BEGINNER ITALIAN INTERMEDIATE ITALIAN ARE VERBS CONJUGATION PRACTICE 6 TENSES & WORKBOOKS @ $0.80 EACH IN THE BUNDLE focusing on 25 high-frequency Italian -ARE verbs. My students really like this kind of grammar activity, as they like to work and learn independently, which is a successful way of varying teaching and learning methodologies - I’ve found it’s really important to avoid predominantly teacher-led learning in the languages classroom. There are 150 conjugations across 3 differentiated conjugation challenges in each workbook, 900 conjugations in total.

I use these kinds of workbooks in lots of different ways: for practice during the introduction phase, for independent choice in class time, for home learning, for practice and revision during vacation and at return to class, and for cover lessons - they’re really versatile, and ideal for advanced beginner Italian into intermediate Italian students who are getting to grips with conjugation in Italian, building their verb vocabulary, and working regularly with more complex texts, which feature a range of tenses, and including authentic resources. They’re also really useful for KS5 Italian A Level Italian students who are beginning their advanced Italian programme, and revising prior learning.

The workbooks focus on the mechanics of conjugation, rather than usage, and I’ve found that when my students are able to provide the correct conjugation very quickly, and out of a specific context, they feel really confident that their conjugation skills are developing well.

The tenses are:

**present tense (presente)
perfect tense (passato prossimo)
imperfect tense (imperfetto)
future tense (futuro semplice)
conditional tense (condizionale, presente)
pluperfect tense (trapassato prossimo)

The workbooks focus on formation and conjugation, rather than usage, though it’s definitely useful to remind students of a number of things when focusing on or revising tense and verb formation and conjugation. Language learners do often try to conflate what they know about conjugation in their first language, and the language they are learning, and with the Italian conditional tense for example, those with English as a first language frequently look for a word that is the equivalent of would, until they familiarise themselves with the fact that the notion of conditional is indicated in the verb ending. I see this a lot with the future tense too, and tend to introduce both tenses quite closely together. It’s also easy to confuse the future tense endings with the conditional tense endings, and targeted practice helps to address that really well.

Though the workbook focuses solely on the correct conjugation of verbs, and does not look at word order in the context of full sentences, there are conjugation patterns that students can learn, recognise and apply, ensuring that their spoken and written Italian is accurate, and that their understanding of Italian across the skills of listening, speaking, reading and writing is robust.

Each set is structured as follows:

Two alphabetical verb reference lists: Italian-English and English-Italian.

Three conjugation challenges, each with 50 individual conjugations:

Conjugation Challenge 1: each verb conjugated in Italian across a range of pronouns, with students writing the corresponding English verb conjugation.

Conjugation Challenge 2: gives the infinitive of each verb in Italian, specifying the target pronoun. Students write the corresponding verb conjugation in Italian.

Conjugation Challenge 3: students write the corresponding Italian verb conjugation, and its infinitive, from an English prompt.

Notes and Next Steps template which students visit regularly - it really does encourage them to think about where they are now, how confident they feel, and what they might need to work on a little more to be absolutely sure of their conjugation skills. We also note down any new verbs we meet, which enables students to build up their own verb vocabulary bank. It’s a great tool to guide and inform whole-group discussion about learning and progress in general, which is a really successful and popular activity.

answer key: 6-page booklet which is absolutely essential in my view. Answer keys help students develop more independence in their learning, and provide them with an additional opportunity to engage with language and grammar. They also genuinely enjoy correcting their own - and particularly each others’ - work.

Try this free samler to assess whether this kind of activity would work well for your students:

ITALIAN QUICK CONJUGATION PRACTICE SAMPLER
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/italian-conjugation-practice-sampler-12507124

Currently in my store I have Italian conjugation workbooks for a range of verb groups featuring the following tenses:

  • present tense (presente)
  • perfect tense (passato prossimo)
  • imperfect tense (imperfetto)
  • future tense (futuro semplice)
  • conditional tense (condizionale, presente)
  • pluperfect tense (trapassato prossimo)
  • future perfect tense (futuro anteriore)
  • conditional perfect tense (condizionale passato)

Have a browse in my store for more Italian grammar activities, and a wide range of Italian language teaching and learning materials, with dollar deals, special offer bundles, and lots of freebies too - I’ve included a couple in this bundle for you to try.

The product is non-editable in a zipped format. It is copyright, all rights reserved. It may not be amended, copied, rewritten, shared or distributed outside your own classroom, in whole or in part, in any way. The license for purchase is a single-user license only. Please read the Terms of Use.

GRAZIE MILLE E BUON APPRENDIMENTO!

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