What was the Golden Age of Piracy?

 Advanced lesson plan (B2 and above): What was the Golden Age of Piracy? - BUY ME A COFFEE if you like my FREE ESL content


Arrr you ready to be transported back to the times when Blackbeard and his men terrorised merchants crossing the Caribbean sea? 

In this B2/C1 worksheet, students will learn how pirates came to be associated with parrots and peglegs, as well as six pirate-related idioms and some prepositions of direction for navigating the high seas in search of plunder!

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Lesson activities:

1) To warm up, students will use prepositions of direction to guide a cartoon pirate to his treasure; in addition, they will match four pun-ny jokes about pirates with the correct punchlines.


2) Students will watch a video (7:30) about the Golden Age of Piracy (1650s-1730s). Key vocabulary: treaty, stamp out, backfire, put an end to (something).


3) Next, students will see six pirate-related idioms/phrases: to parrot someone, to let someone off the hook, to miss the boat, to run a tight ship, thanks Captain Obvious and to treasure something/someone. They will get a chance to see them in sentences, and to create their own sentences with these idioms/phrases.

4) Finally, they will read an article from How Stuff Works about how pirates came to be associated with ruffled garments, parrots, treasure, peglegs, hooks, etc. Key vocabulary: to orchestrate, to prey on, swashbuckling, quintessential, affluent, to weather, to intimidate. 


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