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СОДЕРЖАНИЕ
Сборник учебно-методических материалов по английскому языку (Базовый курс)
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.
6. Choose the correct verb form.
2. What are your travel essentials? Why?
5. There are lots of compound nouns in the texts, like sleeping bag. How
Vocabulary booster: things you take on holiday
In pairs. Put the dialogue in the right order . Check the tapescript 3-1.
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.
10. Put the verbs in the box into the correct category.
3.Using the clues below, complete the words in the word grid 1-8 and find the Mystery word.
5. Match the questions with the answers:
6. Put the lines of dialogues in order:
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. Where do you buy these things?
3. Where would you hear these sentences?
6. Put the dialogue in the correct order:
1. Give Russian equivalents to the following:
4. Read the text. Translate the words and phrases in brackets.
Module 7: Free time activities.
1 Insert prepositions or adverbs:
2 Arrange the following into groups of words and word combinations close in meaning:
4 Use the following word combinations in sentences of your own:
5 Explain the difference between:
6 Correct whatever is wrong in the statements
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.
If you do something wrong you are: if you’ve done nothing wrong, you are:
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:
1 Please use block capitals. a Mr/ Mrs/ Ms/ Miss/ other
2 Please underline. b always sometimes never
3 Please circle. c GOHN BROWN
4 Tick as appropriate. d yes no
5 Indicate with a cross. e sex M F
6 Delete as appropriate. f Mon/ Tues/ Wed/ Thur/ Fri
Complete this form.
Vixen loans & capital
Please write in BLOCK CAPITALS and tick as appropriate.
Title__________________________________________________
Surname_______________________________________________
Full first names__________________________________________
Sex M F
Date of birth____________________________________________
Place of birth____________________________________________
Nationality______________________________________________
Marital status single married divorced separated
Number of dependent children______________________________
Address
House number____________________________________________
Street name______________________________________________
Town___________________________________________________
Postcode (essential)________________________________________
Telephone (inc. code)______________________________________
Occupation______________________________________________
Present employer__________________________________________
Signature _______________________________________________
Date ___________________________________________________
For official use only.
Module 2: Man and his family.
Составитель И. А. Тазюкова
1.Text A. Britain now. The family.
Text B. Househusband.
2.Dialogue. An interview with Jenifer.
3.Grammar: the noun (case, number); the Present Simple and the Present Progressive.
4.Vocabulary: family values, family problems, household, relationships, social support, daily routine, daily problems, feelings, emotions.
5.Projects: drawing a family tree; discussing relationships/ family problems (suggested); drawing up a personal contract; writing an essay “Families in my country”.
Family tree.
Look at the family tree and complete the text with the correct words. Be careful – you may need to use plurals.
Julia = Derek
Phil = Jean Sarah = Tom
Kate Molly Toby Jessica Rosy Ben
Sister, aunt, mum/mother, father/dad, cousin, granny/grandmother, grandchild, brother, grandson, uncle, husband, child, granddaughter, sister, grandfather
I’ve got one _____ and two_____. Toby is the eldest and Ben is the youngest. My mum’s _____, Jean, is my______. She’s married to Phil, so he’s my _______. They’ve got two ______, Katie and Molly, who are our_____. Jean and mum’s ______, Julia, is our______. Her_______is our. He’s called Derek. Julia and Derek are our ______ and we’re their _______. They’ve got four _______and two _______.
Draw your family tree, and tell your partner something about the people in it.
Text A. Britain now. The family.
Read the text and answer the questions.
There are many different views on family life. Some people couldn’t do without the support and love of their families. Others say it is the source of most of our problems and anxieties. Whatever the truth is, the family is definitely a powerful symbol. Turn on the television or open a magazine and you will see advertisements featuring happy, balanced families. Politicians often try to win votes by standing for “family values”: respect for parental authority, stability in marriage, chastity and care for the elderly.
There is no definition of a “normal family”. Broadly speaking, the family is a group of people related by blood or law, living together or associating with one another for a common purpose.
That purpose is usually to provide shelter and food, and to bring up children. The nature of the family keeps changing: there are a number of types of family that exist in a society at any one time.
Many people think there was once a golden age in which the world was filled with happy families. The mother ran the house, and the father went out to work to bring back enough money for this ideal family to live its life.
The family – mother, father and three or four healthy, happy children – would go out for an occasional treat. Roles were very clear for the parents and children. Discipline within the family was strong, and moral standards were high. This image is the kind of family life people mean when they talk about “Victorian values”. The vision of a golden age is based perhaps on how we think perfect family life should be.
Some sociologists argue that the nature of the family constantly changing and that there is no point in making comparisons with families of a generation ago. However, people continue to hope for a stable family life. Marriage has no gone out of fashion; although the number of divorces has increased, so has the number of divorced people who will marry again.
It is now acceptable in most social circles for people to live together before they are married – if they intend to get married at all. The numbers of couples cohabiting increased during the 1980s (18 per cent of unmarried people aged between 16 and 59 years old), becoming common as a living arrangement before marriage. Many people think that this is a useful way of “testing out” a relationship before the commitment of marriage. People still get married, often after living together, but there is an increasing chance that the marriage ends in divorce (one in two marriages).
On average, those who do choose to get married tend to marry later: the ages at which men and women marry for the first time have risen continuously in recent years. In 1990, it was 27 for men and 25 for women. In Britain, you can get married in a church or in a registry office.
Family sizes fell in the 1970s and 1980s.This is partly because people have fewer children: in Britain most people have just two. But the main factor is the increase in the number of one-person households. Twenty seven per cent of households consist of people who live on their own. Most people living alone are widows, but there has been a big increase in the number of men who live alone. This is because a large number of couples get divorced. Men often live on their own after getting divorced, whereas women often live with the children.
Nowadays, nine per cent of families are lone parents with children. Women are usually the head of the type of household. Just over 17 per cent of families with children are headed by single mothers, with about one per cent headed by a lone father.
A high proportion of men and women living alone have never married – there is no longer great pressure on people to do so. In the past a woman, especially, would not leave the family home until she was getting married and starting her own family.
Now many children leave home at around 18. It is not unusual for young people to live alone or with friends. Finding somewhere cheap to live is not easy in Britain because there is not enough council housing. It is especially difficult for young people without work because they receive very little money from the State. If they are under 18, have left home and are not on a government work training scheme, they receive no money from the State. There are hostels or the homeless, but the accommodation is always temporary.
Answer the questions:
Can you think of people you know who have no children or live on their own?
Would you like to live on your own? Why (not)?
When do you think you will leave home?
If you could not live with your parents, where would you go and what would you do?
Text B Househusband.
Read the text.
It’s early evening and Mike Beaver, 41, is sitting in the living room of his suburban house near London. He’s reading to his daughter Louise, six, and his baby son Eddie is playing with his toys. Aha, you think, mike has come from work and he’s enjoying quality time with his children.
But you’d be wrong. Mike is a househusband. He looks after the children full-time, and he does the same things any housewife does. He wakes the children up and gives them their breakfast, takes Louise to school, and one day a week takes Eddie to the nursery. Then he cleans the house, does the shopping, and picks the children up from school. He makes dinner for his wife Tina. Then he puts the children to bed – all while she’s at work.
Tina is the director of a PR firm in London so she earns a good salary, but she works long hours. She goes to work at 7.00 in the morning and she often doesn’t get home until 8 p.m., when the children are usually asleep, so she hardly ever sees them during the week. But at the weekend they spend time together. They go shopping, go for a family walk, the children sometimes invite friends over, and in the evening they all sit in front of the television. For these two days, Tina forgets her career, and she enjoys being with the children.
“Many people, especially men, don’t believe me, but I’m enjoying life. I’m doing what I want to do”, says Mike. And what does Tina think? “It means that I can have a career, which I love. And I admire Mike for being so good at what he does – he does a better job than I ever could!” she says with a smile.
Notes:
Househusband / housewife – домохозяин, домохозяйка
To earn a good salary – хорошо зарабатывать
Work long hours – работать сверхурочно
Do you agree with the statements?
Housework isn’t really work.
One parent should stay at home with the children.
Women are better than men at looking after children.
Parents should spend some time with their children every day.
Women can have children and a career.
What do you think of Mike’s job?
Could you be like Mike?
Would you marry someone like Mike? Why/ Why not?
An interview with Jenifer.
I. Meet Jenifer.
Q: What is your name?
My name is Jenifer Lynch.
Q: Where do you live?
I live in Milton, Ontario. It's outside Toronto, in Canada.
Q: What do you do?
I'm a student there. And I study at Guelph University.
Q: How old are you?
I'm twenty one.
Q: Do you have a family?
Yes, certainly. I have two parents, and I have a younger brother, who's seventeen. And he goes to high school1. And I have two grandparents on my father's side. And they live very close to us, so, they come over all the time. And my father is Scottish. And, as a family business, we run a restaurant.
II. Parents.
Q: What does your mother do?
She has a job as an accountant.
Q: How old is your father?
My father is fifty-one now, I believe. Sometimes I forget. And my mother is fifty.
Q: What is your parents' origin?
My mother's side is Irish, and my father's side is Scottish. And I'm more influenced, I think, by my father's side, because his parents are still alive, as I said, so they're over quite often, speaking in Scottish accents, and telling me stories about their hometowns, and what they think of Canada.
Q: Do you have any relatives in Ireland and Scotland?
Yes, I have relatives in Ireland and Scotland. They're quite old, most of them are in Ireland now, because they're mostly relatives of my grandparents, so, I find, that they're older, and I don't visit them very often. But... we're closer to our family in Scotland, because they are younger, and they've small children. So, we like to go over there on vacation, and visit with them quite frequently.
III. Her brother.
Q: Do you have any brothers or sisters?
I have a younger brother.
Q: How old is your brother?
Well, my younger brother is seventeen now. And he goes to high school, and he'll be finishing high school next year, because right now he is in grade eleven. And he just got his driver's license, and he's been driving my car around all the time, which is... very popular, when you are a teenager.
Obviously, if you have a car, it's a very good thing. And... he plays hockey, and he also plays soccer. And he doesn't enjoy school very much, because he's more athletic, and he likes to spend his time playing sports.
Q: Is it a difficult job to be a senior sister?
I wouldn't say it's a difficult job, no. My brother is very independent, so he doesn't rely on me too much, except for when he wants to borrow my car.
Q: Don't you think that it's easier to be a younger child?
Yes, I always thought my brother had it easy having an older sister, because then he always had somebody to show him around places, that he's never been to, and introduce him to people.
And I always wanted an older brother or sister to...introduce me to their friends and take me places. And I always think that the younger child always has it easy, because the elder child is the first to do things, so that when the younger child grows up, the parents are more used to them going out and staying out later, that they give them more leniency.
Q: Were you glad, when your brother was born?
Yes, I was very excited, when my brother was born, because...well, I was very young then.
But when you're young you always want a... little brother or sister to play with. So, I was very happy, when I... when my mother had a child.
Q: Do you have friendly relationship with your brother?
When I was younger, I didn't appreciate my brother that much, because he used to follow me around everywhere, and he would want to do everything, that I was doing, and to come along, and play with me and my friends. And, of course, when I was younger, I didn't want him to follow me. But now that we're older, I enjoy his company more, because we can sit and have conversations, and I'm not as embarrassed of him, when he comes around.