Students often learn the present perfect and then hit the present perfect continuous and lose the thread completely. The two forms look similar, but the meaning shifts in ways that are hard to explain with a rule alone. This two-page reference sheet lays both tenses out side by side with clear examples, so students can actually see the difference and come back to it whenever it stops making sense. What's included:Side-by-side comparison of both tenses: focus, typical uses, and example sentences