Giáo trình Speaking 3 (Phần 1)
SPEAKING III: STUDY GUIDE
GENERAL INTRODUCTION
The course Speaking III aims at training students the skills of presenting personal
ideas about a problem, discussing, arguing, approving or disapproving a debating point of
view. Discussion from A-Z Intermediate by Wallwork, Adrian (1997) is the course book
with 26 topic-related units - one for each letter of the alphabet. With an emphasis on
speaking skill, Discussion from A-Z Intermediate also provides students with reading texts
and some listening exercises in order to supply information and provoke discussion. The
study guide is designed to assist students when they study the course book on their own.
The guide focuses on helping students improve their speaking skill through the following stages:
ten to and what it is that we lie about. Some suggested ideas: Whilst we are all very good at telling lies we are not so good at spotting them. Unless someone is a professional/ compulsive liar there are a number of things that people tend to do when they lie: they tend to avoid lie contact; their voice has a high pitch than 22 usual; what they say sounds rehearsed - probably using words that are supposed to be convincing but generally sound unnatural and distant; they tend to touch their nose or ears, scratch parts of their body, and shift in their seats. Interestingly, we tend to lie more to attractive people rather than unattractive people. Most lies are not intended to be deceptive; generally we lie unconsciously, either to be tactful or to protect/promote ourselves, by editing out details. Lying is not always a bad thing; married couples who religiously tell each other everything are more likely to get divorced than those who have a few secrets. In any cases, imagine what life would be like if we always told the truth! - Read the situations in the student’s book, discuss in which of the situations it would be convenient to tell a white lie. Say what the lie might be and whether you would actually use it. Some suggested ideas: + Situation 1: “It’s much too good to wear.” / “I like it but no one in my class wears a new jumper.” + Situation 2: “ Thank you for your invitation but I do not feel very well today.” + Situation 3: “ Your illness is not too bad. Don’t worry. You should relax and enjoy life.” + Situation 4: “My daughter will be 13 years old in two months.” + Situation 5: A lie: “You look lovely, darling.” But in this situation I would tell the truth: “You look very nice but you will be lovelier if you don’t wear so much make-up.” IV. CHEATING - Cover the text. Answer the true and false questions, then discuss them with your friends if you have any. - Read the text and check if your answers are right. Correct the true and false answers where necessary. - Brainstorm on ways that adults cheat (e.g. tax dodges, drugs for sports performance enhancement, politicians, infidelity, lying to their kids). V. HIPPOCRATIC OATH 1. Cover the text and questions. Brainstorm what the Hippocratic Oath is what kind of promises they imagine that doctors have to make. Then read the text and discuss the reasons behind the oaths and the consequent implications. Answer: Implications: 3 This could initiate a discussion on Jehovah’s witnesses. 23 4 euthanasia 5 abortion Vocabulary: - Oath (n): solemn declaration that something is true - Hippocratic Oath : oath to observe the medical code of ethical and professional behaviour, sworn by entrants to the profession - Euthanasia (n): (bringing about of a) mercifully easy and painless death (for persons suffering from an incurable and painful disease) - Jehovah (n): name of God used in the Old Testament 2. Writing: Promises are made to be broken. Discuss. Suggested ideas: Pros: Some people feel it easy to make a promise, even when they don’t think that they can do what they have promised. However, in their opinion, it’s not important for them to keep the promise. Making a promise, to them, is just to please other people at the time. Cons: It’s not good to frequently break your promise because that will make you lose other people’s trust. Only promise what you can do for other people. UNIT 9: IDEAS I. WARM-UPS: 1. Look at the things illustrated in the student’s book. They are a TV remote control, a zip, a magnet, a tennis, a racket, a human being, a rubber. Think of their normal uses. - Try to think of novel uses of three of these six things. You should try to extend your ideas beyond obvious uses. Suggested ideas: the remote control could obviously be used for switching other things off and on (including people we don’t want to hear); the rubber could be used to cancel bad memories; an Austrian surgeon once sewed a zip into a man’s stomach so that it was instantly accessible for internal dressings; the racket can be used for catching fish, the human being can be used to entertain people from other planets; etc. 2. Listening: You will hear about the origins of jeans. First discuss the following questions: a. Why are jeans called jeans? 24 b. What is the name of the material used? c. Where does this name come from? d. Who invented jeans? e. Who for? f. What nationality was the inventor? Then listen and check your answers to the questions. Answers: a. After Strauss’ wife, Jean, who took a hand in shaping and sewing the trousers in the early days of the business, or may have derived from the Italian town of Genoa, where the fabric for producing jeans was supposedly originally made. b. Denim c. serge de Nimes cloth d. Levis Strauss e. Prospectors, cowboys, farmers, lumberjacks, railroad construction men, oil drillers, and town people who wanted hard-wearing trousers. II. FIXED IDEAS 1. Pre-discussion: - In what sense ideas can be considered as “fixed”? - Suggested answer: A “fixed” idea is one in which a person persists and which tends to occupy his thoughts too much. -Think of some of your parents’ and grandparents’ fixed ideas, including ideas on traditions and religions. 2. Discussion: a. Read the text. Vocabulary: - Prosecute (v): continue with; start legal proceedings agaisnt - Theory of evolution: theory of the development of more complicated forms of life (plants, animals) from earlier and simpler forms - Appeal (v): make an earnest request; take a question (to a higher court, etc), fro rehearing and a new decision. - Conviction (n): declaring in a law court that a person is guilty of (a crime) - Technicality (n): technical word, phrase, point - Fundamentalist (n): supporter of Fundamentalism 25 - Fundamentalism (n): maintenance of the literal interpretation of the traditional beliefs of the Christian religion (such as the accuracy of everything in the Bible), in opposition to more modern teachings - Ape (n): tailless monkey (gorilla, chimpanzee, orang-outang, gibbon) - Imminent (a): (of events, esp dangers) likely to come, happen soon - Resurrect (v): bring back into use; revive the practice of; take from the grave; dig up - Eternal (a): without beginning or end; lasting forever - Campaign (n):series of planned activities to gain a special object - Abortion (n): expulsion of the foetus from the womb during the first 28 weeks of pregnancy - Homosexuality (n): the condition of being sexually attracted to persons of one’ own sex - Pornography (n): treatment of obscene subjects, in writing, in pictures - Sacred (a): of God; connected with religion; solemn - Impose (v): lay or place a tax, duty, etc on; force (sth, oneself, one’s company) on sb. b. Answer True and False to the statements. c. Listening: You will hear someone’s views on this matter. Try to understand which questions 1-5 the speaker discusses and what you think about them. Answer: Question 1: The speaker thinks that no one has the right to convict the teacher because he was teaching established scientific fact. Question 2: The speaker thinks parents have the right to decide, for example, whether their child should be taught religion or not. d. Discuss with your partner your answers to the 5 questions under the reading text. e. Writing: “There is only one truth.” Discuss. Suggested ideas: - Everything on the Earth keeps changing and developing so it is impossible to have only one truth. - Everything has two sides: positive and negative. So sometimes one fact is true in this situation but false in the other situation. III. ANY IDEAS? 1. Discussion: 26 - Read the ten kinds of machines mentioned in the student’s book. - In groups, decide which machines it would actually be feasible to create. - When the “impossible” machines have been eliminated, still in your groups, narrow your choice down to four. - Your task now is to draw a design for one or more of the machines: Each individual makes a drawing of one of these four machines, but without specifying which, not writing any explanations. - Then you show each other your drawings and have to guess what you are supposed to depict / describe. - Each student explains to each other how his/her machine works while the others make criticisms. 2. Writing: Write to the patents office putting forth your ideas for one of the machines and explaining why it’s so good. IV. STRANGE IDEAS? 1. Read the “Thinking” text. Guess who the Papalagi might be. Information: Tuiavii, a wise man of a tribe from Samoa, travelled to Europe in the early 1900s, and came into contact with the habits of the “Papalagi” - the white man. On his return to his native islands, he warned his people against the perverse attraction of Western life. Erich Scheurmann, an artist friend of Hermann Hesse, who was in Samoa to escape the horrors of the first World War, made a collection of Tuiavii’s criticisms of the mistaken values of the Europeans, in a book. What we read there makes us question the whole quality of our lives, through the eyes of someone totally unaffected by the so-called progress of mankind. Scheurmann divided Tuiavii’s insights into different sections, some of which are summarised on the student’s pages. 2. What do you think a native of the tribe might say about “things” and “time” in the context of Western culture? 3. Read the passages and discuss the ideas in them. Vocabulary: - Infantile (a): characteristic of infants - Obsession (n): state of being occupied the mind of (a fear, a fixed or false idea) - Devise (v): think out, plan 4. Writing: Imagine what Tuiavii might have said about newspapers and money. Try to write id\t down. 27
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