Grammar Learning App

Future Tenses Mastery

Learn the four main future forms through clear theory, guided scaffolding, interactive practice, and richer tasks that help students move from recognition to production.

4 core tenses 16 practice items 4 task modes

1. Theory

Basic theory of future tenses

Each future form has a different meaning. The key is not only the structure, but also the reason why the speaker chooses it.

Will

Instant decisions, promises, offers, and general predictions

Form: Subject + will + base verb

Use: when the speaker decides at the moment, makes a promise, gives an offer, or expresses an opinion about the future.

Example: I think our team will win the match.

Be going to

Plans and predictions based on present evidence

Form: Subject + am/is/are + going to + base verb

Use: when the plan is already made or when there is visible evidence in the present.

Example: Look at the sky. It is going to rain.

Present continuous

Fixed arrangements and scheduled personal plans

Form: Subject + am/is/are + verb-ing

Use: when the future event is already arranged, booked, or fixed with time, place, or person.

Example: We are meeting the lecturer at 3 p.m. tomorrow.

Simple present

Timetables, public schedules, and official programs

Form: Subject + base verb / verb+s

Use: when the event follows an official timetable or fixed schedule.

Example: The train leaves at 8:15 tomorrow morning.

2. Scaffolding

Guided steps before answering

Before choosing a tense, guide learners through a simple decision path. This helps them recognize meaning first, then form.

Decision path

  1. Look for clues. Words such as tomorrow, tonight, next week, at 3 p.m., or look! often signal a future meaning.
  2. Check the reason. Is it a quick decision, a plan, an arrangement, a prediction, or a timetable?
  3. Match the form. Choose will, be going to, present continuous, or simple present.
  4. Check the structure. Make sure the auxiliary verb and base verb are correct.

Support cues

Will

Instant choice, promise, offer, opinion

Going to

Plan, intention, evidence in the present

Present continuous

Booked, arranged, fixed with a person or time

Simple present

Official schedules, timetables, programs

3. Practice

Interactive latihan

Choose the best future form for each situation and read the explanation after answering.

Level 1

Question 1 of 16

4. Task

Enriched task package

Use these tasks for classwork, homework, or independent practice after the quiz.

Sentence transformation

Rewrite eight present-tense sentences into the correct future form. Add a short reason for each choice.

  • 2 sentences for will
  • 2 sentences for going to
  • 2 sentences for present continuous
  • 2 sentences for simple present

Speaking task

In pairs, plan a class event. Each student must use at least two different future forms while speaking.

  • Use one offer or promise
  • Use one fixed arrangement
  • Use one timetable or schedule expression

Mini dialogue

Create a short dialogue of 6–8 lines about tomorrow, next weekend, or an upcoming trip.

  • Highlight the clue words
  • Underline the verb forms
  • Explain why each tense is used

Reflection and self-check

Write a short reflection after learning: Which tense is easiest for you, and which one still feels confusing?

  • State one rule you remember well
  • State one mistake you want to avoid
  • Give one new example sentence