When to tip and when to skip

Lesson plan overview

This FREE intermediate ESL lesson plan is dedicated to the topic of tipping, with a focus on “tipflation” (a term used to describe the United States’ recent widespread expansion of gratuity to more industries, not just restaurants and hotels). Students will learn useful vocabulary and will discuss topics like guilt-tipping, fair compensation in the hospitality industry, and tipping etiquette around the world. You can combine it with “Phrasal verbs: money”. You can also use this lesson in a Business English class if your students are employed in the hospitality industry.

Speaking: The lesson starts with 5 discussion questions related to tipping. Then, students look at 9 situations and decide whether to leave a tip, and how much would they tip in each one.
Vocabulary: First, students learn expressions related to tipping (customary, a generous tipper, to round up, service charge, minimum wage). To practice the vocabulary, students complete 5 statements with the correct expression, and then discuss the statements. Next, students expand their vocabulary about tipping by completing 5 expressions with the correct word (tipping upfront, tipping etiquette, tip jar, a guilt tip). Then students answer 5 questions related to tipping.
Listening: Students watch a video called “Has tipping reached a tipping point? Whom to tip and whom to skip” and answer 7 questions. After that, they engage in a post-listening discussion about tipping culture in the US.
Speaking: Finally, students are given 4 debate topics to discuss in pairs or small groups.
To review the target vocabulary from this lesson, you can use the conversation cards.

Teacher’s lesson plan

Student’s worksheet

Student’s interactive PDF

Conversation cards PDF

Pre-class activities

All video-based ESL lesson plans include online pre-class activities, which are FREE and can be completed without registration. Perfect for teachers who wish to embrace the blended learning approach. By providing students with resources and engagement opportunities before the actual class session, educators can foster active participation, enhance comprehension, and optimise in-class discussions.

The pre-class activities are optional: if you choose not to assign them, or your students don’t complete them, it will not disturb the flow of the class. You can find and review the pre-class activities for this lesson plan here:

To send the pre-class activities to your students, copy the link below.

https://theenglishflows.com/lesson-plans/when-to-tip-and-when-to-skip/pre-class-activities/

In-class activities

Teacher’s lesson plan
Student’s worksheet

Conversation cards PDF

Student’s interactive PDF

Additional resources

Each video-based lesson plan includes links to additional resources (videos and articles), which are FREE can be found online (in the pre-class activities page. These links aim to extend the learning experience, enabling students to connect classroom knowledge with real-world applications.

Teacher’s lesson plan

Student’s worksheet

Student’s interactive PDF

Conversation cards PDF

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