B1 ESL Video Lesson Plan: A Thousand Words

This B1-level ESL video lesson plan is built around a thought-provoking video that explores the theme of connection. It is designed to help learners develop key language skills—listening, viewing, speaking, reading, writing and visually representing—through guided discussion, roleplay, vocabulary building, and engaging classroom activities.

Check out the lesson plan

This ESL video lesson plan is designed around a short film called A Thousand Words by Ted Chung. Students predict a story from its title, watch the start of a short film and make predictions about how a story will continue and write a story.

 

Link to full downloadable ESL video lesson plan on the theme of connection – ideal for B1–B2 students

 

Language level: Intermediate (B1) – Advanced (C1)

Learner type: Teens and adults

Time: 90 minutes

Activity: Watching video and short film, speaking and writing

Topic: Images

Language: Idiomatic expressions and going to + infinitive

 

Link to full downloadable ESL video lesson plan on the theme of connection – ideal for B1–B2 students

Benefits for Teachers:

  • Save hours of preparation with a fully developed, flexible lesson plan
  • Engage students through compelling stories and real-world themes such as emotional intelligence, character, values, empathy, personal development, identity, relationships, global issues and social issues
  • Build classroom routines that integrate multimodal literacy naturally and progressively
  • Foster more inclusive and differentiated learning by using varied modes of input
  • Rely on a trusted methodology backed by educational research and grounded in the theories of Vygotsky, Kress, Mayer and Krashen

Benefits for Learners:

  • Develop communicative competence and confidence through integrated skill-building
  • Expand vocabulary and improve listening and reading comprehension through repeated, meaningful exposure
  • Think critically and creatively while exploring powerful social and emotional themes
  • Strengthen emotional intelligence and intercultural awareness through affective engagement with multimodal texts

 

Watch the film.

 

Check out the lesson plan

 

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We hope you enjoy this ESL video lesson plan.

 

Thanks for being part of the Film English community, and happy teaching!
— The Film English Team

Teachers preparing engaging lessons with the slogan "Materials that matter for teachers who care"

 

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Transform Your English Classroom with the Multimodal Approach
This ESL video lesson plan is built around a thought-provoking short video and designed using the innovative Multimodal Approach, integrating listening, speaking, reading, writing, viewing, and representing. Engage learners with real-world themes, develop communicative competence, build vocabulary and foster critical thinking through dynamic, research-informed activities. Find out more about the Multimodal Approach and join thousands of teachers transforming their classrooms with Film English.

10 comments on “B1 ESL Video Lesson Plan: A Thousand Words

  1. Prof Kamal Bhattacharyya says:

    The way it was discussed is really interesting not only for the children but also for the teachers. Film English is really strong and full of emotion and educative too.

    1. Hi Kamal,
      Thanks a lot for commenting. Great to know you like the site.
      All the best,
      Kieran

  2. Great site, thanks for sharing

    1. Hi Marcela,
      Thanks a lot for commenting.I’m really happy you like the site.
      All the best,
      Kieran

  3. Maria Cristina Martins says:

    I really loved the ideas… and the film!

    1. Hi Maria Cristina,
      Great to know you like the lesson, thanks a lot for the positive feedback.
      All the best,
      Kieran

  4. Lots of thoughts can be generated from this film lesson.

    Thanks a lot for sharing.

    1. Hi,
      Thanks a lot for commenting, great to know you like the lesson.
      All the best,
      Kieran

  5. Wonderful film, thanks for sharing it!

    1. Hi Laviniea,

      Thanks a lot for commenting; I’m glad you like the film.

      Cheers,

      Kieran

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