1.3 New Total English - Elementary (Photocopiables)
1.3 New Total English - Elementary (Photocopiables)
1.3 New Total English - Elementary (Photocopiables)
Unit 1
Vocabulary families The Smith family tree
Grammar 1 to be: positive Remember where!
Grammar 2 possessive ’s; possessive adjectives; to be: questions Two families
Grammar 3 a/an; to be: negative Holiday photos
Communication start and finish a basic conversation Let’s party!
Unit 2
Vocabulary verbs Whose sentence?
Grammar 1 Present Simple: I/you/we I think that you …
Grammar 2 Present Simple: he/she/it/they An office job
Grammar 3 noun plurals Guess the plurals
Communication talk about what you do on holiday Holiday habits
Unit 3
Vocabulary numbers Write the right number
Grammar 1 adverbs of frequency What about you?
Grammar 2 can/can’t Can you do it?
Grammar 3 using the phone Give me a call
Communication talk about other people’s abilities The careers office
Unit 4
Pronunciation /ӕ/ and /ʌ/ What’s the word?
Grammar 1 countable and uncountable nouns; much, many, a lot of My question, your answer
Grammar 2 a/an, some and any A healthy lifestyle?
Grammar 3 object pronouns First to the finish line
Communication ask people for things and give people things Food exchange
Unit 5
Vocabulary homes; furniture and equipment Find the differences
Grammar 1 there is/there are Eyes closed quiz
Grammar 2 have got Family mix-up
Grammar 3 modifiers (very, quite, really) Talk about …
Communication talk about things you need to furnish a home My dream room
Unit 6
Pronunciation contrastive stress You’ve got it all wrong!
Grammar 1 Past Simple of to be: all forms; Past Simple of regular verbs: Which city in the world?
positive
Grammar 2 Past Simple: irregular verbs My holiday
Grammar 3 Past Simple: questions and negatives A city adventure
Communication understand a store guide and ask for what you want Where in the store … ?
Unit 7
Vocabulary ordinal numbers and months Around the world
Grammar 1 articles A happy ending
Grammar 2 pronoun one/ones That’s the one!
Grammar 3 possessive pronouns It’s mine!
Communication identify a person from a simple description The usual suspects
Unit 8
Vocabulary clothes Match them up
Grammar 1 Present Continuous Painting a picture
Grammar 2 position of adjectives At the back of the wardrobe
Grammar 3 Present Simple and Present Continuous A day in the park
Communication describe problems and ask for solutions Where are they?
Unit 9
Vocabulary the arts and films Arts crossword
Grammar 1 comparison of adjectives Comparative bingo
Grammar 2 superlative adjectives Ask the class
Grammar 3 like/love/hate/prefer The perfect partner
Communication make and respond to suggestions A weekend away
Unit 10
Pronunciation /ɪ/ A-maze-ing vowels
Grammar 1 -ing form as noun In my opinion …
Grammar 2 Present Perfect with been: I/you/we/they Have you been … ?
Grammar 3 Present Perfect: he/she/it Guess who!
Communication give and follow simple directions Can you tell me the way … ?
Unit 11
Vocabulary schools and subjects; education Lesson logic
Grammar 1 can/can’t, have to/don’t have to Rules, rules, rules
Grammar 2 review of wh- questions Say the question
Grammar 3 the imperative Instruction mix up
Communication check instructions and information A school trip
Unit 12
Pronunciation rhymes Rhyming pairs
Grammar 1 be going to My future
Grammar 2 infinitive of purpose; revision of be going to This weekend
Grammar 3 like and would like Which is which?
Communication ask about and discuss plans A trip of a lifetime
Let’s party!
$
You’re a famous person. Who are you? You’re a famous person. Who are you?
Name: Name:
Age: Age:
Nationality: Nationality:
Job: Job:
You’re a famous person. Who are you? You’re a famous person. Who are you?
Name: Name:
Age: Age:
Nationality: Nationality:
Job: Job:
You’re a famous person. Who are you? You’re a famous person. Who are you?
Name: Name:
Age: Age:
Nationality: Nationality:
Job: Job:
1 … an actor?
2 … a sports person?
3 … a singer?
5 … a single person?
6 … a married person?
Let’s party!
Target language: start and finish a basic conversation
Activity type: class mingle
When to use: Use this activity after Unit 1 Communication.
Time: 15 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one role card and one table for each student.
Procedure
Tell students to work alone and to imagine they are famous people. Give each student
a role card and ask them to complete it with the relevant information. Tell students not
to show their role cards to each other. Demonstrate on the board by using yourself and
choosing a famous person to become.
Elicit the questions students need to ask each other to find out each piece of information,
i.e. What’s your name? How old are you? Where are you from? What’s your job? Are you
married?
Give each student a table. Then tell students to work as a whole group and try to meet
someone for each of the eight categories. Create a party atmosphere if possible, playing
music to make it lively. Students move around the room talking to each other, starting a
conversation and asking each other questions until they have found a person who matches
each of the categories in the table, or until they have spoken to everyone.
If you have a classroom with limited space or a small class, students could work with just
two or three partners in small groups.
As follow-up, ask two or three students to tell the class about someone they met.
Remember where!
Place cards
$
$
Worksheet A
3 ___________________________________________________ . _____________________________________________________ .
4 ___________________________________________________ . _____________________________________________________ .
5 ___________________________________________________ . _____________________________________________________ .
6 ___________________________________________________ . _____________________________________________________ .
7 ___________________________________________________ . _____________________________________________________ .
8 ___________________________________________________ . _____________________________________________________ .
9 ___________________________________________________ . _____________________________________________________ .
10 ___________________________________________________ . _____________________________________________________ .
Remember where!
Target language: to be: positive
Activity type: class mingle
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 1.1.
Time: 25 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one place card for each student and one copy of
worksheet A for each pair of students.
Procedure
Give each student a place card. Tell students not to show their place cards to each other.
If you have fewer than twelve students, make sure that you include the New York and
Shanghai cards, but others can be omitted.
Tell students to imagine that they are from this city/country. Ask students to mingle and
to tell each other where they are from, e.g. I’m from Manchester. I’m English/British. It is
important that they listen carefully to each other and remember where each student is from
during this activity, so they can complete the next stage.
When they have spoken to everyone, put students into pairs and give each pair a copy
of worksheet A. Elicit the missing words in the first two sentences and write them on the
board as a model. The first gap of each sentence should be completed with the relevant
name(s), e.g. Guilia is from New York. She’s American. Tomoko and Andreas are from
Shanghai. They’re Chinese.
Tell students to work in pairs to complete the rest of the sentences from memory. If you
have fewer than twelve students, not all the sentences will need to be completed.
Check the answers with the class. Each pair gains one point for every factually correct
sentence and one point for every grammatically correct sentence. The winner is the pair
with the most points.
Two families
Student A
1 Complete the text with a possessive adjective or ’s.
Petra is twenty years old and she’s a student. Petra (1) mother and father are from
Germany. (2) house is in Berlin. Petra’s brother lives in Munich. He’s twenty-six years old.
(3) wife is a teacher. They live with (4) daughter. (5) name’s Antonia
and she’s three years old. Petra’s sister lives with (6) cat. (7) cat’s name is Trixie.
She’s in Malaysia now because (8) boyfriend is Malaysian.
2 Make complete questions using the prompts in brackets and the verb to be. Ask your partner for
the missing information.
Elena is (1) (How old/Elena?) years old. She lives in Buenos Aires with her husband
(2) (What/her husband’s name?). They have a small apartment and two children. Their
children’s names are (3) and (What/their children’s names?). Their cat’s name is
Sofia. Elena’s daughter is at university. She studies English. Elena’s mother is Argentinian. Her father is
Mexican. They live in Santa Fe, but her father is in (4) (Where/Elena’s father?) now. Elena’s
brother is called (5) (What/her brother’s name?). He lives in the US. He’s married. His wife is
American. Their daughter is at school. She’s (6) (How old/Elena’s niece?) years old.
Student B
1 Complete the text with a possessive adjective or ’s.
Elena is forty-five years old. She lives in Buenos Aires with (1) husband Carlos. They
have a small apartment and two children. (2) children’s names are Maria and Carmen.
(3) cat’s name is Sofia. Elena (4) daughter is at university. She studies English.
Elena (5) mother is Argentinian. (6) father is Mexican. They live in Santa Fe, but
her father is in New York now. Elena’s brother is called Alfredo. He lives in the US. He’s married.
(7) wife is American. Their daughter is at school. She’s twelve years old.
2 Make complete questions using the prompts in brackets and the verb to be. Ask your partner for
the missing information.
Petra is (1) (How old/Petra?) years old and she’s a student. Petra’s mother and father are
from Germany. Their house is in (2) (Where/her mother and father’s house?). Petra’s brother
lives in Munich. He’s (3) (How old/Petra’s brother?) years old. His wife is a teacher. They live
with their daughter. Her name’s (4) (What/their daughter’s name?) and she’s three years old.
Petra’s sister lives with her cat. Her cat’s name is (5) (What/her cat’s name?). She’s in (6)
(Where/Petra’s sister?) now because her boyfriend is Malaysian.
Two families
Target language: possessive ’s; possessive adjectives; to be: questions
Activity type: gap-fill exercise/information gap text
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 1.2.
Time: 20 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy one worksheet for each pair of students.
Procedure
Divide the class into pairs. Give half the pairs a Student A worksheet and the other half a
Student B worksheet. Tell students to look at exercise 1 and to complete the gaps in the
text with either the appropriate possessive adjective or possessive ’s. Then tell students
to look at exercise 2 and ask them to prepare questions to ask a partner to find out the
missing information. Check the answers with both groups without giving away any other
information, i.e. just the adjectives/possessive ’s and questions.
Then rearrange the class so that a Student A works with a Student B. Student A starts by
asking Student B the questions he/she has prepared for exercise 2. Student B answers the
questions by using his/her text in exercise 1 and Student A completes the relevant gap in
his/her text. Student B then asks his/her questions for exercise 2 and Student A answers
them. This continues until students have completed all the gaps and their text is complete.
As a follow-up, ask students to say which family is similar to theirs. Ask them to describe
their family.
Answers
Student A questions: 1 How old is Elena? 2 What’s her husband’s name? 3 What are
their children’s names? 4 Where’s Elena’s father? 5 What’s her brother’s name?
6 How old is Elena’s niece?
Student B questions: 1 How old is Petra? 2 Where is her mother and father’s house?
3 How old is Petra’s brother? 4 What is their daughter’s name? 5 What’s her cat’s name?
6 Where is Petra’s sister?
Holiday photos
Student A
A
Dan Felipe
José
Tomoko ustralian,
A Brazilian? 26?
30, chef, Kate panish,
S shop assistant?
J apanese, 30, 24, actor
Kate’s
doctor Australian,
B D brother
A C 27, teacher B
Tatiane
Brazilian? 23? engineer?
C
Anya
German? 28?
shop assistant?
D
Nikolas
German? 35? dentist?
$
Student B
E
Tomoko
Felipe Tatiane Anya Nikolas Canadian? 28? doctor?
rgentinian,
A rgentinian, R
A ussian, Greek, 29,
26, architect 23, lawyer 22, shop dentist H
F
assistant G F
E
Dan
American? 30? lawyer?
Kate’s husband?
G
Kate
American? 27? lawyer?
H
José
Brazilian? 24? engineer?
Photocopiable © Pearson Education Limited 2011
1 Grammar 3
a/an; to be: negative
Holiday photos
Target language: a/an; to be: negative
Activity type: paired information gap
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 1.3.
Time: 20 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one worksheet for each pair of students.
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give each pair a Student A and Student B worksheet. Tell students
not to show their worksheets to each other.
Explain that each student has some correct information about the people in the picture
which is written on the picture. There is also some information that they are not sure about
(at the sides of the picture). Each student must check the handwritten information by
asking their partner questions, e.g. A: Is Nikolas German? B: No, he isn’t. He’s Greek.
Students ask and answer questions and correct their information where necessary. When
they have finished, elicit the corrected information from students in open class using
negative forms, e.g. Nikolas isn’t German, he’s Greek.
Answers
Student A: Nikolas’s Greek and 29; Anya’s Russian and 22; Felipe and Tatiane are
Argentinian, Felipe is an architect and Tatiane is a lawyer
Student B: Tomoko’s Japanese and 30; Dan and Kate are Australian, Dan’s a chef and
Kate’s a teacher, Dan is Kate’s brother; José’s Spanish and he’s an actor
_______ Terry
= = =
1 Look at the family tree and complete the sentences. 2 Ask and answer questions to complete the family tree.
1 mother
Carolyn is Abi’s and Terry’s . 1 Who is Susie?
Patricia _______
= = =
1 Look at the family tree and complete the sentences. 2 Ask and answer questions to complete the family tree.
1 sister
Susie is Peter’s and Patricia’s . 1 Who is Carolyn?
Procedure
Divide the class into pairs. Give half the pairs a Student A worksheet and the other
half a Student B worksheet. Tell students to complete the sentences in exercise 1 with
an appropriate word. When they have finished, check the answers with each group by
checking each missing word, but not the whole sentence.
Then rearrange the class so that a Student A works with a Student B. Tell students not to
show their worksheets to each other. Tell students to do exercise 2. Student A starts by
asking Who is Susie? His/her partner can use his/her completed sentence 1 in exercise 1 to
answer the question, i.e. Susie is Peter’s sister and Patricia’s daughter. Student A should
now be able to write Susie’s name in the correct place on his/her family tree.
Both students ask and answer the questions until they have completed their trees. Each
pair can then look at each other’s tree to check they wrote the names in the correct places.
Answers
Student A: 1 daughter-in-law 2 cousin, nephew 3 grandfather, father-in-law
4 son, uncle 5 son-in-law, father
Student B: 1 daughter 2 cousin, niece 3 brother, son 4 grandmother, mother-in-law
5 aunt, sister-in-law
Holiday habits
Find someone who … Question Name
1 … goes to the beach every day. Do you go to the beach every day?
4 … visits museums.
6 … takes a camera.
9 … sunbathes.
14 … goes to a nightclub.
Holiday habits
Target language: talk about what you do on holiday
Activity type: class mingle
When to use: Use this activity after Unit 2 Communication.
Time: 25 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy one worksheet for each student in the class.
Procedure
Put students into pairs and give each student a worksheet. Tell them to write the question
for each statement on the worksheet. All the questions are about holiday habits. Check
answers with the whole class.
Tell students to mingle to find people who answer yes for each of the questions on the
worksheet. Students find a partner and ask one of the questions (they do not need to ask
the questions in order). If their partners answer no, they can ask another question until
they receive a yes answer. When they receive a yes answer, they should write the person’s
name in the third column on the table and then move on to a new partner. By the end of the
activity, each student should have a different student’s name for each question, although
this will depend on the size of your class.
Then put students into pairs to discuss any surprising or interesting answers. Get feedback
from different members of the class.
In small classes, you may wish to allow students to get three yes answers before they move
on to a different partner. If you have a small classroom where students are unable to move
around, tell students to ask as many people around them as they can while sitting down.
12 … go to bed at _______________________ .
Photocopiable © Pearson Education Limited 2011
2 Grammar 1
Present Simple: I/you/we
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Pair each student with another student that they are not sitting
next to if possible and avoid pairing those who are already good friends. Give each student
a copy of the worksheet and ask them to complete the information about their partner by
guessing. They are not allowed to ask their partner at this stage.
When they have completed the worksheets, tell the pairs to sit or stand together. Each
student reads out his/her statements and his/her partner must say whether the statement
is true or false. If it is false, they should be encouraged to give the correct information.
When they have finished, ask them to discuss whether they have a lot in common with each
other or not and get feedback from the class.
As an alternative, if you feel that your students need more practice with question forms,
you could ask the students to complete the worksheets and then prepare the questions for
each statement. When they sit with their partners, ask the students to ask and answer the
questions in order to find out if their statements are true or false.
An office job
D O J
B F A
H M C
K N L
E I G
An office job
Target language: Present Simple: he/she/it/they
Activity type: picture story and listening
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 2.2.
Time: 30 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one set of cards for each pair of students.
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give each pair a set of cards in a pile, face down, on the table. Tell
students that they must put the pictures in order to create the woman’s daily routine. One
student picks up the first picture and describes it, e.g. She has lunch and places it face up
on the table. The other student picks up the next picture and describes it, e.g. She leaves
home and places it either before or after the first picture depending on whether the student
thinks the woman does it before or after the first picture. This continues until the students
have described the pictures and placed them in the order they think is correct.
Read the text below and tell students to listen and check if their order is the same.
Students’ answers may vary. Read the text a second time, with pauses after each sentence,
while students write down the times next to the relevant pictures.
She gets up at six o’clock, and at quarter past six she has breakfast. At ten past seven she
leaves home. She gets to the office at quarter past eight and she starts work at half past
eight. At ten o’clock, she has a coffee and reads a newspaper. At quarter past twelve, she
has lunch. After lunch, she meets her boss. At half past four, she finishes work and leaves
the office. She gets home at half past five, and at six o’clock she plays tennis with her
friends. At half past seven, she watches the news on television, and at eight o’clock she has
dinner. After dinner, at about nine o’clock, she meets her friends for a drink. She goes to
bed at about eleven o’clock.
Finally, tell students to tell their partner how the woman’s routine is different to their own,
e.g. She gets up at six o’clock, but I get up at seven o’clock. Get feedback from different
members of the class.
Answers
The pictures are in the following order: D, O, J, B, F, A, H, M, C, K, N, L, E, I, G
2
p a r t i e s
3
4
c a m e r a s
5 6
7 8
d i c t i o n a r i e s
9 10
11
n i e c e s
12 13
d i a r i e s
14 15
m e n a d d r e s s e s
16
w i v e s
17
k n i v e s
$
Student B
1
b
u
2
p s
3
w i e
4
o c s
m t
5 6
e u p f
7 8
c n r e a
9 10
h e o w c m
11
i s p a i i
l l t t l
12 13
d s e c i i
r c h e e
14 15
e a e s s
n r s
16
v
e
17
s
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give half the pairs a Student A worksheet, and the other half a
Student B worksheet. Tell students to check with their partners that they understand and
can explain all the words on their crosswords.
When they are ready, rearrange the class so that a Student A works with a Student B. Tell
students not to show their worksheets to each other.
Preteach how to ask What’s 4 across? or What’s 1 down? Students now help each other to
complete their crosswords by describing the words they have without saying the words.
Make sure students are clear that all the words are plural nouns.
The winner is the first pair to finish the crossword.
Whose sentence?
$
1 I listen to music.
3 I drive a car to .
4 I finish work at .
5 I go to every week.
12 I live in a/an in .
Whose sentence?
Target language: verbs
Activity type: guessing activity
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 2.2.
Time: 15 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one set of cards for each group of students.
Procedure
Put the students into groups of four. Give three cards to each student (or two if you have
larger groups). Ask students to complete the sentences about themselves, e.g. I listen
to R&B music. Tell students not to show their sentences to each other. When they have
finished, tell students to fold the sentence card up twice and place it in the middle of the
table. Tell students to shuffle the cards. Ask one student in each group to take a piece
of paper, open it and read out the sentence. He/she must try to guess who wrote the
sentence. If he/she is correct, he/she gets one point. If he/she picks up one of his/her own
sentences, he/she should fold it up again and replace it on the table, mixing it up with the
others, and then take a new one.
The winner is the student who guesses the most sentences correctly.
Do you want to be
We need a Shop assistant
trainee magazine
a chef? needed.
photographer.
urants.com Call 0624 92898
Go to www.rollysresta Call 0622 596381. 6.
$
Helen Jonny William Maggie
Abilities Abilities Abilities Abilities
speak French ✓ ride a motorbike ✓ use a camera ✓ sing and dance ✓
do maths ✓ play the guitar ✓ use a computer ✓ cook ✓
paint ✓ repair machines ✓ drive ✓ play the piano ✓
drive ✗ draw ✗ make things ✗ ride a bike ✗
use a computer ✗ design things ✗ play sports ✗ speak a foreign language ✗
Photocopiable © Pearson Education Limited 2011
3 Communication
talk about other people’s abilities
Procedure
Divide the class into groups of four. Give each group a copy of the job advertisements. Ask
students to discuss what abilities are needed for each job. Elicit one or two ideas from
students in open class.
Explain to the class that they work in a careers office and they help young people decide
what job to do. Today they are going to help four young people to find a job.
Give each student in each group a student information card. If you have a group with three
students, one of the students can have two information cards.
Ask students to tell the other members of their group about the young person on their
information card, e.g. Helen can speak French, but she can’t drive. Together they match a
job to each student.
Get feedback from each group. Encourage cross-group discussion if the groups disagree.
Procedure
Give each student in the class a card and tell them to add an adverb of frequency, so the
sentence is true for them. Do one as an example on the board that is true for you, e.g. I
never play games online. Monitor and correct where necessary.
Tell students to mingle in order to find out how many students in the class agree with
them, e.g. I never play games online, what about you? I occasionally play games online.
Encourage students to give more information, e.g. I don’t have a computer. Students
should make a note of their partner’s answers in the boxes on the card, so they can feed
back to the class.
In smaller classes, get feedback from each person in open class, e.g. Seven people always
play games online. Two people occasionally play games online. In larger classes, put the
students in groups of three or four and ask students to give feedback to each other about
what they learnt.
Answers
All of the adverbs should be placed between the subject and verb in the sentences.
write with your left hand use a fax machine iceskate repair a car
ride a bike play the piano speak three languages climb a mountain
TRUTH LIE
TRUTH LIE
Photocopiable © Pearson Education Limited 2011
3 Grammar 2
can/can’t
Procedure
Put students into groups of four. Try to put students into groups with people they don’t
normally work with. Give each group a set of activity cards in a pile, face down, on the
table. Give each member of each group a TRUTH or LIE card. Tell students not to show their
cards to each other.
Tell students that they’re going to ask each other questions using can. If they have a TRUTH
card, they must always answer truthfully. If they have a LIE card, they must always answer
with a lie. Demonstrate by asking students to ask you three different can questions and
afterwards invite students to tell you if you’re telling the truth or not.
Students take it in turns to pick up a card and ask the other students the questions, e.g.
Can you skateboard? When all the cards have been used, students should guess which
students in their group were telling the truth and which were telling a lie.
Get feedback from each group.
Give me a call
Dialogue 1
Student A Student B
You want to speak to your friend David. You are David’s cousin. Answer the phone.
Call him. David is not at home. Take a message.
$
Dialogue 2
Student B Student A
You’re a shop customer of Calvin’s Clothes. You work in a clothes shop called Calvin’s
Call the shop. Clothes. Answer the phone.
Give your phone number: 06994 231445. Ask the customer to repeat the phone number.
Give me a call
Target language: using the phone
Activity type: dialogue
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 3.3.
Time: 20 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one worksheet for each pair of students.
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give each pair a Dialogue 1 worksheet.
Tell students to roleplay the phone conversation using the flowchart to help them. Give
students time to prepare what they are going to say before they speak. When they have
finished Dialogue 1, give each pair a Dialogue 2 worksheet. Tell students that Student B
starts Dialogue 2. Give students time to roleplay the second situation.
When they have finished, ask one pair for each dialogue to volunteer to act out their
conversation in open class.
b
¿ 2:30 g 19 l 600
c 121 h
¿ 5:40 m 60
d
¿ 5:55 i 50,000,000 n 130
e 16,000 j
% 01866 877432 o
¿ 3:20
b g l
c h m
d i n
e j o
$
Student B
1 Read the numbers to your partner.
a
% 01855 875523 f 6000 k
% 01886 578234
b 113 g 15,000,000 l
¿ 12:15
c
¿ 2:20 h 50 m 140
d 17 i
¿ 8:05 n 70
e
¿ 4:55 j
¿ 8:45 o 5,000,000,000
b g l
c h m
d i n
e j o
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give each pair a Student A and Student B worksheet. Tell students
not to show their worksheets to each other.
Tell students to read the numbers to their partner, who writes down the numbers that they
hear. Sometimes these numbers are phone numbers and sometimes they are times (shown
by the symbols). Monitor the pairs to make sure they are not showing their worksheets to
each other.
When they have read, listened to and written down all the numbers, tell students to
compare the numbers they have written with the numbers that were read to them. The
winner is the first pair to finish with all the correct answers.
Food exchange
$
Photocopiable © Pearson Education Limited 2011
4 Communication
ask people for things and give
people things
Food exchange
Target language: ask people for things and give people things
Activity type: card game
When to use: Use this activity after Unit 4 Communication.
Time: 20 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one set of cards for each group of students.
Procedure
Put students into groups of three. Shuffle the cards and give three cards to each student in
the group. Tell students to put the rest of the cards in a pile face down on the table. Explain
that they must try to get as many families of food cards as possible. Write the categories on
the board (vegetables, fruit, meat, sweet food, dairy), and explain that there are three types
of food in each family. Explain that to complete their family they must ask for the items in
the smaller pictures on the cards.
Students take turns to ask any of the other students in the group for the food items that
they need to make a family, e.g. if Student A has the watermelon card then he/she can ask
for either the apple or banana card. Encourage students to use language for asking for
things and giving things, e.g. A: Can I help you? B: Yes, I’d like an apple, please. If Student
B has the apple card he/she must give it to Student A. If Student B does not have the card
Student A can pick up a card from the pile. It is then the next student’s turn.
Students continue asking and answering until there are no more cards or until you tell them
to stop. The winner is the student with the most families.
1 How _________ eggs do you have at home? a No, I don’t. Just one of each.
2 Do you have _________ CDs? b A lot. About ten I think, boys and girls.
3 How _________ water do you drink each day? c We have two, a Toyota and a Volvo.
4 How _________ mobile phones do you have? d One cup in the morning and one after dinner.
5 Do you have _________ televisions at home? e Not a lot. I go for a walk once a week.
6 How _________ money do you have in your f Two or three hours a day because I love
wallet? cooking.
7 How _________ people live in your house? g Two. We have one in April and one in August
or September.
8 Do you eat _________ fruit?
h I have it every day. My favourite is lamb.
Student B
1 Complete the questions with much, many 2 Listen to your partner’s questions and give
or a lot of. the correct answer (a–h).
1 How _________ cousins do you have? a Yes, I have a banana and an apple every
morning.
2 How _________ exercise do you do?
b Two. A Nokia for private use and an iPhone for
3 Do you spend _________ time in the kitchen? work.
4 How _________ cars does your family have? c Not much. I have about £10.
5 How _________ coffee do you drink each day? d Between one and two litres.
6 How _________ holidays do you take each e Yes, I do. More than 200.
year?
f Not many. Three including me.
7 Do you have _________ brothers and sisters?
g I think there’s only one in the fridge.
8 How _________ meat do you eat each week?
h No, I don’t, just one in the living room.
Procedure
Divide the class into pairs. Give half the pairs a Student A worksheet, and the other half
a Student B worksheet. Tell students to complete the gaps in the questions using much,
many or a lot of. Check the answers with each group without reading out the whole
question.
Then rearrange the class so that a Student A works with a Student B. Tell them not to look
at each other’s worksheets. Explain that Student A has eight questions, and Student B has
the answers to those questions. Student B has eight different questions, and Student A has
the answers to those questions.
Student A begins by reading question 1 (How many eggs do you have at home? ). Student B
looks for the answer on his/her paper. When he/she finds it, he/she reads out the answer
and they decide together if it is the correct answer. Student A writes the letter of the answer
(in this case g) next to the question. Student B then asks his/her first question and Student
A finds the matching answer. The winner is the first pair to match all the questions and
answers correctly. Check the answers with the whole class.
Finally, tell Student A to ask Student B the questions on his/her worksheet. Student B
must answer about him/herself. They then swap and Student B asks his/her questions to
Student A. Student A answers about him/herself. When they have finished, ask one or two
students to feed back any interesting information about their partner to the class.
Answers
Student A: 1g, many; 2e, many/a lot of; 3d, much; 4b, many; 5h, many/a lot of; 6c,
much; 7f, many; 8a, much/a lot of
Student B: 1b, many; 2e, much; 3f, much/a lot of; 4c, many; 5d, much; 6g, many;
7a, many/a lot of; 8h, much
A healthy lifestyle?
Student A
Choose the correct words in italics.
Chris gets up at 5 a.m. every morning. He does (1) an/some exercise at the gym. When he
gets home, he has (2) a/some fruit for breakfast. He drinks (3) a/some cup of coffee and
(4) a/any carton of orange juice, then cycles to work. Chris arrives at the office at 8 a.m.
He starts his work with (5) a/some tea and (6) an/any apple. He sometimes doesn’t eat
(7) some/any food for lunch because he’s very busy. In the afternoon, Chris often sleeps for
twenty minutes and then has (8) a/some can of cola to wake up. He makes (9) a/some phone
calls, around thirty. He writes (10) some/any emails, more than forty.
$
Student B
Choose the correct words in italics.
In the evening, after work, Chris goes to the supermarket and buys (1) a/any pizza and
(2) some/any salad for dinner. When he’s very tired, he buys (3) a/some burger from a fast
food restaurant. In the evenings, he doesn’t do (4) some/any exercise because he’s very
tired, but he takes his dog, Choo Choo, for a walk and then watches TV or a DVD. He often
eats (5) a/some packet of crisps and (6) any/some chocolate. He doesn’t drink (7) some/any
coffee, but he drinks (8) a/some hot milk. At the weekends, he plays (9) some/any sport –
tennis, football and golf, with (10) a/some friends. He also sleeps a lot!
$
Worksheet C Worksheet D
Student A Student B
• not/have/lunch • eat/chocolate
A healthy lifestyle?
Target language: a/an, some and any
Activity type: choose the correct alternative and discussion
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 4.2.
Time: 25 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one worksheet for each pair of students.
Procedure
Divide the class into pairs. Give half the pairs a Student A worksheet and the other half a
Student B worksheet. Tell students to choose the correct words in italics. When they have
finished, check the answers with each group.
Give each Student A a copy of worksheet C and each Student B a copy of worksheet D. Tell
students that they are going to use the sentence prompts on their worksheets to share
their information with each other about Chris’s day. Give students two or three minutes to
look at the sentence prompts and think about what they’re going to say.
When they are ready, rearrange the class so that a Student A works with a Student B. Ask
them to turn over their texts, focusing just on worksheets C and D. Students take it in turns
to tell each other about Chris’s lifestyle. When they have finished, they should discuss
whether Chris has a healthy lifestyle or not.
Get feedback from the class.
Answers
Student A: 1 some 2 some 3 a 4 a 5 some 6 an 7 any 8 a 9 some 10 some
Student B: 1 a 2 some 3 a 4 any 5 a 6 some 7 any 8 some 9 some 10 some
Whether Chris’s lifestyle is healthy or not is open to discussion. It is, in some ways,
healthy and, in other ways, not.
she.
9 8 7 6 5
I can’t Can you
He always wear this hat, I don’t buy see that man?
Please call me
buys me a it’s too big for I. pasta because I know he.
when you get
birthday cake. I don’t like
home.
I like it. them.
10 11 12 13 14
It’s wet
outside.
I don’t eat Our teacher Do you want We want to
Could you
tomatoes. I gives we a lot to meet I thank you for
bring an
don’t like it. of homework. tonight? helping us.
umbrella with
you?
19 Those 18 17 16 I don’t 15
policemen The teacher like the
I’m sorry, I
want to speak speaks fast. way they’re I like him, but
don’t have the
to you. It’s difficult to looking at we. him doesn’t
time to talk to
understand like me.
they.
she.
20 21 22 23
I watch I don’t want to
My sister is
football with It’s easy for talk to she.
here. Would
my brother. me to speak
He loves them English.
you like to FINISH
meet her?
a lot.
Procedure
Put students into groups of three. Give each group a copy of the playing board and a dice.
Tell students that some sentences on the board are correct and some have one mistake in
them. The aim of the activity is for students to place their counters at the start, take it in
turns to roll their dice, move along the board and correct the mistake in each sentence on
the board if necessary. The other students can referee, but if they are unsure or disagree,
you must act as referee. If they give an incorrect answer you should not give them the
correct answer, but simply tell them that they are wrong.
If a student makes an error, he/she moves back to his/her previous square and waits for
his/her next turn.
If a student lands on a sentence that has already been corrected, he/she rolls his/her dice
again. The winner is the first student to reach the finish.
Answers
1 It’s their money, give it to them. 2 She wants to talk to me, but I don’t want to talk
to her. 3 This homework isn’t difficult, I find it easy. 4 3 5 Can you see that man?
I know him. 6 I don’t buy pasta because I don’t like it. 7 3 8 I can’t wear this hat,
it’s too big for me. 9 3 10 I don’t eat tomatoes. I don’t like them. 11 3 12 Our teacher
gives us a lot of homework. 13 Do you want to meet me tonight? 14 3 15 I like him, but
he doesn’t like me. 16 I don’t like the way they’re looking at us. 17 I’m sorry, I don’t have
the time to talk to them. 18 The teacher speaks fast. It’s difficult to understand her.
19 3 20 I watch football with my brother. He loves it a lot. 21 3 22 I don’t want to
talk to her. 23 3
Procedure
Put students into groups of three or four. Give each group a set of cards in a pile, face
down. Make sure they are shuffled thoroughly.
Groups compete against each other. When you tell students to start, one student in each
group takes a card and, without showing it to the other students in the group, describes the
word on the card. They must not say the word on the card while they are doing this. When
one of the other students has guessed the word, he/she takes the next card and describes
this word to the group. When the group has finished guessing all the words, they must then
divide them into two groups, those words with the // sound and those words with the //
sound. If a word has more than one vowel sound, it is the sound which is underlined that
the students should consider. The winner is the group which guesses all the words correctly
and puts them into the correct group first.
As an alternative, you could ask the students to draw the items rather than describe them.
While this does not produce as much language, it can be motivating for some students.
Answers
// salad, apple, bag, cash, laptop, sandwich, bank, travel, actor, carrot
// uncle, cup, sunbathe, fun, run, cousin, butter, lunch, bus, husband
My dream room
dining table and chairs
cupboard coffee table
sofa armchair
my dream room
My dream room
Target language: talk about things you need to furnish a home
Activity type: discussion
When to use: Use this activity after Unit 5 Communication.
Time: 20 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy one worksheet for each student.
Procedure
Give each student a copy of the worksheet and ask them to imagine their dream room –
a room where they can relax, have fun and enjoy their time.
Ask students to tick each of the items on the spidergram that they would like in their
dream room and to put a cross next to those they do not want. Encourage them to think of
anything else that they would like to include.
Then tell students to draw a bird’s eye view of their dream room in the box at the bottom of
the worksheet. The drawings do not need to be artistic and can include simple shapes to
represent items. Students do not need to label their drawings as they are going to describe
them. Draw an example of your dream room on the board to demonstrate.
Put students into groups of three or four. Students take it in turns to show their pictures to
the other group members and describe their dream room. Encourage the other students to
listen and ask questions.
Get feedback from some groups about the similarities and differences between their rooms.
In our classroom …
$
Student B
In our classroom …
4 double-glazing? 10 a telephone?
Photocopiable © Pearson Education Limited 2011
5 Grammar 1
there is/there are
Procedure
Divide the class into pairs. Give half the pairs a Student A worksheet and the other half
a Student B worksheet. Tell students to write questions using the prompts on their
worksheet, e.g. How many/windows? = How many windows are there in our classroom?
Then rearrange the class so that a Student A works with a Student B. Tell students not to
show their worksheets to each other. Tell Student B to close his/her eyes and tell Student
A to ask him/her the questions on his/her worksheet. Student B must answer without
looking around the room.
Then tell Student A to closes his/her eyes while Student B asks his/her questions. Student
A must answer without looking around the room. The winner is the student who gets the
most answers correct.
As a follow-up, you could discuss with the students what they would like to have in their
classroom.
Family mix-up
Family mix-up
$
Mrs Adamson/a mobile
Mr Smith/not/a boat
phone and a video camera
Family mix-up
Target language: have got
Activity type: puzzle
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 5.2.
Time: 20 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy one family pictures worksheet for each group of students and
photocopy and cut up one set of clues for each group.
Procedure
Put students into groups of three. Give each group a copy of the family pictures and tell
students that they must decide which family is the Smith family, the Grant family, the
Adamson family and the Potter family. Give each group a set of clues face down on the
table.
Explain to students how to make clues from the prompts. Write one prompt on the board,
e.g. Mr Smith/not/a boat and elicit the correct sentence, Mr Smith hasn’t got a boat.
In turn, the students in each group pick up a clue card and read out the clue from the
prompt. All the students in the group note down the clue and try to work out which family is
which. When a student thinks that he/she knows the answer, he/she can whisper it to you
for confirmation. If he/she is correct then he/she wins the game. If he/she is incorrect, the
game continues.
Answers
A The Adamson family B The Grant family C The Potter family D The Smith family
Talk about …
a place in your
a really busy
country which is
beach you know
quite high
a month in your
a very dry place
country which is
in the world
quite cold
a really famous
MOVE FORWARD
person in your
ONE SPACE
country
a city or town
Talk about …
Target language: modifiers (very, quite, really)
Activity type: board game
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 5.3.
Time: 20 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy one worksheet for each group of students.
Procedure
Put students into groups of three or four. Give each group a board game, counters and a
coin. If you do not have counters, students can use objects from their pencil cases.
Tell students to take it in turns to flip the coin. Heads = move two squares forward. Tails =
move three squares forward. When a student lands on a Talk about square, he/she must
talk about the place for twenty seconds, but allow ten seconds thinking time first. The other
students can time him/her. If the student is unable to speak for twenty seconds, he/she
must return to the previous square on the board. Encourage the students to ask questions
to get more information after the twenty seconds, if possible.
The winner is the first student who gets around the board and back to the start.
To finish, ask students to feed back any interesting information to the class.
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give each pair a Student A and Student B worksheet. Tell students
not to show their worksheets to each other.
Explain that their pictures are very similar, but that there are a lot of small differences
between them. Tell Student A to ask Student B questions to try to find twelve differences,
e.g. Is there a … ? or Are there any … ? When he/she finds a difference, he/she puts a circle
around it.
Allow them about ten minutes to find the differences. Check the answers with the class,
encouraging students to use the target language, e.g. In my picture there’s a swimming
pool, but in his picture there isn’t.
To give students additional writing practice, you could ask students to write sentences that
describe the differences before eliciting them from the whole class. While students are
writing, monitor and correct where necessary.
Answers
Student A’s picture: Living room: cat not dog, woman not man, a clock and music
system, no bookcase, tea not magazines on the coffee table Kitchen: man not woman,
TV not CD player, no clock on the wall, a microwave next to the cooker Dining room:
food on the table, six chairs not four, fruit not flowers Child’s bedroom: boy not girl,
clothes on the bed, toys on the floor, slippers on the floor, no CD player next to the
computer, no desk lamp Bedroom 2: alarm clock on the bedside table not a phone,
armchair in the corner of the room, two pictures on the wall not three, no mirror on the
wall above the chest of drawers Bathroom: water in the sink, bath instead of shower, a
cupboard next to the sink Outside, a swimming pool, no tree, no bicycle at the front of
the house
Second floor
First floor women’s clothes women’s shoes
Basement
$
Student B
Third floor i
Second floor bookshop
First floor stationery
$
Student C
beauty products bed linen bookshop hats electronic goods flowers furniture department
pharmacy men’s clothes music department computer department stationery
women’s clothes women’s shoes
Procedure
Put students into groups of three. Give each group the card with the list of departments.
Give them a few moments to look at these and to check that they all know what these
different departments sell.
Give each group a Student A, Student B and Student C store guide. Tell students not to
show their worksheets to each other. Ask them what they think the symbols on their plan
mean: i = information counter = restaurant = public phone = car park
= toilets.
Tell students that they all have the guide of the same department store, but some of the
names of departments are missing. They must work together to ask and tell one another
where the different departments are. The departments they need to find are on their list
of departments, e.g. Where can I find the bookshop? It’s on the second floor next to the
restaurant. Where can I find bed linen? It’s in the basement next to the public phones. While
they are doing this, they cannot look at the other students’ worksheets. When they know
where a department is, they write the name on their guide.
When they have finished, they compare their guides. They should all be the same.
2 Two thousand years ago, about one million people (live) in Rome, Italy.
(true)
4 Fifty countries (start) the United Nations in 1945 in San Francisco, US.
(true)
$
Student B
1 Dr John Pemberton first (produce) Coca-Cola in Georgia, US.
(true)
$
Student C
1 Albert Einstein (study) at university in Zurich, Switzerland.
(true)
2 Thirty-eight million people (watch) Barack Obama become President of the US in New York.
(false – Washington DC)
Procedure
Divide the class into three groups. Give one group a Student A worksheet, one group a
Student B worksheet and the final group a Student C worksheet. Tell students to work
together to complete the statements using the correct Past Simple form of the verb
in brackets. Check answers with the class, but only check the verb and not the whole
sentence.
Then rearrange the class so that a Student A works with a Student B and a Student C.
Student A reads out his/her first statement. Student B and Student C discuss whether they
think it is true or false, but they do not have to agree. Student A has the correct answer in
brackets under each statement.
Then Student B reads out his/her first statement. Student A and C discuss whether they
think it is true or false and Student B gives them the correct answer. Student C then reads
out his/her statement and Student A and B decide whether it is true or false.
This continues until all the statements have been read out and discussed. The winner is the
person with the most correct answers in each group.
Answers
Student A: 1 studied 2 lived 3 played 4 started 5 were
Student B: 1 produced 2 lived 3 planned 4 married 5 was
Student C: 1 studied 2 watched 3 stopped 4 lived 5 were
My holiday
$
A great/boring holiday A great/boring holiday
1 I (go) to . 1 I (go) to .
3 I (take) . 3 I (take) .
4 I (spend) . 4 I (spend) .
5 I (buy) . 5 I (buy) .
6 I (meet) . 6 I (meet) .
7 I (see) . 7 I (see) .
8 I (eat) . 8 I (eat) .
9 I (have) . 9 I (have) .
1 I (go) to . 1 I (go) to .
3 I (take) . 3 I (take) .
4 I (spend) . 4 I (spend) .
5 I (buy) . 5 I (buy) .
6 I (meet) . 6 I (meet) .
7 I (see) . 7 I (see) .
8 I (eat) . 8 I (eat) .
9 I (have) . 9 I (have) .
My holiday
Target language: Past Simple: irregular verbs
Activity type: class mingle
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 6.2.
Time: 25 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one card for each student.
Procedure
Give each student a card. Tell students to complete the card about a great holiday or a
boring holiday they had in the past, but they should not tell anyone which it is at this
stage. If necessary, write the first two sentences on the board and elicit the correct verb
forms. Then complete them about your own holiday to demonstrate. While students are
completing the sentences, monitor and help where necessary.
When they have finished completing their sentences, check the correct verb forms with the
class as a whole.
Then put students into pairs and ask them to tell each other about their holidays. Each
student should listen to his/her partner very carefully and remember as much of the
information as possible. They can take notes if they like, but don’t encourage them to write
complete sentences, just key words. At the end, the partner should guess if the holiday was
great or boring.
When they have finished swapping stories, tell each student to find a new partner. He/she
should then tell his/her new partner about his/her old partner’s holiday. His/her partner
should also tell him/her about his/her previous partner. Both students should take notes,
so they can remember information about the holiday. At the end, the partners should guess
if the holiday they just heard about was great or boring.
Students then find another new partner and tell these new partners about their previous
partners.
Ask students to return to their seats and ask them to tell the class who had a really great
and a really boring holiday.
Answers
1 went 2 flew/drove/took the train 3 took 4 spent 5 bought 6 met 7 saw 8 ate 9 had
A city adventure
Student A
You’re a travel magazine reporter. You want to interview someone who visited ten European cities in three months using
one of the types of transport in the pictures. Prepare your questions using the prompts and your own ideas.
Think about:
on a skateboard
$
Student B
You travelled to ten European cities in three months using one of the types of transport in the pictures. A travel
magazine reporter wants to interview you. Prepare your answers for the interview.
Think about:
A city adventure
Target language: Past Simple: questions and negatives
Activity type: roleplay
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 6.3.
Time: 25 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one worksheet for each pair of students.
Procedure
Put students into pairs and tell them to brainstorm as many European cities as they can in
one minute. Get feedback.
Give half the pairs a Student A worksheet and ask students to prepare their interview
questions from the prompts. Give the other half of the pairs a Student B worksheet and ask
students to prepare their answers to the questions. Ask the travellers not to reveal their
mode of transport until the roleplay. Make sure all students understand their roles. Monitor
and correct where necessary.
Then rearrange the class so that a Student A works with a Student B. Tell them to roleplay
the interview. When they have finished, ask two or three reporters to tell the class the most
interesting things they heard during the interview.
As a follow-up, students could work in pairs and write a newspaper article.
Past
born/in Brazil? Was Sachiko born in Brazil?
2 study/English at university?
$
Student B
Past
born/in France? Was Marek born in France?
1 live/in a city?
2 study/French at university?
Sachiko was born in Japan in 1986. She lived in an 3 travel/to the US?
apartment in the city of Osaka and went to school just
ten minutes away. She studied art at university and 4 take/French lessons?
finished in 2008. She wanted to study English, so she
5 marry/Polish woman?
travelled to England. She studied English at a language
school. She became friends with a man in her class Now
and they married last year. He’s Polish. They live in a
have/son? Does he have a son?
big city, in a small house with two bedrooms, and they
have a daughter called Lizzie. Now Sachiko works at 6 work/in a hotel?
home. She’s a full-time mum and a painter. She likes art
galleries. 7 like/tennis?
Photocopiable © Pearson Education Limited 2011
6 Pronunciation
contrastive stress
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give each pair a Student A and Student B worksheet. Tell students
not to show their worksheets to each other.
Tell students to prepare questions alone to ask their partners about either Sachiko
(Student A) or Marek (Student B). They then read the information that they have about
either Marek (Student A) or Sachiko (Student A). Tell students that they must find out if
Marek and Sachiko know each other.
Student A starts by asking his/her questions, e.g. Was Sachiko born in Brazil? Student B
has to correct the information using appropriate contrastive stress, e.g. No, she was born
in Japan. Student B asks his/her first question, e.g. Was Marek born in France? Student A
replies, e.g. No, he was born in Poland. This continues until all of the questions have been
asked and answered. Get feedback and ask if the students know each other.
Answers
Student A: 1 Did she live in the countryside? 2 Did she study English at university?
3 Did she travel to Australia? 4 Did she take German lessons? 5 Did she marry an
English man? 6 Does she work in an office? 7 Does she like football?
Student B: 1 Did he live in a city? 2 Did he study French at university? 3 Did he travel to
the US? 4 Did he take French lessons? 5 Did he marry a Polish woman? 6 Does he work
in a hotel? 7 Does he like tennis?
Marek and Sachiko know each other – they’re married!
Mr White ________ Mr Blue ________ Mr Orange ________ Mr Grey ________ Mr Purple ________
$
Student B
________ Mr Green ________ Mr Brown ________ Mr Red ________ Mr Pink ________ Mr Yellow
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give each pair a Student A and Student B worksheet. Tell students
not to show their worksheets to each other.
Explain that students have pictures of the same men, but in a different order. Each student
has names for half of the men. Tell students that they should match the names in the box to
the five unlabelled men by asking their partners to describe them. Tell students to ask and
answer questions to find out which person is which, e.g. A: What does Mr Orange look like?
B: He’s slim …
The winner is the first pair to match all the names to the people.
A happy ending
D H C
July
I F E
G A B
October
A happy ending
Target language: articles
Activity type: paired picture story
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 7.1.
Time: 30 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one set of cards for each pair of students.
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give each pair a set of cards. Tell students to decide on the order of
pictures and to create a story. When they have finished, put students into new pairs. Each
student tells their story while the other listens.
Get feedback and ask one or two pairs how their stories were similar or different. Finally,
read out the suggested story below to students, so that they can compare this version to
their own.
Suggested answers
D, H, C, I, F, E, G, A, B
It was July. A tall man with a beard and a slim woman with dark hair met at a restaurant
in New York. They talked all night. At the end of the evening, the woman gave the man
a business card. He put the card in his wallet. The man said goodbye to the woman and
left the party. At the train station, the man stood next to a young boy. Suddenly, the
boy took the man’s wallet and ran away. The tall man felt angry and sad because the
woman’s business card was in the wallet. The man went back to the restaurant to look
for the woman, but she wasn’t there.
Three months later, in October, the man wanted to go to Washington. He went to the
train station and got onto a train. The train was very busy. He sat down next to a woman.
She turned and looked at the man. It was the woman from the restaurant! The woman
smiled and said ‘hello’ and he felt very happy.
7 I don’t have a cup of coffee in the morning. I usually have after dinner.
8 I’ve got an old mobile phone, but I’d like to buy a new .
Student B
9 I often have cheese sandwiches for lunch, but I prefer with meat in them.
10 I usually write with a blue pen, but today I’m using a black .
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give half the pairs a Student A worksheet and the other half a
Student B worksheet. Tell students to complete the gaps with one or ones. Check answers
with the class, but don’t read the whole sentence. Ask students to change the sentences so
that they are now true for themselves, e.g I like new houses, I don’t like old ones. Monitor
and help where necessary.
Then rearrange the class so that a Student A works with a Student B. Tell students not
to show their worksheets to each other. Student A starts by reading out his/her first
statement. Student B should listen and say whether he/she agrees or disagrees. Preteach
I agree and I disagree to help the students with the activity, e.g. A: I don’t like old houses, I
like new ones. B: I agree, I live in an old house, but I’d like a new one.
Student B reads out his/her first statement and Student A says whether he/she agrees
with him/her. This continues until both students have read out and discussed all of the
statements.
Get feedback and elicit any interesting information from one or two students.
Answers
Student A: 1 ones 2 ones 3 one 4 one 5 ones 6 ones 7 one 8 one 9 ones 10 one
Student B: 1 ones 2 ones 3 one 4 ones 5 one 6 ones 7 one 8 one 9 ones 10 one
It’s mine!
$
I have an umbrella. If you
This car belongs to Jim and Where’s Ken? Do you think
don’t have one, you can
Grace. It’s … this bag is … ?
use …
(theirs) (his)
(mine)
Give the money to Jane. Please give the ball back to That dog belongs to my
It’s … us. It’s … friends. It’s …
(hers) (ours) (theirs)
Bob, I don’t think this is Your father wants these We found this money in the
mine, I think it’s … newspapers back. They’re … street, so now it’s …
(yours) (his) (ours)
It’s mine!
Target language: possessive pronouns
Activity type: card game
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 7.3.
Time: 15 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one set of cards for each group of students.
Procedure
Put students into groups of three. Give each group a set of sentence cards and pronoun
cards. The sentence cards should be shuffled and placed face down on the table. The
pronoun cards should be spread out on the table, face up so that all three students can see
and reach the cards easily.
One member of the group takes the first sentence card and places it face up on the table
and reads it out. The other two students should try to grab the correct pronoun that finishes
the sentence. The first student to grab the card first can keep it, but only if it is correct. The
reader has the correct answer at the bottom of the sentence card. If it is not correct, the
other student should have a chance to guess the correct pronoun.
Another member of the group now takes a sentence card and reads it out. The two
remaining students should try to grab the correct pronoun that completes the sentence
first. This continues, with students taking it in turns to read out cards until all the cards
have been grabbed. The winner is the student who has grabbed the most cards. Early
finishers can play the game again.
The Longest Day International Women’s Day Green Day Teachers’ Day Police Day
Coast Guard Birthday Discovery Day International Museum Day Independence Day Education Day
Gandhi’s birthday Remembrance Day
2 Answer Student B’s questions about the festivals, celebrations and national holidays in the calendar.
$
Student B
1 Ask Student A when and where these festivals, celebrations or national holidays are.
Union Day Burn’s Night St Patrick’s Day Flag Day Navy Day Farmers’ Day the King’s birthday
Bastille Day People Power Day International Day of Children Freedom Day Mother and Child Day
2 Answer Student A’s questions about the festivals, celebrations and national holidays in the calendar.
Photocopiable © Pearson Education Limited 2011
7 Vocabulary
ordinal numbers and months
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give half the pairs a Student A worksheet and half the pairs a
Student B worksheet. Give students time to read their calendar and check any vocabulary
with you, e.g. navy, freedom, independence. Tell students to work in their pairs and try to
guess one or two of the dates. It is unlikely students will know many, but the task will help
students to focus on the language for two or three minutes.
Then rearrange the class so that a Student A works with a Student B. Tell students not to
show their worksheets to each other. Student A starts by asking Student B when and where
the longest day is and Student B provides the information, i.e. A: When is the Longest Day?
B: It’s on 21st June. A: Where is it? B: It’s in Greenland. Encourage students to correct each
other on the pronunciation of the dates.
When they have finished sharing their information, ask them to talk about their own
favourite festivals, celebrations or holidays. As a follow-up or for homework, students could
use the Internet to find out some more information about one or two of the days on the
worksheets.
Answers
The answers to the questions are on the worksheets. Some additional information:
Burn’s Night celebrates the life and poetry of Robbie Burns, a Scottish poet. Bastille Day
celebrates an important day during the French Revolution. St Patrick is the patron saint
of Ireland. Gandhi led India to independence in the early twentieth century. The Longest
Day in Greenland is also their National Day.
$
Worksheet A Worksheet B
Mike’s Bikes
Dressed to Thrill
Procedure
Put students into groups of four. Give one pair a copy of worksheet A and the other pair a
copy of worksheet B. They should not show each other their worksheets.
Tell students that they bought the items on their worksheets yesterday, but that there is a
problem with them. Give an example of a CD player and elicit possible problems, e.g. It isn’t
working. It’s very quiet/The speaker is broken/The CD player doesn’t open. Give each pair
time to think about what the problems are for each item on their worksheets.
Then tell the pairs to work together. Give each group a copy of the shop pictures. One
pair roleplays their first situation where one of them is a customer and one is the shop
assistant. The customer wants to return the item he/she bought yesterday and tries to
get a refund or exchange, but without saying what the object is or where he/she bought
it, e.g. I bought this yesterday, but it isn’t working. The speaker is broken. Can I exchange
it? Each roleplay should last about a minute. The other pair listens and decides where the
customer/shop assistant is, choosing from the shops on worksheet. The first pair tells them
whether they are correct or incorrect.
The second pair now roleplay their first situation and the first pair guesses where they are.
This continues until all of the roleplays have been completed.
Painting a picture
Student A
$
Student B
Painting a picture
Target language: Present Continuous
Activity type: picture dictation
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 8.1.
Time: 15 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one worksheet for each pair of students.
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give each pair a Student A and Student B worksheet. Tell students
not to show their worksheets to each other.
Student A starts by describing his/her picture to Student B who draws what he/she hears.
When they have finished, students can compare the two pictures. Students then swap
roles, and Student B describes his/her picture, and Student A draws what he/she hears.
When they have finished, tell students to compare the two pictures.
Alternatively, you can do the activity without drawing. Divide the class into pairs. Give half
the pairs a Student A worksheet and the other half a Student B worksheet. Ask each pair to
write eight sentences describing his/her picture, four of them true and four of them false.
Monitor and help where necessary.
When students have written their sentences, rearrange the class so that a Student A works
with a Student B. Student A starts by showing his/her picture to Student B and reading out
his/her first sentence. Student B must say whether this sentence is true or false. If he/she
is correct, he/she gets one point. When Student A has read out all of his/her questions,
Student B shows his/her picture and reads out his/her statements. Student A says whether
these statements are true or false. The winner is the student in each pair with the most
points.
Fact
$
Complete the sentences using an opinion adjective and a fact adjective from the boxes below.
Opinion
Fact
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Pair each student with another student that they are not sitting
next to if possible and avoid pairing those who are already good friends. Give each student
a copy of the worksheet and ask them to complete the information about their partner by
guessing. They are not allowed to ask their partner at this stage. They should complete
each statement with an opinion adjective first, followed by a fact opinion second. The
students can choose adjectives from the boxes and reuse them more than once if they like.
When they have completed the worksheets, ask the pairs to sit or stand together. Each
student asks his/her partner if his statement is correct, e.g. I think you’ve got an expensive
wool scarf. Have you? Each student gets one point for each correct sentence he/she has
made.
When they have finished asking their questions, they can add up their points and see who
guessed the most correctly.
G H I
$
Worksheet A
3 plays/is playing chess with a friend at the moment. 8 eats/is eating an ice cream.
Procedure
Tell smaller classes to work as a whole group and duplicate one or two role cards, if
necessary. Divide larger classes into groups of nine students or fewer.
Give each student in each group a role card, but not in letter order, mix them up. Tell
students to imagine that today is a national holiday and they’re not working, they’re in the
park. Tell students to read the information on their cards and put the verbs into the correct
tense. Check that students have used the Present Simple for the first gap on their cards and
the Present Continuous for the other gap.
Tell students to imagine that they are in the park and to mingle within their groups, meeting
the other people in the park. Students should try to find out whose birthday it is, as well
as finding out what each person usually does and what he/she is doing today. As students
listen to each other, they should complete their worksheets. The first gap of each sentence
should be completed with the relevant student’s name and the correct verb form should be
chosen e.g. Kimiko usually works in a restaurant. If there are fewer than nine students in
each group, e.g. eight, then only that number of sentences needs to be completed.
When students have spoken to everyone in their group, tell them to work with someone
else from their group and compare the information they have on their worksheets. Check
answers with the group and find out how many people got all the information correct.
Answers
Role cards: A work, are having B clean, are swimming C work, are playing
D teach, are playing E study, are walking F work, doing yoga G work, are reading
H work, are eating I drive, are listening
Worksheet A: 1 works 2 is swimming 3 is playing 4 teaches 5 studies 6 works
7 is reading 8 is eating 9 is listening 10 (name of student with role card A)
Match them up
Student A
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12
Student B
A B C D
E F G H
I J K L
Match them up
Target language: clothes
Activity type: paired information gap
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 8.2.
Time: 15 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one worksheet for each pair of students.
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give each pair a Student A worksheet and a Student B worksheet.
Tell students not to show their worksheets to each other.
Explain that the pictures they have are of the same people, but Student A has the left half
and Student B has the right half. The aim of the activity is for students to match the two
halves together by describing the people’s clothes to each other.
Student A begins by describing what he/she can see in the first picture on his/her
worksheet. Student B looks for the identically dressed person on his/her worksheet and
writes the number 1 next to it. Student B now describes a person from his/her worksheet
and Student A tries to find the other half, writing the relevant letter next to the picture when
he/she has found it.
This is repeated until they have matched all their pictures. Students should then compare
their worksheets and check that they have matched the pictures correctly.
Answers
1E 2K 3D 4H 5F 6A 7L 8C 9J 10G 11B 12I
A weekend away
$
Student A Student B
Student C Student D
A weekend away
Target language: make and respond to suggestions
Activity type: discussion
When to use: Use this activity after Unit 9 Communication.
Time: 20 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one worksheet for each group of students.
Procedure
Put students into groups of four. Give each student in each group a weekend away card.
Explain to students that they have all decided to go to a big city for the weekend with their
group and they must decide what to do. Tell students that the pictures on their cards are
their preferences for accommodation and activities for the weekend.
Tell students to try to persuade the others in their group that their choice is the best. As
a group, they then decide on where to stay, what to do in the afternoon, where to have an
early dinner, what to do in the evening and what to do at night.
Get feedback from each group.
Comparative bingo
Card A
It’s busier today than yesterday. She’s funnier than him. It was more exciting than this one.
He was faster than me. My results were worse than yours. She’s shorter than me.
Mine is more modern than yours. Yours was more expensive than mine. It’s more detailed.
$
Card B
My results were worse than yours. She’s funnier than him. She’s shorter than me.
He’s friendlier than me. She’s taller than me. He was faster than me.
It’s more detailed. It was more exciting than this one. Mine is more modern than yours.
$
Card C
I’m a year older than you. Yours was better than mine. Mine was cheaper than yours.
He was faster than me. Yours was more expensive than mine. It’s busier today than yesterday.
Mine is more modern than yours. It’s more comfortable. My results were worse than yours.
$
Card D
Mine is more modern than yours. Yours was better than mine. He was faster than me.
She’s funnier than him. I’m a year older than you. She’s taller than me.
It’s more detailed. Yours is more popular than mine. Yours was more expensive than mine.
$
Card E
He’s fatter than me. Yours was more expensive than mine. I’m a year older than you.
Yours was better than mine. It’s busier today than yesterday. She’s taller than me.
My results were worse than yours. She’s funnier than him. It was more exciting than this one.
$
Card F
It’s more comfortable. Yours was better than mine. She’s funnier than him.
She’s shorter than me. Mine was cheaper than yours. He’s fatter than me.
It’s more detailed. Yours is more popular than mine. My results were worse than yours.
Comparative bingo
Target language: comparison of adjectives
Activity type: bingo
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 9.1.
Time: 20 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one bingo card for each group of students.
Procedure
Before you begin, make sure that students are familiar with the game of bingo, with a brief
demonstration/diagram on the board.
Divide the class into six teams, and give each team a bingo card. Make sure all the team members can
see it (you might need to make more than one copy of each card if you have a big class, or enlarge the
photocopies). Ask students to look at the sentences and make sure that they understand the meanings
of the adjectives.
Tell them that you are going to read them some sentences. Students must listen to the sentences and
try to find a comparative sentence on their card which means the same.
Read out the sentences below, choosing them at random, and allow a few moments between each
sentence for students to look for the comparative sentence on their card. You should read each
sentence out twice. If they find it, they tick (3) or put a line through the sentence. Tick your sentences
as you read them out, so that you don’t repeat any (which could cause confusion).
The winners are the first group of students to tick all their sentences and call Bingo! Check their
answers.
Here are the sentences you need to read out (the students’ answers are in brackets afterwards – don’t
read these out!).
• You’re sixteen and I’m seventeen. (I’m a year older than you.)
• My computer cost £700 and yours cost £800. (Yours was more expensive than mine.)
• Your mobile phone cost £150 and mine cost £120. (Mine was cheaper than yours.)
• My homework was good, but your homework was very good. (Yours was better than mine.)
• You got forty percent in the exam, but I only got twenty percent. (My results were worse than
yours.)
• There were 200 people in the restaurant last night, but there are 300 here this evening. (It’s busier
today than yesterday.)
• This football match is good, but the match I saw at the weekend was really good. (It was more
exciting than this one.)
• I weigh ninety-five kilograms, but my father weighs over a hundred kilograms. (He’s fatter than me.)
• Michael came first in the race and I came second. (He was faster than me.)
• Tom sometimes makes me laugh, but Susie makes me laugh a lot. (She’s funnier than him.)
• I’m 1 m 75 cm tall, but Alison is 1 m 82 cm tall. (She’s taller than me.)
• I’m 1 m 68 cm tall, but Marnie’s 1 m 55 cm tall. (She’s shorter than me.)
• The Sun newspaper doesn’t give a lot of information, but The Times newspaper gives a lot of
information. (It’s more detailed.)
• That bed feels very hard, but this bed feels very soft. (It’s more comfortable.)
• I talk to a few people at school, but Henry talks to lots of people at school. (He’s friendlier than
me.)
• Last year, 20,000 people visited my town, but 30,000 visited yours. (Yours is more popular than
mine.)
• I bought my camera last year, but you bought your camera in 2005. (Mine is more modern than
yours.)
Survey result:
7 Where do you live? (student’s name)
Procedure
Give one survey card to each student, repeating cards if necessary. Divide large classes
into groups of between eight and ten and distribute the same numbers of cards among the
students in each group.
Tell students to mingle and ask their survey questions to each other. It is important that
they note down the information they receive. If you have divided a larger group into two or
three groups, ask students to keep within their groups only.
When they have finished, ask students to complete their survey results statement using
the correct student’s name, depending on the answers they collated, and the correct
superlative adjective, e.g. Tomas was the earliest student to arrive for class today.
Then put students into pairs and ask them to check each other’s statements. Then get
feedback from each student. In large classes, divide students into two or three groups and
ask each student to feedback to each other rather than in open class.
Answers
1 the earliest 2 the liveliest 3 the most hard-working 4 the busiest 5 the oldest
6 the tallest 7 the nearest 8 the latest 9 the biggest 10 the youngest 11 the newest
12 the healthiest
Name: Name:
Age: Age:
Job: Job:
Loves: Loves:
Likes: Likes:
Hates: Hates:
Prefers: Prefers:
(sport?) to (sport?) to
(going out?) to (going out?) to
Name: Name:
Age: Age:
Job: Job:
Loves: Loves:
Likes: Likes:
Hates: Hates:
Prefers: Prefers:
(sport?) to (sport?) to
(going out?) to (going out?) to
Name: Name:
Age: Age:
Job: Job:
Loves: Loves:
Likes: Likes:
Hates: Hates:
Prefers: Prefers:
(sport?) to (sport?) to
(going out?) to (going out?) to
Procedure
Give each student a role card. Make sure that the number of male role cards and the
number of female role cards distributed is even. Tell students to complete the information
about the people on their role cards as they choose.
Option 1: Ask students to become the characters on their role cards and introduce the
concept of speed dating, where men and women meet each other for just three or four
minutes in order to find out if they get on well or not. If they get on well, they can meet
again at a later date. Option 2: Ask students to imagine that they are trying to find the
perfect partner for their friends (the role card characters).
Then put students into pairs. Arrange the class so that students with male role cards work
with students with female role cards. Elicit the questions that students will need to ask
each other to find out information, i.e. What’s your name? How old are you? What do you
do? What kind of things do you love/like/hate? Do you prefer … or …?
Give students a time limit of three/four minutes to ask and answer questions about each
other/their friends. When the time is up, ask students with male role cards to stand up
and move to a different student with a female role card. They talk for another three or four
minutes. This continues until students have spoken to at least four different characters.
Put students into groups of three or four and ask them to tell each other which character
they thought was the perfect partner for them/their friend and why. Get feedback from one
or two groups.
Arts crossword
Student A
1
2
c i n e m a
3
c l a s s i c a l m u s i c
6
0
7 8
h o r r o r f i l m
10 11 12
b a l l e t p a i n t i n g
13
t h e a t r e
14
c o m e d y
$
Student A
1
s
2
c
i
e
n
3
c
e
4
f c
5
i a r
c r o
t t c
6
0
i o a k
7 8
o o l m m
n n o u u
9
v s o s
10 11 12
e i p n i
s c e o c
13
t a r v
o l a e
r l
14
y
Arts crossword
Target language: the arts and films
Activity type: half a crossword
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 9.2.
Time: 20 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one worksheet for each pair of students.
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give half the pairs a Student A worksheet, and the other half a
Student B worksheet. Tell students to check with their partners that they understand and
can explain all the words on their crosswords.
When they are ready, rearrange the class so that a Student A works with a Student B. Tell
students not look at each other’s worksheets.
Preteach how to ask What’s 2 across? or What’s 1 down? Then tell students to help each
other to complete their crosswords by describing the words/phrases they have without
saying the words.
The winner is the first pair to finish the crossword.
1 the museum
WARWICK ROAD
2 the Italian restaurant
6 the library
DEBDEN
ROAD
7 the bar
8 the bank
ALEXANDER STREET
HILL
STREET
$
Student B
Ask for directions to:
HILL
STREET
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give each pair a Student A and Student B worksheet. Tell students
not to show their worksheets to each other.
Tell students to take turns to direct each other around the maps. Student A starts by asking
where the museum is. Student B gives directions from the X on the map to the museum and
Student A writes museum in the relevant square on his/her map. Student B now asks where
the Internet café is and Student A gives directions from the X on the map. Student B writes
Internet café in the relevant square on his/her map.
This continues until both students have completed their maps. They can then look at each
other’s worksheets to check they are correct.
In my opinion …
$
1 Travel/by train … 2 Play/computer games …
a cheap. a a lot of fun.
b expensive. b boring.
c slow. c bad for people.
d convenient for me. d good for people.
5 Swim … 6 Shop …
a the healthiest sport. a fun.
b difficult. b boring.
c boring. c expensive.
d dangerous. d bad for people.
7 Visit/museums … 8 Cook …
a really interesting for me. a fun for me.
b boring for me. b easy.
c important for everyone. c difficult.
d important for children. d only for women.
9 Live/alone … 10 Do/housework …
a easy. a really boring for me.
b not safe. b relaxing for me.
c fun. c necessary for me.
d lonely. d only for women.
In my opinion …
Target language: -ing form as noun
Activity type: discussion
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 10.1.
Time: 25 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one set of cards for each group of students.
Procedure
Write Ride/a bike … fun for me/dangerous in my country/healthy/difficult for me on the
board. Elicit a grammatically correct and true sentence from the class, e.g. Riding a bike is
fun for me. Ask one or two students to say more about this, or give more information about
your own opinion.
Put students into groups of four students. Give each group a set of discussion cards in a
pile, face down, on a table. One student takes the first card and lays it on the table, so all
the students can see. He/she makes a true and grammatically correct sentence about him/
herself. The others in the group then make sentences about themselves that are true and
grammatically correct. Encourage students to say why if possible or ask questions.
Another student in the group turns over the second card and makes a true and correct
sentence. This continues until all the cards have been discussed.
Get feedback and elicit some interesting information from one or two groups.
Answers
1 Travelling by train is … 2 Playing computer games is … 3 Getting up early is …
4 Speaking English is … 5 Swimming is … 6 Shopping is … 7 Visiting museums is …
8 Cooking is … 9 Living alone is … 10 Doing housework is … 11 Watching Hollywood
films is … 12 Watching the news is … 13 Riding a motorbike is … 14 Walking alone at
night is …
1 … snowboarding?
2 … to a classical concert?
3 … to a nightclub?
4 … on a speedboat?
5 … to an island?
6 … bowling?
7 … to a beautiful beach?
8 … to a zoo?
9 … on a long train
journey?
10 … on the radio?
11 … to the US?
13 … on a cycling holiday?
14 … hiking?
15 … to India?
16 … to a language school
in another country?
Procedure
Put students into pairs and write a question starting with Have you been … ? to ask other
students based on each question on the worksheet. Check answers with the whole class.
Students now work in groups of four and find out who answers yes to the questions on
the worksheet. One student asks the first question and all the students write the names
of any students in the group who answer yes. Encourage students to ask each other more
questions to find out as much information as possible.
Another student now asks the second question and the group discusses the answers,
asking more questions if possible. This continues until all the questions have been asked
and discussed.
Get feedback from the class and find out if there were any questions that all the students
answered yes to and if there were any surprising answers.
Guess who!
Student A
$
Student B
Guess who!
Target language: Present Perfect: he/she/it
Activity type: pair discussion and class mingle
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 10.3.
Time: 25 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy one worksheet for each pair of students.
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give a worksheet to each pair. Tell them to complete the sentences
together so that each sentence starts with the name of someone in the class and the verbs
are in the correct Present Perfect form. The pair should believe that the statement they
create is true, e.g. Vincent has written to a famous person, but they should not ask the
student if they are correct at this point.
When each pair has finished making their sentences, ask them to tear the worksheet in half
down the dotted line. One student takes the Student A worksheet and the other takes the
Student B worksheet. Tell each student to find out if their statements are true by asking the
people they have made sentences about if they have done those things or not, e.g. Vincent,
have you written to a famous person? If you feel the students need time to prepare their
questions, ask them to write them down with their partner before they mingle.
When the students have mingled and found out if their statements are true or false, the
pairs should sit together and tell each other what they learnt, e.g. We were wrong. Vincent
hasn’t written to a famous person.
Answers
Student A: 1 has written 2 has taken 3 has run 4 has sailed 5 has played 6 has visited
7 has flown 8 has learnt
Student B: 1 has slept 2 has read 3 has had 4 has bought 5 has played 6 has taken
7 has climbed 8 has eaten
A-maze-ing vowels
A-maze-ing vowels
Target language: /I/ (and /i/)
Activity type: paired maze activity
When to use : Use this activity after Lesson 10.2.
Time: 15 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy one worksheet for each pair of students.
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Tell students to work together and to begin at the start and to try
to find the path through the maze, following the words with the /I/ sound until they arrive
at the finish box. They can only move vertically or horizontally, not diagonally, i.e. you can
move from the start to either eat or thick but not heat. If a word has more than one vowel
sound, it is the sound which is underlined that the students should consider, e.g. teacher.
Encourage students to use a dictionary to check the pronunciation of words they are not
sure about. Highlighter pens would be useful to help students to colour code the different
words in the maze.
When they have finished, check answers with the class.
Answers
The maze path is as follows: thick, miss, live, milk, biscuit, swim, hill, dish, building,
dinner, drink, did, fish, sink, ticket, visit, bit, chicken, fit, sing
The other words in the maze have the following sounds in them:
/I/ think, sit, big, listen, big, this, disco, rich, spring, crisps, six, film, linen
/i/ week, three, eat, heat, feed, jeans, beans, east, dream, teacher, keep, beach, tree,
sleep, meet, leave, see, sea, cheap, green, tea, clean, machine, beef, these, street, read,
niece, cheese, speak, Greece
A school trip
$
You’re going on a class trip to see a play. You’re going on a class trip to see a play.
You want to check this information: You want to check this information:
The trip costs £40. True/False The bus leaves school at 9 a.m. True/False
The play is at the Grand Theatre. True/False The bus leaves the city at 11 p.m. True/False
You’re going on a class trip to see a play. You’re going on a class trip to see a play.
You want to check this information: You want to check this information:
The play starts at 1 p.m. True/False The bus journey is three hours. True/False
The play is a comedy. True/False Dinner costs £25. True/False
You’re going on a class trip to see a play. You’re going on a class trip to see a play.
You want to check this information: You want to check this information:
The trip is on Sunday. True/False The play finishes at 5:30 p.m. True/False
You have free time before dinner. True/False Lunch is at a café. True/False
You’re going on a class trip to see a play. You’re going on a class trip to see a play.
You want to check this information: You want to check this information:
Dinner is at a French restaurant. True/False The bus arrives home at 11 p.m. True/False
Thirteen people are going on the trip. True/False The shops open until 7 p.m. True/False
A school trip
Target language: check instructions and information
Activity type: class mingle
When to use: Use this activity after Unit 11 Communication.
Time: 15 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one role card for each student.
Procedure
Introduce the idea that the class is taking a trip together at the weekend to see a play. You
could elicit ideas about what play the class is going to see to engage the students’ interest
and set the context.
Give each member of the group a role card. For smaller classes, make sure that all eight
role cards are distributed, even if it means some students having two cards each. For larger
classes you could divide the class into groups of eight and students work within these
groups.
Tell students to mingle and check information with each other and give information where
they can. If a student is asked for some information that they don’t have, they should be
encouraged to say I’m sorry I don’t know. After a student has checked his/her information,
he/she can still continue to mingle and answer questions to provide other students with
the information they need.
When students have shared their information, ask them whether they think they would
enjoy the trip or not.
2 Men in Morocco ________ go into the army for a year after school.
4 In Canada, you __________ drive and text on a mobile phone at the same time.
5 In Denmark, you always __________ drive a car with the lights on.
8 In Thailand, people __________ wear seat belts in the back of the car.
Answers to Student B’s rules: 1 have to 2 can’t 3 can’t 4 can 5 can 6 don’t have to 7 can 8 have to
$
Student B
Complete the sentences with can, can’t, have to or don’t have to to make true sentences.
1 In Australia, you __________ wear a helmet when you cycle on the road.
6 In Turkey, you __________ study at school when you’re fifteen years old.
Answers to Student A’s rules: 1 have to 2 don’t have to 3 have to 4 can’t 5 have to 6 can 7 can 8 don’t have to
Procedure
Divide the class into pairs. Give half the pairs a Student A worksheet and the other half a
Student B worksheet. Preteach licence, helmet and seat belt. Tell the pairs to work together
to complete the sentences about each country with have to/don’t have to/can/can’t so that
the statements are true.
Rearrange the class so that a Student A works with a Student B. Tell students not to show
their worksheets to each other. Student A starts by reading out first his/her statement.
Student B tells Student A if he/she is correct by looking at the answers at the bottom of
his/her worksheet. When Student A has read out all his/her sentences, Student B reads out
his/hers.
Then tell the pairs to discuss whether they have the same rules in their own country/ies,
e.g. In my country, we have to drive on the right. Men have to go into the army for two years
after they finish school.
Answers
Answers to Student A’s rules: 1 have to 2 don’t have to 3 have to 4 can’t 5 have to 6 can
7 can 8 don’t have to
Answers to Student B’s rules: 1 have to 2 can’t 3 can’t 4 can 5 can 6 don’t have to 7 can
8 have to
Student B
1 We’re staying at a hotel near the lake. (Where are you staying?)
2 My favourite city is Venice. (What’s your favourite city?)
3 I’ve got three grandchildren. (How many grandchildren have you got/do you have?)
4 I visit museums at the weekends. (What do you do at the weekends?)
5 They aren’t mine. Maybe they’re John’s. (Whose are they?)
6 We usually go to Spain on holiday. (Where do you usually go on holiday?)
7 I’m Roger, your new English teacher. (Who are you?)
8 I usually go to the cinema on Fridays. (What do you usually do on Fridays?)
9 I finish work at 5 p.m. (When do you finish work?)
10 Chemistry is my favourite lesson. (What’s your favourite subject/lesson?)
11 A lesson is £20. (How much is a lesson?)
12 I travel to work by taxi. (How do you travel/get to work?)
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give each pair a Student A and Student B worksheet. Tell students
not to show their worksheets to each other.
Student A starts by reading out his/her first answer. Student B must listen and try to guess
the question which is on Student A’s worksheet in brackets. If he/she is incorrect, he/she
should keep trying until he/she manages to guess the question correctly.
Student B now reads out his/her first answer and Student A tries to guess the question
which is on Student B’s worksheet in brackets. The students continue to take turns until all
the questions have been guessed.
To make it more competitive, give out the Student A worksheet first. The pairs compete
against each other and the winner is the fastest pair to finish. Give out the Student B
worksheet and the students compete again. The winner is the fastest pair to finish.
Instruction mix up
$
Put the clothes into the washing machine.
Instruction mix up
Target language: imperatives
Activity type: matching
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 11.3.
Time: 15 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one set of cards for each pair of students.
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give a set of cards to each pair of students. Make sure you shuffle
the cards. Tell students that there are three sets of instructions on the cards. Ask students
to read the instructions and to decide what the three sets of instructions are for. Then tell
students to put the instructions in the correct order.
Get feedback from the whole class.
Answers
Using a washing machine: 1 Put the clothes into the washing machine. 2 Don’t put too
many clothes into the machine. 3 Put some washing powder into the machine.
4 Put two coins into the machine. 5 Press the WASH button.
Using a cash machine: 1 Put your bank card into the cash machine. 2 Enter your PIN
number. 3 Don’t enter the wrong number! 4 Choose how much money you want.
5 Take the money and your card out of the machine.
Making a call on a mobile phone: 1 Turn on your mobile phone. 2 Dial the number.
3 Press the green CALL button. 4 Speak to the person you are calling. 5 Finish speaking
and press the END CALL button.
Lesson logic
Jim Andrew Helen Maggie
Subject
Type of course
Type of person
Institution
Student A
Student B
Lesson logic
Target language: schools and subjects; education
Activity type: puzzle
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 11.3.
Time: 20 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one worksheet for each pair of students.
Procedure
Put students into pairs. Give each pair a Student A worksheet and a Student B worksheet.
Also, give each pair one copy of the table and point out the possible options for each
section. Tell students not to show each other their worksheets. Tell them to use their clues
to complete the table with the correct information.
Student A starts by reading out his/her first clue and they try to complete the table.
Student B reads his/her first clue and again they try to complete information in the table.
This continues until both students have read out their clues. The students should be able to
complete the table in full, although it is likely they will need to refer back to previous clues
to help them.
Check answers with the class.
Answers
Jim: biology, full-time, teacher, secondary school
Andrew: French, evening class, student, language school
Helen: hairdressing, part-time, trainee, college
Maggie: physics, distance learning, lecturer, online university
A trip of a lifetime
1 .com Pedlington
for travel
PD42 6RY
11th June
Yours sincerely
Managing Director
Morning Fly to …
Fly back to …
Afternoon/
Evening
Photocopiable © Pearson Education Limited 2011
12 Communication
ask about and discuss plans
A trip of a lifetime
Target language: ask about and discuss plans
Activity type: group planning activity and discussion
When to use: Use this activity after Unit 12 Communication.
Time: 25 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy one worksheet for each student.
Procedure
Give one worksheet to each student in the class and tell students that they have won a
£10,000 holiday in a competition.
Put students into groups of three. Each group discusses where they’d like to go on holiday
and what they’d like to do there. They can visit several places or countries if they wish, but
they only have £10,000 between them. Make sure that all the students in the group note
down their plans on their worksheets.
Rearrange the class so that each student now works with another student from a different
group. Tell students to ask about and discuss their holiday plans to find out who has made
the best plans.
When they have finished, ask the pairs to discuss which holiday is the best and why and
feed this back to the class.
My future
$
I ________________________________ tonight.
I ________________________________ next year.
I ________________________________ next summer.
I ________________________________ tomorrow.
I ________________________________ in two years’ time.
I ________________________________ on Saturday.
I ________________________________ later this year.
I ________________________________ one year from now.
I ________________________________ tomorrow night.
I ________________________________ the week after next.
I ________________________________ next week.
I ________________________________ in ten years’ time.
I ________________________________ on Friday.
I ________________________________ tomorrow night.
I ________________________________ next month.
I ________________________________ next October.
I ________________________________ by Sunday.
I ________________________________ five years from now.
I ________________________________ on Wednesday.
I ________________________________ next June.
Photocopiable © Pearson Education Limited 2011
12 Grammar 1
be going to
My future
Target language: be going to
Activity type: class mingle
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 12.1.
Time: 25 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up two or three sentence cards for each student in larger
classes (or four sentence cards for each student in smaller classes).
Procedure
Tell students to work alone. Give out two to four sentence cards to each student, depending
on the size of the class, and ask them to complete the sentences with true information
about themselves, but they must not write their names. Monitor and help where necessary.
Take in the sentences and put them in a bag. Shuffle the sentences in the bag and ask each
student to take out two to four new sentences, depending on how many each student wrote
originally. If a student pulls out one of his/her own, he/she should return it and take a new
one.
Then tell students to mingle in order to find the people who wrote the sentences on their
cards, e.g. Are you going to the cinema this evening? If the answer is yes, the student
must ask Did you write this sentence? as other students may also be going to the cinema.
Encourage students to ask for more information, e.g. What film are you going to see? If the
answer is no, the student should ask another student.
When students have all found the people who wrote their sentence cards, get feedback and
elicit some interesting information from the class.
This weekend
$
This weekend
Target language: infinitive of purpose; revision of be going to
Activity type: memory game
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 12.2.
Time: 15 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one set of cards for each group of students.
Procedure
Put students into groups of three. Give each group a set of cards, and tell them to place the
cards face down on their desk.
One student begins by taking a card, looking at the picture and saying This weekend, I’m
going to go to the ___ to ___, e.g. This weekend I’m going to go to the library to borrow a
book. The card is then placed face-up on the desk next to the original pile of cards.
The second student then takes the next card from the top of the pile, repeats what the first
student said and then says what he/she is going to do, e.g. This weekend I’m going to go
to the library to borrow a book, and I’m going to go to the pet shop to buy a dog. Each
student should repeat all the activities mentioned before adding an additional place and
reason for visiting.
This is repeated until two of the students forget why he/she is going to go a particular
place. When this happens, the remaining student is the winner.
They can then play the game again, this time the cards should be placed face down on the
table once used, so that the students are having to memorise the places as well as what
is going to be done there. Allow them about fifteen minutes in total. Monitor the pairs to
make sure they are using the correct grammatical structures and other language.
Which is which?
Write the information below in the squares. Choose any square. Don’t write full sentences.
1 the name of a place you’d like to visit 7 the name of a place you wouldn’t like to visit
5 the name of a famous person you’d like to meet 11 the name of a famous person you don’t like
6 the name of a food you love eating 12 the name of a food you don’t like eating
Photocopiable © Pearson Education Limited 2011
12 Grammar 3
like and would like
Which is which?
Target language: like and would like
Activity type: guessing activity and discussion
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 12.3.
Time: 20 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy one worksheet for each student.
Procedure
Tell students to work alone at first and to write the information requested in each of the
squares. Encourage students to write just one or two words and not complete sentences,
and not to follow the order of squares, but to write answers in random squares.
Put the students in pairs and ask them to show each other their worksheets. Each student
should try to guess what the information in each square relates to, e.g. I think you’d like to
visit Morocco. Encourage students to ask more questions about each of the answers.
When they have finished discussing their answers, get feedback and elicit one or two
interesting facts about students.
Rhyming pairs
$
Rhyming pairs
Target language: rhymes
Activity type: pelmanism and poetry writing
When to use: Use this activity after Lesson 12.2.
Time: 15 minutes
Preparation: Photocopy and cut up one set of cards for each pair of students.
Procedure
Put students into pairs (or groups of three). Give each pair/group a set of cards and ask
students to shuffle them and spread them out face down in front of them. One student
starts by turning over two cards, so that everyone can see them. If the cards contain words
which rhyme with each other, the student must make a sentence which includes both
words. If the sentence makes sense, the student can keep the cards. However, if the words
on the cards do not rhyme, or the student is unable to produce a sentence with both words
which makes sense, the cards must be placed back on the table, face down and in the same
position as before.
Each student takes it in turns to try to turn over two cards with rhyming words on them until
all of the cards have been matched. The winner is the student with the most pairs.
As an optional follow-up, ask each pair/group to choose three of the rhyming pairs and
write some song words. To demonstrate, take one pair, e.g. pretty/city and elicit two
possible song lines from the whole class, e.g. We walked around the city, the sun in the sky
was very pretty. Tell students to work in their pairs/groups and to write six lines of a song
using three rhyming pairs. Monitor and help where necessary. When they have finished, ask
each pair/group to read their song words to the class.
Answers
pretty–city, dream–ice cream, farmer–drama, shop–stop, eye–sky, play–today,
boat–wrote, son–fun, ran–began, said–red