Hi again Macavity, can you expand a bit on your 'reverse what happened next – for past perfect'? I think I know what you mean, but still... me, I tend to tell a (true) story as I would naturally (coincidentally using past perfect), then show how a straight chonological run-through, if I elected to tell it that way instead, would be so very boring in comparison:
I met this really hot chick, got her number, arranged a date at that swanky restaurant, and we're sitting there when this guy comes up and tells me to get out! (Listener: WTF?!) Yeah, it turned out that she'd broken up with this guy just a few days before, and was maybe trying to get him angry by parading herself around with me (she'd suggested the restaurant)...
versus
A girl broke up with her boyfriend, then she met me, and...where's the surprise in this story, dammit!
The main thing is, I'd tell that story in pretty much the same way its events unfolded to me at the time.
You can present short situations and ask for the reason why: The cat froze - Why? - It had seen a mouse.
Some pairs of examples that I've always thought show one aspect of the difference between perfect and perfect continuous:
Have you fought?
Have you been fighting?
Have you drunk (whiskey (again))?
Have you been drinking (whiskey) (again))?
I guess the "experiential" aspect to the simple perfect clashes rather well with the perfect continuous.
I wrote something recently on testing in Japanese schools that has some discussion of past perfect:
http://www.eslcafe.com/forums/teacher/v ... 6310#26310
Simple present, you can get a good idea of what can work by looking in any ESL/EFL textbook series' lower-level volumes (but lexically, there is of course a lot more to learn even for those at intermediate and above - e.g. there's no end to 'describing') - same goes for Present progressive (but I'd be wary of 'charade' type activities, I'd go more for "stuff that ISN'T visible" e.g. What (book) are you reading, what are you typing, or what are you doing tomorrow?
The past, it's wide open, and limited only by your imagination and the students' interests...Mac's hinted at the "backgrounding" function of past continuous...
Sorry, gotta go home now! Signing out...will try to post more at some point.