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GCSE GERMAN KS3 GERMAN KS4 GERMAN HIGH-FREQUENCY VERBS PRESENT TENSE CONJUGATION PRACTICE This workbook focuses on 25 high-frequency verbs in the present tense. I’ve used these ‘quick conjugations’ for many years with my German students. My students find them to be a great way of practising, reinforcing and revising how to conjugate essential verbs in German. I’ve used them in a range of contexts such as independent work either in class time or at home, holiday refresher work, or individual activities for cover lessons. I tend to give my students regular opportunities to practise the conjugations during the whole schools year, and they find this really useful for mapping their own progress and developing their overall understanding of how German conjugation ‘works’.

The resource is structured as follows:

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

Three conjugation challenges, each with 50 individual conjugations:

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

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

Conjugation Challenge 3: students write the corresponding German 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.

answer key

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 German is accurate, and that their understanding of German across the skills of listening, speaking, reading and writing is robust. Students become very familiar and confident the more they work with conjugation, and these quick conjugations certainly help to embed that successfully.

Try this free sampler:

GERMAN CONJUGATION PRACTICE FREE SAMPLER
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/german-conjugation-practice-example-12154187

Have a browse in my store for more German grammar activities, and a wide range of other German teaching and learning resources, with special offer bundles and lots of freebies too!

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 any way. The license for purchase is a single-user license only. Please read the Terms of Use.

VIELEN DANK UND VIEL SPAß BEIM KONJUGIEREN!

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GERMAN PRESENT TENSE RESOURCE BOX #1

**KS3 GERMAN GCSE GERMAN KS4 GERMAN PRESENT TENSE CONJUGATION PRACTICE FIVE WORKBOOKS @ £1.00 EACH IN THE BUNDLE** ***focusing on a range of German verb groups in the present tense, with 150 conjugation questions (750 conjugations in total), and complete answer keys*** ideal for **KS3 German** students who are consolidating conjugtion skills, and **KS4 German** students who are beginning to work with compound sentences and longer texts, and generally developing their knowledge and understanding of conjugation and tense in ***German***. 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. **The verbs groups are:** ***regular German verbs irregular & mixed German verbs high-frequency German verbs German reflexive verbs German separable verbs*** ***The workbooks focus on the correct conjugation of verbs, rather than usage***, but I definitely find it useful to remind students of a number of things when focusing on or revising tense and verb conjugation. For example, with ***German verbs***, I encourage students to look for patterns across all the verbs, such as the ***singular pronouns***, including the pronoun ***man*** form being identical, pointing out also that ***man*** is commonly used in ***German***, often also meaning ***we***, unlike the pronoun ***one*** in ***English***. There are certain complexities with ***German reflexive verbs***, as learners whose first language does not have ***equivalent reflexive verbs*** can find identifying the ***correct reflexive pronoun***, and particularly ***dative reflexive pronouns***, and ***positioning them correctly***, quite challenging. Students do often try to conflate what they know about conjugation, and with those whose first language is ***English***, I frequently see attempts such as ***ich bin sich waschen*** for ***I am getting washed*** or similarly ***ich mache / tue sich erinnern*** for ***I do remember***. I refer frequently the difference in usage between ***English and German***, and this is important particularly when explaining when and in which contexts to use the ***simple present and the continuous / progressive present tense***. Though the workbooks focus solely on the correct conjugation of verbs, and does not look at word order in the context of full sentences, there are very ***conjugation patterns*** that students can learn, recognize and apply, ensuring that their ***spoken and written German*** is accurate, and that their understanding of *German* across the skills of ***listening, speaking, reading and writing*** is robust. Students become very familiar and confident the more they work with conjugation, and these quick conjugations certainly help to embed that successfully. I've used these 'quick conjugations' for many years with my ***German*** classes. My students definitely find them to be a great way of practising, reinforcing and revising how to conjugate essential verbs in ***German***. I use them in a range of contexts such as independent work either in class time or at home, holiday refresher work, or individual activities for cover lessons. I tend to give my students regular opportunities to practice the conjugations during the whole schools year, and they find this really useful for mapping their own progress and developing their overall understanding of how ***German*** conjugation 'works'. **Each conjugation workbook has the following structure:** ***Two alphabetical verb reference lists***: German-English and English-German. ***Three conjugation challenges***, each with 50 individual conjugations: **Conjugation Challenge 1**: each verb conjugated in German across a range of pronouns, with students writing the corresponding English verb conjugation. **Conjugation Challenge 2**: gives the infinitive of each verb in German, specifying the target pronoun. Students write the corresponding verb conjugation in German. **Conjugation Challenge 3**: students write the corresponding German verb conjugation, and its infinitive, from an English prompt. ***Notes and Next Steps***, which encourages students to think about how their understanding of German conjugation works, reflect on what progress they have made, what their targets for improvement might realistically be, and what they might reasonably do in order to meet those targets. They also use this page to note any new verbs they learn, which helps them build up a comprehensive verb vocabulary. It's also a useful tool to guide and inform whole-group discussion about learning and progress in general, which is a really popular activity with my students. The ***answer key*** is a 6-page book 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 quick conjugation workbook sampler to see if it's the kind of learning activity that will work well for your students - it's free to download here:*** **GERMAN QUICK CONJUGATION SAMPLER** [https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/german-conjugation-practice-sampler-12154187](http://) ***Currently in my store I have quick conjugation workbooks for the above verb groups featuring the following tenses:*** *present tense (Präsens) perfect tense (Perfekt) imperfect tense (Präteritum) future tense (Futur I) conditional tense (Konjuktiv II, Futur I) pluperfect tense (Plusquamperfekt) future perfect tense (Konjuktiv I, Futur II) conditional perfect tense (Konjuktiv II, Plusquamperfekt)* ***Have a browse in my store for more German grammar activities, and a wide range of other German teaching and learning resources, with lots of freebies too - I've added a selection here.*** *The product is non-editable in a zipped format. It is copyright, all rights reserved. It may not be copied, rewritten, shared or distributed outside your own classroom in any way. The license for purchase is a single-user license only. Please read the Terms of Use carefully.* **VIELEN DANK UND VIEL SPAß BEIM KONJUGIEREN!**

£5.00
Bundle

GERMAN CONJUGATION PRACTICE BUNDLE #1

ALEVEL GCSE GERMAN VERBS CONJUGATION PRESENT PERFECT IMPERFECT TENSES SIXTEEN WORKBOOKS & ANSWER KEYS: REGULAR VERBS : SEPARABLE VERBS : REFLEXIVE VERBS : IRREGULAR & MIXED VERBS : HIGH-FREQUENCY VERBS : VERBS TAKING SEIN IN THE PERFECT TENSE : 2,400 CONJUGATION QUESTIONS My students love these for quick conjugation recall practice, and they're the perfect activity for practice and revision. This is a bundle of sixteen 'quick conjugation' workbooks, which provide students with lots of opportunities to practice how to conjugation a range of high-frequency verbs in German with a focus on three tenses: present, perfect and imperfect. One of the workbooks focuses on verbs taking sein in the perfect tense.<br /> <br /> There are 150 conjugations in each workbook, with an individual focus on particular verbs groups. That's 2,400 quick conjugation questions in total. There is a complete answer key for each individual workbook too - my students really like to have the answer keys, as they find it enables them to work more independently, and they benefit from both self and peer assessment. I find answer keys really essential, as they provide students with additional opportunity to engage with language.<br /> <br /> I've been using the workbooks for a long time, and found they work best when I give my students regular and frequent chances to revisit the workbooks, including noting their thoughts on the Notes and Next Steps template. That really does help them to focus on their progress. We also use the template to guide and inform whole-group discussions about German conjugation in particular and German grammar in general. Even my advanced students get the chance to go 'back to the beginning' and work quickly through the conjugations, just to be sure that they have really grasped the concept. I use the workbooks as classwork, as homework, as 'free choice' resources, holiday refresher and revision work, and also as focused activities for sub lessons. They really do work well in a broad range of contexts.<br /> <br /> The verbs groups are:<br /> <br /> - regular verbs<br /> - irregular and mixed verbs<br /> - regular and irregular separable verbs<br /> - regular and irregular reflexive verbs<br /> - regular and irregular high-frequency verbs<br /> - verbs taking sein in the perfect tense<br /> <br /> The tenses are:<br /> <br /> - present tense (Präsens)<br /> - perfect tense (Perfekt)<br /> - imperfect tense (Präteritum)<br /> <br /> The structure of each quick conjugation workbook is:<br /> <br /> 10-page work book with two alphabetical verb reference lists: German-English and English-German<br /> <br /> Three differentiated conjugation challenges, each with 50 individual conjugations:<br /> <br /> Conjugation Challenge One: each verb conjugated in German across a range of pronouns, with students writing the corresponding English verb conjugation.<br /> <br /> Conjugation Challenge Two: gives the infinitive of each verb in German, specifying the target pronoun. Students write the corresponding verb conjugation in German.<br /> <br /> Conjugation challenge Three: students write the corresponding German verb conjugation, and its infinitive, from an English prompt.<br /> <br /> * 6-page answer key book which students find really useful, and I actually consider essential for this type of workbook - either to self- or peer-assess - it's also a great time saver for teachers, as well as a way of encouraging students to really assume more responsibility for, and independence in, their learning.<br /> <br /> * Notes and Next Steps page - we use this to map progress, and to note ideas for improvement. We also use it as to guide and inform whole-group discussion about learning and progress in general, which is a really popular and effective activity. It's also a great place to note any additional verbs that students learn, and this helps to build up a really strong verb vocab bank.<br /> <br /> Try this free-to-download sampler to check whether this kind of activity would work well for your students:<br /> https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/german-conjugation-practice-example-12154187<br /> <br /> Please read the Terms of Use carefully. This bundle is copyright, all rights reserved. I've also included a range of free-to-download resources you may not have seen in my store. The files may not be copied, rewritten, shared or distributed in any way. The license for purchase is a single-user license only.<br /> <br /> VIELEN DANK UND VIEL SPAß BEIM KONJUGIEREN!

£10.00
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GERMAN HIGH-FREQUENCY VERBS CONJUGATION PRACTICE #3

**GCSE GERMAN KS4 GERMAN KS3 GERMAN ALEVEL GERMAN VERBS CONJUGATION PRACTICE 8 workbooks & tenses @ 60p each in the bundle** *featuring 25 high-frequency German verbs in the present, perfect, imperfect, future, conditional, pluperfect, future perfect and conditional perfect tenses, 150 conjugations in each workbook, 1,200 conjugations in total, answer keys & verb lists* ideal for***KS3 German*** students who are beginning to work with compound sentences and longer texts, and generally developing their knowledge and understanding of conjugation and tense in *German*; ***KS4 German*** students who have a sound baseline understanding of conjugation and tense in *German*, are working regularly with the notion of past tense in *German*, and distinguishing between verbs that are conjugated with either ***haben or sein in the perfect and pluperfect*** tense to *KS5 German and advanced German* students who have a sound understanding of conjugation and tense in *German*, are working regularly with the notion of a range of tenses and mood in *German*, and have a solid grasp of verbs that are conjugated with either ***haben or sein in the relevant tenses***. It's actually really useful to introduce the ***pluperfect tense in German*** quite closely with the ***perfect tense***, as the patterns are identical, and it allows students to ***compare and contrast*** the tenses, and to practise both fairly simultaneously - in my experience, students do not confuse or mix up the tenses when they're learning and using them together. Similarly, I do tend to introduce the ***perfect tense and imperfect tense*** together, as usage of the tenses is not directly equivalent with *English* for example, particularly in *spoken German*. *The workbooks focus on the mechanics of conjugation, rather than usage*, but 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 *German* conjugation skills are developing well, which is a key step in creating and producing correct *German*, in both ***oral and written form***. 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. I definitely find it useful to remind students of a number of things when focusing on or revising tense and verb conjugation. Students do often try to conflate what they know about conjugation in their first language with the patterns and rules of the language they are learning. For example, with the ***German imperfect tense***, with students whose first language is *English*, I frequently see attempts such as ***ich war machen for I was doing / making*** or similarly ***ich machte arbeiten for I did work***. Students also tend to look for a direct translation of the notion of ***used to...***, before they understand that the ***notion is implicit in the tense itself***. I refer frequently the difference in usage between *English and German*, and this is important particularly when explaining when and in which contexts to use the various tenses. Though the workbooks focus solely on the correct conjugation of verbs, and does not look at word order in the context of full sentences, there are ***fixed conjugation patterns*** that students can ***learn, recognise and apply***, ensuring that their ***spoken and written German*** is accurate, and that their understanding of *German* across the skills of ***listening, speaking, reading and writing*** is robust. Students become very familiar and confident the more they work with conjugation, and these quick conjugations certainly help to embed that successfully. I've used these 'quick conjugations' for many years with my *German* classes. My students definitely find them to be a great way of practising, reinforcing and revising how to conjugate essential verbs in *German*. I use them in a range of contexts such as independent work either in class time or at home, holiday refresher work, or individual activities for cover lessons. I tend to give my students regular opportunities to practice the conjugations during the whole schools year, and they find this really useful for mapping their own progress and developing their overall understanding of how *German* conjugation 'works'. **The tenses are:** present tense *(Präsens)* perfect tense *(Perfekt)* imperfect tense *(Präteritum)* future tense *(Futur I)* conditional tense *(Konjuktiv II, Futur I)* pluperfect tense *(Plusquamperfekt)* future perfect tense *(Konjuktiv I, Futur II)* conditional perfect tense *(Konjuktiv II, Plusquamperfekt)* **Each set has the following structure:** *Two alphabetical verb reference lists*: German-English and English-German. *Three conjugation challenges*, each with 50 individual conjugations: ***Conjugation Challenge 1***: each verb conjugated in German across a range of pronouns, with students writing the corresponding English verb conjugation. ***Conjugation Challenge 2***: gives the infinitive of each verb in German, specifying the target pronoun. Students write the corresponding verb conjugation in German. ***Conjugation Challenge 3***: students write the corresponding German verb conjugation, and its infinitive, from an English prompt. *Notes and Next Steps* sheet, which encourages students to think about how their understanding of German conjugation works, what progress they have made, what their targets for improvement might realistically be, and what they might reasonably do in order to meet those targets. Students also note down any new verbs they discover, which enables them to build up a really sound verb vocabulary bank. We also use this to guide our whole-group discussions about conjugation and German grammar, and learning and progress in general - this is a really successful and popular activity. *answer key*: there are 6 pages in the answer key book - for me, answer keys are an essential and integral part of learning with these kinds of workbooks - they give my students an additional opportunity to engage with language, they certainly help them develop more independence in their learning, and they genuinely enjoy 'correcting' their own, and especially each other's work. ***Currently in my store I have quick conjugation workbooks for a range of verb groups featuring the following tenses:*** present tense *(Präsens)* perfect tense *(Perfekt)* imperfect tense *(Präteritum)* future tense *(Futur I)* conditional tense *(Konjuktiv II, Futur I)* pluperfect tense *(Plusquamperfekt)* future perfect tense *(Konjuktiv I, Futur II)* conditional perfect tense *(Konjuktiv II, Plusquamperfekt)* ***Have a browse in my store for more German grammar activities, and a wide range of other German teaching and learning resources, with special offer bundles and lots of freebies too - I've included a selection here for you to try.*** *This resource consists of non-editable files in a zipped format. It is copyright, all rights reserved. It may not be copied, rewritten, shared or distributed outside your own classroom in any way. The license for purchase is a single-user license only. Please read the Terms of Use carefully.* **VIELEN DANK UND VIEL SPAß BEIM KONJUGIEREN!*

£4.80
Bundle

GERMAN HIGH-FREQUENCY VERBS CONJUGATION PRACTICE #1

**KS3 GERMAN KS4 GERMAN GCSE GERMAN CONJUGATION PRACTICE** *3 workbooks @ £1.20 each in the bundle featuring 25 high-frequency irregular German verbs in the present, perfect and imperfect tenses, 150 conjugations in each workbook, 450 conjugations in total, answer keys and verb lists* ideal for *advanced KS3 German* students who are beginning to work with compound sentences and longer texts, and *KS4 German* students who are working with more complex language and texts, including a range of tenses. *The workbooks focus on the correct conjugation of verbs, rather than usage*, but I definitely find it useful to remind students of a number of things when focusing on or revising tense and verb conjugation. For example, with the ***German present tense***, I encourage students to look for patterns across all the verbs, such as the ***singular pronouns***, including the ***pronoun man*** form being identical, pointing out also that ***man*** is commonly used in ***German***, often also meaning ***we***, unlike the ***pronoun one*** in ***English***. Students do often try to conflate what they know about conjugation, and with those whose first language is ***English***, I frequently see attempts such as ***ich bin singen for I am singing*** or similarly ***ich mache singen for I do sing***. I refer frequently the difference in usage between ***English and German***, and this is important particularly when explaining when and in which contexts to use the ***simple present and the continuous / progressive present tense***. 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 ***fixed conjugation patterns*** that students can***learn, recognise and apply***, ensuring that their ***spoken and written German*** is accurate, and that their understanding of ***German*** across the skills of ***listening, speaking, reading and writing*** is robust. Students become very familiar and confident the more they work with conjugation, and these quick conjugations certainly help to embed that successfully. I've used these 'quick conjugations' for many years with my *German* classes. My students definitely find them to be a great way of practising, reinforcing and revising how to conjugate essential verbs in *German*. I use them in a range of contexts such as independent work either in class time or at home, holiday refresher work, or individual activities for cover lessons. I tend to give my students regular opportunities to practice the conjugations during the whole schools year, and they find this really useful for mapping their own progress and developing their overall understanding of how *German* conjugation 'works'. **Each set has the following structure:** *Two alphabetical verb reference lists*: German-English and English-German. *Three conjugation challenges*, each with 50 individual conjugations: ***Conjugation Challenge 1***: each verb conjugated in German across a range of pronouns, with students writing the corresponding English verb conjugation. ***Conjugation Challenge 2***: gives the infinitive of each verb in German, specifying the target pronoun. Students write the corresponding verb conjugation in German. ***Conjugation Challenge 3***: students write the corresponding German verb conjugation, and its infinitive, from an English prompt. *Notes and Next Steps* sheet, which encourages students to think about how their understanding of German conjugation works, what progress they have made, what their targets for improvement might realistically be, and what they might reasonably do in order to meet those targets. Students also note down any new verbs they discover, which enables them to build up a really sound verb vocabulary bank. We also use this to guide our whole-group discussions about conjugation and German grammar, and learning and progress in general - this is a really successful and popular activity. *answer key*: there are 6 pages in the answer key book - for me, answer keys are an essential and integral part of learning with these kinds of workbooks - they give my students an additional opportunity to engage with language, they certainly help them develop more independence in their learning, and they genuinely enjoy 'correcting' their own, and especially each other's work. ***Currently in my store I have quick conjugation workbooks for a range of verb groups featuring the following tenses:*** present tense *(Präsens)* perfect tense *(Perfekt)* imperfect tense *(Präteritum)* future tense *(Futur I)* conditional tense *(Konjuktiv II, Futur I)* pluperfect tense *(Plusquamperfekt)* future perfect tense *(Konjuktiv I, Futur II)* conditional perfect tense *(Konjuktiv II, Plusquamperfekt)* **Have a browse in my store for more German conjugation and grammar activities, and a wide range of other German teaching and learning resources, with special offer bunles and lots of freebies too - I've included a couple here for you to try.** *Files are non-editable in a zipped format. The bundle is copyright, all rights reserved. It may not be 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 carefully.* **VIELEN DANK UND VIEL SPAß BEIM KONJUGIEREN!**

£3.60
Bundle

GERMAN HIGH-FREQUENCY VERBS CONJUGATION PRACTICE #2

**GCSE GERMAN KS4 GERMAN KS3 GERMAN CONJUGATION PRACTICE 6 workbooks & tenses @ 75p each in the bundle** *featuring 25 high-frequency German verbs in the present, perfect, imperfect, future, conditional and pluperfect tenses, 150 conjugations in each workbook, 900 conjugations in total, answer keys & verb lists* ideal for ***KS3 German*** students who are beginning to work with compound sentences and longer texts, and generally developing their knowledge and understanding of conjugation and tense in *German* to ***KS4 German*** students who have a sound baseline understanding of conjugation and tense in *German*, are working regularly with the notion of past tense in *German*, and distinguishing between verbs that are conjugated with either ***haben or sein in the perfect and pluperfect*** tense. It's actually really useful to introduce the ***pluperfect tense in German*** quite closely with the ***perfect tense***, as the patterns are identical, and it allows students to ***compare and contrast*** the tenses, and to practise both fairly simultaneously - in my experience, students do not confuse or mix up the tenses when they're learning and using them together. Similarly, I do tend to introduce the ***perfect tense and imperfect tense*** together, as usage of the tenses is not directly equivalent with *English* for example, particularly in *spoken German*. *The workbooks focus on the mechanics of conjugation, rather than usage*, but 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 *German* conjugation skills are developing well, which is a key step in creating and producing correct *German*, in both ***oral and written form***. 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. I definitely find it useful to remind students of a number of things when focusing on or revising tense and verb conjugation. Students do often try to conflate what they know about conjugation in their first language with the patterns and rules of the language they are learning. For example, with the ***German imperfect tense***, with students whose first language is *English*, I frequently see attempts such as ***ich war machen for I was doing / making*** or similarly ***ich machte arbeiten for I did work***. Students also tend to look for a direct translation of the notion of ***used to...***, before they understand that the ***notion is implicit in the tense itself***. I refer frequently the difference in usage between *English and German*, and this is important particularly when explaining when and in which contexts to use the various tenses. Though the workbooks focus solely on the correct conjugation of verbs, and does not look at word order in the context of full sentences, there are ***fixed conjugation patterns*** that students can ***learn, recognise and apply***, ensuring that their ***spoken and written German*** is accurate, and that their understanding of *German* across the skills of ***listening, speaking, reading and writing*** is robust. Students become very familiar and confident the more they work with conjugation, and these quick conjugations certainly help to embed that successfully. I've used these 'quick conjugations' for many years with my *German* classes. My students definitely find them to be a great way of practising, reinforcing and revising how to conjugate essential verbs in *German*. I use them in a range of contexts such as independent work either in class time or at home, holiday refresher work, or individual activities for cover lessons. I tend to give my students regular opportunities to practice the conjugations during the whole schools year, and they find this really useful for mapping their own progress and developing their overall understanding of how *German* conjugation 'works'. **The tenses are:** present tense *(Präsens)* perfect tense *(Perfekt)* imperfect tense *(Präteritum)* future tense *(Futur I)* conditional tense *(Konjuktiv II, Futur I)* pluperfect tense *(Plusquamperfekt)* **Each set has the following structure:** *Two alphabetical verb reference lists*: German-English and English-German. *Three conjugation challenges*, each with 50 individual conjugations: ***Conjugation Challenge 1***: each verb conjugated in German across a range of pronouns, with students writing the corresponding English verb conjugation. ***Conjugation Challenge 2***: gives the infinitive of each verb in German, specifying the target pronoun. Students write the corresponding verb conjugation in German. ***Conjugation Challenge 3***: students write the corresponding German verb conjugation, and its infinitive, from an English prompt. *Notes and Next Steps* sheet, which encourages students to think about how their understanding of German conjugation works, what progress they have made, what their targets for improvement might realistically be, and what they might reasonably do in order to meet those targets. Students also note down any new verbs they discover, which enables them to build up a really sound verb vocabulary bank. We also use this to guide our whole-group discussions about conjugation and German grammar, and learning and progress in general - this is a really successful and popular activity. *answer key*: there are 6 pages in the answer key book - for me, answer keys are an essential and integral part of learning with these kinds of workbooks - they give my students an additional opportunity to engage with language, they certainly help them develop more independence in their learning, and they genuinely enjoy 'correcting' their own, and especially each other's work. ***Currently in my store I have quick conjugation workbooks for a range of verb groups featuring the following tenses:*** present tense *(Präsens)* perfect tense *(Perfekt)* imperfect tense *(Präteritum)* future tense *(Futur I)* conditional tense *(Konjuktiv II, Futur I)* pluperfect tense *(Plusquamperfekt)* future perfect tense *(Konjuktiv I, Futur II)* conditional perfect tense *(Konjuktiv II, Plusquamperfekt)* ***Have a browse in my store for more German grammar activities, and a wide range of other German teaching and learning resources, with special offer bundles and lots of freebies too - I've included a selection here for you to try.*** *This resource consists of non-editable files in a zipped format. It is copyright, all rights reserved. It may not be copied, rewritten, shared or distributed outside your own classroom in any way. The license for purchase is a single-user license only. Please read the Terms of Use carefully.* **VIELEN DANK UND VIEL SPAß BEIM KONJUGIEREN!**

£4.50

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