ENGLISH FOR WAITER/WAITRESS OF RESTAURANT
By:
Endang Puji Lestari
Need Analysis
Based on data collected from several restaurants, there
are many waiters and waitress of the restaurant cannot speak English
well.
Whereas the restaurants are visited by many
tourists. The question is how if the waiter and waitress cannot speak English well
while they
have to serve the visitors coming from other countries. Thus, in this case we find what
the waiters
and waitress needs, lacks and wants.
1. Necessities:
The waiters
and waitress must be able to speak English as their profession
2. Lacks:
- The waiters and waitress could not service the visitor with English.
- Sometimes the visitors do not want to have
breakfast, lunch, and dinner in the restaurant due to the first lacks factor
3. Wants:
-
They want to
be serviced by using English
-
They want the restaurant is always crowded by the visitors
Target Situation
Analysis (TSA)
This course designed to prepare waiter/waitress of the restaurant to
be fluently in English speaking skill, and to make waitress
capable in English language communication.
Present
Situation Analysis (PSA)
Firstly, at the beginning
of the course, we will carry out the placement test. This written test is to
see what level the learners should be in or whether the participants (learners)
pass the test and could join to the course. This test to ensure that the
learners have enough basic competence in English so that the course is
not going to difficult for the learners. Or
we are not teaching them from the basic English anymore.
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SMALL ENGLAND ENGLISH COURSE
Ds.
Tamanrejo Dk. Maguan Rt. 003 Rw. 001 Kec. Tunjungan Kab. Blora Jawa Tengah
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Formulir
RENCANA PELAKSANAAN PEMBELAJARAN (RPP)
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No. Dokumen
5.2.3-01
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No Revisi
0
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Tanggal Terbit
1
Juli
2016
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Class :
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PRIVATE CLASS
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Lesson :
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ENGLISH FOR WAITRESS
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Aim :
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This course designed to
prepare waiter/waitress of the restaurant
to be fluently in English speaking skill, and to
make waiter/waitress capable in english language
communication
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Lesson Description :
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This course is intended to help students to improve their masteries
and skills of speaking abilities in English for waiters and waitress of the restaurant. It is expected that students will be able to
develop their abilities on English waitress
service emphasizes on students competency for
serving the visitors.
The meeting of this course is twice a week. And it
needs three month to finish this course.
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Meeting
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Learning Goal
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The Competence
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Students Asignment
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Indicator
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Time Allocation
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Strategy of Learning
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The Material
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1
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2
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3
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4
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5
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6
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7
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9
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1
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Understanding
the restaurant and the equipments
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- An overview of restaurant
- The equipments in the
restaurant
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Individually the students:
1. Understand the materials
2. Memorize the materials
In
group, students:
1.
Discuss the materials
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The students are able to:
1.
Understand the definition of
restaurant
2. Identify what is in restaurant
3. Mention things in restaurant
4. Memorize the equipments in restaurant
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2 x 60’
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-
Sharing
-
Teaching
-
Group discussion
-
Drilling
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Language Functions and Skills
Vocabulary
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2
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Identifying
many kinds of food and dessert
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- Identify many kinds of
food and dessert
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Individually the students:
1. Understand the materials
2. Memorize the materials
In
group, students:
1.
Discuss the materials
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The students are able to:
1.
Identify many
kinds of food and desert
2. Identify many kinds of drink
3. Offer the food and drinks to the customers
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2 x 60’
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-
Sharing
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Teaching
-
Group discussion
-
Drilling
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Vocabulary
v Grammar
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3
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Evaluation
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2 x 60’
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-
Sharing
-
Teaching
-
Group discussion
- Drilling
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Materials of the first and the second
meeting
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4
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Examination
(Oral and Written)
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2 x
60’
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5
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Understanding many kinds of payment
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- An
overview of payment
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Individually the students:
1. Understand the materials
2. Memorize the materials
In
group, students:
1.
Discuss the materials
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The students are able to:
1. Tell the visitors about the payment in the restaurant
2. Tell the visitors about the prices of food
3. Tell the visitors about the prices of drinks
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2 x
60’
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-
Sharing
-
Teaching
-
Group discussion
- Drilling
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Vocabulary
Grammar
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6
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Understanding and using Greeting Expressions
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-
An overview of
greeting expressions
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Individually the students:
1. Understand the materials
2. Memorize the materials
In
group, students:
1.
Practice to use greeting
expression in pairs
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The students are able to:
1.
Understand and mention the greeting
expressions
2. Use greeting expressions correctly
3. Make dialogue for greeting the visitors
4. Practice greeting dialogue using role
play technique
5. Express and act the dialogue in front of the class.
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2 x 60’
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-
Sharing
-
Teaching
-
Group discussion
- Drilling
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Vocabulary
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7
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Evaluation
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2 x
60’
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-
Sharing
-
Teaching
-
Group discussion
- Drilling
|
Materials of the first and the second
meeting
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8
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Examination
(Oral and Written)
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2 x
60’
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9
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Understanding and using Offering Expressions
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An overview of offering expressions
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In
groups the students:
1. practice to do a conversation
2. disscuss about the materials
Individually the students:
1. understand materials
2. memorize
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The students are able to:
1.
Understand and mention the offering
expressions
2. Use offering expressions correctly
3. Offer some helps correctly
4. Identify sentences for offering to
do something
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2 x 60’
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Vocabulary
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10
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Understanding and using Offering Expressions
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An overview of offering expressions
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In
groups the students:
3. practice to do a conversation
4. disscuss about the materials
Individually the students:
3. understand materials
4. memorize
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The students are able to:
1.
Make
dialogue for offering to do something.
2. Practice offering to do something dialogue using role play technique
3.
Express
and act the dialogue in front of the class.
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2 x 60’
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Vocabulary
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11
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Evaluation
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2 x
60’
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-
Sharing
-
Teaching
-
Group discussion
- Drilling
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Materials of the first and the second
meeting
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12
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Examination
(Oral and Written)
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2 x
60’
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13
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Understanding and
using the expression of giving thank
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An overview of giving thank expressions
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In
groups the students:
1. practice to do a
conversation
2. disscuss about the materials
Individually the students:
1. understand the mateials
2. memorize the materials
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The students are able to:
1.
understand and mention the expressions of giving thanks
2.
Use expressions of giving thanks
expressions correctly
3. Identify sentences for giving thanks expressions
4. Make dialogue for giving thanks expressions
5. Practice giving thanks dialogue
using role play technique
6. Express and act the dialogue in front of the class.
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2 x 60’
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-
Sharing
-
Teaching
-
Group discussion
- Drilling
|
Vocabulary
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14
|
Understanding and
using the expression of apology
|
An overview of giving apology
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In
groups the students:
1.
practice
to do a conversation
2.
disscuss
about the materials
3.
Individually
the students:
4.
understand
the mateials
5.
memorize
the materials
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The students are able to:
1.
Understand and mention the expressions of apology
2.
Use expressions of apology
correctly
3. Identify sentences for giving apology
4. Make dialogue for giving apology
5. Practice giving apology dialogue
using role play technique
6. Express and act the dialogue in front of the class.
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2 x 60
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-
Sharing
-
Teaching
-
Group discussion
- Drilling
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Vocabulary
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15
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Evaluation
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2 x
60’
|
-
Sharing
-
Teaching
-
Group discussion
- Drilling
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16
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Examination
(Oral and Written)
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2 x
60’
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17
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Understand how to tell time
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An
overview of telling time
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In
groups the students:
1. practice to do a
conversation
2. disscuss about the materials
Individually the students:
1. understand the mateials
2. memorize the materials
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The students are able to:
1.
understand how to tell time correctly
2.
tell time to the visitors correctly
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2 x 60
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-
Sharing
-
Teaching
-
Group discussion
- Drilling
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Vocabulary
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18
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Understanding the calculation
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An overview of calculation
|
Individually the students:
1.
understand
the mateials
2.
practice
the materials
|
1.
the
students are able to calculate the calculation
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2 x 60’
|
-
Sharing
-
Teaching
-
Group discussion
- Drilling
|
Language Functions and Skills
|
19
|
Evaluation
|
2 x
60’
|
-
Sharing
-
Teaching
-
Group discussion
-
Drilling
|
All of materials
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20
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Understanding
receiving customers and taking orders
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Receiving
customers and taking orders
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1.
Receiving
and placing customers
2.
Asking about
customer’s wishes
3.
Polite
responses to customer’s requests
4.
Taking orders
for starters and main courses
5.
Making
recommendations
Describing
wines
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2 x 60’
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Language Functions and Skills
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21
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Understanding receiving
customers and taking orders
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Receiving
customers and taking orders
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1.
Would
when asking about wishes: Would you like an aperitif?
2.
Can and would
when recommending : I can recommend the salmon. I would suggest the St.
Emilion
3.
Countable and uncountable
: a roll, some rolls, some water
4.
Comparisons :
Wine A is lighter than Wine B. Wine B is more full-bodied not as light as
Wine A
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2 x 60’
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Grammar
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22
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Examination
(Oral and Written)
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2 x 60’
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23
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Evaluation
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2 x
60’
|
All of materials
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24
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Practice
Examination
(In Restaurant)
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Students are devided into some groups. Each group consists of at least
three students
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The students do the examinations in the restaurant with the partners
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2 x 60’
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LESSON
PLAN
1.
LESSON’S IDENTITY
Course : Small England
English Course
Subject : English
Class : Private Class
Skill focus :
Speaking
Material : Offering Expressions
Time Allocation : 2 x 60
minutes
2.
STANDARD COMPETENCE
Expressing the meaning in the form of transaction and interpersonal
dialogue orally, which is simple and short to interact with the environment.
3.
BASIC COMPETENCE
Expressing and understanding the meaning in the form of simple
transaction and interpersonal dialogue orally, which is accurate, fluent, and
suitably to interact with the environment that involves greetings,
introductions, and offering something.
4.
INDICATORS
5.
The students are able to understand and mention the offering expressions
6.
The students are able to use offering expressions correctly
7.
The students are able to offer some helps correctly
8.
The Students are able to identify sentences for
offering to do something
9.
The Students are able
to make dialogue for offering to do something.
10.
The Students are able
to practice offering to do something dialogue using role play technique
11.
The Students are able
to express and act the dialogue in front of the class.
5.
LEARNING GOALS
At the end of
the study, students are able to use offering expressions correctly.
6.
METHOD
There are two methods used in this lesson:
First is rote memory, this is one of the methods can help the
learners to use their capabilities of brain in memorizing.
Second is role play, in principle role play is learning to create
roles that will exist in work proficiency letter on.
7.
TECHNIQUES
Some techniques used in this lesson are:
a.
Conversational practice
b.
Role play
c.
Rote memory
d.
Drilling
e.
Reading aloud
f.
Questions and answers
g.
Language game
h.
Micro teaching
8.
MEDIUM OF LEARNING
a.
Whiteboard
b. Boardmarker
c. Worksheet
d. Computer/Laptop
e. LCD projector
9. LEARNING
MATERIAL
a.
Definition of Restaurant
A restaurant (/ˈrɛstərənt/ or /ˈrɛstərɒnt/; French: [ʀɛs.to.ʁɑ̃]) is a business
which prepares and serves food and drinks to customers in exchange for money.
Meals are generally served and eaten on the premises, but many restaurants also
offer take-out and
food delivery services, and some only offer take-out and delivery. Restaurants vary
greatly in appearance and offerings, including a wide variety of cuisines and
service models ranging from inexpensive fast food
restaurants and cafeterias to
mid-priced family restaurants, to high-priced luxury establishments. In Western countries, most
mid- to high-range restaurants serve alcoholic
beverages such as beer, wine and
light beer. Some restaurants serve all the major meals, such as breakfast, lunch,
and dinner
(e.g., major fast food chains, diners, hotel restaurants, and airport
restaurants). Other restaurants may only serve a single meal (e.g., a pancake house may only serve breakfast) or they may serve two meals (e.g., lunch
and dinner) or even a kids' meal.
Restaurants may be classified or distinguished in many
different ways. The primary factors are usually the food itself (e.g. vegetarian, seafood, steak); the cuisine (e.g. Italian,
Chinese, Japanese, Indian, French, Mexican, Thai) and/or the style of offering
(e.g. tapas bar, a sushi train, a tastet restaurant, a buffet restaurant or a yum cha restaurant).
Beyond this, restaurants may differentiate themselves on factors including
speed (see fast food), formality,
location, cost, service, or novelty themes (such as automated
restaurants).
Restaurants range from inexpensive and informal lunching or dining places catering
to people working nearby, with modest food served in simple settings at low
prices, to expensive establishments serving refined food and fine wines in a formal
setting. In the former case, customers usually wear casual clothing. In the
latter case, depending on culture and local traditions, customers might wear semi-casual, semi-formal or formal wear. Typically,
at mid- to high-priced restaurants, customers sit at tables, their orders are
taken by a waiter, who brings the
food when it is ready. After eating, the customers then pay the bill. In some
restaurants, such as workplace cafeterias,
there are no waiters; the customers use trays, on which they place cold items
that they select from a refrigerated container and hot items which they request
from cooks, and then they pay a cashier before they sit down. Another
restaurant approach which uses few waiters is the buffet restaurant. Customers
serve food onto their own plates and then pay at the end of the meal. Buffet
restaurants typically still have waiters to serve drinks and alcoholic
beverages. Fast food restaurants are also considered a restaurant.
The travelling public has long been catered for with ship's messes and railway restaurant cars which are, in
effect, travelling restaurants. Many railways, the world over, also cater for
the needs of travellers by providing railway refreshment rooms, a form of
restaurant, at railway stations. In the 2000s, a number of travelling restaurants,
specifically designed for tourists, have been created. These can be found on
trams, boats, buses, etc.
A restaurant's proprietor is called a restaurateur
/ˌrɛstərəˈtɜːr/; like 'restaurant', this derives
from the French verb restaurer, meaning "to restore".
Professional cooks are called chefs, with there being various finer distinctions (e.g. sous-chef,
chef de
partie). Most restaurants (other than fast food restaurants and cafeterias) will have various waiting staff
to serve food, beverages and alcoholic drinks, including busboys
who remove used dishes and cutlery. In finer restaurants, this may include a
host or hostess, a maître d'hôtel to welcome customers and to seat
them, and a sommelier
or wine waiter to help patrons select wines.
History (Greece and Rome)
In Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome, thermopolia (singular thermopolium)
were small restaurant-bars that offered food and drinks to customers.
A typical thermopolium had little L-shaped counters in which large storage
vessels were sunk, which would contain either hot or cold food. Their
popularity was linked to the lack of kitchens in many dwellings and the ease
with which people could purchase prepared foods. Furthermore, eating out was
considered a very important aspect of socializing.
In Pompeii, 158 thermopolia with a service counter have been
identified across the whole town area. They were concentrated along the main
axis of the town and the public spaces where they were frequented by the
locals.
China. In China,
food catering
establishments which may be described as restaurants were known since the 11th
century in Kaifeng,
China's capital during the first half of the Song dynasty
(960–1279). Probably growing out of the tea houses
and taverns that catered to travellers, Kaifeng's restaurants blossomed into an
industry catering to locals as well as people from other regions of China.
There is a direct correlation between the growth of the restaurant businesses
and institutions of theatrical stage drama, gambling and
prostitution which served the burgeoning merchant
middle class during the Song dynasty. Restaurants catered to
different styles of cuisine, price brackets, and religious requirements. Even
within a single restaurant much choice was available, and people ordered the
entree they wanted from written menus.[9] An account from 1275 writes of Hangzhou,
the capital city for the last half of the dynasty:
"The people of Hangzhou are
very difficult to please. Hundreds of orders are given on all sides: this
person wants something hot, another something cold, a third something tepid, a
fourth something chilled; one wants cooked food, another raw, another chooses
roast, another grill.
The restaurants in Hangzhou also
catered to many northern Chinese who had fled south from Kaifeng during the Jurchen
invasion of the 1120s, while it is also known that many restaurants were run by families
formerly from Kaifeng.
The birth of the modern restaurant - Paris in the 18th century
The modern idea of a restaurant –
as well as the term itself – appeared in Paris in the 18th century.
For centuries Paris had taverns which served food at large common tables, but
they were notoriously crowded, noisy, not very clean, and served food of
dubious quality. In about 1765 a new kind of eating establishment, called a
"Bouillon", was opened on rue des Poulies, near the Louvre, by a man
named Boulanger. It had separate tables, a menu, and specialized in soups made
with a base of meat and eggs, which were said to be restaurants or, in
English "restoratives". Other similar bouillons soon opened
around Paris.[14]
Thanks to Boulanger and his imitators, these soups moved from the category of
remedy into the category of health food and ultimately into the category of
ordinary food. Their existence was predicated on health, not gustatory,
requirements.
The first luxury restaurant in
Paris, called the Taverne Anglaise, was opened at the beginning of 1786,
shortly before the French Revolution, by Antoine Beauvilliers, the former chef of
the Count of Provence, at the Palais-Royal.
It had mahogany tables, linen tablecloths, chandeliers, well-dressed and
trained waiters, a long wine list and an extensive menu of elaborately prepared
and presented dishes. In June 1786 the Provost of Paris issued a decree giving
the new kind of eating establishment official status, authorizing restaurateurs
to receive clients and to offer them meals until eleven in the evening in
winter and midnight in summer. A rival restaurant was started in 1791 by Méot,
the former chef of the Duke of Orleans, which offered a wine list with
twenty-two choices of red wine and twenty-seven of white wine. By the end of
the century there were other luxury restaurants at the Grand-Palais: Huré, the
Couvert espagnol; Février; the Grotte flamande; Véry, Masse and the cafe des
Chartres (still open, now the Grand Vefour).
United States. In the United States, it was not until the late 18th
century that establishments that provided meals without also providing lodging
began to appear in major metropolitan areas in the form of coffee
and oyster
houses. The actual term "restaurant" did not enter into the common
parlance until the following century. Prior to being referred to as
"restaurants" these eating establishments assumed regional names such
as "eating house" in New York City, "restorator" in Boston,
or "victualing house" in other areas. Restaurants were typically
located in populous urban areas during the 19th century and grew both in number
and sophistication in the mid-century due to a more affluent middle class and
to suburbanization. The highest concentration of these restaurants were in the
West, followed by industrial cities on the Eastern Seaboard, with the lowest
number of restaurants per person located in the southern states.
10.
LEARNING ACTIVITIES
Pre Activities
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Teacher
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Students
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The teacher asks the chief to lead the praying
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The teacher greets the students
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The teacher checks the attendance list
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The teacher
gives stimulating questions related to the material
|
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The chief lead, and all of the students pray
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The students answer the teacher’s greeting
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The students pay attention to the teacher
-
The students answer the teacher’s question based on
their understanding
|
|
Main Activity
|
-
The teacher
explains the materials about restaurant and things in restaurant
-
The teacher
gives examples of each material
-
The teacher asks students to listen the explanation and
response the teacher’s speaking
-
The teacher asks the students to do activity based on
the teacher’s explanation several times
-
The teacher asks the students to practice what they
have learnt in group
-
The teacher asks some students to come forward for
giving example about the material
-
The teacher checks the students’ understanding one by
one
-
The teacher give them activity to response what he say
-
The teacher gives a small game to the students
-
The teacher
gives opportunity to students for asking question.
|
-
The students pay attention to the teacher’s explanation
-
The students pay attention to the teacher’s explanation
-
The students response the teacher’s speaking
-
The students do activity based on teacher’s command
-
The students practice in group
-
Some students come forward and give examples
-
The students answer the theacher’s questions one by one
-
The students ask questions to the teacher about the
material that they don’t understand yet.
|
Post Activity
|
-
The teacher evaluates the students’ speaking ability.
-
The teacher
summarize and conclude the material.
-
The teacher
gives suggestion or motivation to students for study hard and memorizes the
material.
-
The teacher conveys
the activity in the next meeting.
-
The teacher
closes the class.
|
-
The students write down the result of teacher’s
summarize result
-
Students
study hard and memorizes the material.
-
|
11. ASSESSMENT
Form : Writting & Speaking
Technique :
1.
Students are able to understand the definition and the history of restaurant
2.
Students write down the materials in their own words
12. ASPECTS TO BE
ASSESSED
Generic structure and language
features of the materials
13. SOURCES
1.
Laila Keane.
International Restaurant English. English Language Teaching. Prentice Hall
(UK). Ltd. 1990
2.
English for Professional Waitress. Susanto Leo. PT. Gramedia
Pustaka Utama. Jakarta, 2000.
3.
Appelbaum, Robert, Dishing It
Out: In Search of the Restaurant Experience.
(London: Reaktion, 2011).
4.
Fleury, Hélène (2007),
"L'Inde en miniature à Paris. Le décor des restaurants", Diasporas
indiennes dans la ville. Hommes et migrations (Number 1268-1269, 2007):
168–73.
5.
Haley, Andrew P. Turning
the Tables: Restaurants and the Rise of the American Middle Class, 1880–1920.
(University of North Carolina Press; 2011) 384 pp
6.
Kiefer, Nicholas M.
(August 2002). "Economics and the Origin of
the Restaurant" (PDF).
Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly. 43: 5–7. doi:10.1177/0010880402434006.
7.
Lundberg, Donald E., The
Hotel and Restaurant Business, Boston : Cahners Books, 1974. ISBN
0-8436-2044-7
8.
Whitaker, Jan (2002), Tea at the
Blue Lantern Inn: A Social History of the Tea Room Craze in America.
St. Martin's Press.