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Thursday, 17 September 2015

Listening Practice 2

Here are the KEY answers to Listening Practice 2.

How are you doing?
Please, share your opinons in the comments box below.










LISTENING PRACTICE 2 – KEY ANSWERS

1.     B
2.     A
3.     C
4.     B
5.     C
6.     B
7.     A
8.     C
9.     A CHARITY
10.  FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN
11.  NOISY
12.  DAMAGE
13.  BUILD ACCOMMODATION
14.  HIGHER RENTS
15.  POOR CONDITIONS
16.  GENEROUS
17.  TEMPORARY STAYS
18.  FOOD / SOMETHING WARM AND FILLING
19.  D
20.  A
21.  E
22.  C
23.  B
24.  E
25.  H
26.  W
27.  E
28.  W
29.  E

30.  H

Thursday, 10 September 2015

Working with videos

The art of the trailer

In class we discussed the aims and main features of a particular video genre: the trailer.
Among the aims, we agree that trailers may be used:
  • To provide a summary of the film’s content
  • To show the audience what makes the film unique
  • To reveal just enough of a film to make an audience want to go and see it
  • To show the best moments or highlights of a film
  • To raise interest and ask provocative questions about the film

These are the features we analysed.
What’s in a trailer?
  1. The name of the film is included at the end.
  2. There are close-ups of the main actors.
  3. Dramatic music is included.
  4. There are a large number of fast cuts.
  5. Key words, a slogan, a catchphrase or captions situate you in the place and time in the movie
  6. Key dramatic moments from the film are included.
  7. There is a dramatic change of pace or direction.
  8. There are short extracts of dialogues and other soundbites.
  9. Characters, setting and plot are all established to an extent.
  10. There is an unresolved conflict, argument or problem.
  11. A narrator describes or summarizes the film in an exaggerated tone.
  12. Written quotes ‘sell’ the movie with superlatives and other exclamations.

Language Learning with Digital Video (CUP).


Now, watch the video America’s complete Immigration History’.

  1. Write a statement to indicate the purpose of the video.
  2. Analyse the most important features of the documentary. 
  3. Prepare a list of items for a class discussion.




Tuesday, 8 September 2015

Self-study: Listening practice

Hello everyone!

Click on this link to have access to the audio material for you to do listening practice. I will be posting the answers to the test once a week.

Enjoy!












KEY ANSWERS
LISTENING TEST 1
1.     B
2.     A
3.     C
4.     B
5.     C
6.     C
7.     A
8.     C
9.     RUNNING WATER / ELECTRICITY
10.  OLYMPIC FAME
11.  RIDING ACCIDENT
12.  BUSINESSMAN
13.  RACING DRIVER
14.  FINANCIAL DISASTER
15.  PAYING BILLS
16.  A BAR (FIGHT)
17.  HIS RELATIVES
18.  HER HUSBAND
19.  D
20.  A
21.  F
22.  B
23.  E
24.  D
25.  M
26.  S
27.  D
28.  M
29.  D

30.  M

Tuesday, 21 July 2015

TESTS 1-2 FINAL MARKS

Hello!

How are you spending your winter holidays?

I simply love them!

I'm sharing a link to the document in which you will be able to check the marks you've got in Tests 1 and 2, during the April - June term.

Click here to see your marks.

I will see you soon.







Thursday, 2 July 2015

The arts

Hello!

These are the paintings we used in class. Look at the paintings again and comments on the features which you find most important.
  • What do you like most about the painting?
  • If there anything you don't particularly like about it?
  • Would you buy either of them?
  • If so, where in your house would you hang it?

The Card Players


Paul Cézanne
















Bathers at Asnières 
Georges Pierre Seurat 
















What do you think of this painting? 



What type of painting is it?
If you had the money, would you buy it?
It is called Women of Algiers
, by Pablo Picasso.
Find information about it on the web to know more about it.









Read the following news story. Would you have paid that amount of money for it?



Wednesday, 24 June 2015

Illustrating the difference

Hello!
Today I came across this picture on my Twitter account. 
Which of these two situations best describes you today?


https://twitter.com/bbcle/status/613645834262069248/photo/1


Tuesday, 9 June 2015

Listen up!

Hello!

As you may well know, listening is one of the four macro skills we need to develop as we are learning a new language. For some people, this may prove to be a daunting experience, but is this really so?


Read the extract from a book below and give your opinions on this matter.

Reasons for listening
Most students want to be able to understand what people are saying to them in English, either face-to-face, on TV or on the radio, in theatres and cinemas, or on tape, CDs or other recorded media. Anything we can do to make that easier will be useful for them. This is especially important since, as we said on page 78, the way people speak is often significantly different from the way they write.
Listening is good for our students’ pronunciation, too, in that the more they hear and understand English being spoken, the more they absorb appropriate pitch and intonation, stress and the sounds of both individual words and those which blend together in connected speech. Listening texts are good pronunciation models, in other words, and the more students listen, the better they get, not only at understanding speech, but also at speaking themselves. Indeed, it is worth remembering that successful spoken communication depends not just on our ability to speak, but also on the effectiveness of the way we listen.
One of the main sources of listening for students is the voice of their teacher (see page 37 for a discussion of the way teachers should talk to students). However, it is important, where possible, for students to be exposed to more than just that one voice, with all its idiosyncrasies. There is nothing wrong with an individual teacher’s voice, of course, but as we saw on page 79, there are significant regional variations in the way people speak English in a country like Britain. For example, the ‘a’ of ‘bath’ is pronounced like the vowel sound in ‘park’ in some parts of Britain, but like the ‘a’ in ‘cat’ in others. In grammar, certain varieties of English within the British Isles use ‘done’ in sentences like ‘I done it yesterday’ where other varieties would find such tense usage unacceptable. In vocabulary, ‘happen’ is a verb in standard southern English, but in parts of Yorkshire (in northern England) it is often used as an adverb to mean ‘maybe’ or ‘perhaps’ in sentences such as ‘Happen it’ll rain’. And if there are many regional varieties in just one country, it is obvious that the different Englishes around the world will be many and varied. Students need to be exposed to different Englishes, but teachers need to exercise judgment about the number (and degree) of the varieties which they hear. A lot will depend on the students’ level of competence, and on what variety or varieties they have so far been exposed to.  (Harmer: 133)


From: Harmer, J. How to Teach English (2007). Pearson Education Limited.


  1. How do you feel about listening?
  2. What type of listening activities are you usually involved with in your everyday life?
  3. Do you ever listen to English outside your class?
  4. What do you do to cope with the difficulties that listening presents to you?