Course: Consumer Spending Unit: Eating Out: Lesson: Going To A Restaurant
Course: Consumer Spending Unit: Eating Out: Lesson: Going To A Restaurant
Course: Consumer Spending Unit: Eating Out: Lesson: Going To A Restaurant
Competency Objectives: Learners will identify table utensils and set the table correctly.
Learners will be able to order and enjoy a meal in a restaurant.
Learners will use appropriate restaurant manners.
Suggested Criteria for Success: Learners will name table utensils and correctly set a place at the table.
Learners will order a meal from a restaurant menu, responding to
questions the wait staff might ask.
Learners will identify proper/improper restaurant manners and figure
an appropriate tip.
Suggested Materials: Restaurant menu(s). Many local restaurants have copies of their menus
reproduced on plain paper for diners to take home. With one in hand and a
copier, you can bring a realistic resource to the classroom.
At least one place setting. Use china/styrofoam plate and bowl, silver/plastic
flatware, crystal/plastic glass, linen/paper napkin, and a cup and saucer.
Copies of the page for labeling a place setting if you subscribe to this site:
http://www.EnchantedLearning.com/language/english/label/placesetting/
or draw and xerox a similar page for use in your class.
Use the resources from the following sites to help you develop a dialogue about
ordering at a restaurant that is appropriate to the level of your class:
http://www.englishpage.com/vocabulary/interactivelesson4.html or
http://esl.about.com/library/speaking/bldialogues_restaurant.htm or
http://iteslj.org/guides/dining.html (scroll down to Ordering).
http://humanities.byu.edu/elc/teacher/sectiontwo/Lesson7.html
Going to a Restaurant 1
Paper and pencils or pens.
One copy per student of the tip chart at the end of this lesson.
Suggested Resources: Restaurant menus—the take-home variety that restaurants often have.
http://www.englishpage.com/vocabulary/interactivelesson4.html is a lesson
“Ordering in a Restaurant”
http://www.EnchantedLearning.com/language/english/label/placesetting/ has a
page for labeling the china and utensils for a place setting in English.
Going to a Restaurant 2
http://www.cuisinenet.com/digest/custom/etiquette/manners_intro.shtml
American Table Manners.
The Table Setting. Use your plastic table setting to teach the vocabulary for knife, fork, spoon, plate,
napkin, glass, cup, saucer, bowl.
Ask student volunteers to demonstrate how they would arrange a table setting in their native land. Do they
use the knife, fork, and spoon in their home country?
Get a volunteer or volunteers to arrange an American table setting. When the table is set to your
satisfaction, give each student a drawing of a place setting to label. You can locate this at the following
address or draw freehand: http://www.EnchantedLearning.com/language/english/label/placesetting/ . Ask
students to check their work with you and keep the corrected page in their Journals for reference.
Parts of a Meal. Do you eat dessert first? Introduce the following terms for the parts of a meal:
appetizer a small dish at the beginning of a meal, a starter
entrée the main dish
dessert a sweet such as fruit, ice cream, or pastry
beverage liquid (water, iced tea, coffee, wine, cola, milk)
Name foods that students have studied. Ask students whether these foods are appetizers, entrées, desserts,
or drinks.
Ordering from the Menu. Distribute copies of a restaurant menu and ask students to find the terms from
the section above (appetizer, entrée, etc.). Choose one part of a meal. What foods do students recognize?
What food words can class members look up in a picture dictionary? Ask students to select and mark on
the menu the items that they wish to order—although one should not mark on a real menu in a restaurant!
Is it necessary to order an item from each course? Some diners may not want an appetizer or a dessert. It
is unlikely that water will be listed on the menu as a drink, but it is an option that some diners may want. If
you wish, you can specify the amount of money that each student has to spend and his/her order must total
less than that amount.
Distribute the dialogue that you developed for your class using the resources from using the following sites
to guide you in putting together your own ideas:
http://www.englishpage.com/vocabulary/interactivelesson4.html or
http://esl.about.com/library/speaking/bldialogues_restaurant.htm or
http://iteslj.org/guides/dining.html.
http://humanities.byu.edu/elc/teacher/sectiontwo/Lesson7.html
Going to a Restaurant 3
Go back to the menus that students marked. Utilize phrases from the dialogue you developed (previous
paragraph) to ask students to respond to your questions as a waiter or waitress by placing the order that they
selected from the menu.
Manners. Use the sites listed in Suggested Materials early in this lesson to develop true/false materials on
table manners. Provide the resources students will need to find the answers to the questions. If you have
access to computers in your classroom, you may be able to do this part of your instruction online.
A fun tip for formal dining is this: Bring your index finger to your thumb on each hand. Let the remaining
fingers extend in a straight line with your arm. Your left hand will form a lower case “b,” and your right
hand will form a lower case “d.” Your bread is on your left, and your drink is on your right.
Tipping. Talk with students about the people who are part of their restaurant experience. Who greets
them? Who serves them? Fine dining to fast food—expectations differ.
Based on the language competence of your class and the restaurant menus you have collected to use,
introduce words for service personnel like the maitre d’, waiter/waitress, wine steward, bartender, owner,
busboy, coat check attendant, car park attendant, rest room attendant. (You may only introduce the words
waiter and waitress.) Price is one way to predict the types of employees you will encounter at a restaurant.
For example, you will not encounter a car park attendant and a wine steward at an inexpensively priced
restaurant. [Inexpensive (less than $20); Moderate ($21-$35); Expensive ($36-$55); Very Expensive ($56
and over).]
Ask students to look at their restaurant menu again. Give out the tip chart and help students use it to find
the appropriate tip for the meal that they have chosen to order from the menu. Show students some quick
math: without charts or pencils they can determine a 20 percent tip by moving the decimal point of the pre-
tax bill to get 10 percent and doubling that figure. They can determine a 15 percent tip by taking half of the
10 percent and adding that figure to the 10 percent figure.
Journal Work: Write about a restaurant experience your have had. The following are some questions to
get your thinking started.
Where did you go?
Was this a special occasion?
Who else was there?
What did you order?
Did you find anything difficult about ordering from the menu?
Was your meal what you expected? Why or why not?
Was the service what you expected? Why or why not? Would you like to go to that same restaurant
again? Why or why not?
Have you been to many restaurants? How did this restaurant compare with others? If you have not
eaten in many restaurants, is there another restaurant where you want to eat and what makes you want
to try it?
Going to a Restaurant 4
Tip Chart
15% and 20%
Apply the tip on a pre-tax sub-total. Remember that at restaurants, the wait staff is usually paid
less than minimum wage. If you have a problem with your service, discuss it with the manager.
Going to a Restaurant 5
Sally’s Restaurant
Your home away from home!
Appetizers
Entrees
Desserts
Beverages
Going to a Restaurant 6
Eating Out:
Ordering Food and Eating at Restaurants
Scenario
So many of our students have difficulty ordering food from a drive thru or in a restaurant.
Intended level(s)
One hour without much dialogue practice or 2 hours with dialogue practice
Materials/Resources needed
Procedure
Go over all vocabulary by putting on the board and discussing it. Have students write the words
and explanations in their notebook or on a sheet of paper they can keep.
Vocabulary
Instructor should go around and help each pair briefly to use who is having difficulty. This plan
can be used on two different class periods if more practice is needed.
Assessment
Outcomes will be measured by how well students demonstrate their ability to order food
in English and answer questions often asked by a waiter or waitress.
Comments:
This lesson can be lots of fun for your students and most seem to really want to practice
the dialogue.