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Today, most Maori people have adopted the lifestyle of the Pakeha - they live in regular houses, do regular jobs, and dress in regular clothes. At the same time, Maori culture is very strong. Many schools teach in the Maori language and train the children in the ways of their ancestors. The Maori people are passionate, humble, warm-hearted and friendly

– but also fierce when they need to be.

From: Speak Out/2, 2008

Pic. 47

16. Fill in the words from the box. Then make sentences using the completed phrases:

Whales; passionate; fierce; songs; caught; carvings; songs; wooden houses; landed; original.

1.……people of New Zealand

2.men……in New Zealand

3.lived in……

4.they……birds and fish

5.used……to tell

6.died in…… battles

7.all the……and seals

8.people are……

Pic. 48

17. Correct the false statements as in the example.

E.g. - It’s believed that the Maori came from Australia.

-They didn’t come from Australia. They came from Polynesia.

1.They were not good hunters.

2.They didn’t use songs and dances to tell the stories to the young.

3.Maori culture is not very strong.

4.The Pakeha (the Maori name for white people) didn’t bring guns, strong drinks and cigarettes, and diseases that were new to the Maori.

18.Write a short article about one of the small nationalities in your country. Write about:

-history;

-traditions;

-culture;

-language;

-national character;

-national food;

-national clothes.

The Southern Land

19. Brainstorm ideas: Australia is …

the continent

Australia

kangaroo

20.Read the text and make a list of facts discussed. E.g. Australian’s population is only about 22 million.

………………………………………………………………………………………

21.Match the words to make word combinations. Look through the texts below to check your ideas. Choose any three to make sentences about Australia.

fertile

attempts

outstanding

land

flightless

coast

southern

successful

wild

feature

repeated

density

partially

animals

international

bird

population

kilometre

square

immigrant

22. Match the animals to the pictures (pic. 49a – 49l). What are you going to read about?

1)numbat

2)koala

3)kangaroo

4)lyrebird

5)cockatoo

6)opossum

7)snake

8)duck-billed platypus

9)dwarf penguin

10)emu

11)dingo

12)kiwi

49a) ___

49b) ___

49c) ____

49d) ____

49e) ___

49f) ___

49g) ___

49h) ___

49i) ___

49j) ___

49k) ___

49l) ___

23.Which of them are marsupial mammals, reptiles and birds?

24.Read the text and entitle it.

Australia is the only country in the world to include an entire continent. Australia the country has the same territory as Australia the continent. Also, its population, only about 22 million, is one-fourteenth as large as that of the United States. This is mainly because most of Australia consists of deserts. It lacks the large expanse of fertile, wellwatered land that has made America a “fruited plain.” Because of its much smaller population, Australia is divided into only six states – Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania (“Tassie”), South Australia, and Western Australia. A seventh administrative unit, the huge Northern Territory, has not yet become a state. In addition, the separate Australian Capital Territory (ACT) – the equivalent of the District of Columbia – houses the national capital, Canberra. It, too, lacks the status of a state.

The most outstanding feature of the Australian climate is the huge expanse of desert land, a “red heart, dead heart” dominating the center of the continent. Some people call Australia the “desert continent.”

The word dead describes the desert character of the continental interior. Red comes from the mainly reddish hue of soil and rocks of these deserts. In fact, the color “signal” given off by the continent Australia, like other continents, has not remained in one place. Instead, it broke away from Antarctica, Africa, and South America eons ago and drifted northeast. During most of this strange journey, the continent was isolated from all others. Isolation allowed unique forms of plant and animal life to develop. Among the animals, marsupials became dominant. Marsupials are

mammals that place the newborn offspring in maternal pouches for additional development. Marsupials existed before continental drift began, and in the Americas the opossum is an example.

In isolated Australia, the marsupials developed into many distinctive animals, such as kangaroos, wombats, and koalas. Other unique species also developed, such as the duck-billed platypus, an egg-laying, web-footed water creature. Australia shares with Africa the crocodile, a danger to swimmers in many waterways. Another danger is the wide variety of Australian snakes – all of them deadly. The continent also evolved its own versions of the giant flightless birds of southern Africa, represented in Australia by the emu. Another flightless bird, the dwarf penguin of Australia’s southern coast, demonstrates the continent’s former link to Antarctica. Phillip Island, near Melbourne, is the best place to see those endangered penguins. Until about 50,000 years ago, no invader animal species except birds and fish reached Australia. Then Aborigines came, bringing dogs with them, and some of those canines evolved into the wild dingo, a meat-eating predator. With the European colonization of Australia came many wild animals. The most destructive were the rabbit and the fox (introduced so the English could continue their pastime of fox hunting). Repeated attempts to eradicate the rabbit have proven futile. An enormous fence was erected across Australia to try to stop the spread of rabbits, but it has proven only partially successful.

25. Read the text again. For questions (1 – 4), choose the correct answer (A, B or C).

1.The separate Australian Capital Territory houses… a) ACT.

b) Canberra.

c) the District of Columbia.

2.“Red heart, dead heart” stands for …

a)huge expanse of desert land.

b)reddish hue of soil and rocks.

c)an Australian superhero.

3.Among the animals … became dominant. a) marsupials.

b) snakes. c) birds.

4.An enormous fence was erected to …

a)stop the spread of rabbits.

b)continue fox hunting.

c)see endangered penguins.

26.Read the sentences. Do you think they are true? Read the text and check your answers.

____ Australia the country has nearly the same territory as Australia the continent.

____ Australia is divided into only sixty states.

____ Queensland is the capital of the huge Northern Territory.

____ Canberra likes the status of a state.

____ Australia is known as the “desert continent.”

____ Mammals are marsupials that place the newborn offspring in maternal pouches.

____ It’s not a good idea to visit Phillip Island, near Melbourne, if you want to see dwarf penguins.

27.Read the text and say what these figures stand for:

2.8

1200

1.7

50000000

55th

2050

6390

How Many of Us

As of 26 January 2010, the population of Australia was 22 140 000. According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, this figure rises by one person every 1 minute and 12 seconds (or 1200 a day). On average, there is a birth every 1 minute and 44 seconds, a death every 3 minutes and 39 seconds, and a net gain of one international immigrant every 1 minute and 53 seconds.

Our population grows at 1.7 per cent a year (faster than Indonesia’s, at 1.2 per cent, and India’s, at 1.6 per cent). But some parts of the country are more popular than others: this decade the populations of Western Australia and Queensland have been growing at 2.5 per cent a year.

The bureau predicts that Australia will reach 30 million by 2025 and 38 million by 2050. Entrepreneurs think we should aim to reach 50 million, the tipping point to make us a world economic player. Environmentalists think we should reduce our population because the continent’s resources can’t sustain more than 18 million people. The bureau says neither of those scenarios can be achieved this century.

Australia is the 55th most populated country in the world (China is top with 1.35 billion) and the 12th most spacious country in the world (Russia is biggest with 17 million square kilometres, while we have 7.7 million). We have one of the lowest population densities: 2.8 people per square kilometre, compared with Singapore with 6390 per square kilometre.

28.Read the text and note down the facts supporting its main idea.

The text is about ………………………………………………………..

Supporting ideas:

1) the population of Australia increases by one person every 1 minute and 12 seconds

2) …………………………………………………………………………

3) …………………………………………………………………………

4) …………………………………………………………………………

29.Look at the charts (pic. 50 – 51) and fill in the missing information. Comment on the charts.

Ex. As the charts show Australian population is steadily growing. In 2010…

Population growth

2,00%

1,50%

per year 1,00%

0,50%

0,00% A) ___ B) ___ C) ___ D)

Russia

country

Pic. 50

Population growth in Australia

Number of people

40000

35000

30000

25000

20000

15000

10000

5000

0

2010

2025

2050

 

Year

 

Pic. 51

30. Read about Australian mysteries and complete the table.

Mrs Chamberlain

was sentenced to twenty years in gaol for …

Tasmanian tiger

Harold Holt

31. Now ask and answer questions as in the example: Ex. What happened to Mrs Chamberlain? – She was … Who was sentenced to 20 years in goal? Why? – …

What happened to Azaria Chamberlain?

In 1980, a two-month-old girl disappeared from a tent a camping ground near Uluru. Her mother, Lindy Chamberlain, said she was dragged away by a dingo. In 1982, Mrs Chamberlain was convicted of the child’s murder and spent four years in gaol before being declared innocent.

Who put the dope in Schappelle Corby’s bag?

In 2005, a 28-year-old Queensland woman, described as a ‘beauty student’, was arrested at Denpasar Airport in Bali after customs officers found a four-kilogram package of cannabis in her boogie-board bag. After trial, she was sentenced to twenty years in gaol. She says she was the victim of an international smuggling racket. Conspiracy theories flourish about Australian airport baggage handlers, drug dealers and even members of her family.

Where is the Tasmanian tiger?

The last known thylacine died in Hobart Zoo in 1936, but Tasmanians occasionally report forest sightings of a wolf-like creature with yellow fur and dark stripes on its back.

What happened to Harold Holt?

In December 1967, the prime minister disappeared while swimming in rough seas at Cheviot Beach, south of Melbourne. One entertaining theory held that he was picked up by a Chinese submarine. Another held that Holt was depressed over waning support for his commitment to the Vietnam War.

Who carved the Marree Man?

In 1988, a four-kilometre-long carving of an Aboriginal hunter appeared in the desert sands of Lake Eyre South, 60 kilometres from the town of Marree in South Australia. In order to create the landmark, the site must have been surveyed from space and the figure would have taken months to plough.

What killed Bogle and Chandler?

On New Year’s Day, 1963, the bodies of Gilbert Bogle, a CSIRO scientist, and Margaret Chandler, the wife of another CSIRO scientist, were found on the banks of the Lane Cove River near Chatswood Golf Course in Sydney. No cause of death has been determined. There was speculation they were working on secret drug projects for the CIA.

Who was attacking the Family Court?

In 1980, Judge David Opas of the Family Court was shot dead at the front door of his Sydney home. In 1984, a bomb went off at the Family Court in Parramatta, Sydney, and later that year the wife of Family Court judge Ray Watson was killed by a bomb at their home. No one has been charged with these crimes.

32. Complete the missing information about Australia. Use Wikipedia to help you. Be ready to tell about Australia.

Name origin:

Total area:

Population:

Official languages:

Ethnic groups:

Motto:

National anthem:

Capital:

Largest city:

Government:

Head of state:

Longest river:

Highest mountain:

Currency:

Self-Assessment

Module 6

1.Look through Module 6 to find the answers to the questions 1 – 20.

1.How many provinces are there on the territory of Canada?

2.What oceans is Canada surrounded by?

3.How many national parks are there in Canada?

4.What is the largest city in Canada?

5.What is Quebec famous for?

6.What territory is associated with the Klondike Gold Rush?

7.What is the national anthem of New Zealand?

8.What trilogy was screened in New Zealand?

9.What is a land of volcanoes?

10.Who are Maori? What are their customs and traditions?

11.What did Rudyard Kipling call ‘the eight wonder of the world’?

12.Where is Wellington?

13.What is the famous resort town that is often called the ‘Adventure Capital of the World’?

14.What are the opportunities for thrill-seekers in New Zealand?

15.What sports were invented in New Zealand?

16.What is the population of Australia?

17.What marsupials live in New Zealand?

18.Who is Azaria Chamberlain?

19.What languages do Canadians speak? Why?

20.What languages are spoken in New Zealand?

2. There are at least 28 hidden words. Find them!

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Bibliography

1.Adrianova Irina, Toumanova Natalia. Learn and celebrate. – Новосибирск: «Инфолио-пресс», 1992. – 159c.

2.Dale, D. The little book of Australia. - Allen & Unwin, Australia. – 2010. – 261 p.

3.Hornby, A. S. Oxford advanced learner’s dictionary / A.S. Hornby - Oxford University Press, 2000. – 1540 p.

4.http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Economy_of_the_United_Kingdom&action=history

5.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page

6.http://eng.1september.ru

7.http://news.bbc.co.uk

8.http://www.bbclearningenglish.com

9.http://www.onestopenglish.com

10.Jon Nauton. Profile 1. Student’s Book. Intermediate. – Oxford: Oxford university Press, 2005. – 143c.

11.Jon Nauton. Profile 2. Student’s Book. Intermediate. – Oxford: Oxford university Press, 2005. – 175c.

12.Neil Wood. Business and Commerce Workshop. – Oxford: Oxford university Press, 2005. – 40c.

13.Powell, Martinez, Jillett. New Business Matters. Coursebook. – Thomson HEINLE. – 2004. – 2000c.

14.Speak Out. Журнал для изучающих английский язык. – 2005. – №1.

15.Speak Out. Журнал для изучающих английский язык. – 2005. – №4.

16.Speak Out. Журнал для изучающих английский язык. – 2005. – №6.

17.Speak Out. Журнал для изучающих английский язык. – 2008. – №4.

18.Sue Kay, Vaughan Jones, Philip Kerr. Inside Out. Student’s Book. Pre-intermediate. – Oxford: Macmillan Publishers Limited, 2006. – 143c.

19.Virginia Evans, Genny Dooley. Enterprise 3. Course Book. Pre-intermediate. – Berkshire: Express Publishing, 2002. – 142c.

20.Кузовлев, В.П. English. 10-11 классы. Activity Book – M.: Просвещение, 2006. – 112 с.

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