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JETSTREAM PRE-INTERMEDIATE-Teacher book

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elementary
elementary
beginner
Real language &
memory training
Real language &
memory training
JETSTREAM Cloud
with LMS
Jeremy Harmer ∙ Jane Revell
Real language &
memory training
Everyday English
videos
Everyday English
videos
Student’s Book
Student’s Book
JETSTREAM Cloud
with LMS
advanced
Everyday English
videos
JETSTREAM Cloud
with LMS
• Grammar to go
The right grammar at the right time plus
a full grammar reference
• Emphasis on speaking
Real language &
memory training
Student’s Book
Your opinion, your voice - right from the start
of the lesson
Mary Tomalin
advanced
upper intermediate
intermediate
JETSTREAM Cloud
with LMS
upper intermediate
Real language &
memory training
JETSTREAM Cloud
with LMS
• Personalisation
Everyday English
videos
Student’s Book
Jeremy Harmer ∙ Jane Revell
intermediate
Teacher’s Guide
Helps you find the right words
Real language &
memory training
Dialogue karaoke
videos
Student’s Book
Student’s Book
Student’s Book
JETSTREAM Cloud
with LMS
Get you interested and communicating
• Focus on vocabulary
Student’s Book
Dialogue karaoke
videos
pre-intermediate
• Motivating topics
pre-intermediate
pre-intermediate
beginner
Jane Revell ∙ Mary Tomalin
with Jane Revell and Mary Tomalin
Student’s Book
Engaging activities to get you talking
pre-intermediate
Jane Revell ∙ Mary Tomalin
Student’s Book
Amanda Maris
Student’s Book
Student’s Book
JETSTREAM is the brand new Helbling Languages
6-level course for adult learners. Its carefully
balanced pace and challenge offer a learning
experience that is fun and motivating and which
prepares students to use their English effectively
in work and life.
Terry Prosser
Comprehensive introduction and overview
Extension activities
Culture notes
• Thinking & Memory
Ideas for mixed ability classes
Encourages thinking and memory training
• Cross culture
Photocopiable games and tasks
Maximise your social and cultural awareness
• Stories
Lively stories for extra reading practice
Technique Banks
• Videos
on
• Cloud Book
• Pronunciation
• Cyber Homework
• Exam practice
• Everyday English videos • Testbuilder
• Mp3 audios
• CLIL Projects
w w w.helbling-ezone.com
Everyday English brought to life
• JETSTREAM Workbook
Revision and practice, progress checks
and writing skills development
• PLUS - fully integrated digital components
Lots of options for flexible blended learning
Teacher’s Guide
www.helblinglanguages.com
With Audio CDs
Terry Prosser
with Jane Revell and Mary Tomalin
pre-intermediate
Teacher’s Guide
Contents
Jetstream Pre-intermediate Student’s Book contents
Introduction
Letter to you, the teacher
Jetstream Pre-intermediate components
Jetstream approach – a summary
Unit overview
Unit notes
Getting to know you
Unit 1
Unit 2
Units 1&2 Review
Unit 3
Unit 4
Units 3&4 Review
Unit 5
Unit 6
Units 5&6 Review
Unit 7
Unit 8
Units 7&8 Review
Unit 9
Unit 10
Units 9&10 Review
Unit 11
Unit 12
Units 11&12 Review
Photocopiable games
Photocopiable tasks
Technique banks
Using the video
Using stories
Using memory games
20 easy games
Five fun techniques to use with a flagging class
Extra questions and tasks for Art & Music
Working with mixed-ability classes
Ensuring learner autonomy and using technology
De-stress! cartoons
4
7
8
8
12
23
29
42
57
59
74
88
91
105
119
121
133
147
149
162
175
177
189
201
205
221
229
230
231
233
235
236
237
237
239
Contents
3
4
Contents
Contents
5
6
Contents
Letter to you, the teacher
Welcome to Jetstream, a course designed to
motivate and engage learners. We aim to provide
you with material that’s stimulating and relevant,
so your students learn English easily and with real
enjoyment.
We hope to give you everything you’d expect, and
more besides. We’ve aimed to balance the familiar
and the new: to give you what you know works
well and, at the same time, to introduce some
unique features that will greatly enhance your
students’ learning experience.
Our approach in general
We believe that engaging content together with
enjoyable and useful learning activities are the keys
to successful learning.
We believe that students need to be exposed to
the most useful vocabulary that they’ll need to
speak and write English at this level.
We pay special attention to the grammar of the
language – without grammar, vocabulary is just
words!
We believe in the importance of having students
meet words and grammar in exciting and
interesting situations – and in giving opportunities
for students to practise this language so that they
feel comfortable with it.
We also believe that teacher support is crucial –
we know you’re really busy. This Teacher’s Guide
provides clear lesson notes and a lot of other
things as well (see Contents on page 3). There’s
also a lot of support online in the form of extra
material, practice tests and so on.
You don’t have to use all – or even any – of the
Teacher’s Guide, of course, but it’s there if you
need it and it’ll help to give you lots of choices.
We’ve put a lot of work into ensuring that
Jetstream is simple to use. And thought-provoking.
And effective. And fun.
Enjoy!
Jane Revell and Mary Tomalin
Introduction
7
Jetstream Pre-intermediate
components
For the student:
Student’s Book
The Student’s Book contains 12 units of three
double-page lessons, and a Vocabulary plus and
Everyday English section at the end of each unit.
It also contains the following:
•
a two-page Review unit after every two units
•
four stories
•
a comprehensive grammar reference section
•
information-gap activities and extra material
•
complete transcripts for the audio
•
a Pronunciation spread contrasting similar
sounds
•
an irregular verbs list.
Workbook with audio
The Workbook contains 12 units of four pages –
one page per SB lesson, and one page for
Vocabulary plus and Everyday English.
It also contains the following:
• a Review quiz after every two units
• a Check your progress test after every two units
• one page of dedicated Writing practice for
each unit, giving students a structured writing
development course.
E-zone
The e-zone is an online resource for students and
teachers containing:
•
the video for all the Everyday English pages
•
a cloud book – an interactive version of the
Student’s Book, including all video and audio
•
cyber homework – interactive activities
covering grammar, vocabulary, reading,
listening and dialogues. They’re assigned by
the teacher in a virtual classroom and have
automatic feedback. (They can also be used in
self-study mode – see below.)
•
mp3 audio files
•
online training – pronunciation exercises, exam
practice (Cambridge ESOL, TOEFL, IELTS and
TOEIC) and cyber homework in self-study
mode (extra practice)
• CLIL projects.
For more information on the e-zone, see page 11.
8
Introduction
For the teacher:
Teacher’s Guide with class audio CDs
The Teacher’s Guide contains full teaching notes
for each unit, including all transcripts, keys and
useful background information, plus ideas for early
finishers and mixed-ability suggestions.
Three class audio CDs contain all the listening
material for the Student’s Book.
The Teacher’s Guide also contains the following
extra material:
• one photocopiable game per unit
• one task per unit
• eight ‘technique banks’ giving ideas in the
following areas:
Using the video
Using stories
Using memory games
20 easy games
Five fun techniques to use with a flagging class
Extra questions and tasks for Art & Music
Working with mixed-ability classes
Ensuring learner autonomy and using technology.
Interactive book for whiteboards DVD-ROM
E-zone
Full access to the students’ area plus
• the video for all Everyday English pages
• mp3 audio files
• downloadable Teacher’s Guide with answer keys
• Helbling placement test
• guide for new teachers
• Testbuilder containing 12 unit tests covering
grammar, vocabulary, functions and the four
skills and six progress tests.
Jetstream approach – a
summary
Motivation
Research shows that motivation is key to learning;
to learn, students need to be interested! Jetstream
has been written to be highly motivating for
students, and includes the following:
•
interesting and relevant topics
•
stimulating and often thought-provoking
photos
•
lots of personalisation activities where students
are encouraged to talk about themselves
•
communicative activities which give students a
real purpose for completing a task
Most of the three main lessons in Jetstream have a
vocabulary component. In addition:
•
highly motivating tasks throughout
the Student’s Book, and also a bank of
photocopiable tasks in the Teacher’s Guide
•
Vocabulary plus pages (one at the end of each
unit) provide an opportunity for vocabulary
enrichment.
•
an Art & Music feature in every unit which
encourages students to use their English in a
fun and less formal way
•
•
Everyday English pages at the end of every
unit which provide immediately useful
conversations practising different functions,
including short video clips
Focus on sections within the Vocabulary plus
pages highlight and practise high-frequency
words and phrases and their different uses and
meanings.
•
Preposition Park sections in the Review units
focus on prepositions, usually within an
interesting text.
•
Similar or different activities ( ) get students
comparing new words with words which are
the same or different in their own language.
•
Useful expressions sections are usually within
the Vocabulary plus pages; they highlight and
practise common expressions used in different
situations.
•
plenty of games and game-like activities, and
also a collection of 20 easy games and a bank
of photocopiable games (one for each unit) at
the back of the Teacher’s Guide.
Grammar
Grammar is an important element in Jetstream. It’s
dealt with in the following way:
•
It’s introduced gradually – each of the three
main lessons in a unit usually has a grammar
point. This enables the grammar to be
introduced step-by-step, practised and easily
absorbed.
•
It’s revised in the Review units that occur every
two lessons.
•
The grammar for a lesson is introduced in
context. The grammar form is highlighted and
students are given activities where they deduce
the form and meaning.
•
Activities are realistic and meaningful.
•
A clear and straightforward grammar reference
section at the end of the Student’s Book
explains each lesson’s grammar.
•
The we don’t say ... / we say ... section at the
end of each Everyday English page rounds off
a unit by highlighting common grammatical
mistakes in the language learnt in the unit.
•
The Irregular verbs section provides an
invaluable reference for students.
Vocabulary
It’s increasingly recognised that vocabulary is just
as important as or perhaps even more important
than grammar when learning a language.
Jetstream has a high vocabulary input so that
students can understand, speak, read and write
with ease. Stimulating and unusual pictures and
motivating activities ensure students absorb the
vocabulary easily and there’s plenty of practice.
Reading
The main reading focus in Jetstream is usually in
Lesson 2, but there are often other, shorter reading
texts elsewhere.
There’s a variety of high-interest text types – reallife stories, articles, quizzes, blogs, etc. Where
possible at this level, texts are based on real
people, places and events.
•
Activities develop students’ ability to scan
a text for its general meaning and guess
meaning from context.
•
Texts, whether in the form of human-interest
articles or fiction stories, are absorbing and
memorable and a key way of learning and
practising language.
Four two-page stories at the back of Jetstream
are an extra resource that provide practice in
extensive reading, where students can read
for meaning and pleasure without necessarily
studying the text in detail. See page 230 for
more ideas on how to use these stories.
Other sections that provide very short, highinterest texts for additional reading comprehension
relevant to the topic are:
•
•
Art & Music
•
Did you know?
The Cross Culture section in the Review units
also provides additional reading matter. It offers
interesting and practical information on different
cultures and should lead to stimulating discussions.
Introduction
9
Writing
•
Regular short Writing sections in the Student’s
Book provide guided writing practice through a
variety of tasks. The core writing course, however,
is to be found at the back of the Workbook, which
includes a full page of guided writing tasks per
unit. In this writing development course, students
cover the following areas:
At Pre-intermediate level, activities are
carefully designed so that students can express
themselves freely without making a lot of
mistakes.
•
The main speaking section of a lesson generally
has longer speaking activities than earlier in the
lesson.
•
The photos, cartoons, listening and reading
texts all provide stimulating platforms for
speaking activities.
•
You first! at the start of some lessons uses a
short question to get students engaged with
the lesson topic immediately.
•
Everybody up! sections encourage students
to stand up and move around the class,
interacting with each other to find out
information.
•
The Art & Music and Did you know? sections in
the main units, and the Cross Culture sections
in the Review units, also provide platforms for
stimulating discussions.
•
The photocopiable tasks in the Teacher’s
Guide and the information-gap activities at
the back of the Student’s Book provide further
communicative practice.
•
a personal profile
•
a biography
•
a CV
•
a blog
•
a holiday review
•
instructions
•
advice
•
a presentation
•
a complaint
•
a magazine article
•
a book review
•
a summary.
The Don’t forget feature summarises the use of
linkers and other accuracy features: word order,
punctuation, time expressions, paragraphing, etc.
The Writing section also starts to cover format and
tone, which many lower-level books don’t cover.
Check it! sections allow students to review and
improve their work.
Listening
The main listening focus in Jetstream is in Lesson 3
of each unit, but there are often short listening
activities elsewhere. The Everyday English page
provides further listening practice in the form of
functional dialogues.
To train students in useful and relevant listening
skills, the listening texts reflect a variety of reallife situations, including conversations, interviews,
talks, reports and radio programmes.
The transcripts of the listening texts can be found
at the back of the Student’s Book for students’
reference and are also reproduced in the relevant
activity notes in the Teacher’s Guide.
Speaking
For many learners of English, speaking is the most
important language skill.
There are speaking activities at all stages of a
lesson in Jetstream:
10
Introduction
Pronunciation
Short pronunciation activities throughout the
Student’s Book provide clear practice of some
common areas, including:
•
specific sounds
•
word stress
•
sentence stress
•
simple intonation.
In addition, students are encouraged to listen
to and repeat the main vocabulary groups
throughout the book.
The Pronunciation section on pages 156–157 of
the Student’s Book includes a phonemic chart for
students’ reference and practice of similar sounds
that students often confuse.
Stories
There are stories about real and fictional people
throughout the course, but at the back of the
Student’s Book (SB pages 126–133) you’ll also find
four slightly longer, completely new stories. These
stories are a way of providing an opportunity
for students to read more extensively and gain
a sense of satisfaction from doing so. For this
Online resources – available on e-zone
reason, they deliberately contain language which
is slightly above students’ level (linking in with
Stephen Krashen’s idea that we learn most from
language which stretches us a little – but not too
much). However, the texts are not too difficult,
and students shouldn’t be reaching for their
dictionaries all the time.
There are no tasks on the Student’s Book page
itself. This is in order to leave you completely free
as to how you approach the stories, but you’ll find
a variety of interesting techniques on page 230.
HELBLING Placement Test
Designed to give students and teachers of English
a quick way of assessing the level of a student’s
knowledge of English grammar and usage.
Online training
Resources and interactive activities for individual
student access. Includes:
• exam practice
• pronunciation
• all exercises from the cyber homework in selfstudy mode.
Consolidation and review
Consolidation of recently acquired language and
regular revision are crucial to learning.
After every two units, there’s a Review unit that
revises key language in these units. Each Review
unit contextualises the language through reading
and sometimes listening texts. There are also
grammar exercises and writing and speaking tasks.
The Workbook provides further practice and
testing of the language in a unit. In addition,
after every two units in the Workbook, there’s a
Review quiz, which tests students using a general
knowledge quiz. This is followed by a Check your
progress test.
Cloud book
An interactive version of the Student’s Book and
Workbook, where students can access all audio
and video content at the click of a mouse or touch
of a screen. Students can complete the activities,
check their results and add their own notes.
Cyber homework
Interactive activities assigned to students by their
teacher within an online virtual classroom. Results
and feedback are automatically given when the
deadline fixed by the teacher has been reached.
Projects
Open-ended tasks on both cultural and global
themes, where students can embed other
resources and share them with the teacher and
their class.
How to integrate an LMS (a Learning Management System) into your teaching
Initial assessment
Assessment
HELBLING Placement Test
Exam practice
Testbuilder
1
2
Scope & sequence
Teacher’s Guide
>
6
Planning
>
5
>
4
Virtual class and self-study practice
Lesson enrichment
•
•
•
•
Projects
Online training
Cyber homework
Student downloads
•
•
•
•
3
Class routine
Student’s Book
Workbook
Resources
Videos
Interactive book for whiteboards
Teacher downloads
Introduction
11
Unit overview
You first!
You’ll find a You first! box on many of the large photos at the beginning of a
lesson. It has a triple purpose. Firstly, to engage students and get them saying
something immediately. Secondly, to allow students to use what they already know
and boost their confidence. And thirdly, to give you an idea of what and how much
they already know so that you can target your teaching much more effectively.
What if your students don’t respond at all? That’s fine. Now you know. Just move
on and start to teach them something.
12
Introduction
Information gap
There’s an informationgap activity in every
second unit. In these,
students need to get
information from
each other in order to
complete a task. All the
material students need
to do the tasks is in the
back of the Student’s
Book on pages 118–124.
Grammar reference
Art & Music
There’s a useful grammar
reference at the back of the
Student’s Book. Each main
grammar point from the grammar
boxes throughout the book has a
relevant section in the grammar
reference.
Most people enjoy looking at pictures and listening to songs.
This section utilises this interest in order to motivate students
and transfer the topic language to a new context. The Art
section provides a picture and related tasks, while the Music
section gives some information about a song and provides
related tasks. The tasks give students the opportunity to
research online and bring the information back to the class,
and should often stimulate lively discussions. There’s a natural
mixed-ability element: more competent students will be able to
take it further than those who are less competent.
For the Art task, students turn to page 125 (Units 1–6) or page
145 (Units 7–12) of the Student’s Book to find larger versions of
the pictures.
Introduction
13
Listening
This symbol tells you that there’s
recorded material that goes with
the activity. This can either be a full
listening text or, as here, it might
be listening to check answers and
hear the correct pronunciation. Full
transcripts are given in the back of
the Student’s Book.
14
Introduction
Everybody up!
This is a chance for
students to move around
the classroom and use
specific language in a
controlled way to get
information from other
students. This kind of
short intensive practice
can be very lively and also
very rewarding if students
succeed in completing the
task using the language
resources available to
them. It also allows them
to interact with lots of
different people. The act
of physically getting up
and moving around is also
mentally refreshing; being
physically active helps
us to learn. Students
may naturally find that
they engage in longer
conversations than the
activity requires. If time
allows, this is good and
enjoyable practice for
them. However, it’s a
good idea to set a time
limit for this activity.
Explore
This is an opportunity for students to
go beyond the page and find out more
about some aspect of the topic: a sort of
mini project. They should do the research
online, make notes and report back,
working either alone or in pairs. You
may want to set this up in the classroom
by suggesting possible websites or just
by eliciting suggestions for words and
phrases to type into the search engine.
As with Art & Music, there’s a natural
mixed-ability element to this section.
De-stress!
Apart from providing tiny practical texts to read, these
sections are there to help students unwind from time
to time. Why? Because, quite simply, we don’t learn
well when we’re stressed; we learn best when we’re
relaxed. You’ll find a simple de-stress exercise in every
unit. If it’s a piece of advice, talk about it with students.
If it’s a physical exercise, get (or help) students to read
it and follow the instructions. Do it there and then in
the classroom if you can. Then you can use it again and
again, whenever it’s useful (see, for example, SB page
93, where students are advised to do simple shoulder
exercises to release tension).
Introduction
15
Guess
Asking students to
‘guess’ answers before
reading or listening to
information not only
gets them to interact,
it also frees them up
from having to know
the ‘right’ answer and
thus inhibiting their
response. In addition,
it prepares them for
the text and gives
a valid reason for
reading or listening
to something – to
see if they were right.
For this reason, it’s
very important not to
confirm if students
are right or not in
their guesses. Just say
things like: Hmm or
That’s interesting or
Possibly, etc and let
the text provide the
answers.
P Pronunciation
There are two pronunciation activities in each unit of the Student’s Book: one
in Lessons 1–3 and one in either Vocabulary plus or Everyday English. At Preintermediate level, there’s work on stress and intonation and an emphasis on
sounds, as these can often pose problems for students. All the pronunciation
activities are recorded so that students can hear the correct sounds or stress.
There’s also a Pronunciation section at the back of the Student’s Book on pages
156–157. This provides practice in differentiating between similar sounds
(minimal pairs), eg the difference between /p/ and /b/.
16
Introduction
Similar or different?
This symbol often occurs where
new vocabulary is introduced
and it suggests that you ask
students which words are the
same as or similar to words in
their own language – and which
are very different. This feature
of Accelerated (or Holistic)
Learning (see page 22) aims
to draw students’ attention to
the fact that they already know
some words. It serves to reassure
them, build their confidence and
lighten their learning load. It can
also give them a basis for wordbuilding (eg the fact that words
ending in -ion in English may also
end in -ion in their language).
Suddenly they know ten words,
not just one.
Note: Very often, if the word is
a similar one, the difference is
in the pronunciation – especially
the word stress – or the spelling.
Also, similar or different is
obviously easier if you have a
unilingual class, especially when
you’re familiar with the students’
mother tongue, but it can work
well with a multilingual class,
where students compare words
in different languages.
Think
This is used to signal a creative or critical-thinking
exercise. Students are asked to work something out
for themselves, give their opinions or comments or
use their creativity, rather than find an answer directly
on the page. A simple example might be where a text
describes a problem at work and students are invited
to come up with solutions. Encouraging students to
think creatively means they increase their engagement
with the material. The increased alertness enhances
their learning capacity.
With these sections – as indeed with many others – it’s
a good idea to give students a chance to look at the
material and think about (or even write down) their
ideas individually (for say 30 seconds) before they start
talking to each other. Some students are quick thinkers
and talkers, while others need more time. Giving them
‘thinking time’ evens it out a little.
Did you know?
These are very short, interesting
pieces of information related
to the theme of the lesson. The
section can usually be done at
any point in the lesson. The
teacher’s notes suggest ways
of exploiting it, but if students
want to know more, they can be
encouraged to search online.
Introduction
17
Vocabulary plus
Students need
words. They need
lots of them and
they need to know
how to combine
them. This page,
which comes after
the third lesson in
every unit, provides
an opportunity
for vocabulary
enrichment and
consolidation. It’s
a flexible section
and can be used
in several ways. It
can be done as a
complete lesson.
Alternatively, the
unit-by-unit notes
indicate points
where a vocabulary
set can be usefully
explored in a lesson.
Or an exercise can
be used as a filler
by a teacher with
time to spare, or
given to stronger
students when
they’ve finished a
task ahead of the
others.
Wordbuilder
Focus on
Learning about how words are formed is
an important part of acquiring a language,
as it helps learners to recognise and
manipulate related words. In this section,
students do various
word-formation activities,
eg adding prefixes (im + polite), suffixes
(care + ful), forming verbs from nouns and
creating compound nouns (back + pack).
These short sections appear on many of the
Vocabulary plus pages. They’re dedicated
practice of a word or words that have come up
in the unit, taking them further, and showing
students how they can be used in different
ways. In Pre-intermediate, there are Focus on
sections for up and down, come, phrasal verbs,
go, get, keep, out, give and take, the news
and like.
18
Introduction
Everyday English
This section provides
practice in the everyday
functional language that
students need when
interacting with people,
such as making requests,
opening and closing
a conversation, giving
instructions and so on.
Video
We don’t say … / We say …
The main conversation in Everyday
English appears on video, which
provides extra contextualisation
for the functional language. (If you
don’t have the video or prefer not
to use it, then just play the audio
version.)
This section focuses on common errors that we know
from experience students are likely to make. The ones
we’ve selected are those made by learners from a
variety of different language backgrounds, but there
will, of course, be many errors which are made by
speakers of a particular language that you’ll also need
to pick up on. By drawing students’ attention to them,
and making it very clear that these are errors, we hope
to help them avoid making such mistakes.
See also Using the video on page 229.
One way of using this section is to ask students to cover
the We say … column and produce the correct version,
then look back and check.
Introduction
19
Review units
Six Review units
revise key language
from the preceding
two units, using a
reading text as the
main presentation.
Memory games
This symbol represents your brain! Memory is a crucial component
in learning anything and it’s like a muscle: the more you exercise
it, the stronger it’ll be. These simple games ask students to
remember a variety of things: vocabulary items, facts from an
article and so on. But you can play a lot more games than the
ones suggested here (see page 231). And remember that the more
you get students to exercise their memory in English, the more it’ll
serve them in other aspects of their life as well.
20
Introduction
Cross Culture
Each of the Review
units finishes
with a Cross
Culture section.
This is often an
opportunity to
reflect on how
people do things
differently (or not!)
in different parts of
the world and how
we can begin to be
sensitive to these
differences and act
accordingly. There’s
usually a short
reading text with a
task or questions,
often leading to a
discussion and a
comparison with
the students’ own
culture(s).
Preposition Park
This section appears in each
Review unit and provides a short
text that revises and extends
prepositions that students already
know, enabling them to recycle
prepositions in a new way, or
introduces new ones.
Introduction
21
A final word
The features new to Jetstream, which occur
throughout the units, are informed – in a
gentle way – by some of the key principles of
Holistic Learning (sometimes called Accelerated
Learning*):
1 We learn with our body as well as our mind:
they are connected. Hence the value we attach
to bringing more physical activities into the
classroom and paying attention to students’
physical well-being.
2 Different learners prefer different kinds of
input. Some people learn more with their eyes,
some more with their ears and some more
with their bodies and movement. We aim to
provide a variety of activities to reflect these
preferences.
3 What we learn with emotion, we tend to
remember best. We hope to engage students’
emotions through the use of stories, songs and
games – and making them laugh.
4 Our memory is very powerful … and we can
make it work even better. The reason for all
the little memory-training games is to give
students practice in using their memory, and
aid their learning.
22
Introduction
5 People know a lot already – more than they
think. Good teaching and good material can
help to make students aware of what they
already know and boost their confidence.
6 People are different. Some people are more
outgoing and sociable, while others are more
introspective and reflective. The former readily
enjoy interacting with others, while the latter
often prefer to work on their own. They usually
welcome time to think on their own too,
before being asked to participate in an activity.
As teachers, we need to try to cater for these
differences.
*The roots of Accelerated Learning go back to the
Bulgarian educator, Georgi Lozanov, who developed
something called ‘Suggestopaedia’ in the early 1960s. By
helping learners feel comfortable, relaxed and confident,
they were able to absorb and remember more information
more quickly. That’s it in a nutshell!
Getting to know you
UNIT
FOCUS
GRAMMAR: questions; be; have; present simple; present continuous; want / need
VOCABULARY: personal information; the alphabet; physical activities; work and life; musical instruments
FUNCTIONS: introducing yourself and other people; asking personal questions; talking about objectives
practise natural pronunciation and connected
speech: What’s your name? /wɒtsjəneɪm/ How
do you spell that? /haʊʤəspelðæt/ Where are
you from? /weəjəfrɒm/.
Lesson 1 Who are you? pp 6–7
Aims
The focus of this first lesson in the introductory
unit is to give students the opportunity to find out
more about each other.
Answers
1 Are you 2 ’s your name 3 do you spell
4 do you spell 5 are you from
Warm-up
Ask students to look at the main photo. Get them
to guess who the people are. Ask: Do they know
each other, or are they meeting for the first time?
Then get students to think of things we say when
we meet someone new. Elicit their answers and
write them on the board.
1
Transcript
teacher Hello! Are you here for the preintermediate English course?
carla
Yes, I am.
teacher What’s your name?
carla
Carla Valenzuela.
teacher Sorry. How do you spell that?
carla
C-A-R …
teacher No, I meant how do you spell your
surname?
carla
Oh, sorry – V-A-L-E-N-Z-U-E-L-A.
teacher Ah. OK. And where are you from?
carla
I’m from Santiago.
teacher In Spain?
carla
No, in Chile!
teacher Wow! That’s a long way!
Play the audio and ask students to
listen. Repeat the conversation all together,
then individually.
1.2
Using the phrases you wrote on the board in
the warm-up, elicit and highlight features of
informal greetings such as choice of vocabulary
(Hi), contractions (I’m Firat, My name’s Olga)
and subject ellipsis ((It’s) Good to meet you,
(It’s) Really nice to meet you too).
Encourage students to walk around the room
and say hello to other people. Encourage them
to use the correct phrases. If extra support
is needed in a multinational class, revise the
alphabet and spelling to help students with
each others’ names.
Transcript
firat Hi! I’m Firat.
olga Hello! My name’s Olga.
firat Good to meet you.
olga Really nice to meet you too.
2
3
1.4 Teach / Elicit tricky (= difficult). Write
the letters on the board and ask students to
say them. If they make mistakes, try to elicit
self-correction. Then play the audio so they
can check their pronunciation. There may be
some sounds that they find difficult to make,
so encourage them to notice the shape of your
mouth, then practise themselves. You may
need to play the audio a few times to get the
correct pronunciation for each letter.
Put students in pairs to read the
conversation and try to guess the missing
words. Then play the audio and pause it so
students can complete the conversation.
Note: These letters have been selected as
ones students frequently have problems
with, but it may be a good idea to recap all
the other letters of the alphabet too.
Ask students to tell you the questions and
write them on the board. Then repeat them
and get students to say them quickly to
Transcript
a, e, i, o, u, w, y, g, j
1.3
Getting to know you
23
4
Go through the conversation in exercise 2
again with the whole class. Play the audio
again if necessary. Put students in pairs to
repeat the conversation using their own
personal information. Monitor pairs as they
practise, making a note of any common
problems with grammar, pronunciation or
intonation. In particular, check they pronounce
the letters in their name correctly. When
they’ve finished, ask them to find a different
partner and repeat the conversation. They
should do this three times in total.
Extra idea: You could also get students to
write down an alias, with a new name and
country. Then tell them that they’re at a
party and meeting lots of new people. Put
some background music on and have them
walk around the room chatting to each
other. Check afterwards and find out who
had the funniest new identity.
Vocabulary
5
Go through the words first to check
comprehension and pronunciation. Students
complete the table individually or in pairs. Ask
them to match the words and categories and
find the odd one out.
Point out the note below the table. Remind
students that they should always ask if they
don’t understand something. If they don’t
know any of the words in this list, tell them to
ask a partner to explain the meaning.
Answers
physical activities: Pilates, running,
swimming, volleyball
work and life: retired, student, teacher,
unemployed
musical instruments: drums, keyboard,
saxophone, violin
The word that doesn’t fit is snake.
Extra idea: To do the activity in a slightly
different way, vary learning styles and
generate more vocabulary, put three
posters up around the class – one for each
heading in the table. Then ask students to
walk around the room and add a different
idea under each heading. Get them to
24
Getting to know you
explain any new words to each other and
check together afterwards.
6 Ask students to work in pairs to complete the
phrases. Check answers with the class, then
ask pairs to work out the rules for using do, go
and play. Elicit answers from the class:
Do is used with individual, non-team sports
or sports without a ball (do aerobics, do
yoga).
• Go is used with activities and sports that
end in -ing (go skiing, go swimming).
• Play is used with activities and team sports
and also sports that need a ball (play
football, play basketball).
Point out that we use the after play with
instruments (play the piano, play the guitar).
•
Answers
1 Pilates 2 running, swimming 3 volleyball
4 drums, keyboard, saxophone, violin
7 Check understanding of each word in the box,
then check students understand the rules for
using each verb. Then ask them to make verb
–noun collocations with the new list of words.
Answers
1 do exercise, karate 2 go riding, sailing,
skiing 3 play golf, table tennis 4 play the
banjo, flute
8 There are a few 3x3x3 exercises throughout the
book. They get students to find a set number
of things in a set time (not always three things
– it could be more). You may want to make
these activities into a team competition.
For this activity, write We all go / do / play /
play the on the board and ask students to
discuss activities and hobbies that they all have
in common. Encourage conversation and elicit
questions they could ask each other, eg What
do you like doing in your free time? What are
your hobbies? Point out that they all have to
agree on the things in their list.
Extra idea: You could also introduce and
practise ways of showing surprise and
agreeing, eg Really? Me too! Encourage
students to ask follow-up questions
to show interest and continue the
conversations.
Grammar Questions
9 Complete the first two sentences as examples
with the class and ask students to explain
their choices. See if they can explain when we
use be and do. Write the two questions and
answers on the board so students notice that
when the statement contains a form of be
(I’m from Salzburg), we use be and invert the
subject and verb in the question form (Where
are you from?). When the statement contains
a verb other than be (I live in Málaga), we use
do in the question (Where do you live now?).
Point out that in spoken English, we often
shorten answers by not repeating the verb or
words that are already understood in context
(In Málaga). Explain that there’s one question
with two possible answers (question 3). Don’t
check answers yet.
10
1.5 Ask students to work in pairs, then play
the audio for them to check their answers.
Answers
1 are (b) 2 do (g) 3 do (d / h) 4 do (f)
5 Do (e) 6 Are; do (a) 7 Do (c) 8 are (i)
Transcript
1 a Where are you from?
b
I’m from Salzburg.
2 a Where do you live now?
b
In Málaga.
3 a What do you do?
b
I’m a social worker.*
4 a Where do you work?
b
In a children’s hospital.
5 a Do you do any sports or physical
activities?
b
Yes, I do zumba!
6 a Are you married or do you have a
partner?
b
No, I’m on my own right now.
7 a Do you play a musical instrument?
b
I play the trumpet, but not very well.
8 a How old are you?
b
I’m sorry, I never tell people my age!
* Only this option is recorded on the audio, although I’m
not working at the moment. I’m unemployed is also a valid
response.
Tip: Listening activities are individual activities,
so it’s often helpful to get students to
compare their answers together after
listening. This provides the opportunity
for them to share their ideas and answers,
help each other and correct mistakes, and
increases interaction, speaking and
co-operative learning.
Speaking
11 Ask students to read the questions in exercise
9 again and think of their own answers.
Encourage them to think of extra information
they’d like to add.
Point out the note below the exercise and
remind students to ask if they don’t know the
word for something.
Tip: Always allow a little time for students to
think individually before talking to each
other. It’s very important for them as part of
their intrapersonal intelligence.
12 Put students in pairs to ask each other five of
the questions from exercise 9. Giving students
the choice encourages them to think about
which questions might be relevant to their
partner. Students could also ask extra questions
and give more information about themselves to
keep the conversation going. Remind them to
listen carefully and remember as many details
as possible, as they will need this information
in exercise 13.
MA It might be helpful for weaker students to
make notes on their answers if it helps them
feel more secure.
(The MA symbol in these notes indicates different
ways of working with mixed-ability classes.)
13 Ask students to introduce their partner to
someone else. Go through the Remember box
below the photo. Remind students to think
carefully about the following:
short forms in spoken English: I’m a
teacher. He’s a waiter. He isn’t studying
French. She doesn’t work in an office.
• third person singular s: He works in a café.
• irregular verb have: She has a great job.
If necessary, go through the notes on be
present simple and have present simple in the
grammar reference on SB page 134.
•
Getting to know you
25
To increase interaction and speaking, get
students to walk around the room and speak
to as many different students as possible.
Monitor pairs as they work, making a note
of any common problems with grammar,
pronunciation or intonation.
Extra idea: Ask students to look at the
sentences in the Remember box and make
questions for each one using be and do.
Writing
14 Write a short paragraph about yourself as a
model and read it together. Then get students
to write their own paragraphs and include the
ideas and information from exercise 11.
Extra idea: As a follow-up, tell students
not to write their name in their paragraphs.
Collect in the paragraphs and mix them
up, then redistribute them to different
students. Ask them to read the paragraphs
and try to guess who wrote them.
Take the paragraphs home, select one
fact about each student and make a Find
someone who … worksheet. In the next
lesson, hand out one worksheet to each
student. Then ask them to walk around the
room asking be and do questions and try
to find the correct person for each fact. To
increase speaking and interaction, explain
that they can only speak to one person at a
time – and make sure they don’t all group
together!
Lesson 2 Why are you learning
English? pp 8–9
Aims
The focus of this second lesson in the introductory
unit is to make students think about their reasons
for learning English, to introduce helpful learning
strategies, and to provide some useful classroom
language for asking questions and clarifying
information.
Warm-up
Introduce the lesson by asking students which
languages are the most popular around the world.
26
Getting to know you
Speaking
1 Go through the verbs and nouns in A and B
and check comprehension of news articles.
Ask students to make collocations using words
from each box, then check answers as a class.
Answers
get a job, go on holiday, meet people, pass
an exam, read news articles, speak English,
watch films
Extra idea: You could do the activity as a
game. Put students into small teams and
explain you’re going to say a word and they
have to think of a verb that goes before it.
Then say one of the nouns in B. The first
team to give the correct answer gets a
point. The team with the most points at the
end wins.
2 Tell students to work in pairs and think of as
many words as they can that go with the verbs
in A. Elicit ideas from pairs and write good
collocations on the board.
Suggested answers
get: a present, a promotion, a new car
go on: a journey, a trip, an excursion, an
adventure
meet: friends, a politician, a celebrity
pass: a driving test, the salt
read: a book, a magazine, an essay
speak: a foreign language, Arabic, Spanish
watch: TV, a football match
Tip: Students do not always copy new
vocabulary from the board, so it’s best
to actually tell them to write new words
down. This should help to develop good
learning habits in class and gradually
increase their vocabulary.
3 Put students in groups to study the photos.
Elicit ideas for how each one involves English
and write them on the board. Point out the use
of the present continuous to talk about what’s
happening in photos.
Suggested answers
A The woman is listening to her mp3
player. She might be listening to a song
in English.
B The girl is visiting London. She might be
speaking English to find her way around
and order food.
C The man is taking an exam. It might be
an English exam.
D The people are in a meeting, or they
might be having an interview. It could
be in English.
Listening
4 Ask students to close their books and work
in groups. Write Reasons to learn English on
the board and ask them to think of as many
reasons as they can. Invite students to write
their reasons on the board. Then tell them
to open their books and check the replies to
see how many were the same. Elicit possible
questions for the answers, eg Why are you
learning / studying English? or Why is English
important to you? Why do you need English?
5
1.6 Play the audio. Ask students to listen
and tick the responses they hear. Do the first
one with the class as an example and elicit the
answer. Play the audio again for students to
check their answers.
Answers
Speaker 1: 1 Speaker 2: 8 Speaker 3: 6
Speaker 4: 5 Speaker 5: 4 Speaker 6: 9
Transcript
1 a Why do you need English?
b
I need it for my work. I’m an air-traffic
controller.
2 a Why do you need English?
b
I don’t need it at all. I just enjoy
meeting people.
3 a What about you?
b
I want a better job. I hate my current
job.
4 a Why do you need English?
b
I need it to go on holiday. I’m going to
Canada next year.
5 a And you?
b
I need to pass an English exam … next
month!
6
a
b
Why do you need English?
Because everybody needs to speak
English! It’s the number-one world
language.
6 Play the audio again, and tell students to
listen, this time making a note of any extra
information they hear (note that it’s always
in the second sentence). You might need to
pause after each speaker for students to make
notes. Play the audio a final time, without
pausing, for students to check their answers.
Answers
Speaker 1: He’s an air-traffic controller.
Speaker 2: No extra information
Speaker 3: He hates his current job.
Speaker 4: She’s going to Canada next year.
Speaker 5: He has an English exam next
month.
Speaker 6: English is the number-one world
language.
Speaking
7 Ask students to think of their own personal
reasons for learning English and how the
language may help them in future. You could
also get them to think about what they like or
dislike, find easy or difficult about learning a
language. This is all useful information for you
to use in your lessons.
This is quite challenging, but it’s very important
to get students thinking about their objectives
at this stage.
MA Add other reasons allows stronger students
to branch out a bit and be more creative.
8 Tell students to walk around the room and ask
each other their reasons for learning English to
see if they have the same goals or objectives.
Write useful language on the board to help
them talk about similarities and differences, eg
both of us / neither of us.
Go through the Remember note about need
and want. Encourage students to use the
phrases to help them express their ideas.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page
134 now or at the end of the lesson and go
through it with students.
Monitor pairs as they practise, making a note
of any common problems with grammar,
pronunciation or intonation.
Getting to know you
27
Learning strategies
9 Ask students if they know what a strategy is.
Teach / Elicit the difference between strategies
and skills. (A strategy is a deliberate, planned,
conscious activity that helps us do things.
These turn into unconscious and automatic
skills over time.)
Allow time for students to read the information
about personal goals individually and write
their reasons for learning English. Ask them to
discuss with a partner how effective they think
this strategy is and also encourage them to
share any other strategies and ideas they have
for learning English.
10 Go through the Useful language box with the
class. Say each incorrect sentence or question
in the We don’t say column and elicit ideas for
the correct version from students.
Look at the cartoon and ask students to
explain why the teacher says what she does.
Then look at the six situations in exercise 10
and ask students to work in pairs and think
of things to say in each one. Teach / Elicit the
phrases get someone’s attention and get past
someone. Tell students to look back at the
Useful language box if needed. Don’t check
the answers yet.
11
Play the audio for students to check
their answers. You might also write the useful
language from SB page 9 and display it on the
board. This should help students remember it
more easily and express themselves more in
English (rather than their first language).
1.7
Transcript and answers
1 If you don’t know how to spell something,
you can say: Sorry. How do you spell that?
or Could you spell that, please?
2 If you didn’t understand what someone
said, you can say: Sorry. Could you say that
again, please?
3 If you want to get someone’s attention, you
can say: Excuse me. For example, Excuse
me. Where’s the bus stop?
4 If you want to get past someone, you can
say: Excuse me! or Sorry!
5 If you step on someone’s foot, you can
say: Sorry! or So sorry! or I’m so sorry! or
perhaps Are you OK?
28
Getting to know you
6 If your teacher is speaking too fast, like this
(bla bla bla bla bla), you can say: Could you
speak more slowly, please? or Could you
possibly speak more slowly, please?
Extra idea: To review the vocabulary from
exercise 5 on page 7, write the following
anagrams on the board and tell students
to rearrange the letters to find the activities
and musical instruments. (The answers are
given in brackets – don’t write those on the
board!)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
UMDRS (drums)
DARBOYEK (keyboard)
ATSPELI (Pilates)
NINUNRG (running)
SAPEXONOH (saxophone)
IMMWGNIS (swimming)
LIVOIN (violin)
LALBLOLEVY (volleyball)
1
UNIT
FOCUS
Ways of learning
GRAMMAR: present continuous; present simple; adverbs of frequency; expressions + -ing form;
reflexive pronouns
VOCABULARY: make / do; multiple intelligences
FUNCTIONS: expressing opinions; agreeing and disagreeing
Lesson 1 What are you good at?
pp10–11
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to review the present
continuous and present simple and also to look at
the use of the -ing form with various expressions
for talking about likes and dislikes. Students also
learn about multi-tasking.
Grammar 1 Present continuous
2 To introduce the rule, write some sentences
on the board and also include adverbs such
as now or at the moment to help students
understand the grammar, eg We’re learning
English at the moment. Ask: When is this
happening? Is it the past, present or future?
Answer
is happening
You first!
There are You first! boxes at the beginning of
many lessons in the Student’s Book. They have
three goals: firstly, to engage students and get
them saying something immediately; secondly, to
allow students to use what they already know and
boost their confidence; and thirdly, to give you an
idea of how much they already know so that you
can target your teaching much more effectively.
Students can say as much or as little as they want.
For this one, put students in pairs to talk about
how many things they think they can do at the
same time. Ask: Do you do other things when
you’re learning at home? Do you work and listen
to music, or maybe watch TV and surf the internet
at the same time? (media multi-tasking).
Speaking
1 Write the word multi-tasking on the board and
ask students if they know what it means. Then
tell them to look at the picture and discuss
the questions. Students don’t need to get
the answers right at this point, as they’ll find
out more in exercise 3, but encourage lots of
discussion about possible answers. Monitor
pairs as they work, helping with any necessary
vocabulary.
Suggested answers
1 See Transcript 1.8.
2 Because it’s difficult for busy working
people to find time to do everything they
need to. / The pace of life in the 21st
century means people have to balance lots
of different jobs / relationships / free time.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 135
now or at the end of the lesson and go through
it with students.
3
Go through the verbs in the box. Find
out how many students used these verbs in
their answers to exercise 1. Then allow time
for them to work individually to complete the
sentences. Play the audio for students to check
their answers. Ask one or two students to say
which activity was missing.
1.8
Answers
1 looking after 2 ’s doing 3 ’s sending
4 ’s having 5 ’s working on 6 ’s making
7 ’s paying
Missing activity: She’s reading a book.
Transcript
The woman in the picture is doing eight things
at the same time.
1 She’s looking after a baby.
2 She’s doing exercises.
3 She’s sending a text message.
4 She’s having a drink.
5 She’s working on her tablet.
6 She’s making an omelette.
7 She’s paying for something with her credit
card.
And … she’s also reading a book!
Unit 1
29
Vocabulary make / do
4
Check understanding and pronunciation
of difficult words, eg decision (stress on the
second syllable), omelette (stress on the first
syllable and silent e: /'ɒmlet/), Sudoku
(/suː'dəʊkʊ/). Students then work in pairs to
make phrases with make or do. Play the audio
for students to check their answers.
1.9
Transcript and answers
make: coffee, a decision, a mistake, a noise,
an omelette, a phone call
do: the cooking, exercise, homework,
the shopping, sport, Sudoku, a test, yoga
Grammar 2 Present simple
5 To introduce the rule for when to use the
present simple, write some sentences on the
board. Include adverbs such as every day
or often to help students understand the
grammar, eg I walk to school every day or
I often play video games. Ask: When is this?
Is it the past, present or future? Does it happen
one time or many times? Ask students to
complete the rule. Go through the things in
exercise 4 again, then put students in pairs to
discuss the questions. Monitor pairs as they
work, making sure they use the correct tense:
present simple or present continuous.
Answer
happens
4 I never use my mobile phone in the car
but I sometimes listen to music.
5 They usually send text messages and
look at / read their emails on their way
to work.
7 Students work on their own to rewrite the
sentences in exercise 6. To help them compare
answers with a partner, elicit what questions
they could ask to get these sentences as
answers, eg I always listen to the radio in the
morning – Do you listen to the radio in the
morning? Students then ask and answer the
questions together. Encourage them to use
different adverbs to describe how often they
do things.
Reading
8 To introduce the topic, ask students to discuss
whether they think it’s possible to do more
than one thing well at the same time, and
what the advantages and disadvantages of
multi-tasking are. Tell them to read the extract
quickly to see if their ideas are true.
9 Ask students to read the extract again and
match the words in bold with the definitions.
Check answers as a class.
Answers
1 tasks 2 myth 3 inefficient 4 bestseller
5 employees
Refer to the grammar reference on SB pages
134–135 now or at the end of the lesson and go
through it with students.
Extra idea: Review the meaning of the
words by getting students to write extra
sentences in context.
6 Do the first sentence together with the class
as an example. After students have completed
the task individually, write the answers on the
board.
10 Tell students to read the extract again and
choose the best answers to summarise the
main ideas in the article.
MA Suggest that stronger students do this
without looking at the verbs in the box.
Answers
1 I always listen to the radio in the morning.
I never watch TV.
2 Ruth often has breakfast in a café. She
goes to a different café every day.
3 Jack hardly ever reads / looks at the
newspaper at breakfast. He usually does
Sudoku.
30
Unit 1
Answers
1b 2c 3a 4b
Extra idea: Ask: Are you good at multitasking? Do you sometimes do two or
more things at the same time? If so,
what things? Tell students to discuss the
questions with a partner.
Grammar 3 Expressions + -ing form
Extra ideas: As a follow-up, ask students to
rank the activities 1–9 from most popular to
least popular.
To see if students can multi-task, put them in
groups of four. Ask them to choose a person
from the group. Get one student to sit on
the person’s right-hand side. This student will
ask lots of questions about likes and dislikes,
eg Do you like drawing? Are you good at
singing? Another student sits on the left and
asks quick questions at the same time about
maths, eg What’s two times two? What’s
four plus six? Help students with vocabulary
before the game. The other student in the
group sits in front and makes movements
and gestures. The person has to answer all
the questions and copy the movements of
the student in front of them at the same
time. After one minute, stop the game and
swap roles. Get feedback afterwards. Ask:
What questions did you prefer? Was it hard
to do everything at the same time?
11 Ask students to look at the expressions and
activities in the grammar box and to think
about the things that are true for them.
Encourage them to think of extra things they
could say about the activity, or reasons why
they like or don’t like it. Model the activity so
they can clearly see what to do, eg I’m not
good at multi-tasking because everything takes
longer and I often forget something important.
I prefer to focus on one thing at a time.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page
136 now or at the end of the lesson and go
through it with students.
Extra idea: You could do some revision
work on modifiers at this stage to help
students with their comparisons. Write on
the board: very, a bit, really, quite. Ask
students to number the words from 1
(least) to 4 (most). Then tell students to get
up and ask other students, eg What are
you quite good at? What things aren’t you
very good at?
Lesson 2 How do you learn best?
pp12–13
Speaking
12 Note that this is similar to the 3x3x3 exercise
students did earlier, only this time they have
four things to think about. In this activity,
students work in groups of four to discuss the
things they all like and hate doing. Remind
them that they only have four minutes to make
their list, so they need to work quite quickly.
This helps to focus their minds on the activity.
It should be short and lively!
Note: You need to make it clear that
students have to reach unanimity: if only
two out of four like or don’t like doing
something, then that doesn’t count and they
need to go on searching.
13 Tell students to work with other groups and
compare their lists. Get feedback from the
groups to find out the most popular and least
popular activities.
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to discover different
ways of learning and to write a multiple-intelligences
profile.
Warm-up
Write the following quote on the board and ask
students to discuss it with a partner to see if they
agree or disagree. Ask them to give reasons for
their answers.
‘Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by
its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life
believing that it is stupid.’ (Albert Einstein)
Vocabulary Multiple intelligences
1
GUESS When you see GUESS in front of an
instruction, it means students can talk about
what they think the answers to something are,
but they don’t have to know the right answers.
For more information about these exercises,
see the Introduction, page 16.
Tell students to cover the text on SB page
12 and just look at the picture. Tell them to
discuss what they think it means. Accept any
Unit 1
31
answers at this stage, but explain that they’ll
learn more through the lesson.
2
Ask students to look at the picture
again and this time focus on the photos.
As many of the words will be unknown, tell
students to match any that they know first,
then work together to match the others,
discussing their ideas. Explain that examples of
some of these intelligences will be given later
in the lesson (in the text in exercise 5). Play the
audio for students to check their answers.
1.10
Transcript and answers
A linguistic, B mathematical, C visual, D social,
E naturalist, F personal, G physical, H musical
3
When you see this icon with a vocabulary
exercise, it means that you should ask students
which words are the same as or similar to
words in their own language – and also which
are very different. See detailed notes in the
Introduction, page 17.
Go through the words in exercise 2 with the
class and get feedback about each one.
4
Read the three statements first. Then ask
students to work with a partner and discuss if
the ideas are true or false. Get class feedback
and quickly check their ideas, but don’t give
the answers yet.
5 Students read the text quickly to check their
ideas from exercise 4. Then ask them to read
it again, this time more slowly. Ask individual
students: Are your ideas and opinions the same
as Gardner’s multiple intelligences theory?
Answers
1 false 2 true 3 true
Tip: Try to set short time limits so that students
read quickly for gist and don’t worry too
much about unknown words.
You could do exercises 1–4 on Subjects in
Vocabulary plus at this point.
6
32
THINK When you see THINK in front of
an instruction, it means students should think
about ideas before they start. They could
also think on their own for one minute, then
talk to a partner about their ideas. For more
information about these exercises, see page 17.
Unit 1
Answers
1 It goes back to 1983.
2 physical intelligence (be good at sports,
athletics), mathematical intelligence (be
good at maths), visual intelligence (be
good at drawing), naturalist intelligence
(be good with animals), musical
intelligence (be a fantastic singer), social
intelligence (be good at connecting with
other people)
1.11 Write the /ɔː/ sound on the board
7 P
and elicit the correct pronunciation. Practise
the sound and get students to repeat it
together. Go through the words in the box.
Say each word out loud and ask students to
discuss in groups which word they think has
the different sound. Play the audio for students
to check their answers. Then play it again,
pausing for them to repeat each word.
Answers
Work does not have the /ɔː/ sound.
Transcript
all, board, call, drawing, false, forty, four, law,
more, sports, talk, thought, walk, work
Extra idea: Ask students to write a short
story (about 100–150 words) and include as
many of the words from the list in exercise
7 as they can. Then ask them to erase the
words and leave a gap instead. Students
read their stories to each other. Every time
they come to a gap, their partner has to
guess what the word is from context.
8 P Read the sentences with the class, then
call on individual students to read them. Ask
students to work in pairs to think of a context,
eg Paul has had an argument with his friend.
Get feedback from the class and vote for the
best idea.
Reading and speaking
Explore
9 Go through the instructions with the class.
Explain how the scoring system for the quiz
works. Encourage students to guess any new
words from the context. You could remind
them of the language revised in the Useful
language box on SB page 9 and invite them to
ask (either their partner or you): What does …
mean?
The Explore exercises give students the opportunity
to go beyond the page and find out more about
some aspect of the topic. They should do the
research online, make notes and report back,
working either alone or in pairs. You may want to
set this up in the classroom by suggesting possible
websites or just by eliciting suggestions for words
and phrases to type into the search engine.
Put students in pairs to ask each other
questions 1–8 on SB page 12. Encourage them
to make notes as they work so that they can
report back to the class in stage d. Tell them
that it’s a good idea to proceed section by
section rather than have one student ask all
28 questions, then swap! Ask students to find
one similarity and one difference between
their and their partner’s answers. If they have
the same answers for each question, tell them
to work with other people until they find one
difference.
For this activity, students should type ‘multiple
intelligence quiz’ into their browser and make
notes about what they find. They then report back
in the next session.
For stage d of the task, ask students to report
their findings to the class. It’s a good idea
to keep a note of students’ answers on the
board, as this will be useful when students
write their profile in exercise 10. Help them
with vocabulary and grammar as necessary, in
particular the use of both and the switch from
first to third person.
Lesson 3 Count on your memory
pp14–15
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce reflexive
pronouns and to learn about helpful strategies for
remembering things.
You first!
Ask individual students the question: How good
is your memory? Encourage lots of discussion
and feedback. To help them, ask: What important
things do you sometimes forget? How do you
remember new vocabulary in English?
Writing
Listening 1
10 After students have done the quiz and looked
at the results, ask them to write their own
short profile.
1 To introduce the extract, ask students to
look at the photos and guess how they’re
connected. Help them with vocabulary
if necessary, eg (playing) cards, joker.
Elicit feedback from students and check
their predictions. Welcome any inventive
suggestions.
Tip: It’ll be useful for you as a teacher to have
an idea of where students’ strengths
and weaknesses lie so that you can help
them more effectively. In this book, we
deliberately aim to embrace all these
intelligences.
11 Ask students to do the same quiz at home with
someone they know. It could be someone in
their family or a friend.
12 Go through the example profile with the
class. Make sure students understand what
they have to do. Get students to write a short
profile about the person they chose in exercise
11 and present it to the group in the next class.
2
1.12 Tell students you’re going to play a
recording about a memory champion. Teach /
Elicit what a champion is. Play the audio while
students listen and fill in the missing numbers.
As numbers can be difficult for students to pick
up, play the audio again, pausing after each
section. Then play it again all the way through
for students to check their answers.
Point out the language note below the extract
and explain that we don’t say one time or two
times – we use once or twice instead. Note,
however, that in American English, you may
also hear one time and two times.
Unit 1
33
Answers
1 eight / 8 2 fifty-two / 52 3 fifty-four / 54
4 three / 3 5 2,916
Transcript
An amazing memory for numbers!
Dominic O’Brien has a really amazing
memory and he’s won the World Memory
Championships eight times. There are 52 cards
in a pack of playing cards (without the jokers)
and Dominic can memorise 54 packs in one
hour. That’s almost 3,000 playing cards! He
looks at each card just once, puts it away and
then says all the cards in order. There are 2,916
cards altogether – if he uses the jokers.
3
1.13 Put students in groups to think of ways
that Dominic manages to remember so many
things. Tell them to read and try to complete
the sentences, then get feedback from the
groups. Play the audio for them to check if
their predictions were correct. Play the audio
again and ask them to complete Dominic’s
three-step strategy.
Answers
1 interesting mental pictures 2 pictures [to]
something personal in his life 3 in a special
place in a ‘house’ in his mind
[He] practises again and again and again.
[He believes] he can remember enormous
quantities of information.
Transcript
To remember information, O’Brien does three
things: he changes information into interesting
mental pictures; he connects these pictures
to something personal in his life; and he puts
each item of information in a special place in
a ‘house’ in his mind, so he can find it again
easily. And – something very important – he
practises again and again … and again.
But perhaps his biggest secret is that he believes
he can remember enormous quantities of
information. He knows it is possible because he
knows our brain is incredibly powerful. The title
of his latest book says it all. It’s called You Can
Have An Amazing Memory. He thinks everyone
can improve their memory – at any age.
34
Unit 1
In fact, he thinks we can remember better as
we get older. But we have to believe we can.
And we must practise.
4 Put students in pairs to ask and answer
questions about Dominic and try to remember
the information. Play the audio again if
necessary for students to check their answers.
Extra idea: Put about ten different objects
around the room and give students time
to look around and try to memorise where
they are. Then get them to close their eyes
and try to remember the location of each
thing. The student that remembers the
most things wins the game.
Explore
Tell students to search online for Dominic O’Brien
to find out more about memory strategies. The
Peak Performance Training website has a great
video of him.
Listening 2
5
Tell students they’re going to play a
memory game. Ask them to listen to the 20
words on the audio. Tell them not to write
anything while they’re listening to the list.
Explain that they’ll then hear some instructions,
which they should follow. Play the audio once,
all the way through. Students then write down
as many words as they can remember in any
order.
1.14
Transcript
instrument, exam, holiday, intelligent,
crocodile, crossword, hairdresser, memory,
maths, map, whistle, diary, holiday, photo,
banana
And the last five … unemployed, team, party,
sport, secretary.
Right. That’s the end of the list!
Now write down as many of the words as
you can remember. You can write them in any
order you like.
6 Tell students to work in pairs and go through
their lists to find the words they both managed
to remember. Tell them to discuss why they
think they remembered those particular words
rather than others. Elicit feedback from the
class.
It’s easier to remember things which are
important for us personally. If I have an exam
next week, I am likely to remember the
word exam. If I have an appointment at the
hairdresser’s this afternoon, then I am probably
going to remember the word hairdresser.
And finally, we remember things we learnt
recently – maybe like the word whistle, which
was in the Multiple Intelligences Quiz. That’s
why it’s important to revise new words as soon
as possible after learning them. That way they
can’t escape!
Extra idea: Write each word in turn on
the board – getting students to spell it –
and ask for a show of hands to find out
how many people in the class remembered
that word. Write that number next to the
word and repeat the process for the whole
list. Find out which words many / not
many students remembered and ask for
suggestions why. They’ll find out more in
the next exercise.
7
Go through the sentences with
students. Tell them to work in pairs to decide
whether the statements are true or false. Play
the audio for students to check their ideas.
1.15
Tip: Explain that reading through information
before students listen gives them a clearer
idea of what they’re listening for.
Extra idea: As a follow-up, ask students
to choose the statements they agree or
disagree with and to give their reasons.
Grammar Reflexive pronouns
8 Focus on the grammar box and read out the
sentence (To help you remember a word, say
it to yourself several times). Point out you at
the beginning of the sentence and yourself
later in the sentence. Teach / Elicit that we
use reflexive pronouns to talk about an action
where the subject (here: you) is the same as
the object (here: yourself). Allow time for
students to work individually to complete the
sentences. They can refer back to the grammar
box if necessary.
Answers
1 yourself; myself 2 himself 3 herself
4 ourselves
Answers
1 false 2 false 3 true 4 true 5 true
Transcript
Research shows that most people remember
beginnings and endings but not middles. We
often remember words at the beginning of a
list because we’re awake and interested and
paying attention. And we remember them at
the end because we tell ourselves it’s going to
finish soon and we relax.
Research also shows that repetition helps us to
remember things. We remember things better
if we hear them more than once. How many of
you remembered the word holiday? The person
said it twice. To help you remember a word in
English, make sure you say it to yourself – or
write it – several times.
We also remember words or pieces of
information which are unusual or silly – like the
word crocodile or banana. We sit up and pay
attention. These kinds of words surprise us or
make us laugh, so they stay in our long-term
memory.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 136
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
Speaking
9 Ask: How can you improve your memory? Elicit
ideas from around the class, then tell students
to read the text quickly and underline the
information that gives them the answer.
Answer
… you need to use your brain cells …
you need to exercise it regularly
10
This symbol shows that this is a memory
game – the first of many in the book. Memory
is an important part of learning anything, and
the more we exercise our memory by playing
these kinds of games, the better it will be.
Unit 1
35
Students cover the text and try to remember
and summarise what it says. Tell them to
check together afterwards to find out who can
remember it in the most detail.
Extra idea: Do a dictagloss with the text.
Tell students you will read the text and
they should just listen. Dictate the text at
a natural pace; don’t slow down or repeat
anything. Then read the text again. This
time students should take notes. Tell them
to work with a partner to try to reconstruct
the text from their notes. Alternatively,
they can walk around the room speaking
to different people until they’ve completed
the text. They’ll probably try to copy each
other or group together, but don’t let
them do that, as it reduces the amount of
speaking. Remind them that they can only
speak to one person at a time and they
can’t copy!
Tip: A dictagloss is a classroom dictation activity
where learners have to reconstruct a text
by listening and noting down key words.
They then use these words as a basis for
reconstructing the text. It helps students
practise listening, writing and speaking,
and is a useful collaborative learning tool.
11 THINK This task asks students to develop
their ideas. Ask students to work in small
groups of three or four and make a quick list
of ways to improve their memory. Encourage
them to share their own strategies.
12 Go through the list of memory tips and check
comprehension of any difficult vocabulary, eg
vitamins, plenty, last but not least, recycle.
Tell students to connect the sentence halves
and then check how many memory tips they
had on the list they made in exercise 11. Get
feedback from the class on some of the ideas
and find out which ones they like best.
Answers
1 h 2 d 3 e 4 g 5 f 6 a/b 7 b/a 8 c
13 Explain that the suggestions here match five
of the tips in exercise 12. Put students in pairs
to try to match them up and encourage them
36
Unit 1
to try some of the tips. Ask them to summarise
what they learnt in the lesson and go through
everything they’ve learnt at the end of each
day. You should also include a quick review of
new vocabulary and grammar at the beginning
of the next lesson.
Answers
1 Tip 3e 2 Tip 4g 3 Tip 1h 4 Tip 2d 5 Tip 8c
14 EVERYBODY UP! When you see
EVERYBODY UP! in front of an instruction,
it means that this is a chance for students
to move around the classroom and use the
language they’ve learnt. This kind of short
intensive practice can be very lively and
also very rewarding if students succeed in
completing the task using the language
resources available to them.
Tell students to write down tips 4, 5, 6 and 7,
then walk around the room and find out who
uses those tips.
15
Explain that for this memory game, you’ll
read out some instructions which students
have to follow. Say: Work in pairs. Student A:
tell your partner seven things you like doing.
Student B: listen carefully – without taking
notes. When student A has finished, tell
them as many of the seven things as you can
remember. Then you swap over.
Go through the example with the class,
explaining that students have to give the
full list of things their partner likes doing.
Monitor pairs as they work, making a note
of any common problems with grammar,
pronunciation or intonation.
Art & Music
This section is designed to motivate students and
transfer the language to a new context. Most
people enjoy music and art, and this section also
gives students the opportunity to research online
and bring the information back to the class.
The Art section contains a picture of a painting
or sculpture and an associated task. Students go
online to check their ideas and to find out answers
to one or two questions. Note that all the images
are shown much larger at the back of the Student’s
Book.
The Music section often gives an incomplete line
from a song, or a song title, which students have
to complete. Again, they can go online, answer
a couple more questions, then find the lyrics and
listen to the song if they want to.
Jay Lerner and the music was composed
by Frederick Loewe. The song was sung by
French actor Maurice Chevalier and British
actress Hermione Gingold. In the song, the
two actors remember their younger days and
contradict each other about their first date
together.
For more detailed information about this section,
see the Introduction, page 13.
Ask students to look at SB page 125 and discuss
the meaning of the painting. When they’ve found
its name, they should discuss why it’s relevant for
this lesson (it’s about memory).
Extra questions for class or homework
Art
What’s the significance of the background
in this painting?
Did Dalí include clocks in any other of his
paintings?
Music
Find the name of another song (not from
Gigi) sung by Maurice Chevalier.
Name one other film that Hermione Gingold
appeared in.
Vocabulary plus p16
This page provides an opportunity for vocabulary
enrichment. It’s a flexible section and can be used
in several ways. It can be done as a complete
lesson or alternatively, there are notes at
appropriate points in this book where a vocabulary
set can be usefully learnt and practised. You could
also practise a vocabulary set when you have
time to spare or give a Vocabulary plus activity to
stronger students when they’ve finished a task
ahead of other students.
Subjects
1
Write smuci on the board and tell students
that they have to unscramble the letters to find
the word. Elicit answers from the class. Then
put them in pairs to complete the anagrams.
You could make this into a team game or
class race to make it more competitive. After
students have found the words, tell them to
match each word with the correct picture.
Don’t check the answers yet, as they’ll listen
to the words in the next exercise. Ask students
which names for subjects are very similar
in their own language and which are very
different.
2
Play the audio for students to check
their answers. Then play it again for students
to repeat each word. Check their pronunciation
of difficult words, eg maths, psychology (silent
p: /saɪ'kɒlədʒi/), geography. (Note that there’s
work on the /dʒ/ sound in exercise 4.)
Answers
Art
The Persistence of Memory
Music
I Remember it Well from Gigi (1958)
Culture notes: The Persistence of Memory
was painted in 1931 by Salvador Dalí
(1904–1989). It’s a very small painting
(24cm x 33cm) and contains images of
melting watches which symbolise the
passing of time and mortality. Dalí was
born in Figueres in Spain. He studied
drawing at school, then moved to Madrid
to study at the art academy there. He was
expelled from the academy in 1926 (for
causing rebellion among the students!)
but continued to develop his painting
skills, particularly through his appreciation
of other artists like Picasso and Miró. He
eventually became one of the best-known
and prolific Surrealist artists – making films
and sculptures as well as paintings. You can
find more information about him in Unit 11
on SB page 100.
I Remember it Well is a song from the 1958
American film Gigi (directed by Vincente
Minnelli). The lyrics were written by Alan
1.16
Then ask students to work individually to add
two more subjects. If they don’t know any, it
doesn’t matter, but they should be able to get
other languages, eg French, Spanish, and they
may know science, physics, chemistry, biology.
If not, help them with new vocabulary.
Answers
1b 2g 3e 4a 5i 6h 7c 8j 9f 10d
Unit 1
37
Transcript
1 music, 2 maths, 3 history, 4 sport,
5 psychology, 6 geography, 7 English, 8 law,
9 art, 10 engineering
sentences using the different expressions of
quantity and uncountable nouns.
Extra idea: Put students into small teams
to play a countable and uncountable nouns
game. Tell them you’re going to dictate
a list of things. They have to shout out
countable or uncountable. The first team to
shout out the correct answer gets a point
and the team with the most points wins.
3 Put students in pairs to talk about their
favourite and least favourite subjects at school.
You could also get them to make a class survey
to find out which were the most popular
subjects and why.
1.17 Write the sound /ʤ/ on the board
4 P
and ask students to repeat it. If they find it
difficult, show them how to make the sound.
Tell them to make a /d/ sound and then move
their tongue back slightly to make a /ʒ/. Then
get them to combine the two sounds. Ask
one or two pairs to read the dialogue, then
ask pairs to underline the /ʤ/ sounds. Ask:
What do you notice about the spelling of the
/ʤ/ sound? (It can be either g or j. G has e
or i after them to make a soft rather than a
hard sound.) Play the audio for students to
listen and check, then play it again for them to
repeat.
Transcript and answers
woman Which subjects are you going to study,
George? Geography, engineering or
languages?
man
Oh, languages, Julia. German and
Japanese!
Uncountable nouns
5 Write an incorrect sentence on the board, eg
I don’t know what to do. Can you give me
some advices? Ask students if they can find
the mistake (some advice, not advices). Quickly
review the difference between countable and
uncountable nouns. (We can count countable
nouns, and plural countable nouns have s at
the end, eg biscuit(s), cake(s), girl(s). We can’t
count uncountable nouns and they have no
plural form, eg coffee, milk, cheese.) Students
work in pairs to find one countable noun in the
list of words.
Answer
idea
Point out the Remember box below the activity.
Read through the rules with the class and check
comprehension by getting students to make
38
Unit 1
6
Ask students to complete the
sentences with the correct quantifiers and
match them to form dialogues. Play the audio
for students to check their answers.
1.18
Transcript and answers
1 man
Oh no! There’s a lot of traffic!
woman Do you want some advice? Let’s
walk!
Have you had any news?
2 man
woman No, we haven’t had any
information at all.
3 woman There’s too much stuff in this room.
man
Yes, let’s sell some furniture.
4 woman Did you do any homework?
man
Just a bit. But I did some
housework!
Wordbuilder Verbs and nouns
Elicit the five vowels from students and write them
on the board. Do the first item with the class as an
example. To make it competitive, get students to
race against their partners to see who can complete
all 12 words first. Students compare answers with a
partner, then check answers as a class.
Answers
1 answer 2 help 3 need 4 reply 5 work
6 sound 7 dance 8 exercise 9 drink 10 call
11 question 12 test
The noun forms are all the same as the verbs.
Extra idea: Write the following list of verbs
on the board. Ask students if they know the
nouns for these verbs (the answers are given
in brackets). Point out that in this list, all the
noun forms are different.
live (life), meet (meeting), think (thought), solve
(solution), choose (choice), decide (decision)
Focus on: up and down
Everyday English p17
a Students complete the sentences individually,
then check together. Try to concept-check to
make sure they know what the phrasal verbs
mean. Look up and take up may be difficult,
so encourage students to guess the meaning
through context and think of synonyms (look
up = try to find a piece of information by
looking in a book or on the internet; take up =
start a new activity or hobby).
Expressing opinions Strong likes and
dislikes
Answers
1 up 2 down 3 up 4 down 5 up; up 6 up
Extra idea: Ask: What are the opposites of
the verbs in questions 4, 5 and 6? (speed
up, go to bed / go to sleep, give up)
b To encourage learner interaction and speaking,
put students in pairs and split the vocabulary
between them. Tell them to look each verb
up quickly; they should try to find all their
words before their partner. Then tell them to
explain the meaning of their verbs to their
partner. Students work in their pairs to think
of two things you can do with each verb. Elicit
feedback from pairs, then check ideas around
the class.
Suggested answers
You can cool down after exercise. / You can
let a cake cool down when you take it out
of the oven.
You can cut up a piece of material to make
a dress. / You can cut up paper to make
small cards.
You can heat up food. / You can heat up
metal.
You can pick up a pencil. / You can pick up
a friend at the airport.
You can put down your book. / You can
put down a heavy suitcase.
You can put up a tent. / You can put up a
notice on a noticeboard.
You can turn down an invitation. / You can
turn down a job offer.
You can turn up at a party. / You can turn
up late.
This page provides practice in the everyday
functions that students need when getting around
in English and interacting with people. The main
conversation has a video which provides extra
contextualisation and is fun to watch. (See page
229 for suggestions on exploiting the video.) If you
don’t have the video or prefer not to use it, then
just play the audio.
Warm-up
Write best food / worst food on the board and
tell students about the things you like and dislike
to model the activity. Include adjectives such
as delicious, lovely, disgusting and horrible to
encourage them to describe things. Ask students
to tell each other about their favourite food and
also things they don’t like. Get class feedback
afterwards.
1 Allow time for students to discuss their ideas
for each picture and explain their reasons.
Answers
a garlic b coffee c cheese (camembert)
d fish e perfume / aftershave f cabbage
g onion h grass
Extra idea: Tell students that a UK survey
in 2014 found that these were people’s
top-ten favourite smells: 1 cut grass
2 aftershave 3 a clean house 4 fresh bread
5 Sunday roast 6 fresh flowers 7 clean
sheets 8 shampoo 9 sausages cooking in
a pan 10 leather. Ask students to walk
around and find the top-ten favourite
smells in the class, then ask for feedback.
Did everybody agree?
2
1.19 Give students time to read each of the
descriptions and match them with six of the
pictures. Then play the audio for students to
listen and check.
Answers
1f 2b 3h 4d 5a 6c
Unit 1
39
Transcript
1 I really hate the smell of cabbage. It’s a
horrible vegetable. It reminds me of school
dinners.
2 I think coffee’s an absolutely wonderful
smell first thing in the morning. I need a
good strong cup before I do anything.
3 I really like the smell of grass when it’s cut.
And I love walking on it without shoes.
4 I can’t stand the smell of fish. Or the taste.
Especially salmon.
5 I think garlic’s a gorgeous smell. The best!
Especially when it’s frying in butter.
6 Camembert cheese is a really disgusting
smell. Like dirty socks! I don’t know how
people can eat it.
3 Ask students to look back at the expressions
in exercise 2 and find the words that express
opinions or show ideas. Draw two columns on
the board (positive and negative) and invite
students to come and write the phrases in the
correct column. Then ask them to discuss their
ideas about each picture together.
Answers
positive: I think it’s an absolutely
wonderful …, I think it’s a gorgeous …,
I really like …, I love …
negative: I really hate …, It’s a horrible …,
I can’t stand …, It’s a really disgusting …,
I don’t know how people can …
4
To introduce the activity, write the words
good and bad on the board, then tell students
that sometimes these words aren’t enough to
explain how we feel about things, so we use
other, stronger adjectives. Write on the board:
Guess what! I passed my exams! – Good.
I broke my leg playing football. – That’s bad.
Try to elicit different responses from students
using the extreme adjectives given. Then get
them to write P or N next to the adjectives. Ask
students which words are very similar in their
own language and which are very different.
Answers
awful N, brilliant P, disgusting N, fantastic P,
gorgeous P, horrible N, nasty N, terrible N,
terrific P, wonderful P
40
Unit 1
5 Draw a scale from strongest to weakest on the
board. Ask students to look at the modifiers
and try to put them in order. After they’ve
finished, ask them to come to the board and
write them on the scale.
Answers
3 really 2 quite 4 incredibly 5 absolutely
1 a bit
6 Ask students to work with a partner and
talk about the smells that they like, dislike,
love or really hate. Remind them to use the
expressions for giving opinions, as well as the
extreme adjectives and modifiers.
Agreeing and disagreeing
7
1.20
6 Decide whether you’re going to
use the video or simply play the audio (you
may not have the video or the necessary video
equipment).
Ask students to guess what the photos are.
Then tell them to guess which adjectives are
used for each photo. Elicit their ideas quickly,
then play the video or audio for them to check
their answers.
Answers
1 dramatic, silly, stylish 2 ugly,
uncomfortable 3 cool, silly 4 amazing
Transcript
1 a Wow, that hat’s quite dramatic!
b
Actually, I think it’s really silly.
a I disagree. I think it’s stylish.
b
I don’t think so at all.
2 a What do you think of those boots?
b
They’re incredibly ugly!
a Absolutely! And they look really
uncomfortable.
b
I agree.
a I can’t imagine wearing them.
b
Me neither.
3 a I really don’t like that hairstyle.
b
Actually, I think it’s cool.
a Really? I think it’s a bit silly!
b
Do you? I like it a lot.
4 a What do you think of the sculpture?
b
I think it’s absolutely amazing!
a Me too. Um … what exactly is it?
b
I have no idea!
8 Play the video or audio again and ask students
to listen or watch again and identify the things
that the people agree and disagree on. Ask:
What tells us they agree / disagree? What
phrases do they use?
Answer
They disagree about the hat and the
hairstyle. They agree about the boots and
the sculpture.
9 Allow students time to decide which
expressions are used to agree and which to
disagree. Then play the video or audio again
for them to check their answers.
Tell them to write down the phrase that isn’t
used in the conversations, then check answers
as a class.
Answers
Agree: I agree. Me too. Me neither.
Absolutely!
Disagree: I disagree. I don’t think so.
Actually, I think … Really? No, you’re
wrong.
No, you’re wrong doesn’t occur in the
conversations.
Ask: Do you know anything about aromatherapy
and the effects that different essential oils have?
If so, what do you know? Have you ever used any
of them?
Note: Tell students to be careful to use just a few
drops of lavender oil on their pillow, as using too
much can have the opposite effect.
we don’t say ... / we say ...
This section focuses on common errors that
students of many different language backgrounds
are likely to make. By drawing students’ attention
to them, and making it very clear that these are
errors, you can help students avoid such mistakes.
Check students understand the heading and
explain that the section focuses on common
mistakes in the unit. Give some examples of
mistakes. Then ask students to cover the green
we say … side and to see if they can correct the
mistakes themselves before they look and check.
This section focuses on the following errors:
• incorrect tense use
• incorrect word order with adverbs of frequency
• incorrect use of reflexive pronouns
• incorrect word order.
10 Ask students to look at the photos again and
discuss each thing with a partner. Encourage
them to use the adjectives and phrases
of agreement and disagreement in their
conversations. Monitor pairs as they work,
making a note of any common problems with
grammar, pronunciation or intonation.
De-stress!
These sections do two things. First, they provide
very short practical texts. Second, and more
importantly, they’re there to help students unwind
from time to time. You’ll find a simple de-stress
activity in every unit – not necessarily a physical
one, but one that’s easy to do in the classroom
as far as possible, or else a piece of advice which
you can discuss with students by asking them
simple questions. For more detailed information
about the De-stress! section, see the Introduction,
page 15.
Unit 1
41
2
UNIT
FOCUS
Amazing … or crazy?
GRAMMAR: past simple; past continuous
VOCABULARY: life events; transport
FUNCTIONS: telling stories
Lesson 1 He was 89 years old.
pp18–19
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to revise the past simple
affirmative of the verb be and regular and irregular
verbs, to revise past simple questions, and to learn
vocabulary for talking about life events.
Warm-up
To introduce the story, write the words old age on
the board. Ask: What do older people usually do?
What hobbies do they have? Students discuss their
ideas in pairs. Elicit ideas from the class.
3 Tell students to read the article again, then
match the words in bold with the definitions.
Remind them to work out the meaning
from the context if they can. Students check
answers in pairs.
Answers
1 take up 2 centenarian 3 raises 4 move
5 tornado
Grammar 1 Past simple affirmative
4 Go through the grammar box and ask students
to quickly complete the sentences. They can
find the first two in the article.
Reading
1 Tell students to look at the photo and discuss
the questions in pairs or small groups. Point
out that the lesson title says he was 89 years
old. Ask: How old do you think he is now?
Elicit ideas quickly from the class.
Suggested answers
1 The man is very old and he’s running.
2 He’s exercising / running / jogging.
3 He’s wearing a turban, running / jogging /
exercise clothes and trainers.
Answers
1 was 2 were 3 wanted 4 wore
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 136
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
5 Ask students to read and complete the article,
then check together with their partners.
Answers
1 did 2 was 3 ran 4 came 5 was 6 died
7 moved 8 wanted 9 took up 10 became
11 finished 12 used 13 were
2 Ask students to read the article to find out why
Fauja became a marathon runner. Tell them not
to worry if they don’t understand all the words
– they’ll do some vocabulary work in the next
exercise, but the focus of this activity is to find
one piece of information quickly. Get feedback
from the class.
Answer
He started running because he didn’t want
to sit at home all day. He runs marathons
to raise money for children’s and babies’
charities.
42
Unit 2
Extra idea: Ask students to say which
verbs in the article are regular and which
are irregular (regular: die, move, want,
finish, use; irregular: do, be, run, come,
take up, become).
6
Tell students to close their books. Write the
years on the board and ask: What happened
in 1911? Elicit the answer to this first year.
Then ask students to work in pairs to try to
remember what happened in the other years.
Then they can read the article again to check.
Answers
1 Fauja Singh was born.
2 Singh’s wife died.
3 Singh became famous / finished the
London Marathon in 6 hours 54 minutes.
4 Singh did the Toronto Marathon / ran 42
kilometres in 8 hours 25 minutes.
Grammar 2 Past simple negative
7 Although students often use verbs correctly
in the affirmative form, they often have
difficulties with negatives. Look out for typical
mistakes such as use of no (He no wanted to
go home) and conjugation of both the auxiliary
and main verb (He didn’t wanted to go home).
Write an incorrect past simple negative
sentence on the board, eg He no wanted to sit
at home. Elicit the correction from students (He
didn’t want to sit at home), then ask them to
complete the grammar table.
Answers
1 wasn’t 2 weren’t 3 didn’t want
4 didn’t wear
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page
136 now or at the end of the lesson and go
through it with students.
Extra idea: You could also do some drilling
of contracted forms, eg
Teacher: was not
Students: wasn’t
Teacher: were not
Students: weren’t
Teacher: did not
Students: didn’t
8 Allow students time to work individually to find
other examples of the past simple negative in
the article.
Answers
Fauja Singh wasn’t a young man … He
didn’t come last … he didn’t want to sit
at home all day.
9 Students read the article again and correct the
sentences together.
Answers
1 He wasn’t born on 2nd April. He was born
on 1st April.
2 He didn’t move to the USA. He moved to
the UK.
3 He didn’t live with his daughter in the UK.
He lived with his son.
4 He didn’t take up boxing. He took up
jogging.
5 He didn’t become famous in 2011. He
became famous in 2000.
6 He wasn’t part of a publicity campaign for
Nike. He was part of a publicity campaign
for Adidas.
Grammar 3 Past simple questions
10 Students often have problems with past simple
questions as well. Write How old he is? on
the board and elicit the correct question from
students (How old is he?). Highlight subject–
verb inversion in questions, then ask students
to complete the questions in the grammar
table. Look out for mistakes such as use of no
(Why he no moved?), as well as leaving out the
auxiliary verb (When he took up jogging?).
Answers
1 was 2 did … move 3 did … take up
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 137
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
11 Do the first question together with the class as
an example. Write In 1911 on the board and
ask students if they know what the question
is. After students have completed the task
individually, write the answers on the board.
Answers
1 When was Fauja Singh born?
2 When did his wife die?
3 Why did he move to the UK?
4 Who were part of / took part in the Adidas
publicity campaign?
5 When did Singh run the London
Marathon / become famous?
6 Did he come last? / Did he win?
You could do exercises 5 and 6 on Ordinal
numbers in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Unit 2
43
De-stress!
Write Count your blessings! on the board and
ask students what they think it means (we often
use it to tell somebody not to complain, but to
realise that they have a lot to be glad about). Ask
students to tell their partner just one true thing
about their life beginning with the words: I’m
lucky because …
12 Allow time for students to work individually
to do the first part of the activity, then check
answers with the class. Then elicit / say that
questions 1 and 2 are factual, they need to
work out questions 3 and 4, and questions
5 and 6 are subjective (ie they have to give
their own opinion). Tell them to choose three
questions (ideally one of each type) to ask and
answer with a partner.
Answers
1 was (He was from India.)
2 did (Because his wife died and he didn’t
want to sit at home all day.)
3 did (the London Marathon); was (He was
89.)
4 Was (It was slower, probably because he
was older.)
5 does
6 do
Extra idea: To increase learner interaction
and speaking, get students to quiz each
other to see if they can remember the story.
Vocabulary and speaking Life events
13
Ask students to work individually
to make the collocations, then check with a
partner before checking with the whole class.
1.21
Transcript and answers
buy: a new flat, my first car
finish: school / university, my exams
get: a new job, a new flat, my first car,
engaged / married
go: travelling
meet: my partner / boyfriend / girlfriend /
husband / wife
move into: a new flat
pass: my exams, my driving test
start: school / university, a new job
44
Unit 2
14 Read through the instructions for the game
and model the example dialogue with one or
two students. Then write three important years
from your life on the board and get students
to ask questions and try to guess why they’re
significant (eg the year you graduated from
university, the year your son / daughter was
born). If they make mistakes with question
forms, gently correct and help them. After
they’ve guessed correctly, tell them to write
three important dates of their own, then ask
and answer questions. Monitor pairs as they
work, making a note of any common problems
with grammar, pronunciation or intonation.
Make sure they only ask three questions!
15 Ask the class if they know what a bucket list
is. If they don’t know, tell them a few things
you’d like to do before you die and see if they
can guess through context. (It comes from the
English phrase to kick the bucket, which is an
informal way of saying ‘to die’! A bucket list
is a list of things you’d like to do before you
die.) Tell them to think of at least five things
they’d like to do before they die. They should
then work in groups of three to agree on
three things that they’d all like to do, first in
their eighties, then for a long and happy life.
Remind students that they only have three
minutes to do this activity, and they must all
agree on the three things for the list.
16 Tell students to read the text on SB page 123
and see if any of their ideas from exercise 15
are mentioned.
Did you know?
Students read the information about Jeanne
Calment. Ask: Has anybody ever heard of this
woman? Tell them to find out more about her
online.
Extra idea: Tell students to write down
the things they do to keep fit and healthy.
Then get them to share their ideas in small
groups and do a survey to find the most
popular and important ideas. To extend
the activity and encourage more learner
interaction, get students to also talk about
the unhealthy things they do.
Explore
Reading
Ask: Who is the oldest person alive today? Tell
students to find out more about one or two
people. You may want to start this activity in class
and ask students to finish it for homework.
3 Tell students to look at the photos on SB page
20 and read the title. Tell them to talk together
and write down five things they expect to read
about in the article and to say what it’s about.
Don’t check answers yet.
Lesson 2 He was swimming
when … pp20–21
Extra idea: If you found a clip of Jason
Lewis, you could play it now to create
interest, set the scene and provide extra
listening practice.
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to learn more about the
contrast between the past continuous and past
simple, to learn words for talking about different
forms of transport, and to find out more about an
interesting world traveller.
Note: You might want to find and download
a clip of Jason Lewis to help with this lesson. It
would also be useful to have a world map to
help with exercise 13.
4 Allow students time to read the article
individually and check how many of their
predictions were correct. Ask: Which things
were the most interesting or surprising about
the article?
Answer
It’s about a man who travelled around
the world in 13 years using only his own
power.
You first!
Students work in pairs and discuss if they’d like to
go around the world alone. Ask them to think of
the advantages and disadvantages of travelling on
your own, then get feedback from the class.
Vocabulary Transport
1
Ask students to match the pictures
and words. Then play the audio for students to
listen and check their answers. Play it again for
students to listen and repeat the words.
1.22
Transcript and answers
a hot-air balloon b mountain bike
c cruise ship d school bus e rescue
helicopter f camper van g car ferry
h roller blades i fishing boat
2 Put students in pairs or groups to ask and
answer the questions. Encourage them to give
extra information by asking, eg What kind of
transport have you been in? Where were you
when you used this transport?
Answers
1 motor: cruise ship, school bus, rescue
helicopter, camper van, car ferry, fishing
boat; pedals: mountain bike; neither:
hot-air balloon, roller blades
5
Tell students to close their books. Write the
headings on the board, and ask students to
work individually to make a list of things they
remember from the article. Tell them to check
their ideas with a partner, then read the article
again and check together. Check answers as a
class. Ask: Why couldn’t he use a sailing boat?
(Because it’s powered by the wind.)
Answers
forms of transport: sailing boat, pedal
boat, roller blades, mountain bike, kayak
countries: Portugal, Australia, Indonesia,
Singapore, Ethiopia, Sudan, Egypt, Syria,
Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania, Austria,
Germany, Belgium
cities: London, Lagos, Miami, San
Francisco, Cooktown, Darwin, Alice
Springs, Mumbai, Djibouti
oceans: Atlantic, Pacific Ocean, Indian
Ocean (note that the Channel and the
Bosphorus are not oceans)
health problems: He broke both his legs
in a car crash while he was rollerblading
in the USA; a crocodile attacked him while
he was swimming in Australia; he caught
malaria while he was travelling in the
Pacific region.
Unit 2
45
6 Go through the questions first to check
understanding. Point out that the answers are
not directly in the article, so students have to
work them out. Put students in pairs to talk
about the questions.
Answers
1 He was 39 years old.
2 He travelled east to west.
3 South America and Antarctica
4 He was probably bitten by a mosquito.
Extra idea: Ask students to write five quiz
questions of their own about the article.
Tell them that the answer must be in the
text somewhere. Walk around the room
and gently correct if needed. Then put
them in groups of three and tell them to
ask and answer each other’s questions.
1.23 Do the first item with the class as
7 P
an example. Write caught on the board and
ask students to identify and underline the
vowel sound (caught – /kɔ:t/). Ask them to find
a word in the box that has the same vowel
sound (thought).
Tell them to work in pairs to match the
other words. Make sure they say each word
out loud so they can hear the sound. Then
play the audio for students to check their
answers. Play it again for them to repeat
each pair of words.
Transcript and answers
caught – thought, could – took, got – lost,
heard – hurt, knew – flew, rang – sang,
rode – stole, said – read, shut – won
Finally, ask students to quickly read the article
again and find five of the verbs. Check answers
as a class.
Answer
rode, got, couldn’t, caught, thought all
occur in the article.
46
Unit 2
Grammar Past continuous and past simple
8 Ask students to complete the table with the
correct form of the verb. Remind them that
they can look back at the article to help them.
Say that you’ll explain more about when to use
each verb in exercise 10. For now, they should
just focus on the form of each tense.
Answers
1 was swimming 2 attacked
3 wasn’t travelling 4 caught
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page
137 now or at the end of the lesson and go
through it with students.
9 Tell students to look back at the article again
and underline other examples of the past
continuous. Elicit feedback from individual
students.
Answers
was rollerblading, was swimming, was
travelling, was kayaking, was crossing
10 Ask students to work in pairs to complete the
rules about the use of the past simple and
past continuous. Check their understanding
with concept-checking questions, eg How
many things happened in the sentence? What
happened first? Then what happened? Did the
first activity continue or was it interrupted?
What words link the sentences together?
You could also draw a timeline on the board
to help students understand how to use each
tense. Look at SB page 137 for a timeline you
could use.
Answers
1 past continuous 2 past simple
3 while; when
11 Explain that the past continuous and past
simple can be inverted, with no change
in meaning. Do an example with the first
sentence in the table in exercise 8, eg While
Jason was swimming across a river, a crocodile
attacked him. / When the crocodile attacked
Jason, he was swimming across a river. In this
activity, however, students should follow the
order of the words given.
Ask students to decide in pairs which action in
each sentence was in progress when the other
thing happened, then write the sentences.
Note: They will find out more about these
people in the following exercises.
MA With weaker students, you could write
each action on the board and ask students to
list them in the order they happened. Leave
this information on the board while they do
the exercise.
Answers
1 Jason Lewis caught malaria while he was
travelling in the Pacific.
2 Helen Thayer was crossing Antarctica when
she celebrated her 60th birthday.
3 Freya Stark had an accident while she was
working in a factory in Italy.
4 Ellen MacArthur was sailing in the South
Atlantic when she almost hit a whale.
5 Ranulph Fiennes was walking to the North
Pole when his fingers froze.
Extra idea: Say the sentences in different
ways so students notice weak forms in
was /wəz/ and were /wə/. Then get them
to repeat the pronunciation and say the
sentences in a more natural way.
12 This is the first of regular pairwork informationgap activities. They appear in every second unit
throughout the book. In these activities, each
student looks at a different page at the back of
the Student’s Book. Make sure they don’t look
at each other’s information during the activity.
Check students understand what they have to
do in this activity. Tell them they’re going to
learn about two famous travellers. Tell them
to work in pairs and decide who is student A
and B. They each read a text about a famous
traveller, make notes about them, then ask and
answer questions to exchange information.
Answers
Ellen MacArthur
profession: retired sailor
nationality: British
date of birth: 8th July, 1976
famous because …: She broke the world
record for sailing solo non-stop around the
world.
scary / bad moment: She got very close to a
huge iceberg.
Ranulf Fiennes
profession: adventurer and writer
nationality: British
date of birth: 7th March, 1944
famous because …: He sailed the
Northwest Passage in 1981, he crossed
Antarctica in 1992, he ran seven marathons
in seven days in seven continents in 2003,
he climbed Mount Everest in 2009.
scary / bad moment: He got frostbite in his
left hand – he had to cut off his fingers.*
* The full story is slightly less gruesome than this implies.
After Fiennes’s return to the UK, his doctor advised him to
leave the fingers for a while before an operation to amputate
the dead parts could be carried out. However, Fiennes grew
impatient and cut the tips off himself with a saw.
Extra idea: Students search online to
find out more about the other travellers in
exercise 11: Helen Thayer and Freya Stark.
Explore
Encourage students to search online for
information about other travellers they know.
Extra idea: Ask students to write a story
about the traveller they researched using
the article about Jason Lewis as a model.
They could show pictures, map the route,
talk about difficulties the explorer had, etc.
Speaking and writing
13 Ask students to turn to the map of the world
on SB page 124 and mark Jason’s journey.
Alternatively, do the activity with a big world
map on the wall and put sticky notes on the
map to show the route. Get students to write
dates and things that happened (rollerblading
accident, crocodile attack …) and stick them
on the map in the appropriate place. Don’t tell
students if their route is correct yet.
14 Put students in pairs to check their route.
Model the example dialogue with one or
two students first and point out the use of
sequencers to help them get the sequence of
events right. Ask one or two pairs to describe
Jason’s journey, or ask each pair to say one part
Unit 2
47
of the journey, then move on to the next pair
for the next stage and so on. Tell students to
make notes as they listen.
15 Have students write a summary of the story,
using the notes they made in exercise 14
to help them. Remind them to use the past
continuous and past simple as well as words
like first, then, finally, while and when to
sequence the story. Ask them to share with
a partner afterwards and read each other’s
stories. Monitor pairs as they work, making a
note of any common problems with grammar
and vocabulary for classroom feedback later.
Encourage them to correct any small mistakes
they see themselves, and help each other.
MA If you used a wall map in exercise 13, tell
weaker students to look at the sticky notes
to remind themselves what happened in each
place and then make notes before they write.
Lesson 3 Why was she wearing
a mask? pp22–23
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to continue learning
about the contrast between the past continuous
and past simple, this time when asking questions,
and to find out about two amazing women and
what they’ve done.
Note: You might want to watch videos or
download information about Diana Nyad and
Rosie Swale Pope before this lesson. Diana Nyad
has also given a TED talk, which might be useful
for you and students to look at.
You first!
Tell students to look at the photos and the lesson
title and try to guess what Diana has done.
Encourage lots of active guessing!
Listening 1
1 Explain to students that they’re going to hear
more information about the woman in the
photo. Go through the words in the box and
check comprehension and the pronunciation of
any difficult words, eg calm (silent ‘l’ – /kɑːm/),
rough (gh as ‘f’ – /rʌf/). Ask students to decide
which ones they expect to hear and how they
might be connected. Check their ideas quickly.
48
Unit 2
2
Play the audio. Ask: Which words did
you expect to hear? Why? Did you hear them
in the conversation? Elicit answers, then play
the audio again for students to answer the
questions in their notebooks – they’ll need to
be able to see their answers for exercise 3. Play
the audio a final time for students to check
their answers.
1.24
Note: There are some dates in the audio. You
might want to remind students that we usually
say the years after 2012 as twenty twelve,
twenty thirteen, not two thousand and
twelve / thirteen, etc, but people do say both.
Answers
1 She was the first person to swim from
Cuba to the USA without a shark cage.
2 She was 64 years old.
3 It took her almost 53 hours (over two
days and two nights).
4 She was wearing a protective mask, a
special bodysuit at night, and gloves
and boots to protect her from sharks
and jellyfish.
5 She tried five times.
6 The first time, strong winds and high
waves pushed her off course. The
second time, she had an asthma attack.
The third time, there were too many
jellyfish. The fourth time, there were
jellyfish and electrical storms.
Transcript
ian
What are you doing?
amanda Well, I saw this amazing talk yesterday
by someone called Diana Nyad, so
now I’m looking her up online.
ian
Diana Nyad? I don’t think I’ve heard of
her. What’s special about her?
amanda Well … in August / September 2013,
she was the first person ever to swim
all the way across from Cuba to the
States … without a shark cage.
ian
Wow. There are a lot of sharks in that
sea, aren’t there?
amanda Yes, there are – which is why
swimmers always use a cage. Diana
was wearing a protective mask, a
special bodysuit at night, gloves and
boots, but no cage.
ian
amanda
ian
amanda
ian
amanda
ian
amanda
ian
amanda
ian
amanda
ian
amanda
3
That’s incredible. It’s a long way
from Havana in Cuba to Key West in
Florida!
Yes, it’s about 160 kilometres.
So it took her a long time?
Yes, the swim took over two days and
two nights – almost 53 hours. And the
sea there can be really dangerous; it’s
often incredibly rough and, apart from
sharks, it is also home to a lot of nasty
jellyfish. So it was a really brave thing
to do.
I don’t think I could do that! How old
was she?
Sixty-four.
Sixty-four? Gosh. That’s an amazing
achievement.
Yes, it was actually her fifth attempt
in 35 years. Her first attempt was in
1978 when she was 28. But because
very strong winds and high waves
were pushing her badly off course, her
team pulled her out of the water after
42 hours.
But she tried again?
Yes. Her second attempt was in
August 2011, but she had to give up
after 29 hours because of an asthma
attack. She tried again one month
later, but this time there were a lot of
jellyfish in the water and their stings
made it difficult for her to breathe.
But she still kept on trying?
Yes, she tried again in 2012, but
jellyfish attacked her again, and there
were terrible electrical storms as well.
Those jellyfish sound really scary! But
she never gave up?
No, she never gave up. In 2013 she
finally made it. And as she walked out
of the sea in Florida, lots of supporters
were waiting to congratulate her. It
was a fantastic moment – I’ve just
watched the clip online.
Tell students to cover exercise 2 or close
their books and recreate the questions using
the answers they wrote in their notebooks.
Then tell them to look and compare and also
correct any mistakes they have.
You could turn to the Wordbuilder section on
SB page 24 at this point and do more work on
compound nouns like jellyfish.
4
1.25 Explain that when Diana finished her
swim on the beach in America, she said three
important things. Read the messages first and
ask students to try and predict the mistake in
each one. Elicit suggestions for each correction.
Then play the audio for students to check their
answers.
Answers
1 We should never, ever give up.
2 You’re never too old to chase your dream.
3 It looks like a solitary sport, but it is a
team.
Transcript
amanda … I’ve just watched the clip online.
ian
Oh, I’d like to see that.
amanda Yes, it’s great. And you know what?
Even though she was completely
exhausted, she took time to talk to the
people on the beach while the doctors
were giving her medical treatment.
ian
What did she say?
amanda It was very moving. She said: ‘I have
three messages. One is: we should
never, ever give up. Two: you’re never
too old to chase your dream. And
three: it looks like a solitary sport, but
it is a team.’
ian
Those are great messages for us all.
amanda Yes, they are.
5
THINK Ask students to talk about the
questions in pairs or small groups. Elicit
feedback from pairs / groups and find out what
different messages students thought up.
Extra idea: Show a video clip about
Diana’s amazing journey. You could also do
extra listening practice and include true /
false or gap-filling activities by using one
of the many online articles about Diana, or
watch her giving a TED talk.
Unit 2
49
Listening 2
6
Explain that students are now going to
hear about another astonishing woman, Rosie
Swale Pope. To set the scene, point to the
photo of Rosie and ask students to guess what
she did. Tell them to listen and compare Diana
and Rosie’s journeys. Ask: What was the same
and what was different? Which achievement
do you think was the most impressive? Why?
man
woman
1.26
man
7
Suggested answer
They both did amazing journeys when they
were quite old. However, Diana swam,
while Rosie walked / ran.
Transcript
man
Hi, what are you doing?
woman I just found this really interesting article
in the paper.
man
Uh-huh.
woman About this woman called Rosie Swale
Pope. She’s amazing!
man
Why? What did she do?
woman Well, when her husband died of cancer
in 2002, she decided to run more than
30,000 kilometres around the northern
hemisphere to raise money for cancer.
man
30,000 kilometres! That’s a bit more
than a marathon. What a challenge!
woman Yeah, and especially as she was 57. She
actually set out on her 57th birthday, on
the 2nd of October 2003 … pulling a
cart behind her.
man
A cart? What? Like a horse and cart?
woman Probably not quite as big, but a cart
she could carry everything she needed
in: clothes, food, camping equipment
… She could sleep in it too, and on
most nights she just camped at the side
of the road.
man
Let’s have a look. Oh. That looks quite
big. Did she go alone?
woman Yes, completely alone.
man
What? No team with her?
woman No, she was totally alone. But she was
in regular contact with her son, James.
He ran a website with news about her.
man
So how long did it take her? 30,000
kilometres is a huge distance on foot.
woman Well, she expected it to take two years
but in the end it took five! She arrived
back home in Wales in 2008.
50
Unit 2
What a brave woman.
Absolutely. And that’s not all she’s
done … she’s crossed the Atlantic in
a five-metre boat, she’s sailed around
the world, she’s ridden a horse 4,800
kilometres across Chile and she’s run
across the Sahara Desert!
Goodness. I feel tired just thinking
about it!
Tell students to listen again and decide if the
sentences are true or false. Play the audio
again, pausing if necessary at relevant places
for each questions. Encourage students to
check their answers together afterwards.
Answers
1 true 2 false 3 false 4 false 5 true 6 false
Extra ideas: Ask students to correct the
false sentences. (2 She slept in her cart.
3 She didn’t have a support team. / She
was totally alone. 4 She was in regular
contact with her son. 6 She’s had lots of
other adventures.)
The audio doesn’t say when she had
the other adventures, so you could ask
students to try and find out more and see
if they can add in any dates (solo crossing
of the Atlantic – 1982; round-the-world
sailing trip – started in 1971; across Chile
on horseback – 1984–85; Sahara Desert
(the Marathon des Sables) – twice: once in
1997 and again in 2000).
8
Write the numbers on the board. Ask
students to try to remember what they refer
to. Then play the audio again for them to
listen and check their answers. Ask: Who
remembered the most details?
Answers
1 Rosie’s age when she began her journey
2 the date Rosie set off
3 the year Rosie arrived back home
4 the length of the boat in which Rosie
crossed the Atlantic
5 the distance that Rosie ran around the
northern hemisphere
6 the time it took Rosie to complete her
journey
9
Go through the four things with the class,
then ask students to write notes about each
one. Walk around the class as they work,
checking their ideas and correcting any small
mistakes if needed.
Answers
1 He died of cancer in 2002.
2 a cart containing everything she needed,
which she pulled behind her
3 He ran a website with news about her
journey.
4 She crossed the Atlantic in a five-metre
boat; she sailed around the world; she
rode a horse 4,800 kilometres across
Chile; she ran across the Sahara Desert.
Extra idea: Put students in pairs to retell Rosie’s story using information from
exercises 7, 8 and 9.
You could do exercises 1–4 on Places in Vocabulary
plus at this point.
Grammar Past continuous v past simple:
questions
10 Go through the table first and elicit which
tense students should use in each gap. Ask a
few questions to review, eg How many things
happened in the sentence? Which action was
first / second? Which action shows a longer /
continuous action in the background?
Answers
1 happened 2 was running 3 did … do
4 slipped
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 137
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
11 Tell students to use the words and write
questions about Rosie. Encourage them to
refer back to the grammar box if needed, then
check answers as a class.
Answers
1 What happened while Rosie was running
in Siberia?
2 Where was Rosie running when she
slipped on the ice?
3 What was she doing when a bus
knocked her down?
4 What happened when she didn’t eat
much?
5 What happened while she was sleeping in
Alaska?
12
Go through the answers first and
check understanding of any difficult words,
eg froze (past simple of freeze), weak, wolves.
Students work individually to match the
questions and answers. Play the audio for
students to listen and check their answers.
1.27
Answers
1c 2d 3e 4b 5a
Transcript
1 man
What happened while Rosie was
running in Siberia?
woman Some wolves ran with her for a
week.
2 woman Where was Rosie running when she
slipped on the ice?
man
She was running in Iceland.
What was she doing when a bus
3 man
knocked her down?
woman She was crossing a road in Russia.
4 woman What happened when she didn’t
eat much?
man
She became weak and fell ill.
What happened while she was
5 man
sleeping in Alaska?
woman She nearly froze in her sleeping bag.
13 EVERYBODY UP! Energise your lesson with
this quick walk-around activity. Elicit examples
of questions from the class, eg Were you
having dinner at eight o’clock last night? Focus
on the example question students should ask if
the answer is no. Give students three minutes
to walk around the room and find someone
who was doing the activities in the past.
Art & Music
For the sculpture, tell students to look at SB page
125 to see a bigger image. Read the information
and elicit ideas for the sculptor’s name. Students
may not know any other sculptors, so encourage
them to check online for more information about
The Wave.
Unit 2
51
For the song, write the words on the board and
elicit guesses for the missing word – students may
know this, as it’s a very famous song.
Extra questions for class or homework
Vocabulary plus p24
Places
1
Art
Why do people think the sculpture is by
Rodin? Find out more.
Whose work influenced The Wave? What
similarities are there?
Answers
Art
It’s by Camille Claudel.
Music
year: 1968
last word: Wild; cult movie: Easy Rider; how
were the riders travelling: by motorbike;
where were they going: New Orleans
Test students’ general knowledge by asking:
Which place in the list doesn’t belong in any
of the categories? (Titicaca is a lake – it isn’t a
sea, an ocean or a river.)
Ask students which names for places are very
similar in their own language and which are
very different.
Culture notes: Camille Claudel was a
French sculptor, born in northern France
in 1864. She studied sculpture at the
Académie Colarossi in Paris and after
that rented a workshop with several
other young female sculptors. She started
working in Rodin’s studio sometime around
1884 and they started a long relationship.
In the early 1900s, she developed a mental
illness and spent many years struggling
with the illness, eventually dying in an
asylum in 1943. She destroyed many of
her works, but some do survive and she’s
considered an important artist of the 19th
and 20th centuries.
The Wave is made of onyx marble and
bronze and was first shown as a plaster
version in 1897. There are three small
female figures standing in front of a large
wave that’s about to break over their
heads. The piece was heavily influenced by
Japanese art and is similar to the famous
print by Hokusai. It can be seen in the
Musée Rodin in Paris.
Born to be Wild was released by
Steppenwolf in 1968. It was used in the
movie Easy Rider, about two motorbike
riders travelling east across the USA from
Los Angeles to New Orleans.
52
Unit 2
Go through the headings first and check
students understand them all. Ask: What’s
the difference between a mountain and
a mountain range? (There’s more than
one mountain in a mountain range.) You
could elicit one place for each one to check
comprehension. Then ask students to work
in pairs to complete the table. Encourage
students to add the in front of some of the
items if they can, but explain that you’ll do
more work on this in exercise 3.
Answers
city: Havana, London, Miami
country: Egypt, the UK, the USA
mountain / volcano: Mount Everest,
Mount Fuji, Vesuvius
mountain range: the Andes,
the Himalayas, the Pyrenees
sea / ocean / river: the Indian Ocean,
the Orinoco, the South Atlantic
Extra idea: This activity could be done as a
race with word cards to cater for different
learning styles and start the lesson in a fun
way.
2
Look at all the places marked with an
asterisk (*). Put students in groups of three and
tell them to remember the connection between
all the places and the stories in this unit. Set
a time limit of two or three minutes and get
them to write down as many as they can. Then
tell them to check their answers by looking
back through the unit to find the places.
Answers
Egypt: Jason Lewis cycled / kayaked
through it.
Havana: Diana Nyad swam from there to
Key West in Florida.
The Himalayas: Jason Lewis cycled / walked
through them.
The Indian Ocean: Jason Lewis pedalled
across it.
London: Jason Lewis started his journey
there.
Miami: Jason Lewis arrived there after
crossing the Atlantic.
South Atlantic: Ellen MacArthur sailed there.
The USA: Jason Lewis rollerbladed across it.
3
Explore
Tell students to look up information about the
rivers and where they’re located.
Answers
the Amazon (Brazil, Colombia, Peru)
the Danube (Germany, Austria, Slovakia,
Hungary, Croatia, Serbia, Bulgaria,
Romania, Moldova, Ukraine)
the Indus (Pakistan, India, China)
the Mekong (China, Burma, Laos, Thailand,
Cambodia, Vietnam)
the Nile (Ethiopia, Sudan, Egypt, Uganda,
Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya,
Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, South Sudan,
Eritrea)
the Orinoco (Venezuela, Colombia)
the Rhine (Germany, Austria, Switzerland,
France, Netherlands, Liechtenstein)
the Volga (Russia)
the Yangtze (China)
Get students to look at the list of places again.
Write the Andes and the Egypt on the board
and ask them which is correct. If they added
the in front of places in exercise 1, elicit their
answers and ask for their reasons for adding
the. Go through the places (see the key for
exercise 1) and ask them to complete the rules.
Answers
1 don’t use 2 use
Extra idea: You could give one river
to each student, then ask them to give
feedback to the class about their river.
Extra idea: Ask: Can you give an example
of each item in rule 1 and 2? An example
might be: a group of islands – the Maldives.
4
P
Students often have difficulties
with the dental sounds /θ/ and /ð/, as they
often don’t exist in their first language.
Play the audio while students listen to the
pronunciation of the each time. See if they can
notice when we say /ðə/ and when we say /ði:/
– the pronunciation changes if a noun starts
with a consonant or a vowel.
1.28
Ordinal numbers
5
Help students with the pronunciation of /θ/ and
do some quick repetition drilling to practise.
Elicit / Teach the pattern of ordinals (th after
each number except with 1, 2 and 3).
Answer
You use /ðiː/ before a vowel.
Transcript and answers
1 first 2 third 3 twenty-second 4 fifth
5 thirty-first 6 hundredth 7 twentieth
8 three thousand, eight hundred and fiftieth
Transcript
the Amazon, the Danube, the Indus,
the Mekong, the Nile, the Orinoco,
the Rhine, the Volga, the Yangtze
Extra idea: Write these countries on the
board: Canada, Ecuador, Germany, Italy,
Mexico, Pakistan, Portugal, Switzerland.
Ask students to say them out loud and
mark the stress. Ask: Which one has a
different stress? (They all have the stress on
the first syllable except Pakistan.)
1.29 Tell students to work in pairs and
say each number and write it out in words.
Monitor pairs as they work, making a note of
any problems with pronunciation and spelling.
Play the audio for students to listen and check
their answers, then again for them to repeat.
6
Go through the dates and ask students to find
out why they’re important.
Answers
1 date of birth of Fauja Singh
2 date of death of Jeanne Calment
3 date that Jason Lewis got back to London
Unit 2
53
2
Extra idea: Ask students to work in pairs and
write down five important dates in their lives,
then tell their partner why they’re meaningful.
man
3
Tell students to work in pairs to match the
words to make compound nouns. Go through
the words together and elicit / teach that the
word stress in compound nouns is on the first
part. Say each word and ask students to repeat
after you.
4
Warm-up
Tell students to look at the photo and try to
imagine what sort of story they might hear about
it. Encourage lots of guessing and get feedback
from the class.
Telling stories
1
Transcript
It was a dark and stormy night. I was walking
home after the cinema. It was raining hard
and the streets were empty. Suddenly, I heard
footsteps behind me. They were coming
closer and closer. My heart was beating faster
and faster. I panicked and started to run. The
footsteps ran too. They were right behind me
and then …
Focus on: come
54
Unit 2
1.31 Put students in pairs to look at the
sentences from the beginning of a story. Tell
them to try and put them in the correct order.
Get quick feedback from one or two pairs,
then play the audio for students to listen
and check their answers. Note that students
may not initially suggest the same order that
appears in the audio (eg b could come
before f). Accept any plausible order.
Answers
a) 5 b) 3 c) 7 d) 4 e) 9 f) 2 g) 8 h) 1 i) 6
b Focus on the cartoon and ask a student to
read the caption. Then tell students to make
similar sentences with the nouns in exercise
a. Encourage them to say their sentences
with the correct pronunciation, and ask other
students to repeat each sentence.
Transcript
1 man
Oh, hello again! That was quick!
woman Yes, I came back for my glasses.
I left them in the kitchen.
Come in! Come in!
I can’t come in! The door’s locked!
I came top of my class in English.
Oh, well done! That’s brilliant!
I came bottom!
Come on! It’s time to leave.
Yes, I know, I know. I’m coming!
Everyday English p25
Answers
backpack, campsite, cashpoint, dustbin,
honeymoon, motorbike, nightlife, raincoat,
wildlife, windscreen
Answers
1 came back 2 Come in!; come in
3 came; came 4 Come on!; coming
woman
man
MA You may want to point out to weaker
students that one of the words in B goes with
two of the words in A.
1.30 Look at the words in the list, then look at
the words in italics. Read through the first dialogue
and elicit suggestions for which expression
students can use instead of returned. Ask students
to work in pairs to do the other dialogues. Then
play the audio for students to listen and check
their answers.
man
woman
Wordbuilder Compound nouns
a Write jelly and fish separately on the board.
You could also just show a picture of a jelly
and a picture of a fish. Ask students if it’s
possible to put the words together to describe
a different thing. Then tell them to look at the
photo of jellyfish on SB page 22.
woman
2
GUESS Ask: How do you think the story
ended? What happened next? Elicit a few
ideas, then ask students to work together with
a partner and guess what happened next.
Then tell them to write their own ending to
the story. Monitor pairs as they work, making a
note of any common problems with grammar
and vocabulary and helping where necessary.
Now ask them to change pairs and share their
stories so they can compare their ideas.
3
•
a series of events that lead to a resolution
(I panicked and started to run. The
footsteps ran too. They were right behind
me and then someone grabbed my arm.)
• a resolution (the person said gently, ‘I’m so
sorry. I didn’t mean to frighten you. Is this
your scarf? I think you left it in the cinema.’)
• an assessment of what happened (I felt
rather stupid … but I was glad to have my
scarf back.).
Put students in groups and ask them to follow
the typical structure and create their own
stories. Explain that each person just adds
one sentence to the story. If there are only a
few people in each group, they can continue
around the group until they’ve finished their
story. Encourage them to use the past simple
and past continuous and also include adverbs
such as suddenly to make their stories more
interesting and dramatic. Monitor students
as they work and help them if needed. Praise
good ideas and use of English.
You could ask students to write up their stories
for homework.
Play the audio while students listen
to the complete story and compare endings.
Ask: What was similar, the same or different
about your stories? Did anybody have the same
ending? Which ending did you prefer?
1.32
Transcript
It was a dark and stormy night. I was walking
home alone after the cinema. It was raining
hard and the streets were empty. Suddenly, I
heard footsteps behind me. They were coming
closer and closer. My heart was beating faster
and faster. I panicked and started to run. The
footsteps ran too. They were right behind me
and then …
… someone grabbed my arm. I shouted, but
the person said gently, ‘I’m so sorry. I didn’t
mean to frighten you. Is this your scarf? I think
you left it in the cinema.’
He was holding out a pale blue scarf. It was my
pale blue scarf!
‘Oh yes, that’s mine,’ I said as I took it. ‘Thank
you so much. That’s really nice of you.’
He smiled, turned around and walked away.
I felt rather stupid … but I was glad to have my
scarf back.
4
Explain that this activity will help students
invent ideas. Write the sentence beginnings on
the board and elicit different endings for each
sentence. Encourage students to be creative
and fun and to brainstorm ideas together.
5
Ask students highlight two adverbs in the
sentence beginnings in exercise 4 (patiently,
busily). Explain how using adverbs can help
make a story more interesting. Then play audio
1.32 again and ask students to listen for the
typical structure of stories. Elicit their ideas
and write the main sections on the board.
Generally there is:
•
•
•
•
a typical opening (It was a dark and stormy
night.)
an orientation and introduction to the
characters (I was walking home alone after
the cinema. It was raining hard and the
streets were empty.)
a complicating action or problem (Suddenly,
I heard footsteps behind me. They were
coming closer and closer.)
a description of how the characters were
feeling (My heart was beating faster and
faster.)
6
1.33
6 Decide whether you’re going to
use the video or simply play the audio. Read
the introduction and explain to students that
they’re going to watch or listen to an interview
between a woman and the police. Play the
audio or video and ask students to note down
what the woman says. Ask: Do you think she
stole the painting? Why? / Why not? Elicit
ideas and write them on the board.
Transcript
detective I’d just like to ask you a few
questions, if that’s OK.
woman
That’s fine.
detective Where were you between eight and
ten last night?
woman
Um … I was at home.
detective What were you doing?
woman
I was sitting on the sofa in my living
room and watching TV.
detective What were you watching?
woman
Um … a film. A James Bond film in
fact.
detective Which one?
woman
Oh a very old one – Goldfinger.
detective Were you alone?
woman
No, my husband was with me.
detective What was he doing?
woman
He was doing the ironing!
Unit 2
55
detective
woman
7
So you were both at home all the
time?
Yes. We weren’t near the national art
gallery!
Go through the prompts and tell students to
write complete questions. Then play the audio
or video again while students check their
answers.
Answers
1 What were you doing?
2 What were you watching?
3 What was he doing?
8
Ask students to read the introduction. Check
comprehension of any new vocabulary, eg
activists, research laboratory, suspect. Tell them
to use the context to help them understand
the vocabulary.
9
Elicit / Teach alibi. Ask students to
work in pairs to think of their alibis, but point
out that they can’t make notes – they must
remember their story without writing anything
down. Remind them to think about the
questions in exercise 7 and any other questions
they might be asked. Before they begin, ask
lots of questions to help them, eg If you were
at the cinema, where did you sit? What time
did the film start? Who was in it? Was the
cinema full? Point out that they’ll need to
know the answers to lots of different questions
if their alibi is a good one.
1.34
Play the audio and tell them to listen carefully
to the questions and create a good story of
their activities and movements.
Transcript
Where were you and your partner?
If you were at home … what were you doing?
If you were watching TV … what programmes
did you see?
If you were having dinner … what did you eat
and drink?
If you weren’t at home … where were you?
If you were at the cinema … how did you go?
… what was the film?
If you were at a restaurant … which
restaurant? … describe the waiter!
56
Unit 2
10 Get students to work with another pair and
take turns interviewing each other. The police
can ask questions together, but the suspects
must be questioned separately. Make sure
the suspect who isn’t in the interview cannot
hear their partner speaking. Encourage the
police officers to note down the answers
each suspect gives and see if they can find
any discrepancies in their stories. Encourage
the suspects to tell their stories using the past
simple and past continuous.
we don’t say … / we say …
This section focuses on the following areas:
• incorrect use of the past continuous
• incorrect use of prepositions
• incorrect tense use before when
Ask students to cover the green we say … side
and see if they can correct the mistakes themselves
before they look and check.
Units 1&2 Review
Speaking and reading
1 Ask students to just look at the photos and the
title of the article. Tell them to think of words
to describe each photo and discuss how they’re
different. Ask: How are they connected? How
did the woman change her life to become a
stunt woman? Which photo do you like most?
Why?
2 Allow time for students to read the article and
check their ideas. Ask: Did you hear any of the
words you suggested in question 1? Did you
guess correctly how the woman became
a stunt woman? Point out the glossary
which explains the word stunt, and check
comprehension of any other difficult words, eg
stunt double (students should be able to work
this out from the context), film extra, financial.
3 Give students time to read through the
questions, then ask them to read the article
again. Check answers as a class.
MA As an extra challenge, ask stronger
students to close their books and try to answer
the questions from memory, then read again to
check.
Answers
1 Amanda’s life was difficult as a child
because she grew up in children’s homes,
not with her parents. It was difficult as an
adult because she had to work to support
her three children.
2 Because she had to qualify in lots of
different activities and work at the same
time.
3 They’re very proud of her and think she’s
wonderful.
4 Ask students to read the text again and find
out if the sentences are true or false. Tell them
to correct any false statements they find, then
check answers with a partner. Check answers
as a class.
pp26–27
Answers
1 false: She only decided to be a stunt actor
when she heard there were no black stunt
women in the UK.
2 false: She had all of them before she was
21.
3 true
4 false: At one point she thought she wasn’t
going to succeed.
5 false: She climbs trees, jumps into rivers
and rides bikes and motorbikes with her
grandchildren.
Extra idea: Ask students to read the
text carefully and try to remember the
details. Tell them you’re going to read the
story with some mistakes. They have to
listen carefully and find the information
that’s different. When they hear false
information, they have to say No, that isn’t
true and correct you.
Grammar
5 Allow time for students to complete the
sentences individually before checking in pairs.
Make sure they use the correct form of each
verb: past simple, past continuous, present
simple or -ing form.
Answers
1 was 2 was working; heard 3 decided
4 took; did 5 think 6 loves climbing
6 Go through the answers and explain that this
activity will make students think more deeply
about the text, and they’ll also have to work
some things out. Question 5 is good for people
with a strong mathematical intelligence!
Students can write the questions individually
or in pairs. Check answers as a class.
Units 1&2 Review
57
Answers
1 How many children does Amanda have?
2 How long / How many years did it take
her to train as a stunt actor?
3 When did she get her first role (as a stunt
actor)?
4 How old is Amanda?
5 It says in the text that Amanda is 46
now and her oldest child (Aaron) is 30,
so: How old was Amanda when she had
her first child? or How old was Amanda
when Aaron was born?
6 The question for the answer I don’t
know can be anything where the answer
isn’t given in the text, eg How many
grandchildren does Amanda have? What
happened to the children’s father? etc.
Speaking and writing
7 Give students time to think about the
questions, then ask them to walk around
the room and talk with different people. Tell
students to make notes of their answers. When
they’ve finished, get feedback on their ideas,
opinions and experiences.
Answer
1 She heard that there were no black stunt
women in the UK.
Preposition Park
Preposition Park is an exercise on prepositions that
occurs in each Review unit.
Focus on the picture of Houdini and ask: Do you
know anything about Houdini? What did he do?
Elicit ideas, then tell students to read the text
to check their ideas. Use the pictures to check
understanding of handcuffs and chains.
Write the following on the board and ask students
to say which prepositions to use with each one
(the answers are given in brackets – don’t write
those on the board!): places (in), dates (on),
movement (to), jobs (as). Ask students to read and
complete the article with the correct preposition.
Answers
1 of 2 in 3 on 4 in 5 to 6 as 7 for 8 from
9 out of 10 under
58
Units 1&2 Review
Cross Culture: Social etiquette
Each of the six Review units finishes with a Cross
Culture section. This is often an opportunity to
reflect on how people do things differently (or
not!) in different parts of the world and how we
can begin to be sensitive to these differences and
act accordingly. There’s usually a short reading
text with a task or questions, often leading to a
discussion and a comparison with students’ own
culture.
a To introduce the topic, ask students if they
know about the rules for politeness in
countries such as Argentina, Greece, Japan,
South Korea and Russia. Allow time for them
to read the advice and try to match it with
each country. Check answers with the class
and ask: Why did you choose each country?
Their knowledge of the countries could be
as a visitor or as a native speaker. Encourage
students to check online to find out more
about each one.
Answers
1 Japan 2 Greece 3 Russia 4 Argentina
5 South Korea
b Find out if students agree with the advice. Ask:
Did you find anything surprising? Ask them
to choose a country and find out more about
customs and social etiquette as homework.
c
Ask students to work together and talk about
social etiquette and advice for visitors to their
country.
Extra idea: Ask students to make a poster
of the top ten pieces of advice for visitors
to their country.
3
UNIT
FOCUS
Work and its problems
GRAMMAR: going to; verb + infinitive; present continuous for future use; will future
VOCABULARY: work; professions; future time expressions
FUNCTIONS: giving instructions; making requests; instant decisions and promises
Lesson 1 I’m going to leave
my job. pp28–29
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce a series of
work-related words and expressions, to practise
going to for talking about future plans and
intentions, and to learn more about verbs followed
by another infinitive. Students also talk about their
own job and career plans in the near future.
You first!
Put students in pairs to discuss the question. Find
out how important work is for them and ask:
What do you like or dislike about it? Ask other
questions about their work, eg Do you work in an
office or do you work from home? Or are you a
student or unemployed at the moment? Get class
feedback and check their ideas and opinions.
Vocabulary Work
1
THINK Focus on the photo and ask students
to work in groups to talk about the questions.
Encourage lots of ideas and help with
vocabulary if necessary.
Suggested answers
1 The smiling faces mean ‘We’re happy
with our work, we enjoy it.’
2 They don’t want to tell their boss their
real feelings. They aren’t happy and they
don’t enjoy their work.
2
1.35
Ask students to read the statements
and guess the meaning of the words in bold.
Point out that experience in question 4 is
uncountable in this context. Play the audio
for students to listen to the words, then play
it again for them to repeat each word. Ask
students which words are very similar in their
own language and which are very different.
Answers
1 salary = a fixed amount of money paid
to an employee every month
2 employed = working for someone in
return for payment; unemployed = without
a paid job
3 get on with = have a good relationship
with; colleagues = people that you work
with
4 experience = knowledge and skill to
do something; qualifications = official
record of ability or skill needed for a job
5 business = the activity of buying and
selling to make money; earn = receive
money as payment for work
6 boss = the person in charge at work
7 self-employed = working for yourself
Transcript
salary, employed, unemployed, get on with,
colleagues, experience, qualifications, business,
earn, boss, self-employed
3 Go through the statements in exercise 2 again
and tell students to tick those they agree with.
Then ask them to talk with a partner and
explain the reasons why. Get class feedback
and encourage further discussion.
You could do exercises 5 and 6 on Similar verbs
in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Reading and speaking
4 Tell students to look at the photo at the top
of SB page 29. Go through the words in the
box and check comprehension of ask for a
rise (= ask for more money). Ask: What is
the difference between an assistant and a
manager?
Put students in pairs or small groups to talk
about the questions. Encourage lots of ideas.
Suggested answers
1 in an office / at work
2 One of them (the woman?) is the manager
and the other (the man?) is her assistant.
3 They are probably discussing a project.
Unit 3
59
5 You might find it best to break the activity
into two parts. First, ask students to read the
article quickly for gist and answer the question
What’s Jack’s problem? Set a short time limit
(one or two minutes only) so they read quickly.
Then tell students to work in pairs and
write quick definitions of the words in bold.
Encourage them to read the article again to
help them work out meaning through context.
Answers
travel agency = company that organises
trips and holidays
career plan = an idea of how you want
your working life to develop
leave = finish working
hard = difficult
intends = wants, plans
Jack’s problem is that although he enjoys
his job, his salary isn’t good; but he can’t
ask for a rise because the company can’t
afford it.
6 Read through the questions with the class first.
Allow students time to read the article again
in more detail, then answer the questions. Ask
one or two students for their answers, then
check answers as a class.
MA As an extra challenge, stronger students
could try to answer the questions from
memory first, then read the article again to
check. To help weaker students, identify the
relevant part of the article for each question
(either number the lines in the article or say
paragraph 1, 2, etc).
Answers
1 It plans long trips to exciting places.
2 He travels to different countries.
3 He’s going to stay in his job for another
two years.
4 He enjoys his job because he loves travel
and gets on well with his colleagues.
5 Because a lot of people plan their holidays
online.
7
60
THINK This task asks students to develop
their own ideas, taking the discussion away
from the article. Tell students to imagine
they’re Jack. Go through the ideas in the box
and ask students if they would like to add
Unit 3
any other ideas. Write any extra ideas on the
board.
Model the example sentence with one or two
students, and point out the use of should to
give advice. Write some helpful phrases on the
board to help students express their opinions
and ideas, eg I think he should …, Maybe he
could …
Give students a few minutes to work alone and
think about the situation. Then ask students to
talk together and think of things Jack should
do. Check their ideas as a class.
Tip: It might be useful to ask students to read
the article again and highlight all the
examples of going to and verbs followed
by an infinitive they can find. This gets
them ready for the grammar section and
helps them see exactly where the lesson is
going and what they’ll be learning. It also
helps them see the grammar in context and
makes it easier to understand.
Grammar 1 going to
8 Focus on the grammar box and read the
example sentences. Point out that in short
answers, we don’t repeat going to (Yes, I am
going to). To give further practice, ask the
class what Jack’s plans are next month. Write
the following sentence on the board and ask
some questions to check their understanding:
Next month he’s going to spend a week in
the Amazonian rainforest. Ask: When are we
talking about? (the future) What words tell us
it’s the future? (next month, going to).
Ask students to read the article again and
underline other examples of going to + verb. If
you already asked them to do this (see the Tip
above), then just ask them to look back at the
items they highlighted. Ask them to decide if
the rule in exercise 8 is true or false.
Answers
he’s going to spend a week … he’s going
to visit some hotels … He’s going to stay
in the job
The statement is true.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 137
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
9 Write the first question prompt on the board:
Where / Jack / spend a week / next month?
and elicit the question from the class. Then
elicit the answer from one or two students and
write it on the board.
Ask students to complete the rest of the
questions and write their answers. Ask
students how they might begin their answer to
question 6. Ask: Is the answer clear from the
article? Elicit that it isn’t, so they should begin
their answer I think / I don’t think he’s going
to …
Answers
1 Where is Jack going to spend a week next
month?
He’s going to spend a week in the
Amazonian rainforest.
2 What is Jack going to do in Nepal?
He’s going to visit some hotels.
3 Is Jack going to stay in the / his job for a
long time?
No, he’s only going to stay in the / his job
for another two years. / Yes, he’s going to
stay in the / his job for another two years.
4 How is Jack going to get more business
qualifications?
He’s going to study in the evenings (to get
more business qualifications).
5 Why isn’t he going to travel for a year?
Because it can be hard to find a job these
days.
6 Is Jack going to ask for a rise?
I don’t think he’s going to ask for a rise
because he doesn’t think that the company
can afford to give him one.
Grammar 2 Verb + infinitive
10 Go through the grammar box. If you asked
students to highlight examples of a verb +
infinitive before (see the Tip on page 60), tell
students to look back at those items. If not,
ask them to go through the article now to find
more examples.
Now read through the sentences about Jack.
Ask students to decide if they’re true or false
and to correct any false ones. Point out that
the answers aren’t always clear from the
article, so they’ll need to make a personal
judgement as to whether something is true or
not. You could do the first item as an example
with the class to demonstrate this. Say: Does
Jack earn a lot of money? How do you know?
(No, he doesn’t. The article says ‘his salary
isn’t good’.) Do you think he can afford to buy
lots of things? (No, he probably can’t afford
to do that.) Elicit that the answer to item 1 is
therefore false. Before students start, check
understanding of all the verbs.
Answers
1 false: He wants a better salary.
2 false: He plans to stay for another two
years.
3 false: He hopes to start an online travel
agency.
4 false: He intends to work with a friend.
5 false: They can’t afford to give him a
rise.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 137
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
11 Read through the grammar box again, then tell
students to underline examples of these verbs
in exercise 10 (afford to buy, plans to stay,
hopes to get, intends to work, agreed to give).
Go through the example with students and
explain that they must use each verb once to
write true sentences about themselves.
Allow them time to work individually, then ask
one or two students for feedback. Get general
feedback from the class.
MA For weaker students, write the verbs
on the board and, before they start writing
sentences, brainstorm a few ideas of things
they could say, eg Next week I plan to go
swimming. I hope to see my brother. I intend
to wash my car.
You could do exercises 1–4 on Verbs + infinitives
in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Explore
Encourage students to look online for information
on future career plans and advice and have them
find out details of how to develop their work
ambitions. It would be useful to set specific
questions to give the activity a clear focus. Ask:
What things do you have to do in that job? How
long would it take you to become qualified? What
personal and social skills do you need? What are
the advantages and disadvantages of having
that job?
Unit 3
61
Speaking
12 Tell students to turn to SB page 124. Read
through Roleplay 1 and make sure students
are clear what they have to do. Put students
in pairs, A and B. Ask all the A students to
write notes before they begin to help them
with what they want to say to their boss. If
necessary, model an example conversation with
a strong student. Then give students time to
have their conversations. Monitor pairs as they
work, making a note of any common problems
with grammar, pronunciation or intonation.
Then look at Roleplay 2 and repeat the
process. Help the B students with ideas for
Jack’s options. It might be useful to write some
ideas on the board, eg leave and look for
another job. Give students time to have their
conversations.
When they’ve finished, ask pairs to tell the
class what advice Jack’s friend gave. Find out
how many students gave the same advice.
13 Model the example dialogue with one or
two students. Encourage them to give more
information about their career plan. If they
don’t have a career plan, tell them to invent
information, otherwise the conversations will
be very short! Alternatively, if students don’t
have a job, they can talk about someone they
know who does.
Put students in groups of three and ask them
to ask and answer questions to find out more
about their jobs.
Tip: Always try to relate recently learnt
grammar and vocabulary to students’
own lives and experiences. This helps it
become more meaningful and memorable
and gives them a real reason to learn. Try
to leave plenty of time for freer speaking
activities at the end of the lesson so
students can actually use the grammar in a
natural context.
Did you know?
Discuss the statements with the class. Ask: What
did you find interesting or surprising? Do you
think these things are true? Do you agree with the
phrase ‘It’s not what you know, it’s who you know
that counts.’? Ask them if they know anybody
who got a job through networking (ie ‘who you
62
Unit 3
know’). Ask: Why do people say they’re ill on
Friday? Elicit lots of ideas and get feedback from
the class.
Extra idea: Ask students to discuss what
could be done about the problem of people
being ill or leaving their jobs because of
stress.
Lesson 2 I’m flying to LA
tomorrow. pp30–31
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce a series
of words related to professions and to find out
more about a scriptwriter’s life. It also looks at the
difference between the present continuous to talk
about future arrangements and going to to talk
about plans and intentions. In addition, students
practise their writing skills with an informal email
to make arrangements with a colleague.
You first!
Look at the photos and explain / elicit that they’re
all about crime / the police. Ask students to talk in
pairs about whether they watch crime drama, and
if so to talk about their favourite crime shows on
TV. Ask: What are your favourite shows and why?
It doesn’t matter if students say they don’t watch
crime drama – this question is just to find out
more about their personal TV tastes.
Vocabulary Professions
1
Look at the photos again and go through
the questions. Check comprehension of each
word in the list. Point out that the questions
are designed to help students understand
the vocabulary. Tell them to work in groups
to answer the questions, using a dictionary
or checking online if necessary. Get feedback
from groups and check answers as a class.
Suggested answers
1 criminal
2 criminal, detective, police officer (and
possibly photographer) – because a
criminal commits a crime and detectives
and police officers try to solve a crime.
A photographer might take photos
of a crime scene.
3 A: cameraman B: detective / photographer
C: police officer
4 actor, cameraman, director, producer, writer
businessman, lawyer
criminal, detective, police officer,
journalist, photographer
editor, journalist, writer
5 A
1.36 Say the word actor and ask
2 P
students to repeat it. Offer help and gentle
correction if needed and get them to notice
the schwa sound at the end of the word. You
could also write the word and its pronunciation
on the board and highlight the sound you
want them to practise: actor – /ˈæktə/. Point
out the changing stress and pronunciation on
photograph – photographer (/ˈfəʊtəɡrɑːf/ –
/fəˈtɒɡrəfə/.
Focus on the words in exercise 1. Tell students
to work in pairs and find the schwa sounds in
each word. Play the audio for students to listen
and check their answers. Ask: Which word
doesn’t have the schwa sound?
MA For some students it might be helpful
to read through the list of words with the
class first so that they can hear the words.
Alternatively, play the audio before they do the
exercise, then again to check.
Transcript and answers
actor, businessman*, cameraman*,
criminal, director, editor, journalist, lawyer,
photographer, police officer, producer,
soldier, writer
Detective doesn’t contain a schwa.
* Note that the ‘i’ in businessman and the ‘e’ in
cameraman are not usually pronounced.
Reading
3 Tell students they’re going to read a text about
a scriptwriter. Teach / Elicit the meaning of
scriptwriter (somebody who writes the words
(the script) for films). Ask them to look at the
words in the vocabulary box and underline
those they think will be in the text. If there
are any words they don’t know, get them to
quickly look them up in their dictionaries.
Elicit ideas from the class, but don’t check
answers yet.
Tip: Pre-teaching words helps to clarify the
meaning of new words and helps students
to read the text without stopping to keep
looking words up in the dictionary. It also
helps students to read more quickly and
remember the details more easily.
4 Allow a few minutes for silent reading and
ask students to check their predictions from
exercise 3. Ask: Did any words surprise you?
Answers
Words in the article: change, competition,
creative, crime drama, criminal, do research,
editor, episode, project, rewrite, version
5 Tell students to read the article again and
answer the questions. You could set a time
limit to encourage students to find the answers
as quickly as possible. If you do this, it’s a
good idea to get students to read through the
questions first so they know what information
they’re looking for.
Answers
1 She’s sitting at her desk, drinking a cup of
strong coffee and working on her TV script.
2 In the first two months of the project
3 She’s writing the second version of episode
2, because the editors have asked for a lot
of changes.
4 By Tuesday afternoon at the latest
5 There’s a big meeting at 9am in Los
Angeles with the producers, writers and
editors of the TV series to discuss the next
three episodes. In the afternoon she’s
meeting her editor to look at the changes
to episode 2.
6 Because they aren’t happy with it and they
think she’s the most creative person on the
team.
7 Tony is a friend of Renata’s and she doesn’t
want to upset him.
MA As an extra challenge, stronger students
could try to answer the questions without
looking at the article again, then read and
check their answers.
Unit 3
63
She’s staying in a hotel … (present
continuous)
… the producers, editors and writers are
having a big meeting. (present continuous)
They’re going to discuss the stories …
(going to future)
Renata is meeting her editor … (present
continuous)
… they’re going to look at the changes
… (going to future)
… the producers are going to ask her to
rewrite it … (going to future)
‘What am I going to do?’ (going to future)
Extra idea: Ask more questions about the
article, eg What time is it at the beginning
of the article? How old is Renata? Where
does she live? How many scriptwriters
are working on the crime drama? Which
episodes is Renata writing? Why is she
feeling stressed?
6 Put students in groups of three to talk about
the questions. Get class feedback and check
their ideas. Write their ideas for question 2 on
the board and ask students to vote for the best
advice to give Renata.
Extra idea: To review recently learnt
vocabulary, put students in small teams.
Tell them you’re going to write some of the
vocabulary from the lesson on the board.
Choose one student in each team and
ask them to turn their chair so they can’t
see what’s written. Their partners have to
describe the word to them and they have
to guess what it is. The first one to guess
the word correctly gets a point. The team
with the most points at the end wins the
game.
Grammar Present continuous for future use
7 Write I’m having lunch with a colleague on the
board and ask: When are we talking about?
If they say now, write tomorrow at the end
of the sentence. Then ask: Do we always use
the present continuous to talk about things
happening now? Point to tomorrow on the
board and teach / elicit that we can also use
the present continuous to talk about things
we’ve arranged to do – future arrangements.
Tell students to find other examples in the
article about the scriptwriter’s life. Ask: Which
sentences describe things happening now
and which ones describe the future? Tell them
to only underline sentences that refer to the
future.
Answers
… the script is going to be ready by then.
(going to future)
Renata is flying to LA. (present
continuous)
64
Unit 3
Note: These are things that are happening now.
They use the present continuous, but they’re not
about the future:
Renata Gonzalez is sitting at her desk.
She is drinking a cup of strong coffee.
She is working on her TV script.
She and three other scriptwriters are writing a
crime drama.
Renata is writing episodes 2 and 6.
She’s feeling stressed.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 138
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
8 Tell students to look at the sentences they
underlined in the article, then look at the
statements in the exercise. Ask them to work
in pairs and tick the statements that are true.
At this point, they may ask questions about
the difference between the present continuous
and going to. Write the example sentences
in statement 4 on the board and try to elicit
which sentence is more certain. Ask: Which
one is arranged and which one is a plan? The
difference is often very slight, but we tend to
use the present continuous to talk about fixed
future arrangements.
Answers
1, 2 and 3 are true.
9
Tell students to cover the article and try to
remember Renata’s arrangements for the week
ahead. Model the example dialogue with one
or two students to help them see what kind
of questions they should ask each other. Put
students in pairs to discuss the arrangements,
agree on the correct ones and write a diary
for her week. Then tell them to read the
article again to check how many things they
remembered correctly.
10 EVERYBODY UP! Energise your class with
this walk-around activity. Go through the list of
items and revise how we ask questions. Ask:
How do we ask questions using the present
continuous? Highlight subject–auxiliary verb
inversion: I am travelling by train next week. /
Are you travelling by train next week?
Give students time to think of the questions
they need to ask, then tell them to walk around
and find out about other people’s future
arrangements. You may want to set a fixed
time for this activity to make it more dynamic.
Extra idea: Give students a handout that
looks like a diary or planner. For each day it
should have space for morning, afternoon
and evening. Tell students to write plans
in the spaces for each day but leave four
spaces empty. Show an example planner
so they know what to do. Tell them to
go around the room and try to arrange
meetings with each other using the present
continuous, eg Hi Jan, what are you doing
on Friday afternoon? Shall we meet? – No,
I’m sorry. I’m busy on Friday afternoon. I’m
going shopping with my mum.
Writing and speaking
11 Read through the email with the class first and
do the first item together as an example. Ask:
What words could go in this gap? What word
do we use with ‘meeting’? Elicit ideas, eg have,
hold, arrange, organise. Put students in pairs to
complete the email. Where they think there’s
more than one possible answer, tell them to
come to an agreement about which word to
use. Monitor pairs as they work, making a note
of any common problems and helping with any
vocabulary as necessary. Make sure students
use the correct tense for each missing verb.
Suggested answers
1 to have / hold / arrange / organise
2 project / programme 3 meeting 4 for
5 ’m going / flying / travelling 6 editor
7 are having 8 ’s doing 9 going to
12 Tell students they’re going to write an email
back to Jerry. Ask them to work in pairs and
allow them a few minutes to think of ideas
together before they start writing. Elicit reasons
why Lisa can’t meet Mike on the dates Jerry
suggests and write them on the board. While
students are working, walk around and offer
help if needed. After they’ve finished, ask them
to read each other’s emails and help correct
any small mistakes they see.
Tip: Try to encourage peer correction after
writing activities. This creates a feeling
of co-operative learning and also helps
students notice mistakes, correct their work
and develop better grammatical accuracy.
13 Ask one or two pairs to read out their email
from exercise 12. Choose one and break it
down into sections. Go through each section
and elicit what students might say in a
telephone conversation instead of an email.
Teach / Elicit useful phrases for talking on the
phone, eg Hello, could I speak to Jerry, please?
Speaking.
Students then all work on their emails to
turn them into telephone conversations and
act them out. Monitor pairs as they work,
making a note of any common problems with
pronunciation or intonation. Make sure they
use the correct future forms for plans and
arrangements.
MA For weaker students, it would be useful
to write language they might need on the
board. You could also note down the stages of
the telephone conversation: greeting, saying
what you’re calling about, giving a reason why
you can’t make the date, apologising, saying
goodbye.
De-stress!
Read through the text and tell students to look
at the picture to help them understand the
instructions. Ask: How does it feel to massage your
forehead in this way? Tell them that it’s actually
something we tend to do naturally when we’re
feeling tense or stressed. Encourage them to do it
now!
Unit 3
65
Lesson 3 Will they like this?
pp32–33
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to practise future time
expressions and to use will and won’t to talk about
future predictions.
You first!
Ask: Are you good at telling jokes? Elicit answers
from around the class and perhaps get one or two
confident students to try telling a joke.
Listening 1
1 To introduce the listening activity, ask
students to discuss the questions in pairs or
small groups. Ask: What do you think the
advantages and disadvantages of being a
comedian are? Use the photos to pre-teach
the words audience, comedian and stage.
Get feedback from students and see if they
guessed correctly what a stand-up comedian
does. Ask: How are comedians like actors?
Explain that like here means ‘similar to’.
Answers
3 A stand-up comedian stands in front of
an audience and tells jokes and funny
stories.
2 Go through the statements first and explain
the meaning of the phrase nine-to-five (we
use it to refer to a job where you start work
at nine o’clock and finish at five o’clock every
day). Have students look at the statements
together and decide which things are true for
an actor or a comedian and get them to think
of similarities and differences between the
jobs. Note that students could have different
answers to those given here – that’s fine if they
can give reasons for their answers.
Suggested answers
a) C, A b) C, A c) C
g) C, A h) C, A
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d) A
e) C
f) C
1.37 Tell students they’re going to hear
a stand-up comedian talking about his job.
He’ll say some of the things in exercise 2. Tell
students to listen and number the sentences
about the comedian (not the ones about the
Unit 3
actor) in the order that they hear them. Play
the audio once all the way through, then play
it again, pausing if necessary, for students to
check their answers. Check answers with the
class.
MA It might be helpful for weaker students if
you write the letters of the sentences about
comedians on the board: a, b, c, e, f, g, h.
Alternatively, tell students to underline the
sentences about the comedian.
Answers
1g 2a 3b 4f 5e 6h 7c
Transcript
Hi, I’m a man with a very unusual job – I’m
a comedian. Well, maybe my job isn’t that
unusual. In many ways, comedians are like
actors: we don’t have a nine-to-five job or
regular working hours, we travel and perform
all over the country, and we don’t have a
regular salary.
But in other ways, a comedian’s job is very
different from an actor’s. For one thing,
you don’t need any qualifications to be a
comedian. The only qualification is that you’re
funny – that’s all. We write our own scripts,
and we don’t have colleagues. Actors are
different, they work with a group of people.
It isn’t an easy job. You write your script. You
think: will the audience like this? Yes, it’s funny.
And they’ll love this. Mmm, maybe they won’t
like this joke. What about this one? Will they
like it? Yes, they will! I think they’ll love it. But
you can never be sure. You tell yourself, I’ll do
well, it will be fine. But the problem is, every
audience is different. You stand up on the
stage and tell a joke and the audience loves
you. Two days later, you tell the same joke in
a different city – and nobody laughs. And you
feel terrible. You need people to laugh. And
then you tell another joke – and the audience
laughs. And you think: That’s it. That’s why I’m
a comedian.
Extra idea: Instead of students ticking the
items in exercise 2, you could write them
out on separate pieces of paper and ask
students to put them in the correct order
as they listen. This helps with different
learning styles and provides a kinaesthetic
and auditory focus.
4
Students work individually to try to
complete the extract from memory. Play the
audio for them to listen and check their answers.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 138
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
Answers
1 script 2 like 3 love 4 joke 5 love
6 never 7 fine 8 audience
6 Pre-teach the word report. Allow time for
students to complete the text individually.
Tell them to look back at the grammar box if
necessary.
1.38
Transcript
It isn’t an easy job. You write your script. You
think: will the audience like this? Yes, it’s funny.
And they’ll love this. Mmm, maybe they won’t
like this joke. What about this one? Will they
like it? Yes, they will! I think they’ll love it. But
you can never be sure. You tell yourself: I’ll do
well, it will be fine. But the problem is, every
audience is different.
Extra idea: To set up more learner
interaction and speaking, give students
a text that has more gaps. Play the audio
again without pausing it while students
listen and try to complete as much as they
can. Tell students to share what they have
with a partner, then talk to other people
until they’ve completed the text.
Grammar will future
5 Read through the grammar box with students.
Point out that in short answers we don’t repeat
the verb, eg Yes, they will, not Yes, they will
like.
Ask students to read the extract in exercise 4
again and underline sentences with will. Read
out the rule and ask students to look at their
underlined sentences to work it out.
Note that students sometimes have difficulty
hearing the /l/ in subject–verb contractions,
so write the following sentences on the board
and get them to practise the pronunciation:
I think they’ll like it. I’ll do well.
Answers
... will the audience like this?
... they’ll love this.
... maybe they won’t like this joke.
... Will they like it?
Yes, they will!
I think they’ll love it.
I’ll do well, it will be fine
We use will + verb to make a prediction.
Answers
1 will take / ’ll take 2 won’t be
3 will be / ’ll be 4 Will I enjoy 5 won’t
6 will feel / ’ll feel
7 Tell students to work individually and think of
something they have to do at work (or school
or home). Tell them to describe the task to a
partner and make predictions about it, eg It
will / won’t take a long time. I think it’ll be
easy. Encourage them to use the future simple
(will + verb) to make predictions and remind
them to look back at the text in exercise 6 if
they need help.
Vocabulary Time expressions
8 Introduce the time expressions in the box.
Ask: When does each expression refer to?
Help with understanding by saying: Today is
Monday. Tomorrow is Tuesday and the day
after tomorrow is Wednesday. Elicit which
expressions basically mean the same thing.
To check comprehension say: Tomorrow is
Tuesday. The day after that / the next day / the
following day is Wednesday.
Answers
the day after tomorrow, the next (day), the
(day) after that, the following (day)
All these expressions can be used to mean
‘the day after tomorrow’.
9 Read the examples with one or two students
and revise ways of saying the date. Point
out that in order to practise the last three
expressions in exercise 8, students need to
give a day or date first, eg Saturday is
October 29th. The …
Allow time for students to write sentences.
Monitor students as they work, making a note
of any common problems with dates and time
expressions. Ask one or two confident students
to read out their work.
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10 EVERYBODY UP! Model the example
dialogue with one or two students and point
out the use of will in the prediction and in
the answer. Ask students to walk around the
room and make predictions about each other
using will and the time expressions. Get class
feedback, correct small mistakes and highlight
good sentences that you heard.
Extra idea: Play Hangman (see page 233)
but instead of getting students to guess
letters in words, ask them to guess where
you’ll be later in the week. If they say
incorrect sentences, add another piece to
the hangman picture.
Listening 2
11 Tell students they’re going to hear more about
the comedian’s job. To set the scene, ask them
to work in pairs, close their books and think of
problems that a comedian might have. Elicit a
few ideas from the class. Accept any answers
at this point, as long as students can give
reasons for them.
12 Tell the pairs to read through the list of
problems. Ask: Did you think of any of the
same problems? Get class feedback and write
any other problems they thought of on the
board. Ask the class: Do you agree with these
other ideas?
13
Play the audio while students listen
and tick the problems in exercise 12 that are
mentioned. Tell students to check their answers
with a partner, then check answers with the
class.
1.39
Answers
b, g, d, e, f
Transcript
One problem comedians have is that we have
to travel a lot. Most comedians travel between
40 and 50 weeks a year. You usually have
half the week at home and half the week
away from home. Here’s an example from
my schedule. This week and next week I’m
performing in three different clubs in London.
The week after that, I’m working in Scotland.
That will be hard work, I can tell you – it isn’t
easy being an English comedian in Scotland!
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Unit 3
The following week, I have no work so I’ll be at
home. That’s OK, I’m happy to spend time with
my family. The week after that, I’m going to be
in London again, performing at the same clubs
as before.
All this travelling is quite hard. It isn’t good
for your relationships, you know, with your
partner and your family. And the money isn’t
great, either. And nothing’s certain. Will I have
work in May? Maybe I will, maybe I won’t. And
when there’s no work, there’s no money. And
I have a family! You have to really love being a
comedian to stay in the job.
14 Go through the questions first and highlight
the use of the time expressions. Tell students to
listen again and work out what the comedian
will be doing at these different times. Play
the audio again and have them answer the
questions.
MA For weaker students, it might be helpful
to write the time expressions on the board and
elicit the timeframe, eg this week, next week,
the week after that, the following week (ie this
refers to four consecutive weeks).
Answers
1 He’s performing in three different clubs in
London.
2 He’s working in Scotland.
3 He’ll be at home.
4 Because he has no work that week.
5 He’ll be in London, performing at the same
clubs as before.
Tips: Giving students time to look at the
questions first means they know what to
listen for.
Try not to ask students if they want to
listen to the audio again. It’s important to
walk around and monitor how students are
doing when they’re doing listening tasks.
This means that you can actually see if they
need to listen to the audio again and then
play and pause the audio as needed.
Extra ideas: As this audio is quite dense,
with a lot of information in a short
time, it would be useful to ask some
extra questions, eg How many hours do
comedians usually travel in a year? Does
the comedian like being at home? Why
isn’t the work certain? Why does the
comedian say ‘And I have a family!’?
Tell students to work in pairs and compare
the jobs of a comedian and a lawyer. Ask:
Would you like to be a comedian or a
lawyer? Talk about qualifications, working
hours, colleagues, salary, time with partner
and family, travel, type of employment.
Speaking
15 Ask students to work in small groups and talk
about why they like or dislike their jobs. If they
don’t have a job yet, tell them to imagine a job
they’d like to have in the future.
Model the example sentence and focus on
the use of will to make a prediction and
also the use of for to talk about a period of
time. Tell students to take turns to give their
information to the other people in the group
and encourage them to write one or two
predictions for each person as they listen to
each other.
MA Help weaker students by brainstorming
lots of different jobs and writing them on the
board. It might also be useful to do an example
first with the class. Talk about your job and
say why you enjoy (or don’t enjoy!) being a
teacher. Ask: Do you think I’ll still be a teacher
in five years? How long do you think I’ll stay in
this job?
Tip: Write your questions on the board and
keep them and the jobs there during the
speaking activity to remind students during
their conversations. Leaving sentences
highlighting the grammar focus on the
board is very useful as students can use
them throughout an activity.
16 Model the example dialogue with one or two
students. Highlight the expressions they can
use, eg That’s interesting. Sorry, I don’t think
... Elicit other expressions from the class, eg
I agree / I don’t agree. I think you’re wrong.
Yes, that’s right, etc. Tell students to discuss
their predictions together. Find out how many
people in each group made the same or similar
predictions about the others in the group.
17 Allow students time to work in pairs and talk
about the cartoon. Ask: What’s happening in
the picture? Does the comedian look happy?
Why not? Encourage lots of active discussion.
Elicit answers for question 1 from several pairs
and see if they agree.
Answer
The audience is bored; they don’t think
she’s funny.
18 Ask pairs to read out their ideas to the
question What do you think the comedian is
thinking? Accept any logical ideas – there’s no
correct answer. Do a class vote on the best or
funniest ideas.
Explore
For this activity, students should type the name
of their favourite comedian into a search engine.
Encourage them to find a video clip that shows the
comedian telling jokes. Ask them to write down
one or two jokes that they can bring into class.
However, they should make sure that the jokes are
appropriate!
Art & Music
For the painting, tell students they can see a larger
version on SB page 125. Tell them to read the
questions and see what they can find out online.
A good starting point would be to search using
the painting’s title and the artist’s name, then
research more about the people in the painting.
For the song, ask students if anybody knows
these lyrics and can sing them – it’s a very wellknown song, so somebody may know it. Tell them
to find the video for the song on YouTube. It’s a
wonderful video and has a very famous actor in it.
Extra questions for class or homework
Art
Find out one extra piece of information about
each of the Marx Brothers.
Find one other painting by Bill Manson and
write a short description of it.
Music
Who were the two actors in the video with
Bobby McFerrin? Find out more about
them.
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Answers
Art
They were actors and comedians and they
were called the Marx Brothers.
Music
Song: worry, be happy
McFerrin says that when you worry, you
make it double; you should call him when
you worry so that he can make you happy.
Culture notes: Bill Manson is an artist who
lives and works in Arizona in the USA. He’s
also a drummer and has played around the
world for over 25 years – his musical tastes
influencing his strong images. He’s also a
trained designer and this led him to start
painting his colourful images – many of
well-known artists, singers and sports men
and women.
Three’s Comedy is a painting he did in 2011
of the Marx Brothers. They were a family
comedy act, performing from 1905 to 1949.
There were five brothers, and initially all
five of them were in the act, but eventually
the two younger brothers left and the three
older brothers – Chico, Harpo and Groucho
– became the act. They all had very distinct
comedy personalities. They were already
popular on the stage when ‘talking movies’
were developed, so they moved from stage
to film and became even more successful.
The three brothers made 13 films together
and five of these films were selected by the
American Film Institute as among the top
100 comedy films.
Bobby McFerrin is an American musician
and singer who’s famous for his 1988 song
Don’t Worry, Be Happy. The song was a
number-one hit in the USA and won three
Grammy Awards in 1989. The song was also
a top-ten hit in 17 countries, and the original
video included the comedians Robin Williams
and Bill Irwin. Bobby McFerrin has won
ten other Grammy Awards for songs such
as Another Night In Tunisia (1985), Round
Midnight (1986 and 1992), What Is This
Thing Called Love and The Elephant’s Child
(1987) and Brothers (1988). He’s also been
a guest conductor for symphony orchestras
and makes volunteer appearances as a guest
music teacher at schools in America.
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Unit 3
Vocabulary plus p34
Verb + infinitive
1 Before students start the activity, ask them to
cover the conversations and just look at the
pictures. Ask: What do you think is happening
in each picture? Elicit some ideas, then put
students in pairs to read the conversations and
match them with the pictures. Point out that
there’s one conversation that doesn’t go with
any of the pictures. Check comprehension of
the words in bold.
Elicit answers from the pairs and ask them to
give reasons for their choice. Check answers
as a class.
Answers
A4 B3 C2
1.40 Say the words in bold on their
2 P
own: promised, arranged, managed. Ask:
What sound do you hear at the end of each
word? (promised = /t/, arranged and managed
= /d/). Now say quickly: promised to. Ask:
Can you hear the sound /t/ twice? Elicit that
you can only hear it once. Do the same with
arranged to and managed to. Ask: Can you
hear the sound /d/ before you hear the /t/
sound in ‘to’? Elicit that you can’t hear it.
Teach / Elicit that this is because in rapid
speech we often run sounds together.
Play the audio and ask students if they can
hear the /d/ at the end of each word in bold.
You may need to play the audio two or three
times for students to hear the sound correctly.
Answer
No, you can’t hear the ‘d’.
Transcript
1 You promised to do it.
2 I’ve arranged to give you a rise.
3 I managed to do it.
3 P Play the audio again for students to repeat
the sentences.
4 Check pronunciation of the words in bold in
exercise 1. Focus particularly on expected. Ask:
Does this have a /t/ or a /d/ sound at the end?
Elicit that it doesn’t have either – it has the
sound /ɪd/.
Allow students time to work in pairs to write
three short conversations, using the words in
bold and the conversations in exercise 1 as a
model. Go around the class helping with ideas
or vocabulary where needed.
MA Elicit ideas from the class before they start
and write them on the board to help weaker
students.
When they’ve finished, ask students to practise
their conversations with two other pairs.
Monitor pairs as they practise, making a note
of any common problems with pronunciation
or intonation, focusing particularly on how
students join words in rapid speech.
Extra idea: Tell students to write their
conversations but miss out the verbs in
each one. Tell them to swap conversations
with another pair and guess what the
missing verbs are in the conversations from
context.
Similar words
5 Go through the sentences and point out the
words in italics. Do the first one with the class
as an example. Ask: What does ‘part-time’
mean? What does ‘full-time’ mean? Elicit that
they have a different meaning.
Allow students time to work individually or in
pairs to go through the remaining sentences.
Encourage pairs to give simple definitions of
each word. Check answers as a class.
Tip: Explain that it can be very useful to try and
give a definition of a word using other
simpler words, eg part-time = when you
don’t work every day, or when you perhaps
work in the morning, but not in the
afternoon. Tell students that if they don’t
know a word in English, this can be one
way of finding out what it is from a native
speaker.
Answers
1 A full-time job is one that involves
working the whole working week
(around 40 hours a week). A part-time
job is one that involves working only
part of the working week (20 hours a
week or less).
2 Work and job mean roughly the same
in this sentence. However, point out
that work is uncountable, and while a
job is the name of the work that you do
to earn money, work is more general. It
can mean ‘job’ but it can also mean the
different activities you do in your job,
and also anything that requires effort.
3 A career is a progression through your
working life, probably involving several
jobs.
4 Salary and pay mean roughly the same
in this sentence.
5 If you’re out of work, you’re
unemployed. If you’re at work, you’re
at the office (or other place that you
work).
6 An employer pays someone to work for
them. An employee is paid to work for
someone else.
6 Tell students to work in their pairs to talk about
their own jobs using the words from exercise 5.
If they don’t have a job, they can talk about
the job of somebody they know well, or make
up a job.
Focus on: Phrasal verbs
a Go through the verbs with the class. Teach /
Elicit that these are all phrasal (or multi-word)
verbs, so they’re made up of a verb, eg deal,
and a preposition (or particle), eg with. Point
out that the meaning of the phrasal verb can’t
usually be guessed from the meaning of just
the verb. Note that at this stage, we’re just
dealing with meaning and not going into the
grammar of phrasal verbs.
Tell students to check the meaning of
the phrasal verbs (they can look them up
in a dictionary or online) and complete
the paragraph. Remind them to use the
correct tense in each gap (present simple or
continuous).
MA To help weaker students, go through the
gaps first and identify which tense is needed in
each one. For each gap, ask: Is this something
that happens regularly, or is it happening now?
Check answers with the class.
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Answers
1 work for 2 go in 3 working on
4 deal with 5 work out 6 look for
Answers
5 and 8 are the least polite as they use
imperatives. Note, however, that sentence
5 also uses please, which does make it
more polite than sentence 8.
Sentence 7 could also be considered less
polite than the others.
b Put students in pairs to ask and answer the
questions. Tell them to look at the questions
and underline the phrasal verbs first. Elicit
feedback from the class.
Extra idea: Ask students to say what they
answered for the first question. Put the
class into two groups – those who think
it’s better to work for a big company and
those who think it’s better to work for a
small one. Ask each group to write five
reasons why they think they’re correct,
then give groups one minute to try and
convince the other group of their position.
2 Go through the instructions and model an
example dialogue with a strong student. Make
a request or give an instruction, eg Could you
open the door, please? and ask the student
to do the action. Choose another student and
give an instruction, eg Tell Tia to stop writing.
The student should follow the instruction or
give a reply, eg OK.
Put students in groups to practise making
requests and giving instructions. Monitor
groups as they practise, making a note
of any common problems with grammar,
pronunciation or intonation.
Everyday English p35
Giving instructions; making requests
1 Go through the verbs in bold and check
comprehension. Ask: What word comes after
each verb? Elicit that it’s an object (you, Yoko,
him, etc). Ask: What comes next? Elicit that
it’s an infinitive with to (to think, to do, to
come, etc). Explain that we often use this
structure (verb + object + infinitive) to give
instructions or make requests. Point out that in
the negative, we say not to, eg Tell him not to
do that. Look at question 1 together. Ask: Can
we say ‘We want to think about this carefully’
here, or does that mean something different?
Teach / Elicit that it has a very different
meaning to We want you to think about this
very carefully.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page
138 now or at the end of the lesson and go
through it with students.
Ask them to read the sentences and work
out which ones sound the least polite. Ask:
Why do you think they aren’t as polite as the
others? Show how we use modal verbs such as
can, could and would to be more friendly and
polite.
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Unit 3
3 Explain that you’re going to watch a video
(or just listen to a conversation) between a
manager and an employee. Go through the
questions with the class and tell students to
look at the photos. Ask: Which person do you
think is Luke? Which person is Mehmet? Make
sure they’re clear about the difference between
a manager and an office worker.
Students work in pairs or small groups to
predict answers to the questions. Elicit a few
ideas from the class, but don’t tell them if
they’re right or wrong.
4
1.41 6 Decide whether you’re going to use
the video or simply play the audio. Pre-teach
document, urgent and chat. Play the video or
audio for students to watch or listen and check
their predictions.
Answers
1 Luke asks Mehmet to look at a
document.
2 He tells them to get back to work.
Transcript
luke
Could you take a look at this
document, Mehmet?
mehmet No problem.
luke
When can you do it? It’s pretty urgent.
mehmet
luke
mehmet
luke
mehmet
luke
mehmet
luke
I’m very busy today. Let me think …
I can look at it first thing tomorrow.
Is that OK?
That’s fine, but I need you to write a
report on it by Friday.
Sure thing. You’ll have it on Friday,
that’s a promise.
Excellent!
I’m getting a coffee, do you want one,
Luke?
Thanks, yes, I’ll have it black, no sugar.
And, um, can you tell everyone to stop
chatting and do some work?
You tell them, Luke. They’ll run to their
desks!
Hey, guys, get back to work!
Useful expressions
5 Go through the phrases in the box. Ask
students to complete the conversation, then
compare answers with a partner. Don’t check
answers as a class yet.
MA To provide help for weaker students, play
the video or audio again before students
complete the conversation.
6 Play the video or audio again (up to Excellent!)
for students to check their answers.
Answers
1 take a look 2 No problem 3 pretty
4 Let me think 5 first thing 6 Sure thing
7 that’s a promise
Instant decisions and promises
7 Read the sentences in the table and teach /
elicit the difference between an instant
decision and a promise. Point out that very
often they’re the same thing.
Tell students to turn to SB page 148 and look
at transcript 1.41. Tell them to find all the
examples of will in the conversation and work
in pairs to decide whether they’re an instant
decision, a promise or a prediction. Elicit a few
answers from students, then check answers as
a class.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 138
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
8 Tell students to look at the sentences in
exercise 1 again. Put students in pairs and tell
them to take turns reading out a sentence,
then making a decision or a promise. Model
the first one as an example with a strong
student. Elicit ideas for a relevant response,
eg OK, I’ll think about it very carefully.
MA As an extra challenge, stronger students
could write two or three more sentences
and use these to elicit a response from their
partner.
Extra idea: Create a grammar quiz with
ten to 15 sentences and questions that
review the language from this unit. Put
students in small groups and get them to
answer the questions together. Tell them
they can look in their books to help them.
The team with the most correct answers at
the end is the winner.
Example questions:
1 Which sentence is a future
arrangement? ‘I’m meeting Tom at the
restaurant tomorrow’ or ‘I’m going to
visit my friends at the weekend’?
2 Which sentence is a prediction? ‘I think
it’s going to rain’ or ‘I’m going to meet
my friends next week’?
we don’t say … / we say …
This section focuses on the following areas:
• omission of to in the structure verb + infinitive
• incorrect future tense use for talking about an
intention
• incorrect future tense use for a prediction
• incorrect use of don’t for a negative instruction
Ask students to cover the green we say … side
and see if they can correct the mistakes themselves
before they look and check.
Answers
a) I’ll have it black
b) You’ll have it on Friday
c) They’ll run to their desks!
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4
UNIT
FOCUS
How we live
GRAMMAR: present perfect v past simple; for and since; already,
VOCABULARY: technology, household items, household tasks
FUNCTIONS: opening and closing a conversation
Lesson 1 Have you ever
written a blog? pp36–37
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce a series of
words and phrases to do with technology, and to
focus on the different uses of the present perfect
to describe past experiences and the past simple
to give more details. Students then talk about their
own experiences with technology.
Note: It would be useful to bring in some photos
of people using technology for this lesson, in
particular people looking at their mobiles instead
of each other in a restaurant or home situation.
You first!
Tell students to talk with a partner about how
long they spend online each day. Ask: Do you
think you spend too long using laptops, tablets or
smartphones? Elicit feedback from the class and
ask for their reasons.
Vocabulary Technology
1 Read the definition of technophobe together.
Check comprehension of advanced technology
by asking for more examples, eg a mobile
phone, tablet. Then ask students to discuss the
question.
2 Explain / Elicit the fact that How technological
are you? means ‘How much do you like using
technology? How good are you with it? Do you
have problems using it?’. Go through the quiz
with the class first. Find out how many people
already know the words in bold – many of
these are the same in different languages, so
they may be able to guess the meaning if they
don’t know it already. Put students in pairs to
work through the words. They can either use a
dictionary or look them up online if they don’t
know them.
Answers
gadgets = small devices or machines with a
particular purpose
74
Unit 4
yet, just
e-reader = a small computer on which you
can read books
download = to copy or move programs
or information into a computer’s memory,
usually from the internet
software = computer programs
hardware = the physical and electronic
parts of a computer
blogs = online diaries
printer = a machine linked to a computer
that prints onto paper
put it right = correct or resolve something
3 Do the first question with a student as an
example. If they answer yes, give them one
point. Tell students to do the quiz with a
partner and give a point for each answer as
follows: 1 Yes, 2 No, 3 Yes, 4 Very important,
5 Yes; yes, 6 Yes, 7 Yes. Explain that if they get
7 points, they’re very good with technology.
It would be a good idea for students to
alternate asking questions, rather than one
person asking all the questions, then swapping
over. This will help to keep the interest level up
and will encourage interaction and speaking.
Ask: How many people in the class are / aren’t
very good with technology?
You could do exercises 1 and 2 on Technology in
Vocabulary plus at this point.
Reading
4 Ask: What do you think ‘opposites attract’
means? (When people are very different,
they often like each other.) Do you think it’s
true? Ask for ideas and reasons. Allow time
for students to read the article and quickly
describe Fergus and Dan.
Suggested answers
Fergus is an artist. He hates technology and
has never used a computer.
Dan is a journalist. He loves technology but
realises that face-to-face communication is
important too.
Tip: It’s a good idea to set a focus question
(with an answer that can be found
somewhere near the end of the text) to
give students a reason to read quickly for
gist. Ask them to write down the answer.
They’ll often just try to underline it,
but it’s better if they write it, as this
gives you a clear visual sign that they’ve
finished reading.
Extra idea: Write the title of the article
Opposites attract on the board. Ask
students to work with a partner and write
down as many words as they can using the
letters in the title. Model the activity on the
board with words like sit and act so they can
see what to do. You could make this into a
competition by setting a short time limit.
5
Go through the list of things and
write them on the board. Check students
understand personal (Phone calls are so much
more personal). Tell students to write down
everything they can remember from the article
about these things and Fergus. Tell them to
check with a partner and see who remembered
the most things. Get feedback from pairs, then
give them time to read the article again to
check their answers.
MA Encourage stronger students to give a little
bit more detailed information. You can get
slightly shorter answers off weaker students,
as they may not yet have the language or
confidence to give longer answers. Point out
that comprehension is the aim here, not using
language correctly.
Answers
1 Fergus has never used a computer.
When someone gave him one, he put it
in a cupboard.
2 He has used a mobile phone, but only
for phone calls, not for texts.
3 He thinks phone calls are more personal
than text messages.
4 He has never watched a video on
YouTube.
5 He read Dan’s latest blog last week.
6
THINK Ask students to discuss the questions
together. Elicit class feedback and find out their
ideas and opinions.
Extra idea: You could also tell students
to think about the advantages and
disadvantages of e-readers. Ask: Do you think
e-readers will ever replace printed books?
Grammar Present perfect v past simple
7 Write Fergus and I have been friends for a
long time and Five years ago a friend gave him
an old desktop computer on the board. Ask
students to look at the sentences and identify
the tense in each sentence.
Tell them to read the article again and find
other examples of the present perfect and past
simple. Then ask them to complete the table.
Check answers as a class.
Answers
present perfect: have been, has never used,
Has … ever used, hasn’t watched, has read
past simple: gave, put, called, showed
1 has 2 has not / hasn’t 3 Has 4 hasn’t
5 Have 6 have / ’ve 7 used 8 did not /
didn’t 9 did; read
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 138
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
8 Highlight used in the first sentence. Use it to
teach / elicit the meaning of past participle.
Ask: What’s the infinitive? (use). Tell students
to underline the remaining past participles and
write down the infinitives.
Note: Sometimes students confuse the second
and third person forms of the verb, so it’s
helpful to elicit the difference and show them
that the past participle has the auxiliary verbs
have or has before it.
Answers
used – use; watched – watch; read – read;
written – write
9 Focus on the sentences in the grammar table
again and tell students to use them to work
out and complete the rules.
Unit 4
75
Elicit extra example sentences from the article
that talk about the past in general (He has read
a blog), say when something happened exactly
(He called me yesterday), or use ever and never
(Has Fergus ever used a mobile phone? He has
never used a computer).
Answers
1 present perfect 2 past simple
3 present perfect
Did you know?
Check comprehension of negative. Tell students
to read through the facts, then ask: Which fact
surprises you most? Why do you think respondents
said people need technology too much? Do you
agree? This provides an opportunity to discuss the
effects of smartphones, etc on social interaction.
Extra ideas: If you brought in a picture of
people looking at their smartphones instead
of talking to each other, show it to students
and ask: What do you think of this picture?
Is it a typical situation?
Tell students to do a survey on mobile
devices and their effect on concentration at
school and work. You could include some of
the questions below or get them to create
their own: Do smartphones distract you
when you’re working? How often do you
check your phone for messages? Do you
look at messages or send texts in lessons?
Do you think mobile devices help you learn?
Have the internet and mobile devices helped
you get better grades or not?
Listening and speaking
10 GUESS To introduce the listening activity,
ask students to look at the photos and guess
what’s happened. Elicit ideas from the class
and encourage lots of active guessing.
11
1.42 Tell students they’re going to hear people
talking about the situations in the photos. Play
the audio for students to check their ideas. Find
out how many guessed correctly.
Play the first conversation again and ask
students what the tenses are. Point out that
once we start giving details, we use the past
simple (It was terrible, I wrote an email, I said
my boss was ..., etc).
76
Unit 4
Answers
1 He sent an embarrassing email to the
wrong person.
2 She got a text message from a stranger.
Transcript
1 man
Have you ever sent an
embarrassing email to the wrong
person?
woman
No, I’ve never done that, have you?
man
Yes, I have. It was terrible. I wrote
an email about my boss to a
friend. I said my boss was really
horrible. And I sent the email to
my boss by mistake!
woman
Oh no! What happened?
2 woman 1 I got a text message from
someone I didn’t know yesterday.
Have you ever received a text
message from a stranger?
woman 2 Yes, I have. It said, ‘It’s been a
long time. I’m thinking about
you.’
woman 1 Interesting! Did you reply?
woman 2 Yes! I …
12 Play the audio again and ask students to
work individually to think about how each
conversation could end and to make notes.
Elicit a few ideas from the class.
MA Tell students to work in pairs to think
about a suitable ending for each conversation.
13 Put students into groups to discuss their ideas.
Tell them to use the notes they made to help
them as they talk together. Then ask them to
walk around the room and share their ideas
with other students. Elicit ideas from the class
and take a vote on the best ending.
14 Write the first question on the board, then
quickly review the present perfect and adverbs
ever and never. Ask: Have you ever published
a book online? Elicit the answer: I’ve never
published a book online.
Ask concept-checking questions, eg When do
we use ‘ever’? (in questions), When do we use
‘never’? (in negative sentences) and Where
do ‘ever’ and ‘never’ go in the sentence?
(between have and the past participle).
Ask students to create questions, then
encourage them to check in pairs.
Answers
1 Have you ever published a book online?
2 Have you ever sent an email to the
wrong person?
3 Have you ever received a text from a
stranger?
4 Have you ever written a blog?
5 Have you ever tried online dating?
6 Have you ever lost a / your mobile
phone?
15 EVERYBODY UP! This is a chance for
everyone to move around and re-energise.
Before they start, ask students to work
individually and write two more questions
like the ones in exercise 14. Then tell them to
walk around the room and ask and answer all
the questions. Explain that when somebody
answers yes, they must ask more questions to
find out what happened. Monitor pairs as they
work, making a note of any common problems
with grammar – particularly the correct use of
the present perfect and past simple.
16 Read the statement from the end of the
first paragraph in the article. Ask students
to discuss the questions in groups, then ask
for class feedback to find out their ideas and
reasons for their opinions.
Lesson 2 Have you ever had a
dream? pp38–39
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to provide practice of
the present perfect, particularly with the adverbs
for and since to describe a period of time and
a point in time, and also to learn the language
required to talk about other peoples’ lives.
Warm-up
Divide the class into two. Ask one group to
describe photo 1 on SB page 38 and the other
group to describe photo 2. When they’ve finished,
tell students to work with somebody from the
other group and describe their photo.
Reading and speaking
1 Pre-teach achieve and countryside. Ask
students to read the short text and think about
their dreams, then work with a partner and
tell each other their hopes and ambitions.
Suggest they start with the phrase My dream
is to ... This could also be done as a guided
visualisation. Tell students to close their eyes,
then read the text to them. You could also play
some gentle background music to relax them
as they imagine the future.
Tip: To introduce the text and encourage
predictions about the topic, tell students
to look at the photos on SB page 39 and
guess where Georgina lives. Ask: Who are
the people in the photos? What job do you
think Georgina does? This helps to create
interest in the text and gives students
a reason to read and find out if their
predictions are correct.
2 Write both questions on the board: What was
Georgina’s dream? Did she achieve it? Ask:
What does the title ‘Living the Dream’ mean?
Encourage students to read the article quickly
and answer the questions. Set a short time
limit so they read for gist. Ask one or two
students to come and write their answers on
the board under the questions. Find out how
many people had the same answers.
MA You could ask stronger students to
quickly read the article and find the names
of as many places, cities, regions and
countries as they can.
Answers
1 Her dream was to live in a house in the
mountains and share it with people of
different nationalities.
2 Yes, she did.
3 Tell students to read the article again more
slowly and find words that match the
definitions. Teach / Elicit the meaning of
relationship in question 3 and ask students
what they think fortunate means.
MA For more support, tell students which
paragraph the words are in (1 paragraph 1,
2 and 3 paragraph 2, 4 paragraph 3,
5 paragraph 4).
Unit 4
77
Answers
1 realised 2 Inuit 3 broke up 4 share
5 tiny
4
To introduce the more detailed reading
section, ask students to look at the photos
with a partner and see if they can relate them
to things they remember from the text. They
then answer the questions individually or in
pairs before reading the article again and
checking their answers.
Answers
Photo 1: This town is in Greenland.
Georgina taught English there.
Photo 2: This is Copenhagen. Georgina was
there from 1990 until 1997.
Photo 3: It’s in the Pyrenees in the northwest of Spain (the Basque country); it now
has seven bedrooms and eight bathrooms.
Photo 4: He’s a lawyer.
Photo 5: They learn Spanish, discover the
Basque culture and go for long walks in the
mountains.
Grammar for and since
5 Focus on the diagrams in the grammar box and
teach / elicit the different uses of for and since.
Tell students to read the article again, then
look at the grammar box and try to complete
the rules together. Point out that both answers
may be correct.
To present the grammar in a different way, you
could ask students to read the article again,
then write the following sentences on the
board:
1 She has lived there since 2001.
2 Georgina has owned a successful holiday
company called Pyrenean Experience since
1999.
3 They’ve been together for many years now.
4 People have lived there for thousands of
years.
5 She lived in Copenhagen for seven years.
Underline the words for and since, then
ask concept-checking question, eg Which
sentences show when something started?
(1 and 2) Which sentences show a length or
period of time? (3 and 4) When do we use
‘since’? (to show when something started)
78
Unit 4
When do we use ‘for’? (to show a period of
time) Which sentence is past simple? (5) Do
we use ‘since’ in present perfect or past simple
sentences? (present perfect) Do we use ‘for’
in present perfect or past simple sentences?
(both).
Answers
1 a specific point in time
2 a period of time
3 present perfect
4 past simple, present perfect
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 139
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
1.43 Vowel sounds are sometimes
6 P
difficult for students, so it’s helpful to highlight
the differences and do plenty of repetition
drilling. Write the words see and since and
the sounds /i:/ and /ɪ/ on the board and ask
students to repeat them. If they have difficulty,
model the sounds and tell them to watch the
shape of your mouth. They’ll notice that your
mouth is wider when you make an /i:/ sound.
Read the conversation with a strong student
and ask the other students to listen. Then play
the audio while students listen and circle the
short vowel sounds and underline the longer
sounds. Don’t check their answers yet.
Transcript
a How long have you been here?
b
We’ve been here for about three weeks.
When did you arrive?
a Just this morning.
b
You must go to the beach.
a We’ve been. The sea is green!
Extra idea: Write the words ship, sheep,
bean, bin, leave, live, chip and cheap on
the board and get students to match them
to the correct sound.
7 P Play the audio again for students to check
their answers. Point out that in have you been
in line 1 and We’ve been here in line 2, the ee
sound is short, unstressed – /ɪ/. In line 5, been
is a stressed sound (We’ve been) so the sound
is long – /iː/.
Ask students to practise the conversation in
pairs, focusing particularly on the short and
long i sounds. Monitor pairs as they practise,
making a note of any common problems with
pronunciation or intonation.
person, but they have different information
and must find out the missing details by asking
questions. Give them a few minutes to prepare
and think of the questions they’d like to ask.
Answers
/ɪ/: been (line 1 and line 2), did, this,
morning
/iː/: we’ve, three, weeks, beach, we’ve,
been, sea, green
When they’ve finished, tell them to take turns
to ask and answer questions to complete the
information. They then work individually to
write questions about Jake using the present
perfect, eg How long has Jake known Kay?
How long has he been married? Tell them
to work in their pairs to ask and answer the
questions they’ve written.
8 Do the first sentence together with the class
as an example and elicit the correct verb tense.
Ask: Is Georgia still in Copenhagen? (No) Is it
still happening, or is it a finished action in the
past? (It’s finished) When did she leave? (In
1997) So do we make the question in the past
simple or present perfect? (past simple).
Ask students to work in pairs and make the
questions and answers using the past simple or
present perfect.
Answers
1 How long did Georgina live in
Copenhagen? She lived in Copenhagen
for seven years.
2 When did Georgina arrive in the Basque
country? She arrived in the Basque
country in 1999.
3 How long has Georgina had her house?
She’s had her house since 2003.
4 How long has Georgina owned her
holiday company? She’s owned her
holiday company since 1999.
5 How long has Georgina lived in the
Basque country? She’s lived in the
Basque country for over [14]* years.
6 How long has Georgina known her
husband? She’s known her husband for
many years.
7 When did Georgina and her Danish
boyfriend break up? They broke up
about 20 years ago.
Finally, ask pairs to say what they know about
Jake (without looking at the information).
Ask the other students to say if the things are
correct or not.
10 Ask: What kind of information is in the
article about Georgina? Elicit the main things
from her story, eg place of birth, early life,
education, where she lived, life experiences,
family and career, likes and dislikes, and write
them on the board. Allow time for students to
work individually to write questions to ask a
partner about their life using the headings on
the board. When they’ve finished, tell them to
take turns to find out information about each
other by asking their questions. Remind them
to make notes of their partner’s answers.
11 Ask students to write a biography of their
partner, using the notes they made in exercise
10. Encourage them to use the present perfect,
past simple and the adverbs for and since.
Tip: Read through students’ work and use
correction symbols for different types of
mistake, eg ‘S’ for spelling mistakes, so
that when you give the writing back, they
can correct the mistakes themselves and
write a second draft. This encourages them
to notice mistakes and really think about
how to correct them, and also increases
grammatical accuracy.
* Note that the answer will depend on the current year.
You could do exercises 3–5 on Relationships
in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Speaking and writing
9 Check students understand what they have to
do in this information-gap activity. Explain that
they each have information about the same
Explore
Ask: Would you like to visit a place like the
Pyrenees and discover the Basque culture? Find
out what kind of holidays students would like
and tell them to look online for an ideal holiday
destination. You could get them to do this for
homework and make a poster presentation in
Unit 4
79
class, which includes information about places of
interest and historical facts, as well as an itinerary
of activities and events available.
Answers
A iron B dishwasher C washing machine
D dustbin E kettle F freezer G fridge
H vacuum cleaner
Lesson 3 I’ve just done it.
pp40–41
Extra idea: Ask students to categorise the
household items into two lists: Things I could
live without and Things I couldn’t live without.
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to learn words for
talking about household items and to introduce
the use of just, yet and already with the present
perfect to talk about things that have been
recently completed or describe things that will
happen in the future. Students also discuss
differences in attitudes to housework.
Note: It would be useful to research and bring in
a photo of a messy teenage bedroom for students
to work with in exercise 5. You could also research
images of different household objects.
You first!
Ask: How do you feel about housework? Ask
students to work together and discuss the
question. Get class feedback and get their ideas
and opinions.
Vocabulary Household tasks
1
THINK Ask students to talk about the photo
in pairs and answer the questions. Teach / Elicit
that to talk about a decade, we say the 1950s
or the 50s, the 60s, etc. Get class feedback
and encourage lots of discussion about what
people wear to do housework.
Answer
1 It’s from the 1940s or 1950s.
2 Check the household vocabulary and ask
students to match the words with the pictures.
Help with the pronunciation of tricky words
such as iron (silent ‘r’) and vacuum. Students
sometimes pronounce the silent ‘r’ in iron and
have difficulty with the diphthong + schwa
combination: /aɪən/. Also explain that students
will often hear hoover as another way of
saying vacuum cleaner. Hoover is a well-known
brand of vacuum cleaner and the name has
become synonymous with the object.
80
Unit 4
3
1.44 Go through the verbs first, then the
phrases and check comprehension. Point out
that all these words can be used together to
make household tasks. Ask students to match
the words and phrases to make verb–noun
collocations.
Play the audio for students to check their
answers, then play it again for them to repeat
the phrases.
Note that you can also clean some of the other
items, eg the fridge, the kitchen floor, but
we’ve given the most common collocations
(clean the bath / the shower) in the audio. You
can also empty a washing machine and use a
bath / shower.
Transcript and answers
clean: the bath, the shower
do: (the) housework, the ironing, the washing
up
empty: the dishwasher, the dustbins, the fridge
make: your bed
use: the washing machine, the dishwasher
vacuum: the carpet
wash: the kitchen floor
Culture note: In American English, a
dustbin is called a trashcan. Americans
also say wash the dishes instead of do the
washing up.
Extra idea: To review vocabulary in a fun
way, play a memory game. Make small
cards showing different household items.
Put students in pairs and give each pair
a set of cards. Tell them to turn the cards
over so they can’t see the pictures and
spread them out across the table. Students
take turns and turn over two cards. If they
find a matching pair, they keep the cards.
If the cards are different, they have to turn
them over again. The person with the most
Transcript
We all have to do household tasks – we have
to make the beds, clean the shower, put out
the dustbin. The question is, who does them?
People with enough money usually employ
a cleaner. But not everyone with money has
a cleaner. Some people actually enjoy doing
housework! The other big question about
household tasks is, of course, is the man in
your household happy to vacuum or wash the
kitchen floor? So we asked people, ‘Do you
like doing housework?’ and ‘Who does the
housework in your household?’.
cards at the end is the winner. To reinforce
the words, tell students that every time
they turn a card over, they have to say what
the household task is.
4 In this 3x3x3 activity, put students in groups
of three to talk about household tasks they
dislike. Note that their decision must be
unanimous – they must all dislike the three
tasks. Set a time limit of three minutes.
When they’ve finished, get class feedback to
find out the least popular chores.
5
Write there is / there are on the board
and quickly review prepositions of place. Tell
students to close their books, then, in pairs,
ask and answer questions about the photo.
They can then look and check their answers.
MA For extra support, allow students one
minute to look at the photo before they do
the task.
Extra ideas: Put students in pairs and tell
one student in each pair to look at the
picture in the book and say five true or
false sentences about it. Their partner has
to close their book and try to remember
what things there are. If they think the
sentence is true, they say Yes, there’s a …
and if it’s false, they say No, there isn’t a …
Students take turns describing the picture.
If you brought in a picture of a teenager’s
bedroom, show students the picture (on
the board or by using a digital projector)
and tell them they have one minute to look
at it and remember everything they can.
Give them two minutes to write everything
that needs to be tidied up in the room.
Listening 1
6
1.45 Tell students they’re going to listen to
the introduction to a radio programme about
housework. Play the audio and tell them to
listen for the two questions people were asked.
Encourage students to compare their ideas.
Answers
Do you like doing housework?
Who does the housework in your household?
Extra idea: This could also be done as a
dictation.
7
Go through the icons in the table.
Explain that the thumbs up and thumbs down
images signify like and dislike; the other icons
answer the question Who does the housework
in your household? – the bucket signifies a
cleaner. Tell students to listen and tick the
information about each person. Play the
audio, pausing as necessary, then play it again
for students to check their answers. Check
understanding of the word dust.
1.46
Answers
woman 1
man 1
man 2
woman 2
man 3
Transcript
woman 1 I hate doing housework, it’s so
boring. But I also don’t want to live
in a dirty house and I certainly don’t
have money for a cleaner. Both
Gavin and I work and we share the
housework between us. Gavin’s very
good, he never complains.
man 1
My wife does the housework, she’s
a housewife and we have three
children, two are under five. I have a
full-time job, and I take work home,
I don’t have time to do housework.
Unit 4
81
man 2
woman 2
man 3
I love doing housework, it’s relaxing.
Ironing – I love it. I vacuum every day,
of course – dust isn’t good for you
– and I wash the kitchen floor every
day, too. My mum did the same. I live
alone and I like a clean house. I’ve
just done the ironing.
Who does the housework? Um, we
all do – but not very often, I’m afraid.
I share a flat with friends – they’re a
couple – and none of us enjoys doing
housework, so our flat isn’t exactly
clean. There are more important
things in life than a clean house.
I’ve never done housework. I have a
cleaner, she comes in every day and
she does everything, makes the beds,
cleans the kitchen.
8 Describe your own work and household
situation as a model first, eg I’m a teacher
and I share a flat with two people. We share
household tasks, but I don’t enjoy doing
housework! We wash the kitchen floor once a
week. I usually do my preparation for this class
on Sunday evening. I haven’t cleaned my room
yet this week! Put students in small groups
to discuss housework in their own home.
Encourage them to ask extra questions, eg
Who usually does the housework? How often
do they do it? Is it important for you to have
a clean and tidy house? Which things do you
most like or dislike doing? Would you like to
have a cleaner? Get class feedback and check
their ideas and opinions.
De-stress!
Note: Students sometimes have quite flat
intonation, so tell them to listen as you read
out the dialogues, then to underline the
stressed words in each sentence and listen for
the rising intonation in yes / no questions and
falling intonation in wh- questions.
Answers
1C 2A 3B
10 Look at the sentences in the grammar box
and tell students to complete them with the
correct word. Encourage them to look back at
the dialogues in exercise 9 to help them. Ask
questions to check understanding, eg Which
word do we use to say we did something a
short time ago? (just) Which word do we use
to say we did something earlier than people
expected? (already) Which word do we use to
say that something will happen in the future
or to ask if something has happened? (yet).
Check answers with the class.
Answers
1 just 2 already 3 yet 4 yet
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 139
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
11 Ask students to complete the rules. Check the
answers as a class and ask students to write
personalised sentences about things they’ve
just done, haven’t done yet or things that have
already happened. Also teach / elicit that just
and already usually come between the auxiliary
verb and past participle, and yet is located at
the end of present perfect sentences.
Read the short text and check students understand
why it’s a good idea to have plants around you.
Ask: What plants do you have in your home or
workplace? This will be challenging for their
vocabulary, so you can ask them to describe a
plant, or search for the English equivalent online
or come to the board and draw it.
Listening 2
Grammar already, yet, just
12
9 Focus students on the pictures and ask them
to predict what’s happening in each one. Elicit
lots of ideas.
Then ask students to read the dialogues and
match them with the pictures. Finally, put
students in pairs to read the dialogues aloud.
82
Unit 4
Answers
1 Just 2 already 3 yet 4 yet
1.47 Write on the board: What are Tomas
and Max doing and why? Play the audio for
students to listen and write their answer. Play
the audio again if necessary for them to check
their answers.
Answer
They’re tidying and cleaning the flat, as
Max’s parents are coming for the weekend.
Transcript
max
This place is a mess! Have you
vacuumed yet, Tomas? It doesn’t look
like it.
tomas I’ve just done the sitting room. I haven’t
done the bedrooms yet. I’ll do them
now.
max
The hall, don’t forget the hall ...
tomas What time are your parents arriving?
max
Seven thirty.
tomas OK, we have five minutes. They’re
staying the whole weekend, aren’t
they? I’ve never met your parents. What
are they like?
max
They’re OK. They, er ... they hate
untidiness.
tomas Great, great! How do they feel about
dust?
max
They hate that too. Hmm … This floor
needs washing.
tomas We don’t have time to do that. At least
they have a bedroom to sleep in. It’s a
good thing Jon’s away for the weekend.
Hey, we must change the sheets.
max
I’ve already changed them. I did that
last night.
tomas Cool! Oh – I haven’t put the food in the
oven yet. And the vegetables, let’s get
them out of the freezer.
max
I’ve already done that. I’ll put them in
the pan. … Oh no, they’re all over the
floor now … Hi, Mum, hi Dad!
mum and dad Hello!
mum
It’s great to see you! So this is your new
flat! Hmm …
dad
Have you ever thought of getting a
cleaner?
13 Tell students to decide if the statements are
true or false. Give them time to read the
sentences so they know what they’re listening
for. Play the audio again for them to check
their answers. Pause as necessary to help
students check.
Answers
1 false: He hasn’t vacuumed the
bedrooms or the hall yet.
2 false: He hasn’t met them before.
3 false: Max has changed them.
4 true
5 false: Tomas hasn’t put it in the oven
yet.
6 false: They haven’t visited the flat
before.
MA For extra support, tell students to look at
transcript 1.47 on SB page 148. This will make
it easier to work out who has done each thing.
Extra idea: Draw three columns across
the board and label them something
that happened sooner than we thought,
something that happened a short time
ago and something we think will happen
soon. Tell students to listen carefully and
write down sentences they hear with
already, just and yet. Play the audio again
for students to do the activity. Get them
to check together, then compare with the
transcript on SB page 148.
Something that happened sooner than
we thought: Max has already changed
the sheets. Max has already taken the
vegetables out of the freezer.
Something that happened a short time ago:
Tomas has just vacuumed the sitting room.
Something we think will happen soon: Tomas
hasn’t vacuumed the bedrooms yet. Tomas
hasn’t put the food in the oven yet.
Speaking
14 THINK Students discuss the questions in
pairs. Get class feedback to find out their ideas
and opinions and encourage further discussion.
Art & Music
For the painting, tell students to look at SB page
125 to see a bigger image. Tell them to read the
questions individually or in pairs, then check their
answers online.
For the song, elicit what students need to search
for and tell them to find a video for the song. You
could encourage them to search during class with
their smartphones or do the task for homework.
Unit 4
83
Extra questions for class or homework
Art
What can you see in the painting?
Describe what the woman is doing.
Music
What does the singer say she can do when
she’s cleaned the floor?
Find the name of another song by the B52s
and read the lyrics.
Answers
Art
Johannes Vermeer was a 17th-century
Dutch painter. The painting is called The
Milkmaid, but in fact the woman is a
kitchen maid and helps with the cooking
and cleaning.
Music
‘I am doing my housework’. The singer says
she needs a man to move in with her and
help her clean, pay rent and do the dishes.
Vocabulary plus p42
Technology
1
Ask students to look at the sentences
below the pictures and the words in bold, then
match them with the pictures. Check answers
as a class by playing the audio.
1.48
Answers
1B 2E 3C 4A 5D
Transcript
A You turn the computer on or off here.
B You often need a password to get onto a
website.
C You click on a file with your mouse to
open it.
D It isn’t very loud. Turn up the volume!
E You click on the X icon to close a file.
Culture notes: The Milkmaid by
Johannes Vermeer is one of the most
famous paintings in the Rijksmuseum in
Amsterdam. It was painted in 1657 or
1658 and is considered a masterpiece. It’s
appeared in many art exhibitions around
the world.
2
Johannes Vermeer only did around 34
paintings in his lifetime. His pictures,
such as The Milkmaid, The Girl with a
Pearl Earring and The Little Street, are still
popular today. Many of his pictures show
interior views, and although there’s nothing
spectacular or extraordinary about them,
his use of bright colours and light gave a
photographic quality to his paintings.
Relationships
The B52s are an American band from
Athens, Georgia, who were famous for
chart hits such as Love Shack, Roam and
Deadbeat Club. The band consisted of Fred
Schneider, Kate Pierson, Cindy Wilson,
Ricky Wilson and Keith Strickland. Kate
Pierson’s distinctive voice also appears on
REM hits such as Near Wild Heaven and
Shiny Happy People. The B52s formed in
1976 and have sold over 20 million albums
in their career so far.
84
Extra idea: Create an art and music
webquest. Select three websites about
Johannes Vermeer and two sites
for the B52s. Make a set of reading
comprehension questions about both and
provide the links for students. They have to
read each web page to find the answers.
Unit 4
3
Put students in pairs and tell them they’re
going to play a memory game. Give them one
minute to look at the sentences in exercise 1,
then tell them to cover them and write them
down from memory. They can use the pictures
to help them. Give them two minutes to write
them down correctly, then get them to look
again and check how many they remembered.
Students complete the sentences with
the words in the vocabulary box. Point out that
they can only use each verb once – and that
the verb must go with all the words in each
line. Play the audio for students to listen and
check their answers.
1.49
Answers
1 go to 2 be 3 have 4 get
Transcript
1 go to a wedding
2 be divorced / married / single / together
3 have a partner / a relationship
4 get divorced / married
4 Go through the sentences and tell students
to choose the statement that best describes
their situation. Point out that some sentences
may not be applicable for them, so they may
only underline one or two items in total. Allow
them time to work in pairs to do the activity,
then encourage them to ask and answer
questions about the statements.
5 To model the activity, describe people you
know and follow up with a few quick
questions, eg Can you remember how long
my (mum and dad) have been married? What
about my (sister)? Then ask students to talk
to a partner about people they know. Remind
them to use the new vocabulary from exercises
3 and 4.
Focus on: go
a Do the first item together with the class as
an example. Ask: What does ‘go to school’
mean? Elicit that it means to be at a place
of education. Put students in pairs to do the
remaining items, then check answers as a class.
Answers
1i 2h 3a 4d 5b 6c 7g 8f 9e
Extra idea: You could also do this activity
with the different phrases on pieces of
paper to vary learning styles and include a
kinaesthetic activity.
b Ask students to create one or two short
conversations using at least four of the words
or phrases from exercise a. Give them time to
brainstorm ideas with a partner and write their
conversations down.
c
This is a learner-centred dictation activity. Go
through the instructions with the class. Tell
students to find new partners and take turns
reading out their conversation from exercise
b. Their partner listens and writes down the
conversation. Then they read it back and
compare what they wrote with the original.
Everyday English p43
Opening and closing a conversation
1
GUESS To introduce the topic, ask: Do you
talk to people doing surveys in the street?
Do you like to talk to people, or do you try
to avoid them and walk past them? Elicit
answers from several students.
Ask students to look at the photo and think
about how someone doing a survey might get
their attention and try to start a conversation.
Ask: What would they say? Elicit students’
ideas and write useful phrases and
expressions on the board. Then get students
to discuss the questions with their partner.
Tell them to write notes, as they’ll check their
ideas in exercise 4.
Tip: It’s often helpful to get students to think of
things from a character’s perspective, and
this often helps with listening and prompts
pair speaking activities. Ask students to
look at the title and photo and try to
brainstorm what the audio is about. Ask
them to imagine they’re the people in the
photo and to think about how each person
feels about the situation.
2 Ask students to look at the expressions and
decide which ones are formal and informal.
Point out that some can be both. Check their
ideas and get them to explain the reasons for
their answers.
Answers
A 1F/I 2I 3F 4F/I 5I 6F
B 1F/I 2F 3F 4F 5I 6I
1.50 Focus on the questions in section
3 P
A in exercise 2. Tell students to listen carefully
to the speakers’ intonation. Explain that a
big voice range means that there’s a lot of
expression in the question. A small voice
range means that the question sounds quite
flat. Play the audio for students to listen to
the questions. Elicit answers from the class,
then play the audio again, pausing after each
question for students to repeat.
Unit 4
85
man
Answer
In each case, the speaker’s voice range is big.
Transcript
1 Can I have a word with you?
2 Hi, do you have a minute?
3 Excuse me. Can I have a few minutes of
your time?
4 Do you have time for a quick chat?
5 How are things?
6 Let me introduce myself.
woman
man
woman
5 Play the video or audio again for students to
answer the questions. Tell students to discuss
their answers in pairs, then elicit feedback from
the class.
Answers
1 He’s asking questions about attitudes to
technology.
2 She doesn’t really want to answer the
questions because she asks how long
the survey will take and she also says
she has to go.
Extra idea: At this point, you could also
have students highlight the stressed words
and rising or falling intonation. To do this,
play the audio and ask students to write
the sentences they hear. Once they’ve done
this, play the audio again and ask them to
underline the words with the most stress
and draw small arrows up and down to
show the speakers’ intonation. Then put
them in pairs to practise the sentences.
4
1.51 6 Decide whether you’re going to
use the video or simply play the audio. Tell
students they’re going to see or hear the street
interview shown in the photo at the top of the
page. Play the video or audio while students
watch or listen and check their predictions
from exercise 1. If you’re using the video, point
out the woman’s facial expressions to help with
showing what she’s thinking.
Transcript
man
Excuse me. Can I have a few minutes
of your time? We’re doing a survey
and I’d just like to ask you a few
questions.
woman Who are you doing this for?
man
Oh, let me introduce myself. My
name’s Billy Walton and the survey’s
for the local newspaper.
woman Um, how long will this take?
man
Just two minutes.
woman OK, but no longer than that, please.
man
The survey’s on attitudes to
technology.
woman OK!
man
So, the first question is, …
woman You know, I have to go.
86
Unit 4
That was the last question. Thanks so
much for your time.
It was a pleasure. So when will the
survey be in the paper?
I think a couple of weeks, something
like that.
OK, I’ll look forward to it.
Extra idea: Write each line of the
conversation on a separate piece of paper,
then mix them up. Hand each line to a
different student and ask them to work
together to put the conversation in the
correct order. When they’ve finished, play
the video or audio again for students to
check if their predictions were correct.
6 Look at the expressions in exercise 2 and ask
students if they can remember which were
formal and which informal. Play the video or
audio again while students tick the expressions
they hear. Ask: Are they formal or informal?
Ask students to give their reasons.
Answers
A 3 Excuse me. Can I have a few
minutes of your time?
6 Let me introduce myself
B 1 I have to go.
3 It was a pleasure.
4 Thanks so much for your time.
They’re formal because it’s a street
interview and the interviewer is being
polite.
7
1.52 Play the first part of the conversation
and tell students to guess what the woman
says. Elicit quick feedback to check their ideas.
Transcript
man
Hi. Do you have time for a quick
chat?
woman Erm …
8 Explain that you’re now going to play the
whole conversation. Play the audio for students
to check their ideas from exercise 7.
Answer
She says OK, but only if it’s quick.
Transcript
man
Hi. Do you have time for a quick chat?
woman Erm … OK, but be very quick because
I have to leave in five minutes. But it’s
good to see you.
man
You too. So, how are things? Is the
business going well?
woman Yes, it is, it’s going well, we’re so
pleased ...
…
woman I’m so sorry, I have to go. It’s been nice
talking to you.
man
See you soon, I hope. Erm … how
about going out for dinner sometime?
woman Great idea – when? I’m free this
evening.
9 Go through the questions with the class and
ask students to make notes, then discuss their
answers in groups. Play the audio again if they
have difficulty remembering the conversation.
Answers
1 They chat about the woman’s business
and how it’s going.
2 How about going out for dinner
sometime?
3 She thinks it would be a great idea. She
seems very enthusiastic.
11 Look again at the expressions in list A in
exercise 2. Ask: Which ones did the interviewer
use? (Tell students to look at their answers
to exercise 6.) Allow time for them to work
individually to write their questions. Monitor
students as they work, making a note of
any common problems with grammar and
helping with vocabulary where necessary.
When they’ve finished, tell them to interview
three people and make a note of their
answers. Encourage them to use some of the
expressions to open their conversations in a
polite way. Get feedback from the class about
attitudes to technology within the class.
MA For extra support, elicit some ideas for
questions before they start and write them on
the board.
12 Look again at the expressions in list B in
exercise 2. Ask: Which ones did the woman
use to end the conversation? (Tell students
to look at the answers to exercise 10.) Allow
students time to speak to different people and
have a short conversation. Remind them to
close their conversations politely.
MA For extra support, tell students to work
in pairs to write a conversation, helping them
with ideas, eg You want to talk to somebody
about a meeting. Students then practise their
conversation in pairs.
we don’t say … / we say …
This section focuses on the following areas:
• incorrect tense use and use of for / since
• incorrect tense use for length of time
• omission of auxiliary verb have in the present
perfect
• confusion between been and gone
Ask students to cover the green we say … side
and see if they can correct the mistakes themselves
before they look and check.
10 Look at the expressions in exercise 2 again. Play
the audio again while students underline the
ones they hear this time. Check answers with
the class.
Answers
A 4 Do you have time for a quick chat?
5 How are things?
B 2 It’s been nice talking to you.
Unit 4
87
Units 3&4 Review
Reading and grammar
1
2 How long has Chris been a house
husband?
He’s been a house husband for 15 months.
(two years minus nine months)
3 How long did Chris work for the software
company?
He worked for the software company for
five years.
4 Has Lola ever been unemployed?
No, she’s never been unemployed.
5 What has Chris started doing?
He’s just started looking for jobs again.
6 Has Chris found a job?
No, he hasn’t found a job yet.
GUESS To introduce the article, ask students
to look at the photos and the title of the article
and discuss the questions together. Check
comprehension of house husband (= a man
who stays at home and looks after the house
and children while his wife goes out to work)
and look after (children) (= take care of). Elicit
ideas from the class, but don’t give away the
answers.
Extra idea: Before students read the article
in exercise 2, tell them to write three things
they expect to see in the text.
2 Pre-teach childcare. Set a short time limit so
that students read the article quickly for gist
and check their guesses from exercise 1.
Answers
1 The woman is a nurse, the man is a house
husband.
2 They’re married – she goes out to work,
but he stays at home.
3 He likes spending time with the children,
but he gets bored and feels he spends too
much time at home.
3 Quickly review the use of for, since, never, just
and yet. Look back at Unit 4 Lesson 1 (SB page
37), Lesson 2 (SB page 38) and Lesson 3 (SB
page 41) if necessary. Ask students to write
questions using the words in brackets. Check
answers quickly, then get students to ask and
answer the questions in pairs.
Answers
1 How long have Lola and Chris been
married?
They’ve been married since [2012].
(The answer will depend on the current
year, as the article says they got married
four years ago.)
88
Units 3&4 Review
pp44–45
4 Allow time for students to read the article
again and write at least three questions about
it (note that the answers must be in the
article). They then find a new partner and ask
and answer each other’s questions.
Listening and grammar
5
Explain that Chris got the job he
had an interview for. Read through the three
questions and elicit one or two ideas for each
one. Students then work individually to make
two predictions for each one. Remind them
to use will in their answers. If necessary, refer
back to SB page 32 or the grammar reference
on SB page 138. Play the audio for students
to check their answers. Check students
understand childminder.
1.54
Answers
1 She’ll be surprised.
2 She’ll say, ‘I’m really pleased’,
‘I understand’, ‘We’ll need to find
a childminder’. (She says a lot more
than this, but these are the three most
important things she says.)
3 I’ll vacuum and I’ll wash up too.
Transcript
lola I’m so tired. I haven’t sat down all day.
chris Neither have I!
lola I’m going to bed in a minute.
chris Actually, I have something to tell you.
lola OK, what?
chris I have a job. I’m starting next month.
lola Really! When did that happen? Why
didn’t you tell me?
chris I wanted to surprise you.
lola Well, I’m surprised. Tell me about the
job.
chris Well, you know my friend Mike? He’s
recently started a new job as manager of
a software company called Teccy, and he
told me they need someone there. So,
I went for an interview last week and I
got the job. I’m going to their office next
week to discuss it.
lola Well, that’s brilliant – I’m really pleased.
I know you haven’t been very happy for
a while.
chris No, I haven’t and I’m very bored. I mean,
the kids are great but, you know, I need
a proper job.
lola Being a house husband is a proper job.
chris Well, it is and it isn’t, you know.
lola Well, what about all the women who are
housewives? You know how many hours
you work every day. You always say
there’s so much to do. It’s a proper job.
chris Yes, OK, that’s true. But I need to get out
of the house. I need to go out to work.
and earn some money. Then I’ll feel good
about myself.
lola Yeah, I really understand. We’ll need to
find a childminder.
chris Yes, we will. Jenny’s starting school in
September. That will help. Shall we get a
cleaner?
lola No, I think we can do it, don’t you?
chris You know how much you hate doing
housework. You never vacuum.
lola I promise I’ll vacuum. And I’ll wash up
too.
chris Wow!
Extra idea: Ask some comprehension
questions about the conversation, eg Why’s
Lola tired? When’s Chris starting his new
job? What’s the software company called?
What’s their daughter’s name?
6 Use this exercise to evaluate how well students
have understood the different tenses for
talking about the future. If necessary, refer to
the grammar reference on SB pages 137 and
138. Students then complete the sentences
with going to or the present continuous. Elicit
a few answers and ask students to explain
why they chose a particular form. Note that
sometimes both are possible.
Answers
1 is going / is going to go 2 is starting /
is going to start 3 is starting / is going to
start 4 are / is going to look 5 aren’t
going to get
Speaking and writing
7 Allow time for students to discuss the
questions in small groups. Encourage them to
talk about their ideas and give reasons for their
opinions. Tell them to write short notes so that
they can use the information later.
8 Tell students they’re going to write a report
about housewives and house husbands. Before
they start, show them the layout of a typical
report so that they can follow the format easily
in their own writing. Explain that a report
has a title, it’s divided into different parts and
that each section has a heading. Encourage
students to include:
•
an introduction that says what the report is
about
• the feelings and opinions of the people in
the report
• recommendations and reasons for their
ideas.
Monitor pairs as they work, making a note
of any common problems with grammar and
vocabulary, and giving help where necessary.
Ask one student from each group to read out
their report and find out how many people had
similar ideas.
Extra idea: Appoint two students to make
notes of the numbers and results from the
reports on the board. The other students
should tell them what to write, eg Six
women in the class are housewives and
two men are house husbands. Two of the
women are bored. The others feel happy at
home and enjoy being with their children.
Units 3&4 Review
89
9 Look at the beginning of the email together
and tell the class to write the rest of it,
including information about the points in the
list. Allow a few minutes before they start so
they can brainstorm ideas with a partner.
Transcript
There are now about 1.4 million house
husbands in the UK – they stay at home while
their wives go out to work. That’s ten times as
many house husbands as ten years ago. Men
and women no longer feel that the man has
to go out to work. Childcare is expensive and
if the woman earns more money, the man is
often happy to look after the household and
family.
In China, men started to stay at home in about
2000. Some of these men prefer not to tell
others about their new role, as their image is
very important.
Traditionally, the woman has always stayed at
home in India. But in cities now, about 3% of
men are stay-at-home dads and 12% of single
men say they have no problem with the idea.
In Australia, less than 1% of men are house
husbands.
You may want to start this activity in class and
ask students to finish it for homework. Collect
the written work and use it to obtain example
sentences for review at the beginning of the
next lesson.
Preposition Park
Teach the meaning of against (I’m leaning against
the wall) and background (in the background).
Ask students to look at other pictures in the SB
and ask: What’s in the background? (There’s ...,
I can see ...). Then focus on photo B on SB page
44. Students work individually to complete the
description with the correct prepositions. Explain
that these are all useful prepositions to use when
describing a picture or photo.
Answers
1 against 2 in 3 against 4 to 5 in
6 In 7 of
Extra idea: Tell students to cover the
description and describe the photo, then
read the description again to check.
Cross Culture: House husbands
a
In pairs, ask students to guess and
complete the information with the numbers.
Check their ideas, then play the audio for them
to check their answers.
1.55
Answers
1 1.4 million 2 ten times 3 ten years
4 2000 5 3% 6 12% 7 1%
90
Units 3&4 Review
b
THINK Read through the questions first,
then ask students to discuss what they think
about the information with a partner.
Explore
Encourage students to search online to find
out more about stay-at-home dads in different
countries. They could draw up a table comparing
attitudes to house husbands in different countries,
then present a short report to the class about their
findings.
5
Getting away
UNIT
FOCUS
GRAMMAR: modals: must, have to, can; might, may, could, will probably
VOCABULARY: travel; clothes
FUNCTIONS: describing an object; speculating about the present and future
Lesson 1 You must have a
certificate. pp46–47
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to learn more about
using modal verbs to express obligation and talk
about things we have to have or do, to practise
talking about requirements for jobs, and to write
about your ideal job.
Note: You may find it useful to research various
travel destinations for this lesson and download
some images or collect images from magazines.
You first!
Students work in pairs to talk about where they
would like to travel in the world and why. Ask:
Would you like to go on holiday, live or study there
or just have a job that involves lots of travelling?
Reading and speaking
1 To introduce the topic and ideas for this
activity, research some images of various travel
destinations and show them on your laptop,
tablet or digital projector, or just stick images
from magazines on the walls or board. Put
students in small teams to guess where each
place is. The first team to call out the answer
gets a point. The team with the most points at
the end wins the game.
Now focus on the photo of a cruise ship on SB
page 46. Find out what students know about
cruises. Ask: Where do you think the beach is?
What type of ship is it? What kind of things
do people do on these holidays? Where do
cruise ships go? Students then work in pairs to
discuss the questions. You may want to review
the difference between want and would like at
this point. Elicit feedback from pairs and find
out how many people thought of the same
advantages and disadvantages.
2 Explain that the photo forms part of an advert
for working on a cruise ship. Before students
begin, ask them to think about what skills and
qualifications you would need to work on a
cruise ship and the kind of jobs that might be
available. Elicit a few ideas, then tell them to
complete the questions in the section called
Are you looking for adventure?. Tell them not
to worry if they don’t know all the words.
They then ask and answer the questions with a
partner.
Answers
Do you want to travel the world and earn
money?
Would you like to spend your winters in
Bali and your summers in Mauritius?
Does the idea of free meals and
accommodation sound good?
Do you enjoy meeting people from
different cultures?
Would you like to work on a cruise ship?
3 Focus on the middle section: We are looking
for waiters … Tell students to read sections
A, B and C at the bottom of the advert and
match the job descriptions with jobs from
the middle section. Ask them to give reasons
for their choice, eg Dance instructors have to
know lots of dance styles.
Answers
A scuba-diving instructors
B dance instructors
C fitness instructors
4 Now focus on the words in bold. Students
may have already worked these out from
doing exercises 2 and 3. You could also ask
questions to check comprehension of some of
the other words, eg What can help you save
someone’s life? (a first-aid certificate) What do
many celebrities have to help them keep fit?
(a personal trainer). Check answers with the
class.
Unit 5
91
Answers
accommodation = a place to live or stay
staff = the people who work for an
organisation
certificate = a piece of paper that proves
you have a qualification
first aid = knowledge of how to help in a
medical emergency
fluent = very good at speaking a language,
like a native speaker
Extra idea: Another way to conceptcheck is to get students to write a simple
definition for each word or do a matching
activity on the board. Write the words down
one side, then the definitions (see answers
above) in a random order on the other side.
5 Go through the jobs in the advert and ask
students to talk together about which jobs
they’d like to do and give reasons why. You
could also elicit a few more jobs and write
them on the board.
Grammar must
6 Go through the sentences in the grammar box
and remind students that with modal verbs,
all forms are the same. Then look back at jobs
A, B and C on SB page 46. Ask students to
find the essential skills and requirements. Elicit
words that show something is necessary.
Answers
A Must have, Must speak
B Must be good at, necessary
C essential, necessary
7 Give students time to match the modal verbs
(1–6) with their meanings (a–e). Look out for
typical mistakes (mustn’t and don’t have to
are often confused when describing a lack of
obligation); if students have difficulty, provide
contextual examples to help them understand.
Give some situations and ask extra questions
to concept-check, eg When I fly to another
country, I must take my passport. Can I fly
without a passport? (No) Is it essential? (Yes)
What word shows it’s essential? (Must);
It’s Saturday today so I don’t have to go to
school! Do I need to go to school? (No) Why
92
Unit 5
not? (School is closed on Saturday) What
words show that I don’t need to do it? (Don’t
have to); You mustn’t talk in the exam. Is it
normal to talk in an exam? (No) Why not? (It’s
prohibited and it’s against the rules).
Point out that must and have to have a very
similar meaning, although we sometimes use
must to talk about an obligation from the
speaker (I must leave now) and have to to talk
about an obligation made by somebody else
(I have to have six months’ experience to do
this job). Elicit the opposite of must – there are
two verbs for this.
Answers
1c 2e 3d 4b 5a 6c
The opposites of must are mustn’t and
can’t.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 139
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
8 Do the first sentence together with the class as
an example. Show students where to find the
information in the advert. Students then work
individually to complete the activity and correct
the false sentences.
MA As an extra challenge, students can do the
activity without looking back at the advert,
then look and check their answers.
Answers
1 true
2 false: They must have an instructor’s
certificate.
3 false: They should be couples if possible
(couples preferred).
4 false: They must be good at all dance
styles.
5 true
6 true
Speaking and writing
9 Put students in pairs and ask them to think
of a job and write a list of essential and nonessential qualities or requirements. Make sure
they understand essential and unnecessary.
Give them a few minutes to come up with six
ideas – using the list of requirements if they
want to. Remind them to use the modal verbs
from exercise 7.
MA The instruction says they can use the ideas
to help them, but they don’t have to. This
choice gives weaker students some support,
while allowing stronger students to be more
creative.
Tip: One of the main reasons speaking
activities are difficult is because students
are shy or lack confidence with the
language. It’s really helpful to put students
in pairs before speaking activities so they
can brainstorm ideas with a partner to
think of things they’d like to say.
10 Put students together with another pair to
discuss their list of requirements. Remind them
not to say what their job is – the other pair has
to guess. Monitor pairs as they work, giving
help where necessary.
Explore
Go through the jobs students came up with in
exercise 9 and write them on the board. Elicit and
add any other jobs that students find interesting.
Tell them to choose one and search online to find
out more about it. It must be a job they’d really
love to do.
11 Tell students you’re going to describe your
dream job. Describe the skills, qualities and
qualifications needed and see if they can guess
what it is. Students then write a description
of their ideal job – using the information they
found online if they want to. Remind them to
look back at the advert on SB page 46 to help
them and encourage them to use some of the
vocabulary too. You may want to start this
activity in class and ask students to finish it for
homework. If they do it in class, after they’ve
finished, tell them to share with their partner
and guess each other’s job.
12 THINK This task encourages students to
develop their own ideas and think more about
things they need to do to become fluent in
English. Put students in groups of three to
discuss the questions. Tell them to talk about
the learning strategies they like best and list
the ones they all agree on. Get feedback from
the class. Point out that in fact they need to do
all the things on the list – they’ll all help them
to learn faster.
13 Encourage students to share other ideas and
suggestions with their partner and get class
feedback.
De-stress!
Read through the short text about doing facial
exercises. Encourage students to all try it together.
They (and you!) should open their mouth wide as
though they’re yawning, at the same time opening
their eyes wide, and then close it. They then screw
up their face, closing their eyes, then relax.
Note: Tell them to do this very gently, as it’s easy
to strain your jaw.
Lesson 2 It might rain. pp48–49
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce modal
verbs to talk about future possibilities, to learn
vocabulary for the types of clothes we take on
different journeys, and to find out more about
how to travel light when going on holiday.
Note: It might be useful to bring in images of
different weather to help with talking about
probability in exercise 8, and a world map might
also be useful.
Warm-up
Divide the class into two groups: A and B. Tell
students in group A to describe the photo of the
woman on SB page 48 and students in group B to
describe the photo of the man. They then work
with a student from the other group and take
turns to ask and answer questions about the other
photo, eg What’s she wearing? Where is she?
What’s her suitcase like?
Vocabulary Travel
1
Do the first couple of words as an
example with the class. Ask: Is ‘backpack’
connected with travel? (Yes) How? (You
can use a backpack to carry things in when
you travel). Repeat with bumbag (You use
a bumbag to put your money and travel
documents in). Allow time for students to do
the activity with a partner, then elicit a few
connection ideas. Note that all the words could
be connected with travel, but only some are
directly connected (and these are given in the
answers on page 94).
2.2
Unit 5
93
wheel can all be verbs too, but the verb use is
higher level than Intermediate, so we’ve only
taught the noun use here.
Play the audio for students to listen to the
words, then play it again for them to repeat,
focusing on any difficult sounds in eg iron,
luggage, scissors, weight.
Answers
backpack (You use a backpack to carry
things in), bumbag (You put your money
and travel documents in a bumbag),
check in (You check in at an airport),
check out (You check out of a hotel),
(suit)case (You use a suitcase to carry things
in), guidebook (You use a guidebook to
help you find your way around a city or
country), journey (You go on a journey
when you travel somewhere), luggage (You
take luggage with you when you travel),
pack (You pack a bag or suitcase), travel
(You travel to different places), trip (You
often go on a trip to see something when
you’re on holiday), unpack (You unpack a
bag or suitcase), voyage (You might go on
a voyage in a boat), weight (You need to
know the weight of your bag when you
travel by plane)
Transcript
backpack, bumbag, check in, check out,
corkscrew, suitcase, guidebook, hairdryer, iron,
journey, luggage, pack, penknife, scissors, size,
travel, trip, unpack, voyage, weight, wheel
Extra idea: Ask a student to choose a
word from the list and mime it for other
people to guess. Repeat with a few
students and words.
Answers
backpack (N), bumbag (N), check in (V),
check out (V), corkscrew (N), (suit)case (N),
guidebook (N), hairdryer (N), iron (N, V),
journey (N), luggage (N), pack (V), penknife
(N), scissors (N), size (N), travel (V), trip (N),
unpack (V), voyage (N), weight (N), wheel (N)
3
THINK These questions encourage students
to think more about some of the words in the
list and take their knowledge of them further.
Ask students to discuss the questions with
a partner. Encourage them to look in their
dictionaries or search online to distinguish the
differences between words.
Answers
1 Journey and trip are both nouns. They
have a similar meaning, but a trip is
usually shorter. Travel is a verb. Voyage
is a trip on a boat.
2 backpack, bumbag, (suit)case, luggage
(Luggage is a general term to describe
all your bags.)
3 corkscrew, penknife, scissors
4 Because they determine what luggage
you can take on the plane, and how
much luggage you can put in the hold
of the plane.
You could do exercises 1–6 on Useful things
in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Reading
Tip: Repeating a list of words with the
class helps with pronunciation such as
articulation and word stress. If students
are unsure about pronunciation, they’ll
often avoid speaking, so repetition drilling
increases confidence and helps them to
remember the vocabulary better.
2 Put students in pairs to identify if the words are
nouns (things) or verbs (actions). Explain that
check in and check out are verbs, but when
they’re spelt with a hyphen (check-in, checkout), they’re nouns. You might also want to
mention that journey, size, trip, voyage and
94
Unit 5
4 To introduce the topic and set the scene, ask
students to look at the title and the photos
and predict what the article is about. Teach /
Elicit the meaning of travelling light. Ask: What
do you think Cheryl and Arun have in their
suitcases?
Set a short time limit so students read quickly
for gist. Ask them to check their predictions.
Ask: Do you travel light, or do you take a lot of
things with you?
Tip: Remind students to try to guess any new
words from the context. If they can’t
work out a meaning, review the phrase:
What does … mean? Using the context
to work out meaning is a useful skill, as
it shows students that they don’t have to
understand every word to understand the
meaning of an article.
Extra idea: Use the text as a jigsaw
reading activity. Put students in pairs: A
and B. Student A reads about Cheryl and
student B reads about Arun. They make
notes about their text, then take turns to
share information with their partner.
5 Allow students time to read the article more
slowly, then to complete the sentences. Check
answers with the class.
Answers
1 Cheryl 2 Cheryl 3 Arun 4 Arun 5 Arun
6 Cheryl and Arun
6
Tell students to cover the article, then
answer the questions and try to remember
how often Cheryl and Arun do things. If
necessary, review adverbs of frequency by
looking at SB page 135. Students then read
and check their answers together.
Answers
1 a Cheryl always packs lots of books.
b She usually takes an iron and a hairdryer.
2 a Arun always takes his bag on the
plane with him.
b He never checks his bag in.
Tip: It would be useful to remind students that
this kind of activity forces them to exercise
their brain and relates to the information
on memory in Unit 1.
Extra idea: You could ask the following
comprehension questions: Why does
Cheryl pack lots of things to wear? Why
does she pack lots of books? What are the
advantages of having only hand luggage?
7 Look back at the questions from exercise 6
and elicit what type of words always, usually
and never are. If necessary, review adverbs of
frequency (see SB page 135). Give students
time to find other adverbs of frequency in the
article and underline the sentences where they
appear.
Answers
I may sometimes have to pay a lot to
check it in.
I often save money too.
You never know what might happen.
You can never trust the weather 100%.
Grammar might, may, will probably
8 Draw a scale of probability on the board (from
100% (certain) to 0% (not certain)), then read
out the sentences in the grammar box and ask
students to match them with different degrees
of probability. Tell students that in practice,
we don’t always differentiate between might
and may, so much depends on the intonation
– but at this stage, it’s useful to have a rule.
We sometimes use might when we think
something is possible, but not very likely.
You can also check understanding with
pictures. If you have them, show different
weather images and ask students to predict
what might, may or will probably happen. If
you have a map, you could also ask students to
predict what the weather will be like tomorrow
in different places such as Morocco, England,
Australia, etc.
Answers
1c 2a 3b
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 139
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
9 Ask students if they can remember what we
say when we’re sure something will happen.
Answer
will
10 Put students in groups of three to predict
things that will probably, may or might happen
in the next few days. Remind them that in this
kind of activity, they must all agree on the six
Unit 5
95
Transcript
ship, shop, Russian, Finnish, sure, sharp, shorts,
wash
things. As they only have six minutes, they
must work fast to create a list, then make their
final decisions.
Vocabulary Clothes
11 Check comprehension of any difficult
vocabulary, eg suitable, smart, scheme. Allow
time for students to read the travel tips
individually, then work in pairs and talk about
the most useful ideas. Give them four or five
minutes to agree with their partner and list
them in order of usefulness. When they’ve
finished, tell them to compare their lists of the
best ideas with another pair.
12 Students quickly read the tips again and circle
the items of clothing. Check and help with
pronunciation if needed. Elicit more items of
clothing and write them on the board. You
could also write men and women on the board
and get students to put the clothes in the
correct category.
Answers
top, socks, tights, underwear, skirt, (pair of)
trousers, swimming things, shorts, dresses,
suits
13
Tell students to cover the tips, then try to
remember them and complete the sentences.
Tell students that they don’t need to write the
tips word-for-word – they just need to get the
general sense of what was written in the tips,
eg 1 Check the weather forecast and pack
clothes you need for the weather. Students
check answers with a partner, then read and
check against the tips.
MA As extra support, you could give students
one minute to read the information again
before they cover it up.
Answers
See text on SB page 49.
2.3 Write the sound on the board
14 P
and ask students to repeat it after you. Elicit
words that contain /ʃ/, eg shower, shopping. If
students have difficulty pronouncing the sound,
explain the tongue position (tongue pressed
against the hard palate in the middle of the
mouth, lips pressed together and rounded).
Play the audio for students to listen and repeat.
96
Unit 5
2.4 Play the audio while students listen
15 P
to the tongue twister. Get them to practise and
say it as quickly as possible. Encourage them to
repeat until they do it perfectly! Play the audio
again if necessary.
Transcript
woman Show me what’s in your shopping bag,
Shane.
man
A shirt, shorts, shoes, shampoo,
shower gel, aftershave and washing
powder. I’m shortly going on a ship to
Shanghai!
16
2.5 Tell students they’re going to hear some
instructions. They should listen and follow the
instructions, repeating parts of the sentence.
Explain that this shows them how to break
sentences into chunks to help pronunciation.
Play the audio, pausing if necessary after each
section. Note that the last sentence is given
first before it’s broken down so that students
can hear it first, then do the backchaining
before saying the whole sentence. There are
long pauses in this audio to allow plenty of
time for repetition, but pause the audio if you
need to.
Transcript
Repeat parts of the sentence and then the
whole sentence.
Shopping bag, Shane // show me // show me
what’s in your shopping bag, Shane //
A shirt, // shorts, // shoes, // shampoo, //
shower gel, // aftershave, // washing powder. //
A shirt, shorts, shoes, shampoo, shower gel,
aftershave and washing powder.
I’m shortly going on a ship to Shanghai!
Shanghai // ship to Shanghai // I’m shortly
going on a ship to Shanghai //
Tip: Backchaining (saying the last part of the
sentence first and going back) often helps
students, so talk about the strategy with
them afterwards and discuss how helpful
it was.
You could do exercises 7 and 8 on Useful
expressions in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Speaking
17 THINK Use this activity to personalise things
and invite students to offer their own ideas
and opinions about travelling light on holiday.
Tell them to look back at the tips in exercise
11 and answer the questions with a partner.
Encourage them to add tips of their own and
get class feedback.
Extra idea: Ask students to think about
airport and travel problems that have
happened to them. Give them a few ideas
by telling a story of your own. Maybe your
luggage was lost or damaged, things stolen
or perhaps you were delayed in some way.
Get them to talk in groups of three and
find out their stories afterwards.
Lesson 3 You should move
around. pp50–51
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to use the modal verbs
should and shouldn’t for giving travel advice and
suggestions to avoid jet lag, and enabling students
to talk about their experiences and things they do
or don’t do on long-haul and overnight flights.
the phrases. Encourage students to compare
their answers with a partner, but don’t confirm
their answers yet.
3
2.6 Play the audio for students to check
their answers to exercise 2. Point out the
definition of should and elicit what Gemma
says we should do when we reach our
destination.
You could also get students to listen again and
write down all the examples of should they
hear, then do a quick concept check so they
understand the function and form. Ask: Do
we have to do these things? (No) Is Gemma
trying to help us? (Yes) What do we call it
when people tell us things to help us? (Advice,
suggestions, tips, recommendations) What
word tells us it’s advice? (Should).
Answers
1d (should) 2f (shouldn’t) 3b (shouldn’t)
4c (should) 5e (should) 6a (should)
Gemma says you should do things at the
‘new’ time from the moment you arrive
and try to go outside.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 140
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
Warm-up
Transcript
Tell students to keep their books closed, then read
out the title of the lesson. Ask: What do you think
the lesson is going to be about? When do you
think you should move around? What might you
be doing? Elicit ideas, then tell the class to open
their books and look at the photos and see if they
guessed correctly.
interviewer
Speaking
1 Put students in pairs to talk about the
questions. Elicit class feedback and quickly
check who likes or dislikes flying; ask for
reasons why.
Listening 1
2 Ask: Have you ever been on a long-distance
flight? (often called a long-haul flight because
it feels difficult). If students answer yes, ask:
Where did you go? How long did it take? How
did you feel when you arrived? Teach / Elicit
the phrase jet lag, then tell students to match
gemma
interviewer
gemma
interviewer
Good morning and welcome to
the travel show. Do you ever go
on a long flight and arrive feeling
really terrible? With us today in the
studio is Gemma Howard, author
of Why fly and cry? and an expert
on long-distance travel. So, thank
you for coming, Gemma. Tell us,
why do we get jet lag?
Well, Bill, if you fly across several
time zones, your body clock gets
confused. You get tired during the
day and you can’t sleep at night.
So what should we do to avoid it?
There are several very simple
things. You should drink plenty
of water, but you shouldn’t drink
too much alcohol and coffee. And
you shouldn’t eat heavy meals on
board either.
Yes, it’s easy to eat too much if
you’re bored.
Unit 5
97
gemma
interviewer
gemma
interviewer
gemma
Yes, it is. And it’s easy to stay in
your seat all the time, too. But you
should get up and move around
during the flight and do stretches
and exercises. It’s also a good idea
to change your watch to the ‘new’
time as soon as you get on the
plane.
What about when you get there?
Should we do anything special?
You should try to do things at the
‘new’ time from the moment you
arrive, so stay awake until night
and then sleep. Go outside, too, if
you can. It can help you experience
the new time of day.
Thank you very much for those
tips, Gemma.
It’s a pleasure.
Speaking
4 Put students in pairs to discuss the tips in
exercise 2. Ask: How often do you do them?
How did they help, and how effective were
they? Go through the list of items in question
2 and use the picture to check comprehension.
Tell students to make notes for each of the
questions.
5 Put students together with another pair and
tell them to report back, ie use their notes
to tell the other pair about their experiences.
Although students may not have covered
reported speech yet, you could help them by
writing phrases they can use on the board such
as: He / She told me … He / She said …
Listening 2
6
GUESS Ask students to look at the pictures,
read the information below them and guess
what’s happening. Elicit ideas and predictions
and encourage lots of active guessing, but
don’t confirm if they’re correct or not.
7
Ask students to listen and compare their
ideas. Play the audio, then encourage them to
talk about how they’d feel if this happened to
them.
2.7
MA You might want to pause the audio after
each section and ask questions to check
comprehension, eg What time is it? What time
is Alice’s flight?
98
Unit 5
Answer
She’s telling him to hurry up or she’ll miss
her flight.
Transcript
narrator Alice is going to Canada for a
conference. Her husband, Mike, is
going to take her to the airport, but
he says he has to do some things
first. Her flight is at 11.55.
narrator 9.25
alice
It’s nine twenty-five, Mike. We should
go. I don’t want to miss my plane.
mike
We don’t have to leave yet, Alice.
I must just finish this email. I won’t
be long.
alice
Oh. Alright. But remember I have to
check in two hours before my flight,
at 9.55.
mike
Uh-huh.
narrator Five minutes later. 9.30
alice
Can we go, Mike? It’s half past.
mike
We have plenty of time, Alice. I need
to have a quick coffee before we go.
alice
Well, OK … but please don’t be long.
I might miss my plane.
mike
OK, OK …
narrator Ten minutes later. 9.40
alice
Come on, Mike … look at the time!
It’s 9.40! I may miss my plane.
mike
It’s OK. I must just feed the dog
before …
alice
No! You don’t have to feed him now,
Mike. You can feed him when you
get back. Please let’s go!
mike
OK, OK. Chill! No need to panic …
8 See if the class can remember why Mike took
so long. Ask students to tick the things that he
did before they left the house. Play the audio
again for students to check their answers.
Answers
D, F
9 Ask students to work in pairs and answer
the questions together. Check answers
for questions 1–3, then invite students to
say whether they think Mike and Alice are
behaving reasonably. Ask: What would you do
in this situation?
10
Answers
1 She feels very frustrated.
2 She wants to leave in time to check in for
her flight.
3 She doesn’t want to miss her plane.
Answer
They get caught in a traffic jam on the way
to the airport and Alice misses her plane.
She’s so upset she tells Mike she’s leaving
and not coming back.
Write the two times (9.30 and 9.40) on
the board and invite students to come up and
write what Alice says at each time. Play the
audio again to check who was right.
Transcript
narrator Twenty minutes later. 10.00
alice
Oh, no. I don’t believe it. We haven’t
moved for ten minutes.
mike
This traffic is terrible, isn’t it? I think
you’ll probably miss your plane!
alice
Yes, I think I will. Why does this
always happen, Mike? Every time I go
away.
mike
It’s not my fault there’s a lot of traffic!
alice
No, but we always leave at the last
minute and …
MA As an extra challenge, see if they can recall
the exact words she uses.
At this point, you could also write the
sentences on the board and quickly check the
meaning of the modal verbs might and may.
Ask: When is the flight? (Soon) Does she know
for certain she’ll miss it? (No) Is it possible
she could miss it? (Yes) So when Alice says
‘might’ and ‘may’, what’s she guessing about?
(Something possible in the future).
Answers
1 I might miss my plane.
2 I may miss my plane.
Tip: Students don’t always ask questions
and often stay quiet when they don’t
understand, so it’s always useful to take
a few minutes to quickly concept-check
new grammar. Without concept-checking,
it’s difficult to know if they’ve understood
the function, form and meaning of the
new grammar. Even if some students
have a good grasp of the language,
concept-checking helps to reinforce their
knowledge and helps weaker students
get a better idea of things they weren’t
completely clear about.
11 Check understanding of the phrase is likely
to. Teach / Elicit that it has the same meaning
as will probably. Ask students to predict what
they think is likely to happen next. Elicit a few
ideas from around the class.
12
2.8 Play the audio so students can check
their ideas together, then find out if anyone
guessed correctly. Ask: Who would have done
the same as Alice?
narrator
alice
mike
alice
mike
alice
mike
Two hours later. 12.00
At last!
I think you’ve missed your flight,
darling. What a pity. Now you don’t
have to go to the conference at all
and we can spend the weekend
together!
I’ve missed that flight, Michael. But
this is an airport. There are other
flights.
What do you mean?
I mean I’m going to fly somewhere
else. And this time I’m not coming
back! Goodbye, Michael!
Oh!
13 Play the audio again and tell students to
answer the questions. Play the audio a third
time, pausing if necessary for students to check
their answers.
Answers
1 There’s a traffic jam.
2 It happens every time she goes away.
3 Two hours and 20 minutes
4 12.00
5 She misses it.
6 Alice decides to get another flight and
leave Mike.
Unit 5
99
Writing and speaking
14
Ask: Can you remember Alice and
Mike’s last conversation? Play the audio and
tell students to listen and write it down. Then
have them compare with a partner and get
them to check against the transcript on SB
page 149.
2.9
MA As an extra challenge, ask stronger
students to try to remember parts of the
conversation before you play the audio again.
Transcript
alice At last!
mike I think you’ve missed your flight, darling.
What a pity. Now you don’t have to
go to the conference at all and we can
spend the weekend together!
alice I’ve missed that flight, Michael. But this
is an airport. There are other flights.
mike What do you mean?
alice I mean I’m going to fly somewhere else.
And this time I’m not coming back!
Goodbye, Michael!
mike Oh!
Extra idea: Alice is very upset and angry,
so she uses quite definite stress on certain
words in the sentence: I’ve missed that
flight, Michael. But this is an airport. There
are other flights. Ask students to listen
again and mark the stressed words in the
sentence (see underlined words in the
sentence).
15 Ask students to work with a partner and create
a different ending to the story. Invite pairs to
act out their conversation to the class and
take a class vote on the best / funniest / most
dramatic one.
16 EVERYBODY UP! Elicit and practise the
questions first, eg Do you have to travel a lot
in your work? Tell students to walk around and
talk to other people. Encourage them to ask
extra questions and find out more about each
other’s travel experiences.
Art & Music
Tell students they can find a larger version of
this painting on SB page 125. Encourage them
to search online to find more information about
the artist, and to find the lyrics to the song. You
100
Unit 5
might want to explain that in the song, the singer
says I’ve rode buses, I’ve rode trains – rode is an
American variant of ridden, which is also used in
the song.
Extra questions for class or homework
Art
Choose one person in the painting and
describe what they’re wearing.
Find one more painting by Haber online
and describe it.
Music
Find out more about Tom Paxton and write
a short biography of him.
Answers
Art
Airport, 2008, Ronald Haber
Music
… must stay behind. The singer wants to
leave his partner again because he loves
the mountains and sea.
Culture notes: Ronald Haber is a British
artist who paints a wide variety of popular
pictures of landscapes and images from
his travel experiences at home and abroad,
including Sunset over the Grand Canal
and Bridlington Harbour. His painting
Airport is a brightly coloured image of a
cosmopolitan crowd of people, including
holidaymakers and businessmen, at the
airport with their suitcases checking in.
Tom Paxton is an American folk singer. He
was born in Chicago in 1937 and his career
has spanned more than 50 years. He’s
famous for songs such as The Last Thing on
my Mind and Bottle of Wine and received
a Grammy Lifetime’s Achievement Award
in 2009. His popular songs have been
covered and played by artists such as Bob
Dylan, The Seekers, John Denver and Willie
Nelson.
I’m Bound for the Mountains and the Sea is
taken from Paxton’s debut album Ramblin’
Boy (1964) and describes the journey of
a restless traveller across the vast land of
America.
Vocabulary plus p52
Warm-up
As a warm-up, ask students to make a list of
five things they always take in their luggage on
holiday. Then get them to compare their answers
with a partner and explain the reasons why.
Useful things
1
2.10 Ask students to name as many of
the items as they can without looking at the
words in the box. Encourage guessing and use
of words from their own language. Then tell
them to look at the words and match them
with the pictures. Play the audio for students
to check their answers, then play it again for
students to repeat the words. Help students
with pronunciation if they have any difficulties.
Point out that jewellery is only three syllables:
/ʹdʒuːəlri/ – the third ‘e’ is not pronounced.
Transcript and answers
1 shower gel 2 adaptor 3 jewellery
4 make-up 5 phone charger 6 shampoo
7 towel 8 pillow
2
Go through the words with the class and
have them repeat after you. Ask: How many
of these words do you already know? They
should know most of them by now. Encourage
guesses for the meaning of any they don’t
know. Ask: Which things can’t you take in your
hand luggage? Elicit answers from the class.
Note that the answers may vary from country
to country, but these are the regulations in the
UK. Ask students which names for these items
are very similar in their own language and
which are very different.
Answers
corkscrew, knife, penknife, scissors (with
blades longer than 6cm), plus any bottles
of water, shampoo, etc over 100ml
Things you would expect to be prohibited,
but aren’t: matches, lighter, scissors with
blades no longer than 6cm.
Extra idea: To review the vocabulary, write
an anagram on the board and get students
to try to guess the word. Then put students
in pairs to make anagrams and take turns
guessing each other’s words.
3 Students make lists of the things they take
with them when they travel.
4 Ask students to add extra things to their lists.
Encourage them to look up words in the
dictionary if needed or get them to describe
them so you can provide the words they don’t
know.
5 Teach / Elicit the phrase do without. Students
identify the essential and non-essential items
on their lists, then compare their list with other
people.
Did you know?
Ask: Who’s this person? (It’s an unusual photo of
the Queen of England, so some students may not
recognise her at first.) Read the short text together.
You could add that all other members of the
British royal family need a passport, as do the Pope
and the US President.
6
Explain the memory-chain game to the
class. Put students in small groups. The first
student says something they take on holiday
and the next person has to remember what
they said and then add another item. If
someone makes a mistake or can’t remember,
they’re out of the game. The last person left
is the winner. Remind students to use have to
and don’t have to correctly.
Useful expressions
7 Ask students to look at the expressions and
find them in the Travelling light text on SB
page 48. Tell them to underline them and
try to guess their meaning from the context.
Check answers as a class.
Answers
fit in = manage to get into a suitcase
It’s a pain to … = It’s a lot of trouble to …
It’s worth it! = The benefits of doing it are
greater than the trouble of doing it.
Just in case. = In the event that something
happens to make me need it.
No way! = never, not at all
Absolutely! = definitely
at both ends = when I check in and when
I land at my destination
get it wrong = do something that’s against
the airline’s rules
loads of = a lot of
save time = spend less time doing something
Unit 5
101
8 Model the example dialogues with one or
two students. Then ask students to work in
pairs and use the expressions in spontaneous
conversations about their travel experiences.
Extra idea: Review the prefixes and
adjectives with a guessing game. Ask
students to write down definitions for each
word and test each other. One student
gives a definition and their partner has to
guess the word with the correct prefix.
Focus on: get
Explain that get is often used in different phrases
and has lots of different meanings. Ask students
to replace get with a different word. Have them
compare answers with a partner and decide if the
sentences are true or false. Tell them to correct the
false statements.
Answers
1 becomes; true
2 obtain; true
3 catch; false: People catch malaria from
a mosquito bite.
4 buy; true
5 travel; false: You have to get on a train
or a ferry to cross the English Channel.
6 receive; true
Wordbuider Negative prefixes: im-, in-, una
Learning prefixes and suffixes is a really
helpful way of increasing students’ vocabulary.
Write possible on the board, then add the
prefix im. Teach / Elicit how it changes the
meaning of the word, then ask the class to
identify the correct prefix for each word. Write
the table on the board and invite students
to come and write the words in the correct
column. Ask students which words are very
similar in their own language and which are
very different.
Answers
im-: impossible, impatient, impolite,
impractical
in-: inefficient, incorrect, inexpensive,
informal, invisible
un-: unnecessary, unfriendly, unhappy,
unimportant, unlikely, unpopular, untidy,
unusual
Everyday English p53
You first!
Introduce the topic (personal stories are always
interesting and provide opportunities for live
listening practice), then ask if students have ever
lost their luggage. Put them in pairs and get them
to share their stories.
Describing an object
1
2.11
6 Decide whether you’re going to use
the video or simply play the audio. Go through
the questions first and ask students to predict
the story. This will also help them to have a
clear idea what information they’re listening
for. Then play the video or audio. Discuss the
answers as a class.
Answers
1 The passenger has lost his suitcase.
2 No, he isn’t.
3 His name is Vladimir Balanovsky, he’s
just arrived from Moscow via Frankfurt
on Lufthansa flight LH0345, he isn’t
very young.
4 He has trouble saying Mr Balanovsky’s
name.
Transcript
traveller
attendant
traveller
b Go through the words and check
comprehension. Ask students to circle the
words that describe them, then compare their
words with a partner. Find out which were the
most commonly used adjectives.
102
Unit 5
Good afternoon, sir. Can I
help you?
Yes, I’ve just arrived from Moscow
but I’m afraid my luggage hasn’t.
Oh dear. I’m sorry to hear that.
I’ll need to fill in a form. Right …
What’s your name?
Balanovsky. Vladimir.
Oh right, um … could you spell
that for me, please?
B-A-L-A-N-O-V-S-K-Y.
B-A-L-A-N-O-V-S-K-Y, Vladimir?
I’m staying at the Hilton, Park
Lane.
luggage attendant
attendant
traveller
attendant
traveller
attendant
traveller
attendant
traveller
attendant
traveller
attendant
traveller
attendant
traveller
attendant
traveller
attendant
traveller
OK. And you’ve just arrived from
Moscow – what was the flight
number, Mr Balloon ...?
Balanovsky! Lufthansa LH0345 via
Frankfurt.
Right. Now, I’m going to show you
some pictures of bags. Which one
of these is most like yours? Is it like
these?
No, it isn’t a backpack. Young
people carry backpacks, not people
like me.
No, of course not. What about
these?
No, it isn’t a bag. It’s a suitcase like
this one.
And is it big or small?
It’s quite big. About 1m by 1m.
And it has wheels.
And what colour is it?
Red. Mainly red, but with some
black too. It’s a very beautiful case.
So it’s a beautiful, big, red and
black case with wheels. Does it
have your name on it?
Of course it does!
Well, we’ll do our best to find it,
Mr Balloon …
Balanovsky!
2 Focus on the pictures of bags. Ask: Which
piece of luggage is most like Mr Balanovsky’s?
Students work in pairs to describe his luggage
and identify it. Play the video or audio
again for students to check their answers if
necessary, or ask them to look at transcript
2.11 on SB page 149.
Answers
suitcase number 5
It’s quite a big suitcase, about 1m by 1m.
It’s a beautiful, big, red and black case with
wheels and it has Mr Balanovsky’s name on it.
3 Look at the sentence with the class and focus
on the order of adjectives. Identify each
adjective, ie colour = green, size = small,
opinion = beautiful, number = two. Students
number the adjectives in the correct order.
Point out that we usually use commas between
the adjectives when there are three or more
adjectives.
Answers
a4 b3 c2 d1
4 Students work individually to put the phrases
in the correct order, then check their answers
with a partner.
Answers
1 a beautiful blue backpack
2 a hundred horrible big handbags
3 one wonderful white wheelchair
4 six stylish, small, silver suitcases
5 Ask students to describe the other items of
luggage in the picture using the correct order
of adjectives.
Suggested answers
1 a small red bag
2 an ugly, large, black and red suitcase
with wheels
3 a small red and black backpack
4 a large red and black suitcase
5 a small black bag (with red handles)
6
Put students in pairs and see if they can
remember five of the questions the lostluggage man asked. Then play the audio or
video again for them to check.
Answers
Can I help you?
What’s your name?
Could you spell that for me, please?
What was the flight number?
Which one of these is most like yours?
Is it like these?
What about these?
And is it big or small?
And what colour is it?
Does it have your name on it?
Speculating about the present and the
future
7 P
2.12 Go through the sentences in
the box and focus on the words in bold. Ask
questions to check comprehension, eg Does
the luggage man know where the luggage is
for certain? (No) Does he really know when
they will find it? (No) Is he talking about the
Unit 5
103
past, present or future? (Present and future)
Is he saying something that he’s sure about,
or is it a guess? (It’s a guess). Teach / Elicit that
we use all these words to speculate (make
guesses) about the present and the future.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page
139 now or at the end of the lesson and go
through it with students.
Put them in pairs to say the sentences and try
to find the stressed words. Play the audio for
them to listen and check their answers.
Transcript and answers
1 It may still be in Russia.
2 It might be in Germany.
3 It might even be in the UK.
4 It’s possible that it’s still on the plane.
5 Do you think it could be in Helsinki?
8 Put students in groups to talk about where
the suitcase might be. Encourage them to use
the correct words and phrases for speculating
about something.
9
Play the audio so students can listen
and check their predictions.
2.13
Answers
1 It may still be in Moscow, or it might be
in Frankfurt, or it might be in London.
2 It could be tonight or it could be
tomorrow.
Transcript
traveller Oh, just one more question.
attendant Of course, Mr … um … ah …
traveller Where do you think my suitcase
might be?
attendant Well, it may still be in Moscow.
That’s possible. Were you late for
your flight?
traveller Of course not. I am never late for a
flight!
attendant Well, in that case, it might be in
Frankfurt. You changed planes there.
traveller Yes, that’s true. It could be in
Frankfurt. That’s better than
Moscow.
attendant It might even be in London and we
just haven’t found it yet.
traveller Well, I hope you find it quickly!
When do you think it could be
here?
104
Unit 5
attendant
It could be tonight or it could be
tomorrow. It all depends where it is
now. It’s definitely … somewhere.
10 Put students in pairs to describe the painting
on SB page 51 (or they can look at the larger
version on SB page 125). Encourage them
to speculate using the phrases on this page.
Monitor pairs as they work, helping with
vocabulary if necessary.
Suggested answer
a The departure hall is very crowded.
A lot of people are waiting.
b Perhaps some flights are late. The
computer system might be down.
Maybe there’s a strike. It might be the
beginning of the school holidays.
Tip: When students are doing speaking
activities, it’s a good idea to walk around
the room and note down typical mistakes
they make. This tells you what they
haven’t completely got yet and identifies
areas for review in future lessons.
Extra idea: As students are talking or
working on activities in this lesson, walk
around the room and take some of their
things. Take bags, magazines, hats, pens,
and of course, mobile phones are good
too. Then set up a lost-property office (you
can put all their things behind your desk)
and get them to come up and describe the
things they’ve lost. Encourage them to use
adjectives in the correct order, but tell them
that they have to use correct sentences to
get their lost property back!
we don’t say … / we say …
This section focuses on the following errors:
• confusion of the phrases do you like and
would you like
• incorrect use of the infinitive with to after must
• incorrect use of mustn’t
• incorrect word order
• incorrect use of the infinitive after shouldn’t
Ask students to cover the green we say … side
and see if they can correct the mistakes themselves
before they look and check.
6
UNIT
FOCUS
Survival
GRAMMAR: zero conditional; when clauses; first conditional;
VOCABULARY: emergency equipment; global warming
FUNCTIONS: giving instructions; checking understanding
Lesson 1 If you get stuck,
keep calm and don’t panic!
pp54–55
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce the zero
conditional to talk about what to do in certain
situations, to practise when clauses, to learn
vocabulary for describing emergency equipment,
and to learn about the dangers of extreme
weather conditions.
You first!
Ask students to look at the photo and elicit a few
answers from the class. It doesn’t matter if some
students never get snow in their country.
Vocabulary Emergency equipment (1)
1
GUESS Tell students to look at the photo of
the car again and talk about the questions.
Encourage lots of ideas and discussion. Get
feedback from the class and check their ideas.
2 Before you go through the words with the
class, ask students to try and name as many of
the items as they can. They should know quite
a few of these words already. Then go through
the words together, checking comprehension
and the pronunciation of battery.
Answers
a boots b umbrella c bottle of water
d first-aid kit e blanket f sunglasses
g jacket h torch i battery j mobile phone
k phone charger l gloves m chocolate bar
3 Allow students time to read about the extreme
weather conditions and snow across Europe in
2012–2013 and discuss the questions together.
Before they start, model the example sentence
with a student and check understanding of the
phrase a good idea.
Extra idea: Tell students to find out about
other extreme weather like the snowstorms
in New York in 2014–2015.
4
relative pronouns: who / which / that
Tell students they’re going to listen to a
winter checklist. Ask them to look back at the
picture in exercise 2 and tick the items the man
mentions.
2.14
Answers
All the items are mentioned, in this order:
jacket, gloves, boots, torch, first-aid kit,
blanket, sunglasses, umbrella, battery,
phone charger, mobile phone, chocolate
bar, bottle of water
Transcript
a The last time we had really bad snow, a
friend of mine got stuck for six hours.
b
Six hours!
a Yeah, so this year, I’m going to be
prepared.
b
Uh-huh.
a I found this really good website with a
checklist of things for driving in winter.
b
So what does it say?
a Well, obvious things like always have a
warm jacket, gloves and boots … and then
things that we always keep in the car all
the time … a torch and a first-aid kit. Oh,
and something to clean the snow off the
windscreen.
b
Yes, I have all those in my car too.
a And it says always have a blanket too – for
extra warmth – and sunglasses because the
sun is so low in winter and an umbrella to
keep dry – because if you get wet, you get
cold.
b
It’s a good idea to have an extra mobilephone battery and charger too, I think. And
a mobile phone, of course!
a Yes, they’re on the list, and food and drink
are on the list too: a chocolate bar and a
bottle of water.
You could do exercises 1–5 on Emergency
equipment in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Unit 6
105
Listening
5 Go through the statements first to check any
new vocabulary, eg panic, engine, run out of.
Ask students to read the statements and guess
if they’re true or false. Elicit ideas, but don’t
check answers yet.
6
2.15 Play the audio. Tell students to listen
and check if their answers were correct or not.
Get them to correct the false statements with
the right advice.
Answers
1 false: You should keep calm.
2 true
3 true
4 false: Turn on the engine if you want to
keep warm. (Run the engine for about
15 minutes every hour.)
5 true
6 false: You should always check the
weather forecast.
Transcript
Well, the first thing is, if you ever get stuck in
the snow, keep calm and don’t panic! I know
that’s easy to say and not so easy to do, but
it’s true. You can’t think clearly if you panic. So
just sit for a few moments and breathe slowly.
Then you’re ready to take action.
If you can see a house, you should get out
and walk there. If you can’t see anything, then
don’t leave the car. Remember that it’s very
difficult to walk in snow and it’s easy to get
lost. It’s easier for people to find you if you stay
in your car, too.
Turn on the engine if you want to keep warm,
but don’t leave it on too long if you don’t
want to run out of fuel. Turn it on for just 15
minutes each hour, then turn it off again.
If you have a phone, you should call someone
and tell them what’s happened and where you
are.
Then put on some warm clothes, drink some
water, eat some chocolate and just wait.
But of course you should always check the
weather forecast and road conditions if you’re
driving a long way. If the weather conditions
are very bad, stay at home!
106
Unit 6
7 Allow a few moments for students to read
the questions first so they know what to listen
for. Then play the audio again, pausing if
necessary, and encourage students to check
their answers together. Elicit answers to the
third question and write any other ideas
students have on the board. Find out how
many people had similar ideas.
Answers
1 It’s difficult to walk in snow and easy
to get lost, and it’s easier for people to
find you in your car.
2 a) Run the engine for about 15 minutes
every hour to keep yourself warm.
b) Call someone to tell them what’s
happened and where you are.
c) Put on warm clothes.
d) Drink some water.
Tip: It’s very difficult to listen and write at the
same time, so tell students you’ll play the
audio at least twice for activities like this.
Explain that the first time, they should just
listen and perhaps make a few notes. At
this point, if they try to write more, they’ll
miss important details. The second time
they listen, they can fill in more details.
Grammar 1 Zero conditional
8 Go through the grammar box first and ask
a few questions to make sure students
understand the meaning and function of
the grammar. Complete the first sentence
together and ask: How many parts are there
in the sentence? (Two) What has to happen
first? (The if clause – get wet) What’s the other
part of the sentence? (The result or thing that
happens after – get cold) Are these things just
possible or are they facts? (Facts) How certain
are we? (Completely sure). Students complete
the remaining sentences.
Answers
1 get 2 get
6 panic
3 are
4 stay
5 can’t
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 140
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
9 Ask students to look back at the statements in
exercise 5 and underline the zero conditional.
Answer
All the sentences in 5 are examples of the
zero conditional.
10 Go through the three situations first and check
that students understand the words signal for
help, thunderstorm and earthquake. Allow
time for them to complete the table on their
own, using the ideas to help them, or they
could make up their own ideas.
Suggested answers
If you’re out in a thunderstorm
do: get inside, stay calm
don’t: stand under a tree, put up your
umbrella, swim in a pool, panic!
If you’re in an earthquake
do: get under a table, keep away from tall
buildings, stay calm
don’t: swim in a pool, panic!
If you get lost in the mountains
do: light a fire, signal for help, stay calm
don’t: panic!
11 Put students in pairs to compare their ideas
from exercise 10. Monitor pairs as they work,
making a note of any problems with grammar
or vocabulary. Encourage them to use zero
conditional sentences and correct any small
mistakes you hear.
Note: Students sometimes get the
zero conditional confused with the first
conditional, so give extra examples if
needed to show the difference in meaning
between facts and possibilities. Don’t go
into detail at this stage, however, as they’ll
do work on the first conditional in the next
lesson.
You could do the Focus on: keep section in
Vocabulary plus at this point.
Grammar 2 when clauses
12 Elicit answers for the missing words in the
sentence, then ask: Can anybody explain the
difference in meaning between ‘if’ and ‘when’
statements?
Answers
are; drive
We use when to talk about specific situations, not
possible situations. For a full explanation, see SB
page 140.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 140
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
Speaking
13 EVERYBODY UP! Energise your class with
this walk-around activity. Allow time for
students to first work individually and answer
the questions. Remind them to use the zero
conditional. Then tell them to walk around the
room, share their ideas and find people that do
the same things.
Make sure you model the activity first and
encourage students to ask questions so they
don’t just show each other the answers, eg
A What’s the first thing you do when you get
really cold at home?
B If I get cold, I put the heating on. What
about you?
A I put my sweatshirt on if I’m cold.
B Why do you do that?
A It saves electricity.
14 Check students understand what they have to
do in this information-gap activity. Explain that
they each have information about different
situations: being lost in the jungle or the
desert. Tell them to read their tips and make
notes, then take turns to tell each other what
to do in each situation. Then allow time for
them to answer the questions.
Answers
A If you’re lost in the jungle, find a river
to follow; climb a tree if you can; light
a fire if you can; don’t eat colourful
berries; keep your clothes on, even if
you’re hot; don’t take off your shoes.
B If you’re lost in the desert, stay near
your vehicle if you’re in one; cover your
neck and your head; walk along hills or
high ground; find water (cactus plants
are good); walk slowly not quickly;
don’t breathe through your mouth,
breathe through your nose.
Unit 6
107
on its prey. Although there are tales (which
may have been spread by Rousseau himself)
that he had studied the jungle during his
travels in Mexico, he never left France,
and learnt all he knew of the jungle from
botanical gardens, textbooks and other
people’s stories!
Tip: It’s often difficult to react quickly to
questions and activities, particularly in a
foreign language, so try to give students
thinking time before they begin. This helps
them to think of ideas and the vocabulary
and grammar they could use to express
themselves. If we rush them straight into
activities, they sometimes say very little, but
if we give them time, they’ll generally have
more fluency and accuracy.
Katy Perry was born in California in 1984.
She’s a famous singer and model and is
known for hit singles such as I Kissed a Girl,
California Gurls and Firework. She has won
many awards for her music. In 2012, she
made the move into movies, releasing the
documentary feature film Katy Perry: Part
of Me. Throughout her career, she’s sold
11 million albums and 81 million singles
worldwide, making her one of the bestselling artists of all time.
Art & Music
For the painting, tell students to look at SB page
125 to see a bigger image. Tell them to work in
pairs to discuss a good title for the painting, then
check their answers online.
For the song, elicit a few ideas for the missing
words, then get students to check online. They
could also find a video of Katy Perry’s half-time
show at the 2015 Super Bowl.
Roar is one of her best-known songs. It
was released in 2013 on her fourth album,
Prism. The song is about standing up for
yourself and being strong and was her
eighth number-one song in the US charts.
In 2015, she sang the song in front of a
huge crowd at half-time at the US Super
Bowl.
Extra questions for class or homework
Art
Describe the painting and the weather.
What’s the tiger about to do?
Music
What do you think Katy Perry is talking
about in this song?
Answers
Art
Surprised! or Tiger in a Tropical Storm,
1891, Henri Rousseau
Music
tiger, fire, champion; other animals: lion,
butterfly, bee
Culture notes: Henri Rousseau was born
in Laval, France, in 1844. Although he
didn’t have great success in his lifetime
(painting was more of a hobby for him –
in fact, he only started painting seriously
after he had retired), like many artists, he
became extremely well known after he
died, and his paintings were bought by
many collectors and museums.
He’s best known for his paintings with
jungle themes, such as the one here: Tiger
in a Tropical Storm or Surprised! It shows
a tiger, lit by lightning, preparing to jump
108
Unit 6
Lesson 2 If temperatures go
up, fish will die. pp56–57
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce the first
conditional and use it to talk about the dangers of
global warming and its effect on the planet, and
to learn some useful words for talking about the
consequences of global warming and rising sea
levels.
Warm-up
Quickly find out what students know about global
warming and climate change. If they need to use
L1 for some words, that’s fine – help them with
the vocabulary they need to talk about it. Keep
this short and dynamic – they’ll find out much
more about it in the lesson.
1
GUESS To introduce the topic, tell students to
look at the photos and guess the connections
between them. Encourage lots of discussion.
Transcript
1 Which of these are fossil fuels? a) coal
b) oil c) gas
The answer is all of them.
2 Which of these are greenhouse gases?
a) carbon dioxide (CO2) b) oxygen (O)
c) methane (CH4)
The answer is carbon dioxide and methane.
3 Which country produces the most
greenhouse gases? a) China b) Russia
c) the USA
The answer is China.
4 How many people die because of global
warming every year? a) 1,500 b) 15,000
c) 150,000
The answer is 150,000.
5 How long does it take CO2 to disappear
from the atmosphere? a) 10 years
b) 100 years c) 1,000 years
The answer is 100 years.
6 Which of these activities produce
greenhouse gases? a) driving
b) cutting down trees c) meat production
The answer is all of them.
Extra idea: You could also include a
short video clip to increase interest and
set the scene. Search online for the trailer
for the Academy Award-winning film An
Inconvenient Truth.
2
Ask students what they know about global
warming and its causes. Encourage discussion
and activate their background knowledge and
opinions on the subject. Then quickly check the
meaning of the words in bold before they do
the quiz.
Answers
fossil fuels = fuels, such as gas, coal and oil,
that were formed underground from plant
and animal remains millions of years ago
coal = a hard, black substance that’s dug
from the Earth in pieces, and can be
burned to produce heat or power, or a
single piece of this
oil = petroleum (= the black oil obtained
from under the Earth’s surface from which
petrol comes)
gas = a substance in a form like air that’s
used as a fuel for heating and cooking
greenhouse gases = gases that cause
the greenhouse effect, especially carbon
dioxide
carbon dioxide = the gas formed when
carbon is burned, or when people or
animals breathe out
oxygen = a chemical element that is a gas
with no smell or colour. Oxygen forms a
large part of the air on Earth, and is needed
by animals and plants to live.
methane = a gas with no smell or colour,
often used as a fuel
atmosphere = the mixture of gases around
the Earth
3
2.16 Give students time to do the quiz on
their own first. Then have them compare their
answers with a partner. Play the audio for them
to check if their ideas were correct.
Answers
1 a, b, c 2 a, c 3 a 4 c 5 b 6 a, b, c
Reading
4
Check that students understand the
vocabulary and get them to quickly look up
any words they don’t know in a dictionary or
online. Explain that all of the words except one
are directly linked to the weather and tell them
to circle the odd one out. Ask students which
words in the list are very similar in their own
language and which are very different.
Answer
mosquito
5 Students work in pairs and take turns to mime
and guess words from the list in exercise 4.
Some of them would be very difficult to
mime, so instead of miming those words (eg
acid, degree, drought), tell students to give a
definition for their partner to guess.
6 Focus on the question: What will happen in the
future if we continue to burn fossil fuels? Elicit
a few ideas from the class, then tell students
to read the report and underline the possible
effects. Set a short time limit so they read
quickly for gist.
Unit 6
109
Answers
There will be more storms and they’ll
be more severe. There will also be more
heatwaves, more droughts, more rain – and
therefore more floods and more hurricanes;
temperatures will go up several degrees;
the ice and snow at the north and south
poles will melt, and sea levels will rise.
The sea will become more ‘acid’. More
places will be hotter, and because more
mosquitoes will survive in these places,
there will be more malaria. There won’t be
nearly as many fish in the oceans, and the
ones that are left will be smaller.
7 It’s helpful to model reading strategies, so do
the first word with students and try to elicit the
meaning of severe from context. Encourage
them to read sections around the words (the
co-text) to guess the meaning. You could
prompt them by asking questions, eg What
weather conditions does the text mention?
(Floods and hurricanes) Are these storms
normal or very serious and extreme? (Serious
and extreme) So what do you think ‘severe’
means? (Very serious).
Students work in pairs to complete the activity.
Answers
severe = extreme, very serious
absorb = take in a gas, liquid or other
substance (here, heat)
reflect = throw back (heat, light or sound)
without absorbing it
melt = turn to water
rise (v) = go up
affect = cause changes in
eco-systems = all the living things in an
area and the way they affect each other
and the environment
rise (n) = increase
8 Give students time to read through the
questions first, then read the report and
answer the questions. Check answers with the
class.
Answers
1a 2a, b, c 3a, b 4a, b, c 5a, c
110
Unit 6
Grammar First conditional
9 Look at the first line of the table and teach /
elicit how we form the first conditional. Ask
students to complete the sentences in the
table. Get feedback and correct any mistakes.
Answers
1 is 2 will be 3 will be 4 don’t act
5 will happen 6 go on
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 140
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
10 Tell students to look back at the first sentence
in the grammar box and complete the rule
with a partner. Write the sentence on the
board (If there is more rain, there will be more
floods), then ask a few concept-checking
questions, eg Is this about the past, present or
future? (The future) What word tells us it’s the
future? (will) Why do floods happen? (Because
there’s too much rain) So what thing has to
happen first? (More rain) And what will the
result be? (More floods) How certain are we?
(Quite certain) Can we say the sentence in a
different way? (There will be more floods if
there is more rain). Elicit that the floods won’t
happen if there isn’t more rain, so we can’t say
that something will definitely happen.
Answer
may happen
11 Look at the sentence you wrote on the board
and highlight the form. Ask students to read
through the article again and underline other
examples of the first conditional. Remind
them that the first conditional has will in the
result clause so they don’t confuse it with zero
conditional sentences in the text.
Answers
if we continue to burn … there will be
more storms
If we go on producing them, temperatures
will go up
12 Do the first sentence with the class and elicit
the sentence. Ask students to work with a
partner and complete the other sentences
using the first conditional. Encourage them to
look back at the grammar box if needed.
Answers
1 If the temperature goes up, there will
be more mosquitoes.
2 If the sea gets warmer, a lot of fish will
not survive.
3 A lot of fish will die if that happens.
4 If we act now, climate change won’t be
so bad.
5 A lot of people will die if climate
change continues.
13
Encourage active discussion and elicit ideas
from the class. Then tell them to read the
report again and check their ideas.
MA For greater support, students could read
the report again before they do this activity.
Speaking and writing
14 THINK This activity encourages students
to think more critically about the problem of
global warming and use the language they’ve
learnt to make more predictions. Ask students
to work in pairs and discuss the questions
together, making a note of their answers
to questions 3 and 4. Monitor pairs as they
work, helping with any necessary vocabulary.
Encourage them to use the first conditional to
make predictions about the future.
15 Tell students to look at the notes they made
for questions 3 and 4 and give them a few
minutes to expand the notes and put them
in a suitable order for writing about them.
Students then write a paragraph about the
environment, including their future predictions
and suggestions for saving the planet. You
may want to start this activity in class and ask
students to finish it for homework, then bring
in their work to the next lesson.
Answers
1 Temperatures will go up several
degrees.
2 The ice and snow at the poles will melt.
3 Sea levels will rise.
4 The sea will become more acid.
5 Fish will die or become smaller and
therefore more expensive.
Extra idea: You could also set up a roleplay. Put students in pairs: A and B. Student
A is an environmental expert and student B
is a journalist finding out about the dangers
of global warming. Allow a few minutes of
thinking time so that student A can quickly
read and remember facts from the quiz
and report, and student B can think of the
questions they’d like to ask.
Extra ideas: To give more practice of the
first conditional in a different context, tell
students that they’re all going on holiday to
a foreign country. Ask them to think about
what they’ll do in different places. Give an
example or two first, eg If I go to Rome, I’ll
visit the Trevi Fountain.
MA Encourage stronger students to ask
more questions so they don’t finish much
earlier than the weaker students.
You could ask for alternatives to the phrase
If we don’t change our ways and suggest
students use a different one each time,
eg If we continue / carry on as we are, If
we go on burning fossil fuels / producing
greenhouse gases, If we don’t stop … etc.
Lesson 3 It’s an animal that
lives in the jungle. pp58–59
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce and practise
relative pronouns to connect sentences, to learn
vocabulary to talk about endangered animals, and
to talk about what we can do to help endangered
species around the world.
Unit 6
111
Warm-up
Find a simple description online about an animal.
Write down its name and its Latin name, eg
hedgehog – erinaceus europaeus, and some
helpful phrases, eg commonly found, its natural
habitat is, it prefers, its diet is and it builds its
nest in. Give a copy to each student. Check they
understand the vocabulary, then describe yourself
as if you were a wild animal, eg Terry (Professoria
Terriceus europaeus) Commonly found in Europe,
though often found in other parts of the world.
Its habitat is a small village near a river in the
Czech Republic. Its diet consists of fruit, vegetables
and cornflakes and it’s also known to eat pizza.
By day, it works, runs to stay fit, and looks after
its children, and by night it can be found in the
local café.
Give students time to think of an animal they’d
like to be and write a short, humorous description
of themselves. When they’ve finished, either put
them in pairs to read out their descriptions to each
other or ask students to present to the class.
MA Weaker students could do this in pairs or
groups of three, so they can help each other
with ideas and vocabulary.
Vocabulary Animals in danger
1
To introduce the topic and check students
know important vocabulary, ask them to match
the words and photos. Ask students which
names for these animals are very similar in their
own language and which are very different.
Answers
a salamander b turtle c leopard d rhino
e tiger f whale g gorilla
2
2.17 GUESS Write phrases on the board
like: I think there is … There could be … There
might be … and model the example sentence.
Then ask students to work in pairs to guess
which adjectives describe the animals. Play the
audio for them to check how many they got
right. Then play it again for students to repeat
the words.
Transcript and answers
1 Amur leopard 2 giant salamander
3 Javan rhino 4 leatherback turtle
5 mountain gorilla 6 right whale
7 Siberian tiger
112
Unit 6
3 Pre-teach the word extinct and ask students to
predict which animals they think are in danger.
Elicit ideas from the class.
Answer
All of them apart from the leatherback
turtle.
Tip: Students usually know a lot about different
things, so try to elicit their ideas and find
out what they know before they listen.
This involves them far more and helps
to activate their background knowledge
about the topic.
Listening
4 Focus on the table below the photos and tell
students to read the last column – Interesting
facts – and guess which six animals from
exercise 2 match each fact. Elicit a few ideas,
but don’t check answers yet.
5
2.18 Explain to students that they’re going
to hear a talk about the six animals. Play
the audio for them to listen and check their
answers to the animals (column A), then
play it again and tell them to make notes
about where the animals live (column B) and
how many there are in existence (column C).
Play the audio again, pausing as necessary.
Encourage students to compare answers with
a partner, then check answers as a class.
Answers
A Animal
1 Amur leopard 2 Javan rhino 3 mountain
gorilla 4 Siberian tiger 5 right whale
6 giant salamander
B Place
1 southeast Russia and northeast China
2 Asia – now only Indonesia 3 Rwanda and
Congo, central Africa 4 eastern Russia
5 North Atlantic, along east coast of US
6 China, Taiwan
C How many left
1 40 2 60 3 fewer than 700 in 1989,
more now 4 about 450 5 fewer than 350
6 not sure
Transcript
Good evening and thank you for coming to
this short talk about animals in danger and the
things that we can do to help.
There are many, many animals in danger
nowadays sadly, but tonight I’m just going to
mention six which are especially in danger of
extinction.
First, there’s the Amur leopard. It lives in
southeast Russia and northeast China and its
skin can sell for $1,000. They’re very, very close
to extinction. There are only about 40 of them
left in the wild.
Second is the Javan rhino – one of the rarest
mammals in the world. There was a time when
it lived all over Asia, but these days there are
only 60 of them left in Indonesia.
Then there’s the mountain gorilla. It’s an
animal which lives in high forests in Rwanda
and Congo in central Africa. In 1989, there
were fewer than 700 mountain gorillas. Their
numbers have gone up again – this is great
news – but they still have lots of problems.
There are only about 450 Siberian tigers left.
They’re beautiful animals and the biggest cats
in the world, so it’s important to protect them.
They only live in the eastern part of Russia.
Right whales are creatures which live in the
North Atlantic, along the east coast of the US.
There are fewer than 350 of these amazing
creatures left, even though they’ve had
protection for more than 80 years.
And my last animal is the giant salamander
from China and Taiwan – the largest amphibian
in the world. People who keep records aren’t
exactly sure how many giant salamanders
are left, but one thing is certain: they are
becoming rarer and rarer.
6
THINK Put students in groups to talk about
why the animals might be in danger. Tell them
that they can look up and use some of the
words from the vocabulary box to help them.
Elicit ideas from each group, but don’t check
answers yet.
7
2.19 Play the next part of the talk for
students to check their reasons from exercise 6.
Play it again, pausing as necessary for students
to make notes in column D, then ask them to
compare their ideas.
The audio finishes with the question So
… what can we do to help? This is a nice
opportunity to prompt more discussion and get
students’ ideas and opinions.
Suggested answers
D
1 hunted for skin (fur coats) and bones
(medicine) 2 horn used in medicine;
disease and natural disasters which destroy
habitat 3 disease (tourism), wars destroy
habitat, hunted for meat, babies kept as
pets 4 hunted for skin (fur coats) and
bones (medicine); forests disappearing
5 swim in polluted waters, crash into ships
6 rivers and lakes polluted, luxury food
Transcript
man
So why are these animals in danger?
Why are so few of them left in the
wild?
woman That’s a great question. Well, there are
lots of different reasons why animals
are in danger.
The Amur leopard and the Siberian
tiger are animals that have beautiful
fur and there are a lot of people who
want to wear very expensive leopard
and tiger coats! So there are people
that hunt them for their skins. Also,
their bones are an ingredient in
traditional Asian medicine. And the
forests where the Siberian tiger lives
are disappearing because people are
cutting down the trees.
People use rhino horn in traditional
medicine too, and people who hunt
rhino can make a lot of money. Rhinos
are also dying because of disease and
natural disasters like tsunamis, as
these destroy their habitat.
Mountain gorillas are dying from
disease too, partly because of
increased tourism but also because
of wars which are destroying their
habitat. Also, some people enjoy
eating gorilla meat and – very sadly –
some people like to have gorilla babies
as pets.
Unit 6
113
The giant salamander is another
creature that is losing its habitat as
more rivers and lakes become dirty
and polluted. But the salamander’s
biggest problem is that people like to
eat it, and it has become a luxury food
item in restaurants in Asia.
Right whales have a different problem.
They have had protection for many
years, but their numbers are still going
down. They are very big and very slow
and they swim very near the coast
where the water is not so clean. It also
means that they often crash into ships
and die.
So … what can we do to help?
A short time limit also means the pace is fast
and more fun. Encourage students to use
different relative pronouns so that they talk
about people, things and places.
10 Focus on the WWF logo with the panda and
ask: How many of you have seen this logo?
Elicit answers to the first question, then tell
students to read the text quickly to find the
answers to both questions. They then read
it again more slowly, this time filling in the
missing relative pronouns. Do the first one as
an example. Ask: What’s the word before the
gap? (organisation) Which pronoun do you use
to talk about a thing? (which / that). Students
complete the activity individually, then check in
pairs.
Extra idea: Tell students to choose one of
the animals and use the notes they made in
exercise 7 to write a short text about it.
Answers
1 World Wide Fund for Nature
2 It’s the symbol of the WWF.
1 which / that 2 which / that 3 which / that
4 which / that 5 who / that 6 who / that
Grammar Relative pronouns who /
which / that
8 Ask students to look at the examples of relative
pronouns in the grammar box. You could
also write the sentences on the board and
highlight the pronouns. Get them to look at
the sentences and work out the rules together.
Note: We’ve just focused on the pronouns
in this level, not relative clauses, so you don’t
need to go into the different types of clause
at this point. Work on both defining and
non-defining relative clauses will be done in
Jetstream Intermediate.
Answers
1 a) who, that b) which, that
2 that
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 140
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
9 Tell students they’re going to play a game to
practise relative pronouns. Read through the
instructions and model the example with one
or two students. Put them in pairs to play the
game; set a time limit of one minute for each
round so they’re quickly on task and don’t
take too long thinking about their answers.
114
Unit 6
11
Ask students to cover the text or close
their books and play the memory game. Give
them a target of perhaps five or six things to
remember. Then tell them to read again to
check.
Extra ideas: You could also do the activity
as a class quiz to see which team can
remember the most facts.
Ask questions about the text, eg How long
has the giant panda been the symbol of the
WWF? What does the panda symbolise?
Does everybody who works for the WWF
get paid? What does the WWF always
need?
Explore
Tell students to go to the WWF website and
find out more about endangered animals and
conservation.
Extra idea: Create a webquest for the
class and get students to either complete
the activity at home or in class using their
smartphones. This is often motivating for
students, so provide links to two or three
websites about endangered animals and
conservation. Make a worksheet with
reading comprehension questions from
each site, then have students search the
sites to answer the questions.
Speaking
Writing
15 Read through the advertisement with the class
and elicit the most important requirements for
volunteers. Ask: What skills, qualities and type
of personality would volunteers need to have?
Make a short list on the board.
12 P
2.20 Say the words five and give to
help students notice the difference between
the long /aɪ/ and short /ɪ/ sounds. Write both
words on the board and ask students to work
in pairs, say the words in the box to each other,
then write them under the correct sound. Play
the audio for students to listen and check, then
play it again for them to repeat each word.
Help with pronunciation difficulties and get
students to see the difference in mouth
position. They should feel the movement from
a more open to closed position when they
make the longer vowel sound /aɪ/ and see the
more closed position of the shorter vowel /ɪ/.
Note: Only the verb form of live is given here.
The adjective live is pronounced /laɪv/.
Transcript and answers
/aɪ/ five: advice, China, describe, drive, inside,
item, mobile, right, wildlife
/ɪ/ give: condition, drink, engine, extinction,
live, since, symbol
Extra idea: Give students these tongue
twisters to practise the two sounds:
A See much wildlife in Dubai?
B Five Siberian tigers and a white rhino!
A Can you list fifty-six ships?
B Give me a minute to think!
13 Put students in pairs to talk about the
questions and make notes for the next
exercise. Encourage students to use relative
pronouns in their answers. You could give this
activity to students as homework so they can
spend some time researching information.
14 Put students in groups to report to the rest of
the class what they talked about. Monitor pairs
as they talk, making a note of any common
problems with grammar, pronunciation or
intonation. Get class feedback and find out the
most interesting and surprising facts.
Give students a few minutes to brainstorm
ideas with a partner, then ask them to write
a formal email expressing interest in being
a WWF volunteer. Remind them to include
details about all of the requirements. Walk
around and offer help and gentle correction if
needed, then get students to share and read
their partner’s emails afterwards.
Vocabulary plus p60
Emergency equipment (2)
1
2.21 Ask students to match the words and
pictures. Then tell them to compare with a
partner. Play the audio for them to check their
answers, then play it again, pausing for them
to repeat each word.
MA For an extra challenge, ask students to
try to name as many of the items as they can
without looking at the words in the box.
Transcript and answers
1 box of matches 2 sweets 3 sun cream
4 sleeping bag 5 whistle 6 GPS device
7 mirror 8 compass 9 map 10 penknife
11 hat 12 rope 13 lighter
Extra idea: Find pictures of each item
of emergency equipment (you could
download them from the internet) and
make a memory game with word and
picture cards. Put students in pairs and tell
them to spread the cards face down on the
table. They then take turns to turn over
two cards. If the words and pictures match,
they keep them and have another turn. If
they don’t match, they turn them back over
and their partner takes a turn. The person
with the most cards at the end wins.
2 To introduce the topic, you could show a short
movie trailer of the film Cast Away with Tom
Hanks (you can find this on YouTube).
Unit 6
115
Ask students to imagine they’re lost in a very
remote and dangerous place. Ask: What
kind of things would be most important?
Put students in groups of three and tell them
to look at the list of emergency equipment
in exercise 2 on SB page 54 and the list in
exercise 1 on SB page 60 and choose the
most important objects. Set a time limit of
three minutes and get them to agree on three
things. Remind them that they must all agree
on the three things. Get feedback from the
groups and find out which three items most
people chose.
3 Go through the Survival quiz first and check
comprehension of a positive attitude, shelter,
and high-energy. Ask students to do the quiz
and compare their answers with a partner.
Remind them that sometimes there’s more
than one correct answer. Go through the
answers with the class and, if you want to,
give them the extra information shown in the
answer key.
Answers
1 b) a positive attitude, followed by
d) training.
2 Order: 1c) find shelter 2d) find water
3a) light a fire 4b) find food (Survival’s
rule of three: In extreme conditions we
can live three hours without shelter,
three days without water and three
weeks without food. With fire, we can
boil water to make it safe to drink.)
(Note: If you have any injuries, you
should treat those first.)
3 b) Animals – you can eat all of them.
Most fish are OK, as are many insects.
(And they all provide protein.) Animals
are safer to eat than plants because
many plants (especially brightly
coloured ones) are poisonous and can
make you sick or even kill you.
4 c) Getting too cold (hypothermia –
when your body temperature falls
below 35º) can kill you because your
organs stop working, though the other
things are dangerous and painful.
5 All of them except tight clothes, which
can reduce circulation.
116
Unit 6
Extra idea: If you have a strong class and
have done work with phonemic script,
write a selection of words for emergency
equipment on the board in phonemic
script. Put students in teams. The first team
to shout out the word correctly gets a
point. The team with the most points at the
end is the winner.
Wordbuilder Nouns from verbs
a Explain that sometimes nouns and verbs have
exactly the same form. As an example, ask:
What’s the noun form of the verb ‘aim’?
(aim). Then tell students that there are also
exceptions and get them to find the one with a
different form.
Answer
survive (noun = survival)
b Read out the example and point out the verb
and noun change. Ask students to choose a
word from the list and write sentences with
both nouns and verbs. Ask them to share their
sentences together afterwards.
Extra idea: Tell students to write the
sentences but leave gaps where the key
words should be. Their partner has to guess
which word goes in the sentence from the
list in exercise a.
2.22 Do the first one as an example and
4 P
elicit where the stress is (atmosphere – first
syllable). Students then work individually to
do the activity. Play the audio for students to
check their answers, then play it again, pausing
for students to repeat each word.
Transcript and answers
atmosphere, condition, connection, disappear,
energy, example, important, mosquito,
positive, temperature
Ask students which of the three-syllable
5 P
words are very similar in their own language
and which are very different. Tell them to say
any words that are similar and decide if the
stress is the same or different.
MA For greater support, play the audio
again rather than asking students to say
the words.
Focus on: keep
a Explain that keep is used in lots of different
phrases. If students aren’t sure about an
answer, encourage them to complete the
ones they know first and guess the final few
options.
Answers
1e 2d 3f 4c 5a 6b
b Students fill in the gaps with the correct
preposition. Get them to check their answers
with a partner afterwards. Ask: Can you
imagine when you might see or say ‘Keep
off the grass!’? Elicit ideas, eg in a park. Put
students in pairs to come up with a situation
for each one, then ask them to share their
ideas with the class.
Answers
1 off 2 away 3 out 4 on 5 up 6 on 7 in
Everyday English p61
You first!
Check students understand unconscious, then
elicit a few ideas from the class for what they
would do in this situation.
Giving instructions; checking
understanding
1 Ask students to look at the photos and work
out what’s happening in each one. Ask: Do you
know what order we do them in if someone
needs first aid? Don’t check answers yet.
2
2.23 6 Decide whether you’re going to
use the video or simply play the audio. If you
can, it would be useful to see the video in this
lesson, as it contains useful visual information.
The video shows how to give first aid and
also highlights useful language for explaining
things, sequence instructions and checking
that people understand what we’re trying to
show them.
Play the video or audio for students to check
their ideas from exercise 1.
Answers
A3 B1 C2
Transcript
A OK. First you need to check if the person is
breathing or not. To do that, lift their chin
and move their head back. Like this. OK.
Then put your ear close to their mouth and
listen. You can see if their chest is moving
at the same time. Are you with me so far?
Yes? Good.
OK then … here’s the next step. If the
person is breathing, turn them onto their
side and move their head back. This is the
‘recovery’ position. Then, if you’re in the
UK, call 999. Otherwise call the emergency
number for the country you’re in. Keep an
eye on the person until help arrives. Is that
clear? OK.
If the person isn’t breathing, call 999
right away, and start to work on the heart
immediately. Put one hand on top of the
other – just like this – push down strongly
here – with the heel of the hand – about
100 times a minute. Like I’m doing now.
And you need to keep doing this until help
arrives. OK? That’s very important. Because
if you stop, the person could die. Do you
understand? Do you have any questions?
B Yes, sorry, I’m a bit confused about what to
do if the person isn’t breathing. Could you
explain it again?
A Yes, sure. Let’s do it again.
3 Tell students to read through the sentences
first so that they know what to listen for. Play
the video or audio again while students watch
or listen and complete the instructions.
Answers
1 breathing or not
2 chin; head back
3 ear; mouth; listen
4 their side and move their head back
5 999
6 999 right away
7 heart immediately
8 the other
9 down strongly with the heel of the hand
about 100 times a minute.
10 doing this until help arrives.
4 Ask students to look at the phrases in the box.
Ask: Can you remember what the instructor
said? Students tick the questions they can
remember, then watch or listen again to check.
Unit 6
117
Answers
Are you with me so far? Yes? Is that clear?
Do you understand? Do you have any
questions?
5 Get students to explain what’s happening
in the photos and match them with the
situations.
Answers
1A 2B
6 Ask students to look at the instructions and
match them with each situation in exercise 5.
Ask: Can you remember what 999 is? (The
number for the emergency services in the UK).
Do you know what number to call in other
countries? If they don’t know the number for
many countries, it would be useful for them to
look it up online.
Answers
burn: b, d, e/f
choking: a, c, f
7 Tell students to try to put the instructions in
the correct order and compare with a partner.
Point out that one item may not be used, as it
depends on the severity of the injury (Call 999
immediately).
Answers
burn: 1d 2b 3f/e
choking: 1c 2a 3f
8 Tell the class to look at the phrases in exercise
3 again, then take turns to give each other
instructions for one of the situations in exercise
5. Encourage them to use the expressions
to sequence things correctly – first, then,
here’s the next step – and check their partner
understands well.
Extra idea: Ask students to talk with a
partner about a time when they were
hurt or injured. Get them to explain what
happened and how people helped them.
Encourage them to ask extra questions for
more detail and information.
118
Unit 6
De-stress!
Read through the short text. Ask students to stand
up – it’s easier – put their hands on their stomach
and take a couple of deep breaths. As they
breathe in, their stomach should push their hands
out (and their shoulders stay still).
Note: One or two breaths is plenty – too many
could cause them to feel dizzy.
we don’t say … / we say …
This section focuses on the following areas:
• incorrect use of a future tense in a zero
conditional sentence
• incorrect tense use in a first conditional
sentence
• incorrect choice of a relative pronoun
Ask students to cover the green we say … side
and see if they can correct the mistakes themselves
before they look and check.
Units 5&6 Review
Warm-up
Tell students you’re going to describe a famous
person. They have to listen carefully and try to
guess who it is. When they think they know, they
have to put their hands up. Give points to students
who guess early on in the list of sentences – the
more information they have, the easier it becomes.
He was born on the island of Mallorca in Spain on
3rd June, 1986.
He still lives there with his family.
He started playing his sport when he was three
years old.
He won the Spanish and European titles when he
was 12.
He won his first grand-slam title in Paris when he
was just 19.
He won a gold medal at the Beijing Olympics in
2008.
He has an advertising contract with Nike.
He has won 14 grand slam titles.
His nickname is Rafa.
Tip: This type of guessing game provides a nice
introduction to reading activities. It
encourages prediction and activates students’
background knowledge so they’re more
engaged and motivated to read the text.
Reading
1 If you didn’t do the warm-up, ask the class
what they know about Rafael Nadal (it’s
OK if they say Nothing!), then get them to
answer the questions in pairs. Check students
understand the words in question 3.
Suggested answers
2 standing / sitting, noisy / quiet, working /
resting, hot / cool, fast / slow …
MA To give more help in question 3, point to
the items in the photos and elicit the correct
words.
2 Quickly check that students understand what
routines and rituals are. Set a short time limit
pp62–63
so they read for gist. It’s also helpful to write a
focus question on the board so that they have
a clear reason to read, eg What does Nadal do
between games? (He drinks from both bottles
of water). Ask students to talk about the article
and things they found surprising. Get class
feedback about their reaction to the article.
3 Ask students to close their books and get them
to complete the sentences from memory if
they can. They don’t have to write the exact
words and it’s OK if they have to look. After
they’ve finished, get them to compare their
answers with a partner, then check the article
again to see if they were correct.
Answers
1 will see that he has a lot of
2 can’t concentrate
3 mustn’t walk on
4 must be exactly the same
5 different heights; won’t
6 can have them in his mind while he’s playing
4
Put students in groups of five if possible
and assign one person or thing in the list to
each student. Tell them to share their facts
with the others in the group, then read the text
again and check their answers.
Speaking and writing
5 Do an example with the class first. Say: I always
close my eyes and breathe deeply for a minute
before I do something difficult. Put students in
small groups to talk about any rituals, routines
or superstitions they have. If they don’t have any
routines, they could talk about someone they
know or make something up.
6 Ask students to write about their (or somebody
else’s) routines or rituals. This provides a reason
to listen closely to each other in exercise 5, as
well as ask extra questions for more detailed
information. You may want to start this
activity in class and ask students to finish it for
homework.
Units 5&6 Review
119
Grammar
Things people do vary, but might include
repeatedly checking that things like lights /
the oven are turned off, washing their
hands several times before they can go out,
etc.
7 Go through the list of items. If necessary,
review each piece of language by looking at
the grammar reference section for Unit 6 on SB
page 140.
Ask students to read the article again and
underline examples of relative pronouns, modal
verbs and conditional sentences. You could put
them in groups of three to do this, each person
looking for a different item.
Answers
1 uncle Toni who taught … and who
is still his coach … courts which were
terrible … routines which help him
… rituals which create order … two
bottles, which he puts down
2 you have to be in the right mental
state … He has to do them … he
believes he has to do … He must walk
… He mustn’t walk … He can’t put
… he must put … His socks must be
… he has to check … He always has
to have … The labels must face … he
must drink … he must look up … he
can have them
3 If you aren’t, you won’t win. … If you
watch Rafa play a match, you will see
… if he doesn’t do them, he can’t
concentrate. … If they are different
heights, he won’t play well.
8 Have students read the text about Wendy and
circle the correct words. Encourage them to
compare their answers with a partner and get
feedback. Ask them to explain the reasons for
their choices, then find out how many people
are like Wendy.
Answers
1 who 2 might 3 goes 4 has 5 must
6 mustn’t 7 has to 8 mustn’t 9 may
10 must 11 will
Preposition Park
a Students complete the sentences with the
correct prepositions. Check answers by asking
eg: What words are before and after the first
gap? (get; the airport) Which preposition do
we use to talk about movement? (to)
Answers
1 to; in 2 at; at 3 to; on 4 to; to 5 to; on
b Have students read the sentences and discuss
their travel preferences together.
Cross Culture: Giving presents
a Start by asking: When do you give somebody a
present? Elicit words like birthday, anniversary,
wedding. Ask: What kind of presents do you
give when you go to somebody’s house? Elicit
a few ideas, then tell students to read the
information and try to complete it with the
correct presents. Tell them that it’s fine to make
a guess – but there are some clues in the article
to help them. Elicit ideas from the class, then
tell them the correct answers.
Answers
1 clock 2 book 3 flowers 4 cakes 5 fruit
6 scissors 7 knife 8 gloves 9 handkerchief
10 shoes
b Students discuss their reactions to the text with
a partner, then make a list of tips and advice
for giving presents in their country. Write
should and must on the board and encourage
students to use the modal verbs. Get class
feedback.
c
Background information: Obsessive
Compulsive Disorder (OCD) is a
psychological condition which we all have
to some extent, but some people find it
very difficult to do anything without going
through certain rituals a number times.
120
Units 5&6 Review
Go through the situations first and check
understanding of roses and scarf. Put students
in pairs to talk about the questions. Tell them
to write a different question about crosscultural differences when giving presents, and
ask them to work with a different partner and
answer each other’s questions.
7
UNIT
FOCUS
Danger
GRAMMAR: comparison; -ing forms as nouns
VOCABULARY: dangers; animals; fears and phobias
FUNCTIONS: giving yourself time to think
Lesson 1 A lot more dangerous
than crocodiles pp64–65
Answers
1 A bears B avalanches C kangaroos
D slippery floor E crocodiles
F dangerous water for swimming
2 Suggested answers: A in Canada / the
USA, in mountains and forests
B in Switzerland and other countries
with mountains C in Australia, in the
outback D in any country, on wet floors
E in Australia / Africa close to rivers F in
any country, on the beach
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce some
phrases for making comparisons, to learn words
to talk about dangerous animals, and to find out
more about the different ways of pronouncing the
letter ‘o’.
You first!
To introduce the topic and start the lesson in
a personalised way, tell students to look at the
photos. Ask: Have you ever seen signs like these
and if so, where were they? Get students to tell
each other their stories and find out if they know
what you should or shouldn’t do if you see each
sign.
Speaking
1 Put students in pairs to talk about and answer
the questions together. Elicit feedback to find
out their ideas.
MA To help weaker students, quickly elicit
modal verbs of probability and phrases for
guessing such as it might be and it could be
from some of the stronger students. Write
them on the board so that weaker students
can refer to them if needed.
Note: Some students don’t respond well to the
instruction to draw something, but are often
OK with the word sketch – less pressure than
draw – and that’s also why we say more or less
in question 4. Students should know that they
don’t have to be good at drawing to do this.
Extra idea: You could also play a mime
game. Tell students to work in groups and
take turns to choose one of the danger
signs and act it out for the other students
in their group.
Vocabulary Animals
2
2.24
Ask students to match the pictures
with the animal names. Then play the audio
for them to check their answers. Play it again,
pausing for students to repeat each word.
Check any difficult pronunciation, eg mosquito
/mɒ'skiːtəʊ/, and check the syllable stress on
the longer words: buffalo, crocodile, elephant,
jellyfish. Ask: Which syllable is the stress usually
on? (The first syllable) Which word is different?
(mosquito – it’s on the second syllable). Note
that more work will be done on different ‘o’
sounds in exercise 4.
Answers
1j 2h 3b 4e 5d 6k 7g 8l 9c
10f 11a 12i
Transcript
a scorpion, b cow, c lion, d deer, e crocodile,
f mosquito, g hippo, h buffalo, i snake, j bee,
k elephant, l jellyfish
3 Go through the verbs first and check
comprehension. Encourage students to look
them up in a dictionary or online if they’re
unsure of the meaning. Ask students to talk
about the animals and discuss the questions
with a partner. Get class feedback and check
their ideas. Accept any answers – no single
answer is correct here, so if students can give
reasons for their answers, that’s fine.
Unit 7
121
Suggested answers
1 A scorpion can sting you and kill you. A
cow could kick you. A lion could attack
and kill you. A crocodile could attack
you, bite you and kill you. A mosquito
could bite you and cause disease. A
hippo could kill you. A buffalo could
kick you. A snake could bite you. A bee
could sting you. A jellyfish could sting
you.
2 A cow could kick you, but it isn’t really
dangerous. A deer isn’t dangerous –
they’re too shy of humans. An elephant
is only dangerous if you get in its way.
2.25 Explain that there are lots of
4 P
different ways to pronounce the letter ‘o’. Ask
students to work in pairs and say the words
in each group out loud. Do the first group as
an example. Ask: Which word has a different
sound? (kangaroo). Ask a few students to
share their answers with the class, then play
the audio for students to listen and check.
Answers
1 kangaroo 2 monkey 3 goat 4 rooster
5 ox 6 rhino
Transcript
1 buffalo, hippo, kangaroo
2 dog, dolphin, monkey
3 goat, horse, scorpion
4 crocodile, frog, rooster
5 dragon, ox, gorilla
6 cow, rhino, mouse
2.26 Introduce the vowel sounds using
5 P
the phonemic charts on SB page 156. Ask the
class to look at the sounds and say and repeat
them together so they know them before
they listen. If they find it difficult to say the
individual sounds shown by the phonemes, say
the example word first, eg wall, then say the
sound, eg /ɔː/.
Tell students to say the words in exercise 4 and
match them with the correct sound. Play the
audio for students to check their answers, then
play it again, pausing for students to repeat
each word.
122
Unit 7
Transcript and answers
/ɔ:/ wall: horse, scorpion
/əʊ/ slow: buffalo, hippo, goat, rhino
/aʊ/ now: cow, mouse
/ʌ/ run: monkey
/u:/ too: kangaroo, rooster
/ə/ about: dragon, gorilla
/ɒ/ box: dog, dolphin, crocodile, frog, ox
Extra idea: Create a matching game with
sound and word cards. Write a word from
the list in exercise 4 on one card and its
corresponding ‘o’ sound on another. Put
students in pairs and give each pair a set of
both cards for them to match.
Tip: Try to play background music while
students work. This creates a relaxed
atmosphere and also encourages them
to speak louder and articulate more
clearly. Stopping the music also helps to
bring activities to a close, so it helps as a
classroom management technique.
You could do exercise 5 on -ed / -ing adjectives
in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Grammar Comparison: a bit (more) / a lot
(less)
6 We often use phrases such as a lot, a little,
a bit to express quantity when we compare
things, so to help students notice these
phrases, tell them to read the sentences in the
grammar box and get them to guess if the
statements are true or false. Elicit ideas from
the class – accept any answers as long they can
give a reason.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 140
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
7 Ask the class to look at the phrases highlighted
in bold in the grammar box and answer the
questions. Check answers as a class and
ask concept-checking questions so students
understand the function and slight differences
in meaning, eg How many animals are
mentioned in each sentence? (Two) Are they
the same or different? (Different) What words
describe the differences? (Adjectives – smaller,
bigger, more intelligent, less dangerous)
What do the sentences do? (Compare things)
What words come before the comparative
adjectives? (a bit, a lot, a bit more, a lot less).
Answers
1 less 2 much
8 Go through the four statements first, then put
students in pairs or small groups to make lists.
Then ask them to make sentences about their
animals using the correct comparative form
and quantifiers. Ask for feedback and gently
correct any small mistakes you hear.
MA For extra support, you could elicit ideas
from the class first and write them on the
board, then ask students to write sentences.
MA Get volunteers to come to the board.
These will generally be stronger students. This
will allow time for the weaker students to
watch the activity and look up adjectives they’d
like to use.
9
2.27 GUESS Ask students to guess which
are the most dangerous animals in the world.
Tell them to work in pairs and guess the
number of deaths caused by each animal. Then
play the audio for them to listen and check
their answers. Play the audio again if necessary,
and encourage them to compare their answers.
Answers
1 at least 1,000 2 nearly 3,000
3 1–2 million 4 more than 3,000
5 at least 20,000
Transcript
There’s no argument about the most
dangerous animal in the world, which is
actually an insect. It’s the mosquito. It causes
malaria, and every year it kills at least one
million people worldwide, possibly even two
million.
For other animals, it’s less easy to give exact
figures because people don’t always report
problems, but the second most dangerous
animal is probably the snake. Snake bites cause
at least 20,000 deaths a year, mostly in Africa
south of the Sahara.
As for other dangerous animals, scorpions have
a very powerful sting and they kill more than
3,000 people every year.
But you might be surprised to learn that hippos
are a lot more dangerous than you think.
They say that hippos kill more people in Africa
than lions or buffalo or even elephants. How
many? We don’t know exactly, but some
people say hippos kill nearly 3,000 people
every year.
And avoid crocodiles too – they’re a bit less
dangerous, but they attack and kill at least
1,000 people a year. Be careful where you
swim!
10 Ask students to look at the numbers from
exercise 9 again and make sentences using the
phrases to compare the animals. Point out that
there aren’t any correct answers here, but they
must use the phrases correctly to compare the
animals.
Suggested answers
1 Mosquitoes are a lot more dangerous
than crocodiles.
2 Crocodiles are a lot less dangerous than
mosquitoes.
3 Hippos are a bit less dangerous than
scorpions.
4 Scorpions are a lot less dangerous than
snakes.
5 Snakes are a lot more dangerous than
crocodiles.
11 Ask the class to say which is the most
dangerous animal and why.
Answer
Mosquitoes are the most dangerous animal
because they cause malaria, which kills at
least a million people every year.
Did you know?
Tell students to look at the pictures of the cow and
the deer on SB page 64. Ask: Do you think they’re
dangerous? If so, why? Elicit students’ ideas and
see if they can guess why they’re sometimes
extremely dangerous. They then read to find out
more about these two animals.
Speaking
12 Tell students to take turns describing animals to
each other. They have to listen to their partner
and guess the animal. Encourage them to use
quantifiers and comparatives.
Unit 7
123
Tip: Try to get students to report back what
their partner said in feedback. If students
know you might ask them to do this, it
tends to make them listen more carefully
to each other in speaking tasks. It also
practises grammar such as reported speech
and third person singular in a natural way.
13 Ask students to look at the photo, then get
them to create their own danger signs. Explain
that the sign should contain a word, a picture
or both. As a follow-up speaking activity, tell
them to walk around the room and guess what
each other’s signs mean.
14 EVERYBODY UP! Energise your lesson by
asking students to stand up and find one (or
more) person for each fact. They should make
a note of each person’s name. Afterwards, ask
students to tell the class what they found out
and ask follow-up questions, eg Where were
you? What happened? How did you feel? to
find out more about each other’s stories. Get
students to report back on the most surprising
and interesting stories afterwards.
Lesson 2 Not as dangerous as
you think pp66–67
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to learn more about
how to compare things using the phrase (not) as
… as, to discover statistics about how dangerous
things are, and to talk about a famous film.
You first!
To introduce the topic, show pictures of dangerous
things such as sharks and other wild animals. Ask
students to brainstorm a list of things that aren’t
actually as dangerous as people think they are. Get
quick feedback on their ideas.
Speaking
1
124
GUESS Tell students to look at the photos
at the bottom of SB page 66 and answer
the questions together. Do the first question
together. Ask: What do you think connects
them? Elicit a few ideas. Tell them it’s OK if they
don’t know the answers, so encourage them to
guess and share their ideas with each other.
Unit 7
Suggested answers
5 Some ideas: cigarettes, alcohol, flu,
dogs, hurricanes, storms
Reading
2 Ask students to read the text and find out if
their predictions were correct. Get feedback
and discuss which facts they expected or found
surprising in the article.
Answers
1 These things are all dangerous.
2 Lightning could kill you if it hits you;
icicles could fall on you and injure you;
you could fall off a ladder; you could fall
out of bed; a shark could attack you; you
could cause a crash by using your mobile
phone while driving; a volcano could
kill you if it erupted; a vending machine
could fall on you.
3 Write part of the opening two sentences of the
article on the board and underline rare.
Say: Look at the sentence on the board. Can
you find a word or phrase that means the
same as ‘rare’? (Not common) Read a bit more.
How many shark attacks were there around
the world in 2012? (80) Is it something that
happens a lot or not much? (Not much) So
what does ‘rare’ mean? (Not happening very
often). This process helps students see how
they can search for clues in the surrounding
content.
Students do the activity individually, then check
in pairs.
Answers
rare = not happening very often
fatal = causing death
annually = every year
slip = slide without intending to
trip = when you knock your foot on
something and fall or lose your balance
out of reach = in a place where you can’t
get it
lose their balance = fall or nearly fall
do a lot of damage = cause a lot of harm
the least of our worries = the thing we
shouldn’t worry about
4 Ask the class to read the text again and answer
the questions with a partner. Ask: Has anybody
texted or used a mobile phone while driving?
Has anybody ever shaken a vending machine?
Why did you do it?
MA Ask fast finishers to find out extra
information from the text, eg the numbers of
people who die from: vending machines, car
accidents, volcanoes, falling down stairs, shark
attacks, falling out of bed, and walking in
winter.
Answers
1 Drive a car while texting on a mobile
phone.
2 Volcanoes
3 Sharks
4 They fall on people from high buildings
and can do a lot of damage because
they’re sharp.
5 If it falls on you because you shake it.
5
Answers
Icicles can be as sharp as a knife.
Sharks are not as dangerous as lightning.
Vending machines don’t kill as many
people as volcanoes.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 141
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
7 Do the first sentence with the class as a model,
then tell students to work in pairs to make
full sentences. Students sometimes use the
comparative adjective immediately after as (Car
travel isn’t as safer as plane travel), so gently
correct any small mistakes you hear.
Answers
1 Car travel isn’t as safe as plane travel.
2 Women aren’t as funny as men.
3 Mobile phones are as useful as
computers.
4 Girls have as many accidents as boys in
the home.
5 Living rooms are as dangerous as
kitchens.
6 Swimming is as dangerous as skiing.
Tell students to close their books and try
to remember the information so they can
complete the sentences. They then read the
article again to check their answers.
Answers
1 the most terrifying monsters
2 are a lot more
3 kills around 40 people
4 are texting while driving
5 is much higher
6 falling down stairs or steps, or falling
off a ladder
Point out the grammar note about the use of
nearly. Ask: What does ‘nearly’ mean here? How
does it change the sentence? Teach / Elicit that it
adds emphasis to the phrase not as common as –
so it modifies the adjective and gives it a stronger
meaning.
Grammar Comparison: (not) as … as
6 Tell students to fill in the gaps and compare
answers with each other. Remind them to look
back at the article on SB page 66 if they have
difficulties.
8
THINK Ask: Do you think plane travel is
safer than car travel? Elicit ideas, then tell
students that it’s true – travelling by plane is
safer than travelling by car, although when
there’s a plane crash, usually a lot of people are
tragically killed, so it seems more dangerous.
Ask students to work through the sentences
and identify the true ones. Elicit class feedback
and have students explain their reasons for
their answers. Point out that some of these are
very subjective, so there may not be a correct
answer!
When students have finished, it might be
useful to suggest that they then research
information about these statements online and
see what they can find out.
Answers
1 True, 4 False, 5 False, 6 False
You could do exercises 1–4 on Idioms with as
... as in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Unit 7
125
Background information: 1 According
to statistics, travelling in a car is about
a hundred times more dangerous than
travelling by plane. 2 According to a
scientific experiment in 2007, men are
funnier than women, but many people
wouldn’t agree with this! 4 According
to statistics, boys are more likely to
have an accident at home than girls.
This may be because they are naturally
more adventurous, but again, that’s
quite subjective. 5 Although apparently
there are more accidents in living rooms
than kitchens, accidents that happen in
kitchens are more serious. 6 It depends on
the country you’re talking about, but in
France in 2007, more swimmers died than
skiers, so in that instance, we can say that
swimming is in fact more dangerous than
skiing.
Extra idea: Tell students to look around
the room and take turns to describe
something they see using the comparisons
as … as or not as … as, eg This book isn’t
as heavy as your dictionary.
9
Let students read through the
paragraph first, then give them two or
three minutes to rewrite it using the correct
comparative forms. When they’ve finished,
play the audio for them to check their answers.
2.28
Transcript and answers
There are about 400 shark species and some
are not as dangerous as others. In fact,
most species never attack humans. The three
most dangerous are the great white, the tiger
and the bull shark. These three are also a lot
bigger than other species. But the biggest
species of all is the whale shark. It’s the
world’s largest fish but it is harmless.
Speaking
10 Before you start the activity, ask: Do you know
any films about sharks? Elicit ideas and see
if the name Jaws comes up. Tell students to
look at the film poster and read the text, then
discuss the questions. Check comprehension
of beach resort, bestseller and blockbuster.
126
Unit 7
For question 3, some students may not want
to sing in front of the class, but if anybody
does, encourage them to have a go. If nobody
wants to sing, tell them to search online to
find the opening music and play it in class.
Most students will probably recognise it,
even though it’s an old film! Ask students for
feedback about questions 1 and 4 and find out
if anybody liked the same animal films.
Answers
2 Steven Spielberg
11 Focus on the photo of the man and the
shark on SB page 66. Students talk about
the questions in pairs and identify possible
reasons why humans are more dangerous than
sharks and other animals. Encourage them to
use comparatives, then check their ideas and
opinions in feedback.
Possible answers
2 war, violence, crime, spread of disease,
creation of famine, pollution of the
seas, hunting, global warming
Lesson 3 Taking an exam is
frightening. pp68–69
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to learn how to use
-ing forms as nouns, to find out more about fears
and phobias, and to discuss why some things are
frightening.
Warm-up
Play a spelling-bee game to review words from
earlier in the unit. Dictate a list of around 10–15
words. These could be words students have
difficulty spelling or just words they’ve recently
learnt. Tell them to check the spellings with a
partner until they’re sure they’re right, then get
feedback from the class.
MA The activity also encourages teamwork so
the stronger students help the weaker ones with
spelling. You could also get them to explain the
meaning of any words they don’t remember the
meaning of.
Listening 1
You could look at the notes on this in the
grammar reference on SB page 141 now, or
leave that till the grammar section in exercise 5
when these are covered in more detail.
1 Ask: Do you know what a phobia is? Elicit
ideas about common fears that people suffer
from. Be sensitive with this, as some people in
the class may have genuine phobias that affect
their lives.
Answers
heights and flying should be circled.
Go through the types of phobia in the list at
the top of SB page 68. Tell students not to
worry if they can’t pronounce them – many
native speakers probably couldn’t either! Point
out that the phobia name often comes from
Latin or Greek, so they may be able to guess.
Ask: Do you know what an arachnid is? (An
insect with eight legs, like a spider). Show
students that the name for ‘fear of spiders’
contains part of the word arachnid. Students
then try to match the phobias and definitions.
Tell students they can guess or check online.
Transcript
1 interviewer Excuse me. Can I ask you a
quick question? I’m doing a
survey about phobias. Is there
anything that you’re afraid of?
man
Afraid of? Yes. I’m really afraid
of heights. I could never go up
the Eiffel Tower.
interviewer So what do you do about that?
man
I don’t do anything. I just
avoid going up tall buildings or
mountains!
2 interviewer Excuse me. Is there anything
that you’re afraid of?
woman
Yeah, I’m afraid of flying. It
terrifies me.
interviewer So what do you do about that?
woman
I don’t fly. I go by train or bus
whenever I can.
3 interviewer Excuse me. Is there anything
that you’re afraid of?
man
Yes, water. I can’t swim. I think
it’s called aquaphobia.
interviewer So what do you do about that?
man
I make sure I never go in deep
water.
4 interviewer Excuse me. Is there anything
that you’re afraid of?
woman
Snakes. I can’t stand them. Just
seeing one on TV makes me
feel sick.
interviewer So what do you do about that?
woman
Nothing. It isn’t exactly a
problem in London!
Answers
1c 2e 3b 4f 5g 6h 7a 8i 9d
Explore
Ask students to search online and find out the
top ten fears and phobias. Set a short time limit
so that they surf the web quickly for the relevant
information. Get feedback from students and
ask them which things they expected or found
surprising.
Background information: Various
websites give different information,
but the most likely top ten fears are:
fear of public speaking (glossophobia),
fear of death (necrophobia), fear
of spiders (arachnophobia), fear of
darkness (achluophobia, scotophobia or
myctophobia), fear of heights (acrophobia),
fear of people or social situations
(sociophobia), fear of flying (aerophobia),
fear of open spaces (agoraphobia), fear of
thunder and lightning (brontophobia), fear
of confined spaces (claustrophobia).
2
Tell students they’re going to listen to
four people describing their fears and phobias.
Play the audio, pausing as necessary for
students to find the fear in the list at the top of
SB page 68. Point out the grammar note and
the use of the -ing form, flying, as a noun (so
it’s a noun like planes in the first sentence).
2.29
3
Teach / Elicit deal with, eg problems,
difficulties, people, questions, etc (= take
action when there’s a challenge). In pairs,
students try to remember how each person
tries to overcome their phobia. Play the audio
again for students to check their answers.
Unit 7
127
Answers
1 He avoids going up tall buildings or
mountains.
2 She doesn’t fly. She goes by train or bus
where possible.
3 He never goes in deep water.
4 She doesn’t do anything.
Speaking
4 Model the example sentence, then write a
sentence on the board about a phobia you
have (or someone you know has). Then ask
students to walk around the room and find
out about other people’s phobias. Encourage
them to ask extra questions, eg What do you
do? How do you feel when it happens? How
do you try to deal with it? Reassure students
that if they don’t want to talk about their own
phobia, they can talk about somebody else’s,
or even make one up.
Tip: It’s often helpful to model speaking
activities with personal stories. This creates
interest, practises students’ listening skills
and gives them a clear idea of what to do.
Interesting and funny anecdotes and stories
from the teacher also relax the class and
give them permission to produce the same.
Speaking
6 Focus on the list of things in exercise 4.
Model the example dialogue with one or two
students. Students then work in small groups
and rank the fears and phobias from most to
least frightening. You could also write some
useful phrases of agreement and disagreement
on the board to help them, eg I agree, That’s
true, Absolutely, I don’t agree, I’m not sure
about that, That’s a good point but …
Extra idea: Do a class survey to find out
which fears rank the highest in the class.
7 Students match the reasons with the fears in
exercise 4. Remind them that sometimes there
is more than one possible answer.
Suggested answers
a) 6, 9 b) 4 c) 7 d) 2, 8, 10 e) 5 f) 3
g) 1 h) 3, 8, 10 i) 8
8 Elicit other suggestions and reasons from the
class. This also provides an opportunity to
talk about the things we worry about when
we’re learning a foreign language or giving
presentations. Explain that it’s OK to make
mistakes and try new things, and also share
helpful strategies and ideas together.
Grammar -ing forms as nouns
Listening 2
5 Ask: What things are people scared of in
exercise 4? Tell students to underline them
and ask questions so they realise that -ing
forms can be used as nouns, eg What things
are people afraid of? (Finding a spider, singing
karaoke, taking a test, etc) What’s similar
about the words ‘finding’, ‘singing’ and
‘taking’? (They all end in -ing) What’s another
word for a thing? (A noun) So all of these
things that look like verbs are used as …?
(Nouns).
9
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page
141 now or at the end of the lesson and go
through it with students.
Get students to complete the sentences about
themselves, then compare answers. Ask a few
students to say their sentences to the class.
128
Unit 7
2.30 Explain to students that they’re going
to hear the first part of a story. Play the audio
and ask them to listen and circle the correct
answers.
Answers
1 the rainforest 2 shower 3 snake
Transcript
tom It was last February. I was on holiday
with some friends in Brazil, and we were
at a hostel in the rainforest near Parati.
jeff
Oh, I’ve been to Parati! It’s fantastic, isn’t
it?
tom We weren’t actually in Parati, in the
town, we were outside, in the rainforest.
jeff
Oh, right.
tom Anyway, one morning I got up and
went to have a shower. I pulled back the
shower curtain – and there was a great
big snake!
jeff
Oh my goodness! A snake? That’s
seriously scary. What did you do?
10 In pairs, students look at the list and talk about
what happened next. Elicit a few ideas, but
don’t confirm if they’re correct yet.
MA For extra support, talk through the list
with the class and ask how many people think
he did each thing. Check comprehension of
keep still.
11
2.31 Play the audio for students to check if
their predictions were right. Pause just after ran
and ran (see note in the transcript below) and
ask the class to guess what happened in the
end. Then play the final section.
Answers
e, b, c
He went and got the hostel manager, but
when they came back, the snake was gone.
Transcript
Jeff What did you do?
Tom Nothing.
Jeff Nothing?
Tom No, I couldn’t move. I just looked at it.
I was terrified. I was paralysed!
Jeff Wow!
Tom And then suddenly I shouted. And then
I ran … and ran and ran. [pause here]
I finally found the hostel guy and he
went to have a look … but the snake
wasn’t there.
Jeff Perhaps you imagined it?
Tom No, I didn’t. He said I probably frightened
it when I shouted. And another thing he
said: ‘Don’t leave the bathroom window
open at night!’
12
Put students in pairs to retell the story. Tell
them they can look at exercises 9 and 10 to
help them. Monitor pairs as they work, making
a note of any problems with grammar or
pronunciation. When they’ve finished, play the
audio again for them to check their stories.
Writing and speaking
13 Before you do the writing activity, ask students
to look at transcripts 2.30 and 2.31 on SB page
151 and point out the structure we use when
we tell stories:
•
•
•
•
•
The place and characters in the story – It
was last February. I was on holiday with
some friends in Brazil, and we were at a
hostel in the rainforest near Parati.
Complicating action and problem –
Anyway, one morning I got up and went
to have a shower. I pulled back the shower
curtain and there was a great big snake!
A series of events – And then suddenly I
shouted. And then I ran ... and ran and ran.
I finally found the hostel guy and he went
to have a look.
The resolution of the problem – The snake
wasn’t there.
The moral of the story – Don’t leave the
bathroom window open at night!
Ask students to write a story about a
frightening experience they’ve had (or they can
make one up). Tell them to use the questions
to help them. Encourage them to use the
story-telling structure as well and give them
a few minutes of thinking time so they can
remember things and write notes.
14 Put students in small groups to tell each other
their stories and frightening experiences. Find
out who’s had the most frightening experience.
Art & Music
Tell students they can see a bigger version of the
sculpture on SB page 145. Tell them to look online
and find out more about the sculpture and the
Katy B song.
Extra questions for class or homework
Art
Find another sculpture by Louise Bourgeois
and write a short description of it.
Music
Write one or two questions about the
lyrics of another song by Katy B and ask a
partner.
Answers
Art
Name of sculpture: Maman. It’s called this
because maman means ‘mother’ in French
and the spider is pregnant. The big bag
under her stomach apparently contains 26
eggs – made of marble!
Unit 7
129
Music
First line of song: … of my mind
Song: Crying for No Reason. Her problems
come alive in her dreams.
Culture notes: Louise Bourgeois was born
on 25th December, 1911, in Paris, France, and
died in May 2010 in New York at the age of
98. She emigrated to America in 1938 with
her husband and lived in New York for the
rest of her life. She was a controversial
painter and sculptor who began using the
spider as a central image in the 1990s.
2 Point out that some of the expressions may be
the same in students’ language too, but usually
idioms that mean the same thing vary quite
widely. Ask students to think of these and try
to translate them into English. Ask, eg What
do you say when something no longer exists?
This can be very amusing, as translated idioms
often don’t make much sense!
Maman is a huge (9m high) statue she
created, which was first seen at the Tate
Museum in London in 2000. There was
another gigantic spider a little later in the
Rockefeller Plaza in New York, and they’ve
since been installed from Havana to Bilbao,
and from St Petersburg to Seoul. The
sculpture was made in admiration for her
mother, who was strong, clever, helpful and
protective. Louise Bourgeois was awarded
the French National Order of the Legion of
Honour in 2008 and was also honoured by
the National Women’s Hall of Fame in 2009.
3 Model the example sentence, then ask
students to write their own sentences using
the expressions in exercise 1. Monitor students
as they work, making sure they use the
expressions correctly.
Katy B (real name Kathleen Anne Brien) is
an English singer / songwriter. She was born
in Peckham, South London, in 1989 and
attended the famous BRIT School alongside
Adele. In 2010, she released her debut
single, Katy On A Mission and she achieved
further chart success with songs like Lights
On, Broken Record and Easy Please Me. She’s
been nominated for the Mercury Prize and
many other awards.
Crying for No Reason was released in January
2014 and was a track from Katy B’s second
album, Little Red.
Vocabulary plus p70
Idioms with as … as
1
130
Transcript and answers
as blind as a bat; as busy as a bee; as cool as a
cucumber; as cold as ice; as dead as a dodo; as
fast as lightning; as good as gold; as quiet as a
mouse; as strong as an ox; as white as snow
2.32 Explain that we often use idiomatic
phrases with as … as (also called similes) to
describe something, so if something no longer
exists, we can say as dead as a dodo because
dodos have been extinct for a long time.
Students work individually or in pairs to match
the words to make idioms.
Unit 7
4 Say the example As sensible as a cheese
sandwich! Ask: Does this make sense? (No!)
Explain to students that they can make up
whatever they want. Allow time for them to
write new expressions and encourage them to
be creative. When they’ve written their new
phrases, tell them to go around the room and
share them with each other.
-ed / -ing adjectives
5 Tell students to look at the picture. Ask: What’s
the difference between ‘bored’ and ‘boring’?
Teach / Elicit that the -ing adjective is the thing
that causes the feeling and the -ed adjective
is the feeling itself. Students complete the
sentences, then check with a partner.
Answers
1 terrified; terrifying 2 worried; worrying
3 fascinating; fascinated 4 amazing;
amazed 5 annoying; annoyed
Focus on: out
Tell students to complete the sentences with the
correct expressions. Then ask them to practise the
dialogues with a partner.
Answers
1 Keep out 2 out of work 3 out of order
4 run out of; run out 5 out of reach
6 out of date
6 P
2.33 Sometimes students find it
difficult to hear stress in words, so get them
to hum the words to find the stressed syllable.
Alternatively, draw circles on the board to
show the stress pattern, eg crocodile – O o o.
Do the first group with students, then tell them
to say the words to each other and circle the
one with different stress. Play the audio for
students to check their answers, then play it
again, pausing for them to repeat each group
of words.
Answers
1 mosquito 2 kangaroo 3 attention
4 statistic 5 volcano 6 American
Transcript
1 crocodile, elephant, mosquito
2 probably, kangaroo, actually
3 attention, animal, dangerous
4 thunderstorm, Africa, statistic
5 accident, volcano, journalist
6 American, terrified, icicle
Extra idea: Ask students to underline the
stressed syllable in each word. This will help
to reinforce the stress patterns. (See the
underlined syllables in the transcript above.)
of what they want to say. Decide whether
you’re going to use the video or simply play
the audio. Explain to students that they’ll hear
a conversation about scary films. Play the video
or audio and ask them to watch or listen and
write down the scary films the people talk
about. Check answers as a class. Ask: Do you
agree with any of the people?
Answers
Javi: Rec
Fred: The Night of the Hunter
Lucia: Suspiria
Jennie: She doesn’t watch scary films.
Transcript
interviewer
javi
interviewer
javi
interviewer
fred
De-stress!
A tiger growl is a great exercise to do if the energy
of the class has dropped very low, but be careful.
Tell students to do it reasonably gently – especially
if anyone has a bad back – no sudden movements.
And tell them not to growl too loudly or it may
hurt their voice (and disturb the class next door!).
Everyday English p71
interviewer
fred
interviewer
lucia
You first!
Look at the film posters and ask students to guess
which genre of movie they are. Ask: Have you
seen any of these films? What did you think of it?
Give an example of a film that frightened you, eg
The Shining, The Omen, then put students in pairs
to talk about the scariest film they’ve ever seen.
Get feedback from the class.
interviewer
jennie
Giving yourself time to think
1
2.34 6 This section highlights ways for
students to hesitate and buy time as they think
interviewer
So what’s the scariest film you’ve
ever seen, Javi?
Oh, definitely Rec!
Rec?
Yes, Rec. R-E-C. It’s short for record
because it’s about a TV reporter.
It’s a Spanish film, it takes place
in Barcelona. The first one was in
2007 and there have been Rec 2,
3 and 4 since then! The first one
was the best.
Do you agree, Fred?
Actually, no. I liked Rec a lot, but
my all-time favourite scary film is
a very old one: The Night of the
Hunter with Robert Mitchum. It’s
terrifying.
When was that? Around 1960?
1955!
What’s the scariest film you’ve ever
seen, Lucia?
My scariest film? Um, wait a
minute, let me think, oh, I think I
have to say Suspiria. It’s, um, it’s an
Italian film made by Dario Argento.
It’s a classic now. In my view, it’s
one of the best horror films ever.
And what about you, Jennie?
What’s your scariest film?
Scariest film? Oh my goodness.
I never watch scary films. I can’t
stand them! There are too many
scary things happening in real life
without watching scary films as
well. I think …
OK, OK – thank you very much.
I’m sorry I asked!
Unit 7
131
2 Go through the ideas in the box and check
understanding of version and scene. Then play
the video or audio again and ask students to
write more information about the scary films.
Play the video or audio a third time, pausing as
necessary, then tell students to compare with a
partner and add more details.
MA As an extra challenge, see if students can
make notes before they watch or listen again.
Answers
Rec: short for ‘record’, about a TV reporter,
Spanish film, takes place in Barcelona, first
film in 2007, three more films
The Night of the Hunter: starred Robert
Mitchum, made in 1955
Suspiria: Italian film, made by Dario Argento
3 Explain that one of the people used some
particular phrases to give themselves time to
think. Ask: Can you remember who that was?
Elicit that Lucia needed time. Play the video or
audio again, and this time get students to tick
the phrases she used to buy time.
Answers
Wait a minute, Let me think
4 Ask: Did you notice any other expressions
people used when they wanted time to think?
Tell students to watch or listen again and
identify any other pauses and hesitations. At
this point, it’s good to tell them that saying um
and er is really quite normal when we speak,
though it’s best to avoid it if we’re doing things
like giving presentations.
Answer
Lucia says Um.
5 Model the example questions with one or two
students. Tell students to take turns to ask
questions and give themselves time to think
and speak. Encourage them to use the phrases
in exercise 3.
MA For extra support, put students in pairs to
write two or three questions they can ask each
other before they start the activity.
132
Unit 7
Writing a film review
6 Ask students to read the short film review and
identify some of the information it contains.
Get them to notice things like the name of
the film, the year it was made, the name of
the actor / the director, the location, a short
description of the story, an opinion.
Tell students to look at the expressions in bold
and ask: Did you hear any of these expressions
in the conversation? Which ones? Play the
video or audio again if necessary for them to
check their answers.
It would be useful to write these expressions
on the board, so students can look back at
them and include them in their own writing in
the next activity.
Answers
My all-time favourite scary film, It takes
place, It’s about, In my view
7 Allow students time to write their review. If
they don’t like scary movies, tell them they
can write about any other type of movie. Give
them time to think of information for each of
the points on the board and also let them look
up information online too.
You may want to start this activity in class and
ask students to finish it for homework, then
bring it into class so you can start the next
lesson with exercise 8.
MA Depending on their ability, some students
could use the text in exercise 6, while others
try to write their review without any extra help.
8 Put students in groups to share their reviews.
Make sure they don’t say the name of the film
so they have to guess what each person has
written about.
we don’t say … / we say …
This section focuses on the following errors:
• incorrect use of as … as
• incorrect superlative form
• incorrect choice of -ed / -ing adjective
• incorrect use of an infinitive instead of an -ing
form as a noun
Ask students to cover the green we say … side
and see if they can correct the mistakes themselves
before they look and check.
8
Go for it!
UNIT
FOCUS
GRAMMAR: something, anything, everything, etc; must and can’t for deductions;
make / let / help; possessive pronouns
VOCABULARY: presentations; presentation equipment
FUNCTIONS: beginning and ending a talk
Lesson 1 Somebody must be in.
Transcript
ann
Hello? Is anybody in? Hello?
bob
That’s strange, nobody is in. Everybody’s
out.
ann
They invited us to have dinner and stay
overnight. They can’t be out! And look,
there are lights on everywhere – all over
the house. Somebody must be in.
bob
Well, nobody’s coming … and it’s very
quiet. I can’t hear anything at all. Let’s go
home. It’s freezing.
ann
Ssh! I thought I heard something, but it
could be the wind.
bob
Yes, it’s probably nothing. Just the wind.
Come on. Let’s go. It’s a bit creepy.
ann
We drove all the way here! I’m not going
anywhere.
bob
Oh look! The door isn’t shut.
ann
Oh yes. So let’s go in.
bob
No, I don’t think we should.
ann
Oh come on! Where’s your sense of
adventure?
bob
I don’t have one. To tell you the truth,
I feel a bit scared.
ann
Well, I’m not staying out here in the rain.
I’m going in.
bob
OK. I’ll come with you, but I don’t like it.
Something feels wrong …
pp72–73
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce indefinite
pronouns to talk about people, places and things,
to learn about using the modal verbs must and
can’t to make deductions, and to talk about a story.
Note: It would be useful to bring in a Sudoku
puzzle (from a newspaper or magazine).
You first!
Ask students to look at the picture and discuss
whether they’d like to spend a night in this house.
Get them to explain their reasons.
Speaking
1 Go through the instructions first and make
sure students know what they have to do. Put
them in pairs to look at the picture and do the
activity. Get feedback from the class and write
their ideas on the board. This should provide a
helpful review of vocabulary and also introduce
some new adjectives. Ask extra questions, eg
Who do you think lived here? Do you think
anyone still lives here? Is there a story behind
this house?
Grammar 1 something, anything,
everything, etc
2
Extra idea: To practise pronunciation and
sentence stress, ask students to look at the
script and underline where they think the
stressed words in the sentences were. Tell
them to try to remember how the actors
said each line, then ask them to act it out
together. When they’ve finished, play the
audio again so they can compare.
Look at the grammar table and check
comprehension of the words. You could either
turn to the grammar reference on SB page 141
now or after exercise 5, when more work has
been done on the words.
2.35
Ask students to complete the conversation
on SB page 72 with the words, then play the
audio for them to check their answers.
Answers
1 anybody 2 nobody 3 Everybody
4 everywhere 5 Somebody 6 nobody
7 anything 8 something 9 nothing
10 anywhere 11 Something
3
GUESS If necessary, review the words and
phrases for speculating about the present and
future from Unit 5 Everyday English (SB page 53).
Put students in pairs to guess the end of the
story together. Tell them to share their ideas
with a new partner and encourage them to use
the correct phrases. Elicit ideas and vote for the
best potential ending.
Unit 8
133
4
Play the end of the story to find out if
their ideas were right. Ask: Have you ever had
or prepared a surprise birthday party? What
happened?
2.36
Speaking
7
Answer
It was a surprise birthday party for Bob.
Transcript
ann
Come on, just down here. Try this room.
voices Surprise! Happy birthday, Bob!!
Answers
1 Ann
2 She said things like ‘Let’s go in’ and
‘Oh come on! Where’s your sense of
adventure?’ Bob says things like ‘No, I
don’t think we should.’ ‘I feel a bit scared.’
You could do exercises 4 and 5 on Speaking verbs
in Vocabulary plus at this point.
5 Ask students to look back at the grammar box
and the script and work out the grammar rules
together. Point out that sometimes more than
one answer may be correct.
Answers
1 affirmative sentences
2 negative sentences, questions
3 affirmative sentences
4 singular
Grammar 2 must and can’t for deductions
8 Look at the sentences in the grammar box and
elicit the missing word in the first sentence.
Tell students to look at the script on SB page
72 to find the answer. Ask: What did Ann say?
Repeat with the second sentence.
Ask students to find reasons in the text that
help Ann and Bob make deductions about the
present. This provides a useful opportunity to
model reading skills such as getting students
to guess meaning from context. Highlight
how we can read forwards and backwards to
link ideas together, ie They invited us to have
dinner and stay overnight. They can’t be out!
And look, there are lights on everywhere – all
over the house. Somebody must be in.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 141
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
Extra idea: When we teach students new
grammar, it can also be useful to focus on
pronunciation. Help students to pronounce
the /ŋ/ sound in thing and show them that
the final consonant sound in words such
as something, everything and anything is a
nasal sound made with the tongue at the
back of the mouth. Get students to also
notice and practise the first-syllable stress
in all of the words. Students sometimes mix
up /ŋ/ with /k/ at the end of words, so look
out for mistakes and gently correct them.
6 Students complete the sentences with the
correct words. When they’ve finished, ask
them to think of a good response to each
sentence. Elicit feedback and find out the best
and funniest ideas from the class.
Answers
1 anywhere; everywhere 2 something;
anything 3 Nobody; everybody
134
Unit 8
THINK This task gets students thinking more
about the photo and the sub-text (ie what
people didn’t say). Students work in pairs and
talk about the questions. Encourage them to
ask each other extra questions about times
when they were afraid or took risks. Elicit
answers from one or two students, then check
answers as a class.
Answers
can’t; must
1 There are lights on everywhere.
2 a) Ann says they’ve been invited to
dinner and to stay overnight.
b) Bob says it’s freezing.
c) Ann says they drove all the way
there.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 141
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
9
2.37 Tell students that they’re now going to
use must and can’t to make deductions about
something completely different. Find out who
knows the game Sudoku. If you brought in a
puzzle, show it to the students. Write must be
and can’t be on the board and ask students to
turn to SB page 124.
b
1 Some students may never have played
Sudoku before, so read through the
instructions together and model the
activity. If anybody in the class knows
how to play, ask them to try and explain
the rules to the others, helping where
necessary with any vocabulary. If it’s easier
for the class, just ask them to read the
instructions.
b
2 Do the first item with the class as an
example. Go through it slowly and
carefully, pausing so that students can
follow on the Sudoku grid. Make sure that
everybody’s clear about the answers. Put
students in pairs to make deductions about
the remaining numbers. Monitor pairs as
they work, making a note of any common
problems and gently correcting where
necessary. By the end of this part of the
activity, they should have filled in squares
A–F on the grid.
3 Play the audio for students to listen to two
people doing the puzzle. Play it again,
pausing frequently for students to follow in
the grid. Find out how many people in the
class got the same answers.
Answers
1 A must be 7. It can’t be 3, 4, 5 6 or 8.
2 B can’t be 7.
3 C can’t be 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 or 9.
4 C must be 1.
5 D can’t be 1.
6 D must be 9.
7 B must be 2.
7 E must be 8 or 9.
8 F must be 6 or 8.
Transcript
a OK, so A must be 7. It can’t be 3, 5, 6, 4
or 8 because they’re in the same box, 1 is
in the same column, and 2 and 9 are in the
same row.
b
Yes, I think I get that. And if A is 7, then B
can’t be 7.
a That’s right. But we don’t know what B is
yet because we need to work out C and D
first.
a
a
b
a
b
a
b
a
b
a
b
a
C can’t be 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 or 9 … so C
must be 1.
Absolutely!
So D can’t be 1.
Correct.
So D must be 2.
Um … Actually … D can’t be 2. There’s a 2
in that column already. Look!
Oh yes! So D must be 9. And B must be 2.
Right.
And E must be 1 or 4?
No, I don’t think so. 1 and 4 are in that
row.
Oh, that’s right! E must be …. 8 or 9!
Yes.
And F must be … 6 or 8?
Yes. Well done.
Speaking
10 Do the first item with the class as an example.
Students then work in pairs to guess the odd
word out in each row and give reasons for
their answers. Encourage them to use must or
can’t.
Suggested answers
1 daughter (The others are men.) 2 salary
(The others are all people.) 3 dustbin (The
others are all electrical.) 4 suitcase (The
others are all ways of getting around.) /
boat (The others can all have wheels.)
5 Canada (The others are all islands.) /
Australia (The others are all in the northern
hemisphere.) / Iceland (The others are all
English-speaking countries.)
Extra idea: Ask students to write one
more odd-one-out puzzle for their partner
to solve.
11 Tell students to look at the photo. Read out
the example deduction, then ask questions to
guide students’ ideas, eg What can you say
about: the boy on the old man’s knee / the
four women at the back / the woman next
to the old man / the three girls sitting on the
ground? Which girls must be sisters? How do
you know?
Unit 8
135
You could also write a set of questions on
the board to help them, eg Where is it? Who
are the people? How are they connected?
When was the picture taken? How are the
people feeling? Point out that students should
use must and can’t to give reasons for their
guesses.
can describe any situation where a person is
delivering more than one or two sentences to
more than one person. Most people will have
had to do this at some time or another – even
if only in group work in their English classes!
Students work in pairs to talk about their
feelings and experience of giving presentations.
Elicit ideas and encourage them to share
helpful tips with each other.
MA Write the modal verbs of deduction on
the board so that weaker students can look
back at them if needed. This just gives extra
scaffolding to help them. Try to encourage
stronger students to write more deductions
about the photo.
Extra idea: Ask students to bring some
pictures in to the next lesson. These
could be old photos or pictures on their
smartphones. Tell them to pick interesting
photos that the rest of the class can make
guesses about. Ask students to walk
around the room and show each other
their pictures and make guesses about
them.
Answer
1 The woman is giving a presentation.
2
GUESS Tell students to imagine they’re
the woman in the picture and answer the
questions. Encourage lots of active guessing
and accept any sensible suggestions. The point
of this exercise is to get students interacting
with each other and producing lots of ideas.
3
2.38 First go through words 1–8 and check
comprehension. Then ask students to look
back at the words in bold in exercise 1 and
match eight of them with these words. Play
the audio for them to listen and check their
answers.
Lesson 2 Does it make you
nervous? pp74–75
Transcript and answers
1 subject – topic
2 objective – aim
3 event – occasion
4 worried – nervous
5 manage – deal with
6 afraid – scared
7 difficulties – problems
8 group of people – audience
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to practise the verbs
make, let and help to talk about strategies for
dealing with stress and increasing confidence,
and to learn useful vocabulary for talking about
presentations.
You first!
Focus on the photo and find out how many people
have given a presentation. Ask: Did you enjoy it?
Keep this short and elicit just a few ideas,
as students will talk more about the photo in
exercise 1.
Vocabulary Presentations
1 Before you begin, ask students about the
photo, eg Where is she? What’s she doing?
Why’s she doing it? Who are the other people?
How’s she feeling? Remind students to
speculate and guess using could, might, must
and can’t.
Go through the questions and, if students
aren’t clear about the meaning of the words in
bold, do exercise 3 at this point. Note that talk
136
Unit 8
4
2.39 Students work in pairs or groups to
discuss the difference between a lecture, a
lesson, a presentation and a speech. Ask:
Where do you think each one happens? Elicit
a few ideas from the class, then play the audio
for them to check their answers.
You might want to point out that we can also
use make with presentation.
Transcript and answers
You give a lecture in a university.
You give a lesson in a school.
You give a presentation in a company.
You give a speech at a wedding.
Reading
Tip: Encourage prediction by asking students
to read the first paragraph of a text, then
guess what the rest of the article will be
about. Elicit feedback of their predictions
before they continue reading. This
encourages more speaking, gets them to
interact more with the text and focuses
them on what they’re going to read.
5 Focus on the short paragraph on the photo
on SB page 74. Allow students time to read it,
then talk about the questions in small groups.
Find out from groups how many people are
afraid of public speaking or not, and elicit ideas
for strategies for dealing with this fear. Write
the top three reasons for being afraid on the
board.
You might want to tell students that in a
recent survey, 74% of Americans said that
their greatest fear was speaking in public. Their
second greatest fear was death! Look back at
Unit 7 Lesson 3 (page 127) for a list of the
top-ten global fears.
6 Allow students two or three minutes to read
the article quickly and underline reasons why
people are afraid of giving presentations.
Setting a short time limit means they
read quickly and don’t focus on unknown
vocabulary (they’ll see this in the next activity).
Look at the reasons for being afraid that you
wrote on the board in exercise 5, and find out
how many were similar.
Answers
five reasons: afraid the audience won’t
like us or will disagree with us; think they
might criticise us or find us boring; think
the audience might walk out; have painful
memories of school; remember more recent
experiences of things going wrong
7 Put students in pairs to try to guess the words
and phrases in bold. Check answers with the
class.
Tip: To help students remember new vocabulary,
ask them to make new sentences with the
words. This is also a good time to review
how they use their vocabulary notebooks.
Answers
actually = in fact, really
over-confident = too sure of yourself
keep us on our toes = force us to continue
directing all our attention and energy to
what we’re doing
anxious = worried and nervous
criticise = express disapproval of someone
or something
even = used to show that something is
surprising, unusual or unexpected
painful = causing emotional or physical
pain
embarrassed = feeling ashamed or shy
went wrong = didn’t go as planned
share = have the same feeling, quality or
experience
perform our best = do something as well as
we possibly can
nerves = worry or anxiety about something
that’s going to happen
8 Go through the questions and check
comprehension of adrenaline. Students work
through the true / false activity and correct the
false statements.
Answers
1 false: Feeling a little bit nervous makes
us give a better talk or presentation.
2 false: Audiences don’t like speakers
who are over-confident.
3 true
4 true
5 false: It’s important to understand why
we’re afraid.
6 true
9 Look at questions 1, 2 and 5 in exercise 8.
Ask: Do you agree or disagree with these
statements? Put students in pairs to talk about
their opinions and give reasons why.
Grammar and speaking
10 Ask students to look at the table and the
examples of make, let and help. Highlight the
object (me) and adjective / infinitive in each
one. Point out that after the verb help, we can
use an infinitive with or without to, but make it
clear that this doesn’t apply to make or let.
Ask students to read through the article again
and find other examples. Check answers with
Unit 8
137
the class. Say: In one sentence, the object
wasn’t ‘us’. What was the object? (our nerves).
man
Answers
… feeling a little bit nervous can actually
help us communicate better … it can
let us connect with our audience …
speaking in public makes so many of us
really anxious … perhaps a teacher made
us feel embarrassed … it can help us
to accept our fear … can make us feel
better too … we can’t let our nerves
control us
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 141
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
11
Tell students they’re going to listen to
four people talking about what helps them
feel more confident. Ask students to look at
the pictures and try to guess what the people
might say. Check their ideas quickly, then play
the audio for them to listen and match the
pictures and speakers. Encourage them to
check their answers together afterwards.
2.40
Answers
1d 2c 3b 4a
Transcript
man Perhaps I can ask you first, Jenny. What
helps you to be more confident if you
have to do something challenging?
jenny What, like giving a presentation or taking
an exam?
man Yes, exactly.
henny Um … I talk to myself, in my head, and
sometimes out loud too! I say things like
It’s OK. I can do this. It’s OK. I can do this
– and I say it over and over again. It really
makes me confident.
man What about you, Kadir?
kadir I go jogging if I can – the day before or
early that morning. Doing something
physical is great. It lets me de-stress my
mind as well as my body. It helps me
relax.
man What do you do, Lizzy?
lizzy If I’m really nervous, I need to get away
from everything and everybody. I need
space! I try to go for a long walk on my
138
Unit 8
max
own. It helps me to feel less anxious and
it gives me time to think.
And finally, Max. What do you do?
I get into a hot bath and sing very loudly!
It makes me feel great and it gives me
lots of energy.
12 Focus on the sentences in the grammar table.
Tell students to tick the sentences they heard,
then play the audio again for them to listen
and check their answers.
Answers
It really makes me confident.
It lets me de-stress my mind.
It helps me relax.
13
Tell students to cover the pictures in
exercise 11. Put them in pairs to try and
remember what each person does and the
effect it has. Remind them to use phrases with
make, let and help. Play the audio again if
necessary for them to check their ideas.
14 Students do the activity in small groups. If you
can, change the groups after a few minutes
to encourage more speaking and interaction.
Elicit feedback and find out the most popular
and useful ideas.
MA Encourage stronger students to speak
more by personalising the topic and giving
examples and stories of difficult things
and what they did. Ask more questions in
feedback.
Tip: In mixed-ability classes, students will
generally do the same activities, but you can
just adapt your expectations accordingly.
Extra idea: Put students in pairs. Write on
the board five to ten of the things that help
students feel more confident. Give them
a few seconds to look at the sentences,
then erase them. Ask students to write
down the sentences they remember. The
team with the most correct sentences
wins the game. The idea of the game is to
encourage students to listen carefully in
feedback. They sometimes chat and don’t
listen to each other, so this memory game
helps them to focus and listen to each
other’s contributions more.
Art & Music
You Can Get It if You Really Want was
originally recorded in 1970 by Desmond
Dekker, but in 1972 Jimmy Cliff did his own
version. It was included in the soundtrack of
the film The Harder They Come, which was
released in 1972 and was a Jamaican crime
film that many people say brought reggae
fully to the attention of the rest of the world.
The song has been used a few times by
various political groups around the world.
Tell students to look at the bigger version of the
painting on SB page 145. Elicit ideas for alternative
titles and encourage students to talk about
another painting by Carolee Clark.
For the song, tell students to find the lyrics and
find out more about Jimmy Cliff online.
Extra questions for class or homework
Art
Does the woman in the painting look
confident?
Are there things about her or the way she’s
walking that make her look confident?
Does she have anything in her right hand?
Describe the street where she’s walking.
Could it be dangerous? Why?
Answers
Art
Carolee Clark grew up in British Columbia,
Canada, but now lives in Oregon, USA.
Music
What you must do: You must keep on
trying in order to succeed.
Jimmy Cliff is from Jamaica.
Culture notes: Carolee Clark grew up in
the Okanagan Valley of British Columbia
in Canada and was influenced from an
early age by her mother’s love of art. Her
family usually spent the summer at a cabin
on the lake, and while she and her two
sisters drew, her mother painted. She’s well
known for her vibrant use of colour and
paintings of common places such as homes,
landscapes, rivers, valleys, or even cars,
coffee shops and airports. Her artwork has
been shown in public and private collections
all over the world.
Jimmy Cliff is a musician, singer and actor. He
was born in St Catherine, Jamaica, on April
1st, 1948. His real name is James Chambers.
His career took off when he was just 14 years
old with the hit single Hurricane Hattie. He’s
in the rock-and-roll hall of fame and is famous
for songs such as Wonderful World, Beautiful
People, The Harder They Come and I Can See
Clearly. He’s been nominated for Grammy
awards and was also awarded the Order of
Merit by Jamaica.
Lesson 3 Some practical ideas
pp76–77
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to learn more words
for talking about presentations (in particular
PowerPoint presentations), to ask and talk about
possession using whose and possessive pronouns,
and to give students helpful ideas and suggestions
for visualising and preparing a presentation.
Note: You could make pairs of word and stresspattern cards for a word game. See notes in
exercise 14.
Warm-up
Write a list of topics on the board, eg favourite
hobby, best holiday, best friend. Tell students to
work with a partner and choose a topic. They have
to take turns and talk about the topic for one
minute. You could also remind them to use make,
let and help phrases from the previous lesson.
When they’ve finished, students report back to
the class.
Vocabulary Presentation equipment
1
2.41
Students match the words with the
things they see in the picture, then say which
is the odd one out and why. Play the audio for
students to check their answers, then play it
again, pausing for them to repeat each word.
Pay particular attention to the different stress
on multi-syllable words, eg remote control,
keyboard, laptop, memory stick, microphone,
projector. Also point out cable is two syllables:
/'keɪbl/.
Ask students which words are very similar
in their own language and which are very
different.
Unit 8
139
The first thing is to think of your
presentation as a story, which has
a beginning, a middle and an end.
Begin with a bang! Research shows
that people remember beginnings and
endings much more than middles, so
make your beginnings and endings as
interesting and as powerful as possible
to get their attention.
Sometimes presenters talk too much.
That’s very boring. Don’t talk all the
time. Let your audience talk too. Ask
them questions and involve them. Do
you think that’s a good idea or not?
How many of you use PowerPoint?
Well, if you’re using PowerPoint, don’t
use too many slides. If you do, they
will make your audience go to sleep!
And don’t write too much on one
slide – people won’t be able to read it
and they will lose interest. Fonts like
Helvetica or Arial are easy to read and
don’t forget to use a big size.
And sometimes pictures are more
powerful than words, so use them, but
make them clear and simple. In fact,
a basic principle of any presentation is
kiss – K-I-S-S. What do you think that
means? Any ideas?
audience Keep it short and simple!
woman Exactly. Keep it short and simple! And
how should I end?
audience With a bang!
woman Yes, great.
Transcript and answers
a vase b plug c cable d projector e screen
f slide g keyboard h memory stick
i mouse j laptop k remote control
Vase is the odd one out as it isn’t
something you use in a presentation.
2 Allow students time to discuss in pairs or small
groups which are the four most essential items.
They can compare their ideas with another pair
or group. Try to get them to agree on the four
most important things, then elicit feedback
from each pair or group.
Note that there are no right or wrong answers
– students can make a case for more than four
items as long as they can back them up.
Listening 1
3
2.42 Go through the tips first and do the
first one as an example with the class. Ask:
What does a story usually have? (A beginning,
a middle and an end). For item 6, show a
sentence in Helvetica or Arial on a computer to
teach / elicit the word font.
Students try to complete the tips in pairs. Play
the audio for them to listen and check their
answers. Ask one or two students to read out
their answers to the class.
Answers
1 beginning, a middle and an end
2 your beginnings and endings as
interesting and as powerful as possible to
get their attention
3 talk too; them questions and involve them
4 slides; go to sleep
5 be able to read it and they will lose
interest
6 read; big
7 clear and simple
8 it short and simple
Transcript
woman OK, so today we’re going to look at
things to consider when you’re
preparing a presentation because you
don’t want your audience to get bored.
You want them to enjoy your
presentation and remember it, don’t
you?
140
Unit 8
4
Write the words from the box on the board
and tell students to close their books. Allow
time for students to work in pairs to try to
remember what the trainer said. Play the audio
again for students to listen and check.
Answers
You should think of your presentation as a
story.
People remember beginnings and endings.
Avoid talking too much.
Don’t use too many slides.
Use fonts that are big and easy to read.
Use pictures that are clear and simple.
Speaking
5 Put students in pairs or small groups to
discuss the questions and decide whether
they agree with the presentations advice.
Monitor students as they work, making a
note of any common problems with grammar,
pronunciation or intonation.
Elicit ideas from pairs or groups and ask them
to give reasons for their ideas and opinions.
Suggested answers
3 Ideas for ways of starting a talk in an
interesting way might include asking a
question, using a picture, a word, some
music, a story, a joke, etc.
4 Use a large size font; 28–34 point is
perfect.
When you’ve finished your presentation
and you’re happy with it, always check
the spelling and the grammar!
And it’s a good idea to keep it in at
least two places: on your laptop and on
a memory stick.
And finally, on the day, be in the room
early to check the equipment and see if
everything works.
Answers
1 mine 2 yours 3 hers 4 his 5 ours
6 yours 7 theirs
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 141
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
8 Put students in small groups and tell them to
put things on the table. Model the example
dialogue with one or two students, then tell
them to ask and answer questions using the
possessive pronouns.
Extra idea: Put students in teams and tell
them that you're going to write sentences
with mistakes on the board. They have to
quickly read and correct each sentence.
The first team to shout out the correct
answer gets a point. Students sometimes
make mistakes with possessives, such as
repeating the noun or noun phrase after
the pronoun, making the pronoun plural,
using the wrong gender, or using object
pronouns instead. This activity helps
students notice and correct typical mistakes
in a fun way.
Example sentences (correct answers given
in brackets – don’t include those on the
board):
Those are mine apples. (Those are my
apples.)
Hers books are on the table. (Her books are
on the table.)
Is it Tom’s pen? Yes, it’s hers. (Is it Tom’s pen?
Yes, it’s his.)
I want you to meet a friend of me. (I want
you to meet a friend of mine.)
The big house is they. (The big house is theirs.)
6 This is a pairwork information-gap activity.
Each student looks at a different page. Make
sure students don’t look at each other’s advice
while doing this activity. They each read and
summarise their text by making notes in the
table. Walk around and offer help with difficult
vocabulary if needed. They then tell each other
about their texts and make notes to complete
the table. Encourage careful listening and ask
them to agree on the most useful piece of
advice. Elicit ideas from each pair and find out
how many pairs chose the same piece of advice.
Grammar Possessive pronouns; whose
Listening 2
7 To introduce the grammar point whose, write
the following sentences on the board and see
if students can explain the difference: Who is
this? Whose is this? Then tell students to look
at the picture and ask one or two students
to read out the dialogue. Ask: What could
the woman say instead of ‘It’s mine’? (It’s my
memory stick) What does ‘mine’ replace? (my
memory stick). Give students time to complete
the grammar box individually, then check
answers in pairs.
9
THINK To introduce the topic, ask students
to look at the photo and discuss the questions
about visualisation. Elicit a few ideas about the
meaning of visualisation.
10
2.43 Write the questions from exercise 9
on the board and ask the class to listen and
write the answers. Play the audio, pausing as
necessary, then play it again for students to
check their answers.
Unit 8
141
bill
Answers
1 Visualisation is seeing things in your
head. You imagine what you want
in advance and you see it happening
before it really happens.
2 Sportspeople use it to help them win;
you can use it for giving presentations,
taking an exam, performing in a
concert, doing your driving test.
Transcript
julie Good evening and welcome to ‘Secrets
for Success’. With me in the studio
tonight is sports psychologist, Bill Baxter.
Bill’s going to talk about a technique
which can help us deal with big
challenges in our life. Thank you very
much for coming in, Bill.
bill
I’m very glad to be here, Julie.
julie I believe you’re going to tell us about a
technique called visualisation?
bill
Yes, that’s right.
julie Um, so what exactly is visualisation?
bill
Good question! Visualisation is, um,
seeing things in your head. You imagine
what you want in advance and you see it
happening – before it really happens.
julie That sounds a bit strange.
bill
Actually, it’s a technique that
many sportspeople use. Successful
sportspeople see themselves winning –
in their mind – before they take part in
an event. It’s an essential part of their
training and it helps them to win.
julie So if I’m running a marathon and the
night before I do it, I see myself running
it and I finish successfully, that’s going to
help me?
bill
It’s a start. But once isn’t enough.
Practice is important, and you need to
practise a lot. Great athletes imagine
that they’re winning an important
competition for months before it
happens, and they do it over and over
again.
julie Right. So regular practice is important?
bill
Very.
julie Right. That’s good to know. And of
course you can use this technique for
other things which have nothing to
do with sport, can’t you? Like giving
presentations?
142
Unit 8
julie
bill
julie
bill
Of course you can – you can use
visualisation for taking an exam,
performing in a concert, doing your
driving test, and, as you say, giving a
presentation – anything!
And it really works?
Yes, it really works. It really makes a
difference. But remember, preparation is
extremely important too. It isn’t enough
just to visualise and expect magic to
happen! You need to prepare really
carefully too. It’s important to work
hard, train seriously, and do whatever
you need to do in order to increase your
chances of success.
Bill Baxter, thank you very much.
It’s a pleasure.
11 Play the audio again and ask students to
write down what Bill says about practice and
preparation. Check answers as a class.
Transcript
1 You need to practise a lot.
2 Preparation is extremely important. You
need to prepare carefully, work hard and
train seriously.
12 Allow time for students to look at the options
first so they know what to listen for. Then play
the audio again while students choose the best
answers.
Answers
1d 2d
13
Ask students to try to remember the
interview and complete the sentences in their
own words. Then play the audio again for
students to check if their ideas are the same.
MA As they’ve already heard the audio
three times, this shouldn’t be too difficult
for stronger students, but you could always
encourage weaker students to make notes
when they listen before, so they can use those
to try and complete these sentences.
Transcript
1 Visualisation is seeing things in your head.
2 Great athletes imagine that they’re winning
an important competition (for months
before it happens).
3 You can use this technique for other things
(which have nothing to do with sport).
4 It isn’t enough just to visualise and expect
magic to happen.
5 You need to prepare really carefully too.
Extra idea: Tell students you're going to
read the interview to them, but as you
read, change some of the details for false
information. Students have to listen and
correct you when you get it wrong.
2.44
Encourage students to say
14 P
the words and mark the stressed syllables.
Then play the audio for them to listen and
check their answers. Play it again, pausing for
students to repeat each word. Ask students
which words are very similar in their own
language and which are very different.
Transcript and answers
advance, athlete, challenge, concert,
difference, event, exam, magic, pleasure,
practise, prepare, secret, simple, success,
technique
Extra idea: Make a word-stress game and
give each pair of students a set of words
and stress-pattern cards, eg oO = advance /
event / exam, etc, Oo = challenge / concert /
magic, etc. Students have to match the
words with the correct stress pattern.
MA To make it more challenging and practise
pronunciation, you could also write the words
in phonemic script, eg oO = /əd'vɑːns/, Oo =
/'tʃælɪndʒ/.
Tip: Some students find it difficult to hear
the stress in words. Get them to hum
the sound of the word so they hear the
stressed syllables more clearly.
15 P Put students in pairs to create sentences
with the words in exercise 14, then ask them
to read out their sentences, making sure they
use the correct stress pattern on each word.
Speaking
16 THINK Students talk about the questions
with a partner. Elicit feedback and find out
which techniques they liked most and which
ones they might use in future.
17 EVERYBODY UP! Energise students at the
end of the lesson by asking them to walk
around the room and find one (or more)
person for each statement. Quickly elicit the
questions they might need to ask before they
start and write the question forms Do you …
Have you ever … Would you … and Can you
… on the board to help them.
MA Tell students to ask follow-up questions
and get more information from the stronger
students in feedback. If you hear good
sentences, you can also write helpful phrases
and expressions on the board for the weaker
students to write down. This enables students
to contribute and learn from each other.
Extra idea: Ask students to close their eyes
and do a guided visualisation activity with
them (see example below). Tell them to listen
and imagine where they are, what they can
see, hear and feel. Then ask them to tell
their partner where they were and what
they imagined. Check their ideas and stories
together afterwards.
Guided visualisation
I’d like you to imagine you’re in a café in a
foreign city. It doesn’t have to be a city you
know or that you’ve visited. Just picture the
first image that comes to mind and actually
see yourself there. Describe what you can see
around you. What can you hear and how do
you feel?
Vocabulary plus p78
Warm-up
Tell students to look back at the vocabulary
sections in Lessons 1–3, then write down five
words. Tell them to quickly look up the definitions
of the words, then test their partner. The person
who remembers the most words wins.
Adjective + to + infinitive
1 These activities are useful to practise the use
of adjectives and infinitives and also provide
an opportunity to quickly review the unit. Put
students in pairs to search for the information
(it can be anywhere in the unit, including
in a transcript). Tell them it’s a race so that
they read quickly. The first pair to find the
information wins.
Unit 8
143
Answers
1 font (on a presentation slide) 2 Bill Baxter
2 Ask students to think of one thing for each
adjective (easy, comfortable, stupid, quick),
then report back using complete sentences, eg
A mobile phone is easy to lose.
3 Model the activity by writing a personalised
sentence on the board, eg It’s hard to find
the time to go to the fitness centre or It’s
important to eat healthy food. Allow students
time to work individually, then share with their
partner using the adjectives.
Speaking verbs
4 Ask students to complete the sentences with
the correct verb, then check with a partner.
other so your palms are touching, and interweave
your fingers. Then you can fold your hands under
your arms and bring them up against your chest.
Wordbuilder Nouns – adjectives
a Write care on the board and ask students if
they can create an adjective from the noun
(careful / careless). Allow time for them to
work individually, then compare answers with
a partner. Elicit which ending you can use with
all of them.
Answer
-ful
b Students work individually to complete the
sentences. Check answers with the class.
Answers
1 careful; painful 2 successful; stressful
3 colourful; powerful 4 helpful; useful /
useful; helpful
Note: Students sometimes confuse say and
tell, so it’s important to offer gentle correction
as needed. Try to elicit self-correction and get
them to see that we say something but tell
someone.
c
Answers
1 say 2 telling 3 speak 4 talk 5 talk 6 Tell
Extra idea: Ask students to write a
sentence that starts with I really want to …
Ask them to walk around the room and tell
each other their sentence. The other person
has to listen and respond with a sentence
that includes an adjective + infinitive, eg
‘I really want to travel around the world.’
‘Yes, but it’s important to learn English so
that you can talk to people!’
5 Put students in pairs or groups to ask and
answer the questions in exercise 4. Monitor
pairs as they work, making a note of any
problems with grammar or vocabulary.
MA To provide extra support, go through the
questions first and elicit answers from the class,
then put students in pairs to do the activity.
De-stress!
This is a wonderful exercise for calming a
hyperactive class and getting them to refocus. The
easiest way to get into position is to stretch your
arms out in front of you as though you’re about
to do breast stroke, then cross one arm over the
144
Unit 8
Get students to write two more sentences
using the remaining adjectives from exercise a
(peaceful and wonderful), then read their
sentences to a partner.
Extra idea: Put students in groups of
three and tell them to write a chain story
together. Each sentence has to include
an adjective. The first student writes a
sentence and passes the paper to their
partner. Their partner reads the sentence
and continues the story, eg It was late and
I was walking home on my own …; It was
really dark …; Suddenly, I heard a strange
noise behind me …
Finish the activity after about five minutes,
then ask students to share their stories with
other groups. Check their ideas afterwards
and vote for the best, most creative,
funniest stories.
Focus on: give and take
a Ask students to match the phrasal verbs with
their correct definition. Elicit feedback and
encourage students to write sentences using
each verb to check understanding.
sara
Answers
a) take up b) give back c) give up d) take
back e) take off f) give away g) take away
audience
sara
b Ask students to complete the dialogues with
the verbs in the correct form. Remind them
that sometimes the verbs are in a different
tense. They then write a suitable response for
each suggestion. Students check answers with
a partner, then practise the dialogues.
audience
sara
Suggested answers
1 give … up; take up
That’s a good idea!
2 give … back; gave … away
Oh no! That was my favourite shirt!
3 take … back; Take … off
Oh yes, silly me!
…
Well, that brings me to the end of my
talk. I hope you found it interesting.
Are there any questions?
audience member How soon can we jump in
the pool and play a game?
sara
Right away! Let’s go downstairs. The
equipment’s by the pool.
sara
Everyday English p79
Beginning and ending a talk
1
2.45
6 Decide whether you’re going to
use the video or simply play the audio. Ask
students to look at the photos and talk about
the questions. Elicit ideas from the class, then
play the video or audio for students to check if
their predictions were correct.
2 Allow time for students to read through the
phrases first, then ask them to decide whether
they should be at the beginning or end of a
presentation.
Answers
a) E b) B c) E d) E e) B f) E g) B h) E
i) B j) E
Ask: Has anybody heard of underwater
hockey? Do you think it’s an easy sport?
Answers
1 at a leisure centre
2 give a talk / presentation
3 underwater hockey
Transcript
sara
Good evening!
audience Good evening.
sara
Thank you so much for coming to
this talk about underwater hockey.
audience member We’re looking forward to it!
sara
My name’s Sara Ford and I’m from
the Underwater Hockey Society.
Thank you very much for inviting me
tonight. I hear that some of you are
interested in forming an underwater
hockey team?
audience Yes / That’s right / Possibly.
That’s great. So, I’m here to tell you a
little bit about it.
Great.
OK, so first I’m going to give you
a brief history and explain the
rules. And I’ve brought along some
equipment, so afterwards I thought
we could go down the swimming
pool and …
… jump in!
Absolutely. Jump in and have a
game. What do you think? Good.
That’s great. OK, so let’s start.
I have to say that underwater hockey
is a wonderful sport and a terrific
workout and …
3 Elicit ideas from the class for which phrase in
exercise 2 you wouldn’t usually use in a talk.
Answer
f
4
Put students in pairs to see if they can
remember the phrases they heard in the
presentation. Then play the video or audio
again for them to check their answers.
Answers
b, g, c, a, h
5 Ask students to think of different ways of
saying the phrases in exercise 2. Elicit good
sentences and useful ideas that students could
use in their own presentations.
Unit 8
145
Suggested answers
a) I hope you enjoyed it.
b) Hello and thank you for taking the time
to attend my talk.
c) I’ve now finished my presentation.
d) In conclusion, I’d like to tell you …
e) I’m really pleased to be here today to
tell you about …
f) OK, I’m done. See you soon.
g) I’m very grateful that you asked me to
come and talk to you.
h) Do you have anything you’d like to ask
me?
i) You can ask me questions when I’ve
finished.
j) You’ll find more information on the
website.
6 Put students in pairs – A and B – and tell them
to think of a topic for an interesting talk.
Student A starts the talk and student B finishes
the talk. Tell them to use suitable phrases from
exercise 2 or their alternatives from exercise 5.
Make sure they realise they don’t have to
actually give the whole talk.
7 Ask pairs to think of a topic and make a short
presentation (between two and five minutes
only) using the correct phrases for beginning
and ending a talk. Allow plenty of thinking
time for them to brainstorm ideas with a
partner and offer help with any words or
phrases they might need. Remind students to
use other ideas from Lesson 3 in preparing and
giving their talk, eg beginning in an interesting
way, asking questions as well as talking, etc.
When they’ve prepared their talk, ask pairs to
give their talk to another pair or a small group
and then, if they wish, to the whole class.
Tip: Even a short presentation can be quite
daunting for most people, so it’s often
a good idea to get them to do their
presentations in pairs or small groups to
alleviate anxiety.
2.46 Ask students to look at the words
8 P
and ask: Can you remember what these words
referred to in the unit? Elicit a few ideas, then
ask students to say the words and identify the
word that doesn’t start with a /h/ sound.
146
Unit 8
Play the audio for them to check their answers,
then play it again, pausing for them to repeat
each word.
Answer
hour
Transcript
hate, have, hear, help, here, hockey, hour,
house, how, hundred
2.47 Play the audio once for students
9 P
to listen to the tongue-twister, then put them
in pairs to take turns saying it to each other.
Make sure they use the /h/ sound correctly. Play
the audio again for students to listen again and
repeat.
Transcript
Hello! I’m Harry Higgins and I’m very happy to
be here in Helsinki this evening to talk about
the history of hip hop!
10 Explain to students that PowerPoint slides
are visual aids; they’re supposed to help, and
Harry’s slide doesn’t help! Ask students to
identify what’s wrong with it. Remind them of
the things they discussed about presentations
in Lesson 3.
Answers
It’s too complicated and some of the text
isn’t legible.
we don’t say … / we say …
This section focuses on the following errors:
• incorrect use of an indefinite pronoun
• incorrect use of an infinitive with to after a
modal verb
• incorrect use of help / make + object +
infinitive
Ask students to cover the green we say … side
and see if they can correct the mistakes themselves
before they look and check.
Units 7&8 Review
Warm-up
To introduce the topic, ask: What kind of books do
you like reading? Students talk about this in pairs
first, then tell the class.
Speaking
1 Put students in pairs to discuss the questions
and give their opinions about self-help books.
Find out if anybody in the class has read the
three books on SB page 80 or any other selfhelp books. If so, ask them to say, in just a
few words, what they thought of them, and
whether they’re effective.
Answers
1 A self-help – or self-improvement –
book helps people solve personal or
professional problems.
Extra information: Sales of self-help
books have more than doubled in recent
years. Almost half of us have bought a selfhelp book at least once in our life.
Reading and speaking
2 Allow only a short time for students to quickly
read about Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway
and find the key message. Setting a short time
limit means they don’t worry too much about
individual words. Elicit a few ideas from the
class.
Answer
That fear is natural
3 Students read the text again and answer the
questions. Encourage them to check their
answers with a partner before checking with
the class.
pp80–81
Answers
1 Answer will depend on current year; in
2015, the book was 28 years old.
2 Doing something new
3 Do it!
4 Five fears: telling somebody how you
really feel about something; going on
holiday on your own; leaving a job
you hate; speaking in public; doing a
bungee jump
5 Because we have a negative belief that
we can’t do something.
6 A lot of other things become possible;
everything changes.
4 Put students in small groups to talk about the
questions. Monitor pairs as they work, helping
with vocabulary where necessary. Ask: Who
thinks self-help books are useful? Who thinks
they’re a waste of time? Ask students to give
reasons for their answers.
Writing
5 Go through the highlighted expressions in the
article on Feel the Fear and make sure students
understand how to use them. Ask students to
work in pairs and think of a title for a selfhelp book, then write a description of what
it’s about. Tell them they can look back at the
article to help them and encourage them to
use the highlighted expressions. When they’ve
finished, ask them to share their ideas with
another pair and read each other’s self-help
book descriptions. Students can vote for the
most interesting / most useful / strangest book.
MA For extra support, brainstorm a few ideas
for titles and write them on the board, helping
with vocabulary as necessary. You could also
get students to write an outline for their book
description, going through what to say in
each paragraph, eg paragraph 1: information
about the author and the book, paragraph 2:
a description of the main message in the book,
paragraph 3: a summary of the book.
Units 7&8 Review
147
Extra idea: Ask pairs to read out the title
of their book and get other students to
guess what the book is about.
Did you know?
Ask: Why do you think Jeffers’ book was rejected?
Check understanding of rejected and elicit a few
ideas from the class. Ask: Why was this a good
thing – what did she do? (She felt the fear and did
it anyway!).
Grammar
6
Tell students to cover the description of
Feel the Fear and complete the sentences
with the same indefinite pronouns used in the
text: everybody, something, nobody, etc. Elicit
feedback and ask students to try to explain the
rule for the use of each pronoun. If necessary,
review the use of the pronouns on SB page
141.
Answers
1 Everybody; something 2 Nobody
3 somebody; something 4 somewhere
5 something; everything
7 Ask students to read about reality TV shows
and circle the correct words. Check answers
as a class. If necessary, review grammar from
Units 7 and 8 on SB pages 140 and 141.
Answers
1 much 2 as 3 as 4 more 5 most
6 to say 7 many
Preposition Park
Ask students to read the text and fill in the gaps
with the correct preposition. You could also write
the prepositions on the board and tell the class
that you’re going to read the text with gaps. They
call out the correct preposition each time you
pause.
Answers
1 of 2 in 3 for 4 until 5 of 6 through
7 of 8 for
148
Units 7&8 Review
Cross Culture: Attitudes to time
a Pre-teach value (someone or something) and
tend to. Ask: What do you value? What do you
tend to do when you meet someone. Teach /
Elicit that the meaning of tend to is similar to
usually. Also elicit the meaning of black and
white in the phrase Things are never black
and white. Ask: What colour could they be?
(Grey). Elicit that this means things are never
clearly right or clearly wrong – they’re usually
somewhere in between.
Ask students to read the text and compare the
ideas in it with their own country and typical
attitudes to time.
Explore
Encourage students to find out more about six
other countries that are similar to A and B. They
can search online by keying in attitudes to time.
Extra information: Generally speaking,
many countries in northern Europe and
North America are like paragraph A. Many
countries in South America, southern
Europe, the Middle East and sub-Saharan
Africa are more like paragraph B. Countries
in Asia can be either, eg Singapore, Japan
and China are more like A; India, Indonesia
and Thailand are more like B.
b Ask students to imagine and discuss what they
would do in each situation.
Suggested answers
1 Be on time, but be prepared to wait for
your Brazilian colleagues! And don’t get
impatient with them.
2 Make an effort to be on time … or even
early!
9
UNIT
FOCUS
What’s the alternative?
GRAMMAR: verbs + -ing; present simple and past
VOCABULARY: the cost of living; farming; health
FUNCTIONS: managing a conversation
Lesson 1 Can you imagine
doing this? pp82–83
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to look at verbs that are
followed by the -ing form of another verb, and to
learn words and phrases to talk about the cost of
living and living an alternative lifestyle.
You first!
Ask students to talk about their biggest household
expenses. Help with vocabulary if necessary, eg
gas, electricity, heating, but keep the discussion
short at this point.
Vocabulary The cost of living
1 Put students in pairs to ask and answer the
questions and encourage them to work out the
meaning of any words they don’t know from
the context. Elicit feedback from pairs and do a
quick class survey of the most expensive costs.
MA Encourage stronger students to guess
the meaning of the words from context, but
let weaker students use their dictionaries if
needed.
Answers
rent = money that you pay to someone to
live in a house that they own
mortgage = a loan from a bank to enable
you to buy a house
central heating = a system of heating
buildings by warming air or water at one
place, then sending it to different rooms in
pipes
electricity / gas bills = money you pay to
use electricity or gas in your home
high = expensive
low = cheap
food bills = the cost of buying the food you
eat
living cost = the money spent on things
needed to survive
simple passive; subject / object questions
2
GUESS Ask students to look at the photos of
three very different houses on SB page 82 and
guess how much they pay for things like rent /
mortgage, central heating, electricity / gas bills
and food bills. Highlight the useful phrases in
the example sentences (I think … are probably /
I don’t think …). Ask: What do you think is
each person’s biggest living cost?
Reading
3 Write off the grid on the board and see if
students can guess what it means. Use the top
photo on SB page 82 to pre-teach electricity
pylons and also check comprehension of
national grid, electrical power, public utilities
and water supply.
Then tell them to read the first paragraph
quickly and check their ideas about the
meaning of off the grid.
To encourage further predictions about the
article, ask: In what ways do you think these
people are self-sufficient? Elicit / Teach solar
power, wind power, growing their own food.
Answer
You don’t use public utilities such as mains
electricity or water.
4 Allow time for students to read the rest of the
article and match the photos with the two
couples in the article. Ask students to give
reasons for their answers.
Answers
John and Victoria Jungwirth: B (They live in a
wild part of the US.)
Margy and Wayne Lutz: A (They live on a lake.)
Background information: If students
want to find out more, you can tell them
that Margy Lutz writes a really interesting
blog, which they can find at
http://PowellRiverBooks.blogspot.com.
Unit 9
149
5
Ask students to close their books and try to
remember similarities and differences between
the two couples. They then read the article
again and check their ideas.
Answers
Similarities
Both couples live completely off the grid.
They grow a lot of their own food.
They both have solar panels.
They don’t regret living the alternative life.
Differences
The Jungwirths built their own home, the
Lutzs didn’t.
They Jungwirths work, the Lutzs are retired.
The Jungwirths live on land, the Lutzs live
on water.
The Jungwirths spend a lot of time working
on their land. The Lutzs don’t, because they
only have a small space to grow vegetables.
6
THINK Read the sentence from the end of
the article and ask students to work in pairs
to talk about the questions. Elicit ideas – you
could write them on the board and discuss
what the advantages and disadvantages of
each alternative way of living are.
Answer
1 A different lifestyle from most people
3.2 Do the first word as an example by
7 P
writing business on the board. Elicit the correct
pronunciation and write it in phonemic script:
/'bɪznəs/. Ask: Which letter can’t you hear?
Elicit that the ‘i’ isn’t pronounced and remind
students that English spelling often doesn’t
reflect the pronunciation.
Put students in pairs to say each word,
compare the spelling and pronunciation,
and find the silent letters. Play the audio for
students to listen and check their answers,
then play it again, pausing for them to repeat.
Transcript and answers
business, camera, chocolate, different,
February, interesting, mortgage, scientist,
vegetable
Note: In some accents, the ‘r’ in February is
pronounced, but the ‘a’ is silent.
150
Unit 9
Tip: Try to help students’ pronunciation using
word-stress drilling. This gives them a clear
visual idea of syllables and word stress, as
well as identifying silent letters in words.
Hold your fist in front of you and show
the beat of the syllables in the air. Move
your hand upwards to indicate stressed
syllables. Remember, start on your righthand side and move to the left as you drill
the words. You’ll be facing students, so this
matches the way they see words written
on the page. If students still add silent
letters, write the words on the board and
cross the letter out so they remember the
pronunciation.
Did you know?
Read through the information with the class. Ask:
Did either of the facts surprise you?
Grammar Verb + -ing form
8 Tell students to look at the sentence and find
the main verb. Ask: What verb follows it? Elicit
answers from the class.
Answer
means paying (-ing form)
9 Read through the grammar box with students
and ask them to complete the gaps with other
examples from the article. Point out that when
we use the verb spend to talk about time, we
also use an -ing form after the time. Check
answers with the class.
MA For extra spelling support, students could
look at the section on Spelling rules for ‘-ing’
forms on SB page 135. You could ask stronger
students to make other sentences using four of
the verbs in the grammar box.
Answers
start, enjoy, regret
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 142
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
10 Put students in pairs and ask them to think of
other verbs which are typically followed by an
-ing form. Elicit ideas from the classs and write
the verbs on the board. As a follow-up, have
students create their own sentences with each
verb, then share their ideas with a partner.
Extra idea: Make sets of cards with
different verbs on them. Include verbs
that are usually followed by an -ing form
(like, begin, suggest, imagine, stop, start,
enjoy, regret), as well as other verbs that
are usually followed by an infinitive with to
(promise, offer, afford, learn, choose, hope).
Put students in pairs and give each pair a
set of cards. Tell them to shuffle the cards
and put them face down on the table. They
then take turns to pick up a card. They have
to look at the verb and make a sentence
with the correct form using an infinitive
or an -ing form. If they make a correct
sentence with the right form, they keep the
card. Note that some of these verbs can be
followed by either an infinitive or an -ing
form. If you want to make it easier, make
sure all the verbs can only be followed by
one or the other. The student with the most
cards at the end wins the game.
11 Do the first item with the class as an example.
Say, eg To me, modern life means owning a
computer. Make sure students understand they
can use their own ideas. Elicit sentences from
one or two students.
Suggested answers
1 To me, modern life means owning a
computer.
2 I spend five hours a week watching TV.
3 I don’t regret moving to Scotland.
4 Can you imagine not having a washing
machine?
5 I started working 25 years ago.
6 I’d like to stop paying rent.
7 Recently a friend of mine suggested
buying a flat together.
Speaking
12 THINK Write the question on the board and
get students to discuss with a partner. Elicit
their ideas and opinions and encourage them
to give reasons for their ideas, eg Solar panels
provide cheap electricity, and that helps. If you
live completely off the grid, you don’t have
many bills.
13 Put students in pairs to think of changes
they could make to their everyday life to save
money. Tell them to make notes and try to
think of three or four really good ideas, eg
I could switch to a cheaper electricity company,
I could eat less meat. Monitor pairs as they
work, helping with vocabulary as necessary.
Then tell students to work with another pair to
compare their ideas and decide which three or
four changes they’ll make. Find out the most
popular ideas from the class.
Extra idea: Encourage students to look
online for energy- and money-saving ideas at
home, then do a short presentation in class.
Students watch each other’s presentations
and vote for the best ideas. You could also
refer them back to the functional phrases for
beginning and ending a talk on SB page 79.
Lesson 2 They’re kept in very
small spaces. pp84–85
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to use the present and
past passive, to talk about how animals are treated
on factory farms now and through history, to learn
vocabulary for talking about farming, and to learn
more about writing a for / against essay.
You first!
Put students in pairs to talk about their favourite
food together. Ask: Do you like chicken? How
often do you eat it? Point out that What kind
refers to the photos of factory-farmed chickens
and free-range chickens.
Vocabulary Farming
1 Elicit students’ reactions to the photos. Ask:
Which is better and why?
Go through the words in the box and check
comprehension and pronunciation. Remind
students that chicken when it means meat
(I eat chicken) is uncountable, but that
when it means the animal (I saw a chicken),
it’s countable. Allow time for students to
complete the sentences individually, then tell
them to work with a partner to talk about the
questions. Elicit reactions from the class and
find out how many students are in favour of
each type of farming.
Unit 9
151
Answers
1 farm; keep 2 farming 3 feed
4 traditional; fields 5 produce
2 Put students in pairs to discuss the statements
and complete them with the correct words or
figures. If necessary, teach / elicit the meaning
of space, shed and cubic metre (used to talk
about volume).
Answers
1 40,000 2 small 3 300 4 three
5 antibiotics
3 Put students in pairs and get them to
offer their opinions and feelings about the
statements. Ask: Did you know about some
of these figures? If not, do these facts change
your mind about factory farming? Check
students’ ideas and encourage extra discussion
about the topic.
know? (No) Teach / Elicit that the person who
does the action in the passive is called the
‘agent’. Put students in pairs to decide if the
statements are true or false.
Answers
1 true 2 true
6 Go through instructions 1 and 2 and model
the examples with one or two students. Put
students in pairs to play the guessing game.
Encourage them to use the past participles
(found, grown, produced, made) and make
sentences in the passive voice. Change the
pairs to increase interaction and speaking.
When they’ve finished, tell them to look at
instruction 3. Tell them to work with another
pair and tell each pair to write six down things
or animals. The other pair then has to write
six passive sentences using them. Encourage
students to check each other’s work, then elicit
sentences from the class.
Grammar 1 Present simple passive
Reading
4 Write the two sentences on the board. Look
at the active sentence and ask: What is the
action? (Keep) Who does the action? (They /
the subject) Who does the action happen to?
(The chickens / the object) What form is the
verb? (Present simple). Look at the passive
sentence and ask: What is the action? (Are
kept) Who does the action happen to? (The
chickens) Do the chickens do the action?
(No) Are they the subject or the object in the
sentence? (The subject) How does the verb
change in the passive sentence? (We use the
past participle) What comes before the verb?
(Auxiliary verb be).
7 Set a time limit of two or three minutes for
students to read the article and find out which
fact from exercise 2 isn’t included.
Ask students to find other examples of the
present simple passive in the statements in
exercise 2.
Answers
is kept, are … kept, are used
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 142
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
5 Look at the passive sentence on the board
again. Ask: Who does the action in the
passive? (We don’t know). Do we need to
152
Unit 9
Then ask them to read it again more slowly
and try to work out the meaning of the words
and phrases in bold. Students check answers
with a partner.
Answers
Fact 5 (about antibiotics) is not in the article.
cleaned = have the dirt removed
spaces = areas
diseases = illnesses
conditions = the physical situation that
someone or something is in and affected by
method = way of doing things
ponds = pools, areas of water
on special occasions = on a day that is
considered different from other days for a
good reason
developing countries = countries with little
industrial and economic activity and where
people generally have low incomes
cruel = unkind
treated = considered, thought of
pollution = damage caused to water, air, etc
by harmful substances or waste
8 Students read the article again and answer the
questions.
2 Not so long ago, all chickens and cows
were kept on family farms.
MA Write extra questions on the board for
stronger students and fast finishers to answer,
eg Which animals are mentioned in the article?
Who invented factory farming?
Ask: Which sentence is in the past? (Sentence
2) What are the main verbs? (given, kept) Is the
main verb in the same form in the present and
past passive? (Yes) What shows us the time
and verb tense? (The auxiliary verb changes).
Answers
1 They’re kept in very small spaces where
they live and die.
2 They can get terrible diseases.
3 For their eggs
4 They’re kept in open, free conditions.
5 It’s cruel to the animals and it creates
pollution.
6 Because it’s cheaper.
Ask students to complete the past passive
sentence in the grammar table.
Extra idea: You could extend the activity
by getting students to write two or three
extra questions about the article. Then tell
students to ask and answer each other’s
questions in pairs.
Explore
Answer
was
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 142
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
10 Write the first sentence on the board in
the active and passive as a model. Elicit the
differences, then highlight the form of the
passive (subject + auxiliary verb be + past
participle). Ask some quick concept-checking
questions to review, eg What was the action?
Do we know who did it? What’s most
important, the action or who did it?
Ask students to find out more online about freerange farms in their area. If there aren’t any, tell
them to expand the search to the whole country.
Give students time to change the sentences
from the active to the passive and offer help
and gentle correction as needed.
Extra idea: To help students and set a
clearer task, give the class a webquest.
Provide three or four links to websites and
give students a list of comprehensionchecking questions. This encourages
them to skim and scan the websites for
information and find the answers to the
questions.
Answers
1 Factory farming was only started about
60 years ago.
2 For hundreds of years, fish was eaten
on Fridays.
3 Not so long ago, chickens were kept for
their eggs.
4 Chickens weren’t given special food.
5 Chickens weren’t treated badly in the
past.
Grammar 2 Past simple passive
9 Remind students about the grammar on SB
page 84. Ask: Was it the past or the present
tense? (Present) Tell them to look at the second
grammar box and complete the sentence.
At this point, it may help to compare the
grammar so they see that the passive is always
formed with the past participle, even in the
present simple passive. The tense is shown by
the auxiliary verb be. Write these sentences on
the board:
1 Animals are given a lot of antibiotics these
days.
MA For extra support, elicit which words
should begin the passive sentence in each case
before students start rewriting the sentences.
Speaking and writing
11 THINK This activity will encourage students
to bring their own thoughts and ideas to
the discussion. Pre-teach the meaning of the
phrase eating habits. Elicit ideas for changing
or not changing their eating habits, eg I’d like
to buy organic food, but I can’t afford it.
Unit 9
153
Put students in pairs to talk about the
questions. Monitor pairs as they work, making
a note of any common problems with grammar
or vocabulary, and offer help where needed.
12 Before they start, elicit students’ opinions on
factory farming. Ask: Who’s for it and who’s
against it? Elicit ideas for each argument, then
ask students to write a paragraph giving their
opinion. As a follow-up, ask students to swap
their work with a partner and correct any
mistakes they see together.
MA For extra support, write for and against on
the board and elicit reasons from the class to
put under each heading.
Tip: Tell students to leave some time for
checking their work after writing. They
don’t always do this, so it’s an important
strategy to develop, as it helps them find
small mistakes, improve their writing and
edit their work.
Lesson 3 Who has back pain?
pp86–87
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce subject and
object questions, to learn words and phrases for
talking about health problems and different kinds
of medicine, and to talk about experiences with
alternative medicine.
You first!
Look at the photo of acupuncture. Teach / Elicit
needle and find out if anybody has ever had
acupuncture. Ask: What was it like? Did it help?
Can you recommend it?
Vocabulary Health
1
3.3 Look at the photos first and check
pronunciation of each type of medicine, in
particular osteopathy /ɒsti'ɒpəθi/ (but note
the change of stress and pronunciation
for the person: osteopath /'ɒstiəʊpæθ/) and
homeopathy /həʊmi'ɒpəθi/ (and the person
is a homeopath /'həʊmiəpæθ/). Check
understanding of bones, substances and treat.
Ask students to complete the descriptions with
the correct type of medicine. Play the audio for
them to check their answers.
154
Unit 9
Answers
1 acupuncture 2 Osteopathy
3 homeopathy 4 Conventional medicine
Transcript
1 In acupuncture, needles are placed in the
body. It started in Ancient China.
2 Osteopathy is a health system that works
with the bones and muscles.
3 In homeopathy, a patient is given tiny
amounts of natural substances.
4 Conventional medicine uses science to treat
illness.
2 Ask students to guess the meaning of the
words in bold from the context. If they aren’t
sure, encourage them to look the words up in
a dictionary or online. Point out that medicine
and flu are uncountable. Tell pairs to compare
answers, then ask and answer the questions.
Ask pairs to tell the class one or two of their
answers. Find out how many students use
alternative medicine.
Answers
colds = common infections, especially in
the nose and throat, that often cause a
runny nose, a cough, a slight fever and
sometimes some pain in the muscles
flu = a common infectious illness that
causes fever and headache
feel ill = feel unwell
have a temperature = have a fever
get a headache = have a pain inside your
head
painkillers = medicine used to reduce or
remove physical pain
serious illness = disease that is bad or
severe
pills = small solid pieces of medicine that a
person swallows, usually with water
conventional medicine = traditional,
scientific ways of treating illness
go to the doctor = attend the doctor’s
surgery to ask for medical advice
alternative medicine = a range of
treatments for medical conditions that
people use instead of or with conventional
medicine
Extra idea: Ask students to notice typical
collocations in the questions, eg have
a temperature, get a headache, take
painkillers, and tell them to write them in
their vocabulary notebooks.
Listening 1
3
3.4 Ask students to listen and put the
different kinds of treatments in the order they
hear them. Play the audio. Encourage students
to compare their answers together; play the
audio again if needed.
Answers
a) 4 b) 1 c) 2 d) 3
Transcript
When you have a cold or flu, how do you treat
it? A lot of people take a pill, but some people
don’t do that. Instead, they use alternative
medicine – for example, homeopathy, where
an illness is treated by giving a person tiny
amounts of natural substances. Today, about
50% of people in developed countries use
some kind of alternative medicine and billions
of dollars are spent on it.
Conventional medicine isn’t very good at
treating back problems, and osteopathy, a
health-care system that works with the bones
and muscles, is very popular if conventional
medicine doesn’t work. Today, there are a lot
of countries where the government health-care
system will pay for treatment by an osteopath.
Acupuncture, where needles are placed in a
person’s skin at particular points in the body, is
another treatment that health-care systems are
often happy to pay for.
4
Do the first sentence with the class
as an example. Then put students in pairs to
decide if the statements are true or false. Tell
them to correct the false statements if they
can. Play the audio, pausing if necessary. Elicit
a few ideas, but don’t confirm answers yet.
3.5
Transcript
When you have a cold or flu, how do you treat
it? A lot of people take a pill but some people
don’t do that. Instead, they use alternative
medicine – for example, homeopathy, where
an illness is treated by giving a person tiny
amounts of natural substances. Today, about
50% of people in developed countries use
some kind of alternative medicine and billions
of dollars are spent on it. Conventional
medicine isn’t very good at treating back
problems, and osteopathy, a health-care system
that works with the bones and muscles, is
very popular if conventional medicine doesn’t
work. Today, there are a lot of countries where
the government health-care system will pay
for treatment by an osteopath. Acupuncture,
where needles are placed in a person’s skin
at particular points in the body, is another
treatment that health-care systems are often
happy to pay for.
But although this is true, there are still a lot
of people who don’t believe in alternative
medicine. They say that there isn’t much
scientific evidence for it and they think that
success in alternative medicine is a result of the
placebo effect. The placebo effect is when a
medical treatment has success, not because of
the treatment, but because the patient believes
it will be successful. And the placebo effect
is very powerful – somewhere in our bodies
we have a very powerful healing system. But
as we’ve already said, a lot of people use
alternative medicine for medical conditions
that aren’t serious. They say that the drugs
in conventional medicine can sometimes be
dangerous and they prefer to use a gentler
kind of medicine, such as homeopathy.
Extra idea: To encourage students to
listen for gist, write a focus question on
the board, eg What is the placebo effect?,
so they have a task. Tell them to listen and
answer the question. (The placebo effect is
when a medical treatment is successful, not
because of the treatment, but because the
patient believes it will work.)
5 Play the audio again for students to check their
answers.
Answers
1 true
2 true
3 false: A lot of people don’t believe in
alternative medicine.
4 true
Unit 9
155
elif
5 false: A lot of people use alternative
medicine for conditions that aren’t
serious.
6 false: People think that drugs in
conventional medicine can sometimes
be dangerous.
6
osteopath
Conversation 2
acupuncturist Have you been to an
acupuncturist before, Michael?
michael
No, I haven’t, this is my first time.
acupuncturist So what’s the problem?
michael
I get headaches. I’ve had them
for years now. Obviously, I’ve
seen the doctor about them. It’s
nothing serious. They aren’t even
real migraines, just headaches.
But I get them a lot.
acupuncturist How often?
michael
About twice a week.
acupuncturist Do you take painkillers?
michael
Yes, I do. But I don’t like taking
them.
acupuncturist OK, well, I can certainly give you
some acupuncture treatment and
I hope I can help you. Could you
lie down and I’ll examine you.
EVERYBODY UP! Ask students to walk
around and do the activity. Monitor students as
they talk, helping with vocabulary for particular
illnesses if necessary. Elicit feedback and
students’ opinions about alternative medicine.
MA To provide extra support, quickly review
the new vocabulary from previous exercises.
You could do exercises 1–4 on Health
in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Listening 2
7
Tell students they’re going to listen to
three patients visiting the doctor. Ask them
to listen and choose the correct answers. If
necessary, elicit the meaning of back pain
by telling students to look at the photo
for osteopathy on SB page 86. Play the
audio while students complete the activity
individually. Encourage students to compare
their answers with a partner.
3.6
Conversation 3
How can I help you, Paula?
paula
I’m not feeling very well. I feel
hot and cold, I have a headache
and a temperature. I think I have
flu.
doctor
OK, well, let’s take your
temperature … Yes, it’s high.
How long have you had these
symptoms?
paula
Um, about two days.
doctor
Lie down, please, and I’ll examine
you.
paula
OK.
doctor
OK – you were right, you
have flu. You don’t need any
antibiotics. Just go to bed and
drink lots of fluid. And if your
temperature is still high after
three days, please come and see
me again.
doctor
Answers
1 an osteopath 2 back pain
3 an acupuncturist 4 headaches
5 a conventional doctor 6 flu
Transcript
Conversation 1
osteopath
So what’s the problem, Elif?
elif
I have bad back pain.
osteopath
Really, where exactly?
elif
Here.
osteopath
OK, the lower back. And how
long have you had it?
elif
I’ve had it for about six weeks.
I’ve seen my doctor three times,
but she can’t help. I’m taking
painkillers. A friend suggested
seeing an osteopath.
osteopath
Yes, well, I hope I can help you.
Can you tell me more about
the problem? What kind of
movements are difficult?
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Unit 9
Well, sometimes it can be
difficult to walk. And I can’t
stand for more than about ten
minutes, I have to sit down.
OK, well, let’s have a look at your
back. Can you stand up, please?
8
Ask students to listen again and answer the
questions about Elif, Michael and Paula. Play
the audio again, pausing as necessary for
students to check their answers.
MA As an extra challenge, stronger students
could try to answer the questions before they
listen again, then listen to check. At the same
time, work with weaker students to elicit ideas
for each question.
Answers
1 For about six weeks
2 Walking, and standing for more than
ten minutes
3 About twice a week
4 He doesn’t like taking them.
5 She feels hot and cold, she has a
headache and a temperature.
6 Go to bed, drink lots of fluid and come
back if her temperature is still high in
three days’ time.
You could do exercises 5 and 6 on Useful
expressions in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Grammar Subject / object questions with
who / what / which
9 Ask students to complete the gaps in the
grammar table. Then ask them to look at the
sentences in A and B and the words in bold.
Ask: How are they different? Focus on the
questions in A. Ask: Who’s the focus of the
first question? (Elif) And the second question?
(Dr Hammond). Teach / Elicit that these are
both the subject of the sentence. Repeat for
the questions in B, eliciting that back pain and
Elif are both the object of the sentence.
Answers
visited Elif yesterday
did
visited Elif
1 A: subject B: object
2 The questions in A use a main verb. The
questions in B use the auxiliary do with
an infinitive.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 142
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
10 Students sometimes make mistakes with
subject and object questions, so model the first
one with both subject and object questions
and also remind students that we don’t use do
or does in subject questions. Ask: Who visited
an osteopath? Elicit the answer from students:
Elif visited an osteopath. (Subject question)
Who did Elif visit? Elicit the answer: Elif visited
an osteopath. (Object question).
Then put students in pairs to ask and answer
subject and object questions. Tell them to use
the verbs in the box to help them. Offer help
and gentle correction as needed.
Suggested answers
Who gets headaches? / What does Michael
get?
Who went to a conventional doctor? / Who
did Paula go to?
Who has back pain? / What does Elif have?
Who saw an osteopath? / Who did Elif see?
Who takes painkillers? / What does Michael
take?
Who visited an acupuncturist? / Who did
Michael visit?
Speaking
11 Put students in small groups to talk about
their experiences with doctors and alternative
medicine. It’s worth remembering that not all
people feel comfortable talking about their
medical experiences and conditions, so if
students seem a bit reluctant, get them to talk
about something that happened to someone
they know instead.
MA Arrange the activity so that weaker
students interview stronger students. This
means they can ask questions and the stronger
students can give more detailed answers.
12 Read through the instructions. Ask: How do we
often ask for and give advice? Elicit sentences
and write examples with should on the board,
eg What should I do? I think you should …
Students work individually to make notes, then
work in groups to ask each other for advice.
Check their ideas and find out what the most
popular piece of advice was.
Extra idea: Do a ‘vanishing conversation’
with the class. This involves lots of
repetition and pronunciation practice in
a more communicative context. Draw
two faces on the board and ask students
to invent names for them. Ask them to
invent a short conversation between the
two people about their health. Write
the conversation on the board and get
Unit 9
157
students to repeat. Then divide the class
into two groups – each group takes a
different role – and drill the conversation
again. Erase a word or phrase and drill
again. Students have to remember the
conversation without the missing words.
Gradually remove more words until all the
conversation has gone. At the end, put
students in pairs to remember the whole
conversation.
Culture notes: Norman Rockwell was
a 20th-century American painter and
illustrator who was popular for his pictures
of American culture. He was born in
February 1894 in New York City and died
in November 1978 in Massachusetts. At
the age of 21, Rockwell’s family moved to
New Rochelle, New York, and he set up a
studio with the cartoonist Clyde Forsythe.
They produced work for magazines such
as Life, Literary Digest and The Saturday
Evening Post. His pictures reflected smalltown American life. In 1973, he established
the Norman Rockwell Museum. In 1977,
Rockwell received America’s highest civilian
honour, the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
De-stress!
Read through the information with the class and
elicit other ideas and suggestions for reducing
stress and anxiety.
Give students a moment to doodle and at the
same time, play them some nice relaxing music.
Ask students to interpret each other’s doodles.
Ask: Do they mean anything significant?
Doctor and Boy Looking at Thermometer
was painted in 1954 as an advertisement for
The Upjohn Company. Rockwell did a series
of medical paintings for advertisements for
pharmaceutical companies, which were
meant to inspire Americans to see their
doctors as kind people who looked after
their emotional health as much as their
physical health.
Art & Music
Tell students they can find a larger version of the
painting on SB page 145.
Elicit ideas for the relationship between the man
and the boy before students find out the title
(eg by searching for ‘1954 Norman Rockwell’).
Extra questions for class or homework
Art
How many paintings did Rockwell paint as
medical advertisements?
How many paintings are in the Norman
Rockwell collection in his museum?
Find another painting by Norman Rockwell
and write a description of it.
Music
How many times of day are mentioned in
the song?
Which two stories does the song mention?
Answers
Art
Doctor and Boy Looking at Thermometer
Music
first line: Never know how much I love
you
title of the song: Fever
connection with this lesson: Fever is
another word for temperature. The singer
is comparing being in love with having an
illness.
158
Unit 9
Fever was originally written by Eddie Cooley
and Otis Blackwell and recorded by the
American R&B singer Little Willie John in
1956. However, the best-known version of
the song was recorded by the jazz singer
Peggy Lee in 1958. This was a much slower
version than the original and became Peggy
Lee’s signature song. It has had continued
success in the years since, and many people
have done cover versions, including Elvis
Presley (1960), Helen Shapiro (1964),
Madonna (1992) and Beyoncé (2003).
Vocabulary plus p88
Health
1
3.7 Get students to look at the pictures
and try to guess what’s wrong. Then ask them
to complete the dialogues with the words in
the box. Play the audio for them to listen and
check their answers.
Extra idea: To extend the activity as well
as encourage student interaction and
speaking, ask students to talk about when
they’ve had some of these problems.
Answers
1 headache 2 earache 3 toothache
4 backache 5 stomach ache 6 hurts
Transcript
1 a What’s the matter? Are you feeling OK?
b
I have a headache!
2 a Are you OK?
b
No. My earache is terrible!
3 a What’s wrong?
b
I have really bad toothache!
4 a I have terrible backache!
b
Take it easy!
5 a What’s the problem?
b
I have a stomach ache.
6 a What’s up?
b
My arm hurts.
2
Answers
1 feel 2 well 3 a cold / (the) flu
4 temperature 5 pills / painkillers
6 feel / get better
7 go to / see / visit a / the doctor
Useful expressions
5
Answers
a) 1 b) 3 c) 2
MA For extra support, write the phrases for
asking what’s wrong on the board: What’s the
matter? Are you OK? What’s wrong? What’s
the problem? What’s up?
3 Students make verb and noun collocations. Do
the first one as an example and remind them
they can use some words more than once.
Answers
feel: better, ill, well
have: a cold, flu, an illness, a temperature
get: better, a cold, flu, ill, an illness, well
go to: a / the doctor
see: a / the doctor
take: medicine, a painkiller / painkillers, a pill,
a temperature
visit: a / the doctor
4 Ask students to work in pairs to complete the
conversation. Check answers with the class
and also elicit other possibilities.
d) 6
e) 4
f) 5
Transcript
man
What’s the matter?
woman I’m not very well.
man
How do you mean?
woman I have a stomach ache. I feel sick.
man
You should take it easy. Go to bed.
woman I’ll do that.
Tell students to cover the dialogues and use
the pictures to act out the dialogues.
As an extra challenge, write the following
phrases on the board: That’s what happens
when you … You need to … You should …
Tell students to act out the dialogues and give
advice. Model the activity, eg What’s wrong?
– I have really bad toothache – That’s what
happens when you eat too many sweets!
Check students understand the phrase
take it easy (when you don’t do much). Allow
them time to work individually, then play
the audio for them to listen and check their
answers.
3.8
Extra idea: This could also be done with
each line on a different piece of paper to
vary the activity and learning styles.
6 Give students time to think about their
responses before they do the speaking activity.
Tell them to take turns.
Everyday English p89
Managing a conversation
As a warm-up, ask students to discuss the things
that really annoy them about people they know or
have lived with. Ask: Which habits are the worst?
Tell them a personal story about someone you
know (you can make it up) to model the activity.
Ask students to report back afterwards and find
out some of the funniest stories.
1
3.9
6 GUESS Decide whether you’re
going to use the video or simply play the
audio. Ask students to look at the photos and
try to guess what the people are talking about.
Elicit the meaning of cross from the context
(annoyed, angry). Ask: Who looks cross? Who
looks worried?. If necessary, pre-teach turn the
light / heating on / off / up / down. Play the
Unit 9
159
video or audio for students to watch or listen
and answer the questions. Point out that this is
just the end of a conversation – not the whole
conversation.
Answers
1 high energy bills
2 Because he turned the heating up
instead of putting on extra clothes.
kate
luke
kate
Transcript
kate Sorry to interrupt, Luke, but you don’t
have to have the heating high, you can
just wear more clothes. Wear three
jumpers! And you don’t leave the lights
on because you’re cold!
luke OK, OK, that’s true. OK, I’ll be really
careful about the lights and I’ll wear
three jumpers! Now, can we talk about
something else?
kate What?
luke Our food bills …
2
3.10 6 Play the video or audio for students
to check if their predictions were correct.
Then play it again and ask students to answer
the questions. Ask: What do you think their
relationship is? Elicit that they could be
flatmates or in a relationship. The video / audio
clip offers a nice opportunity for conversation.
Ask students to talk about similar situations
with people they’ve lived with and explain
what happened.
Answers
1 £500 2 Because he feels the cold.
3 He says he’ll be careful about the lights
and wear three jumpers.
Transcript
kate Oh, look, here’s the post. Hmm, this
looks like a bill. It’s the electricity and gas
bill. It’s huge, it’s absolutely huge. Look!
luke £500 – that’s ridiculous!
kate You know, I have to say, Luke, it’s your
fault, you know it is. You’re terrible. You
leave the lights on when you go out, you
have all the lights on all the time, the
heating is always on really high, I mean
always and …
luke Can I say something?
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Unit 9
luke
kate
luke
kate
luke
… the fact is, Luke, you never think
about the cost of things – ever. Electricity
and gas are really expensive and we have
to be careful. We don’t earn a lot of
money, I’ve got very little in the bank at
the moment. We can’t just have things
on all the time, we have to …
Actually, I’d like to say something,
please.
Go ahead.
The problem is, I feel the cold. It’s been a
really cold winter. You don’t seem to feel
the cold but I do. I need the heating on
high. Otherwise, I just can’t do anything,
you know, I can’t think, I can’t …
Sorry to interrupt, Luke, but you don’t
have to have the heating high, you can
just wear more clothes. Wear three
jumpers! And you don’t leave the lights
on because you’re cold!
OK, OK, that’s true. OK, I’ll be really
careful about the lights and I’ll wear
three jumpers! Now, can we talk about
something else?
What?
Our food bills …
3 Ask: What does ‘managing a conversation’
mean? Teach / Elicit that it means making it go
in a certain direction or way, maybe changing
the topic, interrupting or continuing. Put
students in pairs to match the phrases and
expressions.
Answers
1 d, e, g 2 c 3 a, b, f
4 Play the video or audio again. Ask students to
tick the expressions they hear. Check answers
with the class.
Answers
g, d, e, c
5 P Write the sound /ʌ/ on the board or
point to the phonemic chart on SB page 156.
Practise the sound with students and model
the mouth and tongue position to help them
(the mouth is quite open to make this sound).
Ask: Can you find two words in exercise 3 with
this sound? (something, interrupt or but). Then
get students to say the words in the box and
find the ones that have the same sound.
6 P
3.11 Play the audio for students to listen
and check their answers. Then play it again,
pausing as necessary for students to repeat.
Ask: How many different ways are there to
spell this sound?
Answers
acupuncture, couple, enough, hundred,
instruction, money
Note: The word one also has the /ʌ/ sound, but
the difference between the spelling and the
pronunciation makes it difficult to focus on at this
level.
Transcript
acupuncture, couple, enough, found, hundred,
instruction, money, one, produce
7
3.12 Explain to students that they’re going
to hear the rest of the conversation between
Kate and Luke. Tell them to look back at the
expressions in exercise 3. Play the audio and
ask them to put the three expressions they
hear in order. Ask them to compare answers
with a partner, then check with the class.
Answers
b, f, a
Transcript
luke Our food bills are really high too. And
really, you know, Kate, it’s because you
spend far too much on food.
kate I think it’s important to eat well, you
know. And good food costs more,
unfortunately. And also, there are things
like free-range chicken. We have to buy
that because it’s wrong to eat factoryfarmed food. Anyway … what did you
think of that TV programme last night on
alternative energy? It was so interesting,
wasn’t it? And the presenter was
wonderful! I thought …
luke Stop changing the subject! We were
talking about food bills. We spend too
much on food.
kate OK, OK, I’ll try and spend less. But as
I was saying, the presenter of that TV
programme was …
luke
kate
8
Do you promise? Promise to spend less?
Yes, I do. I’ll be really careful. But
anyway, to continue, I thought the
presenter …
See if students can remember what
happened and tell them to answer the
questions. Play the audio again for them to
check their answers.
Answers
1 Luke wants to talk about their food
bills; Kate wants to talk about a TV
programme on alternative energy.
2 She thinks it’s important to eat well,
but good food costs more; it’s wrong to
eat factory-farmed food, but free-range
food is more expensive.
9 Put students in pairs and tell them that they’re
going to have a conversation about food
and energy bills. Go through the instructions
and make sure students are clear about their
roles. Allow a few minutes for students to
write notes about their bills (they can make
up the information) and remind them to use
expressions for interrupting, changing the
topic or continuing with the topic. Model the
start of a conversation with one or two strong
students. Monitor pairs as they talk, making a
note of any common problems with grammar,
pronunciation or intonation.
we don’t say … / we say …
This section focuses on the following errors:
• incorrect use of an infinitive after imagine
• incorrect use of the active instead of passive
voice
• incorrect phrase for asking about health
• incorrect use of the verb hurt
• incorrect use of a reflexive instead of a passive
construction
Ask students to cover the green we say … side
and see if they can correct the mistakes themselves
before they look and check.
Unit 9
161
10
UNIT
FOCUS
The news and journalism
GRAMMAR: past perfect; reported
VOCABULARY: verbs of movement;
FUNCTIONS: telling an anecdote
speech; say and tell
crime; personality
Lesson 1 She had fallen
through a window! pp90–91
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce the
past perfect to talk about news stories and to
sequence events in the past, to learn how to use
when clauses, and to learn and review verbs of
movement.
Note: It would be useful to bring in different
examples of media (newspapers, magazines, etc)
for this lesson.
You first!
To introduce the topic, ask: Do you read
newspapers? Ask students to talk together about
the things they like to read. Ask: Do you prefer
serious news stories or stories about celebrities?
Speaking
1 Check students understand (the) news (the
most recent information about events). Elicit
that we can watch the news on TV or read it
online or in newspapers.
Put students in pairs or small groups to talk
about the questions. Encourage them to
ask follow-up questions, eg What are your
favourite newspapers, magazines and news
websites? How often do you read news
articles?
Extra ideas: If you brought in newspapers,
find some recent news stories and show
students pictures or headlines (without
showing them the text). Put students in
small teams and see if they can remember
or guess what happened in each story, then
check their ideas.
To get everybody up, stick news stories on
the wall around the room and ask students
to walk around, read the stories quickly, then
match them with pictures or newspaper
headlines.
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Unit 10
Vocabulary Verbs of movement
2 Teach / Elicit the meaning of the words in bold
or alternatively tell students to look them up.
MA As these words are quite straightforward,
give stronger students a time limit to write
their definitions.
Extra idea: Put students in pairs to take
turns to act out the verbs and guess the
actions.
Answers
throw = use your hand to send a ball or an
object through the air
climb = use your hands and feet to move
up something
pull = move something towards you
running = using your legs to move quickly
walking = using your legs to move around
carry = hold something in your hands and
take it somewhere
fallen = past participle of fall = move
quickly down to the ground from an object,
often by accident
catch = stop something from moving
through the air using your hands
hang = fix something to a wall
Tip: To get a clear visual clue of students’
understanding of the verbs of movement,
do a Total Physical Response (TPR) activity
where they act out the verb. This would
also be a good way of getting students to
move around a little and make them more
alert if they’ve been sitting for a long time.
MA TPR is also good with mixed-ability classes,
as very often weaker students lack confidence
or are too shy to speak. This gives them the
chance to show their understanding without
having to say too much.
3 Students answer the questions, then share
their ideas with a partner.
Suggested answers
1 a ball
2 a mountain, a cliff, a ladder
3 your arms
4 running
5 a briefcase, an umbrella
6 Yes, I have. / No, I haven’t.
7 cricket, rugby, American football
8 a wall
You could do exercises 1–3 on Verbs of
movement in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Reading
4 Tell students to look at the pictures and teach /
elicit the vocabulary. Explain that the righthand one in each case shows two possible
endings to the story and read out the
suggested beginning of each story. Put
students in small groups to try to tell the
stories. When they’ve finished, tell them to
share and compare with another group. At
this point, students probably won’t know the
past perfect, so don’t worry too much about
correcting their mistakes.
MA For extra support, brainstorm words and
ideas and write them on the board.
Suggested answers
1 A man looked out of his window and
saw a woman above him. She was
hanging from a window. She fell and
he caught her. / She was hurt and taken
to hospital in an ambulance.
2 A dog fell off a cliff when it ran after a
feather. The coastguards climbed down
the rocks and rescued the dog. / The
dog’s owners couldn’t rescue it.
5 Allow time for students to read the stories and
check to see if their ideas were correct. Elicit
feedback about what they guessed correctly.
Check comprehension of neighbour, make a
lot of noise and horrified. Ask: Did anything
surprise you?
6 Ask students to read the stories again and
answer the questions with a partner. Check
answers as a class. Find out which story
students preferred and why.
Answers
1 Because his neighbour was making a lot
of noise.
2 He saw his neighbour. She was hanging
from the window sill.
3 His neighbour fell and Ray caught her.
4 Because it was running after a feather.
5 He was on some rocks.
Grammar Past perfect
7 Ask one or two students to read the sentences
in the grammar table. Students find examples
of the past perfect in the stories, then check
with a partner.
Answers
1 … Susi Li, 30, had fallen through a
broken window … she hadn’t fallen to
the ground …
2 … after it had fallen off a 50m cliff …
Grant King had gone for a walk … the
dog had seen a feather … It had run
after the feather and run off the cliff and
then fallen into the water … the dog had
already climbed onto some rocks
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 142
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
8 Ask some concept-checking questions to help
students understand when we use the past
perfect. It’s also helpful to draw a timeline on
the board so they can see sequences of events.
Focus on the affirmative sentence. Ask: How
many things happened? (Two) When did they
happen? (In the past) How do we know it’s
the past? (From the verbs read, had heard) Did
they happen at the same time or a different
time? (Different time) Which thing was first?
(I had heard about the story.) How do we
know? (Because of the word earlier). Put
students in pairs to answer the questions for
the negative sentence.
Answers
affirmative
1 hearing about the story 2 yes
negative
1 not hearing about the story 2 yes
Unit 10
163
9 Write the sentences on the board and try
to elicit the difference in time between the
sentences. Draw a timeline on the board and
invite students to come up and highlight when
the events happened.
Answers
When I arrived, I heard the news.
When I arrived, I had heard the news.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 142
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
10 Ask students to work in pairs to complete the
story with the correct form of each verb. Ask
different pairs to say their answers.
Answers
1 woke up 2 thought 3 had left 4 didn’t
have / did not have 5 had had 6 turned
7 saw 8 fell 9 had fallen 10 had survived
11 rang
11
Ask students to cover the story and take
turns to tell it to a partner. They then read it
again to check their version.
Extra idea: Tell students you’re going to
read the story to them. Ask them to close
their books. Then read the story, changing
some of the details as you read. Students
have to listen carefully and try to find the
mistakes you make.
Speaking
12 Put students in pairs to do the informationgap activity. Tell them to read the sentences
they have from a news story. Explain that they
don’t have the whole story. They then ask and
answer questions to find out the rest of the
story. When they think they have the whole
story, tell them to close their books and try to
write it out. Invite one or two pairs to tell the
story to the class.
Art & Music
Tell students to look at SB page 145 to see a
bigger version of the painting. Put them in pairs
and ask them to write down as many things as
they can about John Lennon. Tell them it’s a race
and they only have two minutes. The team that
164
Unit 10
knows the most wins. Then ask students to find
out information about the picture online and
also guess what the song Imagine is about. As a
follow-up, ask them to imagine their ideal world
and describe it to their partner.
Extra questions for class or homework
Art
Find a painting of one of the other members
of The Beatles and try to describe it.
Music
How many songs did John Lennon write?
Who did he sing with after The Beatles?
Answers
Art
The pieces of newsprint are about John
Lennon.
Music
complete the line: But I’m not the only one
What does he ask you to imagine? That
there’s no heaven or hell, no countries, no
religion and no possessions. People live life in
peace and share the world.
Culture notes: Anthony Brown was
born in Liverpool in 1961. He’s an artist,
designer, illustrator and musician. He does
contemporary portraits as well as abstract
art and graphic-design projects.
The John Lennon Canvas is one of his
most famous paintings. It’s a collage that
contains newspaper articles, photographs,
memorabilia, certificates, song lyrics,
magazines and CD covers collected over
a 40-year period. All these items form the
base of an oil painting, and it was finished
on December 8th, 2005.
John Lennon was born in Liverpool in 1940
and was shot in New York in 1980 when
he was just 40 years old. He was an English
musician, singer and songwriter and
founder member of The Beatles, the most
commercially successful band in the history
of popular music, with between 600 million
and 1 billion sales of records and albums
worldwide. In 2004, Rolling Stone ranked
The Beatles as the best group of all time.
They were included in Time magazine’s
compilation of the 20th century’s 100 most
influential people and received the Grammy
Lifetime Achievement Award in 2014.
Imagine was first released in May 1971
and was Lennon’s best-selling single of his
solo career. The lyrics describe a peaceful
and utopian world without the barriers
of religions, nationalities and material
possessions. The song sold over 1.6 million
copies in the UK alone and received
a Grammy Hall of Fame Award.
Lesson 2 He said that there
was no big boss. pp92–93
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce reported
speech and look at the difference between say
and tell, to learn words to talk about crime, and to
read about an infamous gang of thieves.
You first!
Ask students about crime in their town. Ask: What
kind of crimes are most common? Explain that
crime in general is uncountable, but specific crimes
are countable.
Vocabulary Crime (1)
1 Ask students to look at the pictures with a
partner and talk about the questions. Elicit a
few ideas from the class. Ask: How many of
you recognised the film?
Answers
1 The Pink Panther
2 The man on the right is a jewellery
thief (he’s holding a necklace and is
dressed in black); the man on the left is
a detective.
3 Picture 2 shows a pink panther.
Background information: The Pink Panther
was the first of a series of films about the
French police detective Inspector Clouseau.
Peter Sellers played Clouseau in five of the
films. The Pink Panther was actually a very
valuable pink diamond which was stolen by
Sir Charles Litton (played by David Niven)
in the first film. In all the films, Clouseau
was an incompetent police inspector, with a
long-suffering boss, Chief Inspector Charles
Drefus (played by Herbert Lom).
2
Explain that some words always go
together to make phrases. Ask students to
match the verbs and nouns, then compare with
a partner. Play the audio for them to check their
answers and also to check pronunciation, in
particular thief and jewellery. Also point out the
plural of thief (thieves) and the past simple /
past participle of catch (caught).
3.13
You could do exercise 4 on Crime in Vocabulary
plus at this point.
Transcript and answers
catch: a criminal, a robber, a thief
rob: a bank, a jewellery shop
steal: jewellery, money
3 Tell students to look at the picture of two men
in a jewellery shop and answer the questions.
Check answers with the class and elicit a few
suggestions for question 5. Accept any sensible
suggestions.
Answers
1 a robbery in a jewellery shop
2 Yes, they do.
3 They’re stealing jewellery.
4 Because the robbers are wearing masks.
Extra idea: Tell students you’re going to
test their powers of observation. Give them
ten seconds to look at the picture, then
ask them questions about it, eg How many
people are in the picture? (Two) What are
they wearing? (Balaclavas / masks, gloves,
jeans, coats) What are they holding? (One
is holding a box and necklace, the other
one is holding a gun) What colour are their
coats? (One has a brown coat, the other
has a blue coat).
Reading
4 Pre-teach scare, hurt, violence, gang, scarves
and disguise. Also explain smash and grab
– the expression smash and grab is used to
describe a very quick robbery in a shop. Ask
students to read the article and answer the
questions. Set a short time limit so they read
quickly and don’t worry too much about
vocabulary. Students check their answers with
a partner.
Unit 10
165
Answers
1 a group of Balkan jewel thieves
2 a documentary film about the gang
3 No, they haven’t.
Extra idea: Write these numbers on the
board: 1993, 200, 448, 35, 2008, 15, 100, 1.
Ask students to read the text again and
write down what the numbers refer to.
(1993 – The gang started their robberies
in 1993; 200 – There are 200 people in
the gang; 448 – They have stolen jewels
worth over $448 million; 35 – They have
stolen things in 35 different countries;
2008 – They stole things in Paris in 2008;
15 – They only took 15 minutes; 100 –
They took over $100 million in jewellery; 1
One thief talked to a journalist about the
robberies)
5 Ask students to read the article again and
finish the sentences.
Answers
1 they use very clever methods but very
little violence.
2 women; disguises (on)
3 hurt
4 a big boss
5 wear disguises
6 the robberies are more dangerous
Grammar 1 Reported speech (1)
6 Read the grammar table with students, then
tell them to answer the questions and work
out the rules about reported speech. Check
answers as a class and ask students to find
other examples in the article.
Answers
1 direct speech: 1, 3
reported speech: 2, 4
2 By using speech / quotation marks
(Note that they can be single (‘) or
double (“).)
3 When we want to report what
someone said
4 tense changes, time phrase changes,
pronoun changes
166
Unit 10
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 143
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
7 Write the first sentence in direct speech on
the board and invite students to come up and
change it to reported speech. Quickly review
the rules. Ask: What do we use to show it’s
reported speech? (A reporting verb like say or
tell) What happens to the verb? (It goes into
the past) What happens to the pronouns?
(They change). Put students in pairs to write
the other sentences in reported speech.
Remind them that they can look back at the
grammar table to help them.
Note: We don’t focus on the transformation of
time expressions at this level, eg right now in
question 6.
Answers
1 A journalist said (that) the thieves didn’t
usually use violence.
2 A detective said (that) they were very
intelligent people.
3 The shop owner said (that) the shop
would open soon.
4 The police said (that) they could catch
the thieves.
5 The police said (that) the men had
dressed as women.
6 A detective said (that) they were
looking for the thieves right now.
Grammar 2 say and tell
8 Read through the examples in the grammar
box and elicit the differences between say
and tell. You could also write the sentences
on the board and quickly concept-check, eg
Do we say something or say someone? (We
say something) Do we tell something or tell
someone? (We tell someone).
To help students remember this rule about
reported speech, get them to repeat it out
loud like a little rhyme: Say something, tell
someone, say something, tell someone, etc.
Answer
Say doesn’t need an object, tell does.
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 143
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
9 Do the first item as an example with the class.
Ask: Why did the young man say he stole?
Elicit: He stole because he couldn’t earn a living
any other way. Put students in pairs to rewrite
the rest of the sentences in reported speech.
Remind them to look back at the grammar box
to help them.
Answers
1 The young man said he stole because
he couldn’t earn a living any other way.
2 The woman told me (that) she worked
in a bank that had had a bank robbery.
3 The thief said (that) his job wasn’t easy,
(that) it was hard work.
4 The detective said (that) they were
watching a gang of thieves very
carefully.
5 The robber told the journalist (that) he /
she couldn’t imagine doing anything
different.
Tip: Once you’ve covered the grammar, take
the opportunity to reinforce it in normal
classroom interaction (What did he say?
What did Pablo tell you?). This provides
really helpful review in a natural way.
Speaking and writing
MA Change pairs so there’s a mix of stronger
and weaker students. The stronger student in
each pair can help the weaker student with
vocabulary and grammar as they brainstorm
and write their stories together. Alternatively,
you could just allow the weaker students to
use dictionaries to find the words they need.
12 To encourage students’ interaction and
speaking, ask them to walk around the room
and share their stories with other pairs.
Extra idea: Put students in groups of four
to play a version of Chinese Whispers.
The first person tells the person next to
them something interesting (they should
whisper). They then pass the message on
to the next person and so on around the
group. The last person must say what the
first person said using direct speech. The
person who started the message says the
message again, using reported speech, eg
Yes, that’s right. / No, that’s wrong. I said
that …
Explore
Ask students to find out about famous crimes
online and make a short poster presentation for
the next class. You may want to start this activity
in class and ask students to finish it for homework.
10 EVERYBODY UP! Use this activity to
energise the class at the end of the lesson.
Model the activity with students. Say
something to them, then ask them what
you just said. It’s a good way of finding out
if they’re listening or not! Ask them to walk
around the room and talk to six other people,
then get them to report back what they just
said. Look at the example phrases, and remind
them to use reported speech. Ask students to
report back to the class and find out interesting
facts about them.
De-stress!
11 Put students in pairs to write a short
newspaper story about a crime. Remind them
to use reported speech to say what people
who saw the robbery said. Model the activity
with your own story so students understand
the task, then allow a few minutes for them
to brainstorm ideas together. Monitor pairs
as they work, making a note of any common
problems with grammar or vocabulary and
offering help where needed.
Aims
Read the instructions and encourage students
to do this exercise in class whenever they feel
stressed.
Note: Students should release their shoulders in a
controlled way rather than just let them drop! And
the circles should be slow and gentle and as large
as possible.
Lesson 3 What questions did
he ask? pp94–95
The focus of this lesson is to learn more about
reported speech (this time more on questions), to
introduce words to talk about personality, and to
find out more about what to do (and not to do) in
job interviews.
Unit 10
167
You first!
isobel
Ask students to talk with a partner about whether
they’d like to be a journalist. Check their ideas
and reasons. You could also encourage further
speaking about things such as the advantages and
disadvantages of being a journalist.
editor
Listening 1
1
,
2
isobel
editor
GUESS This activity encourages prediction
about the listening. Ask students to guess
what the photos are about and how they
might be connected. Encourage lots of active
guessing, but don’t confirm their ideas yet.
isobel
Answers
1 They’re waiting for an interview.
2 The interview is for a job with a climbing
magazine.
editor
3.14 Allow time for students to read the
questions so they know what they’re listening
for. Then play the audio for them to check their
ideas from exercise 1. Play it again for them to
answer the questions. Ask students to compare
their answers with a partner. Then check
answers as a class and find out how many
people made correct predictions in exercise 1.
isobel
editor
isobel
Answers
1 It’s an interview for a job with Climb
magazine.
2 Because Isobel arrives 40 minutes late.
3 She writes articles for the university
sports magazine and she loves climbing.
Transcript
editor It’s good to meet you, Isobel. But why
are you late? You’re 40 minutes late, in
fact. Can you explain?
isobel Yes, my train was cancelled. I’m so
sorry.
editor OK, well, let’s forget that and begin
with basic facts. From your accent, you
sound American.
isobel No, I’m Canadian actually. My parents
moved to Britain four years ago.
editor What’s your background?
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Unit 10
editor
isobel
editor
isobel
editor
isobel
3
My family now live in Exeter and I went
to Exeter University. I’m in my final year
there. I write for the university sports
magazine. I write a lot of articles for
them.
When did you start writing for the
magazine?
In my first year.
I’ve read your articles online and they’re
good. Tell me, what qualities do you
need to be a good journalist, in your
opinion?
Um, you do a lot of interviews, so you
need to be good with people. You need
to be careful. For example, you always
need to check your facts. And you must
be a good, fast writer, of course.
Good, yes. And you need to be reliable.
You said you’d send us some of your
articles. But you haven’t done that.
I … I forgot. But here they are.
Thank you. So tell me, why do you
want this job? Are you a climber?
Yes, I am, I love climbing and I climb
a lot. That’s why I’ve applied for a job
with Climb magazine. I love all sport,
actually. And I’m a good writer. So it
seems a good idea to get a job with
you!
Do you read our magazine?
Of course I do.
What do you think of it?
I love it; it has great articles, great
pictures. I think Don Watson, your chief
writer, is terrific. I read his articles very
carefully.
His name’s Don Matthews actually …
Oh yes, sorry, Don Matthews!
Tell students to try to remember the
questions in the conversation. Then play the
audio so they can check their answers and
complete the sentences correctly.
Note: It would be useful to write the questions
on the board so you can use them later in
exercise 6.
Answers
1 are you 2 explain 3 What’s your
4 did you start writing 5 do you need to be
a good 6 do you want this 7 Are you a
8 our magazine 9 do you think of
4
Ask students to try to remember Isobel’s
answers. Point out that they don’t need to use
her exact words, but they should use direct
speech. They can also just answer with the first
thing she says, as often she says more than
one thing.
Check their answers and write Isobel’s
responses in direct speech on the board. This
provides a nice way of presenting the grammar
in context in the activities that follow.
Suggested answers
1/2 My train was cancelled.
3 I’m Canadian, but I live in Exeter. I’m in
my final year at Exeter University.
I write articles for the university sports
magazine.
4 In my first year
5 You need to be good with people, you
need to be careful and check your facts.
You must be a good, fast writer.
6 I love climbing and I’m a good writer.
7 Yes, I am.
8 Yes, I do.
9 I love it; it has great articles, great
pictures.
Grammar Reported speech (2)
5 Ask the class to look at the grammar box and
compare the sentences. Ask some conceptchecking questions to help students notice the
differences. Focus on yes / no questions and
ask: What type of question is it? Is it a ‘yes /
no’ or a ‘wh-’ question? (Yes / no) What’s
the word order in the direct question? (Verb
+ subject) Is the word order the same in the
reported question? (No) So is it like a question
or a statement? (The reported question has
statement word order) What word do we use
to report the question? (if). Teach / Elicit that
we can also use whether.
Then focus on the wh- questions. Ask: What
type of question is it? Is it a ‘yes / no’ or a ‘wh-’
question? (wh- question) What’s the word
order in the direct question? (Question word
+ auxiliary verb (didn’t) + subject + verb) Is the
word order the same in the reported question?
(No) So is it like a question or a statement?
(The reported question has statement word
order) Do we use ‘do / does / did’ in the
reported question? (No).
Answers
1 if 2 The subject and the verb are
swapped (ie the same as statement order).
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 143
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
Tip: It can be difficult for students to
understand grammar, so using the board
carefully is often more helpful than wordy
explanations. Take time to write neatly
(printed lower case works best), show
plenty of examples and write key words in
different colours so they stand out clearly.
Although it might take a few seconds
longer to write carefully, it saves time and
students will understand more quickly,
as they have a clear visual clue of the
grammar.
6 Do the first sentence with the class as an
example. Ask students to write the remaining
questions in exercise 3 as reported questions. If
you have the sentences already on the board,
ask students to come up and change them
from direct to reported speech.
Answers
1 The editor asked Isobel why she was
late.
2 He asked (her) if she could explain.
3 He asked (her) what her background
was.
4 He asked (her) when she had started
writing for the magazine.
5 He asked (her) what qualities you
needed to be a good journalist.
6 He asked (her) why she wanted that
job.
7 He asked (her) if she was a climber.
8 He asked (her) if she read their
magazine.
9 He asked (her) what she thought of it.
3.15 Ask students to listen carefully to
7 P
the questions and think about whether the
intonation goes up or down at the end of the
sentence. Play the audio and see if they can
notice the pattern, then get them to explain.
Unit 10
169
Answer
The speaker’s voice goes down at the end
of wh- questions and up at the end of yes /
no questions.
Transcript
1 But why are you late?
2 Can you explain?
3 What’s your background?
4 When did you start writing for the
magazine?
5 What qualities do you need to be a good
journalist?
6 Why do you want this job?
7 Are you a climber?
8 Do you read our magazine?
9 What do you think of it?
8 P Play the audio again and get students to
repeat the questions.
Tip: Intonation can be very difficult for students,
so you could also backchain the questions
(repeat the last part of the sentence first) so
they notice and practise the pronunciation,
eg late // are you late // Why are you late?
Vocabulary Personality
9 Ask: Have you ever had an interview? Where
was it and what happened? Elicit a few stories.
Students can talk about a friend or family
member if they’ve never had an interview.
Put students in pairs to make a list of qualities
needed for an interview. Ask one or two
students to read out the example, then elicit a
few ideas from the class.
10
Go through the words in the vocabulary
box. Ask students to take turns to explain
the words to their partner. If they aren’t
sure, tell them to guess or look up the
words in a dictionary or online. Check their
ideas and correct if necessary. Ask students
which adjectives are very similar in their own
language and which are very different.
Ask students to discuss the questions and give
their reasons. Elicit that Isobel isn’t very reliable
because she didn’t get to the interview on time
and forgot to send the articles she’d written.
Elicit a few ideas as to which qualities are
useful as a journalist.
170
Unit 10
Answers
amusing = funny
charming = pleasant and attractive
curious = eager to find out about things
keen = eager
patient = willing to wait for things
pleasant = nice
positive = optimistic
reliable = able to be trusted
11
Play the audio for students to listen
and repeat the words. Ask them to count the
syllables in each word and guess where the
word stress is.
3.16
Transcript
amusing, charming, curious, keen, patient,
pleasant, positive, reliable
Listening 2
12 THINK Ask students to think about the
questions and give reasons for their ideas. Elicit
a few ideas from the class, in particular the
questions Isobel should ask, eg What’s the start
date for the job? What are the working hours?
How many weeks’ holiday are there? What’s
the salary? If necessary, pre-teach start date
and working hours, as both these phrases will
come up in audio 3.17. Ask: How many of you
think Isobel will get the job?
13
Tell students that they’re going to
listen to Isobel and a friend talking about the
interview. Play the audio for them to listen and
check their ideas from exercise 12. Ask: How
many of your predictions were right?
3.17
Answers
2 No, she didn’t.
Transcript
amy
So how was the interview, Isobel?
isobel I think it went well, Amy. I really hope
I’ve got the job.
amy
Who interviewed you?
isobel The editor.
amy
What was he like?
isobel He was OK, but he wasn’t exactly
friendly. He was about 60, I think, quite
tall, grey hair.
amy
isobel
amy
isobel
amy
isobel
amy
isobel
amy
isobel
amy
isobel
amy
isobel
amy
isobel
amy
isobel
amy
isobel
amy
isobel
Right! What questions did he ask you?
Oh, he asked me if I was a climber and
when I started writing for the magazine.
He said my articles were good.
I hope you asked him questions, it
shows you’ve thought about the job.
Did you ask him questions?
Yes, of course I did. I asked him what
the start date for the job was.
And what is it?
June.
That’s perfect, isn’t it?
Yes, it is, it means I can have a holiday.
Oh yes, and I asked how many weeks’
holiday there were. He said six weeks,
which is fine. And I asked what the
working hours were.
What are they?
He said it was a 45-hour week – a bit
longer than most jobs.
Are you alright with that?
Yes, it’s fine.
Is the salary OK?
I forgot to ask about the salary!
That’s crazy!
I know. I’m just going to check my
phone. Maybe I have an email from him.
Oh, I didn’t get it! I didn’t get it.
Oh, that’s a pity, Isobel. I’m really sorry.
Yeah, me too. I really wanted that job.
Are you feeling OK?
Yes, it’s OK, I’ve got another interview
next week. You know, I did make a few
mistakes …
What kind of mistakes?
I, um …
14 Tell students to listen again and make notes.
Explain that they don’t need to write every
word and that you’ll play the audio again so
they have another chance to listen. Remind
them that they must use direct speech for
these questions, so they have to change what
Isobel said. Do the first item on the board
so students know what to do, then play the
audio twice for them to listen and do the
activity. Briefly put students in pairs to compare
answers, then check their answers and write
the questions on the board to set up the next
activity.
Answers
What is the start date for the job? – June.
How many weeks’ holiday are there? – Six.
What are the working hours? – It’s a 45hour week.
She didn’t ask about the salary.
15 Look at Isobel’s questions on the board. Do
the first one with the class and get students to
change it to reported speech. Then tell them to
rewrite the other questions. Help and correct
as needed, then play the audio for students to
check their answers.
Answers
She asked him what the start date for the
job was.
She asked him how many weeks’ holiday
there were.
She asked him what the working hours
were.
16 Students do the activity individually, then check
with a partner.
Answers
1 Amy asked how the interview was.
2 She asked who had interviewed her /
Isobel.
3 She asked what questions he / the
editor had asked her / Isobel.
4 She asked if Isobel had asked him / the
editor any questions.
5 She asked if she / Isobel was alright
with that.
6 She asked if the salary was OK.
MA Although stronger students should be able
to create the questions, leave examples of the
grammar on the board for weaker students to
refer to if needed.
17 When Isobel talks to Amy, she knows that she
made some mistakes. Ask: Which things did
Isobel do well and which things did she do
wrong? Find out how many people think she
should have got the job.
Unit 10
171
Speaking
18 Put students in pairs and assign roles A and B.
Ask students to read their roles, then allow a
few minutes’ thinking time for them to make
notes about what they want to say before they
start. Then tell them to act out the interview.
Monitor pairs as they work, making a note
of any common problems with grammar,
pronunciation or intonation.
19 Put pairs together to form groups of six.
Model the activity and ask students to report
the conversations they had to their group.
Encourage them to use reported questions and
reported speech (it’s often best to leave some
examples on the board to help them). Get
feedback, highlight good sentences you heard
and gently correct any small mistakes.
Extra idea: To finish the lesson in a
personalised way and also reinforce the
grammar, ask students to talk together
about interviews they had that went well or
not so well. Get them to include details of
where they were and what happened.
Did you know?
Read through the interesting facts with the
class and find out if they’d still like to work as
a journalist. Get them to explain their reasons
together.
Vocabulary plus p96
Verbs of movement
1
Ask students to look at the pictures
and match them with the verbs. Do the first
one together as a model. Ask: What action
is this? What do you sometimes do to open
a door? Students complete the activity, then
play the audio for them to check their answers.
Elicit which two verbs have a similar meaning.
3.18
Transcript and answers
A push, B pull, C drop, D lie down, E get up,
F pick up / lift, G kick, H hit, I put down
lift and pick up have a similar meaning.
2 Ask students to look at the words again and
find the opposites.
172
Unit 10
Answers
push / pull; lie down / get up; pick up / put
down
3 Ask: How do we give instructions? (With
imperatives). Read out the example and get
students to do the action. Point out the use of
the adverb gently. Then, for fun, tell students
they can ask you to do things – act out the
things they say! Then put students in pairs to
give each other instructions using the verbs of
movement.
Crime (2)
4 Go through the statements and check
comprehension of the words in bold. If
necessary, go over the words you covered in
Lesson 2, exercise 2 on SB page 92. Remind
students that the plural of thief is thieves and
that crime is uncountable when general and
countable when specific. Point out that we
also say the police, not just police when we’re
talking about an organisation.
Students work with a partner to complete the
article with the correct words. To review and
finish in a personalised way, ask questions
about crime in their country / countries.
Answers
1 crime 2 robbed 3 robbed 4 stole
5 stole 6 thief 7 the police 8 police officer
Wordbuilder Prefix unWrite pleasant and unpleasant on the board
and quickly elicit what prefixes do (They change
the meaning and make opposite words). Ask
students if prefixes in their language are very
similar or very different.
a Get students to make sentences using if and
the adjectives in the list. Do the first sentence
with the class as an example. Say: If you don’t
do the things that you promised to do, what
are you? (Unreliable).
Answers
1 If you’re unreliable, you don’t do the
things that you promised to do.
2 If you’re uninteresting, you’re boring!
3 If you’re untalented, you aren’t very
good at anything.
4 If you’re unambitious, you aren’t
interested in a successful career.
5 If you’re unconfident, you don’t believe
in yourself.
b Encourage students to make extra sentences,
then check ideas with the class.
Suggested answers
If you’re unpleasant, you aren’t very nice.
If you’re unintelligent, you aren’t very clever.
c
P
Ask students to look at the
adjectives in the dialogue and try to identify
which syllable is stressed in each word. Play the
audio for them to listen and check. Then play it
again, pausing for students to repeat each line.
Once again, if students make any mistakes,
backchain and help them with pronunciation.
3.19
Note: In this case, the stress is on the prefix
because the speaker is emphasising the
negativity of each word. In isolation, the
stress on each word is as follows: untalented,
uninteresting, unintelligent, unconfident.
Transcript and answers
man
I’m so untalented, uninteresting and
unintelligent!
woman Rubbish! Don’t be so unconfident!
Focus on: The news
Show students that the word news can be used
in lots of different ways and has slightly different
meanings. Then ask them to match the sentences
and meanings from context. Check answers with
the class.
Answers
1c 2a 3c 4c 5b
Everyday English p97
Telling an anecdote
1 Ask students if they know what an anecdote is
(A short story about an event that’s interesting
or funny). Tell them to look at the pictures and
talk about the questions together. Ask students
to share their ideas – first in groups, then as a
class.
2
3.20
6 Decide whether you’re going to
use the video or simply play the audio. Play
the video or audio for students to check their
predictions. Find out if anybody guessed
correctly what the car-park attendant did.
Answers
1 He earned £1.40 per car and worked at
the car park for 25 years.
2 He’s relaxing with a drink by the sea in
Spain.
3 He didn’t have an employer, so he kept
all the money from the car park.
Transcript
kate OK, this is a true story.
luke Now, why don’t I believe you?
kate Bristol Zoo here in England has a large
car park. And there was this very
pleasant car-park attendant who worked
there. He’d worked there for 25 years.
And he had this ticket machine and he
charged cars about £1.40.
luke OK.
kate Anyway, one day he didn’t come in to
work. So a manager at the zoo said,
‘Hmm, we need to phone the City
Council and ask them to send another
car park attendant.’
luke Sounds like a good idea.
kate Yes, so they rang the City Council,
who said the car park wasn’t their
responsibility. ‘What?’ went the zoo
manager. ‘Didn’t the attendant work for
the council?’ The council said, ‘Er … no.’
luke He didn’t work for the City Council?
Interesting!
kate Very! So, here’s the thing, somewhere on
the coast of Spain there’s a guy with a lot
of money from the car park. Remember,
he’d worked there for 25 years. And no
one even knows his name.
luke I’d like to meet him!
3 Give students time to read through the
questions so they know what information to
listen for. Then play the video or audio again
for students to do the activity. If necessary, play
it again for them to compare their answers.
Unit 10
173
Answers
1 For 25 years
2 Because one day the man didn’t come
in to work.
3 No, he didn’t.
4 Nobody – he worked for himself!
5 On the coast of Spain
6 Because he kept all the money from the
car park.
MA As an extra challenge, ask students to
answer the questions before they listen again,
then check with a partner, before you play the
video or audio.
4 Ask: Do you believe this story or not? Tell
students to read the dictionary definition of an
urban myth, then ask: Has anybody heard this
story (or a similar version) before? Also find
out if there’s something similar in the students’
own language(s).
5 Go through the words in the box and explain
that these are all words and phrases we can
use when we tell an anecdote. Ask questions
to check understanding, eg What word can
we use of instead of ‘a’? (this) What word
can we use instead of ‘said’? (went) How can
we take the story in a different direction? (By
using anyway) What phrase can we use to
talk about the results of an action or to say
‘this is the interesting information’)? (Here’s
the thing) How can we introduce someone
or something? (By using There was …) What
word can we use to start a story, or start
talking about something? (OK). Give students
time to complete the extracts. Remind them
they can use some of the words more than
once. Play the video or audio again for them to
check their answers.
Answers
1 OK 2 there was 3 this 4 And 5 Anyway
6 one day 7 So 8 went 9 So 10 here’s
the thing 11 And
6
174
Tell students to cover the extracts in
exercise 5, then ask them to take turns retelling
the story using the key words. Remind them to
use some of the expressions from the word box
in exercise 5. Let them read the extracts again
afterwards to see how well they remembered.
Unit 10
Explore
Ask students if they know any urban myths
and get them to look up interesting stories and
anecdotes online.
Extra idea: In the next lesson, ask students
to tell their stories to the rest of the class
and encourage them to use some of the
phrases from exercise 5. Get them to start
their stories with the phrase This is a true
story … which of course means that it
probably isn’t!
we don’t say … / we say …
This section focuses on the following errors:
• incorrect use of the past simple instead of
the past perfect
• omission of the object pronoun after tell
• incorrect choice of word between rob and
steal
• incorrect use of say instead of tell
• incorrect collocation with questions
Ask students to cover the green we say … side
and see if they can correct the mistakes themselves
before they look and check.
Units 9&10 Review
Reading and grammar
catherine
1 Put students in pairs to talk about the
questions, but don’t check answers yet.
interviewer
2 Show students the title Superfoods and elicit
ideas for what the article is about. Then
ask them to read the article and check their
answers to exercise 1. Set a short time limit.
Help with vocabulary afterwards if needed.
Answers
1 salmon 2 cocoa 3 watercress 4 quinoa
3
catherine
interviewer
catherine
Ask students to close their books and do
the activity. Then tell them to read again and
check their answers.
4 Write down sentences from Unit 9 Lesson 2
in the present simple and past simple passive,
eg Oranges are grown in North Africa and
Chicken was only eaten on special occasions.
Quickly review and elicit the function and
form, referring to SB pages 84 –85 if necessary.
Then ask students complete the sentences with
the correct passive form.
interviewer
catherine
interviewer
pavi
Answers
1 is known 2 are found 3 is eaten
4 was done 5 were studied
interviewer
Listening and grammar
5
Tell students they’re going to listen
to people talking about superfoods. Play the
audio and elicit answers from the class.
pavi
3.21
Answers
Three of them (Catherine, Pavi and James)
eat superfoods. Catherine eats them
because she’s a vegan; Pavi eats them
because she’s a model; and James eats
them to balance the junk food he eats.
Transcript
interviewer
I have a question for you,
Catherine. What is a superfood?
interviewer
pavi
interviewer
pavi
pp98–99
Um, it’s a food that’s really good
for you.
Do you eat superfoods?
I’m a vegan. So yes, because I eat
more vegetables and fruit than
most people and there are a lot
of vegetables and fruit that are
superfoods.
You’re a vegan, so you don’t eat
meat, fish or dairy products. Why
don’t you eat them?
When I became a vegan, I’d been ill
with a stomach condition for a long
time. Conventional doctors hadn’t
helped me, so I began eating really
healthily. Then I became a vegan
and I got better.
Did you try conventional medicine?
Yes, and it didn’t help me.
I think food can be very powerful
medicine. I just can’t imagine
eating meat or fish now.
Do you eat superfoods, Pavi?
I’m a model and yes, I do. I have to
stay slim and healthy. Good food
is very important for your skin, so
I eat very carefully. I eat berries, lots
of dark green vegetables, oily fish,
quinoa.
How did you become a model?
Well, I was about 15 when a friend
suggested sending some photos to
a model agency and – they liked me.
Do you enjoy working as a model?
Yes, I do. Hey, I thought we were
discussing superfoods!
Sorry, yes, um, do most models eat
healthily, in your experience?
Yes, being a model means being
careful about your diet. If you
don’t, you have problems. I have
a friend who ate very badly for a
while because she’d broken up
with her boyfriend. She got skin
problems and they stopped giving
her work.
Units 9&10 Review
175
interviewer
james
interviewer
james
interviewer
james
interviewer
nick
interviewer
nick
Do you eat superfoods, James?
Yes, I do. But that’s because
I eat a lot of junk food too – you
know, hamburgers, chips, fizzy
drinks, sweets, crisps. I eat two
or three bags of crisps a day.
So I also eat superfoods – I drink
green tea, I eat lots of green
vegetables, broccoli, watercress,
dark chocolate, etc, to try and be
healthy.
You really think that will help you,
eating superfoods? Isn’t it more
important to stop eating junk
food?
Yes, it probably is.
Have you always eaten junk food?
No, I started eating junk food after
I’d lost my job. Now I can’t stop!
Do you eat superfoods, Nick?
Um, what are superfoods?
Food that people say may have
special nutritional qualities and be
very good for you. You know, they
may protect you against illness.
No, I don’t. I’m 83 and I eat what
I eat. I eat vegetables and fruit,
yes, but I also eat biscuits and
cake. And look at me. I’m fine.
I think the idea of superfoods is
ridiculous. One of my daughtersin-law talks a lot about diet. When
I saw her last week, she’d started
a new diet – all raw food. I think
that’s silly!
6 To review, ask: Can you remember the story
about the dog? What happened to it? Was it
OK? Then write a sentence from the story on
the board, eg When the coastguards arrived,
the dog had already climbed onto some rocks.
Ask: What happened first? Which words show
a sequence of events? Elicit the function and
form of the past perfect.
Then put students in pairs to complete the
sentences with the correct verb form. Check
answers as a class.
Answers
1 became; had been 2 became; got 3 ate;
had broken up 4 started; had lost 5 saw;
had started
176
Units 9&10 Review
7 Read the questions with one or two students
and elicit how they’re different. If necessary,
review subject and object questions on SB
page 87. Then ask students to create questions
about Catherine, Pavi, James and Nick.
Speaking and writing
8 Give students time to brainstorm a few
questions with a partner before they begin,
then tell pairs to walk around the room and
interview each other about the food they eat.
Encourage them to take notes and listen to
what people said.
9 If necessary, review reported speech in Unit
10, Lessons 2 and 3 (SB pages 93 and 94).
Ask students to write a short summary of
their interviews and report the things that
people said. Encourage them to use reported
questions and reported speech. Get feedback
from the class. You may want to start this
activity in class and ask students to finish it for
homework, then do the feedback session at
the beginning of the next lesson.
Preposition Park
Write for on the board and ask students to give a
sentence using it so they notice that it can be used
differently depending on the sentence. Then ask
them to match the sentences.
Answers
1b 2a 3d 4c 5c 6a
Cross Culture: Table manners
a Ask: Do you know what ‘table manners’ are?
Write Germany, India, China and Egypt on the
board and ask students to guess how table
manners are different in each place. Use the
picture to teach cutlery and revise knife, fork
and spoon. Students read the article and check
if their ideas were correct.
b Put students in pairs and tell them to read
through their instructions. Make sure they’ve
chosen a nationality for student B that has
different table manners to student A’s. Give
them time to prepare their roles, then ask them
to do the role-play. Monitor pairs as they talk,
making a note of any common problems.
MA For extra support, elicit language from
students first and write it on the board.
11
UNIT
FOCUS
Artists and writers
GRAMMAR: zero conditional; first conditional;
VOCABULARY: the arts; writing and novels
FUNCTIONS: expressing strong feelings
Lesson 1 If you make money,
you’re lucky. pp100–101
second conditional; purpose clauses
2
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to review the zero and
first conditional (first done in Unit 6), to learn
vocabulary for talking about the arts, and to
discover more about the painter Salvador Dalí.
Transcript and answers
1 A novelist writes novels.
2 A poet writes poems.
3 A painter paints paintings.
4 A musician makes music.
Note: It might be useful to bring in images of
famous paintings for this lesson.
You first!
Ask: Do you like art? What do you think of the
painting? Elicit a few ideas about what it shows.
Extra idea: Give students definitions of
words from the box and ask them to guess
which word you’re talking about.
Vocabulary The arts
1 Focus again on the painting and elicit what
students know about Dalí and his work. You
might want to point out that mad means crazy,
but in American English it means angry.
Answer
1 He describes himself as mad.
Culture notes: Look at the notes about
Dalí on page 37 and use them to remind
students about him. You might want to add
further notes on surrealism in this lesson.
Surrealism began in the 1920s and is known
for its disturbing images – many of which
are quite dreamlike and show things from
the artist’s unconscious mind. In addition
to the famous paintings by artists like Dalí,
Ernst, Miró and Giacometti, there were
many writers in the movement – in fact,
the name ‘surrealist’ was first used by the
playwright Guillaume Apollinaire in 1917.
The movement was initially closely linked
with Dadaism, but after World War I, many
artists and writers moved away from the
attacks on values by Dada and started to
look more closely at Sigmund Freud’s work
on free association and dream analysis.
Put student in pairs to discuss the
questions using the words in the vocabulary
box. Then play the audio for students to check
their answers to question 1. Ask them which
words are very similar in their own language
and which are very different.
3.22
3
Tell students to close their books. Give
them one minute to write down all the words
they remember. Get them to compare with
their partner to see who remembered the
most, then ask them to write sentences using
the words in context. Elicit feedback and check
their ideas.
MA Give weaker students about 30 seconds to
look at the words again before they close their
books.
You could do exercises 1–4 on The arts
in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Reading
4 Pre-teach the words normal, ordinary and
mad and look at the photo of Dalí to elicit
the meaning of moustache. Allow a couple of
minutes for silent reading, then ask students
for their ideas about the article.
Answers
Because he’s an example of a ‘crazy’ artist;
the writer thinks artists are all a bit strange.
5 Tell students to read the article again, more
slowly this time, and find the answers to the
questions. They then compare their answers
with a partner.
Unit 11
177
Answers
1 They’re very creative and their lives are
often quite difficult.
2 He had a moustache that wasn’t real,
he wore 19th-century clothes and he
talked about himself using he.
6
THINK Allow time for students to discuss
the questions together and give reasons for
their opinions. To encourage more interaction
and speaking, change the pairs so they talk to
different students.
Explore
For homework, ask students to find out more
online and write about their favourite works of art
and artists. Ask them to print a picture separately
and give the picture and their writing to you
before class. Collect the pictures and writing and
put them up around the room like an art gallery.
Then ask students to walk around the class and
guess which descriptions match which pictures.
Encourage lots of interaction and find out which
pictures students like and why.
Extra idea: If you brought in images of
paintings, cut each picture in half, mix
them up and distribute them to students.
Tell students they’re not allowed to show
each other their pictures. They have to go
around the room and try to find who has
the other part of their picture by describing
it to each other.
Listening
7
3.23 Tell students they’re going to listen to
two people talking about an art exhibition and
ask: What does the picture show? (People at
an exhibition in an art gallery). Tell students
to listen and answer the questions. Play the
audio, then play it again for students to check
their answers.
Answers
1 The conversation is about an art
exhibition that’s going to take place;
the picture shows that the exhibition
was a success.
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Unit 11
2 Because she says she’s crazy and wears odd
things (a hat that Nico thinks is strange).
Transcript
rosa Hey, Nico, have I told you? The Churchill
gallery is going to show my paintings. If
a gallery shows your paintings, they think
you’re good.
nico Of course they do! Congratulations, Rosa
– you must be so pleased!
rosa I am! People will come and see the
exhibition, you know. This means the
big newspapers. Oh, if this exhibition
gets good reviews, I’ll be so happy! If the
critics like the paintings, it will change
everything.
nico True – it will.
rosa I hope so. The thing is, you can expect
to be poor if you’re an artist. I earn so
little. I have this really old car! If the
exhibition does well, I can buy a new car
– fantastic!
nico If you buy a new car, ask my advice. I’m
good on cars.
rosa I will! Come on – let’s go and celebrate!
nico OK, there’s a new restaurant in Haven
Street, let’s go there. I’ll pay!
rosa Thanks!
nico Um, you aren’t going to wear that hat,
are you?
rosa Yes, I am.
nico Rosa, you can’t wear that hat. People will
think you’re crazy.
rosa I am crazy!
8 Ask students to complete the sentences in
pairs. Then play the audio again for them to
check their answers.
Answers
1 think 2 ’ll be / will be 3 ’ll change / will
change 4 can expect 5 can buy 6 ask
3.24 Write the example sentence on
9 P
the board and say it aloud, drawing the arrows
above the words as you speak. This will help
to show how the voice rises and falls. Ask
students to repeat the sentence. Play the audio
so they can compare and repeat again. Elicit
when we use a rising intonation (at the end
of the first clause) and when we use a falling
intonation (at the end of the sentence).
Transcript and answers
1 If a gallery shows your paintings, they
think you’re good.
2 If this exhibition gets good reviews, I’ll
be so happy.
3 If the critics like the paintings, it will
change everything.
4 You can expect to be poor if you’re an
artist.
5 If the exhibition does well, I can buy a
new car.
6 If you buy a new car, ask my advice.
Grammar Zero and first conditional
10 Read through the grammar box first and ask
some quick concept-checking questions, eg
How many parts to the sentences are there?
(Two) Can this part of the sentence (point to
the result clause) happen on its own? (No)
What has to happen first? (The part with if)
Can we change the order of the parts? (Yes).
Point out that with the first conditional, the
subordinate clause is in the present tense, even
though it refers to the future.
Put students in pairs to read the sentences
and work out the rules for the zero and
first conditional. Get feedback and check
the answers. Highlight how we use the first
conditional for things that are possible in the
future and how the zero conditional shows
things that are facts and always true.
Answers
1 true 2 true 3 true 4 false
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 140
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
11 Give students time to look back at exercise 8
and find the first conditional sentences.
Answers
2, 3
12 Look at sentence 3 and teach / elicit that we
use they to mean he or she when we don’t
know the sex of the person or we’re referring
to somebody we’ve mentioned using someone,
anyone, a person, etc.
Students complete the sentences using the
zero conditional. Remind them that they
should finish each sentence in two different
ways. Check the answers with the class and
gently correct any small mistakes.
MA Make the activity into a game and tell
students to make as many sentences as they
can. This gives fast finishers extra practice while
the weaker students complete the activity.
Ask stronger students to give extra examples
in feedback. This should also reinforce the
grammar for the weaker students.
Suggested answers
1 If you work as a painter, you probably
know a lot of other artists / don’t make
much money.
2 If you go to a lot of art exhibitions,
you must be very interested in art / you
learn more about art.
3 If someone is creative, they probably
have a good imagination / they’re
probably interested in art.
13 Tell students to use the key words to create
complete sentences about a shopping trip
using the first conditional. Do the first one with
the class as an example.
Answers
1 If the traffic is bad, I’ll go by train.
2 If I have time, I’ll visit an art gallery.
3 If I really like a picture, I’ll buy it.
4 If I see my friend Anna, we’ll have lunch
together.
Speaking
14 Put students in pairs, A and B, and go
through the instructions. Model the example
conversation with one or two strong students.
Ask student A to note down four possible
things in the future. Encourage student B to
ask extra questions for more information.
When they’ve finished, tell them to swap roles
and repeat the activity.
Extra idea: Put students in pairs to talk
about their holiday plans and what they’ll
do if they go to different places (If I visit
Paris, I’ll see the Eiffel Tower).
You could do exercises 8–10 on Useful
expressions in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Unit 11
179
Lesson 2 If I took one novel …
pp102–103
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce and practise
the second conditional for talking about imaginary
situations, to learn more about the novel War and
Peace, and to talk about favourite novels.
Warm-up
To introduce the topic, ask: Do you read blogs?
What things do you like to read about? Elicit ideas
and find out how many students prefer reading
things online to reading a printed book.
Reading
1
GUESS Ask students to look at the photos
from a famous film and guess the title of the
book. If they don’t know the title, ask them to
guess the themes shown in the two photos.
Answer
War and Peace
2 Allow a short time for students to read quickly
for gist and decide the best title. You could
also encourage other ideas if they have them.
To encourage more speaking, find out what
kind of books students like. A few ideas now
will help them later in the lesson.
Answer
My Desert Island Novel
Culture note: Desert Island Discs is a very
popular British radio programme, which
first aired in January 1942. It was off air
from 1946 to 1951, but has been on the
radio ever since. There have been only four
presenters in the history of the programme.
3 Ask students to look at the words in bold
in the blog, or you could write them on
the board. Check understanding, then put
students in pairs to choose the best words to
complete the sentences. Do the first one with
the class as a model. Ask: What’s another
word for ‘author’? Elicit that we can also use
novelist, but that author has a wider meaning
and includes authors of non-fiction, etc.
180
Unit 11
Answers
1 plot; characters; publish; author
2 play records; play 3 takes place; guests
4 invasion; re-read
not used: luxury
4 Tell students to read the blog again and answer
the questions. Check answers as a class.
Answers
1 Choose eight records, a book and a
luxury item to take to a desert island.
2 Which novel would you take?
3 It’s very long (one of the longest novels
ever written).
4 They feel very real.
5 He wanted to make the reader
understand the horror of war.
6 Because a friend who didn’t usually
enjoy novels loved it.
MA Ask students to find the correct answers
to the reading comprehension activity, but get
a personal reaction to the text from stronger
students. This encourages higher processing
skills, involves them more and gets them to
interact more with the text.
Grammar Second conditional
5 Students work individually to complete the
sentences in the grammar table. If they’re
unsure, encourage them to look back at
the blog to find similar sentences to help
them. Get feedback and elicit the differences
between the second conditional and the first
conditional. Ask: How are they different,
and how do they change the meaning of the
sentences? Write an example of a first and
second conditional sentence on the board so
students notice the past tense in the if clause
and would in the result clause of the second
conditional sentence. It would also be useful
to focus on the use of If I were in the last
sentence in the grammar table. Point out that
this is the correct form to use, although in
spoken English, many people now say If I was.
When students have completed the sentences,
they can refer to them to complete the rule for
the use of the second conditional.
Answers
1 would 2 would 3 had 4 would
5 take / read
are imaginary or unlikely
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 143
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
6 Put students in pairs to discuss which
sentences are more likely to happen. Draw a
scale of probability on the board (from most to
least likely) and check their ideas.
Note: Questions 3, 6 and 8 can be either the
first or second conditional here depending
on whether students see the situation as
imaginary or possible. Questions 2, 4, 7 and 9
are likely to be imaginary and questions 1 and
5 are almost certainly imaginary!
7 Read the example sentence. Quickly conceptcheck with questions, eg Am I a millionaire?
(No) Could I really buy my own island? (No)
Is it impossible for me in the future? (No, but
it probably won’t happen) Should I say the
sentence with ‘will’ or ‘would’? (would).
Students write their sentences, then check with
a partner to see if they had similar answers.
Suggested answers
1 If I bought an island, I’d invite all my
friends there.
2 If someone stole my car, I’d call the
police.
3 If I don’t come to the next English class,
I’ll find out about the homework from a
friend.
4 If a stranger said ‘I love you’, I’d think it
was a bit strange.
5 If I became an animal, I’d be a lion.
6 If I go to the cinema this month, I’ll see
the new Hunger Games film.
7 If I saw my favourite writer in a
restaurant, I’d ask him / her for an
autograph.
8 If a friend invites me to a party at the
weekend, I’ll say yes.
9 If I wrote a novel, I’d write about my
childhood.
Speaking and writing
8
THINK Get students to explain the cartoon
and talk about the questions in pairs or small
groups. Check students’ ideas and find out if
they prefer books or films and why.
You could do exercises 5–7 on Book types
in Vocabulary plus at this point.
9
EVERYBODY UP! Ask students to imagine
what they’d do if they had lots of money and
free time. Give them time to think of ideas.
Then tell them to walk around the classroom
and ask and answer the question. Encourage
them to ask extra questions to find out more,
but make sure they make notes of everybody’s
answers. Remind them to use the second
conditional.
10 Read the example sentence and tell students to
look at the notes they made in exercise 9 and
find the patterns in the answers. Elicit feedback
to find out the most popular answers.
11 Look back at Tanya’s blog and elicit the kind of
information she includes in it. Write the main
ideas on the board as bullet points for the class
to include (the title of the book, the writer, the
story and what it’s about, reasons why you like
it and when you first read it). Monitor pairs
as they work, making a note of any common
problems with grammar or vocabulary and
helping where necessary.
You may want to start this activity in class and
ask students to finish it for homework.
Tip: Students often think that coursebook texts
are just there for reading practice and
comprehension activities. They don’t always
realise that reading sets up both speaking
and writing activities, adds background
knowledge, grammar and vocabulary and
also provides a model for writing tasks.
Encourage students to closely follow the
structure and content of the text (in this
case a blog) to help their own writing.
12 Put students in small groups to talk about
the novel they’d take with them to a desert
island. Start by getting a student to ask you
the example questions and answer with
information about your own desert-island
novel.
Unit 11
181
Did you know?
Suggested answers
1 It’s by Gabriel García Márquez. He won
the Nobel Prize for the novel. Oprah’s
Book Club chose it. Salman Rushdie
says it’s ‘the greatest novel ... of the last
50 years’. (Explain that Salman Rushdie
is a well-known novelist writing in
English.)
Read the information and find out what (if
anything) students know about these three novels.
You could also ask students to vote for the best
20th-century love story (in a novel).
Explore
Ask students to find out more online about one of
the novels in the lesson (one they haven’t written
or talked about before). Alternatively, they could
choose to find out more about another novel
they’ve heard about.
2
Extra ideas: Tell students to stand up
and form a line. Start a chain by telling
everyone what your favourite book is. Then
the next person says what you said and
adds their favourite book. The next person
remembers what the others said and
adds their own sentence… and the chain
continues. If a student says the wrong
thing, they’re out of the game and must sit
down. The last student standing wins.
The same game could also be done with
second conditional statements: If I had a lot
of money, I’d ...
Lesson 3 He went there to
study law. pp104–105
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce infinitives
of purpose, to learn vocabulary for talking about
writing and novels, and to discover more about
the Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez.
Warm-up
Look at the title of the book and ask: Has anybody
read this book? If anybody has, ask them to give a
very quick (and simple) outline of it. If nobody has
read the book, just move on!
Vocabulary Writing and novels
1 Look at the book covers and ask: If you’ve read
this book, did it have the same or a different
cover? Explain that there are several different
covers, as the book has been published in
many languages and by different publishers as
well. Find out what students know about the
writer Gabriel García Márquez. Put students in
pairs to describe the two covers.
182
Unit 11
Get students to match the words in
the boxes to make literary expressions. Play the
audio for students to check their answers, then
play it again for them to repeat the phrases.
3.25
Note: There are other possible combinations,
particularly if you include the article (a / an or
the), as in publish an article. You could also
have publish a story / a review.
Transcript and answers
book cover, book prize, book review,
book title
newspaper article, newspaper review
publish a novel, publish an article
short story
Listening 1
3
Go through the information with
students so they know what to listen for. Play
the audio while they listen carefully for the
dates. Tell them not to worry if they don’t get
everything first time. Play the audio again for
them to fill in any gaps they had, and check
their answers.
3.26
Note: Some sources give García Márquez’s
year of birth as 1928.
Answers
1927 He was born in the river town of
Aracataca in Colombia.
1946 He went to university.
1954 He went to Europe.
1958 He got married.
1967 One Hundred Years of Solitude was
published.
1982 He received the Nobel Prize for
Literature.
1985 Love in the Time of Cholera was
published.
2014 He died.
Transcript
interviewer
andrea
interviewer
andrea
interviewer
andrea
interviewer
andrea
interviewer
andrea
interviewer
andrea
interviewer
The Colombian writer Gabriel
García Márquez, who died in 2014
at the age of 87, is recognised all
over the world as one of the 20th
century’s greatest novelists. Andrea
Thomas is writing a biography of
him and is with us now to tell us
something about his life. García
Márquez lived in quite a remote
river town as a child, didn’t he,
Andrea?
Yes, that’s right. He was born
in 1927 in the river town of
Aracataca. He lived there with his
grandparents until he was nine.
Then he went to live with his
parents.
So he didn’t live with his parents
until he was nine!
No. But he had a very happy
childhood.
How did his writing career begin?
Well, he went to university in 1946
to study law. But he only studied
law to please his parents. His
real interest was writing and he
started writing newspaper articles
and short stories while he was at
university.
So he became a journalist as a
student?
Yes and a successful one. In 1954,
he went to Europe to work as
a journalist there. Then he got
married in 1958, and he and his
wife went to live in Mexico.
He wrote One Hundred Years of
Solitude in Mexico, didn’t he?
Yes, One Hundred Years of Solitude
is his most famous novel, and
he wrote it in Mexico. There’s a
wonderful and true story about
how he had the idea for the novel
while he was driving with his family
to Acapulco. He had this idea and
then immediately drove back home
to start the novel.
So the family never got to
Acapulco?
No! He stopped all his other work
and they had to sell their car to
make money.
andrea
interviewer
andrea
interviewer
andrea
Really! How long did it take him to
write the novel?
It took him 18 months and they
had to borrow money to live.
But fortunately, when the novel
was published in 1967, it was an
immediate, international success –
a huge success.
So money was no longer a
problem.
No. He became a bestselling writer.
He went to live in Spain for eight
years and then he returned to
South America. He wrote novels,
short stories and non-fiction too.
And of course he received the
Nobel Prize.
Yes, in 1982, he travelled to
Norway to receive the Nobel Prize
for Literature. But his other truly
great work, Love in the Time of
Cholera, was published in 1985,
after he received the Nobel Prize.
4 Play the audio again and tell students to
complete the sentences. Get them to compare
their answers with a partner, then check
answers as a class.
Answers
1 his parents 2 journalist 3 start the novel
4 make money 5 write the novel; live
6 receive the Nobel Prize for Literature
Extra idea: Write down events from García
Márquez’s life (without dates) and cut them
up into separate events. Put students in
pairs. Play the audio again and tell them to
listen and put the events in the correct order.
Grammar Purpose clauses
5 Ask students questions about García Márquez,
eg Why did he go to Europe? Elicit the reasons.
Highlight the use of the infinite of purpose,
then ask students to work out the questions
for sentences 2 and 3 in the grammar table.
Answers
2 Why did he go to university?
3 Why do you read novels?
Unit 11
183
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 143
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
6 Put students in pairs to think of reasons why
you or other people do things and to complete
the sentences using a purpose clause. Tell
students that we sometimes use the phrase in
order before the infinitive, eg I work hard in
order to earn money. Elicit sentences from the
class.
MA For extra support, go through all the
sentences and elicit ideas for completing them.
Write the ideas on the board.
7
Explain to students that they’re going
to hear the biographer, Andrea, from exercise
3 talking more about García Márquez’s famous
book. Play the audio and tell students to
listen and complete the sentences. Have them
compare together and play the audio again,
pausing as necessary.
3.27
Answers
1 write about the history 2 In South
America 3 In magical realism 4 strange
and funny 5 ask questions about
6 magical events
Suggested answers
1 to relax / to be entertained / to get
information
2 to earn money / to support my family
3 to tell me some good news / to ask
how I was
4 to find out what my friends are doing
5 to buy some food for the week
Transcript
EVERYBODY UP! Energise your class by
asking everyone to stand up and walk around
and find as many people as they can for each
thing. They must ask each person why they do
it and get a response. Remind them to use a
purpose clause when they give their reasons.
Monitor students as they talk, making a note
of any common problems with grammar,
pronunciation or intonation. Help with any
language, eg I wear a hat to keep warm / look
different. I go clubbing to meet people / have a
good time.
MA Encourage peer correction so that when
weaker students make small mistakes, stronger
students can offer gentle correction and help
them. This also helps stronger students to
analyse the language and develops accuracy.
Students don’t generally like doing this,
though, so wait until they know each other
quite well and gradually encourage them to
help each other more.
interviewer
Listening 2
8 Allow time for students to read the
information, then answer the questions.
Teach / Elicit the meaning of supernatural,
ghosts, shoot and rise (into the air). Elicit ideas
from the class.
184
9
Unit 11
interviewer
andrea
andrea
interviewer
andrea
interviewer
andrea
interviewer
andrea
interviewer
andrea
interviewer
Can you tell us more about
One Hundred Years of Solitude,
Andrea?
Of course. The novel takes place
in an imaginary village called
Macondo. In fact, the village is
based on the town where García
Márquez lived as a child.
Aracataca, the river town?
That’s right. He tells the history of
this imaginary village and of the
Buendia family. But actually, Gabo
used the novel to write about the
history of Colombia.
Gabo? You mean García Márquez?
Yes, sorry, he was so famous in
South America that he’s known as
‘Gabo’.
OK! Now, one reason why, um,
Gabo was so famous is because he
invented ‘magical realism’.
Yes, he did.
What is magical realism exactly?
I’ve never understood.
Well, in magical realism,
supernatural events happen in
ordinary situations. For example,
in One Hundred Years of Solitude,
ghosts often visit the characters.
Ghosts?
Yes, and flowers fall from the sky.
And a woman rises into the sky
and disappears.
You know, there are a lot of people
who don’t like fantasy.
andrea
interviewer
andrea
interviewer
Yes, but in Gabo’s novels, the
magical events are very strange
and funny, and interesting. And
Gabo uses these events to ask
questions about reality.
I see.
And you know what gave him the
idea? When Gabo was a child, his
grandmother talked a lot about
magical events. And she seemed
to believe they were real. She saw
ghosts – she believed they were
real. So that’s how he describes
these events in his novels, like
they’re real.
OK, I’ll read it. It sounds great!
Tip: If you use a CD player, give students control
of it so they can pause the audio and replay
the sections they need to hear again. This
makes the lesson more learner-centred and
reflects their needs.
10
Tell students to look at the supernatural
events in exercise 8 and tick the things they
remember were mentioned. Elicit a few ideas,
then play the audio again for them to check
their answers.
Answers
a, c, e
Speaking
11 GUESS Look at the photo. Ask: What do
you think it means? Encourage lots of active
guessing, then elicit ideas and agree on the
best explanation. Accept any ideas – there’s
no right answer here. Encourage students to
use purpose clauses if they can when they’re
speaking, eg He’s wearing the book on his head
to tell us that it’s about ideas from his head.
12 Put students in pairs to talk about the
questions and get their opinions on why
fantasy novels are so popular.
Art & Music
Tell students to look at SB page 145 to see a
bigger image of the painting. Pre-teach words
to help students describe the painting, eg deer,
arrows, wood.
Extra questions for class or homework
Art
Who was Frida Kahlo married to?
What happened to her when she was a
young woman?
Answers
Art
The painting tells us Kahlo suffered pain all
her life.
Music
Song title: All I Have to Do Is Dream by The
Everly Brothers (1958). The singer makes
himself happy by dreaming when he misses
his girlfriend.
Culture notes: Frida Kahlo was born
on July 6th, 1907, in Coyocoán, Mexico.
Considered one of Mexico’s greatest artists,
she began painting after she was severely
injured in a bus accident. Kahlo later
became politically active and married fellow
communist artist Diego Rivera in 1929. She
exhibited her paintings in Paris and Mexico
before her death in 1954. In her lifetime,
she did around 200 paintings, drawing and
sketches – 55 of the paintings were selfportraits. After suffering from ill health for
many years, Kahlo died on July 13th, 1954,
just one week after her 47th birthday. The
house she shared with Rivera, the Blue
House, was opened as a museum one year
after her death in 1958.
The Wounded Deer, painted in 1946,
shows a young deer with Frida’s head
that’s been fatally wounded by a cluster
of arrows. The painting expressed her
disappointment, pain and emotional
depression after an operation on her spine
failed to relieve her terrible back pain.
In the bottom left-hand corner of the
painting, she wrote Carma, which means
destiny or fate.
All I Have to Do Is Dream was sung by
The Everly Brothers – an American country
and rock-and-roll group that consisted of
brothers Don and Phil Everly. Their music
has influenced many famous singers and
bands such as The Beatles and Simon and
Garfunkel. Their first single, Bye, Bye Love
Unit 11
185
in 1957, was the first of many classic hit
records and is one of the most famous songs
of all time. The Everly Brothers were elected
to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986
and the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2001.
Vocabulary plus
Suggested answers
1 See is more general; watch focuses on
the action more.
2 See is more general, watch focuses on
the action more.
3 A poet is a person who writes a poem.
4 A sculptor is a person who makes
sculpture.
5 Work can be used to describe the
things that an artist produces (this
artist’s work) or as a general word to
describe tasks you do to earn money (I
hate work).
6 A drawing is done with pencils or
charcoal, for example; a painting is
done using paints.
p106
The arts
1
Tell the class to make verb and
noun collocations with the words from the
vocabulary boxes. Then play the audio for
students to check their answers. Ask them
which phrases about the arts are very similar
in their own language and which are very
different. If students ask about the difference
between see and watch a play / film, you could
do exercise 4 at this point.
3.28
Transcript and answers
direct a play / direct a film
do a painting
go to the theatre / go to the cinema
make a sculpture
perform a play
see a play / see a film
watch a film / watch a play
write a play / write a film script / write a poem
2 Focus on the photo and put students in pairs
to describe it. Point out they can use two of
the phrases from exercise 1.
3 Read the example, and perhaps add your own
personal information about the activities you
do as a further model. Then tell students to
talk in pairs about the questions. Encourage
them to ask extra questions and get feedback
to find out which activities were the most
popular.
4 Do the first item with the class as an example.
Ask: Do you think ‘see a play’ is the same as
‘watch a play’? Elicit that watch is the action
of watching, eg I’m going to watch a film
tonight, but we use see to say if we’ve been to
a cinema or theatre to see something, eg Have
you seen ‘The Dark Knight’?
Put students in pairs or small groups to discuss
the difference in meaning between the other
word pairs. If they’re unsure, encourage them
to look up the words in their dictionary or
online.
186
Unit 11
Book types
5
3.29
Draw two columns, fiction and
non-fiction, on the board. Elicit which column
autobiography goes in. Then ask students to
put the other types of book in the correct list.
Play the audio for them to check.
Transcript and answers
fiction: detective story, fantasy, historical novel,
literary novel, romance, thriller
non-fiction: autobiography, biography, cookery
book, history book
6 Ask: What kind of book is ‘One Hundred
Years of Solitude’? Tell students to go through
the list in exercise 5 and think of examples
of each kind of book. Get their ideas and
recommendations for different types of book.
7 Put students in pairs to talk about the
questions. Give an example of a book you’ve
recently bought and read, as well as one you
didn’t like so much.
Useful expressions
8 Read through the useful expressions (1–5) and
tell the class they’re very natural ways of
expressing opinions about something. Then
ask students to match them with the correct
meaning: a, b or c. When you go through the
answers, point out that I’m into on its own
means I like this, but if you add really, then it
means I love this. Similarly, I’m keen on means
I like this, but I’m very keen on means I love this.
Answers
1b/c 2c 3a 4b/c 5a
9
Tell students to close their books and try to
remember the expressions from exercise 8. Tell
them to write a sentence using each expression
if possible.
10 Check understanding of poetry (they had poet
and poem in exercise 4, so they should be
able to work this out), then read the example
dialogue with one or two students. Tell them
to think about the arts and discuss their
preferences with a partner. Remind them to
use the expressions from exercise 8 in their
conversations.
De-stress!
Tell students to do this first together, facing you,
which will probably make them laugh and feel very
silly – which is great. Then you can ask them to
turn to their partner and smile. About 30 seconds
is plenty in both cases! (This is a meditation
described in Elizabeth Gilbert’s book Eat, Pray,
Love.) Smiling makes us feel happier and more
able to face things.
Everyday English
p107
Expressing strong feelings
1
2
GUESS Show students the video stills and
ask them to discuss what they think is going to
happen. Encourage lots of thoughts by saying,
eg Maybe the man will talk to the woman in
the gallery. Maybe the woman will tell him to
go away. Elicit a few ideas from the class.
3.30
6 Decide whether you’re going to use
the video or simply play the audio. Pre-teach
the word ending (of a book, film, etc), then
play the video / audio for students to check
their ideas.
Answers
1 The man asks the woman about the
book she’s reading.
2 The man is going to ask the woman
what she thinks of the pictures.
Transcript
1 man
Sorry to disturb you, but I see
you’re reading Donna Tartt’s new
novel. I’ve just finished it.
woman Oh really, what did you think of it?
man
It’s so good! I couldn’t put it down.
woman Yeah, I’m enjoying it, but it’s such a
long book! I’m not sure I’m going
to finish it.
man
Really? Oh you should, the ending’s
wonderful.
woman Thanks for the advice, I’ll read to
the end then. Have you read A
Secret History?
man
Yes, I have!
woman What a brilliant story!
man
I loved it too. Sorry, what’s your
name?
woman Sophie. And yours is …?
2 woman Eugh! Hmm!
man
Um, you don’t seem to like that
picture.
woman No, you’re right, I don’t like it at
all. In fact, these are such awful
paintings I don’t know why I came.
man
The exhibition got good reviews.
woman I know. The critics were wrong.
I mean, look at that! What a boring
picture!
man
Oh, I disagree, I think it’s a very
interesting painting. And I love
those colours.
woman How interesting! Our opinions are
so different!
man
Um, we obviously have a lot to talk
about. Do you fancy going for a
cup of coffee? There’s a great café
near here.
Extra idea: Ask questions about the
photos and the video / audio, eg The
two people in each conversation liked
each other a lot. What do you think they
thought about each other afterwards? You
could also ask general questions, eg Do you
ever talk to strangers? In what situation
would you talk to a stranger? Have you
ever chatted to a stranger, then become
friends with them?
Unit 11
187
3 Ask students to fill in the gaps in the
conversations. Then play the video or audio
again for them to check their answers.
Answers
1 good 2 long 3 brilliant 4 awful
5 boring picture 6 interesting
4 Tell students to look at the words in bold in
the table and point out how they show strong
feelings and interest. Ask them to complete the
sentences, then repeat the sentences together,
stressing the words how, what and such.
Answers
What terrible poems!
What good coffee!
It’s such a boring film!
It’s such useful information!
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 143
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
5 Model the activity by saying, eg What a great
book! ‘One Hundred Years of Solitude’ is such
an amazing story! Then tell students to look
back through the unit to find examples of each
thing and make one or two sentences for each
one, using what or how.
Students’ ideas for each thing may vary, but
these are things they could talk about: goodlooking people – the actors in the photo on
SB page 102; strange painting – Dalí’s painting
Sleep on SB page 100; interesting information
– any article that the students find interesting;
crazy man – Dalí on SB page 100.
3.31 Play the audio for students to
6 P
check their answers to exercise 5. Then play
it again and tell students to underline the
stressed words in each sentence. You may need
to play it a few times, as the stress isn’t always
clear. Point out that sometimes the stress is
on more than one word – and word stress
can vary a lot in spoken English depending on
the context. Because the adjectives in these
sentences are important, they’re stressed; if we
really want to make our feelings clear, we can
stress what or such as well.
188
Unit 11
Transcript and answers
1 What good-looking people! They’re
such good-looking people!
2 What a strange painting! It’s such a
strange painting!
3 What interesting information! It’s such
interesting information!
4 What a crazy man! He’s such a crazy
man!
7 P Play the audio again and ask students
to repeat the sentences. Focus on the
stressed words and backchain to help with
pronunciation.
8 Ask students to write down artists, writers,
books and films that they have strong feelings
about. Give them a few minutes to make a
list. Then tell them to walk around the room
and ask each other questions about things
they like or dislike. Encourage them to use the
expressions and adjectives to describe each
thing, eg What’s your favourite book? – I really
love ‘The Grapes of Wrath’ – What an amazing
book! If they can’t find an artist they both
agree about, tell them to move on to another
partner. Monitor pairs as they talk, making a
note of any common problems with grammar,
pronunciation or intonation.
we don’t say … / we say …
This section focuses on the following errors:
• incorrect use of tense in a first conditional
sentence
• incorrect use of tenses in a second conditional
sentence
• incorrect use of for instead of to in a purpose
clause
• incorrect use of so instead of such and
omission of the indefinite article
Ask students to cover the green we say … side
and see if they can correct the mistakes themselves
before they look and check.
12
Special occasions
UNIT
FOCUS
GRAMMAR: verb + infinitive or -ing form; used to; grammar review
VOCABULARY: weddings
FUNCTIONS: making, accepting and refusing invitations; making suggestions
Lesson 1 It began raining.
2
pp108–109
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to review and practise
verbs that take an infinitive or an -ing form, to
learn vocabulary for talking about weddings, and
to talk about wedding ideas.
Tell students that they’re going to play
a memory game. Ask them to look at the
photos, then close their books. Put them in
pairs to describe the photos in as much detail
as possible, then check.
Extra idea: Put students in pairs. Tell them
to look at the photos for 15 seconds and
close their books. One student describes a
photo but says things that aren’t true. Their
partner has to listen carefully and interrupt
when they hear something that’s incorrect,
eg No! That’s wrong! He isn’t wearing a
black suit; he’s wearing a white one.
You first!
Tell students to look at the photos. Ask about each
one: What’s happening and what do you think
about it? Get their reactions to the photos and ask
the class to decide if they’re romantic or ridiculous.
Vocabulary Weddings
Grammar 1 Review
1
3 Go through the sentences and check
understanding of fiancé, close family and
divorced. Give students time to read the text
and fill in the gaps, making sure they use the
correct form of the verbs in brackets.
If necessary, go through the sections on
verb + infinitive on SB page 137 and
verb + -ing form on SB page 142.
3.32
Check comprehension of trivia
(unimportant facts) and the first two lines of
the text. Students complete the text, looking
up new words if necessary. Play the audio
for them to check the answers. Ask students
which wedding words are very similar in their
own language and which are very different.
Answers
1 ceremony 2 wedding dress 3 bride
4 celebrate 5 (bride)groom 6 guests
7 get married
Transcript
Some people go to a lot of trouble to make
their wedding ceremony memorable. The
world’s longest wedding dress was worn by
a bride in Italy in 2012. It was nearly three
kilometres long!
Some people celebrate their marriage in
amazing ways. One groom in China decided to
surprise his new wife with 99,999 roses.
A Scottish couple surprised their wedding
guests when they told them that they were
going to get married underwater!
And finally, if you want to be different, why
not get married on a motorbike like one
Russian couple? It’s cheap and it’s fun!
Answers
1 having; to have 2 spending 3 to have;
to buy 4 to get married 5 dreaming
6 having 7 to be married
4 Put students in pairs to talk about the
statements. Elicit feedback and find out how
many people agree with each statement.
5
GUESS Ask students to talk about the photo
and the questions. Use the photo to revise
umbrella and beach. Elicit a few ideas, but
don’t check answers yet.
6 Give students time to read the article and
check if their predictions were correct. Set a
short time limit so they read quickly and don’t
worry too much about words they don’t know.
Ask: Do we definitely know what nationality
the people are? (No, we don’t, because they
Unit 12
189
could just be on holiday in South Africa, but
they’re probably South African.) How do you
know the bride and groom thought it might
rain? (Because all the umbrellas are green –
this means that they bought them before the
wedding because they thought it might rain.)
Answers
1 South African
2 Two people are getting married on a
beach; they loved getting married in the
rain.
3 Yes, they did – they had umbrellas
ready.
7
Students do the activity individually, then
read the article again to check their answers.
Answers
1 he had intended to ask her the same
thing
2 they are both careful with money and
had saved a lot
3 have a huge party on the beach
4 raining all afternoon
5 go back to the beach
MA After the stronger students and fast
finishers have completed the activity, tell
them to close their books and ask each
other questions to find out who has the best
memory, eg Where was the wedding? What
did Adam have in his pocket? How many
guests came to the wedding? What colour
were the umbrellas?
Extra idea: Write adjectives from the text
on the board: natural, careful, fabulous,
huge, grey, green, amusing. Then ask
students if they can remember what they
refer to. Tell them to read again to check
their answers.
8
190
THINK These questions take the topic further
and encourage students to think about ideas
that have come up so far. Ask: Has anybody in
the class had or been to an unusual wedding?
If so, ask them to describe it. Focus on the
phrase go down on one knee in the article and
ask what people do in their countries when
they ask somebody to marry them.
Unit 12
You could do exercises 5–7 on Useful expressions
in Vocabulary plus at this point.
Grammar 2 Verb + infinitive or -ing form
9 Go through the grammar box and read the
example sentences. Ask: Do these sentences
mean the same thing? (Yes). Point out that
there’s a slight difference between British and
American English with the verb like. In British
English, we usually use like + -ing form to talk
about enjoying something, eg I like walking,
but we use like + infinitive to talk about a habit
or a choice, eg I like to walk in the park in the
evening, although both forms are possible. In
American English, like + infinitive would be
more usual in both situations.
Ask students to read through the article again
and write down the four verbs that can be
followed by verb + -ing or the infinitive.
Answers
continue, intend, begin, love
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 144
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
Tip: Encourage students to write things down
in their vocabulary books – such as
collocations, verbs followed by infinitive or
-ing form, phrasal verbs and idioms – and
try to review them in subsequent lessons.
If you don’t, students won’t really see the
point of writing things down and they’ll
quickly forget the new vocabulary.
10 Students complete the questions individually,
then compare with a partner.
Answers
1 doing / to do 2 doing / to do 3 learning /
to learn 4 learning / to learn 5 going / to go
11 Put students in pairs to write answers to the
questions they wrote in exercise 10. Tell them
to make notes about their different answers so
they’re ready to talk about them.
12 Get students to report back about the
similarities and differences in their ideas.
Speaking
13 Explain to students that they’re going to read
about one couple’s wedding, but that they
each have slightly different information. Put
students in pairs and ask them to read their
text and to think of questions to find out the
missing information. Give them a few minutes
to ask each other questions and complete their
text.
When they’ve completed the text, tell them
to close their books and try to remember and
tell the story again. Then tell them to read the
story and check.
Student A questions
1 How many guests did Alec and Lydia
intend to invite?
2 Where did they celebrate their
marriage?
3 What happened after the wedding
ceremony?
4 What did Alec’s father say in his
speech?
5 What time did the rock band start
playing?
Student B questions
1 How many guests did Alec and Lydia
invite?
2 What did the bride and groom wear?
3 When did Alec begin crying?
4 What had Lydia intended to do?
5 How long did the rock band continue
playing?
Did you know?
Read through the information with the class. Ask:
What happens to a woman’s last name when you
get married in your country? Does she take her
husband’s name? Find out how many different
customs there are in your class.
Lesson 2 They used to
celebrate New Year. pp110–111
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to introduce used to
for talking about past habits, to learn more about
festivals around the world, and to talk about
favourite festivals and childhood memories.
Note: It would be useful to bring in a photo of
yourself as a child for help with exercise 8.
You first!
Ask students what their favourite festivals are and
write the names on the board. These notes will
be useful later on for exercises 11 and 12. Get
students to talk about the things they do and why
they’re so special.
Speaking and listening
1 Check understanding of presents and relatives.
Using photo C, elicit the fact that during Holi,
people throw coloured water and powder
at each other, and make sure students
understand these phrases. Give students time
to talk about the questions, then get feedback
from the class. Don’t confirm answers to
questions 2 and 3 yet.
Answers
1 A Carnival B Eid C Holi
2
Tell the class they’re going to find out
about different festivals. Play the audio for
them to check if their predictions were correct.
3.33
Answers
2 Carnival: Europe, North and South
America
Christmas: Europe, North and South
America, China
Diwali: India
Holi: India and south Asia
Eid: Middle East, north Africa, Pakistan,
other Muslim countries
Spring Festival: China, south-east Asia
Thanksgiving: USA and Canada
3 a) Christmas, Diwali, Eid, Spring Festival
b) all of them except Carnival
c) all of them except Carnival
Transcript
Carnival takes place in the streets. Continents
that celebrate carnival include Europe, North
and South America. There’s a lot of singing and
dancing and people wear fantastic costumes.
Christmas is celebrated in Europe and North
and South America. The Chinese love it too.
People give presents and have a big family
Unit 12
191
meal with special dishes for friends and
relatives. They sometimes visit homes of friends
and relatives, and they also decorate their
homes.
Diwali is called the ‘festival of lights’ and
people light lamps and candles and have
fireworks. It’s celebrated in India. People give
presents and have a special meal with friends
and relatives.
Holi takes place in India and south Asia. People
celebrate in the streets. They sing and dance
and throw coloured water and powder at each
other. It’s great fun! They also visit relatives and
eat special dishes with them.
Eid is a Muslim festival and is celebrated in the
Middle East, north Africa, Pakistan and other
Muslim countries. Families have a special meal
together and give charity to people. They visit
family and friends and give presents, especially
to children.
Spring Festival lasts five days and takes place
in China and south-east Asia. It celebrates the
New Year. People clean and decorate their
homes and have a big meal with their family.
They give little presents of money to children.
Thanksgiving is an American and Canadian
celebration that takes place in the autumn.
Families and relatives get together for a big
meal with special dishes.
3 Check students understand costumes and
decorate, then tell them to listen again and
write down one extra piece of information
about each festival. Play the audio again,
pausing to give them time to write things
down. Tell them to compare answers with a
partner.
Answers
Carnival: singing and dancing, people wear
fantastic costumes
Christmas: people decorate their homes
Diwali: called the ‘festival of lights’, people
light lamps and candles and have fireworks
Holi: people sing and dance and throw
coloured water and powder at each other
Eid: families give charity to people
Spring Festival: people clean and decorate
their homes
Thanksgiving: takes place in the autumn
192
Unit 12
4 Read out the example sentence, then focus on
the grammar note below exercise 4. Write the
two sentences on the board and highlight that
the verb has two objects. Ask: Which is the
direct object? (a present) Which is the indirect
object? (someone). Refer to the grammar
reference on SB page 144 and go through it
with students. They then discuss the questions
in pairs.
Extra idea: Put students in pairs to talk about
how they feel when they receive presents.
Ask: Can you remember a present you loved?
What was it, and why was it so special?
Reading
5 To introduce the reading, ask: What do you
know about the Chinese New Year festival and
Holi, the Indian Spring festival? Use the photos
in the article to pre-teach lanterns, firecrackers,
envelope and bonfire. Set a short time limit for
students to read and complete the article.
Answers
1b 2c 3a
6 Do the first word as an example with the class.
Tell students to read the first sentence again
and find a synonym for very old (ancient).
Students then do the activity individually
before checking with a partner.
Answers
1 ancient 2 decorate 3 beast 4 eve
5 strangers 6 century 7 servants
Extra idea: Ask students to write sentences
with the new words. Then ask them to take
turns to read their sentences to each other
but hum instead of saying the word. Their
partner has to guess the word from context.
7 Tell students to make notes about one of the
festivals using the text to help them. When
they’ve finished, ask them to tell each other
the information.
MA Stronger students could use their notes to
reconstruct the article as closely as they can. To
help weaker students with the task, elicit ideas
about each section of the article and write
them on the board before students make notes.
Explore
Tell the class to find out more information online.
Ask them to think about how the festivals began,
food, presents and traditions.
Grammar used to
8 If you brought in a photo of yourself as a
child, use it to introduce the grammar in an
interesting and contextual way. Ask: Who do
you think this is? Tell students about what you
used to do when you were younger (eg I used
to sit on my dad’s shoulders and we used to
play together on the beach).
Go through the sentences in the grammar
table and teach / elicit the different spelling
of used to in the affirmative and negative /
question forms. Find the affirmative sentence
in the article, then ask students to find two
further examples. Make sure they don’t get
used to confused with the past simple of
the verb use in the sentence They also used
firecrackers to frighten the beast.
Answers
People used to put food outside their doors …
… how people used to celebrate …
Refer to the grammar reference on SB page 144
now or at the end of the lesson and go through it
with students.
9 Students look at the sentences they underlined
and the sentences in the grammar table and
complete the usage rules.
Answers
1 past 2 don’t do these things any more
Tip: When you teach grammar, identify
features of pronunciation that are worth
mentioning and practising. Highlight the
weak form of to in used to sentences and
get students to repeat and practise the
pronunciation of the schwa sound.
10 Use the photo to teach Father Christmas
outfit, then put students in pairs to complete
the paragraph about childhood memories.
Encourage them to look at the examples in the
grammar box and remind them that the form
is different in the negative.
MA For extra support, go through the verbs in
the box first and check comprehension.
Point out the grammar note and elicit what still
and any more mean. Turn to SB page 144 to
find out more about both these words.
Answers
1 used to count 2 didn’t use to sleep
3 used to have 4 used to put 5 used to
shout 6 used to give out 7 didn’t use to
take off
Writing and speaking
11 Ask: What holidays and festivals can you
remember from when you were young? Can
you remember what you used to do? Allow
time for students to write about their memories
and how things are the same or different now.
It would be useful to model the activity with
some of your own memories first. Encourage
students to use used to and monitor pairs as
they work, making a note of any common
problems with grammar or vocabulary, and
helping where needed. You may want to start
this activity in class and ask students to finish it
for homework.
MA Give students an idea of how many words
you’d like them to write. You could tell them
to write at least 200 words, but encourage
stronger students to write more. The weaker
students will generally write the expected
amount, but it extends the activity for the
stronger students and ensures they’re engaged.
12 Put students in small groups and tell them to
use their descriptions to share their childhood
memories. Encourage them to ask extra
questions and find out more about each
other. Elicit feedback from the class and ask
one or two strong students to talk about their
favourite memories.
Extra idea: Ask students to find old
pictures of themselves at home. If they
have digital pictures, get them to show
them on their smartphones or other mobile
devices. Tell them to walk around and show
each other photos and ask each other
questions about their memories and what
they used to do when they were younger.
Unit 12
193
Lesson 3 I was really happy
there. pp112–113
I’ve been back to Brittany since then.
But I couldn’t remember the name of
the bay and never found it, until now.
I’ve just found it online. But I don’t
think I’ll go back. It wouldn’t be the
same.
Aims
The focus of this lesson is to review grammar from
throughout the book and to talk about special
places and people in students’ lives.
Note: It might be useful to make a set of cards for
students to use after exercise 7. Write nouns they
know (people, places or things) on each card.
Warm-up
Put students in groups of three. Tell each person
to make notes about one of the photos, then take
turns to describe their photo to the other people
in their group.
Listening 1
1 To introduce the topic, ask students to look at
the photos and answer the questions. Explain
that gulf means ‘a large bay’. Elicit a few ideas
in feedback and find out if anybody has been
to this area of France.
2
,
Tell students they’re going to listen
to two people talking about special places.
Pre-teach drama school if necessary. Play the
audio and tell them to write down the places
they hear, then compare with a partner.
3.34
Answers
Woman: A hotel in the south of Brittany. It
was on a bay called the Gulf of Morbihan.
Man: A restaurant in Manchester that did
cheap Italian food
Transcript
woman There’s a hotel in Brittany that I’ll
always remember. I went to Brittany
with my boyfriend when I was 20
and we went round it on a really old
motorbike. One day we found this
great hotel in the south of Brittany.
It was on a bay called the Gulf of
Morbihan that had lots of little islands
in it. The view was so beautiful. We
stayed there for three days and I was
happier than I’d ever been, I think.
I was in love!
194
Unit 12
man
I’m an actor and I’ll never forget the
first acting job that I had after leaving
drama school. It was at a small theatre
in Manchester – it’s gone now. People
were paying me to act – I felt so good!
There was a small restaurant that did
cheap Italian food and we used to
go there after the show. There were
always about seven of us and we
used to stay until about three in the
morning discussing plays and actors.
We all had a lot to say – we never
stopped talking! I’ve never been back
to Manchester, but next month I have
a small part in a TV series that takes
place there. I know the restaurant’s still
there – it was so special for me. I might
go there just to remember old times.
3 Get students to complete the sentences. Then
play the audio so they can check the answers.
Answers
1 I’ll always remember
2 had lots of little islands in it
3 ’ve been
4 ’ve just found
5 I’ll go back; wouldn’t be
6 I had
7 did cheap Italian food
8 ’ve never been
9 might go
Grammar Review 1
4 Ask students to look at the sentences in
exercise 3 and guess the grammar rules with
a partner. Do the first item with the class as
an example. Tell students to look at sentences
1 and 5. Ask: What did the woman say about
the hotel? (I’ll always remember it) What did
she say about going back? (I don’t think I’ll
go back) Are these sentences predictions or
intentions? (They’re both predictions for the
future). Students work through the remaining
sentences. Get feedback and ask them to
give extra examples of each grammar point. If
necessary, look at the relevant sections of the
grammar reference: will future (SB page 138),
relative pronouns (SB page 140), present perfect
(SB page 138), modal verbs (SB page 139).
Answers
1 & 5: a 2, 6 & 7: b
3 & 8: a
4: b
9: a
5 This activity does more work on subject
relative pronouns. If necessary, go through
this grammar point again. Write the following
half sentences on the board: He’s the person
…, It’s something …, It’s a place … Point out
that they’re incomplete, so we don’t know
what the answer to each one is. Add a relative
clause to each sentence and ask students to
guess who or what each sentence is about
(the answers are given in brackets): He’s the
person who directed ‘Jaws’. (Steven Spielberg)
It’s something that has four wheels. (A car) It’s
a place which sells things. (A shop). Highlight
who, that and which and ask students when
we use the pronouns. Elicit that we use who
for people and that / which for things.
Students make true sentences about each
place.
Speaking
6 In pairs, students tell each other about a place
that’s really special for them using relative
clauses and other grammar they reviewed in
exercise 4. When they’ve finished, ask them
to change pairs and find out more with a new
partner.
7
THINK This activity makes students reflect
more about why they might return to a place
and whether it’s a good idea or not. Make sure
they give reasons for their answers.
Extra idea: Write nouns that students
know on cards. Put students in pairs and
give each group a set of cards. Ask them to
put the cards face down on the table. Tell
students to take turns and pick up a card.
They have to give a definition of the word
using relative clauses. Their partner has to
guess what the person, place or thing is.
Listening 2
8
To help students prepare for the
listening activity, ask them what they can see
in each picture. Ask: What country and city do
you think this is? Why? (The USA / New York
because we can see the Statue of Liberty in
picture B, and theatre is spelled the American
way: theater). Find out if anybody knows what
the bridge in picture A is called – it’s a famous
bridge in New York (the Brooklyn Bridge). Then
play the audio while students listen and work
out which picture is correct, according to the
conversation. Ask for their reasons, then play
the audio again for them to check.
3.35
Answer
B (Theatre, small woman with red hair)
Transcript
heidi Hi, Jake!
jake Hi, Heidi! How are things?
heidi Great! I’m really happy – Ella, an old
friend of mine, is coming to stay for a
week!
jake Sounds great!
heidi Yeah, I’m excited – we haven’t seen each
other for ages – five years, in fact.
jake How did you get to know her?
heidi We were best friends at school. She was
tiny with red hair and she used to make
me laugh so much. But when she was
ten, her family moved to Hong Kong.
jake Hong Kong – that’s a long way from
New York. Did they use to come back
and visit?
heidi Yes, they used to come over to New York
about once a year, and she always came
to see me. And we also wrote to each
other once a month. I may still have her
letters – I’m not sure.
jake So where does she live now?
heidi She still lives in Hong Kong. She’s arriving
on Friday. It will be great. We’re going
to see a couple of plays – she loves the
theatre.
jake New York theatre is the best!
heidi Absolutely! You know, she hasn’t
changed at all – she still looks exactly the
same and she still makes me laugh.
jake Have you been to stay with her in Hong
Kong?
Unit 12
195
heidi
jake
heidi
jake
Yes, I’ve been four times. Actually,
she’s invited me for this summer. If
I had the time, I’d go. But I’m too busy,
unfortunately.
That’s a pity. I’d love to meet her when
she’s here.
Well, if you’re free one evening, I’ll ask
you over. We could go to the theatre.
That would be great!
9 Students work individually to correct the
sentences. Play the audio again for them to
check their answers.
Answers
1 Ella is coming to stay for a week.
2 Heidi hasn’t seen Ella for five years.
3 Ella and Heidi were best friends at
school.
4 Ella is arriving in New York on Friday.
5 If Heidi had the time, she’d go to Hong
Kong to visit Ella.
6 If Jake is free one evening, he’ll go the
theatre with Heidi and Ella.
You could do exercises 1–4 on Adjectives
describing feelings in Vocabulary plus at this
point.
3.36 Explain that in natural, fluent
10 P
speech, we often join final consonants and the
first vowel of the next word together. Point out
the blue joining lines in the extract from Jake
and Heidi’s conversation and play the audio.
Ask students to follow the words in their books
while they listen. Play the audio again and ask
one or two students to say each line.
Transcript
heidi Ella, an old friend of mine, is coming to
stay for a week!
jake Sounds great!
heidi Yeah, I’m excited – we haven’t seen each
other for ages.
11 P Play the audio again. Put students in pairs
to practise the dialogue – make sure they take
turns to be Heidi and Jake. Monitor students
as they talk, making sure they run the words
together to give natural-sounding speech.
Backchain if necessary to help them and
practise their pronunciation.
196
Unit 12
Grammar Review 2
12 Ask students to look at the sentences in
exercise 9, answer the questions and work
out the grammar rules. Get feedback and also
elicit what the grammar is called. If necessary,
review the tenses and structures by looking at
the relevant section in the grammar reference:
past simple (SB page 136), present continuous
for future use (SB page 138), present perfect
(SB page 138), first conditional (SB page 140),
second conditional (SB page 143).
Answers
a) 2 (present perfect) b) 3 (past simple)
c) 6 (first conditional) d) 1, 4 (present
continuous for future use) e) 5 (second
conditional)
MA Draw time lines on the board and ask
concept-checking questions, eg What tense do
we use for a completed situation in the past?
Try not to nominate and get voluntary answers.
Stronger students will generally answer the
questions, but this gives the weaker ones
the chance to listen carefully, see things
clearly on the time lines and reinforce their
understanding without being picked out.
13 Students work individually to write questions
about a friend, then they ask and answer the
questions to find out about their partner’s
friend.
Answers
1 How long have you known them?
2 How did you meet them?
3 When will you / are you going to see /
are you seeing them again?
4 When you next speak to them, what
will you / are you going to say?
5 If you see them soon, what will you do
together?
6 If you were extremely rich, what present
would you give your friend?
Writing and speaking
14 Go through the list and make sure students
know what to include in their paragraph. Tell
them to choose somebody different to the
person they spoke about in exercise 13 – it
could be a friend, a relative or somebody who’s
helped them in the past, eg a teacher. Tell
students about somebody special you know
as an example. Walk around and offer help if
needed. Try to gently correct small mistakes
too. You may want to start this activity in class
and ask students to finish it for homework.
Tip: If students make mistakes in feedback,
simply echo what they said to indicate
there was something incorrect. This
prompts self-correction, gives you the
chance to praise them and helps the
rest of the class see what’s right. It’s also
more learner-centred and promotes active
learning.
15 Model the example dialogue with one or two
students. Point out the use of That’s interesting
to make the reply sound more natural and
interested in what the other person said. Elicit
other phrases students could use, eg Really?
Did you?.
Students work in pairs and tell each other
about the person they chose. Tell them to find
out similar things and also ask extra questions
for more information. Elicit feedback from the
class and highlight good use of English.
Art & Music
Tell students to look at SB page 145 for a bigger
version of the painting. Explain that Mont means
‘mountain’ in French. Help with language for
talking about the painting eg Impressionism, in the
background / foreground, etc. Find out if anybody
knows any other music by Manic Street Preachers,
then tell students to search online for the lyrics.
Extra questions for class or homework
Art
When did Cézanne die, and what did he
die of?
How many paintings did he do of this
landscape?
Music
Where do Manic Street Preachers come
from?
How many songs have they released?
Name the main members of the band.
Answers
Art
Artist: Paul Cézanne; year: 1887
Mont Sainte-Victoire was near one of
Cézanne’s studios. He liked the different
shapes in the mountain. (See also Culture
notes below.)
Music
capital city: Tokyo
The singer misses the emptiness and the
silence, the non-communication, the Tokyo
skyline, the smog and sunshine.
Culture notes: Paul Cézanne was a French
artist and Post-Impressionist painter. He
was born in 1839 in Aix-en-Provence. He’s
famous for paintings such as The Card
Players (1890–1895), The House with
the Cracked Walls (1892–1894) and The
Bathers (1898–1905). Although Cézanne’s
works were rejected numerous times by
the official Salon in Paris, he was widely
considered by other artists such as Picasso
and Matisse as one of the most influential
artists of the 19th century. He died in 1906
of pneumonia after being caught in a
storm a few days before.
Mont Sainte-Victoire with Large Pine (to
give it its full name) was painted around
1887, but there are numerous paintings
of the same view – all slightly different.
Cezanne apparently started painting the
mountain after he saw it on a train journey
around 1878.
Manic Street Preachers are an alternative
rock band from Wales. They’ve been
playing together since 1986. The band
consists of James Dean Bradfield (lead
vocals, lead guitar), Nicky Wire (bass guitar,
lyrics) and Sean Moore (drums). It took
Manic Street Preachers a while to get
critical and commercial success, but they’re
now firmly established as a cult band,
with many awards to their name, and
they’ve sold more than ten million albums
worldwide.
Tokyo Skyline was written after the band
had first been to Tokyo and they all fell in
love with the city. The song appeared on
their 2013 album Rewind the Film.
Unit 12
197
Vocabulary plus p114
Adjectives describing feelings
1
Model the example dialogue with a
student. Find out who they think looks
disappointed. Elicit that it’s probably the man
in E. Students then match the remaining
pictures and adjectives. Remind them that
two of the adjectives match one person, as
they mean something quite similar. Elicit /
Explain the difference between depressed /
miserable, cheerful (behaving in a happy,
friendly way) and delighted (very happy about
something specific). Point out that the middle
‘e’ in miserable isn’t pronounced. Ask students
which adjectives are very similar in their own
language and which are very different.
Answers
A depressed / miserable B embarrassed
C cheerful D delighted E disappointed
2 Pre-teach I bet as another way of saying I feel
sure in the expression I bet you felt … Students
work in pairs to complete the sentences.
3
3.37 Play the audio for students to check
their answers. Point out that although the
audio gives only one adjective for each gap,
more than one may be possible in items 1 and
2, so accept alternative answers.
Answers
1 disappointed / depressed / miserable
2 miserable / depressed 3 embarrassed
4 cheerful; delighted
Transcript
1 a I’m feeling really disappointed.
b
Why?
a I was expecting a nice present from my
girlfriend and she gave me some socks!
2 a Why are you looking so miserable?
b
We don’t have enough money to give
our children presents for Diwali.
3 a Oh dear! A friend gave me an expensive
Christmas present yesterday and I didn’t
have one for her.
b
Oh dear! I bet you felt embarrassed!
4 a You look very cheerful.
b
Yes, my boyfriend’s just bought me a
beautiful ring! I’m delighted!
198
Unit 12
4 Put students in pairs to act out the dialogues.
Explain that they have to change the sentences
in italics and think of a different one, so give
them time to write new sentences before they
start. Monitor students as they work, helping
with pronunciation if needed.
Focus on: like
a Explain that like can be used in different ways.
Ask students to read the sentences using like
in different contexts and answer questions
a to e. Get feedback from the class and elicit
extra examples of each use of like. Point out
the difference between look like and be like.
Ask: Which one do we use to talk about
appearance? (look like) Which one do we use
to talk about character? (be like).
Answers
a) 3 b) 1 c) 4 d) 2 e) 5
b Tell students to ask each other similar questions
to exercise a. Monitor and make sure they use
the correct phrase with like.
Extra idea: Tell students to write down the
words they hear and dictate the following
adjectives: happy, sad, lonely, proud, afraid.
Tell students to write down a place where
they’ve experienced these feelings. Then
ask them to walk around the room and
share their stories. Encourage them to ask
questions and find out more information,
eg I was in London and I felt so lonely
because I moved there to go to university
and I was away from my family and friends
for the first time.
Useful expressions
5 Go through the expressions and occasions
with the class and elicit ideas for matching the
first item. Ask: What do you say if someone is
travelling somewhere? What’s another word
for a trip? (journey). Put students in pairs to
match the expressions. If necessary, point
out that two expressions apply to the same
situation.
Answers
1c 2c 3e 4a 5b 6d
6
Tell the class to test each other and try
to remember the expressions in exercise 5.
Get them to close their books and take turns
to read the situations and say the correct
expression.
7 Put students in pairs to write out conversations
including the expressions. When they’ve
finished, tell them to share with another pair.
Alternately, ask them to erase the expressions
and leave gaps in their conversations. They
then share with another pair who have to
guess which expressions are missing.
Everyday English p115
Making, accepting and refusing
invitations; making suggestions
1 To introduce the topic and elicit predictions,
ask students to look at the photos and say
what they think is happening. Ask: Who’s in
the first photo? Have you seen them before?
Elicit that they were both in Unit 11 Everyday
English.
2
3.38
6 Decide whether you’re going to
use the video or simply play the audio. Tell
students to watch or listen to find out who
does each thing. Play the video or audio while
they write in the correct name. Find out if their
predictions from exercise 1 were correct.
Answers
1 Mehmet; Sophie 2 Mehmet; Sophie
3 Sophie; Mehmet 4 Mehmet; Sophie
5 Mehmet; Sophie
Transcript
1
mehmet What are you doing on Saturday 15th?
sophie
I’m not sure. Why?
mehmet Jon Gregson’s invited me to a lunch
to celebrate his birthday. It starts at
midday. The invitation says ‘Bring a
friend’. Would you like to come?
sophie
Yes, I would, but I’m upset he hasn’t
invited me.
mehmet He hardly knows you!
sophie
I think I’m free, let me check … No,
sorry, I can’t, I’m busy.
mehmet
sophie
mehmet
sophie
Oh! Well, how about doing something
in the evening? We could see a film.
Mmmm … I’m afraid I can’t. I’m busy
all day.
That’s a pity!
I’d love to do something another time.
2
sophie
mehmet
sophie
mehmet
sophie
mehmet
sophie
mehmet
sophie
mehmet
sophie
How was your day?
It was great. How about you?
Not so good. Boring. Um … What are
you doing this evening?
Nothing much. Why?
Do you fancy going to the theatre?
Not really, I hate the theatre. But how
about doing something else? Do you
feel like going to the Comedy Club?
Yes, I’d love to, that sounds great.
What time does the show begin?
Let’s see. Eight o’clock. Shall we meet
outside the theatre? Or I could pick
you up at your place.
Let’s meet there, it’s easier.
And then maybe we could go for a
meal afterwards?
That sounds good!
3 P
3.39 Explain that we can say the
same words in a sentence but give them a
completely different meaning by changing
our intonation. This shows our attitude and
feelings about things. Give an example and
elicit the difference in stress and meaning, eg
Do you want to go to the cinema tonight?
(focusing on the place) Do you want to go to
the cinema tonight? (focusing on the time).
Play the audio and ask students to listen and
underline the stressed words. Then get them
to fill in the missing words which identify what
meaning the stressed word gives the sentence.
Tell students to use not in their answers, eg the
cinema, not the theatre. Play the audio again if
necessary.
Transcript and answers
1 Jon’s invited me to his party, not Peter.
2 Jon Gregson’s invited me to his party, not
Jon Brown.
3 Jon’s invited me to his party – not you.
4 Jon’s invited me to his party – not his
wedding.
Unit 12
199
4 P Play the audio again while students repeat
the sentences and practise using the correct
stress.
Answers
making an invitation
Would you like to come?
Do you fancy (going to the theatre)?
Do you feel like (going to the Comedy
Club)?
accepting an invitation
That sounds great!
Yes, I’d love to.
refusing an invitation
No, sorry, I can’t.
I’m afraid I can’t.
making a suggestion
Shall we …
How about …
We could …
Let’s …
5 Point out that all the sentences in this exercise
are from the conversations in exercise 2. Do
the first one as an example. Ask: What do
we say when we want somebody to come
somewhere with us? Elicit the phrase Would
you like to …? Students work individually to
complete each sentence. If you think students
will have difficulty doing this, then play the
video or audio first, focusing on the sentences
in the exercises. Elicit the answers and focus on
the new language:
Conversation 1: 5 I’m afraid I can’t.
(= I’m sorry, but I can’t.)
Conversation 2: 1 Do you fancy + verb + -ing?
(= Would you like to ...?)
2 Do you feel like + verb + -ing?
(= Would you like to ...?)
3 I’d love to. (It) sounds
great. (= Yes, I’d love to.)
4 Shall we ...? (= Why don’t
we ...?)
Write the key language on the board, then
erase it and ask students to complete the
sentences. Then play the video or audio again
for them to check.
Answers
1 1 Would you 2 sorry, I can’t 3 how about
4 We could 5 I’m afraid I can’t
2 1 Do you fancy 2 Do you feel like
3 I’d love to; sounds great 4 Shall we
meet 5 Let’s
MA If students need more support with this,
play the video or audio again first, before they
complete the sentences.
6 Read out the headings in the table and say
the first example: Would you like to come?
Elicit that we say this when we make an
invitation. Ask: How do we accept or refuse
an invitation? and elicit the other examples.
Repeat for making a suggestion and the phrase
Shall we … Put students in pairs to complete
the table with the correct expressions from the
conversations in exercise 5.
200
Unit 12
7
EVERYBODY UP! This final activity will help
to re-energise your class. Tell students to walk
around and invite each other to do things. Tell
them to accept or refuse politely. Remind them
that if they refuse, they should give a reason
why they can’t come. Model the activity with
the class so they know what to do.
MA For extra support, get students to make a
list of things they could invite others to before
they stand up. For extra help, elicit and write
the phrases they can use on the board.
De-stress!
Ask: How many of you hum from time to time?
If students don’t know the meaning of hum,
demonstrate, then ask the whole class to hum
for a few moments. Ask: Does it make you feel
happier / less stressed? Put students in pairs to
take turns to hum a song and guess what it is.
we don’t say … / we say …
This section focuses on the following errors:
• omission of the verb get in the expression get
married
• omission of to in the phrase used to
• incorrect word order when using still
• incorrect use of to after the modal verb could
Ask students to cover the green we say … side
and see if they can correct the mistakes themselves
before they look and check.
Units 11&12 Review
Note: You might want to download the trailer for
the film The Life of Pi for this lesson.
Reading
1 To introduce the topic, ask students to look at
the film still. Ask: Do you know the film or the
book? If anybody does, ask them to explain
(very simply) what it’s about. Ask: Did you like
it? Why or why not?
Answer
The Life of Pi
Extra idea: If you downloaded it, play
the trailer for the film The Life of Pi. Tell
students to work with a partner and try
to guess what the film is about from the
images they see. Elicit ideas from the class.
2
THINK Go through the questions and ask
students to describe the photo. Elicit miserable,
depressed and terrified to talk about question 1.
Elicit ideas for question 2 and, if necessary,
provide an example answer, eg I’d stay in
the raft because I’d be safe from the tiger
there. Put students in pairs to talk about the
questions. Elicit feedback from the class and
check their ideas.
3 Pre-teach sink and officials. Ask students
to read about The Life of Pi and check their
answers to the questions in exercise 2. If
anybody knows the story, ask them to explain
what the other three animals were (a hyena, a
zebra and an orang-utang).
Answers
3 Food, water and wood
4 He needs to train the tiger.
4
pp116–117
Suggested answers
1 His father used to own a zoo, and
Pi used to help him and he learnt a
lot about animals. He learnt to train
animals there and this helped him to
train Richard Parker, the tiger.
2 He tells his story to two Japanese
officials who don’t believe him.
MA If weaker students find it difficult, let
them look back at the article to help them.
Encourage stronger students to answer the
questions from memory.
Extra idea: Tell students they’re going
to test each other. Ask them to write five
questions about the article; they have to be
difficult questions and the answers have to
be in the article, eg Where did Pi get to in
the end? (Mexico). When they’ve written
the questions, put students in pairs to ask
and answer each other’s questions.
5 Read the questions and elicit ideas for each
one. You could explain that the men chose the
story with the tiger in the end. Ask: Why do
think they did that? Encourage extra discussion
by asking, eg Would you like to read the book
or watch the film? Why or why not?
Tip: So many reading activities focus on text
comprehension, but it’s also important
to encourage a personal response to the
things students read. This is also helpful
in mixed-ability classes because there
are no right or wrong answers, just their
interpretation and feelings. These openended questions also tend to prompt far
more interest, pairwork and discussion.
Tell students to read the article again, then
answer the questions without looking at the
text. Tell them to use used to where possible in
their answers to question 1. Finally, they read
again to see if they were right.
Units 11&12 Review
201
Grammar
6
THINK Ask: Why does Pi make a raft? Elicit
the answer with a purpose clause as shown
in the example. Students then answer the
remaining questions using a purpose clause.
If necessary, go through the notes on purpose
clauses in the grammar reference on SB page
143. Point out that there are no fixed answers
here, so as long as students can give a reason
for their answer, that’s fine.
Suggested answers
1 Pi makes a raft to escape from the tiger.
2 Pi used to go to the zoo to train the
animals.
3 They decided to go to America to get a
better life / to make more money.
4 They went to see Pi to find out about
the ship.
5 He wrote the novel to tell a wonderful
story.
Extra idea: Put students in pairs to tell
each other about their last summer holiday.
Tell them to interrupt whoever’s talking
and keep asking why! Their partner has to
explain the reasons why they did things,
eg ‘Last year, I went on holiday to Italy
and …’ ‘Why?’ ‘Because I wanted to go to
Rome and …’ ‘Why?’ Remind them to use
purpose clauses.
7 Check understanding of pet, fly (and the past
simple flew), mice and broken. Do the first
item with the class as an example and read the
example dialogue with one or two students. If
necessary, go through the notes on the second
conditional in the grammar reference on SB
page 143. Get students to make questions,
then tell them to ask and answer them.
Answers
1 What would you do if your pet bird
flew out of the window?
2 What would you do if there was a tiger
in the streets near you?
3 What would you do if you found mice
in your kitchen?
4 What would you do if you saw a snake
under your bed?
202
Units 11&12 Review
5 What would you do if you found a cat
with a broken leg in the road?
Preposition Park
Look at the phrases in the box and focus on
different to / than / from. Teach / Elicit that we
usually use from after different, but we often
use to instead. In American English, people often
use than, so point out that students will hear all
three phrases. Tell students to complete the short
text with the correct prepositional phrase, then
compare answers with a partner.
Answers
1 different to / from / than 2 similar to
3 similar to 4 difference between
Writing and speaking
8 Tell students to choose one of the questions
they wrote in exercise 7. Tell them to give more
details about what they’d do and why.
9 Put students in small groups to share their
paragraphs to find similarities and differences.
Encourage them to ask extra questions to find
out more information and find out if anybody
had a completely different answer.
Cross Culture: Wedding traditions
a Tell students to look at the picture and guess
why the man is dancing. Ask: Which country
do you think he’s from? Do you know any
countries where men have to do something
silly before they see their bride? Elicit ideas
from the class, but don’t check answers yet.
b Tell students to read about wedding traditions
and check if their predictions were right. Check
understanding of ransom (see the explanation
below the article).
Answer
He’s a Russian man doing a silly dance for
his bride as a ‘bridal ransom’.
c
3.40 Explain that four sentences are missing
from the article. Play the audio again, pausing
after each paragraph, and tell students to
complete the missing information.
Answers
Jamaica: … married women carry the cakes
to the wedding.
Russia: This can be a present, money or
jewellery.
India: … it’s done at a ‘mehndi party’ with
friends and family.
Germany: … the money is given to the
couple.
Transcript
In Jamaican villages, everybody in the village
often helps to plan the wedding day. Everyone
stands in the street to see the bride. Several
cakes are made for the ceremony and on the
wedding day, married women carry the cakes
to the wedding.
Before their wedding, Russian grooms go to
their future bride’s home to see their bride.
Her family and friends tell him he must pay
something if he wants to see her. This can be
a present, money or jewellery. Or they may
ask him to dance or do something silly. This
tradition is called vykup nevesty, or bridal
ransom.
Before an Indian bride’s wedding, her hands
and feet are painted with something called
‘mehndi’ or henna. Mehndi is also the name
for the art of painting the hands, feet or body.
It takes many hours to create beautiful designs
and it’s done at a ‘mehndi party’ with friends
and family.
In Germany, family and friends of the bride
and groom make a wedding newspaper with
pictures, articles and stories about the couple.
The newspaper is sold at the wedding and the
money is given to the couple.
d
Suggested answers
In Jamaica, everybody in the village often
helps to plan the wedding day.
Russian grooms may do a dance as their
bridal ransom.
In India, the bride’s hands and feet are
painted with henna.
In Germany, family and friends of the
couple make a newspaper about their lives.
e Put students in pairs to talk about how
wedding traditions have changed in their
country. Encourage lots of discussion and elicit
ideas from the class.
Do the first item as an example with the
class. Write the prompts on the board and ask
what the connection is between Jamaica and
the village. Elicit that everybody in the village
helps to plan the wedding day in Jamaica.
Tell students to cover the article and try to
remember the other connections. Tell them to
read the article again and check if they were
right.
MA Write the prompts on the board and go
through the article with each one, eliciting
ideas before students explain the connections
from memory.
Units 11&12 Review
203
Extra material
Photocopiable games
Teacher’s notes
Getting to know you
Unit 1
Unit 2
Unit 3
Unit 4
Unit 5
Unit 6
Unit 7
Unit 8
Unit 9
Unit 10
Unit 11
Unit 12
205
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
Tasks
Teacher’s notes
Tasks Units 1–12
221
223
Technique banks
Using the video
Using stories
Using memory games
20 easy games
Five fun techniques to use with a flagging class
Extra questions and tasks for Art & Music
Working with mixed-ability classes
Ensuring learner autonomy and using technology
229
230
231
233
235
236
237
237
De-stress! cartoons
239
204
Extra material
Photocopiable games
Teacher’s notes
Unit
Game
Players
Getting to know you
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
Bingo rows
Do or make? (B)
Find the differences
Future plans (B)
I’ve already done that! (B)
The holiday game (B)
It’s a thing which …
Compare (B)
The name game
Matchmaker
Report it! (B)
If … (B)
Celebrations
C
C/G
P/G
G
G
G
P/G
G
C
C
C / G /P
C / G /P
C
Language focus
Vocabulary: alphabet (listening)
Vocabulary: nouns which go with verbs
Present and past continuous
going to / present continuous for future plans
Present perfect with yet / just / already
Vocabulary: travel items
Relative pronouns / Vocabulary: survival items
Comparison
something, somewhere, someone
Passive / Verb + -ing / Vocabulary: health
Reported speech
Conditional sentences
Vocabulary: celebrations
B = board game, C = whole class, G = groups, P = pairs
These games are all photocopiable. Alternatively,
you can download them from the e-zone.
Remember, you don’t have to play the games just
once in the particular unit – you can return to
them any time to replay them, or else have them
handy as an option for early finishers. If you do
want to keep the games and re-use them, it’s a
good idea to put them in individual plastic folders
so you’ve always got them when you need them.
Board games
(Marked ‘B’ in the above table; they include all the
games except Getting to know you, Units 2, 6, 8,
9 and 12.)
You can set these games up in several ways:
1 As a normal board game using dice and
counters, with students in pairs or small
groups of three or four. You’ll need to make
sure you have enough dice for the number of
groups. Students place their counters (or coins,
paperclips, etc) on START and take turns to
throw the die and move.
In many of these games, players get points for
their answers. The first person to reach FINISH
gets an extra 2 points and the game stops. The
winner is the player with the most points.
2 As a whole-class team game, dividing the
class into two teams. Before the lesson, write
numbers to correspond to the number of
squares on pieces of paper and put them in a
hat, box or plastic bag. Call out the number of
a square to each team in turn. The team gets
points for correct answers. If one team can’t
answer, it goes to the other team. Keep a score
(or have a student keep a score) on the board.
3 In pairs. One person shuts their eyes and puts
their finger on the board before opening their
eyes again, and the other answers. (If they
don’t point to a particular square, they have
another go.) Points as above.
4 As an interactive whiteboard activity with the
whole class, or played either individually or in
pairs on the e-zone.
Important notes
1 You can change the instructions or rules for
any game, or ask your students if they can
suggest more interesting ways of playing a
game!
2 MA If you want to make a game more difficult
for some (or all) your students, say that a
square already used by one player cannot be
re-used by another.
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205
Answers for Report it! (Unit 10)
Unit 2 – Find the differences
1 He said (that) he would always love Lucy.
2 He said (that) they were playing tennis with
their friends.
3 He said (that) he lived in a flat in London.
4 He said (that) she had given her mum a
present.
5 He said (that) he was going on holiday.
6 He said (that) she didn’t like spiders.
7 He said (that) Karen was very happy with her
car.
8 He said (that) there was a game that John
wanted to buy.
9 He said (that) he loved to visit Istanbul.
10 He said (that) he drove to work every day.
11 He said (that) he flew to many countries on
business.
12 He said (that) she was very good at painting.
13 He said (that) they didn’t want to come.
14 He said (that) the film wasn’t very good.
15 He asked why he was dressed like that.
16 He asked if she was a journalist.
17 He asked if they had liked the festival.
18 He asked what they wanted to buy.
19 He asked how many trains to Rome there were.
20 He asked how they could do that.
There are various ways of doing this.
Non-board games
Getting to know you – Bingo rows
Before the lesson
1 Photocopy the page and cut it into ten
separate grids – one grid for each student. (It
doesn’t matter if some students have the same
grid if you have more than ten students.)
2 Write the letters of the English alphabet (A–Z)
on small pieces of paper and put them in a bag
or box.
Playing the game
Take a piece of paper out of the bag or box, and
call out the letter. Students cross the letters off as
they hear them. They shout Bingo! for a complete
line of letters horizontally or vertically. They don’t
have to wait for the whole card!
An alternative easy way of playing this is to have
students choose and write down between five and
ten letters. You’ll still need to write the letters of
the alphabet on small pieces of paper beforehand
and put them in a bag or box, so you can call
them out.
Once they get the idea, invite individuals or pairs
of students to do the calling out instead of you.
206
MA With a mixed-ability class, you might want to
use a variety (1 is easiest, 3 is more difficult).
1 Students have the whole sheet so they can see
both pictures and make statements.
2 Students have one picture each so they can
only see theirs and have to ask each other
questions.
3 Student A looks at a picture, student B doesn’t
have one. A describes the street scene for B to
draw, or B asks questions and sketches it.
4 Use one or both pictures as a memory game.
Students look at it / them for 30 seconds, then
write down (or draw) all the things they can
remember.
5 Use one of the pictures as the basis for a true /
false drill – either with students looking at the
picture as you do so, or from memory. You
could do this as a prelude to any of the other
activities.
Unit 6 – It’s a thing which …
Before the lesson
Photocopy the page and cut it into 30 pieces of
paper or card. If you have a large class, you may
want to make more than one copy so that students
can play the game in smaller groups. With a
weaker class, you may wish to elicit and / or write
the names of the 30 objects on the board first.
Playing the game
1 Place the pile of cards face down in the middle
of the group. Students take turns to pick a
card from the top of the pile.
2 The student looks at the card and describes
the item without saying what it is. They can
describe what it looks like (eg It’s flat and
made of paper, They’re brown and made of
leather), but encourage them to use relative
pronouns to describe what it’s used for (eg It’s
a thing which you use to find your way, They’re
things which you put on your feet to keep
them warm and dry).
3 The first student to correctly guess the item
wins the card. If no one correctly guesses the
item after one minute, the card is returned to
the bottom of the pile.
4 The game continues until all the cards have
been won. The winner is the student with the
most cards.
Jetstream Pre-intermediate Teacher’s Guide © Helbling Languages PHOTOCOPIABLE
Unit 8 – The name game
Unit 12 – Celebrations
This can be played as a board game with dice and
counters but is probably best played as a wholeclass competition, with students working in pairs
or small groups to brainstorm ideas.
Before the lesson
Photocopy the page and cut it into 30 pieces of
paper or card. There are ten featured celebrations
from around the world, each with three cards. If
you have fewer than 30 students, discard the cards
for one or more of the celebrations (see answers
below) to ensure each student has one card. If
your class does not divide equally into three, one
or two students may need to share a card.
You may wish to pre-teach any difficult vocabulary,
eg float, costume, pumpkin pie.
Before the lesson
Write the numbers 1–30 on small pieces of paper
and put them in a hat, box or plastic bag.
Playing the game
1 Select and read out a number. (Or you can just
shut your eyes and stab the page with your
finger!) Students have 30 seconds to write
down all the things they can think of in that
category.
2 Elicit ideas from the class. Pairs or groups get a
point for an idea nobody else has thought of.
Keep score on the board.
Unit 9 – Matchmaker
Before the lesson
Photocopy the page and cut it into 30 pieces of
paper or card.
Playing the game
1 Give each student one card each. It doesn’t
matter if you have some left over.
2 Students try to find the person who has the
other half of their sentence. This involves
finding a match in terms of both grammar and
meaning. Note that some cards may match
grammatically (eg 1+19) but won’t make
sense.
3 When students think they’ve found their pair,
they bring their cards to you for checking.
If they’re correct, they can sit down (or take
another card each if you have any left over). If
they’re wrong, send them back out to find the
correct pair.
4 The game continues until all the cards are
correctly paired.
5 Students who find their match quickly could
help those who are still looking.
Answers
1+21, 2+20, 3+19, 4+27, 5+25, 6+23, 7+26,
8+16, 9+30, 10+18, 11+29, 12+17, 13+24,
14+22, 15+28
Playing the game
1 Give each student a card and explain that it
contains the details of a celebration. They have
to find two other students with details of the
same celebration.
2 Students mingle and discuss the details on
their card. When they think they’ve found
someone with a detail about the same
celebration, they form a pair and try to find the
third detail.
3 When they think they’ve found all three details
for their celebration, they come to you and say
what their celebration is. The winners are the
first group to correctly match the three details
and identify their celebration.
4 Note that some details are deliberately
ambiguous (eg cards 15, 26 and 27); these
could be given to stronger students, as there
will be a degree of elimination in working out
which celebration they belong to.
Answers
a wedding: 1, 12, 26
Rio Carnival: 2, 15, 17
Christmas: 3, 9, 22
Eid: 4, 6, 27
Diwali: 5, 18, 28
Venice Carnival: 7, 10, 14
Thanksgiving: 8, 19, 24
Harbin Ice Festival: 11, 13, 16
Holi: 20, 21, 30
Chinese New Year: 23, 25, 29
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
Getting to know you
Bingo rows
S
D
T
A
H
H
N
Y
O
Z
N
R
E
M
C
E
S
T
A
W
Y
U
I
O
Q
G
R
F
X
Q
B
G
T
K
L
M
U
L
B
P
O
E
R
N
U
C
U
R
F
B
Y
S
L
I
D
M
H
D
O
T
T
A
Q
M
K
V
E
K
L
W
V
B
G
W
H
A
N
I
X
Z
O
N
H
A
T
Y
A
E
N
B
S
M
J
I
D
S
U
I
V
O
E
Y
F
P
W
D
M
H
J
C
G
U
Q
V
K
P
K
Z
R
T
U
P
G
Y
S
A
S
Z
F
E
E
C
O
R
N
M
R
N
T
B
A
D
I
H
B
K
D
O
Y
X
T
W
Q
F
L
G
J
C
U
H




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Unit 1
Do or make?
Playing the game
When you land on a square:
1 say make or do. (1 point)
2 say when you last made or did that particular
thing. (1 point)
START
7
an excuse
Sudoku
a noise
a test
a decision
sport
the cooking
12
a phone call
15
14
the shopping
19
18
4
11
16
coffee
5
10
a mistake
3
a cake
6
exercise
9
17
when the first player gets to FINISH.
an appointment
homework
An appointment – make – I made an
appointment at the dentist this morning.
2
1
8
‘
’
4
The cooking – do – I never do the cooking at the
‘
weekend.
’
The winner is the player with the most points
1
You need
a die and counters
Pilates
13
a reservation
the ironing
20
yoga
your hair
FINISH
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209
Unit 2
Find the differences
Work with a partner or in small groups. How many differences can you find between
these two pictures? Give yourselves a point for each one.
A Yesterday
210
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
B Today
Unit 3
Future plans
You need
a die and counters
2 say when and / or why you’re going to do it.
(1 point)
Before you begin
Go through the words and decide what verb you
can use in circles that don’t have one, eg party =
go to a party / have a party, and what nouns or
phrases you can use in circles that just have a verb,
eg fly = fly a plane / fly to Rio.
1
3
‘
’
I’m going to watch a film on TV this evening.
‘
’
I’m having a party on Saturday because it’s my
birthday.
The first player who gets to FINISH gets an extra
two points and the game ends. The winner is the
player with the most points when that happens.
Playing the game
When you land on a circle:
1 talk about a future plan you have using the
word / phrase in the circle. (1 point)
1
2
3
START
party
jazz
TV
15
16
17
18
19
4
shopping
qualifications
classical
music
football
fly
housework
14
25
26
20
5
travel
pop music
learn another
language
FINISH
rap
the cinema
13
24
23
22
21
6
a job
a computer
game
a newspaper
cricket
coffee
the theatre
12
11
10
9
8
7
tennis
work
start
colleagues
a business
a magazine
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Unit 4
I’ve already done that!
You need
a die and counters
You get an extra point if you use yet, just or
already correctly.
1
Playing the game
When you land on a square:
1 say the past participle of the verb. (1 point)
The first player who gets to FINISH gets an extra
two points and the game ends. The winner is the
player with the most points when that happens.
2 make up a true sentence (affirmative or
negative) or a question using the present
perfect of the verb. (1 point)
2
1
START
understand
6
buy
spend
read
break
do
12
show
15
write
14
work
19
18
4
11
16
share
use
5
give
10
watch
212
be
call
9
17
3
make
7
8
‘
’
Well done! Three points!
’
‘
make – made – I’ve just made a mistake in my
homework.
13
teach
live
20
own
clean
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FINISH
Unit 5
The holiday game
You need
a die and counters
Playing the game
You’re going on holiday to the Maldives. It’ll
be hot and sunny, and there are lots of lovely
beaches, but not much else. You need to choose
five things to take with you.
When you land on a square:
1 decide if you want to take the item shown on
the square.
1
2
2 justify your decision if you want to take the
item.
1
‘
I have to take swimming things with me so
I can swim in the sea.
’
If the other players agree with your reason, you
can write the item on your list.
The first player who gets to FINISH with five
suitable items is the winner.
3
4
5
START
11
10
9
8
7
6
12
13
24
14
23
15
22
16
21
17
20
18
19
25
26
27
28
29
30
FINISH
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Unit 6

It’s a thing which …
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
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1
Unit 7
Compare
You need
a die and counters
hippo and a mosquito. A hippo is bigger than
‘aAmosquito.
’
2
A scorpion and a deer. A scorpion has more legs
‘ a deer.
than
’
The winner is the player with the most points
1
Playing the game
When you land on a square:
1 name the two things on that square. (1 point)
2 make a comparison between them. (1 point)
when the first player gets to FINISH.
START
FINISH
1
8
9
16
17
24
2
7
10
15
18
23
3
6
11
14
19
22
4
5
12
13
20
21
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215
Unit 8
The name game
Playing the game
1 Listen to the teacher say a number. You have
30 seconds to write down all the things you
can think of.
‘3 – something you can read’
2 Say your answers. You get a point for each one
nobody else has thought of. Keep score on the
board.
a book, a magazine, a newspaper, an email,
a text message
Name …
START 1
2
3
4
5
6
something you somewhere something you someone who somewhere
someone
can make
you can go on
can read
makes you
you can’t park who’s famous
music with
holiday
laugh
a car
12
someone who
doesn’t live
in a house
13
something
that takes a
long time
24
someone
who’s taller
than you
25
something
that’s bad
for you
11
somewhere
you can buy
a banana
14
10
something that
you would like
to buy
15
9
8
someone
who’s won
an Oscar
16
somewhere someone who
something
you would like
works in a
you would like
to live
hospital
to eat
23
somewhere
you would
hate to go
26
somewhere
you can keep
your money
22
something
you would
like to learn
27
someone
who’s done
something
amazing
7
somewhere
something
you could hide that scares you
an elephant
17
somewhere
that you feel
relaxed
18
someone who
can play the
guitar
21
20
19
someone
you would like
to meet
somewhere
you like to
meet your
friends
29
something
you take on
holiday with
you
30
28
something
you’d like
as a pet
somewhere
you’d like
to visit
someone
you might see
at an airport
FINISH
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Unit 9
2
Acupuncture
needles are
placed …
6
3
Bananas
are grown …
7
I feel …
12
Our electricity
bill was …
16
… backache.
21
… in special
parts of
the body.
26
… sick this
morning.
I have
a terrible …
Painkillers
are often
taken …
… for headaches.
Free-range
chickens
spend …
9
13
17
5
Chickens
are kept …
8
I can’t
imagine …
11
4
10
I spent
two hours …
14
The doctor
gave me
this …
18
Until recently,
chickens
were …
19
… high
temperature.
23
24
… kept for their
eggs.
… living without
electricity.
… medicine
for my stomach.
27
28
29
… to the
country.
I’ve got
a very …
15
We don’t regret
moving …
20
… in cages on
factory farms.
22
… their time
in fields.
Global
warming
means …

1

Matchmaker
… very high
this month.
… in hot
countries.
25
… rising
sea levels.
30
… washing
the car
yesterday.
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217
Unit 10
Report it!
You need
a die and counters
Playing the game
When you land on a square, report what John
said / asked.
1 point for each correct answer.
He said that he would always love Lucy.
‘
’
15 He asked why he was dressed like that.
‘
’
The winner is the player with the most points
1
when the first player gets to FINISH.
START 1
2
‘I will always love
Lucy.’
10
3
‘They’e playing
tennis with their
friends.’,
9
11
12
‘I fly to many
countries on
business.’
20
‘I live in a flat in
London.’
8
‘I love to visit
Istanbul.’
‘I drive to work
every day.’
4
‘She’s very good
at painting.’
19
‘How can they do ‘How many trains
to Rome are
that?’
there?’
‘She gave her
mum a present.’
7
‘There’s a game
that John wants
to buy.’
13
18
‘What do they
want to buy?’
Jetstream Pre-intermediate Teacher’s Guide © Helbling Languages PHOTOCOPIABLE
‘I’m going on
holiday.’
6
‘Karen is very
happy with her
car.’
14
‘They don’t want
to come.’
FINISH
218
5
‘The film isn’t
very good.’
17
‘Did they like the
festival?’
‘She doesn’t like
spiders.’
15
‘Why’s he
dressed like that?’
16
‘Is she a
journalist?’
Unit 11
If …
You need
a die and counters
Playing the game
When you land on a square, say a conditional
sentence using the object in the square.
1
‘If I wasn’t afraid of horses, I’d learn to ride.’
START 1
You get a point for every correct sentence.
The winner is the player with the most points
when the first player gets to FINISH.
2
3
4
5
6
12
11
10
9
8
7
13
14
15
16
17
18
24
23
22
21
20
19
FINISH
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Unit 12
2
Afterwards, the
bride and groom
often go on a
honeymoon.
Everyone
dances samba
in the street.
3
4
Father Christmas
gives presents to
the children.
It’s also known
as ‘the Sweet
Festival’.
6
7
It marks the end
of Ramadan,
when we don’t
eat during
the day.
It takes place
in February or
March, so it can
be cold – even
in Italy!
11
12
13
People make
wonderful
sculptures out
of ice and snow.
The bride wears
a special dress.
The sculptures
are lit with
coloured lights
and lasers.
16
17
18
19
It takes place
in Harbin, China,
in January
every year.
There are lots of
floats – everyone
tries to have the
best one!
This is the Hindu
festival of lights.
This reminds
us of the first
people from
Europe who
went to America.
21
22
23
24
We celebrate
this ‘festival of
colours’ in the
spring.
26
27
We invite lots
of guests to
celebrate.
220
We decorate
a tree and give
each other
presents.
We put on our
best clothes.
8
5
It takes place
on the fourth
Thursday in
November in
the USA.
We decorate
our houses
in red.
28
We put special
lights and
candles all
around our
homes.
It lasts five days
and is usually
in October or
November.

1

Celebrations
9
10
It’s in December,
and we usually
eat roast turkey.
People dress up
and wear
amazing masks.
14
15
The canals
are full
of colourful
boats.
We eat roast
turkey and
pumpkin pie.
29
We set off lots
of firecrackers.
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The costumes
are very bright
and colourful.
20
We build
bonfires
and sing
and dance.
25
We give gifts of
money in red
envelopes.
30
We throw
coloured
powders
and water
at each other.
Tasks
General teacher’s notes
Specific task notes
1
Unit 1
You can either read the task instructions to
the students, or photocopy the task notes and
hand them out.
2
For some tasks, students can produce a printed
document if they have access to computers.
Decide if you want them to do this and
organise the task accordingly.
3
If the task requires certain things, eg a stapler,
supply these.
4
Make sure students understand each stage
of the task. As you go through the stages,
check students understand the examples and
elicit more where necessary. Remember that
when students are in their pairs or groups,
they’ll need language for suggestions,
agreement, etc. Where there are dialogues or
conversations, it’s often a good idea to model
them first with confident students.
5
Tell students that when they need new
language, they can use a dictionary, or ask
each other or you for help.
6
As students do the task, monitor them and
help them with language. Check their written
work so they have a correct final version.
7
It can be a good idea to do the unit task as
revision after you’ve finished the unit.
8
Students will need a certain amount of help to
do the tasks, but at the same time encourage
them to be as independent as possible, as this
promotes learner autonomy.
Read out the task and highlight the phrase help
you learn, as this is a useful structure for this task.
STAGE 1:
Read out the four questions and briefly
elicit some answers from students. Teach
the phrases important / helpful to (write
words down).
STAGE 3:
Elicit suggestions, eg Vocabulary is a
very important part of a language. How
can you improve your vocabulary and
memory? Here are some useful tips.
STAGE 4:
If you want, add a final stage, where the
class has to agree on the top ten tips.
Unit 2
STAGE 1:
Check students understand the language
in the example answers, eg each other,
love at first sight (when you see someone
and fall in love immediately), the one
(the right partner for you). Encourage
students to use the past continuous at
least once.
STAGE 2:
Model the question-and-answer process
with a confident pair. They should ask the
questions in stage 1, but can ask other
questions as well.
STAGE 5:
Bring in a stapler to create the files.
Alternatively, students could print their
descriptions for homework, and the files
could be created in the next lesson.
Unit 3
STAGE 1:
Encourage students to talk about their
problems with their work or studies and
to give advice about other students’
problems. Teach vocabulary where
necessary.
STAGE 4:
Encourage students to use future tenses
here.
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Tasks
221
Unit 4
Unit 9
STAGE 1:
Go through the language in the examples
and elicit more ideas. Point out that work
(It worked ...) in this context means ‘do
the work that it should do’. Encourage
students to use the present perfect where
possible. Make sure students understand
that the sales assistant must decide what
to do about the fact that the customer
doesn’t have a receipt.
STAGE 1:
Check students understand these words:
organic / non-organic food, produce,
dairy produce, deliver, local, good value.
Explain that in the advertisement, the
language is in the active voice because
the company wants to stress that it
produces, grows and delivers the food.
But two of the questions are in the
passive voice.
STAGE 3:
You could ask groups to act out one of
their role-plays for the whole class.
STAGE 2:
Ask questions to check comprehension,
eg How long have you received the
food boxes for? Is the food good? Ask
students why people eat organic food.
(The main reason is that they think
it’s healthier because it doesn’t have
pesticides.) Encourage students to use the
passive where possible.
Unit 5
STAGE 2:
Go through the kinds of thing students
could take, eg a water bottle, a waterproof
jacket, a first-aid kit. Point out that we use
could for possibility.
Unit 6
STAGE 1:
Make sure that students understand the
names of the different types of holiday
and can say them. Encourage students to
use sentences with if.
Unit 10
STAGE 1:
Unit 7
STAGE 1:
Check students understand the difference
in meaning between exercise and
(a) sport. (Exercise refers generally to
activities that make you strong and
healthy. So all sport is exercise.) Also point
out that both words are uncountable
when we talk about them generally
and countable when we talk about a
particular exercise / sport. Help students
with the language before they work in
pairs.
Unit 8
STAGE 1:
STAGE 3:
222
Ask students if they often get anxious /
stressed and when this happens.
Brainstorm ways to reduce anxiety and
stress and teach these phrases: (a) way /
method of (doing) something (eg a way
of reducing anxiety), to get / become
anxious / stressed, to suffer from anxiety.
Point out that the nouns stress and
anxiety are usually uncountable.
Encourage students to discuss and
compare their articles.
Tasks
Elicit examples of questions, encouraging
students to keep them simple, eg How do
you prepare for a job / college interview?
How do you dress for a job interview?
When was your last job interview? Did
you get the job? / Did the college accept
you? Are you nervous at a job interview?
What helps you feel calm? Do you think
it’s important to ask questions at an
interview? Why?
When students write their lists, tell them
to leave enough space to write down the
answers of four or five people under each
question.
Unit 11
STAGE 1:
If you want, students could plan the book
festival in groups of three or four. This
would make each group’s book festival
different.
STAGE 2:
Suggest students could include a jingle (a
very short song used in adverts).
Unit 12
STAGE 1:
Explain that we often use the expression
birthday boy / girl for someone who has
a birthday. Point out the use of would
in the examples because at present the
situation is imaginary.
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Unit 1
STAGE 1
TASK: Make a list of ten tips to help you learn vocabulary in a foreign language.
Work in pairs. Talk about these questions
and make notes of your answers.
•
STAGE 2
Work with two more pairs and compare
notes. Then agree on your top ten tips
and make a list of them. Choose a title
for your list.
I write the words in my notebook.
STAGE 3
Write a short introduction of two
or three sentences.
What do you do to remember the
stress in words and phrases?
STAGE 4
Work with the whole class. Someone
from each group reads out their group’s
introduction and tips. Have a class
discussion about which tips are most
useful.
When you’re in class, what do you do
to memorise vocabulary?
I think that’s very impor tant.
•
I underline the stressed syllable.
•
What do you do at home to improve
your vocabulary and help your
memory?
‘I think it’s very important / helpful to …’
I do the Workbook exercises. That
helps a lot.
I repeat words. That helps me
remember them.
•
What else can you do to improve your
vocabulary?
You can keep a vocabulary book. That’s
very helpf ul.

Unit 2
STAGE 1
TASK: Create a file describing the best moment of your life so far.
What’s been the best moment of your life
so far? Think about these questions and
make notes.
•
Work in pairs and ask questions to find
out about your partner’s ‘best moment’.
STAGE 3
Work with two other pairs. Take turns
to tell each other about your partner’s
experience. Your partner must correct you
if you make a mistake.
STAGE 4
Write a description of your own
experience. Exchange your description
with your partner and help each other
with language mistakes. Then write a
final version.
STAGE 5
Create a file of your group’s experiences.
Give it to other groups to read.
When was the best moment of your
life?
It was about ten years ago.
•
STAGE 2
What exactly happened?
I met my par tner for the first time.
•
Where were you, and what were you
doing?
I was at a par ty and I was talking
to a friend. I was a bit bored.
•
Can you describe what happened?
A guy came and said hello. We looked
at each other. He had great eyes. It
was love at first sight! I knew he was
‘the one’ – and he knew too!
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Tasks
223
Unit 3
STAGE 1
TASK: Find solutions for problems at work.
Work in groups of between four and six.
Each describe a problem that you have
with your work or studies. If you don’t
have a problem, invent one.
‘
STAGE 3
‘
I’m going to talk about Maria’s problem. She
likes her job, but her pay isn’t good. My solution /
advice is this: I think Maria needs to ...
’
My manager is very disorganised and blames
me for problems. But it’s often his fault!
’
After your talk, ask other members of the
group for their opinion.
Discuss solutions to each of the problems
and give advice.
‘
’
That’s a good idea. Then you could send him
‘ email and ask for confirmation.
an
’
Sit in a circle and think about the problem
‘
So that’s my advice. What do you think?
Do you agree, or do you have a different
suggestion?
When your manager asks you to do something,
I think you should write down his instructions.
STAGE 2
Take turns to describe the problem and
your solution to the group.
STAGE 4
’
Think about your own problem again.
Decide what you’re going to do about it.
Take turns to tell the group.
‘
Thanks for your advice. It’s very helpful. I’m
seeing my manager next week. I’m going to ask
for a rise.
of the student on your left. Decide on
your advice / solution and make notes in
preparation for a talk.
’

Unit 4
STAGE 1
TASK: Role-play returning something to a shop.
Work in pairs. You’re going to do a roleplay where a customer returns something,
eg a household or technological item, to
a shop. Each choose a role – A or B – and
read the notes for it below. Then write
notes for your role.
Student B: You’re the sales assistant.
•
Student A: You’re the customer.
•
Decide what the item is, eg electric
kettle, mobile phone.
•
Decide how to begin the conversation
with the sales assistant at the shop.
•
Say when you bought the item and
what the problem is.
•
‘
•
’
Decide if you want a refund or if you
‘
I’ll talk to the manager. Can you wait a
moment, please?
’
want to exchange the item.
STAGE 2
I’d like to exchange it, please.
‘You
’
have the receipt but when you
Act out the role-play. Then discuss how
you can improve it and act it out again.
STAGE 3
Work with two other pairs and perform
your role-play for them.
look for it, you can’t find it.
•
I help you?
‘Can
’
What’s wrong with it? / What’s the
‘
problem?
’
Do you have a receipt?
‘Do you want a refund or’ would you like to
‘
exchange
it?
’
When the customer looks for their
receipt, they can’t find it. They tell you
that you served them. Decide what to
do.
It worked on the first day, but it hasn’t
worked since then.
•
Ask the usual questions a salesperson
asks when a customer wants to return
something.
You bought the item from the sales
assistant and they remember you. Try
to persuade them to either give you a
refund or exchange the item.
‘
Look, I’ve only had the phone for a week!
You served me – you remember me!
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Tasks
’
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Unit 5
STAGE 1
STAGE 2
TASK: Make a list of the things you need for a one-week walking holiday.
Work in pairs. You’re going on a oneweek walking holiday in hilly country
together. Decide where.
You’ll each carry a backpack. Remember
that you don’t want to carry too much or
your backpacks will be heavy. Agree on:
•
the things that you need to take.
•
‘
’
We’ll definitely get blisters. We must take
‘ of sticking plasters.
lots
’
We could pack a blanket. And definitely
‘ chocolate.
some
’
think there’ll be enough room for
‘theI don’t
blanket – but chocolate, yes!
’
It may rain. Should we take umbrellas?
‘
’
what to do about lunch and snacks.
We have to have really good walking
shoes, obviously. I need to buy a pair.
STAGE 3
STAGE 4
Make a list of what each of you is going
to take.
I’ll carry the blanket.
‘Work
’
with another pair and read out
your lists. Explain why you’re taking these
things.
‘
We’re packing a groundsheet because we need
to sit on something comfortable!
STAGE 5
’
After listening to the other pair’s list,
discuss whether you should change your
list in any way.
You don’t have a big budget. Decide
what to pack, if anything.
‘Let’s pack some plastic food boxes.’

Unit 6
STAGE 1
TASK: Persuade another pair to come on an adventure holiday with you.
Work in pairs and choose an adventure
holiday from the list below. Think about
the problems that each holiday may
have. You have a budget of $2,000. If
you spend more than that, you can’t buy
something that you really want. None of
the holidays includes flights.
•
a trekking holiday in Nepal / 13 days /
$900
•
a safari holiday in Tanzania / 9 nights /
$1,550
•
a white-water rafting holiday in Idaho,
USA / 6 days / $1,665
•
STAGE 2
Find a pair of students who’ve chosen a
different holiday to you. Try and persuade
the other pair to come on holiday with
you instead. Take turns to do this.
‘
’
Yes, but it’s very expensive. If I go on the safari
‘holiday, I can’t afford a new computer and
I really need one.
’
The holiday will be more fun with four people.
‘We can have a really good time.
’
OK, we’ll come with you!
’
‘
In your groups, take turns to tell the class
Come on the safari holiday. You’ll see lions
and tigers, it’ll be wonderful.
STAGE 3
a survival holiday in the jungle in
Guyana / 10 days / $1,300
‘
’
I think we should choose the safari holiday.
‘I’m not sure. I think Tanzania is a country that’
‘ be dangerous.
could
’
If we go on the trekking holiday, we must be
very fit. I’m not at all fit!
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what happened in stage 2.
‘
We weren’t successful. Ali and Mehmed aren’t
coming on holiday with us.
’
Tasks
225
Unit 7
STAGE 1
TASK: Give a talk about the role of exercise and sport in your life.
Work in pairs and discuss these questions.
STAGE 2
Make notes for a talk about the role of
exercise and sport in your life. Use the
questions in stage 1 to help you.
•
Do you enjoy exercise / sport? Is it
important to you? Why? / Why not?
•
What kind of exercise / sport do you
do, and how often do you do it?
Here are some examples:
STAGE 3
Work with your partner and take turns to
give your talks. Help each other with your
English.
(go) cycling, swimming, skiing,
climbing, sailing, surfing, walking
(play) rugby, football, golf, tennis,
squash
(do) yoga, tai chi, kung fu, Pilates
STAGE 4
Work with another pair and take turns
to give your talks. Which person in the
group feels most like you about sport?
•
In your opinion, which types of
exercise / sport above are: relaxing /
exciting / enjoyable / easy to do?
Compare some of them. Which ones
do you do?
•
Do you watch sport on television?
Which sports do you watch? Say why /
why not.

Unit 8
STAGE 1
TASK: Write an article about reducing anxiety and stress in everyday life.
Work in pairs and talk about:
•
STAGE 2
when you feel anxious and stressed,
and what makes you feel this.
‘
’
I often feel anxious when I wake in the
‘
morning.
’
Life makes me anxious!
‘
’
ways of reducing anxiety and stress.
I get very stressed about work. I worry
about it a lot.
•
226
Tasks
•
Think of a title for the article.
•
Start with some general remarks
about anxiety and stress.
Everybody feels anxious sometimes.
And a lot of people feel anxious a lot
of the time!
•
Which methods do you use?
helps reduce anxiety and
‘Meditation
stress.
It’s very helpful. I meditate every
day.
’
Exercise is a good way of reducing anxiety.
‘ makes you feel good. It helps you relax.
It
I think it’s one of the best methods.
’
Work in pairs and write a short article
about ways to reduce anxiety and stress.
Write the main section of the article.
These methods can help reduce
anxiety and stress:
Every day, write a list of your
worries. Write down the solutions. For
example, ...
STAGE 3
Work with another pair. Exchange your
articles and correct mistakes.
STAGE 4
With your partner, write a final version of
your article.
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Unit 9
STAGE 4
TASK: Write a blog entry about an organic food company.
Work in pairs and read this advert. Then
discuss the questions below.
STAGE 2
Riverdale Organic Food Company
www.riverdaleorganicfood.com
06361 334490
You write a food blog and have been
receiving food boxes from Riverdale
Organic Food Company for several
months now. The food is fresh and tastes
good, and you’ve decided to write about
it. Each write a blog entry.
• All our vegetables, fruit, meat and dairy produce
are organic.
•
Say you eat more organic food these
days. Explain why.
• We deliver different kinds of organic food boxes
to your door once a week.
•
• The produce comes from our own farm or from
local farmers.
Say that you get food boxes from
Riverdale. Say how often and how
long you’ve had them for.
•
• Our boxes are in large, medium and small sizes
and are very good value!
Give information about the company
and the food boxes.
•
Give your opinion of the food and
Riverdale.
I can really recommend Riverdale.
•
Does the company just deliver fruit
and vegetables?
•
Is all their food produced locally?
•
Are the food boxes very expensive?
•
When are the boxes delivered?
STAGE 3
Take turns to read out your blogs.
Correct any mistakes. What are the main
differences between your blogs?

Unit 10
STAGE 1
TASK: Carry out a survey of experiences of job / college interviews.
Work in groups of four or five. Agree on
between seven and ten questions for the
survey. Each write a list of the questions.
STAGE 4
Together, write a report on the other
group’s answers.
•
How do you feel about job / college
In this small survey, we interviewed
interviews?
four people about job interviews. These
were the questions.
How many job interviews have you had?
STAGE 2
STAGE 3
Introduce the subject.
•
Work with another group. Pair up with
someone in the other group and take
turns to ask your questions. Make notes
of their answers.
Make some general comments about
the survey.
No one enjoys job interviews!
•
Work with your group again. Take turns
to tell the group about your partner’s
answers in stage 2. Make notes of
everyone’s answers.
Briefly write about the answers to
each question.
Two people have never had a job
interview because they’re students.
Pedro said that he had one last week.
He got the job!
Lee said that he hated job interviews. He
•
said he’d had three interviews …
STAGE 5
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End with another general comment.
Work with the whole class. Choose
someone to read out your report. What’s
the general feeling about job interviews?
Tasks
227
Unit 11
STAGE 1
TASK: Write and perform a local radio advertisement for a book festival.
Work with the whole class. Plan a book
festival for your local town or area.
Decide on these things:
•
STAGE 2
When the book festival will take place
and for how long
‘I think a week is too long. I think’ it should
‘ five days.
be
’
What kind of events there’ll be,
Are you a book lover? Then you mustn’t
miss Sidbury’s book festival!
It could be five days or a week.
•
eg talks by famous authors and
journalists, poetry workshops, panel
discussions
•
‘We should definitely have some
workshops.
’
Which famous authors will give talks
Work in groups of three or four and
write your radio advertisement. Give the
necessary information and make the
book festival sound interesting.
Do you want to meet famous authors?
Now’s your chance!
STAGE 3
Decide how many voices you want to
perform the advertisement.
STAGE 4
Choose who’s going to perform the
advertisement for the group.
STAGE 5
When you’re happy with it, perform your
advertisement for the class. The class
votes for the best one.
(both fiction and non-fiction authors)
‘
Let’s have … But would he really come to
a small town to give a talk?
’

Unit 12
STAGE 1
STAGE 2
TASK: Plan a surprise birthday party for somebody in your language class.
Work in groups of three or four. You’re
going to plan a surprise birthday party
for somebody (the ‘birthday boy / girl’) in
your class. Choose someone from one of
the other groups but don’t tell them!
STAGE 3
Discuss these questions.
•
When and where will you have the
party?
‘
We could have it in a restaurant. But that
would be quite expensive.
•
’
What will you do about food and
drink?
‘
•
•
•
How will you tell people about the
party? You don’t want the ‘birthday
boy / girl’ to know about it.
•
How will you get the ‘birthday boy /
girl’ to the party?
•
What will you do about birthday
presents?
Finalise your party plan. Help each other
with your English.
‘
I think we should ask everyone to bring a
dish. That would be easiest.
•
STAGE 4
Now think about these things:
’
What time will it start and finish?
Will the party have any costs? If it
does, what will you do about this?
Let’s ask everyone to contribute.
‘What
’
kind of party will it be?
We’re going to have the party at Chia’s flat.
We want it to start at eight o’clock. And we’ve
decided to ask everyone to bring a dish.
STAGE 5
’
Work with the whole class. Someone
from each group reads out their party
plan. The class votes for the best party
ideas. Can you guess who each party is
for?
A normal party? A fancy-dress party?
Will there be dancing? Who will you
invite?
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Tasks
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Technique banks
Using the video
You won’t necessarily want to work through
all three stages described here every time, nor
will you always want to work through all the
sub-stages. It depends how fast you and your
students want to go and how much practice they
need. But if your goal is for students to act out a
conversation, then – especially in the early days –
you’ll need to build up their confidence (and take
away their support) gradually rather than suddenly.
This structure of gently developing a conversation
from reception to production is ideal for exploiting
many of the conversations in Everyday English,
but it’ll also work well with other conversations
in the book. (See also Shadow reading in Five fun
techniques on page 236.)
Stage 1
Watch, listen to and / or read the conversation.
• Students watch or listen to* and / or
(silently) read the conversation once or
twice. Make sure they understand any new
words or expressions.
• They listen to and repeat sentences from
the conversation, either after you or the
audio / video.
• You read one part of the conversation,
students read the other in chorus. Swap
roles.
• Divide the class in half, each with one role.
Open pairs: Two students read the conversation
while the rest of the class listens.
Closed pairs: Students read the conversation in
pairs.
*Different ways of using video / audio
• Play the video sequence with sound and
vision (S+V) in the normal way. You can do
this with or without the subtitles.
• Play the video sequence with vision only
(VO) and ask students to imagine what’s
being said. Then play the sequence S+V so
they can check.
• Play the video sequence with sound
only (SO) (or just play the audio) and ask
students to guess:
o how many characters there are
o where they are
o what they look like
o what the situation is.
Then play the sequence S+V so they can
check, or look at the photo if you’re using
audio.
• Play part of the video / audio sequence
(S+V / VO / SO) and pause it. Ask students
to guess:
o what X is going to say next
o what’s going to happen next.
Play the next part for students to see if they
were right.
Note: Any time you play the video S+V, you can
do so with or without the subtitles and you can
vary the order you do this, ie first without, then
with, or first with, then without. It’s very flexible!
Stage 2
Practise using the ‘Look, look up and speak’
technique.
This is a great technique to help students
move from listening / reading to acting out a
conversation.
Working in pairs, students ‘read’ the conversation
in the following way.
• A looks at their line, then looks up at B,
makes eye contact and says it.
• B then looks at their line, looks up at A,
makes eye contact and says it.
And the conversation continues in this way. It
takes a little longer than just reading it, but it helps
to gently take students away from the support of
the written word and build up their confidence.
You’ll need to demonstrate this technique with a
student in front of the whole class the first few
times you use it.
Technique banks
229
Stage 3
Act it out.
When you and your students feel they’re ready,
students can close their books and have a go on
their own. They can do this first sitting down,
then standing up and adding gestures. It doesn’t
matter if the words aren’t exactly the same as in
the video. At this stage, fluency is more important
than accuracy. (If students are making a lot of
mistakes, go through stages 1 and 2 again.)
If some students are happy to come to the front
and ‘perform’ in front of the class, that’s great. If
not, don’t pressurise them. Let them ‘perform’ in
small groups.
Variations
1 Suggest students take on different moods
or ways of behaving: quiet and shy / noisy
and enthusiastic / happy / grumpy / angry /
confused / tired, etc.
2 Bring props into the classroom if you think
they’re appropriate (and you can get hold of
some).
Using stories
You can use the stories at the back of the
Student’s Book in an unstructured or a structured
way:
Unstructured: Suggest students read them as and
when they feel they’d like to.
Structured: Set a particular story to be read
outside class by the whole class. (The stories can
come after every third unit, so after Units 3, 6, 9
and 12.)
If you choose the second way, then you may
or may not wish to introduce the story in class
beforehand and do some work on it afterwards.
But be careful! Stories are for pleasure and
motivation. If you do too much ‘work’ on them,
you’re in danger of killing them dead and putting
students off reading altogether. Do enough to help
them, but no more.
You might also encourage students to keep a
vocabulary notebook for useful words, expressions
and idioms they find in the stories.
Introducing a story before students
read it
Here are some of the things you could use with
the stories (or any other stories) to elicit ideas from
students before they read. Not only does this help
to prepare them for reading, but it also motivates
them to want to read and gives them a reason for
reading. Because of this, it’s important that you
don’t tell students if their predictions are correct or
not. Let them read the story and find out.
You can use …
• the picture(s) illustrating the story
• the title of the story
• music, song, sound effects
• real object(s)
230
Technique banks
• mime (you mime part of the story)
• words from the story (in order or out of
order, especially any new ones likely to
cause difficulty)
• the first or last line(s)
• possible message(s): This is a story about X
• one or more of the characters
• the setting(s)
• question(s)
• a synopsis.
Exploiting a story after students have
read it
In the next lesson, you could ask students to give a
personal response:
Did you like the story? Why? / Why not?
Which part did you like best / least?
Could this story take place in your country? If
not, why not?
Is there anything you would like to change in
the story? What?
Imagine you’re making a film. Which famous
actors would you like to play the roles? What
theme song or music would you like for the
film?
You could also ask students to do one or more of
the following:
• answer questions (but not too many)
• decide on true / false statements (again, not
too many)
• complete sentences from the story, eg We
called her Pinky because …
• tell you who said a particular thing
• write a question on the story for the rest of
the class to answer
• retell the story or write it – possibly using
key words as guidance
• tell chain stories around the group / class,
with each student adding a sentence
• retell or rewrite the story from the point of
view of one of the characters
• continue the story – what do you think
happened next (or five / ten years later)?
• change the ending (or the beginning or
middle) and create their own ending
• fill in gaps in the story, eg What happened
between X and Y?
• mime or act out part of the story (or a word
or a character from the story) for other
students to guess and describe
• suggest similar stories they know
• draw a picture or abstract painting
• create a movie poster or book cover design
• rewrite it as a conversation / play
• retell the story in their mother tongue – or
translate key words (for monolingual classes
only)
• stand up for their word (see page 235)
Note: The stories are too long to do this for
the whole story, so maybe just take the first
paragraph. Suitable words might be:
Pinky / rabbit
crash landing / wedding
weekend / beach
second chance / dream
Using memory games
Use it or lose it! That’s what fitness instructors say
about our muscles. And it’s what psychologists say
about our memory, too. If we want to be good at
remembering things, then we need to practise as
often as possible. The more we practise, the better
we get. And as remembering is a very large part
of successful language learning, it’s crucial that
we give our students plenty of opportunities to
exercise their memory.
Some memory games are already indicated in the
lessons, wherever you see this symbol: .
Here are some more, very simple, ideas if you’d
like to do more. You can do them as whole-class
activities or, once they’re familiar to students, in
pairs or small groups. They need only take a few
minutes, so make them a regular part of your
routine if you can.
Using pictures
1 Ask students to look at a picture in the book
for 30 seconds, then close their books.
2 Ask them questions about the picture.
Obviously the questions you ask will be
dependent on the picture, but here are some
possibilities:
Is there a …? Are there any …s? How many
…s are there?
Where’s X? What’s in / on / under / behind
the …? What’s on the left / right?
What colour is X? What’s Y wearing?
Variations
1 Students write a list of people or objects in the
picture.
2 Students do a sketch of the picture. (We use
the word sketch rather than drawing because
it’s somehow less stressful. Some people find
the word drawing a bit scary!)
3 Students test each other in pairs. One has their
book open, the other has their book shut.
Using texts
1 Students re-read a text they’ve already worked
on in class, perhaps a while ago, then close
their books.
2 Ask them questions on the text or make true /
false statements for them to confirm or correct.
Variations
Can they remember the following?
• the title
• the very first word in the text
• the last word
• the first line
• the last line
• the most frequent word
• any words that occur more than once
Using conversations
1 Students re-read a conversation or listen to it
again, then close their books.
2 Say a line from the conversation. Students reply
with the line that comes next.
Technique banks
231
Variations
1 Read the conversation, saying just the first part
of each line. Students complete the rest of the
line.
2 Choose lines from a conversation and ask
students who says them.
Using vocabulary
Ask questions, eg Can you remember ten words
from the last lesson?
How many words can you remember beginning
with …?
How many places / countries / adjectives / irregular
verbs, etc can you remember?
A couple of other activities
Repeat my sentence
This is an exercise in very careful listening as well
as remembering. Students work in pairs. Student
A says a sentence (or reads one from a text or
conversation). Student B must repeat it word for
word. They swap. They should do this five or six
times, with the sentences getting a little longer
every time.
I, I, I, you, you, you!
Another exercise in careful listening as well as
remembering. Students work in pairs. Student A
makes statements about themselves beginning
with I. Student B listens carefully. After five or
six statements, student B must repeat as many
of student A’s statements as they can remember,
beginning with you. Then they swap over.
This exercise can have a grammatical focus and
function as a very personal repetition drill – it lends
itself to many different structures. Some possible
kinds of statement:
I like + noun
I like + activity
Every day I + present simple
Last year I + past simple
I’ve never + past participle (= present perfect)
In the future I’d like to …
232
Technique banks
Note: According to memory experts, we readily
forget 70% of what we learn in 24 hours unless
we recycle it before that 24-hour period is up. You
can facilitate that as a teacher by doing two things
(which you may already be doing!):
1 Make sure you leave five minutes at the
end of a lesson for students to recap what
they’ve learnt in the lesson.
2 Tell students to take just five or ten minutes
to go through the lesson at home that
evening … and tell them why it’s important
to do that.
You have control over the first of these but not
the second! Because of that, revising the previous
lesson at the beginning of the next one is also
crucial.
20 easy games – no preparation required
These games are useful whenever you have some time to spare or notice that the group needs a change of
activity. Many of them will already be familiar to you, but it’s nice to have them all in one place.
The suggestions here are written for a teacher playing the game with the whole class, but once students
know the games, they can of course be played in pairs or small groups, and as such are useful for early
finishers.
Game
1 Introductions
Focus
Memory game
I’m / He’s / She’s …
My / His / Her name’s …
Instructions
Students introduce themselves round the class:
A I’m Mary.
B My name’s John, her name’s Mary.
C I’m Frank, he’s John, she’s Mary.
2 Simon says …
Following instructions
Students follow instructions only if you say Simon
says, eg Simon says put your hands on your head.
3 Hangman
Alphabet / spelling
Think of a word and write a line for each letter
on the board, eg cat = _ _ _
Students guess the word by asking questions
about letters, eg Is there an ‘e’? If they’re correct,
write the letter. If they’re incorrect, the student
loses one of their ten lives.
4 I went to the
supermarket and I
bought …
Memory game
This can be used for a
variety of tenses and
vocabulary sets, eg I like
dancing. I like dancing
and eating pasta. … The
example here is for past
simple and food and drink
vocabulary.
One student starts by saying what they went to
buy (or what they like, etc), then each student
adds something else to the list.
5 Ten questions
Asking questions in the
present or past
Think of a person (alive or dead) or an object.
Students ask ten yes / no questions to find out
who or what it is.
6 What’s my job?
Asking present simple
questions with Do …?
Think of a job and mime a typical action.
Students ask ten yes / no questions to guess it.
7 Where’s the
mosquito?
Prepositions
Imagine a mosquito somewhere in the classroom.
Students guess where it is.
Is it in my bag? Is it under your foot? …
A I went to the supermarket and I bought a
lettuce.
B I went to the supermarket and I bought a
lettuce and some potatoes.
C I went to the supermarket and I bought a
lettuce, some potatoes and …
8 Don’t say yes or no! Short answers
Students must answer questions without using
the words yes or no.
A Do you like broccoli?
B I don’t. Not at all.
A Are you enjoying this?
B I am. Very much!
9 Whose is it?
Two students go out of the room. Other students
decide on an object belonging to one of them.
Students come back in and must find the owner.
Is it Pedro’s phone?
Is it his ...?
Possessive adjectives and
pronouns
Technique banks
233
10 Describe someone
Be, have, descriptive
adjectives, parts of the
body
Each student writes a short description of
someone in the class, then reads it out for others
to guess who it is.
11 Mime an action
Present, past and future
tenses
Students mime an activity that they like doing
(or do every day / did last night / are going to do,
etc). Others ask yes / no questions to guess.
12 What’s he / she
wearing?
Present continuous
Students mingle and stand back to back with
someone. They describe what the other person’s
wearing, then look and check.
13 I spy
Vocabulary: classroom (or
based on a picture)
Say: I see something beginning with B. Students
must guess: Is it a bee? Is it a bin?
14 Word hunt
Prepositions
Decide on a specific word on a page and
students must ask yes / no questions to guess it.
Is it at the top of the page?
Is it a long word?
Is it in the third line?
Is it a noun?
15 Change of
appearance
Present perfect
A student leaves the classroom, alters something
in their appearance and comes back in. Other
students ask yes / no questions to find out.
Have you taken off a ring?
Have you undone your shoelace?
16 Banana
Numbers
Students count (fairly quickly) around the class
but must not say any number which has a 3 in
it or is a multiple of 3 (eg 3, 6, 9, 12, 13, etc).
Instead of these numbers, they must say banana.
If they make a mistake, they’re out.
17 Jetstream! Make
ten (or 20!) words
Vocabulary
How many words can students make from the
word Jetstream in a given time limit? You can
use any other long word or choose a word from
the lesson you’re working on, eg conversation,
information, grandmother.
18 Words that begin
with …
Memory game
How many words beginning with a given letter
can students list in a given time limit?
19 Name ten!
Vocabulary: countries,
sports, types of transport,
etc
Students say or write a list of ten things from a
particular lexical set – and get a point for every
item nobody else has thought of.
20 Potato ping-pong
Vocabulary: vegetables (or
any other lexical set)
Divide the class into two teams. Team A says the
name of a vegetable, then team B says one. They
continue back and forth until one team runs out
of ideas and can’t hit it back! The other team
wins the point.
234
Technique banks
Five fun techniques to use with a flagging class
You can use these techniques again and again
over time in different ways – students always enjoy
them and feel energised by them.
1 ‘True for me’ drills
Make true statements about yourself. You can link
the statements to your teaching focus or else use
a variety of language, eg present simple + adverbs
of frequency: I always get up early. I sometimes go
jogging before breakfast.
Students must repeat only those statements that
are also true for them. This means that they need
to listen carefully and think before they speak –
and they get lots of repetition practice. And when
they get it wrong, it usually causes lots of laughter.
These drills are a great way to start a lesson: I’m
feeling tired today. I had trouble getting here.
I missed the bus!
They’re also brilliant for breaking the ice and getting to know a new group of students and for
letting them know a bit about you: My name’s Pat.
I’m a woman. I’m a teacher. I was born in March.
I like dancing.
2 True / false drills
You can do this with any picture in the Student’s
Book, eg page 10 (multi-tasking), page 18 (Fauja
Singh).
Make true and false statements about the picture.
If what you say is true, students repeat it. If it’s
false, they must say: That isn’t true! You could do
this first with books open, then with them closed,
as a memory game.
You can continue the activity by getting students
to provide the sentences themselves. Each student
writes one sentence about the picture, which can
be true or false. Students take turns to read out
their sentence and the rest of the class responds.
Variations
1 Instead of using a picture, you can make true
or false statements about real things, especially
relating to a topic you’ve been dealing with in
class, eg They speak French in Canada. / They
speak Dutch in Germany.
2 Students could also or instead be asked to use
some kind of physical movement, eg they raise
their right hand if something’s true, their left if
it’s false.
3 Stand up for your word
This is a great way of raising energy in a group
when you notice students are getting tired – and a
good way of revising, too. Take a text that they’ve
read or listened to recently and select a word from
it, eg SB page 13 (intelligence(s) in Shelflife) or
page 20 (kayak in Around the world in 13 years!).
Tell students to close their books and tell them the
word. Then read them the text. They must stand up
every time they hear the word.
What’s the point? Apart from being lots of fun,
it’s a great way of ensuring unconscious learning
– another feature of Accelerated Learning (see
page 22). While consciously listening out for a
specific word, students are unconsciously exposed
to the whole text without the stress of having
to do anything particular with it. These are ideal
conditions for the unconscious mind to acquire
language.
Variations
1 If standing up is too disruptive or noisy, then
just get students to raise one or both arms.
2 Select two or three words and give different
groups of students a different word. At the
end of this activity, ask the groups what words
the other groups had.
4 Dictopuzzles
These are like dictations – with a purpose.
1 Students note down what you say in order to
find the answer(s) to a question. It’s important
to tell them not to shout out the answer once
they’ve found it, but just to put up their hand
(or stand up) to let you know they know. That
way, other students can go on thinking.
In fact, the example below has four possible
answers, so you can ask students to go on
searching for the others. (Make sure they
realise that the name of both the country and
its capital are the names in English.)
It’s a country in Europe. It’s in the EU, but it
isn’t one of the countries in the UK. There
are seven letters in the English name of this
country and six letters in the English name of
its capital city. What country is it?
(Ireland / Dublin, Germany / Berlin, Austria /
Vienna, Croatia / Zagreb)
2 As soon as enough students have put their
hand up, check their answers. If they haven’t
found the correct answer – or all the answers –
Technique banks
235
rather than tell them, give clues to help them,
eg The first letter is A, It’s near Italy.
3 Elicit a correct version of the text to write on
the board.
4 Using the model text on the board, students
work individually or in pairs to create a similar
text about another country – not necessarily in
Europe.
5 Students work in small groups and take turns
to dictate their puzzle for the others to solve.
Other possible subjects:
• famous people, contemporary or historical
• well-known places: cities, buildings,
monuments
• everyday objects
• animals
• sports and games
• words (It’s an adjective. It begins with a B.).
5 Shadow reading
Not only is this a great revision exercise, it’s
challenging and a lot of fun.
1 Go back to a listening conversation you’ve
done recently and play the recording so
students can listen to it again.
2 Divide the class into the number of roles and
allocate each half (or group) one of the people
in the conversation.
3 When you play the conversation again (quite
loudly), students should speak (quite softly) at
the same time as their character (so they can
still hear the conversation even while they’re
speaking).
This is quite a challenge – and usually causes a lot
of laughter because although the speakers in the
conversations speak reasonably slowly, their speed
will still be faster than that of the students.
Extra questions and tasks for Art & Music
Given the motivational impact of this section,
there are deliberately very few questions on the
page. A few more questions are always suggested
in the unit-by-unit teacher’s notes, which you can
use or ignore as you see fit. And here you can find
a full range of questions that could apply to almost
any picture or song.
Art
•
Do you know this picture / sculpture? Do you
like it?
•
What’s the title of the picture / sculpture in
your language?
•
Who’s the painting / sculpture by?
•
Describe the picture / sculpture. What’s the
artist trying to say?
•
If there are people in the picture, what can you
say about them?
•
What do you think the painting tells us about
the artist / sculptor?
•
•
Can you find one or two other paintings /
sculptures by the artist / sculptor that you
particularly like? Say why.
•
Do you like this artist’s / sculptor’s work?
Music
Note: A good website for lyrics is
www.metrolyrics.com or just type the title or first
line into a search engine.
•
Do you know this song? Do you like it?
•
What’s the name of the song?
•
Who’s the singer / group? Do you like him /
her / them?
•
Who wrote the song? When?
•
What’s the next line?
•
What word occurs more than ten times in the
song?
•
What’s the chorus?
•
What nationality was the artist / sculptor, and
in which century did they paint / sculpt?
What other songs do you know by this singer /
group / songwriter?
•
•
Do you know anything else about the artist /
sculptor?
Read the lyrics and listen to the song. Sing the
chorus if you want to.
•
•
Find out two or three extra pieces of
information about the picture / sculpture.
Watch a video clip of the song and give your
opinion of it.
•
•
Find out two or three extra pieces of
information about the artist / sculptor.
What’s the message of the song – in one
sentence?
236
Technique banks
Working with mixed-ability classes
It’s inevitable that there will be students with
different levels of English (though not necessarily
ability) in your class, especially in larger classes.
Some students will need extra support, some will
need less. So here are some ideas to help you
tackle this issue. You’ll also find ideas in the unitby-unit notes where you see this symbol: MA.
Note: We’ve used the terms ‘stronger’ and
‘weaker’ for the sake of convenience, but of
course those terms are not completely accurate.
•
Use stronger students to correct weaker
students. Make sure that you praise weaker
students for their successes just as much as
stronger ones.
•
Direct more difficult questions at stronger
students and easier ones at weaker students.
•
Sometimes pair and group students of the
same ability so they feel comfortable with each
other.
•
And sometimes pair up students of different
levels and encourage the stronger student to
help the weaker one.
•
Group weaker students together for an activity
and give them extra attention, leaving stronger
students to work alone.
•
Use stronger students as group leaders and
give them more responsibility for activities, like
being the group ‘scribe’ and keeping a written
record, for example.
•
When appropriate, give weaker students
slightly easier tasks. The teacher’s notes may
suggest these – look for the MA icon.
•
Note weaker students’ errors and give them
extra homework
Fast finishers
If some students complete an exercise more
quickly than others, have some extra activities
ready that they can do. Ideally, these activities
should be short, fun things that are easy to set
up. Students shouldn’t feel punished for finishing
quickly by being given something boring to do!
•
Many of the 20 easy games on page 233
would work, especially games 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8,
13, 14, 17, 18 and 19.
•
Also suitable are the Memory games using
pictures on page 231, once students have
played them in class and know how they work.
•
Online research is another task you can give,
using the Art & Music box or an Explore
suggestion, for example.
•
And finally, you can offer them lots of different
e-zone activities to choose from.
Ensuring learner autonomy and using technology
What is learner autonomy?
As defined by Henri Holec in 1981, learner
autonomy is ‘the ability to take charge of one’s
own learning’. It’s crucial because when you
give learners more choices (and therefore more
responsibility) in how and what and how fast they
learn, then they’re also a lot more motivated and
they learn better. In addition, they gain more selfawareness about their skills and more awareness
of the learning process itself.
How can we provide it?
One of the key tools we have nowadays of course
is technology, which can take students beyond
the limits of the classroom and allow them the
freedom to choose what topics they want to
explore, and what language areas they want to
focus on.
Jetstream on e-zone offers a wealth of digital tools
for this purpose, giving students plenty of options:
•
Online Training on e-zone provides hundreds
of online practice activities for extra
listening, reading, grammar, vocabulary and
pronunciation, as well as practice activities that
help to prepare for a range of international
exams.
•
Cyber homework lets you assign homework
to students. You have the capability to allow
students to see their score after they complete
the tasks. They can keep practising and
improving their score until a deadline. This
way, homework becomes more of a learning
experience and students can take on more
responsibility for their results. Students can
do cyber homework offline and submit their
results once they go back online.
Technique banks
237
•
•
Projects enable students to learn
collaboratively. They can vote and comment
on each other’s work, and thus learn from and
with each other. They can choose to take on a
more or less active role in this collaboration.
Cloud Book allows students to download the
Student’s Book and the Workbook, as well as
the audio and video, by using the access code
at the back of the Student’s Book. This way,
students can practise any time, anywhere,
offline on their desktop computers as well as
their mobile devices. These devices will sync
with each other once students go online.
In the Student’s Book and the Workbook, there’s
also scope for learner autonomy.
•
In the Student’s Book, both the Explore and
the Art & Music sections invite students to go
online and use their language skills to find out
more about particular subjects if they want to.
•
In the Workbook, the Check your progress
pages give students the opportunity to assess
themselves.
•
The DIY (Do It Yourself) wordlist at the back of
the Workbook allows students to make choices
about which words they translate and record.
(It’s not intended that they should write down
every single word – unless they want to, of
course!)
238
Technique banks
What else can you do?
•
Ask students to keep a record of their
problems and successes. They might do this
as a written diary or logbook or else keep an
online diary or write a blog. Dedicate some
classroom time for them to compare notes
with a partner from time to time.
•
Give students choices in classroom tasks, even
in a small way. If an exercise has six questions,
for example, ask them to choose four. (They
still have to read all of them to make that
decision.)
•
If they’re having a discussion or playing
a game, encourage them to change the
instructions sometimes.
De-stress! cartoons
Unit 1
Unit 2
Unit 3
Unit 4
Unit 5
Unit 6
Unit 7
Unit 8
Unit 9
Unit 10
Unit 11
Unit 12
De-stress! cartoons
239
HELBLING LANGUAGES
www.helblinglanguages.com
JETSTREAM Pre-intermediate Teacher’s Guide
by Terry Prosser
with Jane Revell and Mary Tomalin
© HELBLING LANGUAGES 2015
First published 2015
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic,
mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior written permission of the publishers.
ISBN 978-3-85272-982-4
The publishers would like to thank the following for their kind permission to reproduce the following photographs and other copyright material:
Moviestore collection Ltd p14 (Pink Panther) / Alamy; Anthony Brown, ‘The Portrait Of John Lennon’. Oil & Mixed Media on canvas (2005) 48” x 60”. © Anthony Brown.
All Rights Reserved & Asserted p13; Maksym Yemelyanov p12, Jakub Cejpek p16 (rock climbing), Marilyn Barbone p20 (watercress), Sikth p20 (salmon), Jiri Hera p20 (cocoa) |
Dreamstime.com; baranq p16 (waiting for job interview), Goodluz p17 (job interview), qvist p17 (newspapers), Justek16 p20 (quinoa), Ev Thomas p21 (cutlery), Melpomene
p21 (card) /Shutterstock.com; UNITED ARTISTS / THE KOBAL COLLECTION p14 (THE PINK PANTHER with PETER SELLERS and DAVID NIVEN).
Illustrated by Davide Besana, Oscar Celestini, Giovanni Da Re, Giovanni Giorgi Pierfranceschi
Edited by Clare Nielsen-Marsh and Catriona Watson-Brown
Designed by Greg Sweetnam and Pixarte
Cover by Capolinea
Printed by Athesia
Every effort has been made to trace the owners of any copyright material in this book. If notified, the publisher will be pleased to rectify any errors or
omissions.
elementary
elementary
beginner
Real language &
memory training
Real language &
memory training
JETSTREAM Cloud
with LMS
Jeremy Harmer ∙ Jane Revell
Real language &
memory training
Everyday English
videos
Everyday English
videos
Student’s Book
Student’s Book
JETSTREAM Cloud
with LMS
advanced
Everyday English
videos
JETSTREAM Cloud
with LMS
• Grammar to go
The right grammar at the right time plus
a full grammar reference
• Emphasis on speaking
Real language &
memory training
Student’s Book
Your opinion, your voice - right from the start
of the lesson
Mary Tomalin
advanced
upper intermediate
intermediate
JETSTREAM Cloud
with LMS
upper intermediate
Real language &
memory training
JETSTREAM Cloud
with LMS
• Personalisation
Everyday English
videos
Student’s Book
Jeremy Harmer ∙ Jane Revell
intermediate
Teacher’s Guide
Helps you find the right words
Real language &
memory training
Dialogue karaoke
videos
Student’s Book
Student’s Book
Student’s Book
JETSTREAM Cloud
with LMS
Get you interested and communicating
• Focus on vocabulary
Student’s Book
Dialogue karaoke
videos
pre-intermediate
• Motivating topics
pre-intermediate
pre-intermediate
beginner
Jane Revell ∙ Mary Tomalin
with Jane Revell and Mary Tomalin
Student’s Book
Engaging activities to get you talking
pre-intermediate
Jane Revell ∙ Mary Tomalin
Student’s Book
Amanda Maris
Student’s Book
Student’s Book
JETSTREAM is the brand new Helbling Languages
6-level course for adult learners. Its carefully
balanced pace and challenge offer a learning
experience that is fun and motivating and which
prepares students to use their English effectively
in work and life.
Terry Prosser
Comprehensive introduction and overview
Extension activities
Culture notes
• Thinking & Memory
Ideas for mixed ability classes
Encourages thinking and memory training
• Cross culture
Photocopiable games and tasks
Maximise your social and cultural awareness
• Stories
Lively stories for extra reading practice
Technique Banks
• Videos
on
• Cloud Book
• Pronunciation
• Cyber Homework
• Exam practice
• Everyday English videos • Testbuilder
• Mp3 audios
• CLIL Projects
w w w.helbling-ezone.com
Everyday English brought to life
• JETSTREAM Workbook
Revision and practice, progress checks
and writing skills development
• PLUS - fully integrated digital components
Lots of options for flexible blended learning
Teacher’s Guide
www.helblinglanguages.com
With Audio CDs
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