Summary
This 90-minute ESL lesson for B2 learners explores Project management: talking about future deadlines through a real article. Across 11 interactive exercises, you'll develop reading comprehension, vocabulary, grammar, practical communication, speaking skills — all built around authentic English content.
What you'll practise:
- 5 key vocabulary items with definitions and usage notes
- Grammar focus: future perfect with examples and practice
- Real-world phrases for reporting progress in a meeting
- Gap-fill and cloze exercises to test vocabulary in context
- Matching exercise to connect terms with their meanings
- Error correction to sharpen grammar awareness
- A reading passage to practise newly learned language
Lesson activities (11 exercises)
Each exercise builds on the previous one. Work through them in order for the best learning experience.
- Warm-up — Discussion questions to activate what you already know about the topic.
- Comprehension — Answer questions to check your understanding of the main ideas and supporting details.
- Vocabulary — Learn key words and expressions from the article, with definitions and usage notes.
- Matching — Connect words, phrases, or concepts to their correct counterparts.
- Grammar — Study future perfect — explanation, examples, and key rules.
- Error correction — Find and fix the mistake in each sentence — a great grammar workout.
- Practical English — Learn phrases for reporting progress in a meeting — ready to use in real conversations.
- Fill the gaps — Complete sentences with the correct vocabulary. Drag and drop or type your answers.
- Reading — Read a short passage on the topic and answer comprehension questions.
- Discussion — Reflect on the topic and share your opinions using the language you've learned.
Vocabulary
This lesson introduces 5 key terms drawn directly from the article:
- Fall behind schedule — to progress more slowly than planned or expected.
- Hit a snag — to encounter an unexpected problem or difficulty.
- Scope creep — when a project's requirements expand beyond what was originally agreed upon.
- Iron out the details — to resolve the final, often small, problems or points of disagreement on a plan or project.
- Sign off on (something) — to give formal approval or authorization for something.
Grammar
This lesson focuses on future perfect.
We use the future perfect (will have + past participle) to talk about an action that will be completed before a specific time in the future. In project management, this is useful for discussing deadlines and milestones, as it confirms what will be finished by a certain date.
Examples from the lesson:
- By the end of the week, I will have finished the initial prototype. — Use 'by' or 'by the time' to specify the future point before which the action is completed.
- By Friday, the team will have compiled all the user feedback. Next Monday, they will analyze it. — The future perfect emphasizes completion ('will have compiled'), while the future simple ('will analyze') describes a future action without focusing on its completion.
- Will you have finalized the budget by the time we have our next meeting? — To form questions, invert 'will' and the subject: 'Will you have...?' For negatives, use 'won't have'.
Key rules:
- Form: will + have + past participle (e.g., will have completed)
- Use it for actions finished before a specific future time or event
- Common mistake: avoid using it for general future plans where future simple is better (e.g., 'I will finish it next week.')
Practical English
Reporting progress in a meeting
In any project, you'll need to give updates on your work. These phrases will help you clearly report your progress, highlight achievements, and raise potential issues in a professional way.
Phrases you'll learn:
- "We're making good headway on the user testing phase." — To report positive progress.
- "As of this morning, we've wrapped up the initial data analysis." — To announce the completion of a specific task or stage.
- "I'm flagging a potential issue with the supplier's timeline." — To proactively warn the team about a possible future problem.
- "Could we get some clarity on the budget for this part?" — To politely ask for more information or for a decision to be made.
- "Barring any unforeseen issues, we should have it done by Friday." — To give a confident but realistic timeline.

