DVD READERS TEACHER S NOTES



Similar documents
Provider Guide Many families may find it difficult to pay for or get

FOOD QUESTIONNAIRE RESULTS

NIT 5: Food I like. Debbie: Do you want some chocolate, Leo?

You can eat healthy on any budget

Just Married. PART 1 - Meet Neil and Julia. PART 2 - A tour around the kitchen

Breakfast Served until 11.30am

Three week. Supporting Healthy Lifestyles. Inspiring Futures

Heart Healthy Diet: Tips for Lowering Cholesterol and Fat in Your Diet

PLEASE ORDER FOOD AT THE DINER COUNTER OR AT THE BAR, MAKING A NOTE OF YOUR TABLE NUMBER.

Carbohydrate counting a pocket guide

Useful Websites for more information

Dietary advice for people starting treatment for Hepatitis C. Information for patients Sheffield Dietetics

Eat More, Weigh Less?

A healthy cholesterol. for a happy heart

Healthy Grocery Shopping On A Budget

simple steps give you for good bowel health

Get ready to test your knowledge Nutrition Jeopardy!

Contact Us. Best Food Forward: Plan, Shop, Cook, Enjoy!

Try pancakes, waffles, french toast, bagels, cereal, English muffins, fruit or juice. These foods are all high in carbohydrates.

We want you to have the best results possible while doing our detox. If your goal is weight loss, then eating the right foods and exercising

Diet for Oral Surgery/Wired Jaw

Diet, activity and your risk of prostate cancer

Kangourou Italia - British Institutes Gara del 2 marzo 2010 Categoria Wallaby Per studenti della classe terza della Scuola Secondaria di Primo Grado

NUTRITION GRADE: 3 LESSON: 1 THEME: FOOD CLASSIFICATION CONCEPT: EACH FOOD GROUP HAS A SPECIFIC FUNCTION WHICH PROMOTES HEALTH

When you have diabetes be careful about what you eat to help you control your blood sugar.

Hospitality Catering Services. Catering Menus

Duke Center for Metabolic and Weight Loss Surgery Pre-op Nutrition Questionnaire

CUSTOMS HOUSE THE LOUNGE THE CHAMBERS. Specialty Events at Customs House; Versatile & Unique ASEMENT

The Bite Catering Thank you

ChildcareNashville.com

Grocery Shopping Within a Budget

DIAGNOSTIC EVALUATION

Beverages Coffee / tea portion 3,07 Refreshments 0,33 l 3,07. Fresh juice. Fruitie (juice-based) Smoothie (yogurt- based)

Theme: Britain Focus: Healthy Eating Context: Basic Culinary skills

21-Day Sample Cycle Menu Child and Adult Care Food Program

How to Feed Your Growing Child Ages 2 to 5

RÉVEILLON Hotel Apartamento Paraíso de Albufeira

Young Learners English

Healthy Foods for my School

WEIGHT GAINER S NUTRITION GUIDE

An introduction to carbohydrate counting

Goodbye, fish and chips: changing trends in British dining. halve dataset triple prudent soar consumption shift calorie belated skimmed

English for Spanish Speakers. Second Edition. Caroline Nixon & Michael Tomlinson

Grocery Shopping Within a Budget Grade Level 10-12

Oxford Bariatric Service Pre bariatric surgery diet Information for patients

Words In The News. Teacher's pack Lesson plan and student worksheets with answers

Licensed light refreshment restaurants may only prepare and sell one of the following groups of food items for consumption on the premises

1. Deciding on the Food Budget and Which Foods to Spend Most Money on.

Topic: Modern British cooking and restaurants; the popularity of celebrity chefs

Healthy Grocery Shopping on a Budget. Tips for smart spending at the grocery store

Essential Khmer Spices. Cooking Class Courses

Welcome to the Dog & Duck

Eating Right for Kidney Health: Tips for People with Chronic Kidney Disease

We give great importance to breakfast, especially if it weekend. A typical. Turkish breakfast consists of slices of Turkish feta cheese, honey or jam,

A Happy Hollow Park & Zoo Specialty Quality, Care & Conservation

Week 5. You're Doing It!

Healthy Eating During Pregnancy

Paediatric Diabetes: Carbohydrate counting

Women and Children s Directorate

High Cholesterol and Heart Failure

Crustaceans Eggs Fish Peanuts Soybeans Milk Nuts Celery Mustard Sesame. Breaded King Prawns yes yes yes no yes yes yes yes yes yes yes no no no

Low Fat Diet after Cardiac Surgery With or Without Chyle Leak

Kangourou Italia - British Institutes Gara del 2 marzo 2010 Categoria Joey Per studenti della classe quinta della Scuola Primaria

10 Week Nutrition Plan

BETTER PRACTICE IN FOOD AND NUTRITION SERVICES - MENU PLANNING AND MENU DESIGN TO DELIVER OPTIMAL NUTRITION TO RESIDENTIAL AGED CARE

o Presentation Guide o What s On the Shelf? o Healthy Meal Planner (Side A) / Healthy Meal Planner Worksheet (Side B)

It is important to know that some types of fats, like saturated and trans fat, can raise blood cholesterol levels.

University College Hospital. Insulin Pump Advanced Bolus Options

Low Residue Diet A low residue diet is easier for your gut to digest. It

A GUIDE TO HELP PLAN, PURCHASE & PREPARE YOUR OWN HEALTHY FOOD. FOOD SENSE HEALTHY MEALS ON A BUDGET

MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY BREAKFAST

Canada s Food Guide Jeopardy

100 Gram Fat Diet for 72 hour Fecal Fat Collection

The Millennium Café At Chicago State University Campus Dining Services Program

Running a STAR English conversation class

But the one thing you can be reassured about is school lunch.

NIVEL A - ACTIVIDADES DE LECTO-COMPRENSION

Restaurant Rehab: Using the Menu to Make Heart Healthy Choices

DIABETES & HEALTHY EATING

F.A.Q. about bowel preparation and colonoscopy

Healthy Eating for Diabetes

Allergen/Specialty Information

gestational diabetes my pregnancy, my baby, and me

MEAL PLANNING FOR MECHANICAL SOFT DIET

But what does my body need? (No...it is not just candy and soda!)

Healthy Eating and your Diabetes

Meal Planning for a Mushy Soft Diet After Nissen Fundoplication

Annual Menu

Understanding the Carbohydrate Portions in Gluten Free Foods 1 Portion/Exchange = 15g

My Diabetic Meal Plan during Pregnancy

Season ~ Muhammad Ali

BALFES: A FOOD HAVEN FROM SHOPPING STORMS NEW SEASONAL MENU IS PERFECT FOR SHOPPERS IN THE CITY

BANQUET & CATERING MENU

Unit 5 Tips for Saving Money

MEN'S FITNESS FAT TO FIT CHALLENGE CALORIE MEAL PLAN WEEK 2

Making Healthy Food Choices. Section 2: Module 5

See also:

Healthy lunch ideas. Sample ISE I Controlled Written examination tasks Candidate answers, assessments and rationale

Creating Healthy Menus with USDA Foods SNA ANC 2013

Meal Planning for a Mushy Soft Diet After Laparoscopic Myotomy

Transcription:

ENT AREA URAL STUDIES B1 l English breakfast every DVD READERS CONTENT AREA UK CULTURAL STUDIES B1 ldie finds out more about l come from. He visits a ausages, and discovers ys the best! ders readers for rial adapted from CONTENT AREA UK CULTURAL STUDIES B1 ach title presents ked to a curriculum to authentic English, L d subtitle option. Intermediate level (1500 headwords) BRILLIANT BRITAIN BREAKFASTS CONTENT AREA: UK CULTURAL STUDIES DCD Media plc Common European Framework level B1 This level is suitable for teenage students who have been learning English for at least two years, and assumes a knowledge of approximately 1500 headwords. WHAT ARE THE RICHMOND DVD READERS? The Richmond DVD ers are a series of nonfiction graded readers with supporting DVD material. Based on popular TV factual series and documentary films, the Richmond DVD ers present teenage students with engaging content that covers a range of curriculum content areas. The reader itself tells the story of the episode or film in graded language, providing students with background information and context, as well as language support, before they watch the clips that follow each chapter. The DVD clips are taken from the original TV show or film and expose students to authentic English, supported by a simplified voiceover and subtitle option, and provide an excellent opportunity for audio-visual comprehension practice. USING YOUR RICHMOND DVD READER The Richmond DVD ers are suitable for students to use autonomously or in class. Autonomous reading Each student chooses a title that appeals to them personally and reads at home, watching the DVD clips after finishing each chapter and completing the activities. Teacher provides answer key for checking. Class/ teacher-led reading You will usually need two forty-minute classes to comfortably complete a chapter. Use the Word Bank page to introduce the new vocabulary before students read the chapter independently. Set a time limit. (Early finishers could read one of the Fact File pages.) Students watch the DVD clips together, answer the activities and discuss the chapter as a class. Autonomous & class reading Choose a reader that will interest your students. the Preview page and watch the first clip in class, then set a class reading schedule. For example, students read a chapter for homework, then watch the DVD in class together, completing the activities. 1

STRUCTURE OF A DVD READER The structure of each DVD er is carefully conceived so that students gain optimum benefit from their reading and watching experience. Preview page Word Bank 1 (new vocabulary) Chapter 1 Watch DVD clips and complete activities Word Bank 2 Chapter 2 etc. Afterreading: Self-Study Activities Watch the Conversational Language clip READ READ PREVIEW (pages 4 5) Students should read the Preview page before beginning the reader. This section provides background information to the TV show or film and presents the overall themes, the main characters and locations. After reading, students watch a short introductory DVD clip. The clip is accompanied by a while-watching comprehension question. PREVIEW THE TV SHOW In the TV show Brilliant Britain, famous people find out more about a part of British life that they think is brilliant! In Goldie s Brilliant Britain, Goldie finds out about the traditional British breakfast. He visits THE PEOPLE some farms and meets the people and animals that produce his favourite meal. He learns a lot about farming and cooking. Can he use what he s learnt to make a better breakfast? THE BREAKFAST Butcher Howell Jenkins shows Goldie how to make sausages. It isn t easy! 15 0 0 pigs live at St Margaret s Farm. Goldie learns a lot about pigs here. The chickens at Sha Redhouse Tin, China Farm produce more than 15,000 eggs every day. WORD BANK Each chapter is preceded by a Word Bank which presents the content vocabulary that will appear in the chapter that follows and on the DVD voiceover. Students should familiarise themselves with the new words, using a dictionary if necessary to check meaning, before reading the chapter. In later chapters, Vocabulary Review activities are provided. These act as a refresher and focus on vocabulary from the preceding Word Banks and chapters. CHAPTER 1 1Clips 2 & 3 WORD BANK 1 What are these words in your language? BREAKFAST FOOD breakdancing (n) butcher (n) chef (n) Goldie is a DJ, an actor, a painter and Jimmy is Goldie s chef, and his friend a musician. He loves to start his day too. He cooks Goldie a big breakfast with a traditional English breakfast. almost every day. 4 THE PLACES Goldie lives in a village in the Chiltern Hills. Now watch Clip 1. What different food do you see? 5 Suffolk, in the east of England, is an important farming area. St Margaret s Farm, Redhouse Farm and Howell Jenkins butcher s shop are all here. Chiltern Hills Suffolk London bacon (n) (U) (baked) beans (n) (pl) porridge (n) (U) jam (n) (U) cereal (n) (U) fat (n) (U) fry (v) graffiti (n) (U) fresh (adj) Are the vegetables fresh or from a tin? healthy (adj) She s very healthy because she eats good food and does lots of exercise. heart attack (n) He s in hospital because he had a heart attack. ingredient (n) The main ingredients in chips are potatoes and oil. quality (n) This is a good quality watch, so it won t break easily. sausage (n) toast (n) (U) traditional (adj) In Britain, it is traditional to have a special cake on your birthday. U = Uncountable 6 7 2

48 DVD READERS CHAPTERS Each reader is divided into four chapters. The function of each chapter is: to provide students with extensive reading practice, to enrich their understanding of the topic by giving extension material, and to act as comprehension support to students before they watch the corresponding DVD clips. After reading each chapter, students watch one longer or two short clips from the DVD. WATCHING THE DVD CLIPS The DVD clips are usually between two and three minutes long and link directly with the chapter that the students have just read. They contain a simplified voiceover containing structures and vocabulary familiar to students as well as the authentic English dialogue. The DVD menu contains a subtitle option for each clip. We recommend playing each clip three times, twice with subtitles as students familiarise themselves with the content, and once without, depending on the confidence and overall level of the class. Students should complete the DVD activities in the reader, as they watch the clips. The first activity is a while-watching activity; the second activity poses a slightly higher level of challenge, requiring closer attention to the content of the DVD. The section is usually rounded off by a freer activity which encourages students to think about what they have learnt and relate it to their own experience. Please note As the clips contain real English, the dialogue may sometimes be fast and colloquial. Students do not have to understand every word that is being spoken and the accompanying activities are designed so that students focus on the salient points within the clip. S Each DVD er contains two magazine-style Fact Files, with further cross-curricular or crosscultural information on the topic. Each Fact File has a discussion question which can be used by the teacher in class. After reading the Fact Files, students answer the corresponding comprehension questions in the Self-Study Activities. BREAKFAST AROUND THE WORLD Breakfast is eaten in most parts of the world. about some very different kinds of breakfast from different countries. The little lunch Breakfast in France is called le petit déjeuner ( the little lunch ). It is usually a piece of the traditional French bread stick with butter, jam or chocolate spread. To drink, people usually have a small black coffee, or sometimes a hot chocolate. Rice porridge In many parts of China they eat a special rice porridge called congee, often flavoured with meat, fish or eggs. Many people drink tea for breakfast (and at their other meals too). 24 Did you know? In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, some European churches said that people shouldn t eat breakfast. Why? Because it was a bad thing to be greedy. Many rich people waited as long as they could before they ate. Poor people had to wake up early and work hard, however. They usually had a bit of bread for breakfast, even if their church didn t like it! 600 types of bread In Germany, a traditional breakfast is bread with butter, jam, cold meat or boiled egg, and a drink of coffee. There are six hundred different types of bread in Germany! So sweet! In Canada, sweet breakfasts are popular, for example, pancakes with maple syrup or fruit. SELF-STUDY ACTIVITIES (pages 46 7) After completing the reader and watching the DVD clips, the students can complete the self-study activities. These provide further activities on the story as a whole, as well as exploiting the two Fact Files and presenting a short writing task. (page 48) The DVD clips provide a great opportunity to expose students to chunks of colloquial language in context. The final clip on the DVD pulls out a selection of conversational language from the preceding clips. Students watch the clips, then complete the activities. CLIP 9 1 Watch the clip. What do you say in these situations? Match the situations and the conversational language. a) Your friend suggests a race to school. i) It s been a You think you can win. pleasure, mate. b) You re saying goodbye to your ii) Shut up! friend after a fun afternoon together. c) You can t hear your favourite iii) Bring it on! TV programme because your brother is shouting. d) You ve just found out that iv) Get in there! you ve won an art competition. 25 Soup in the morning In Korea, a traditional breakfast is a bowl of rice with side dishes such as a small plate of vegetables called kimchi and a bowl of soup. Did you know? Cornflakes are one of the world s favourite breakfast cereals, and one of the oldest too. They were made by mistake in 1877, when an American doctor called John Harvey Kellogg was trying to cook healthy biscuits for the vegetarian patients at his hospital. The recipe went wrong and cornflakes were the result! Which of these breakfasts do you prefer? Why? What do these words mean? You can use a dictionary. biscuit chocolate spread pancake maple syrup 2 Complete the sentences with the correct conversational language. Do you have any feedback on your Richmond DVD er? Let us know at: readers@link2english.com a) Tom: I always win at this game. Do you want to play? Kyra: b) Mum: You got 100% in the exam. Jim: c) Jo: You re all giving me a headache. d) Sue: Thanks for a great day. Jola: 3

ANSWER KEY BRILLIANT BRITAIN: BREAKFASTS PREVIEW (page 5) CLIP 1 Possible answers: egg, tomato, sausage, baked beans, mushrooms, bacon, potato, toast CHAPTER 1, DVD ACTIVITIES (page 14) CLIP 2 1 a) True b) False (He always eats breakfast.) c) True d) False (He loved it.) e) False (He grew up in a city.) g) True 2 a) breakfast b) toast c) porridge d) chef e) packets f ) quality g) changes CHAPTER 1, DVD ACTIVITIES (page 15) CLIP 3 1 a) hasn t b) 1500 c) big d) homes e) strong f ) don t eat g) wants 2 a) ii b) iv c) i d) v e) iii CHAPTER 2, WORD BANK 2 (page 17) 1 a) cockerel b) chef c) ingredient d) cage e) graffiti f ) bacon g) jam 2 a) boil b) fat c) fresh d) lay e) butcher f ) peck g) heart attack 3 a) cereal b) traditional CHAPTER 2, DVD ACTIVITIES (pages 22 3) CLIP 4 1 a) True b) True c) False (There are white eggs and brown eggs, and some eggs can be red and brown, green or blue.) d) False (They can t become baby chickens. You need a cockerel to make baby chickens.) e) False (They ll be in the shops in four days.) 2 a) G b) C c) C d) G e) C f ) G 3 a) i b) ii c) i d) ii e) i 4 Students own answers. CHAPTER 3, WORD BANK 3 (page 27) 1 a) pork b) vegetarian c) hot dog d) farmer e) leek f ) supermarket g) pepper 2 Possible answers: a) bacon, crisps, cereal b) apple, toast, cereal c) vegetables, fruit, milk d) Indian food, black pepper, chilli pepper e) (in Britain) fish and chips, roast beef, birthday cake 3 a) iv b) iii c) i d) vi e) v f ) ii CHAPTER 3, DVD ACTIVITIES (page 34) CLIP 5 1 The correct order is: c, b, a and d. 2 a) ii and iii b) i c) iii 4

ANSWER KEY BRILLIANT BRITAIN: BREAKFASTS CHAPTER 3, DVD ACTIVITIES (page 35) CLIP 6 1 a) pork b) yes c) white pepper d) They sometime go BANG when they are cooking because they have water in them e) no f ) six sausages g) amazing 2 a) False (He wears it so his hair can t fall into the food.) b) True c) False (They re his favourite sausages.) d) True e) False (There is only good meat in his sausages, but cheaper sausages have skin in them.) g) True CHAPTER 4, WORD BANK 4 (page 37) 1 a) iii b) ii c) i 2 birds: cockerel, duck jobs: butcher, chef meat: bacon, duck, pork, sausage vegetarian ingredients: beans, leek, mushroom, pepper 3 a) average b) grill, frying pan c) fresh d) organic e) cage f ) porridge, cereal CHAPTER 4, DVD ACTIVITIES (page 42) CLIP 7 1 a) iv b) i c) v d) iii e) ii 2 a) ordinary chickens eggs, free range organic chickens eggs and ducks eggs b) the ordinary chicken s egg c) He learns that free-range and organic food tastes better. d) a little oil e) yes CHAPTER 4, DVD ACTIVITIES (page 43) CLIP 8 1 a) confident b) quickly c) forgets d) likes e) Goldie 2 a) ii b) iv c) i d) v e) iii SELF-STUDY ACTIVITIES (pages 46 7) 1 a) i b) iii c) v d) iv e) ii 2 a) True b) False (Rice, vegetables and soup are popular for breakfast in Korea.) c) True d) False (He was a doctor.) e) False (This was true in the twelve and thirteenth centuries.) f ) False (They have bread and jam for breakfast.) 3 a) i and iii b) iii c) ii and iii d) i and iii e) ii and iii f ) i and ii 4 a) More b) haven t c) bigger d) Kent e) ice cream f ) whisky g) sheep h) Wheat WRITING 1 & 2 Students own answers. (page 48) CLIP 9 1 a) iii b) i c) ii d) iv 2 a) Bring it on! b) Get in there! c) Shut up! d) It s been a pleasure, mate. 5