Are prepositions really so difficult? What if I told you that IN JUST 5 MINUTES I could help you solve some of your most confusing preposition problems?
English learners everywhere are confused about prepositions, and English learners every always say it’s one of their biggest difficulties. But with the right strategies, prepositions DO NOT need to be so complicated. If you take a few minutes to learn a few tricks, and visualize the problem in a new way, your experience learning prepositions will be a lot easier. This is gonna be fun! Ready?
Today, we’re going to explore how the prepositions AT, ON, and IN are used with TIME and PLACE, and use a formula that works in around 90% of cases. It’s not perfect, but it gives you a great foundation to learn the exceptions.
Given the fact that most people are visual learners, and most prepositions are best taught in a visual way, we’ll also use graphic organizers and a video lesson to teach this.
Before we explain a bit more, let’s take a good look at the picture one more time below. Try to get a general idea of the organization and proportion.
The first thing I want you to recognize, and try your best to visualize as you learn these, there is a general flow with both time and location from general to specific. We’re going to explain it in the following way, first with time, then with location:
IN- The pyramid’s TOP (wider), which is BIGGER and more GENERAL:
ON- The pyramid’s MIDDLE part, which is SMALLER and MORE SPECIFIC:
AT- The pyramid’s BOTTOM (pointed), the SMALLEST, and the MOST SPECIFIC:
IN – The TOP (wider), which is BIGGER and more GENERAL:
ON – The MIDDLE, which is SMALLER and MORE SPECIFIC:
AT – The pyramid’s BOTTOM (pointed), the SMALLEST, and the MOST SPECIFIC:
The mind map pyramid below explains TIME in the same way we did above (only this one is not inverted), but it also introduces prepositions PLACE/PLACEMENT, which we will focus on here.
Again, these rules are not an exact science, but they will help you get past 90% of the preposition confusion that most people encounter with IN, ON, and AT.
After you learn these techniques, you will not only speak a lot better, and with a lot more confidence, but the final 5 to 10% of prepositions won’t seem too hard. It will probably take some study time and some memorization of collocations (“in the kitchen,†“at the mall,†but you will see that it’s a lot more manageable. The point is that you don’t want to be thinking about the rules too much when you’re communicating.
This will help make most of the process unconscious and automatic, which is exactly what fluency is.
These are all very important parts of the Real Life English methodology. Make sure you sign with us at Unikcolors Media Training Institute.