Upper Beginner ESL Speaking - Jobs 1

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A Career-Themed ESL Speaking Unit for Real-World English

Unit 8, Jobs & Careers, is an exciting, high-engagement ESL speaking unit designed for multilingual learners ages 6–18. Students explore a wide range of jobs—from builders and plumbers to scientists, artists, park rangers, and tour guides—while practicing essential speaking and listening skills.

These lessons help students build real conversational fluency around a universal topic: work.

Teachers searching for:

  • Jobs ESL speaking lessons

  • Occupations conversation worksheets

  • Workplace English for beginners

  • ESL speaking curriculum for kids & teens

  • Career-themed ESL discussions

…will find this unit a perfect fit for both classroom and pull-out ESL settings.

This unit builds job vocabulary, develops workplace-related communication, and encourages future-focused discussion—perfect for early career awareness and meaningful conversations.


🧭 Unit Overview: Speaking About Work, Careers, and Real-Life Jobs

This unit teaches students to talk about:

  • Trade jobs (builders, plumbers, electricians, farmers, carpenters)

  • Professional jobs (scientists, accountants, engineers, office workers, designers)

  • Creative jobs (artists, musicians, photographers, sculptors)

  • Outdoor & travel jobs (flight attendants, sailors, park rangers, delivery drivers, tour guides)

Across all four lessons, speaking is the central focus:

Chat-a-Bit warm-up
Clear job readings that introduce workplace vocabulary
Comprehension speaking questions
Four speaking dialogues per lesson
Partner Q&A practice
“Would you rather…?” career-speaking tasks
End-of-lesson oral reflection

The unit gives students dozens of opportunities to speak in each class session.


🗣️ Speaking Skills Developed

✔ 1. Oral Fluency & Conversation

Students practice:

  • Describing jobs and what people do

  • Asking & answering questions about work

  • Expressing opinions (“I think…,” “I prefer…”)

  • Talking about skills, tools, and daily tasks

  • Giving reasons and making comparisons

  • Discussing future interests (“I want to be…”)

✔ 2. Listening & Interaction

Students learn to:

  • Respond to peers during partner dialogues

  • Follow spoken directions

  • Engage in multi-turn conversations

✔ 3. Job Vocabulary for Speaking

Students use vocabulary like:

  • skilled, strength, measure, shock, focused (trade)

  • experiment, document, details, organized, discover (professional)

  • design, sculpture, stylish, unique, perform (creative)

  • turbulence, passenger, deliver, fasten, knowledgeable (travel/outdoor)

Vocabulary is always used in an oral context.

✔ 4. Grammar for Workplace Speaking

  • Present simple for duties (“They fix…,” “They build…”)

  • Talking about abilities (“They can…” “They need to…”)

  • Giving opinions and reasons (“because…”)

  • Conditional speaking (“I would rather…”)


🎓 Teaching Approaches (Speaking Priority)

Communicative Language Teaching

Students practice real conversations about real careers.

Task-Based Speaking Practice

Students complete meaningful mini-tasks:

  • Describe a job

  • Explain a skill

  • Compare two careers

  • Role-play workplace situations

  • Give advice for different jobs

Differentiation for Ages 6–18

  • Younger learners: simple sentences, picture support

  • Teens: extended answers, deeper reasoning

  • Newcomers: sentence frames + vocabulary repetition

Multilingual-Friendly

Students discuss jobs in their home country vs. jobs in their new community.


📘 How Unit 8 Fits in the K–12 Speaking Curriculum

This is the eighth speaking unit in the full curriculum.

It builds on:

  • Daily routines (Unit 1)

  • Neighborhood helpers (Unit 2)

  • Animals (Unit 3)

  • Food & restaurants (Unit 4)

  • Hobbies (Unit 5)

  • Travel (Unit 6)

  • Planet & environment (Unit 7)

Unit 8 expands speaking into career exploration, an essential theme for older students, high-intermediate learners, and goal-setting conversations.

This unit prepares students for future speaking units on:

  • Money and responsibilities

  • Community participation

  • Future plans and goals


👔 Detailed Speaking-Centered Lesson Descriptions


Lesson 1 — Trade Jobs (Builders, Plumbers, Electricians, Farmers, Carpenters)

Speaking Objective: Students describe hands-on jobs and talk about tools, tasks, and skills.
Speaking Vocabulary: skilled, focused, shock, raise, measure, strength
Speaking Activities:

  • Warm-up about building & fixing things

  • Speaking questions after each reading

  • Vocabulary discussion in conversation

  • 4 guided dialogues (building, leaks, electricity, woodwork)

  • “Would you rather…?” job choices
    Speaking Benefit: Builds strong descriptive language around everyday jobs kids see often.


Lesson 2 — Professional Jobs (Office Workers, Scientists, Engineers, Accountants, Designers)

Speaking Objective: Students talk about desk jobs, science jobs, and creative professional roles.
Speaking Vocabulary: experiment, document, creative, organized, discover, details
Speaking Activities:

  • Warm-up about working with people vs. alone

  • Speaking Q&A after each reading

  • Partner conversations with workplace vocabulary

  • 4 dialogues (office, science, engineering, accounting)

  • Speaking reflection about future careers
    Speaking Benefit: Helps learners talk confidently about future education & career paths.


Lesson 3 — Creative & Service Jobs (Artists, Musicians, Sculptors, Hairdressers, Photographers)

Speaking Objective: Students describe creative talents and talk about service-based jobs.
Speaking Vocabulary: design, sculpture, stylish, unique, perform, patient
Speaking Activities:

  • Warm-up about creative strengths

  • Read & speak sections for each creative job

  • 4 creativity-focused speaking dialogues

  • Pair tasks about music, art, and style

  • “Would you rather…?” creative job questions
    Speaking Benefit: Builds expressive language, feelings vocabulary, and descriptive detail.


Lesson 4 — Outdoor & Travel Jobs (Flight Attendants, Sailors, Rangers, Delivery Drivers, Tour Guides)

Speaking Objective: Students discuss travel jobs, nature jobs, and customer-service jobs.
Speaking Vocabulary: turbulence, passenger, instructions, deliver, fasten, knowledgeable
Speaking Activities:

  • Warm-up about outdoor vs. indoor work

  • Speaking questions about safety, travel, and exploration

  • Oral vocabulary practice

  • 4 job-based dialogues (planes, ships, nature parks, city tours)

  • “Would you rather…?” job decision-making questions
    Speaking Benefit: Encourages students to speak about adventure, travel, movement, and culture.


🍎 Teacher Tips (Speaking-Focused)

  • Use photos of jobs to spark rich conversation.

  • Encourage students to ask follow-up questions.

  • Provide sentence starters for newcomers (“A plumber fixes…,” “I think…”)

  • Create partner interview cards about job duties, tools, and skills.

  • Use role-plays (interviews, job helpers, customer service conversations).


📝 Speaking-Based Assessment

  • Oral job description

  • Dialogue performance

  • Speaking interview: “Which job is best for you and why?”

  • Compare two jobs using speaking frames

  • Group project: “Jobs in our community” (oral presentation)