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Elicit what they show 2 people with punk hairstyles, someone sitting on the bonnet of an expensive sports car, an African tribesman with traditional face painting, before asking students

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6 Communication

This module contains various topics related to the theme of communication, including non-verbal communication, changes in language, mobile phones, studying in another language, intuition and young people today

Lead-in p.87

Starting with books closed, put the word communication

on the board or play a game of hangman to elicit it Ask

students what the word means to them and find out how

they communicate with their friends and family Alternatively,

ask which is more important – meeting friends and family

face to face or communicating with them through different

means, and why You might want to discuss how the way they

communicate has changed in the last ten years or so, and why

1 Ask students to open their books and look at the

photos on page 87 Elicit what they show (2 people with

punk hairstyles, someone sitting on the bonnet of an

expensive sports car, an African tribesman with traditional

face painting), before asking students to discuss the

questions in pairs or small groups Elicit ideas and open

the discussion to the class, using this as an opportunity

to expand on their ideas and feed in useful vocabulary

The photos show 3 different ways of communicating, i.e

through fashion, luxury and tradition

2 This question could be discussed in pairs or small groups

before being opened to the class This could be a good

point to bring sign language and Braille into the discussion

and find out what students know about them

Background

A sign language is a visual language where gestures,

lip patterns, facial expressions, finger spelling and body

language are used to express meaning Originally designed

as a way for deaf people to communicate, different varieties

exist, e.g BSL (British Sign Language), ASL (American Sign

Language) Sign languages do not follow the same structures

as their counterpart spoken language, e.g BSL does not

have the same structure as English In BSL, for example,

you would ask ‘Name you what?’ rather than ‘What is your

name?’, ‘Live you where?’ not ‘Where do you live?’

Background

Braille is a language used by blind people in which raised

dots are read or written to convey meaning Letters,

words and numbers are represented by set groupings

based on a cell of six dots and are read using both hands

(predominantly the index fingers) simultaneously Modifying

a French military secret code, Braille took on the name of

the blind child who developed it, Louis Braille

Extra!

Widen the discussion and ask students to come up with specific aspects to consider regarding someone being a good communicator in the following types of communication:

1 face-to-face

2 written

3 oral

Possible answers to Extra!

1 non-verbal language (body language, eye contact, facial

expression, gestures, posture) and aspects such as patience, a personable attitude, tone, manner, intonation, stress pattern

2 appropriate tone/register, greeting/closing, etc

3 appropriate tone, pauses to let others speak (relating to the

situation), etc

3 Elicit what the main five senses are (sight, hearing, taste,

smell and touch) before asking students to discuss

these questions in pairs or small groups If students are interested in this topic, you could widen the discussion to the class, to talk further about the crossing over of senses, i.e synaesthesia

Background

Synaesthesia is defined as a neurological condition where the stimulation of one sensory pathway in effect triggers experiences in a second sensory pathway, e.g letters or numbers being seen as colours There are many different forms of synaesthesia but few have been researched in any depth

6A Getting your message across

Reading 1 p.88

1 Focus students’ attention on the photo on page 89 and

elicit what it shows (a doughnut) Ask whether they have

any idea what to doughnut might mean when used as a

verb (the answer is in the text) Then ask students to discuss the question in pairs before eliciting ideas from the class Encourage them to think of examples of particular words, phrases and structures that are different

2 Give students 2 minutes to skim the text to find out what

aspect of language changes it focuses on

Trang 2

3 Before students read the text in detail, focus on the

Expert Word Check box and ask them to find the words

in the text Encourage them to deduce their meanings

from the context before looking them up in a dictionary

and noting relevant information (e.g pronunciation, stress,

word type, use, grammar, word family, collocations)

for each word Then refer students to the Expert Task

Strategy notes on pages 168–169 before they attempt the

gapped text task (Paper 1 Part 7) Remind them to use the

Help clues for support as needed Encourage students to

compare answers in pairs before class feedback Discuss

any potential new vocabulary, such as pretentious, to send

someone off, etc

1 F 2 B 3 G 4 D 5 A 6 E

4 Have a short discussion with the class about the linguistic

links focused on before asking them to find further

examples Suggest they underline those linkers which

point to the answers and afterwards, as in Module 3,

spend time discussing ideas as a class Perhaps mention

that the distractor paragraph C (On the other hand ) is

wrong because it would introduce an opposing view to

something in the previous paragraph, which would need

to be a negative comment about verbing as paragraph C

is positive At a quick glance it might fit in gap 6; however,

applied to someone’s name can only refer to Stephen

Pinker, who is mentioned in paragraph G but not in the

main paragraphs

1 evidence of this linguistic phenomenon (i.e verbing)

2 Additional linguistic links:

Gap 1 links to a recent example of how English is changing and

what follows the gap provides additional examples of newly-formed

words (Further evidence of this linguistic phenomenon …)

Gap 2 requires information on another source of language creation

as the paragraphs both before and after the gap (Yet another

productive field is …) provide examples of sources of language

creation

Gap 3 requires further information on the practice of verbing,

and what follows the gap (There is a difference today, though, …)

contrasts the pace at which language changes are accepted now

with the situation in the past

Gap 4 links to the way additions to the English language can be

almost instantly integrated into the language throughout the world

(What makes these innovations so easy is …) and what follows the

gap provides examples

Gap 5 leads on from contrasting verbing in English to other

languages which use inflections to question why a more complicated

approach would be considered (What is the driving force behind

wanting to do it ) and what follows the gap makes a comment on

the use of verbing in English (Which is fine, but sometimes the results

are ridiculous …)

Gap 6 leads on from the focus being on going full circle and creating

new verbs from nouns (which had originated from verbs in the

first place) to explaining why some language lovers so dislike

verbing What follows the gap provides examples of verbs that are

particularly disliked.

These questions could be discussed in pairs or small groups before being briefly discussed as a class This might be a good opportunity to feed in an activity on English words

which originate from other languages (e.g coffee from Arabic, kindergarten from German), slang and teen speak or text

language Note that slang and teen speak are constantly evolving and words quickly come and go out of use

Extra!

Find 10–15 English words derived from other languages and ask students to guess the language they originate from

Extra!

Search for SMS English on the internet in advance and prepare some SMS language and characters to write on the

board (e.g BTW = by the way, ICBW = it could be worse,

ROTFL = rolling on the floor laughing, ;-) = wink, x- = you

are mad, etc.) Ask students to guess the meanings You could then write some messages for them to translate into real English or suggest they write some for the rest of the class to guess the meaning

Vocabulary p.90

1a This exercise encourages students to think about

alternatives to a selection of phrasal verbs linked to communication Remind students that there is always a single-word (and more formal) verb that means the same

as a phrasal verb

1 explained properly 2 communicate with/make (somebody) understand (something) 3 mention 4 occur unexpectedly

5 persuade (him) not to 6 discuss

1b Students work in pairs, using some of the phrasal verbs

from Exercise 1a to share their own life experiences

2a Whilst the verbs speak, talk and say (along with tell) can

have a very similar meaning, this changes when they are used in idioms or phrasal verbs Generally, they all relate

to a spoken language being used In this exercise, students match the sentence halves, checking answers in pairs, before class feedback

1 b 2 e 3 h 4 c 5 a 6 g 7 d 8 f

2b This exercise gives students practice in deciding which

verb goes with which expression If useful, students could

do the task in pairs Remind them to go with their instinct

if unsure and to think about the feel of the word used when pronouncing the sentences Encourage students

to underline the set expressions and suggest they keep a record of them under the main verb used

1 say 2 speaking 3 talk 4 talking 5 say 6 speaking 7 talk

8 saying

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Students work in pairs and note down as many expressions

using the verb tell as they can in two minutes After this they

should join another pair and share ideas Next, give them

3 minutes to find further examples in a dictionary before

rounding up by eliciting any new expressions found

2c In this exercise students are encouraged to formulate their

own questions using the expressions given and to talk

freely about their own experiences

3a Explain that this exercise introduces some more

expressions Give students a few minutes to match

and complete the exercise, and allow time for them to

compare answers in pairs before class feedback

1 e 2 c 3 b 4 g 5 d 6 a 7 f 8 h

3b This exercise gives students the opportunity to put

expressions from Exercise 3a into practice, in either pairs

or small groups

4 Discuss the best way to record any new expressions

(e.g grouped by verb) from this section and encourage

students to note linked prepositions, e.g speak on behalf

of, speak up, etc.

Photocopiable activity

Activity 6A could be used here It is a pairwork/

groupwork activity where students match sentence

beginnings with an appropriate ending to complete the

expressions This activity revises expressions and phrasal

verbs covered in Module 6A

Use of English 1 p.91

1 Focus students’ attention on the photo and ask what

it shows (tennis player Andy Murray texting) Find out

whether students could live without their phones before

asking them to discuss the questions in pairs or small

groups

Extra!

Students work competitively to compile the longest list

of advantages and disadvantages, obtaining one point for

each one they think of that no one else has Alternatively,

students work in teams (either for or against) to debate

whether the advantages of mobile phones outweigh the

disadvantages or vice versa

2 Before students begin the word formation task (Paper 1

Part 3), ask them to scan the text to find the advantages

and disadvantages mentioned

Advantages: encourage people to communicate more; are

useful to people in dangerous situations; help people to avoid

unwelcome attention

Disadvantages: people who disturb others by talking loudly on

public transport

3 Encourage students to skim the text to get the gist,

working through using clues around each gap to identify which form of the given word is required for each gap (noun, adverb, positive/negative adjective, etc.) Point out that the word needs to fit both grammatically and in meaning, and suggest they write an abbreviation near each gap to note the part of speech needed

4 Students complete the task, referring to the Expert Task

Strategy notes on pages 167–168 for extra help

1 harmful 2 grounding 3 reassurance 4 unavailability

5 controversial 6 inconsiderate 7 minority 8 disapproval

5 The task analysis is best conducted as a class

1 A prefix is required to make the noun/verb negative

(disapproval); a suffix is required to make it into a different part of speech (inconsiderate)

2 exist: existence; harm: harmful; ground: grounding; reassure:

reassurance; available unavailability; controversy (or controversy):

controversial; consider: inconsiderate: minor: minority; approve:

disapproval stress changes in: available: unavailability; controversy:

controversial; minor: minority

6 Students could discuss the questions in small groups

before the discussion is opened up to the class Encourage students to justify their reasons and use this as an

opportunity to feed in useful language

Extra!

Ask students to write an email to a national newspaper,

in response to an email criticising the 21st century dependence on mobile phones They should agree or

disagree, giving their reasons Then ask them to read each

other’s emails Which is the most persuasive?

Listening 1 p.92

1 Allow time for students to discuss the questions in pairs

or small groups before opening the discussion to the class Encourage students to support their opinions and to consider aspects of different languages that would make them difficult to learn

2a Go through the rubric and elicit what students remember

about Part 4 of the Listening test You may wish to mention that they have covered this exercise type in Module 3 Allow time for students to underline key words and predict language they might hear Remind them that they will hear all 5 speakers once before the whole recording is repeated, and to use the silent time given to read the questions or check answers

2b T41 Refer students to the Expert Task Strategy notes on

page 171 before attempting the task Encourage students

to compare answers in pairs before class feedback

Task One: 1 F 2 H 3 C 4 E 5 A Task Two: 6 H 7 G 8 C 9 F 10 B

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3 The task analysis might best be done as a class Encourage

students to underline the words or phrases that help

them

She wanted to help her son, who was having problems at school

I got more and more interested in the French way of life might lead

you to choose H (to deepen knowledge of a culture) and we often

get cheap flights might tempt you to choose C (to go travelling)

However, these were not reasons why the speaker decided to

start learning a language.

Extra!

Students refer to the rest of the audioscript on page 142

and underline the words and phrases that give the correct

answers Encourage them to mark any other words or

phrases that might wrongly distract them This could be

done alone or in pairs

4 Ask students to look at the items in the Expert Word

Check box and look up all relevant information (e.g

pronunciation, stress, word type, use, grammar, word

family, collocations) for each word Students then discuss

the questions in groups before you elicit key ideas from

the class to round up

Language development 1 p.93

This section focuses on spelling Remind students that spelling

is important in most papers, but particularly so in word

formation in Paper 1 Part 3 This section highlights common

patterns and words that are often misspelt Begin by eliciting

from students words that they often misspell

1 Go through the techniques given with the class, discussing

any others they (or you) know

2 Students identify the correctly spelt words, comparing

ideas with a partner

1 recommend, successfully 2 exaggerate, difference

3 According, disappointed 4 addition, beginner 5 opportunity,

business 6 necessary, accommodation 7 embarrassed,

professionalism 8 apartment, immediately 9 occurred,

preferred 10 career

3 The plural forms of the nouns given all follow a particular

rule or pattern Students should decide on the plural

spelling of each noun before referring to the Expert

Writing section on Spelling on page 200 Check on

pronunciation if useful and, if time allows, ask students

to think of other words which in the plural form would

follow the same rules

boxes, chiefs, enquiries, flies, heroes, journeys, leaves, lives,

potatoes, radios, thieves

4 In this exercise, students have to identify the incorrectly

spelt words first, before correcting them

1 assistance 2 separate 3 niece 4 Medicine 5 advice (as

a noun) 6 arriving 7 practise (in British English, practice in

American English) 8 prettier 9 families 10 receive

Photocopiable activity

Activity 6B could be used here It is a pairwork/groupwork activity where students take turns to say a word which another student then has to spell out loud This activity focuses on words that are commonly misspelt

5a The words in this exercise are commonly confused The

idea is to train students to spot differences so that they can more easily identify their own mistakes when writing

Encourage students to get into the habit of checking their own work for words they often misspell or ones, such

as those in this exercise, which are easily confused They should by now have some pieces of written work that they can refer to and, from these, they should be able to produce a list of words they often spell incorrectly (but with the correct spelling given) that they can use for future checks This should be kept up to date

1a loose b lose 2a stationary b stationery 3a ensure b insure 4a affect b effect

5b Students write their own sentences to show the

differences between the pairs of words given, referring

to their dictionary as needed Allow time for students to compare ideas before eliciting examples from the class

Extra!

Ask students to think of a further 5 pairs of homophones and to write a definition for each one In the subsequent lesson, students could work in pairs and take turns to read out a pair of definitions Their partner then has to write down the 2 words being defined Students continue taking turns and, when finished, check their words and spelling with each other

6 Discuss what a hyphen is and the general rules of usage

Explain that the rules for hyphens are complicated and that fewer people use them these days, choosing to either

join words (e.g playground, seafood, riverbank) or to write them as separate words (e.g gift giving, web page, house plant) Before students complete the task, remind them

to check in a dictionary if they are unsure whether to use

a hyphen or to write the words separately Allow time for students to compare ideas in pairs Refer students

to the Expert Writing section on page 200 for further information on hyphens

1 re-formed (to distinguish from the verb reformed = improved by

making changes) 2 break-ins 3 ex-husband 4 Day-to-day

5 co-star; down-to-earth

Writing 1 p.94 This section focuses on aspects of cohesion: the relationships based on grammar or vocabulary between parts of sentences

or across them that hold the text together

1a Go through the points made in the Expert Strategy box

and spend some time discussing the information on linking devices given in the Expert Writing section on sentence structure on page 202 Students then complete the task

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Once students have identified what the links refer back

to, ask how the sentences would be without them

(repetitious and boring) You might also want to ask

whether references always refer back (they can also refer

forward, e.g A few days before she left for university, my

sister gave me the keys to her car)

1 One method: several ways; Another: several ways/methods

2 there: the local college; then: last month; That’s why: because

she’s been going there; her: Rebecca 3 those people: the

people who find it difficult to learn a language; so: you are one of

those people; millions: of people 4 one: a dictionary; the ones:

dictionaries 5 neither: I don’t want to join

1b This exercise gives students practice using a variety of

linking devices Encourage students to skim the text to

get the gist of it before they complete it Suggest that

they fill in the gaps they are more confident about first,

and remind them to cross out expressions as they use

them so that they eliminate options as they go Allow time

for students to compare answers and, during feedback,

discuss what is being referred to and what the function of

the linking device used is (e.g to contrast ideas, to present

an example)

1 their 2 such claims 3 On the contrary 4 instead of 5 since

6 Firstly 7 whatever 8 which is why 9 such as 10 Secondly

11 What’s more 12 The reason 13 in the process

2a Give students a few minutes to read the text and

underline any repetition noticed, before discussing ideas in

pairs or small groups

2b Students now rewrite the extracts, incorporating cohesive

devices to limit repetition This could be done alone or

in pairs Alternatively, this could be set as homework

and gone through in a subsequent lesson after students

have had a chance to swap work and perhaps read each

other’s

Suggested answer:

INTRODUCTION

Studying for a degree in a second language is a challenge, whatever

the academic goals What’s more, it is something that very few

people are capable of Students should remind themselves what

an amazing achievement studying a second language represents

and that they are bound to feel frustrated at times Therefore,

we believe that most will benefit from English language training to

ensure they fulfil their academic potential

OUR COURSES

Do you have language difficulties in your seminars and suffer

from lack of confidence, both of which can affect your academic

performance? If so, then our Language Support programme

aims to help you Our programme, which is free, is open to all

students for whom English is not their first language It offers both

individual tutorials for students who wish to discuss their academic

writing and language training in groups We think our programme

offers the best available support and, we are pleased to say, so do

our students.

3 Students work in pairs to organise and write an

information sheet, checking that their work incorporates linking devices to limit repetition and correcting any spelling mistakes noticed This task could be set as homework if Exercise 2 is done in class, with students comparing ideas in groups in the subsequent lesson, deciding which place they would prefer to go to and why

6B A sixth sense

Listening 2 p.95 Begin by asking what the cartoon represents (intuition) and explain that the heading is a clue Find out whether students believe in intuition

1 These questions are best discussed in pairs or groups

before ideas are elicited from the class

2 T42 This exercise gives further practice of Paper 3 Part

2 Students should be familiar with this type of sentence completion, having covered it in Modules 1 and 5 Give students time to read through the text to get the gist of it,

as well as to predict the types of word to complete each gap If useful, refer them to the Expert Task Strategy notes

on page 171 before playing the recording

1 music 2 unsettled 3 logical 4 (university) noticeboard

5 diary 6 brain waves 7 numbers 8 rhythm

3 Students work in pairs to compare answers, before

discussing the questions of the task analysis as a class

Check that students can justify their answers and, with a weaker class, refer students to the audioscript on page

143 as useful

4 Ask students to look at the items in the Expert Word

Check box and look up all relevant information (e.g

pronunciation, stress, word type, use, grammar, word family, collocations) for each word Students then discuss the questions in groups or as a class, using the language presented Encourage students to provide examples of relevant situations or experiences

Speaking p.96 The photos show 3 unexpected situations (a man whose car has a flat tyre, a birthday celebration, a car blocking a driveway) These should act as a prompt for showing different emotional reactions, and the question should encourage students to speculate on initial reactions and difficulties dealing with the situations This discussion could be done in pairs or small groups Round up by eliciting ideas and asking students which situation might be the hardest to handle and why

1a Students discuss the questions, with reference to the

photos, in pairs or groups before the discussion is opened

to the class Use the questions as an opportunity to feed

in further adjectives, e.g disgruntled, perturbed.

1 They all show someone reacting to an unexpected situation

2 One photo shows someone having a nice surprise; the other two are unpleasant surprises 3 A frustrated B absolutely

delighted C seething with anger

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1b T43 This exercise focuses on sentence stress Give

students a minute to read the sentences before playing the

recording Allow them time to compare answers in pairs

and, if useful, play the recording a second time, pausing

after each sentence and eliciting the stressed word Elicit

which types of word are stressed (i.e those carrying

most meaning or emotion, generally adjectives, verbs and

nouns)

1 I was absolutely livid because I was stuck 2 I immediately

burst into tears 3 I was in two minds and had to weigh up

what to do next 4 It’s thoroughly depressing when you’re

stranded and can’t move 5 I welled up – I was so moved

6 When people do things like that it winds me up 7 My patience

soon wore thin – the situation was driving me mad

8 I was really down and a bit grouchy beforehand – but I cheered

up straight away.

1c Students match the sentences, which express different

emotions, to the photos

1 A/C 2 B 3 C 4 A 5 B 6 C 7 A/C 8 B

1d Students work in pairs, discussing their own reactions to

the situations given Elicit from the class which students

would be calmer and which more agitated, and why

2a Focus students’ attention on the cartoon and ask what

it shows Students then complete the text choosing the

correct alternative, comparing answers in pairs

1 in high spirits 2 lost my cool 3 flew into a rage 4 In the

heat of the moment 5 snapped at 6 ratty 7 make a scene

8 delightful 9 get to me 10 calmed down

2b Give students a minute to scan the text for the synonyms

before eliciting them from the class

1 lost my cool, flew into a rage, snapped at him, ratty, make a scene

2 in high spirits, delighted 3 pull myself together, calmed down

2c Briefly elicit some examples of new words or expressions,

e.g ratty (irritated), before giving students a few minutes

to write down some questions using them Students then

take turns to ask their partner their questions Round up,

eliciting some of the questions asked and answers given

3a T44 Refer students to the photos in Exercise 1 and

elicit ideas on what the interlocutor might ask Play the

recording and discuss the task set

3b T45 Students now listen to another candidate attempting

the task, deciding which photos are chosen Elicit answers

and ask students their opinion about his interpretations

He talks about the man changing a wheel and the woman being

given a surprise party His personal comments about him not

being able to change a wheel and most people don’t know how are

irrelevant.

3c T46 Before students listen again, refer them to the

assessment criteria on page 171 and the Expert Task

Strategy notes on page 172, and give them a minute to

reread them Play the recording and allow them a few

minutes to evaluate in pairs how well the candidate dealt

with the task in relation to the strategies and criteria,

4a For this exercise, ask students whether they can recall

the expressions used Alternatively, play the recording for Exercise 3c a third time or refer students to the audioscript on page 143

1 whereas 2 is probably, seems to be 3 must be, I do think,

obviously

4b This exercise gives students practice in rewriting sentences

using a range of aspects, such as possibility, emphasis, etc

1 might be a bit difficult 2 Actually, I do think a lot of people …

3 I do think 4 I’ve never done it myself 5 Perhaps she’s even shocked 6 My guess is it won’t …

5 Briefly elicit what students remember about the long

turn (Paper 4 Part 2), which was introduced in Module

4 Then focus their attention on the task, checking they understand what it involves, the photos they should use and the timing they must adhere to before they attempt the task in pairs

6 The task analysis is best conducted in pairs before a

general discussion on strengths and weaknesses as a class

Remind students to note the areas they need to improve

on and to refer back to these before further practice

7 Give students time to discuss these questions in pairs or

small groups before opening the discussion to the class to round up

Extra!

Students choose one of the three questions from Exercise

7 and write an essay (220–260 words), incorporating ideas from the discussion

Language development 2 p.98 Students should be familiar with the concept and use of verbs

followed by -ing or the infinitive with to Weaker students

might benefit from some additional practice from other sources before focusing on the more advanced examples covered in this section

1a This exercise asks students to identify verbs and the forms

that follow them Allow time for students to compare ideas in pairs

+ infinitive: agree, attempt, choose, deserve, guarantee, hesitate,

hope, long, neglect, struggle, volunteer

+ -ing: consider, contemplate, deny, fancy, imagine, involve, put

off, practise, resent

Both + infinitive / + -ing: attempt

1b Students refer to the Expert Grammar on page 182 to

check their answers Check that students understand the meaning of the verbs given as well as their pronunciation

Extra!

Students work in pairs to decide the number of syllables and the syllable stress pattern for each of the verbs given in Exercise 1a

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1c This exercise gives students practice using some of the

verbs from Exercise 1a Allow time for a discussion of

the answers, particularly when more than one option is

possible

1 imagine 2 struggled 3 agreed (volunteered/attempted/

chose) 4 hoped/longed 5 volunteer/hope (agree/attempt/

guarantee) 6 put off, agreed (volunteered)

1d This exercise provides freer practice using verbs and their

associated forms After students have finished asking each

other questions, elicit some of the endings to the stems

given to form questions

2 Students rewrite the sentences, comparing ideas in pairs

With a weaker class you might first want to elicit the form

that follows each verb given in brackets

1 them to enjoy the holiday 2 us to go to a very exotic market

3 them not to try/them against trying the very sour milk

4 loving the mysterious atmosphere 5 the excursion to be cut

short 6 a taxi to take her back to her hotel

3a In this exercise, students need to identify the correct form

to follow the verbs so as to give the correct meaning

If useful, discuss the first one or two answers as a class

before students attempt the task Allow time for them

to compare answers in pairs before going through them

Discuss the difference in meaning when the -ing or

infinitive is possible

1 walking 2 feeling 3 to stay 4 him telling 5 going

6 to hurry 7 to collect 8 picking 9 to explore 10 having

11 not having taken/not taking 12 to find 13 sheltering/to

shelter

Extra!

Students write their own sentences using the same verbs

as given in the exercise but with the form (-ing or infinitive)

that was not used in the text

3b This exercise could be done in pairs Suggest that students

write an example sentence with each form and refer

to a dictionary if necessary Elicit sentences and discuss

differences as a class

Extra!

Students think of an alternative verb for each of the 10

different meanings (e.g go on to do something = to progress

to, go on doing something = to continue).

4 For this exercise, students could work in pairs or small

groups to match the sentence halves and discuss any

differences in meaning before class feedback

1 a ii (specific case); b i (generalisation) 2 a ii (part of an

unfinished action); b i (complete finished action) 3 a i (present

simple + -ing for a generalisation); b ii (would prefer + infinitive for

a specific case) 4 a i (specific case); b ii (generalisation)

5 a i (single short action); b ii (repeated action) 6 a ii he

continued waiting while I went home; b i purpose: his purpose

was to wait for the shop to open.

Photocopiable activity

Activity 6C could be used here It is a pairwork/

groupwork activity where students match question beginnings with an appropriate ending, such that the verb

in the first part is followed by another verb in the correct form They then take turns to ask each other the questions

made This activity revises the use of verb + -ing or

infinitive with to forms as covered in Module 6B.

Use of English 2 p.99

This section provides further practice of verbs followed by -ing

or the infinitive through key word transformations that they will encounter in Paper 1 Part 4

Begin by focusing students’ attention on the cartoon and asking what it shows Briefly elicit what students remember about this part of the exam (which is covered in Module 3B) before looking at the example

1 This exercise could be done in pairs Weaker students

might need to refer to the Expert Task Strategy notes on page 168 for support before doing the exercise, while stronger students could complete the exercise and then refer to it Allow time for students to compare answers in pairs before discussing them as a class

1 being spoken to as though/if 2 be guaranteed to last

3 it that persuaded you to 4 was only when/after Emily arrived

5 ever having hurt/hurting him 6 was in no mood to get

2 Discuss ‘over-transformation’ as a class, eliciting students’

own examples

3 The task analysis is best conducted in pairs before ideas

are discussed as a class Ask what students have learnt from doing the task and remind them to make a note of the forms that follow particular verbs in their vocabulary records

1 The idea has been changed from ‘speak to’ to ‘thought of’

2 The key word ‘guaranteed’ has been changed to ‘guarantee’

3 The answer is more than six words 4 The answer is more

than six words and has had extra elements added.

4 This exercise gives students further practice in key word

transformations Allow time for students to discuss their ideas in pairs before eliciting examples from the class to round up

Writing 2 p.100

1 Start by asking what the photos show (one teenager

doing voluntary work in a hospital and another lying on her bed checking her mobile phone with a laptop on her lap and headphones around her neck) before asking students to discuss the questions in small groups or as a class Encourage students to compare cultural differences

in young people’s behaviour as well as attitudes towards them, etc

Trang 8

2 Give students a few minutes to read and appreciate the

scope of the task and discuss the questions in pairs Open

the discussion to the class, eliciting that it is an opinion

essay Check on any new vocabulary and remind them to

refer to the planning and organising strategies covered in

Module 5B You may wish to spend a little time recapping

on these Elicit the word limit for the essay (220–260

words)

3a Students work in pairs to discuss the questions and

brainstorm ideas for the essay Elicit the number of

characteristics they must focus on (2) and remind them to

add reasons and examples to support their ideas

3b This exercise invites students to consider the number of

paragraphs they will write for their essay and where they

will add their point of view Briefly elicit ideas from the

class

3c Students now decide which ideas to include and where

Remind them to consider where to add reasons and

examples

4a This exercise focuses on the opening sentence of the

introduction to an essay and encourages students to

consider the best way to begin their essay The examples

given could be discussed in pairs or as a class

A The writer’s personal opinion is given too early

B A good opening sentence to introduce the overall subject of the

essay, saying what it is you are going to discuss

C This sentence jumps into specifics too quickly without giving the

reader a general idea.

4b Remind students that a topic sentence should make clear

the topic of a paragraph and is usually the first sentence

of a paragraph Students complete the sentence stems,

adding their own ideas, before discussing them in pairs or

small groups

See sample answer.

4c This exercise focuses on phrases used to present an

opinion or support an opinion It could be done in pairs or

discussed as a class

1 belief (S) 2 worry (I) 3 claims (I) 4 hold the view (S)

5 argued (I) 6 conceded (I) 7 point of view (I)

4d Students now write their own sentences using selected

phrases Allow time for them to compare ideas in pairs

and elicit some examples from the class

4e Focus students’ attention on the expressions before asking

them to complete the headings, using the words given

A Expressing general views B Conceding C Beginning a

conclusion D Emphasising E Disputing F Giving reasons

5 At this point the planning is complete, so give students 20

minutes to write their essay The writing would be best

done as homework unless you wish to assess what they

are capable of writing in the given time period

Sample answer:

In recent years, there has been concern that youth attitudes have changed as living standards have risen and that young people have become less empathetic But is this true?

It is certainly the case that many young people in the West seem

to be more self-centred and in need of more personal attention than ever They believe that everything they do is important and are intolerant when they are criticised Consequently, they are sometimes known as the ‘Me-generation’ as opposed to the ‘We-generation’:

egotistic and lacking self-discipline It is perhaps no coincidence that this attitude reflects the behaviour of media celebrities that many young people seem obsessed by When they mix, they only mix with people like themselves, a situation encouraged by the advent of online social networking

On the other hand, in some countries younger people are volunteering for charity work in greater numbers than ever before, and are more concerned about social inequalities than their parents

Moreover, they also have a far higher tolerance of other people’s beliefs than ever before, opposing discrimination against minorities and believing strongly in equal rights

In other words, the picture is contradictory It is my firm belief that young people are probably much the same as they have always been

The social conditions of the country they live in are bound to have an effect but in general young people are still a mixture of good and bad,

of selfishness and selflessness [240 words]

6 Students spend 5–10 minutes checking their essay, using

the checklist on page 190 as necessary Alternatively, students swap and check their partner’s essay

Review These exercises aim to help both students and teachers to monitor and analyse progress after each module has been completed, focusing on vocabulary and grammar from the module They are best used to show where further consolidation is required or, in the case of students who have missed a module, to assess how much they need to catch up

on In terms of usage, the review exercises can be set in class time as a 20–25-minute test or completed as a pair/group activity followed by a class discussion Alternatively, they can

be given for homework, which in the case of any student who has missed a module would be more practical

1 1 C 2 A 3 D 4 B 5 C 6 A 7 A 8 D

2 1 mind 2 word 3 make 4 mulling 5 end 6 say 7 at

8 spirits

3 1 ex-girlfriend, advice 2 principal, their 3 affected, ensure

4 enquiries, independent 5 Additional, receive 6 day-to-day, lives 7 Unbelievably, lose 8 healed, successfully

4 1 saying 2 to tell 3 to drive 4 to bathe 5 to see

6 splashing 7 to take 8 to panic 9 trumpeting 10 to be

11 taking 12 to try 13 to provoke 14 to react 15 to leave

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