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Сборник учебно-методических материалов по английскому языку (Базовый курс)

Содержание:

Module 1: Meeting people. Introducing.

1. A) Complete the personal introduction form.

2. Describe someone in your group or a famous person. Other students must guess the person.

4. Correct the mistakes.

6. Filling forms.

Vixen loans & capital

Module 2: Man and his family.

I. Meet Jenifer.

II. Parents.

III. Her brother.

IV. Relatives

V. A typical family.

VI. Grandparents.

VII. Child care.

5. Correct the mistakes.

6. Choose the correct verb form.

Module 3: Travelling.

2. Look at these phrases and divide them into things a customer would probably say and things a travel agent would probably say. See if you can finish the phrases with suitable words.

2. What are your travel essentials? Why?

3. The extracts below are from guidebooks for Iceland and Zimbabwe. Read the extracts and match them to the countries.

4. Imagine you’re going to one of these countries. How many things have you got already and what would you have to buy?

5. There are lots of compound nouns in the texts, like sleeping bag. How

Vocabulary booster: things you take on holiday

1. A) Look at the advertisements for three dream holidays. Which places do you visit on each holiday?

In pairs. Put the dialogue in the right order . Check the tapescript 3-1.

2. Where do you go first when you travel by plane? Put these places in the correct order. Write 1-5 on the left.

3. Listen to the conversations. Where are they? Write the letter next to the correct place on the right in ex.2.(tapescript 3-2)

4. Travel information

Imagine you are in a hot sunny country on holiday. Write a postcard to a friend. Mention five of the things in ex 2.

In the town – в городе

1. In groups. Choose one of these trips. What sort of bag would you take and what would you pack? Why? Tell the class about your plans for the traveling.

2. A) Complete the story about a holiday incident.

3. Work in pairs or small groups.

8. Read this conversation in the hotel and put the lines in the correct order.

9. Ben is going to take his driving test soon. Complete the conversation with the correct form of have to or can.

10. Put the verbs in the box into the correct category.

1. Work in groups.

Imagine that you are cooking a meal for twenty. Your friend offers his help. Prepare vegetables, set the table, do the washing-up, open the wine.

1. Put the words in the box in the correct place in the table. Write the singular and plural form for the countable nouns.

2. Put the following words under the correct heading in the box below. Translate the words into Russian.

3.Using the clues below, complete the words in the word grid 1-8 and find the Mystery word.

4.Tick the correct sentence:

5. Match the questions with the answers:

6. Put the lines of dialogues in order:

7.Read parts of Anna and Liz’s conversation with the waitress and complete it with the given phrases below.

8. Rewrite the following sentences using the construction there is/

Text c Presents and souvenirs in British shops. Read the text and answer the following questions:

1. Make the purchase word grid. Give clues for your words. The example bellow may help you:

2. Imagine that you have lost your luggage with all your clothes. You have enough money to buy only twelve items of clothing. Make a list of the clothes you would buy and the colours.

2. Where do you buy these things?

3. Where would you hear these sentences?

5. Tick the correct sentence:

6. Put the dialogue in the correct order:

Module 6: Health

Diseases

Mini projects

1. Give Russian equivalents to the following:

2. Medical terms

3. At the chemist

4. Read the text. Translate the words and phrases in brackets.

Module 7: Free time activities.

1) You discuss with your friend the way to spend your weekend. Having different opinions on the matter, it takes you rather long to work out a common plan

2. Make reports on:

1 Insert prepositions or adverbs:

2 Arrange the following into groups of words and word combinations close in meaning:

3 Fit the following sentences into situations. Paraphrase them wherever possible. Translate into Russian.

4 Use the following word combinations in sentences of your own:

5 Explain the difference between:

6 Correct whatever is wrong in the statements

Module 9: Education and job.

Vocabulary notes

2. Discuss in groups. Read the people’s problems. (Do you have similar problems yourself?)

3. Choose one of the topics given below and make a report.

Module 9-II. Job.

If you do something wrong you are: if you’ve done nothing wrong, you are:

Content

Interview 1

Interview 2

1 Discuss in groups.

2 There are some adjectives below. Use some of them describing yourself:

4 Make up your Resume, using these points:

Interviewee. Think about these things:

IX Write complete sentences.

X Match the questions and the answers.

Travelling.

Module 9-II. Job.

Составитель Л. П. Вачугова

1. Text A Work and Jobs.

Text B (part 1) The right way to find a job.

Text B (part 2) How to write a CV

2. Dialogues: Interview 1.

Interview 2.

3. Grammar: First conditionals; Future forms.

Present Indefinite and Present continuous, Past Indefinite and Present Perfect (review)

4. Vocabulary: work, kinds of job, discharge, recruitment, applying for a job, abilities, earnings, professions.

5. Projects: discussing (in groups)/ advertising jobs/ professions; describing one’s abilities; having job interviews (role-play), getting job information by phone (pair work), writing CV and Cover Letter, filling in application forms.

Text A Work and jobs

Read the following text and answer the questions:

  1. What is the difference between “work” and “job”?

  2. What are the ways to know about the vacancies?

  3. What is the selection procedure?

  4. What is the difference between “salary” and “wages”?

  5. What extra money can you get?

  6. Are this jobs considered to be highly skilled, skilled, semi-skilled, or unskilled?

Teacher, car worker on a production line, airline pilot, office cleaner, bus driver, office manager.

  1. How do we call people working for a company?

8. What is “business”?

What do you do?

To find out what someone’s job is you say “What do you do?” Here, Kerstin talks about her job:

“I work for a large European car maker. I work on car design. In fact, I run the design department and I manager a team of designers: 20 people work under me. It’s very interesting. One of my main responsibilities is to make sure that new model designs are finished on time. I’m also in charge of design budgets.

I deal with a lot of different people in the company. I am responsible for co-ordination between design and production: I work with managers at our manufacturing plants”.

If you work, you have a job. Work is also the place where you do your job.

- Hi, I’m Frank. I work in a bank in New York City.

I leave for work at 7.30 every morning.

- I go to work by train and subway.

- I get to/ arrive at work at about nine.

- I’m usually at work till six.

- Luckily, I don’t get ill very much so I’m not often off work.

A full-time job is for the whole of the normal working week; a part-time job is for less time than that.

A permanent job does not finish after a fixed period; a temporary job finishes after a fixed period.

Old and new ways.

I’m an office worker in an insurance company. It’s a nine-to-five job with regular working hours. The work isn’t very interesting, but I like to be able to go home at a reasonable time.

I’m in computer programming. There’s a system of flextime in my company. We can start at any time before eleven, and finish as early as three, as long as we do enough hours each month.

I work in a car plant. I work in shifts. I may be on the day shift one week and the night shift the next week. It’s difficult changing from long shift to another.

Nice work if you can get it.

All these words are used in front of “job” and “work”:

  • satisfying, stimulating, fascinating, exciting: the work is interesting and gives you positive feelings

  • dull, boring, uninteresting, unstimulating: the work is not interesting

  • repetitive, routine: the work involves doing the same things again and again

  • tiring, tough, hard, demanding: the work is difficult and makes you tired


Note: satisfying – доставляющий удовольствие

fascinating – очень интересный и привлекательный

exciting – вызывающий интерес

dull - неинтересный

boring - скучный

repetitive – постоянно повторяющийся

tiring - утомительный

tough - трудный

demanding – требующий терпения, усилия

Recruitment

The process of finding people for particular jobs is recruitment. Someone who has been recruited is a recruit. The company employs them: they join the company. A company may recruit employees directly or use outside recruiters, recruitment agencies or employment agencies. Outside specialists called headhunters. The process is called headhunting.

Applying for a job

Fred is a van driver, but he was fed up with long trips. He looked in the situations vacant pages of his local newspaper, where a local supermarket was advertising for van drivers for a new delivery service. He applied for the job by completing an application form and sending it in.

Harry is a building engineer. He saw a job in the appointments pages of one of the national papers. He made an application, sending in his CV and a covering letter explaining why he wanted the job and why he was the right person for it.

Note: Situation, post and position are formal words often used in job advertisements and applications.

Selection procedures

Dagmar Schmidt is the head of recruitment at a German telecommunications company. She talks about the selection process, the methods that the company uses to recruit people:

“We advertise in national newspapers. We look at the backgrounds of applicants: their experience of different jobs and their educational qualifications. We don’t ask for handwritten letters of application as people usually apply by e-mail.

We invite the most interesting candidates to a group discussion. Then we have individual interviews with each candidate. We also ask the candidates to do written psychometric tests to assess their intelligence and personality.

After this, we shortlist three or four candidates. We check their references by writing to their referees: previous employers or teachers that candidates have named in their applications. If the references are OK, we ask the candidates to comeback for more interviews. Finally, we offer the job to someone.”

Education and training

Margareta: The trouble with graduates, people who’ve just left university, is that their paper qualifications are good, but they have no work experience. They just don’t know how business works.

Nils: I disagree. Education should teach people how to think, not prepare them for a particular job. One of last year’s recruits had graduated from Oxford in philosophy and she’s doing very well!

Margareta: Philosophy’s an interesting subject, but for our company, it’s more useful if you train as a scientist and qualify as a biologist or chemist – training for a specific job is better.

Skilled and unskilled

A skill is the ability to do something well, especially because you have learned how to do it and practiced it.

Jobs, and the people who do them, can be described as:

highly skilled skilled semi-skilled unskilled

(e.g. car designer) (e.g. car production manager) (e.g. taxi driver) (e.g. car cleaner)

You can say that someone is: You can also say that someone is:


+ noun computers

customer care Good with… figures

electronics people

computer software

skilled at, _________________

or skilled in… + -ing

communicating

using PCs

working with large groups

The right person

These words are often used in job advertisements. Companies look for people who are:

  • Self-starters, self-motivated, or self-driven: good at working on their own.

  • Methodical, systematic and organized: can work in a planned, orderly way.

  • Computer-literate: good with computers.

  • Numerate: good with numbers.

  • Motivated: very keen to do well in their job.

  • Talented: naturally very good at what they do.

  • Team players: people who work well with other people.

Note: self-starter – человек, способный работать самостоятельно, не нуждаясь ни в чьих советах

self-motivated – человек, знающий как вести себя в той или иной ситуации

self-driven – с собственным автомобилем

Wages, salary and benefits

My name’s Luigi and I’m a hotel manager in Venice. I get paid a salary every month.

I’m Ivan and I work as a waiter in Prague. I like my job even if I don’t earn very much: I get paid wages every week by the restaurant.

I’m Catherine and I’m a saleswoman based in Paris. I get a basic salary, plus commission: a percentage on everything I sell. If I sell more than a particular amount in a year, I also get extra money – a bonus, which is nice. There are some good fringe benefits with this job: I get a company car, and they make payments for my pension, money that I’ll get regularly after I stop working. All that makes a good benefits package.

Employees, management and administration

The people who work for a company, are its employees, personnel, staff, workers or workforce. But these words can mean just the people carrying out the work of a company, rather than those leading it and organizing it: the management.

A company’s most senior managers usually work in its head office or headquarters (HQ). Some managers have their own individual offices.

Note: Workforce, work-force and work force are all possible.

Losing your job


If you do something wrong you are: if you’ve done nothing wrong, you are:

- dismissed - laid off

- fired - made redundant

- sacked - offered early retirement

- terminated

Employees who are made redundant may get advice about finding another job, retraining, etc.

Note: to dismiss - сократить

to fire - уволить (выгнать)

to sack – уволить (за что-то)

to terminate – прервать контракт

to lay off – уволить

to make redundant – уволить по сокращению штатов

Business and businesses

Business is the activity of producing, buying and selling goods and services. A business, company, firm or a concern, sells goods or services. Large companies considered together are referred to as big business.

A company may be called enterprise, especially to emphasize its risk-taking nature. Businesses vary in size, from the self-employed person working a long, through the small or medium enterprise (SME) to the large multinational with activities in several countries.

Limited liability

I’m the managing director and main shareholder of a small company in Scotland called Advanced Components Ltd. “Ltd” means limited company. The other shareholders and I have limited liability: we don’t have to use our personal property, such as a house or car, to pay the company’s debts.

I’m the chief executive of a British company called Megaco PLC. “PLC” means public limited company, so anybody can buy and sell shares in Megaco on the stock market.

I’m CEO of Bigbucks Inc. “Inc” stands for Incorporated. This shows that we are a corporation.

a) Write about each person using words in brackets.

  1. I’m Alicia. I work in a public library in the afternoon from two until six. (I \ job)

I have a part-time job

2. My husband works in an office from 9 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. (He \ job)

3. Our daughter works in a bank from 8 till 5 everyday. (She \ work)

4. I’m David and I work in a café from 8 p.m. until midnight. (I \ work)

5. My wife works in local government and she can have this job for as long as she wants it. (She \ job)

6. Our son is working on a firm for four weeks. (He \ job)

7. Our daughter is working in an office for three weeks. (She \ work)

b) Read the job adverts and answer the questions:

  1. How many different jobs are advertised?

  2. Which job needs most experience?

  3. What is the minimum salary for the English Lecturer?

  4. How can you contact Maria Philips?

  5. Which job pays most?

  6. Which job doesn’t pay at all?

  7. Which needs most experience?

  8. Which involves most travel?

  9. Which isn’t permanent?

  10. Which job do you need a computer to apply for? Why?

  11. Which jobs want people who’ve been to university?

  12. Which could somebody leaving school apply for?

INTERNATIONAL

VOLUNTARY WORK

PROGRAMME

______________________

If you’re planning to do voluntary work over the summer, take a look at what we have to offer. We send volunteers on four-week projects round the world, helping local communities.

Volunteers need no qualifications, should be aged 18+, enthusiastic, friendly, flexible, and enjoy working in a team.

For more information write to:

IVWP

19 Brook Street

Guildford

GU5 2JY

or visit our homepage at

www.ivwp.org

Can you see into the future?

If you can, and you see yourself in IT, then we want to hear from you. We have vacancies for recent graduates in our Systems Support Network.

We offer:

  • a starting salary in the region of $20K

  • a full package of benefits including pension, health insurance, and flextime

  • challenging and varied work

You offer:

  • a degree or diploma in computer science

  • at least a year’s experience in systems support

  • enthusiasm, reliability, flexibility, and ambition

Interested? E-mail us.

networker@ssncv.co.uk

City of Eureka, California

Parks and Beaches Manager

Full-time

Salary $4,500-$6,500 per month

Application closing date: Open until filled. Apply ASAP.

You will be

responsible for the development and care of the city’s parks and recreation facilities. You must have a degree in park management and four years’ experience. The position requires excellent communication skills, and the ability to work independently. Applicants must have a California Driver’s License.

For more information contact:

City of Eureka Personnel Department

10 Manchester Drive

Eureka California 90401


the following positions are now

available in Glasgow and Edinburgh

waiters, waitresses, bar servers

you should be smart and motivated

chefs

you should have at least two years’

experience – salary excellent

if you are interested, please contact

steve on 0131 921 1221

Langside College Exeter

English Lecturer

P. 15,885 to P. 23,305

Applicants should have a degree in English, a teaching qualification, and three years’ experience in an institute of higher education. Good communication skills are essential.

For further details contact:

Maria Philips, Langside College,

50 Prospect Road, Exeter, EX6 3DE

philipsm@langside.ac.uk

direct line 01392 345777

Wanted

SPORTS CAMP INSTRUCTORS

Enthusiastic sports instructors wanted for our summer camp in August, teaching groups of 11-14 year olds. No experience is necessary, but a knowledge of at least one foreign language is useful.

Write with a CV to Ms Jean Robson,

Sports Camp International, PO Box 231.

Text B (part 1) The write way to find a job.

You’ve graduated from the University and your task now is to find a job. How to do it? This information will help you.

Answering advertisements is one way of finding a job. But there is a big gap between the number of vacancies filled and those advertised. So writing to employers can often be a good idea.

The object is to get the employer to see you – no more, because the best you can hope for from such an approach is an interview. Asking straight out for a job is fatal because it invites a yes or no response. As no one will offer a post to an unknown quantity the answer will always be negative.

There are a number of golden rules:

  • Try to research the name (spelt correctly!) of a specific person to write to.

  • Put yourself in the employer’s shoes. Think of what you have to offer.

  • Try to keep your CV brief – one page is enough; perfect prose isn’t expected – note form is acceptable.

  • Gear your CV to the job and organization. No two CVs should be exactly alike.

  • If you’ve been in work, explain your duties and how your work has evolved. Demonstrate on paper that you are a potential asset.

  • List your outside interests and skills. Don’t forget your language abilities. Participation in sports can show your capacity for team work.

If your covering letter is in English it should be checked by a native speaker. You should state at the beginning why you are writing and then try to keep the reader interested. You must establish that you would like an interview. Edit ruthlessly. Go over your letter as many times as necessary. Search out and get rid of all unnecessary words and sentences.