Use Visual Aids; Create a chart that clearly shows the theme and rheme parts of a sentence:
Hang this chart in the classroom so students can refer to it during lessons.
Make It Fun with Interactive Activities; Engage students through hands-on learning:
Theme-Rheme Matching Game: Write themes and rhemes on separate cards. Let students match them to create sentences.
Sentence Building Challenge: Divide students into teams. Give them sets of theme and rheme cards and see which team can create the most sentences in a given time.
Practice with Short Texts; Give students simple paragraphs and guide them to identify the theme and rheme in each sentence. For instance:
"Today, the weather (theme)is very hot (rheme)."
"Our teacher (theme) give us task(rheme)."
Highlight how the theme introduces the topic and the rheme adds details.
Show How Theme-Rheme Builds Flow; Teach students how repeating or linking themes can create a smooth flow in writing. For instance:
 "The cat (theme) is lounging on the mat (rheme). It (theme) looks very comfortable (rheme)."