First and Second Conditional Negotiating Practice
A LESSON PLAN FOR ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHERS
Students make realistic and unrealistic requests and proposals with suggested trades in the right form of conditional, predict the response, and sees what their partner really says - with first conditional vs second conditional presentation and practice.
Lesson Plan Content:
First and second conditional in negotiations games
Work in groups of two or three. One person chooses one of the proposals below. Think about how you could complete that proposal with a request for your partner to do something for you in return. Think very carefully about which tense is needed for that proposal:
- First conditional for real, possible or likely proposals
- Second conditional for imaginary, impossible or unlikely proposals
Which tense you need might depend on you, the person who you are speaking to, and your relationship, so bear in mind that this is a real communication between the two of you, not a roleplay.
When you have decided on a yes/ no question proposing an exchange (in the right tense), try to guess what your partner’s reaction will be to that proposal. If you think that your partner will accept your proposal, secretly put a tick in the “Yes” column next to that proposal. If you think that they will reject what you offer and ask for, secretly write a cross (X) in the “No” column. If you think they won’t give a clear yes or no answer, put a question mark (?) in the “Maybe/ It depends” column. Ask the question that you made, listen to your partner’s reaction, then show them which response you predicted. Then switch roles and do the same.
Useful phrases for saying it depends/ maybe “I might be able to accept that if/ as long as/ providing…” “I can accept that unless…” |
Ask about any phrases below which you don’t understand or can’t make a sentence out of, discussing which tense would be most suitable between you and your partner each time.
Play the same game, but this time continuing your discussion until you get the response that you predicted, e.g. trying to persuade your partner if you expected a positive answer but got a negative answer.
Do the same thing the other way round. Think of a proposal (“If I…” etc) that could go together with the requests on the bottom sheet below, secretly write down what you think your partner’s response will be, ask the question, then compare their answer to what you predicted.
What function does this third conditional response have in a negotiation?
“I would have been able to if you had told me earlier”
Use as many conditional forms as you can while you roleplay a whole negotiation. You get one point for each time that you say “if”, “providing”, “unless” or “as long as”.
Making requests and predicting responses version
Proposal |
+ request/ desire/ what your partner could do in response |
Predicted reaction by your partner |
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Yes |
No |
Maybe/ It depends |
bring you some lunch next week |
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cook some traditional food for you |
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double your budget |
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give you a free gift with my company’s name on it |
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give you a free… worth 10 dollars |
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give you a lift (= a ride) to the supermarket |
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give you a million pounds |
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give you a promotion |
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give you a superpower |
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give you a very good evaluation |
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give you extra paid leave next year |
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give you some good investment advice |
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give you two weeks to finish (…) |
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lend you a book written in my language |
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lend you my car |
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let you finish early today |
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pay for your coffee |
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pay for your petrol and parking |
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promise you a 5% ROI (= return on investment) |
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recommend a good baker’s to you |
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recommend a good place to go on holiday |
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say it can save your company millions of dollars |
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threaten to sue your company |
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Making proposals and predicting responses version
If… |
Request/ Desire |
Predicted reaction |
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Yes |
No |
? |
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allow me to employ ten (more) people |
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arrange three English classes a week |
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cancel next week’s lesson(s) |
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come in to work at 7 a.m. on Monday |
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do extra preparation before the next lesson |
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give me a budget of $7 million for my project |
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give me a full refund |
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give me a pay rise of ten times the rate of inflation |
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give me a perfect evaluation |
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give me a permanent job |
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give me one year’s unpaid leave (= a sabbatical) |
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give me ten weeks’ paid holiday next year |
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give me two more weeks to finish (…) |
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invest in my start-up |
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join me in a new business venture |
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lend me five dollars |
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let me use your credit card |
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let me use your house |
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let me work from home (= telecommute) |
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move abroad (= move overseas) |
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move departments |
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move this lesson to Saturdays |
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offer a discount of 40% |
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pay for me to take some training |
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pay for me to travel to… |
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proofread a report for me |
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put me in charge of a large(r) project |
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put me in charge of your personal finances |
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relocate to Siberia |
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share an office |
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sign a five-year contract for English lessons |
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take charge of relocating the call centre to India |
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tell me every detail of your company’s next product |
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tell me some famous jokes from your country |
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