Kyzylorda region, Shiely district
“Ak Orda” school-gymnasium No 45
Work Book
The theme:
Unit 6 Plans and predictions.
Introduction
Grade: 7B
Date: 29.11.2013
y
Teacher: Kussepova
G.T.
Student: _____________________________
2013-2014 academic year
The theme: Unit 6 Plans and predictions. Introduction
Date: 29.11.2013
The aims of the lesson:
To give information about Bristol, Manchester, Amman and
Shanghai;
To teach them how to compare and use future tense during making
the sentences;
To teach them to work in groups.
The
expected results:
ü Students will know about Bristol, Manchester, Amman and Shanghai;
ü Students will be able to compare and use future tense during
making the sentences;
ü Students will be able to work in groups.
Steppes of the lesson:
Warm up “Missing letters”
“Before/After” chart
Team work “Venn diagram”
Pair work “Discussion”
“Before/After” chart
I.
Organization moment (7 minutes)
a.
Greeting the students
b.
Check up their attendance
c.
Warm up “Missing letters”
Write the appropriate letter where they are missing.
A_str_li_ C_i_a G_in_a
A_gen_ina C_pr_s In_i_
Br_zi_ E_y_t K_r_a
C_m_r_n G_or_ia K_za_hs_an
First group
Second group
II.
Team work “Venn diagram”
-
Determine roles as “Leader”, “Times keeper”, “Secretary” and
“Speaker”. As the class has fewer students, we don’t take the role of
“Observer”.
-
Before the beginning your work, complete the following chart
“Before/ After”
You will
watch videos about Manchester, Amman, Bristol and Shanghai. After watching
these videos you should make a comparison between them. For example first group
get the video about Manchester and Amman, so you will compare these two cities.
The next group will compare Bristol and Shanghai.
Materials
about above-mentioned cities:
Amman is the capital and most populous city of
the Hashemite
Kingdom of Jordan. It is the country's political, cultural and
commercial centre and one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the
world. The Greater Amman area has a population of 2,842,629 as of 2010.[2] The
recent economic growth experienced in Amman is unmatched by any other Arab city
except those located in the Persian Gulf. Amman is also the administrative seat
of the homonymous governorate. Amman is
also ranked a Gamma global city on
the World city index.
Amman was named one of the MENA's best
cities according to economic, labour, environmental, and socio-cultural
factors. Amman is among the most popular locations for multinational
corporations to set up their regional offices, alongside Doha and
only behind Dubai.
Furthermore, it is expected that in the next 10 years these three cities will
capture the largest share of multinational corporation activity in the region.[3] It
is a major tourist destination in the region and the capital is especially
popular among Gulf tourists.
Bristol is a city, unitary authority area and ceremonial county in South West England, with an estimated population of 433,100 for
the unitary authority in 2009,[3] and
a surrounding Larger Urban Zone (LUZ) with an estimated 1,070,000
residents in 2007. It is England's sixth and the United Kingdom's eighth
most populous city, one
of the Core Cities Group and
the most populous city in South West England. Historically in Gloucestershire, the city
received a Royal charter in
1155 and was granted County status in 1373. From the 13th century, for
half a millennium, it ranked amongst the top three English cities after London,
alongside York andNorwich, on the
basis of tax receipts, until
the rapid rise of Liverpool, Birminghamand Manchester during
the Industrial Revolution in
the latter part of the 18th century. It borders the counties of Somerset and Gloucestershire, and is
also located near the historic cities of Bath to
the south east and Gloucester to
the north. The city is built around the River Avon, and it also has a short coastline on
the Severn Estuary, which
flows into the Bristol Channel. Bristol
is the largest centre of culture, employment and education in the region. Its
prosperity has been linked with the sea since its earliest days. The
commercial Port of Bristol was
originally in the city centre before being moved to the Severn Estuary at Avonmouth; Royal Portbury Dock is
on the western edge of the city boundary. In more recent years the economy has
depended on the creative media, electronics and aerospace industries,
and the city centre docks have been regenerated as a centre of heritage and
culture. There are 34 other populated places named Bristol, most in
the United States, but also in Peru,
Canada, Jamaica,
Barbados, andCosta Rica, all
presumably commemorating the original. People from Bristol are
termed Bristolians.
Manchester is a city and metropolitan borough in North West England with an estimated population of 512,000.[5] It
lies within the United Kingdom's second most populous urban area which
has a population of 2,553,379.[6] Manchester
is located in the south-central part of North West England, fringed by the Cheshire Plain to
the south and the Pennines to
the north and east, and an arc of towns with which it forms a continuous
conurbation. The local authority is Manchester City Council, and the
city's inhabitants are referred to as Mancunians. Manchester's unplanned
urbanisation was brought on by a boom in textile manufacture during the
Industrial Revolution, and
resulted in it becoming the world's first industrialised city. Today Manchester
is ranked as a beta world city by
the Globalization and World Cities
Research Network; The city is notable for its architecture, culture,music scene, media links, scientific and engineering output, social impact andsporting connections. Sports
clubs which bear the city name include Premier League football
teams, Manchester City and Manchester United.
Manchester was the site of the world's first railway station, and the
place where scientists first split the atom and developed the first stored-programme computer. Manchester
is served by two universities, including the largest single-site university in
the UK, and has the country's third largest urban
economy. As of 2011 Manchester is the fastest growing major city in the
UK [13] and
the third-most visited city in the UK by foreign visitors, after London and
Edinburgh, and the most visited in England outside London.
Shanghai is the largest city by population in China and
the largest city properby
population in the world.[9] It
is one of the four direct-controlled municipalities of
China, with a total population of over 23 million
as of 2010.[10] It
is a global financial center, and
a transport hub with the world's busiest container port. Located
in the Yangtze River Delta in East China, Shanghai
sits at the mouth of theYangtze River in
the middle portion of the Chinese coast. The municipality borders the provinces
of Jiangsu and Zhejiang to
the north, south and west, and is bounded to the east by the East China Sea.For
centuries a major administrative, shipping, and trading town, Shanghai grew in
importance in the 19th century due to European recognition of its
favorable portlocation
and economic potential. The city was one of several opened to foreign trade
following the British victory over China in the First Opium War and
the subsequent 1842 Treaty of Nanking which
allowed the establishment of the Shanghai International Settlement. The city
then flourished as a center of commerce between east and west, and became the
undisputed financial hub of the Asia Pacific in the 1930s. However, with the
Communist Party takeover of the mainland in 1949, trade was reoriented to focus
on socialist countries, and the city's global influence declined. In the 1990s,
the economic reforms introduced
by Deng Xiaoping resulted
in an intense re-development of the city, aiding the return of finance and
foreign investment to the city. Shanghai is a popular tourist destination
renowned for its historical landmarks such as The Bund, City God Temple and Yu Garden, as well
as the extensive Lujiazuiskyline
and major museums including the Shanghai Museum and
the China Art Museum. It has
been described as the "showpiece" of the booming economy of mainland China.
Assessment
Assess by
using criteria
Criteria
|
Assessment
|
Given answers
|
|
Comparison
|
|
Grammatical and lexical correctness of the sentences
|
|
Assessor
|
|
III. Pair work “Discussion”
- You will work in pairs. Read the grammar rules and then work
in pairs by discussing about your future plans
- Assess each other with showing traffic light cards
Simple Future
Form will [will + verb]
Examples:
·
You will
help him later.
·
Will you help him later?
·
You will
not help him later.
FORM Be Going To
[am/is/are + going to + verb]
Examples:
·
You are
going to meet Jane
tonight.
·
Are you going
to meet Jane tonight?
·
You are
not going to meet Jane
tonight.
USE 1 "Will" to
Express a Voluntary Action
"Will" often suggests that a
speaker will do something voluntarily. A voluntary action is one the speaker
offers to do for someone else. Often, we use "will" to respond to
someone else's complaint or request for help. We also use "will" when
we request that someone help us or volunteer to do something for us. Similarly,
we use "will not" or "won't" when we refuse to voluntarily
do something.
Examples:
·
I will
send you the
information when I get it.
·
I will
translate the email, so
Mr. Smith can read it.
·
Will you help me move this heavy table?
·
Will you make dinner?
·
I will not
do your homework for
you.
·
I won't do all the housework myself!
USE 2 "Will" to
Express a Promise
"Will" is usually used in
promises.
Examples:
·
I will
call you when I arrive.
·
I promise I will
not tell him about the
surprise party.
·
Don't worry, I'll be careful.
·
I won't
tell anyone your secret.
USE 3 "Be going
to" to Express a Plan
"Be going to" expresses that
something is a plan. It expresses the idea that a person intends to do
something in the future. It does not matter whether the plan is realistic or
not.
Examples:
·
He is
going to spend his
vacation in Hawaii.
·
She is not
going to spend her
vacation in Hawaii.
·
I'm going to be an actor when I grow up.
·
Michelle is
going to begin medical
school next year.
·
They are
going to drive all the
way to Alaska.
·
Who are you going
to invite to the party?
USE 4 "Will" or
"Be Going to" to Express a Prediction
Both "will" and "be going
to" can express the idea of a general prediction about the future.
Predictions are guesses about what might happen in the future. In
"prediction" sentences, the subject usually has little control over
the future and therefore USES 1-3 do not apply. In the following examples,
there is no difference in meaning.
Examples:
·
The year 2222 will
be a very interesting
year.
·
The year 2222 is
going to be a very
interesting year.
·
John Smith will
be the next President.
·
John Smith is
going to be the next
President.
·
The movie "Zenith" will
win several Academy
Awards.
·
The movie "Zenith" is
going to win several
Academy Awards.
“Questionnaire”
1.
Will you be here tomorrow?
2.
Will you be at home on Saturday night?
3.
Will you be at the seaside on Sunday afternoon?
4.
Will you be at this school next year?
5.
Will you be in this class next year?
(write
your names)
A:
|
B:
|
A:
Will you be here tomorrow?
|
|
A:
Will you be at home on Saturday night?
|
|
A:
Will you be at the seaside on Sunday afternoon?
|
|
A:
Will you be at this school next year?
|
|
A:
Will you be in this class next year?
|
|
IV. “Before/
After” chart
V.
Expression of students about
the lesson
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