Cambridge Basic 9 English
Cambridge Basic 9 English
Cambridge Basic 9 English
Lower Secondary
Complete
English
Series Editor: Dean Roberts
Alan Jenkins, Mark Pedroz,
Jane Arredondo, Annabel Charles,
Tony Parkinson
Second Edition
9
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Foodies’ delight
1
Healthy eating – a radio discussion Listen to the Developing your language – writing Global
Sophia, Nikri and Nor were asked to discuss how young people audio for this task: appropriately for the reader Perspectives
can be encouraged to eat healthily. Sophia starts the discussion. Sophia, Nikri and Nor talk about how to convey information Most fresh food produced
Listen carefully to their discussion. about healthy eating effectively for young people. Answer the by farmers around the world
following questions about language features. is nutritious. However, many
Understanding 1. What do the group suggest is important? of these natural foodstuffs
2. Look at the features below and decide which you think are are then processed into
Answer the following questions.
important and which are not. Explain your answer. considerably less healthy
1. Sophia’s and Nikri’s mothers have the foods. Think about your
same view of food. What is it? region. How might a local
Standard English clear headings straightforward words
2. What do Nor, Sophia and Nikri think farmer communicate this to
writing in the third person colloquial language
young people need to eat to stay local people?
healthy? short sections complex sentences
3. What do they think are the foods you scientific words illustrations addressing the reader directly
should eat less of? What would you subject-specific language glossary to explain difficult
add to that? words similes exclamations humour
4. Give two ways the group suggests of persuading young
people to eat healthily. 3. Add more features to those above.
5. Which method do you think is more effective? Explain your 4. Using the information from the radio discussion, and your
answer. own knowledge, write an information leaflet for students of
your age to encourage them to eat healthily.
6. You just heard someone say, “An awful lot has to change
before children will eat a healthy diet.” What might they You need to think about:
mean by this? ● what you are going to include in your leaflet
● how to make your leaflet persuasive for a younger
Word builder Word cloud audience by using a range of suitable language techniques
● how you are going to organise your ideas clearly.
calcium nutritious
The words in the Word cloud are all subject-specific words
linked to the topic of nutrition and diet. Look at the Word carbohydrate protein
cloud and answer the following questions. fat vitamins My favourite food
1. Check you know what each word in the Word cloud means. nutrients
On social media, you follow a Teenage Kicks pro-health
Use a dictionary to help you. food group. Write a quick tweet, in reply to these
2. Give some examples of foods in each of these categories: rich prompts.
in calcium; high fat content; high protein content; plentiful ● My favourite healthy food is ...
vitamins.
● What I love about it is ...
3. Nutrients and nutritious come from the same word family.
● Nutritionally it is ...
They are both Latin words. Use a dictionary to find out what
their Latin origins are. ● Science says we need this food because...
16 17
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light on the death and burial of Richard III in the Grey Friars
Contents
Introduction 4
Narrative viewpoints 6
1 Learning about narrative viewpoint, understanding archaic language;
punctuation in complex sentences, using embedded clauses;
talking about film; writing a fantasy story
Discovering the past 26
2 Non-fiction: examining the past; creating a drama script;
combining words; writing a summary
Influencers 46
3 Discussing famous people; making adjectives; creating a
TV script; group role-playing activities
The impact of tourism 66
4 Non-fiction: travel writing, creating a humorous tone; using
juxtaposition and oxymoron; hyperbole; creating a travel blog
Exploration and investigation 86
5 Examining different text types; identifying figurative language;
varying sentence structure; writing a news article
Science and the future 104
6 Using topic sentences; making effective transitions; using
discourse markers; presenting an effective argument
Focus on William Blake 124
7 Creating a group poem; comparing different poems; writing
from notes; punctuation; using poetic imagery; expressing an opinion
Cultures and communities 144
8 Fiction: presenting character, describing places and lifestyles;
using compound sentences; responding to narratives
The world today 164
9 Revising listening, reading and writing skills including inference, planning,
punctuation; using language to convey meaning; non-narrative writing task
Language and literacy reference 185
In every unit there are listening tasks. Your teacher may play the audio for
you, or you can listen to the audio on the website using the QR code.
Website: www.oxfordsecondary.com/9781382019392
3
Introduction to Student Book 9
Welcome to Oxford’s Cambridge Lower The units look at the past, the present world we
Secondary Complete English Student live in and the possibilities of the future. The
Book 9. This book and the student workbook work in the units encourages you to practise
will support you and your teacher as you engage the curriculum skills you need for success by
with Stage 9 of the Cambridge curriculum exploring relevant and contemporary topics such
framework. as science, communities, influencers, tourism
It aims to encourage you in becoming: and investigation. There are also units that focus
on narratives, drama and the work of the poet
● Confident in your English skills and your
William Blake.
ability to express yourself
Through the Thinking time and Speaking &
● Responsible for your own learning and
Listening features, you will get the chance to
responsive to and respectful of others
express what you already know about a theme
● Reflective as a learner so that you can be a or topic, think critically and find out more from
life-long learner – not just in school now your classmates whilst exploring new ideas.
● Innovative and ready for new challenges as a
global citizen Reading
● Engaged in both academic and social You will read about a character in literature called
situations. Gregor, who was no longer human when he woke
Student Book and Workbook one morning! This extract will help you learn how
narrative works and, in particular, how a writer
There are some great features in your Stage 9
controls narrative. You will also read about a
book. Here’s an explanation of how they work.
drought in Trinidad and how it affected the local
people. Here, you will learn about how writers
1 Narrative viewpoints choose descriptive words with care. A different
kind of reading will also introduce you to a real-
In this unit, you will read stories told using different narrative voices and experiment with a range life explorer who walked the entire length of the
of approaches to constructing narrative. You will read about Gregor, who woke up one morning as a very
different creature, and about Gulliver, who visited lands very different from his own in England. You will
also listen to a discussion about how effectively narratives in novels translate to film scripts. You can then
Amazon river. And you will also read about King
have a go at planning your own story with an unexpected twist.
And in doing all that, you will be practising these key skills:
Richard III of England as well as poems about
sharks, snakes and tigers!
Speaking & Listening Writing Reading
£ Shape the direction and
content of a pair-based
£ Manipulate the features of
satirical writing by creating
£ Analyse and explore the
layers of meaning in a text Use the Word clouds to learn new vocabulary,
discussion about how well an imaginary land to which seems out of this
books are represented in
film versions.
convey a serious message. world but very much relates
to the world around us.
exploring meanings and usage in context. The
£ Use and share extensive
£ Adapt your speech to
match different registers,
notes to inform the
planning of an extended
£ Interpret and infer meaning
from a story that is written
Glossary features will help you with words or
from formal to informal,
while discussing a film
story which has an element
of surprise.
as a children’s story but
which has very adult phrases that you may not find in a dictionary
from different viewpoints. themes.
because they are uncommon, colloquial or
Assessment workshop
4
6
students talk about their very different cultural powerful, being in the hot seat as a famous person,
backgrounds, a lively discussion where two giving a multi-media presentation about the place
people debate if the book is always better than where you live, and playing your part in a range of
the film and a radio broadcast about the discovery dramatic pieces.
of the bones of an English king who died
hundreds of years ago. When you listen to all of Language development
these people, and more, you will be practising
There are also activities to improve your
your skills of listening to locate details, listening
language awareness and help you develop your
to understand the gist of what is being said and
use of language, including your grammar, spelling
listening to make inferences – trying to work out
and punctuation. In this Stage 9 book, there is
what people really mean!
a focus on using topic sentences to good effect,
abstract nouns, transition and connecting words,
Writing workshops using discourse markers in speech, choosing
Most of the units have a workshop in which you adjectives carefully, getting to grips with complex
will focus either on creative writing – stories, sentences by experimenting with punctuation,
a drama script and your own poetry – or on making sure you use a wider range of sentence
writing non-fiction pieces. types in your writing and exploring words that
end in -tic.
You will practise using a wide range of writing
styles for different purposes: a persuasive essay,
Vocabulary
arguing whether you should be allowed to listen
to music while you study at school, a review of Learning new words and, perhaps more
some new poems, a travel blog, a TV screenplay importantly, learning exactly how they should
about a detective trying to solve a crime, a story be used is a key element of this series of books.
based on a character you have created, and a There are lots of word building exercises for you
summary of an article on how best to get a good to extend and enhance your vocabulary. Don’t
night’s sleep! expect to know all the words you encounter – this
book will help you build up your vocabulary.
Speaking
Assessment workshops
Learning through talking is really important. You As you move towards the formal assessment
will take part in a wide range of speaking contexts of tests and exams (and perhaps preparing for
– talking by yourself, working with a partner or the IGCSE English course), the Assessment
taking part in small group discussions. Learning workshop in each unit will help you practise
how and when to make your contributions is a the skills you need. Each workshop invites you
key skill for success in tests and exams, but also to self-assess and reflect on your own learning
in life. The speaking tasks include a group poetry by presenting you with tasks and questions like
game, reading some poems out loud by yourself, the ones you will find in the Cambridge Lower
discussing which roles each member of your Secondary Checkpoint test. There are also
group will play on an expedition to walk along the sample student responses which you can explore
Amazon river, working out with a partner what it and even mark. In addition, there are many useful
is about influential people that helps them become tips to help you improve key skills.
5
8 Cultures and communities
In this unit, you will engage with communities in different cultures, some of which face great
difficulties. You will read about the effects of drought on the island of Trinidad and how the people who
live in the Gobi Desert flourish in such a harsh environment. You will listen to an interesting discussion
featuring a group of students from different countries discussing what their lives are like. You will also
practise writing how to successfully begin a story using characterisation.
And in doing all that, you will be practising these key skills:
Assessment workshop
You will gain practice in the key assessment skills of responding to a narrative text and analysing its
content. You will respond effectively with short answers to questions about a literary text.
144
8
Thinking time “Smile at
strangers and you just
1. Think about what you see in the two pictures. What would might change a life.”
it be like to live in those places? Which would you prefer? Steve Maraboli
2. What did Mark Twain mean when he said that kindness
was ‘the language which the deaf can hear and the blind
can see’? Why do you think kindness is important?
the
3. What does Maya Angelou mean by ‘bigotry’? How far does “Kindness is
af can
n g u a g e w hich the de
what she says defeat bigotry? la see.”
e blind can
hear and th
Mark Twain
145
Hairy history
Cultures and communities
A drink of water
1 The time when the rains didn’t come for three months and the sun
was a yellow furnace in the sky was known as the Great Drought in
Trinidad. It happened when everyone was expecting the sky to burst
open with rain to fill the dry streams and water the parched earth.
5 But each day was the same; the sun rose early in a blue sky, and
all day long the farmers lifted their eyes, wondering what had
happened. (…) They rested on their hoes and forks and wrung
perspiration from their clothes, seeing no hope in labour, terrified
by the thought that if no rain fell soon they would lose their crops
10 and livestock and face starvation and death.
In the tiny village of Las Lomas, out in his vegetable garden,
Manko licked dry lips and passed a wet sleeve over his dripping face.
Somewhere in the field a cow mooed mournfully, sniffing around
for a bit of green in the cracked earth. The field was a desolation of
15 drought. The trees were naked and barks peeled off trunks as if they
Word cloud
were diseased. When the wind blew, it was heavy and unrelieving, as
if the heat had taken all the spirit out of it. But Manko still opened charred furnace
his shirt and turned his chest to it when it passed. cracked parched
He was a big man, grown brown and burnt from years of working desolation scummy
20 on the land. His arms were bent and he had a crouching position
even when he stood upright. When he laughed he showed more
tobacco stain than teeth.
But Manko had not laughed for a long time. Bush fires had swept
Las Lomas and left the garden plots charred and smoking. Cattle
25 were dropping dead in the heat. There was scarcely any water in the
village; the river was dry with scummy mud. But with patience one
could collect a bucket of water. Boiled, with a little sugar to make it
drinkable, it had to do.
Sometimes, when the children knew that someone had gone to the
30 river for water, they hung about in the village main road waiting
with bottles and calabash shells, and they fell upon the water-carrier
as soon as he hove in sight.
‘Boil the water first before drinking!’ was the warning cry. But even
so two children were dead and many more were on the sick list, their
35 parents too poor to seek medical aid in the city twenty miles away.
146
88
Manko sat in the shade of a mango tree and tried to look on the
bright side of things. Such a dry season meant that the land would Glossary
be good for corn seeds when the rains came. He and his wife Rannie and come a big man in
had been working hard and saving money in the hope of sending Trinidad and become
Sunny, their son, to college in the city. 40
someone important in
Rannie told Manko: ‘We poor, and we ain’t have no education, but Trinidad
is all right, we go get old soon and dead, and what we have to think
we ain’t have no
about is the boy. We must let him have plenty learning and come a
education we don’t
big man in Trinidad.’
have any education
And Manko, proud of his son, used to boast in the evening, when 45
we go get old soon and
the villagers got together to talk and smoke, that one day Sunny
dead we shall soon be
would be a lawyer or a doctor.
old and we’ll die
But optimism was difficult now. His livestock was dying out, and the
market was glutted with yams. He had a great pile in the yard which we poor we are poor
he could not sell. 50
Manko took a look at his plot of land and shook his head. There was Remember
no sense in working any more today.
Although the grammar is
From A Drink of Water by Samuel Selvon incorrect, this is how Rannie
speaks. In a story, it is better
to write people’s speech as
Understanding they would talk so it is more
realistic and believable.
1. What did the people of Las Lomas do for a living?
2. Do droughts like this happen often in Trinidad? Explain
your answer.
3. How does the description of the trees make it clear how Global
unusually bad the drought is? Perspectives
4. Explain how the villagers got their water and what they did After doing some research,
with it. how dependent do you
5. How do you know that life in Las Lomas was always difficult? think your region is on its
agriculture and the food
6. At the end of the passage the writer says how the villagers
it produces? Is exporting
used to get together in the evening to talk and smoke.
local produce an important
Imagine that you are Manko, talking to other villagers. The
industry in your country
drought is really serious. What would you talk about? In your
or is the importation of
conversation you could include:
foodstuffs from the global
● the state of the ground and the cattle market more significant?
● the serious matter of the water supply
● when the drought might end
● what will happen when the drought ends
● your hopes for your children.
147
Cultures and communities
Word builder
When the writer tells you about the heat in the wind, he calls it
‘heavy and unrelieving’. The use of ‘heavy’ doesn’t mean that the
wind is physically heavy; he is saying that when the wind blows,
the heat seems to push downwards and you have to fight against it.
Look at the words in the Word cloud describing how the earth
suffers under terrible heat.
Answer the following questions. In your answers, show how the
context changes the meanings of words.
1. Why has the writer used the word ‘furnace’ as a metaphor for
the sun?
2. How did the garden plots come to be ‘charred’? Describe
what you would see.
3. What does the writer mean when he talks about the ‘cracked
Remember
earth’? The vocabulary around
4. How does ‘parched’ personify the earth? the particular word you
are thinking about gives it
5. The writer talks about ‘a desolation of drought’. Why is this
context. The context often
expression effective?
changes the meaning of
6. Why did the writer say ‘scummy mud’ and not ‘dirty mud’? the word in some way.
What effect does ‘scummy’ add?
148
8
Developing your language – how writers
present character
In the extract from A Drink of Water you have only read about
one person – or character – called Manko.
You know what Manko looked like – he was big, brown and
burnt, had bent arms and back, and his teeth were stained from
smoking – but this is his appearance, not his character.
Someone’s character is what they are like, for example, you can
work out that Manko was hard-working.
He was also slightly superstitious, as he wondered what had
happened to the rain god.
Answer these questions.
1. The words and phrases below describe different aspects of
Manko’s character. Find a quotation from the text which
describes each characteristic in a different way.
a A devoted father
b Optimistic even when times were bad
c Sociable
d Defiant
e Liked to laugh a lot
2. Imagine you are Sunny, Manko’s son. You have become a
famous doctor and have been asked to write about your early
life and what you owe to your father. Write a paragraph
about your memories of Manko.
Remember
When you choose words from a text to describe someone’s
character the choice is yours, but you should always find
a quotation that supports your answer. For example, you
could choose any of the following details:
● what the writer tells you
● what the person does and says
● what other people say about him or her.
149
Cultures and communities
1 The people of the Gobi Desert live in one of the most inhospitable
places on earth. It is a harsh, rocky environment, and it is
landlocked. Its nomadic inhabitants travel several times a year on
camels in search of water. They are accompanied by the animals
5 that they herd: oxen, sheep, and most valuable and beloved of all,
their horses. When they arrive at a suitable location, they set up
their gers or yurts which can be easily constructed and dismantled.
These circular tents with their woollen coverings provide coolness Word cloud
in the summer and protection from the extreme cold of the desert
10 winter when the temperature falls drastically to a piercing –40° C. dismantled
In summer there is warmth and the herders make the most of the forage
pastures, leaving their horses outside to forage for themselves. herder
Every member of a herder’s family possesses their own horse – horsemanship
in fact the population is smaller than the number of horses. inhospitable
15 Mongolians process mares’ milk into airag, the national nomadic
beverage, although they mainly use horses for riding, at which
process
they are extremely accomplished. They are famous for horse
racing for they gallop with great velocity. Women also have
extensive knowledge of horsemanship. They say, ‘A Mongolian
20 without a horse is like a bird without wings.’ Glossary
So if you want to visit the Gobi Desert, and love horses, you
airag a light drink made
will be welcomed with open arms. These people are known
from mares’ milk, slightly
for their hospitality and a proverb says, ‘Happy is the one who
sour to the taste
has guests; merry is the home that boasts a tethering rail with
25 many visitors’ horses.’ gers, yurts a special type
of tent
Understanding tethering rail a bar for
tying your horse to
Answer these questions.
velocity speed in a
1. What do the inhabitants of the Gobi Desert do for a living?
certain direction
2. How do they travel about?
with open arms with
3. Explain how the yurts protect the herders and their families
great friendship; pleased
from the weather. to see you
4. In what way do the women seem to be equal to the men?
5. Explain the proverb, ‘A Mongolian without a horse is like a
bird without wings.’
6. How would you prepare for a trip to this community?
150
8
Developing your language – words about
a lifestyle
Someone’s way of life is their lifestyle. Manko’s lifestyle was one
of poverty and back-breaking hard work for little reward.
Each of the words in the Word cloud hints at something that
Mongolian nomads spend their time doing – that helps make up
their lifestyle.
‘Dismantled’ tells you that their homes are made to be taken
apart. Although they are comfortable and made with strong
circular wooden frames, this word reminds you that they do not
stay in the same place for long.
Answer the following questions.
1. The people described in the extract are said to be ‘herders’
and to live a ‘nomadic’ life. Explain what this tells you about
their lifestyle.
2. What hints do the words ‘horsemanship’ and ‘forage’ give
you about the interests of these nomads?
3. What hint does ‘process’ give you about the herders’ way of life?
4. How does the use of ‘inhospitable’ to describe the Gobi Desert
emphasise the challenges faced by the people who live there?
Paragraph 2
● What I do for recreation and play
● My favourite activities
● Who I share my activities with
● Which is more important to me, work or play?
151
Cultures and communities
152
8
Conjunctions Remember
Use the right conjunction for each gap. Then read the Conjunctions are used to
sentence to make sure it makes sense. link sentences together.
1. I first read about the nomads of the Gobi Desert, Examples: when, where,
they seemed to me to be tough people they could why, who, which, if,
survive such winter cold. although, because, for,
since, as, after, before, how,
2. The nomads would not be able to survive it was that, unless, until, while, yet.
not for three things are their tents, their animals
and warm summers.
3. The Gobi Desert is an unusual place I might like
to go , of course, it was in mid-winter.
Danger ahead!
What is wrong with the following sentence? Explain your
answer and write down an improved version.
I’m just back from Mongolia and I feel ill but I don’t know why
because I was careful what I had whenever it was mealtime
when they gave you so much that I couldn’t finish unless it was
something I liked which wasn’t often so they must’ve thought I
was fussy but I’m not well because maybe it was something I ate,
but I don’t know.
153
Cultures and communities
Understanding
1. What job did Miss Favoro give to Sukhvinder?
2. Why did she want Gopal to keep notes?
3. Why did Melina use the word lottery about the place you are
born in?
4. Explain the disagreement between Sukhvinder and Melina
about living in Mongolia. Global
5. Is Sukhvinder justified in saying that poverty is relative? Perspectives
6. Write an email to a local charity outlining your ideas for To what extent is poverty an
tackling poverty in your country. issue in your region or country?
How does this compare to
Understanding how a group works poverty on a more global
scale? What systems would you
recommend be put in place to
Miss Favoro said
discuss and start to resolve the
I was the chair. I keep issue of poverty on a local or
the discussion in order and, when regional level? In order to make
people have had their say, I move the poor people better off, does
discussion on. Everyone must have a that mean making wealthier
chance to say something. I sometimes people less well off?
make a summary of what has
been said.
154
8
I had to keep notes and make
a record of the discussion so we
could report back. My job was to listen,
and I needed to be a quick writer –
which I wasn’t.
You are Miss Favoro. You have heard the recording of the
discussion. What would you say to each of the four students
about the part they played in the discussion?
155
Cultures and communities Creative writing workshop
Talk about what is interesting about the ostler. Does the extract
suggest more to you than just describing what he looked like?
How do you think the story might go on (and even finish?)
Here are some more characters who might start off a story…
156
8
Using vocabulary to create characters
1. Write the beginning of a story by describing a character. You
can use an idea from one of the pictures on page 156, choose
a picture of your own or create a character from your own
imagination.
Appearance – What
Clothes – What is the
does your character
character wearing?
look like?
Characteristics – What
can you tell about the
character from their
appearance?
Speech – Does the
character say anything Place – Where does
and in what tone your story take place?
of voice?
Establish Tip
After you complete this section, you will be able to: Before you answer
questions, make sure
Î read a fictional text to understand how characterisation is
you have understood the
created and used successfully
whole extract by reading it
Î respond appropriately to questions that require short but through very carefully. This
specific answers is not a skimming exercise.
Î use carefully chosen quotations from a text to show You will be returning to
engagement and understanding. the text repeatedly to scan
for specific details.
Read this extract from a fiction text.
Coming home
1 Landing at the airport had confused Maria. Of
course there was no airport when she was a child.
She had left the farm when her parents fled
the country thirty years ago and had settled a
5 thousand miles away in a place that would protect
them. Only now could she pluck up enough
courage to return. She wondered where she had
found the resolution to do so because she was
not an outgoing person, but she needed to take
10 perhaps her only chance to re-discover her roots.
‘This way’, said a kind voice as she threaded her
way through the airport which seemed like a
monster to her, ready to swallow her up.
She did not recognise the town. It had become a city with tramways
15 where she remembered carts pulled by lumbering oxen, and smart
Glossary
business people where she remembered sad men by the roadside. hemmed in surrounded by
Kind people pointed the way to her village when she spoke its ramshackle old, in need
name, and Maria set off through tall, smart buildings that once of repair
were cornfields. They seemed never-ending, but she knew the resolution strength of
20 farm was near. mind
Suddenly she saw it. She recognised the weathered, wooden
buildings immediately. They appeared the same as ever,
ramshackle, but friendly and welcoming. They looked
insignificant, hemmed in by the grey faces of the tower blocks of
25 the new university. Maria shed a tear for happy childhood days
and entered the farmhouse.
158
8
‘Yes?’ demanded an unfriendly voice. ‘What can I do for you?’
The woman’s face was wrinkled, saddened by time, yet she had
Tip
the toughness of a farmer’s wife. The two women looked at
each other for a time, searching for recognition. Then suddenly, 30 Take note of the
punctuation used in
the old lady exclaimed with astonishment, ‘It can’t be! After all
dialogue as this will give
these years!’ and flung her arms round Maria, weeping with
you a clue to how the
amazement. In that moment, Maria recognised her aunt, the
characters are behaving
brave patriot who had refused to leave her country but stayed to and the emotions they are
keep the farm alive. 35 feeling.
Later, she told her how the university bought the surrounding
land, how they offered her money, but how she refused. ‘You
see, my dear, it was the family tradition. So many generations – I
couldn’t give it up. It is so good. I never thought to see you again.’
Engage
Questions often ask you to find a quotation to support
your answer or to give a word or phrase from the passage
that matches a statement. Questions are often about
characters and settings. You may have to find examples
of devices like personification, alliteration, onomatopoeia
and imagery.
Answer the following questions to practise these skills.
159
Cultures and communities Assessment workshop Fiction reading
Evaluate
Here is a selection of sample answers to the questions on the
previous page. For each question, think about which answers
are best and why.
160
8
Enable
At the beginning of this Assessment workshop, one of your targets was to
respond appropriately to questions that require short but specific answers.
Read this extract. Haoyou is a 12-year-old boy whose story is set in China in
the 13th century. Haoyou’s father has been killed, so Haoyou must provide
an income for his mother and baby sister.
The Kite-maker
1 So Haoyou became a kite-maker. Haoyou the artisan. Haoyou
the breadwinner. Great-Uncle Bo (...), grudgingly gave money
enough to buy some lengths of reject silk, some soiled paper,
sewing thread, size, and a craft knife. Haoyou went out himself
5 to cut bamboo, which he split into spills. He made red kites and
blue ones, white kites and yellow.
‘Where shall I put them?’ he asked his mother, holding up the
first, moving his hand back and forth so that the size-wet silk
breathed like a diaphragm.
10 ‘In your father’s bedroom,’ said Qing’an. ‘I’ll sleep by the
hearth.’ Haoyou was shocked that his model-making should oust
his mother from her bed, but obedience forbade him to argue.
Besides, his heart thrilled at the thought his kites were adjudged Tip
so important. Up until now, they had simply been a hobby. Now
15 they were his profession, and his mother walked among them as You may not understand
through a zoo of weird and wonderful animals. every word in the text but
you should be able to work
As indeed, they were.
out the approximate meaning
Haoyou made triangular kites and square ones, oblongs and of a word you do not know.
pennons with swallow tails. He made box kites and tubular kites, Understanding the context
20 and with every one, he mastered some new deftness, learned some – the sentence the word is in
secret trick of quickness, and how to keep waste to the minimum. and other sentences around it
His friends said, ‘Let’s see what you made, Haoyou! Let’s see.’ – can be very useful.
But Haoyou only smiled that polite, businessman’s smile which
he had seen Great-Uncle Bo use: the yes which meant no.
25 ‘When I have enough,’ he told them.
His mother – quiet-spoken at the best of times – trod the house
Glossary
as hesitantly as a crane, and said nothing. But he heard her artisan skilled worker
murmur to the family shrine, where Pei’s rice bowl stood, ‘Do spills thin strips
you see, Pei? Do you see how hard our boy is working?’ And
30 then the pride and honour pricked behind Haoyou’s eyes and he
vowed to make the most beautiful kites Dagu had ever seen.
From The Kite Rider by Geraldine McCaughrean 161
Cultures and communities Assessment workshop Fiction reading
162
8
6. How does the writer create a sense of growing excitement in
the extract? Copy and complete the table by referring to the
Tip
passage. You will need an explanation written in your own
When choosing
words and a relevant quotation.
quotations from an extract
Quotation Explanation to answer a question, ask
Using lists ‘He made red kites yourself the following
and blue ones, white questions:
kites and yellow.’ ● Does this quotation
Using the rule of The writer increases exactly match what the
three question is asking?
the pace by
grouping together ● Are there any
actions to show an alternative quotations
to consider before
improvement in choosing?
Haoyou’s mastery of
● How much of the
kite-making skills.
chosen text is actually
7. What does the writer infer by using the phrase ‘businessman’s needed to answer the
smile’ on line 23? Tick () one box. question fully?
Haoyou is being dishonest and evasive with his friends
Haoyou is unsure and frightened of how to behave
Haoyou is growing into his new role as a breadwinner
8. Look at line 27. The phrase ‘as hesitantly as a crane’ is an
example of what literary technique? Circle one answer from
the list.
A Metaphor
B Simile
C Synonym
9. What aspect of a crane is being used to describe the
mother’s actions?
10. In your own words, explain why it is most important that
Haoyou can create such wonderful kites.
When you have finished, discuss your part of the story with
your teacher.
163
Cambridge Lower Secondary
Complete
English
Second Edition
9
Cambridge Lower Secondary Complete English embeds an excellent
understanding of the Cambridge Lower Secondary English curriculum. The
stretching approach supports learners with reading, writing, listening and
speaking, and develops the skills required to help students progress to
Cambridge IGCSE® with confidence.
● Fully prepare for exams – comprehensive coverage of the course
● Develop advanced skills – cross-subject links support Global
Perspectives tasks
● Progress to the next stage – differentiated extension material eases
the transition to 14–16 study
eBook
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