target language, the students’ existing knowledge, and the lesson’s primary aim.
Thornbury, Scott · How to Teach Grammar (Pearson) · Chapter 4: Approaches to Teaching Grammar
“The deductive approach (explain then practise) and inductive approach (encounter then notice then analyse) represent the two poles of grammar teaching. Most classroom frameworks sit somewhere between them. TTT leans inductive — students attempt first. Situational presentation is deductive — meaning is established before form. Text-based is inductive — students discover language in authentic context.”
Framework 1 — TTT

Test · Teach · Test

Students attempt to use the language before it is taught. The teacher diagnoses errors and gaps. Then the language is focused on. Then students try again with better preparation.

Best when: students have partial knowledge · mixed-ability classes · reviewing before recycling · when you want to see what they already know
Framework 2 — Situational

Situational Presentation

Teacher establishes a context (a story, a situation, a picture) and elicits or presents the target language from it. Language focus (MFP) follows. Then controlled practice. Then freer.

Best when: brand-new language · lower levels · clear context available · functions and lexis · strong visual context possible
Framework 3 — Text-Based

Text-Based Presentation

Students read or listen to an authentic or near-authentic text. They complete comprehension tasks. The teacher highlights the target language from the text. Language focus. Then practice.

Best when: upper intermediate/advanced · inductive learners · target language occurs naturally in written/spoken discourse · developing reading/listening skills simultaneously

Framework 1 — Test · Teach · Test

The Diagnostic Approach
Cambridge English · CELTA Lesson Frameworks · TTT Definition
TTT (Test-Teach-Test) is a lesson framework in which students first attempt to use the target language (Test 1), revealing their existing competence and gaps. The teacher then focuses on the areas where students showed difficulty (Teach), providing MFP clarification and controlled practice. Students then attempt a similar or extended task again (Test 2), this time with greater accuracy. The initial test is not a formal assessment — it is a communicative task designed to elicit the target language.
Cambridge: TTT grammar teaching explained ↗

The TTT framework inverts the traditional sequence. Instead of explaining before practising, you have students practise first — and use what they produce to direct your teaching. This is more student-centred, more diagnostic, and avoids teaching things students already know.

Harmer, Jeremy · The Practice of English Language Teaching, 5th ed. · p.71
“The advantage of TTT over a purely deductive approach is that it engages students immediately in the communication challenge, and it allows the teacher to tailor the Teach phase precisely to the gaps the students have demonstrated, rather than teaching what the syllabus says students don’t know.”
TTT — Full Stage Sequence (Click each stage)
Stage 1
Context Setting
Establish a situation that will naturally elicit the target language

Before the initial test, students need a communicative context that will prompt them to want to use the target language — even imperfectly. This is not optional: without context, the diagnostic task produces no evidence about the language gap.

Example (2nd conditional): “Look at these pictures of lottery winners. What would you do if you won a million pounds?” Students discuss. The teacher listens, notes what they produce.

Teacher notes: “Some students said ‘If I will win’ — clear gap in conditional form. Others said ‘I would buy’ correctly. The teach phase should target form over meaning.”
Stage 2
Test 1 — Diagnostic Task
Students attempt to use the target language. Teacher diagnoses, does not correct.

The Test 1 task must be genuinely communicative — a role play, a discussion task, a writing prompt, an information gap. The teacher monitors closely, takes notes on errors and gaps, but does not interrupt or correct during the task. Correcting now would invalidate the diagnostic data.

Critical distinction: Test 1 is NOT a formal test. It is an elicitation device. Students should feel this is a normal communicative activity, not an assessment. Anxiety produces avoidance — students who feel tested will avoid the target language.

Teacher role during Test 1: Monitor silently. Note exact student utterances. Identify the most common error pattern. This becomes the focus of the Teach phase.

Students produce: “If I will win…” / “If I won, I would buying…” / “If I win, I buy…” — The teacher notes three distinct error types and decides which to prioritise.
Stage 3
Teach — MFP Focus
Targeted teaching based on observed gaps. Meaning + Form + Pronunciation.

The Teach phase is the MFP presentation from Day 8, but targeted precisely at the gaps revealed in Test 1. If students understood meaning but had form errors, spend more time on form. If pronunciation was the main issue, prioritise drilling.

Important: Write student errors on the board — anonymously (“I heard someone say…”). This makes the error visible without embarrassing anyone, and turns the diagnostic data into a teaching moment.

Sequence: Present the target sentence → establish meaning (CCQs) → analyse form (board layout from Day 7) → drill pronunciation → provide a brief written reference (form notes for students to keep).

Teacher writes on board: “If I _____ (win), I would _____ (buy) a house.” Elicits the correct form. “What verb form do we use after ‘if’? Past simple — ‘won.’ What about the result clause? ‘Would + base form.’ Let’s drill: won → I won → if I won → if I won, I would…”
Stage 4
Controlled Practice
Accuracy practice on the specific gap identified in Test 1

A short, targeted controlled practice activity — gap-fill, sentence transformation, or error correction — focused exactly on the error pattern observed in Test 1. This consolidates the form before the freer Test 2.

Duration: 3–5 minutes maximum. The goal is consolidation of the form, not extensive controlled practice. The main communicative work happens in Test 2.

Stage 5
Test 2 — Extended Task
Students repeat or extend the communicative task with improved accuracy

Test 2 is a communicative task — similar to Test 1, but with a different context or partner, or an extended version of the original prompt. Students now have the MFP knowledge to perform more accurately.

Do not repeat Test 1 exactly: Repetition without novelty produces mechanical repetition, not language use. Change the content: different hypothetical scenario, different partners, or a written version of the original spoken task.

Evaluation: Compare student production in Test 2 to Test 1. Improvement in accuracy is your evidence that the Teach phase was effective. Note any remaining errors for future lessons.

New prompt: “Your partner has just inherited a house. In pairs, discuss: what would you do if you were in their situation?” Students now produce second conditional forms with greater accuracy.

Framework 2 — Situational Presentation

The Context-First Approach
CELTA Lesson Frameworks · Cambridge ESOL · Situational Presentation
Situational Presentation is a framework in which the teacher first creates a clear context that gives meaning to the target language, then introduces the language itself (usually by eliciting it from students), then analyses it explicitly (MFP), then leads students through controlled to freer practice. The situation is the vehicle for meaning — it exists to make the target language feel necessary and natural, not arbitrary.
Cambridge English · Guidance Notes for the Teaching Practice Element of CELTA · Lexical/Grammar Situational Template
A well-designed situation for language presentation must meet three criteria: (1) it must make the meaning of the target language immediately clear; (2) it must feel realistic and believable to students; (3) it must be simple enough to be grasped instantly, so that cognitive load is on the language, not on understanding the situation.
Situational Presentation — Full Stage Sequence
Stage 1
Lead-in / Context Creation
Establish the situation. Generate interest. Activate schema.

The teacher creates or presents a situation — through a story, a picture, a scenario, a video clip, a question — that makes students curious and engaged, and that will naturally require the target language to discuss or resolve.

Good contexts are: relatable (students can imagine themselves in them), visually supported where possible, emotionally engaging, and simple enough to be grasped in under 90 seconds.

Example (2nd conditional): Teacher shows a picture of a deserted tropical island. “Imagine you are stranded here with only one other person. Who would you choose and why?” Students discuss. Teacher doesn’t introduce the language yet — just gets them thinking in the conceptual territory.
Stage 2
Presentation / Elicitation of Target Language
Introduce or elicit the target language from the established situation

The teacher either elicits the target language from students (“What could we say here?”) or models it clearly in the context of the established situation. Elicitation is preferred — it engages students actively and reveals what they already know.

Elicitation vs presentation: If students can approximate the target language, elicit. If the language is completely new to them, present it clearly in the context sentence. Do not waste time eliciting what students cannot produce.

Teacher: “What would you say? ‘If I were stranded on an island…’ — can anyone complete this?” (Elicitation) → Student: “If I were stranded, I would choose a doctor.” Teacher: “Excellent. If I were stranded, I would choose a doctor.” (Repetition, confirmation, model.)
Stage 3
Language Focus — MFP Analysis
Meaning (CCQs + timelines) · Form (board layout) · Pronunciation (drilling)

The complete MFP analysis — as studied in Day 8 — applied to the target language item. This is the “teach” moment of the situational framework. Students understand the meaning from the context (Stage 1–2); Stage 3 makes the form and pronunciation explicit.

Meaning check: Even though context has conveyed meaning, CCQs are still required. “Is this situation real? Am I actually stranded? Am I speculating about what would happen?” → NO / NO / YES.

Form on board: If + past simple, + would + bare infinitive. Highlight the past simple in the if-clause (not future). Note: “were” for all persons in formal/written English.

Pronunciation: Contraction “I’d” = /aɪd/. Weak form of “would” in natural speech. Drill sequence: stranded → I were stranded → If I were stranded → If I were stranded, I’d choose…

Stage 4
Controlled Practice
Accuracy-focused production — gap-fill, transformation, or guided speaking

Students practise the form in a structured way: gap-fill exercises, sentence transformation, substitution drills, or guided speaking prompts. The goal is form accuracy before fluency. Students cannot self-correct during freer practice if they have not first consolidated the form.

Types of controlled practice for grammar: Gap-fill (if I _____ (have) enough money, I _____ (buy) a house) · Sentence transformation (convert simple past → 2nd conditional) · Error correction (identify and fix 6 sentences) · Personalised sentences (“Write 3 true 2nd conditional sentences about your own life”).

Stage 5
Freer Practice
Fluency-focused communication using the target language naturally

A communicative task in which the target language emerges naturally — discussion, role play, information gap, survey, ranking task. The focus shifts from accuracy to communication. Students are expected to use the target language but are not drilled into it.

Language support: During freer practice, the target language should still be visible (on the board or a handout) so students can self-refer. Removing the reference too early increases cognitive load and reduces the quality of communication.

Freer practice prompt: “Think of 3 ways your life would be different if you hadn’t chosen your current career. Discuss with a partner.” Target language available on board. Teacher monitors and notes errors for delayed correction.

Framework 3 — Text-Based Presentation

The Discovery Approach
CELTA Lesson Frameworks · Cambridge ESOL · Text-Based Presentation
Text-Based Presentation is a framework in which the target language is embedded in an authentic or near-authentic reading or listening text. Students engage with the text for meaning first (comprehension tasks). The teacher then draws students’ attention to the target language as it appears in the text — using it as an authentic example of the language in natural use. MFP analysis follows, then controlled and freer practice. This framework is particularly suited to upper-intermediate and advanced learners who benefit from encountering language in context before analysing it.
Cambridge: Teaching grammar from reading texts ↗
Text-Based Presentation — Full Stage Sequence
Stage 1
Lead-in
Generate interest in the topic. Activate background knowledge.

A brief activity — 2–4 minutes — that engages students with the topic of the text before they read or listen. A question, a prediction task, a brief discussion, a related image. The lead-in prepares the schema that makes the text comprehensible and activates vocabulary.

For a text about career regrets (target language: “wish + past perfect”): “Think of one decision in your life that you sometimes wish you had made differently. Tell a partner in one sentence.” Students discuss briefly — the teacher does not introduce the target language yet.
Stage 2
Pre-teach Vocabulary
Remove comprehension obstacles — maximum 3–4 words

Pre-teach only vocabulary items that would block comprehension of the gist or detail tasks. Do NOT pre-teach the target grammar structure — that is the point of the lesson. Pre-teach only the lexis that would otherwise derail the reading/listening.

Rule of three: Pre-teach a maximum of 3–4 words. More than this creates a vocabulary lesson rather than a grammar lesson, and students experience cognitive overload before reading the text.

Method: Present each word using the situational or contextual approach — brief MFP notes on the board. No more than 60–90 seconds per word.

Stage 3
Gist Task — First Reading / Listening
One big-picture question. Students read/listen once for general understanding.

Set one gist question before students see the text. One question only — too many questions on first reading creates a detail task, not a gist task. The gist question should be answerable after reading the entire text once at normal speed.

Good gist questions: “Is the speaker happy or regretful about her decision?” / “What is the main point of this article?” / “Is the author for or against working from home?”

Timing: Set a time limit. If reading, give 2 minutes for a 200-word text. If listening, play the audio once. Do not stop. Do not help. Students must attempt the gist task independently — this builds real processing skills.

Stage 4
Specific Information Task — Second Reading / Listening
Detailed comprehension. Students read/listen again with specific questions.

Students read or listen again with 4–6 specific comprehension questions. The purpose is twofold: deeper engagement with the text’s content, and exposure to the target language in context again before it is highlighted. Compare answers in pairs, then whole-class feedback.

Stage 5
Highlight Target Language
Draw students’ attention to the grammar structure in the text

The pivotal moment of the text-based framework. The teacher directs attention to specific sentences in the text that contain the target language. “Look at paragraph 2, line 4. What do you notice about the verb form here?”

Inductive approach: Ask students to find or identify the target structure before explaining it. “How many times does this structure appear in the text? Underline them all.” Students discover the pattern before the teacher analyses it.

Students underline: “I wish I hadn’t accepted the job” / “She wishes she had started earlier” / “He sometimes wishes he hadn’t moved abroad.” Teacher: “What do all these sentences have in common? What tense follows ‘wish’? What does it mean?”
Stage 6
Language Focus — MFP
Full MFP analysis using text examples as the source

The full MFP analysis — using the text sentences as the starting point. Students have already encountered the language in authentic context; the MFP stage makes it explicit. CCQs, form on board, pronunciation drill — all as in Day 8, but anchored in real text.

Advantage over situational presentation: The text provides multiple authentic examples in context. Students don’t just see one teacher-constructed example — they see the structure used naturally, multiple times, in varying contexts within the same text. This provides richer input and accelerates noticing.

Stage 7
Controlled then Freer Practice
Consolidation and productive use

As in the situational framework — controlled practice (accuracy-focused) followed by freer practice (fluency-focused). The text often provides the prompt for freer practice: “Write about a decision you wish you had made differently,” echoing the text topic.

Side-by-Side — The Same Grammar Point, Three Frameworks

Comparison

Target language: Second Conditional (“If I had enough money, I would buy a house.”). Level: B1. Below is how each framework approaches the same lesson. Click a stage within each framework to see the classroom reality — the script, the timing, and the teacher decisions.

Second Conditional — B1 · Three Frameworks
Click a framework tab, then click stages to expand
1
Context + Test 1 — Lottery scenario
8 min

Teacher shows image of a lottery ticket. “Imagine you’ve just won £5 million. Tell your partner what you would do.” Students discuss freely — teacher monitors without correcting, noting errors.

“Tell your partner what you would do with £5 million. You have 3 minutes — use as much language as you can. Don’t worry about mistakes.”

Teacher note: Most students produce “If I will win…” and “I would to buy…” — clear gaps in if-clause form and would + bare infinitive.

2
Teach — MFP focus on diagnosed errors
10 min

Teacher writes on board anonymously: “I heard someone say: If I will win…” “Is this correct? What should it be?” Elicits: won (past simple). Then: “I also heard: I would to buy…” Elicits: would buy (bare infinitive). Full MFP board layout: If + past simple, + would + bare infinitive. CCQs. Pronunciation drill.

3
Controlled practice — transformation
5 min

Sentence transformation exercise: “I want to travel the world” → “If I had the money, I would travel the world.” 6 items. Students work alone, compare in pairs, whole-class feedback.

4
Test 2 — Extended scenario discussion
8 min

New prompt: “Your partner is moving to a different country. What would you do if you were in their situation? What would you miss? What would you change?” Students discuss with improved form accuracy.

“Same activity as before, different scenario. Work in pairs — what would you do if you were moving to another country? 4 minutes.”
1
Lead-in — Desert island scenario
5 min

Teacher shows image of deserted tropical island. Generates interest with questions: “Would you want to be here? Who would you want with you?” Students brainstorm briefly — no target language introduced yet.

“Look at this island. You’re going to be alone here for a month. One person can come with you — a famous person, anyone. Who would you choose? Tell your partner.”
2
Elicitation / Presentation of TL
5 min

Teacher creates a model sentence from the scenario. “What could I say? If I were stranded on this island, I would choose Malala Yousafzai.” Writes on board. Elicits variations from students. “What would you say?” → “If I were there, I would…”

3
Language Focus — MFP
10 min

Full MFP analysis on board using the context sentence. CCQs: “Am I actually stranded? (No.) Is this real? (No.) Am I imagining? (Yes.)” Form: If + past simple + would + bare infinitive. Pronunciation: /If aɪ wə ˈstrænd ɪd/ → drilling sequence.

4
Controlled + Freer Practice
12 min

Controlled: Gap-fill — “If I _____ (have) a superpower, I _____ (choose) invisibility.” 8 items. Then freer: “If you could change one thing about your daily life, what would it be? Discuss with a partner.”

1
Lead-in — Hypothetical life discussion
3 min

Teacher asks: “Do you ever think about alternative versions of your life — the path not taken?” Brief class discussion. Teacher does not introduce TL. Students activate background schema about hypothetical thinking.

2
Pre-teach 3 vocabulary items
5 min

Pre-teach: parallel universe (a world identical to ours but with one thing changed), contemplating (thinking seriously about something), mundane (ordinary, not exciting). Method: context sentence + CCQs. No more than 3.

3
Gist + Detail Reading
8 min

Text: A short article or interview (200–250 words) in which a person discusses what they would do if they lived a different life. Gist: “Is the speaker happy with their life or not?” Detail: 4 specific comprehension questions. Compare in pairs, whole class feedback.

4
Highlight TL + MFP Analysis
10 min

“Find and underline all the structures in the text that begin with ‘If…’ How many can you find?” Students identify 4–5 examples. Teacher then draws attention: “What do you notice about the verb form in the if-clause? And in the result clause?” Students notice: past simple + would. Then full MFP on board.

5
Controlled + Freer Practice
10 min

Controlled: Students write 4 sentences about their “alternative life” using the structure. Teacher monitors for accuracy. Then freer: “Write a short paragraph (80 words) about what your life would be like if you had made one different decision.” Links back to lead-in topic.

The Framework Decision — A Diagnostic Table

When to Use Which
CriterionTTTSituationalText-Based
Student existing knowledgePartial knowledge — some exposure, some gapsBrand new — no prior encounterSome knowledge — can engage with authentic text
Level most suited toAny — especially mixed abilityA1–B1 (lower and intermediate)B1+ (intermediate and above)
Student learning style preferenceCommunicative learners who resist direct instructionStructured learners who prefer clarity firstAutonomous, curious learners who enjoy discovery
Language typeGrammar and functionsGrammar, lexis, and functionsGrammar — especially complex or subtle structures
Teacher preparation neededLower — flexible, reactive teachingModerate — well-prepared context requiredHigher — text selection and comprehension tasks needed
Lesson paceFaster start — communicative task firstSteady — context → language → practiceSlower start — comprehension before language focus
RiskTest 1 may produce little target language if students avoid itContext may not land — students may not find it realisticStudents may not notice the target language without careful staging
AdvantageStudents feel heard — teaching responds to their actual errorsClear, predictable structure — lower anxietyAuthentic input — students see language in real use

Interactive Decision Tool — Which Framework Should You Use?

Answer each question below. The tool will suggest a framework based on your choices.

Framework Decision Tool — 4 Questions
Question 1
Have your students encountered this language item before in any form?
Question 2
What level are your students?
Question 3
Do you have a suitable authentic or near-authentic text that contains the target language naturally?
Question 4
Do your students tend to be communicative risk-takers, or do they prefer structure and clarity first?

Build Your Own Lesson — Framework Planner

Your Turn

Choose a framework tab. Fill in each stage for the target language item given. This is a CELTA-standard lesson planning exercise — write as if this plan will be observed and evaluated.

Target language: Comparatives and superlatives (“bigger than” / “the biggest”) · Level: A2

Plan a TTT lesson for comparatives at A2. For each stage, describe what you will do — the task, the instructions, and what you expect students to produce.

Stage 1Context + Test 1 diagnostic task
Stage 2Teach — MFP based on Test 1 errors
Stage 3Controlled practice activity
Stage 4Test 2 — extended communicative task
✦ Model TTT Plan — Comparatives, A2

Test 1: Show 5 pictures of different cities (London, New York, Tokyo, Paris, Sydney). Task: “Which city is the most exciting? Which is the most expensive? Discuss in pairs.” Students attempt comparisons — likely producing “London is more better” / “Tokyo is more big” / “New York is expensive than Paris.” Teacher notes: double comparative, wrong comparative form, missing “than.”

Teach: Anonymously write errors on board. Elicit corrections. Full form: short adjective + -er + than (bigger than, taller than); long adjective: more + adjective + than (more expensive than). Superlative: the + adj + -est / the most + adj. Irregulars: good/better/best, bad/worse/worst. CCQs: “Am I comparing one thing to another? (comparatives). Am I comparing one thing to all others? (superlative).” Drill: big — bigger — the biggest.

Controlled practice: Gap-fill: “London is _____ (big) than Paris.” “Mount Everest is _____ (high) mountain in the world.” 8 items. Answer key comparison in pairs.

Test 2: New prompt: “Your partner is choosing between three flats — they have different sizes, prices, and distances from work. Help them decide using comparatives and superlatives.” Student A has information about the flats, Student B asks questions. Role play.

Plan a Situational Presentation lesson for comparatives at A2. Design a context that makes comparatives feel necessary and natural.

Stage 1Lead-in — context creation
Stage 2Elicitation / Presentation of TL
Stage 3Language Focus — MFP
Stage 4Controlled practice
Stage 5Freer practice
✦ Model Situational Plan — Comparatives, A2

Lead-in: Teacher draws two stick figures on board — Alex and Sam. “Alex is 180cm. Sam is 165cm. Who is taller?” Gets “Alex.” Writes: “Alex is taller than Sam.” Then adds: “Alex earns €2,000/month. Sam earns €3,500/month. Who is richer?” Gets “Sam.” Writes: “Sam is richer than Alex.” Simple, visual, immediately clear.

Elicitation: Adds a third character — Jamie, 190cm, earns €5,000. “Can anyone tell me about Jamie compared to Alex and Sam?” Elicits comparative sentences. Confirms and writes on board. Then: “Who is the tallest of all three?” → Elicits superlative form.

MFP: Board layout: short adj (tall → taller → the tallest) · long adj (expensive → more expensive → the most expensive) · irregular (good → better → the best). CCQs: “Am I comparing two things or one to all? (comparatives: two; superlatives: one vs all).” Drill: tall → taller → the tallest — back-chain for “expensive.”

Controlled: Gap-fill with Alex/Sam/Jamie information — 8 comparison sentences. Students work alone, compare in pairs.

Freer: “Compare two cities you know — write 5 sentences using comparatives and superlatives.” Display on board at end for peer reading.

Plan a Text-Based lesson for comparatives at A2. Design or select a text in which comparative structures appear naturally. (Note: at A2, ensure the text is simple enough.)

Stage 1Lead-in
Stage 2Pre-teach vocabulary (max 3 items)
Stage 3Gist task → Detail task
Stage 4Highlight TL + MFP analysis
✦ Model Text-Based Plan — Comparatives, A2

Lead-in: “Would you prefer to live in the city or the countryside? Why?” Brief pair discussion. 2 minutes.

Pre-teach: (1) affordable = not too expensive, reasonable price — CCQ: Is something affordable cheap or just reasonably priced? (reasonably priced). (2) commute = travel from home to work every day. (3) densely populated = a lot of people in a small area — CCQ: Is a densely populated area crowded or empty? (crowded).

Text: A short (150-word) factual comparison of city living vs countryside living — written specifically for A2 level. Contains: “Cities are more expensive than villages.” / “The countryside is quieter than the city.” / “Cities have more job opportunities.” / “Rural areas are cleaner and less polluted.” Gist: “Is the text for or against city living?” (balanced). Detail: 4 true/false questions.

Highlight TL: “Underline every sentence that compares two things. How many did you find?” (7). “What word comes between the two things being compared?” (than). “What is special about the adjective form before ‘than’?” Elicit: -er ending / more + adj. Full MFP on board from text examples.

Reference Sources — Direct Links

Further Reading
Cambridge
Cambridge ELT Blog — TTT Grammar Teaching

Cambridge’s explanation of the Test-Teach-Test framework with classroom examples.

Cambridge: TTT explained ↗
Cambridge
Focus on Grammar from Reading — Cambridge Blog

How to use reading texts as the foundation for grammar teaching — the text-based approach in practice.

Cambridge: Grammar from reading ↗
Brit. Council
TeachingEnglish — Grammar Teaching Approaches

British Council’s guide to different approaches to grammar teaching — including inductive and deductive frameworks.

TeachingEnglish: Grammar Teaching ↗
Brit. Council
LearnEnglish Grammar Practice Hub

British Council’s grammar exercises by level — use to design controlled practice activities for any framework.

LearnEnglish: Grammar exercises ↗
Oxford
Oxford Grammar Reference — All Structures

Oxford’s complete grammar reference — form notes, restrictions, examples. Use when planning the MFP analysis stage of any framework.

Oxford Grammar Reference ↗

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