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Story

The Forgotten Homework

🏷 Responsibility 💡 Values A1 A2 B1 B2
The Forgotten Homework
Language focus: Present simple; have/has; feel + adjective; negatives (does not, cannot)

Before you read

  • Do you do homework?
  • Do you sometimes forget things?
  • How do you feel when you make a mistake?

The story A1

Ben has homework.
He forgets it at home.
The teacher asks him.
Ben feels sad.
He does it later.

Key words

homework noun
school work that you do at home "Ben has homework to bring to school."
forget verb
to not remember something "He forgets his homework at home."
mistake noun
something you do that is wrong or not correct "Forgetting homework is a mistake."

Comprehension

  1. 1 What did Ben forget?
  2. 2 Who asks him about it?
  3. 3 How does Ben feel?

Discussion

  1. 1 What do you do when you forget something important?

Personal reflection

  1. 1 Have you ever forgotten your homework? What happened?

Activities

  • Talk about what you carry in your school bag
  • Act the classroom scene with a partner
  • Draw a list of things to remember for school

Writing task

Write 3 sentences: 'I forgot my ___. I felt ___. Next time I will ___.'

The Forgotten Homework
Language focus: Past simple; feeling adjectives (embarrassed, disappointed, careful); making promises (I will, I promise to)

Before you read

  • Why is homework important?
  • What happens when you forget something at school?
  • How do you stay organised?

The story A2

Ben had homework to bring to school, but he forgot to put it in his bag.
At school, the teacher asked everyone to hand in their work.
Ben realised his mistake and felt very embarrassed.
The teacher was understanding and told him to bring it the next day.
Ben promised himself he would be more careful in future.

Key words

embarrassed adjective
feeling uncomfortable because you have done something wrong or silly "Ben felt embarrassed in front of the class."
understanding adjective
sympathetic and patient when someone makes a mistake "The teacher was understanding."
promised verb
said that you would definitely do something "He promised to be more careful."

Comprehension

  1. 1 Why did Ben not have his homework?
  2. 2 How did the teacher react?
  3. 3 What did Ben decide to do differently?

Discussion

  1. 1 Is it important for teachers to be understanding when students make mistakes?

Personal reflection

  1. 1 Have you ever had to apologise for forgetting something? What did you say?

Activities

  • Role play the scene between Ben and the teacher
  • Write about a time you had to apologise
  • Discuss: what habits help you remember important things?

Writing task

Write a short paragraph about a time you forgot something important. What happened and what did you learn?

The Forgotten Homework
Language focus: Past perfect and past simple; cause and effect; adverbs of degree (very, particularly, genuinely); expressing regret and intention

Before you read

  • Why do people sometimes fail to do things they planned to do?
  • What is the difference between being forgetful and being irresponsible?
  • How do you build better habits?

The story B1

Ben had spent two hours on his homework the previous evening and had felt genuinely satisfied with it. He had gone to bed with the reasonable expectation that the morning would be straightforward.
It was not. He slept through his alarm, dressed quickly, skipped breakfast, and left the house in a rush. His homework was sitting on his desk — where he could easily have picked it up — but in the hurry he simply did not think of it.
At school, when the teacher asked the class to hand in their work, Ben's chest tightened. He checked his bag twice, though he already knew. He had to tell the teacher he had forgotten it, and he watched her expression shift from expectation to mild disappointment. She was not unkind about it — she told him to bring it the following day — but he left the exchange feeling worse than if she had been cross with him.
That evening he sat at his desk and thought about it properly. He had done the work; the failure had been purely organisational. He started packing his bag the night before from that day on, and placing it directly by the front door. A small adjustment, but an effective one. The homework was never forgotten again.

Key words

straightforward adjective
easy; without complications "He expected the morning to be straightforward."
tightened verb
became more tense or uncomfortable "His chest tightened when he realised."
purely adverb
only; nothing else was involved "The failure was purely organisational."
adjustment noun
a small change made to improve something "A small adjustment made a big difference."

Comprehension

  1. 1 Why did Ben not pick up his homework in the morning?
  2. 2 Why did he feel worse by the teacher's mildness than if she had been cross?
  3. 3 What practical change did Ben make?

Discussion

  1. 1 What is the difference between making a mistake once and failing to learn from it?

Personal reflection

  1. 1 What systems or habits do you use to avoid forgetting important things?

Activities

  • Discuss: what is the difference between effort and organisation?
  • Make a list of tips for avoiding common mistakes
  • Write about a mistake you learned from

Writing task

Write a short paragraph explaining a habit or system you use to stay organised. Why does it work for you?

The Forgotten Homework
Language focus: Sophisticated register; irony and self-awareness; vocabulary of organisational failure (lapse, oversight, systemic); abstract reflection on habit and character

Before you read

  • Is being disorganised a character flaw or simply a habit that can be changed?
  • Why do people often blame circumstances rather than behaviour when things go wrong?
  • What does it mean to take genuine responsibility for a mistake?

The story B2

The irony was not lost on Ben. He had spent two and a half hours on the assignment — more time than it probably warranted, going back to rework a paragraph he had not been entirely satisfied with — and then left it on his desk when he walked out of the door the following morning.
He had known, the moment his teacher said 'please hand in your work', exactly what had happened. The specificity of the memory arrived all at once: the assignment sitting in the centre of his desk, slightly to the left of his lamp, exactly where he had placed it after finishing. He had looked at it. He had thought nothing of it.
He told her. She received the news without drama, which was its own kind of pressure. A lecture he could have deflected; her calm, slightly tired acknowledgement of a situation she had clearly encountered before made him feel the weight of it more directly. She expected better, not because she was demanding, but because she knew he was capable.
On the bus home, he tried to think clearly about what had gone wrong and resisted the temptation to attribute it to the alarm or the rush. Those were circumstances. The failure was structural: he had a habit of finishing work and leaving it where he had been working, which meant it was always in a location optimised for doing homework rather than for leaving the house. He reorganised his desk that evening. He began packing his bag as soon as he finished work, not the following morning.
The change was minor. The principle it expressed was not: he had mistaken the completion of a task for the completion of a responsibility, and the two were not always the same thing.

Key words

structural adjective
relating to the way something is organised or set up, rather than individual events "The failure was structural, not accidental."
deflect verb
to redirect or avoid something, such as criticism "A lecture he could have deflected."
attribute verb
to explain something as being caused by a particular factor "He resisted attributing it to bad luck."
optimised adjective
arranged in the best way for a particular purpose "His desk was optimised for work, not for leaving."

Comprehension

  1. 1 What is the irony in the first paragraph?
  2. 2 Why did the teacher's calm reaction feel like more pressure than anger would have?
  3. 3 What distinction does Ben make between completing a task and completing a responsibility?

Discussion

  1. 1 The story suggests that many mistakes are 'structural' rather than accidental. What does this mean, and do you agree?

Personal reflection

  1. 1 Can you think of a habit or pattern in your own life that leads to recurring mistakes? What would a 'structural' fix look like?

Activities

  • Discuss: when do we blame circumstances rather than behaviour?
  • Write about the difference between effort and follow-through
  • Debate: are organisational skills taught or innate?

Writing task

Write a reflective essay (200–250 words): 'Finishing a task and completing a responsibility are not always the same thing.' Explore this idea using examples from your own life.