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Учебник 3 курс 1 семестр.doc
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What is being advertised?

Aims Skills - speaking, writing

Language - making conjectures, expressing probability, giving reasons

Other - making notes, discovering some advertising techniques

Level Intermediate

Organisation Pairs

Preparation A number of different advertisements (cut out from magazines) from which all names and pictures of the products advertised have been removed, half as many advertisements as there are students. (Don't throw away the bits that have been cut out.)

Time 15 – 20 minutes

Procedure Step 1: Each pair of students receives one advertisement. The partners discuss what product the advertisement could be for and why they think so. One of each pair makes some notes. After about five minutes the advertisements are exchanged and each pair of students discusses another advertisement in the same way.

Step 2: Taking turns, each pair of students show their second advertisement to the rest of the class and report their ideas on the product being advertised. The two students who discussed this particular advertisement in the first round say where they agree or disagree and give reasons. When all the advertisements have been discussed the teacher gives the solutions (by presenting the cut-out parts of each advertisement). Remarks When the students are making suggestions about the type of product being advertised by, for example, idyllic scenes in the country, their attention can be drawn to the associations which certain pictures give us (e.g. waterfall -clean air, health - cigarettes).

Unit III c hoosing a career

Speaking

Look at the pictures of people with different jobs and discuss who you think should be paid the most/the least and why.

I. Describe what these different people do in their jobs. example: A nurse takes care of people who are not well.

a nurse; a debt collector; an undertaker; a referee; a tax inspector; a bouncer; a plumber; a traffic warden; a conductor; a bookmaker; a social worker; a surgeon; a dustman; an artist; a chef; a miner; a private investigator; a librarian; a caretaker; a stockbroker; an editor; a vet; a wrestler; a lifeguard.

II. If you had the necessary skills/qualifications, which of these jobs:

1. might you be interested in? Why?

2. would you definitely not be interested in? Why?

III. Work with a partner.

1. Choose one of the jobs from Exercise 1, but don't tell your partner which one you have chosen.

2. Your partner must ask you questions to find out what the job is. example: a: Do you wear a uniform? B: /Yes.

3. You can only answer 'Yes' or 'No' to the questions. When your partner has discovered the job, change over.

4. See who can discover the other person's job in the least number of questions.

Warm up

Discuss the following questions.

1. Did you choose your career when you were still at school?

2. What influenced your choice of a career?

3. Did you have any family council to help you choose your career?

4. Did all the family support your choice?

5. What advantages do you see in the career you have chosen?

6. Can you foresee any demerits of it?

Read the following text and say if you agree with all the main points of it.