- •Eu jep catch project
- •Unit I education system in russia and english speaking countries Lesson 1
- •I see I’m afraid if I’m not mistaken and what about you
- •It seems to me that I don’t know exactly
- •Informal letters
- •Lesson 2
- •Introduction
- •To express your opinion
- •To agree or disagree with somebody
- •Lesson 3
- •Introduction
- •Lesson 4
- •My education
- •Asking and answering questions:
- •I’m not perfectly ready to answer this question, but next time I’ll try to answer!
- •Lesson 5
- •Lesson 6 The secrets of successful language learning
- •Self- study materials for unit I
- •Verb to be (the Present Simple Tense) Positive and Negative Forms
- •General Questions
- •Alternative questions
- •Special questions
- •Tag questions
- •The Present Simple Tense
- •General questions
- •Alternative questions
- •Tag questions
- •Special questions
- •The Sentence Structure
- •Unit II
- •Countries and cities
- •(Traditions, customs and holidays in Russia and English speaking countries)
- •Lesson 1
- •Lesson 2
- •Lesson 3
- •Lesson 4
- •Lesson 5
- •Lesson 6
- •Self-study materials for unit II The Present Continuous Tense
- •Unit III
- •Scientists
- •(Famous people)
- •Lesson 1
- •Lesson 2
- •Introduction
- •Invention, inspiration, closet, bulb, nap, wax, phonograph, genius, perspiration.
- •Thomas Alva Edison
- •Invent hired closet nap laboratory light bulb
- •Who was ... Thomas Adams?
- •Lesson 3
- •Invention, to explode, dynamite, powerful, closet, iron, bulb, fortune, phonograph, discovery, genius, to carry out, research:
- •Alfred Nobel
- •Lesson 4
- •1876 1886 1938 1940 1965 1971 1975 1976 1979 1995
- •How to be a successful inventor
- •Lesson 5
- •Invention, to explode, dynamite, powerful, closet, iron, bulb, fortune, phonograph, discovery, genius, to carry out, research.
- •I. Read the text The man who invented e-mail
- •II. Read the article Louis von Ahn
- •Lesson 6 Women in science
- •Problem-based task (webquest) Famous Women – Scientists and Inventors
- •Self-study materials for unit III The Past Simple Tense is used:
- •When we talk about actions and situations in the past we use:
- •Positive form — Regular verbs
- •Positive form — Irregular verbs
- •Negative form and questions
- •General questions
- •Alternative questions
- •Tag questions
- •Special questions
- •Verb to be (The Past Simple Tense) was/were
- •The past continuous tense
- •Positive form
- •Negative form
- •Past continuous vs. Past simple
- •Unit IV computer Lesson 1
- •Lesson 2
- •Lesson 3
- •Lesson 4
- •Lesson 5
- •Lesson 6
- •Self-study materials for unit IV The Present Perfect Tense
- •Present perfect and past simple
- •Unit V career prospects Lesson 1
- •Lesson 2
- •Lesson 3
- •Lesson 4
- •Lesson 5
- •Lesson 6
- •Self-study materials for unit V The Future Simple Tense
- •I’ll be… or I’ll probably be… or I don’t know where I’ll be.
- •The Future Continuous Tense
- •I ________________ soon. (to leave)
- •I shall be leaving soon. Or I will be leaving soon.
Lesson 4
LEAD-IN
Can you guess which year these inventions were made?
1876 1886 1938 1940 1965 1971 1975 1976 1979 1995
ballpoint pen CD colour TV dishwasher DVD e-mail
mobile phone personal computer video recorder
How necessary are they in your life?
LEXICAL EXERCISES
Find suitable words to the following definitions:
Research, invention, inspiration, closet, bulb, to take a nap, wax, phonograph, genius, perspiration
subsidiary room in an apartment house ;
something that someone has made, designed or created, that did not exist before;
outstanding abilities, talent, talent in the certain field of activity;
the condition of creative rise, inflow of a creative power;
the lighting or heating device of a various kind and the device;
to be in a condition of a light slumber;
solid substance that becomes liquid when it is heated. Wax is used, for example, to make candles;
the first device for mechanical record and reproduction of a sound;
the liquid allocated during physical activities, or during excitement;
the detailed study of something in order to discover new facts;
New words
Try to guess the meaning of the following definitions:
someone who performs religious duties and ceremonies in some religions;
a long stick with a weight at the end of it that hangs down and swings from side to side, especially in a large clock;
the hot wet substance that is produced when water is heated;
the part of a vehicle that produces power to make it move;
someone who is patient, is able to wait for a long time or deal with a difficult situation without becoming angry or upset;
a glass object with a very thin wire inside, that produces light, when it is connected to an electricity supply.
Priest, steam, pendulum, patient, bulb, engine.
Longman Exams Dictionary
SPEAKING PRACTICE
Reading
Now before reading an article, let’s remember Edison’s main idea about success, inspiration.
What did he say?
How to be a successful inventor
What do you need for an invention to be a success?
Well, good timing for a start. You can have a great idea which the public simply doesn’t want ... yet. Take the Italian priest, Giovanni Caselli, who invented the first fax machine using an enormous pendulum in the 1860s. Despite the excellent quality of the reproductions, his invention quickly died a commercial death. It was not until the 1980s that the fax became an essential piece of equipment in every office ... too late for Signor Caselli.
Money also helps. The Frenchman Denis Papin (1647 — 1712) had the idea for a steam engine almost a hundred years before the better- remembered Scotsman James Watt was even born ... but he never had enough money to build one.
You also need to be patient (it took scientists nearly eighty years to develop a light bulb which actually worked) ... but not too patient. In the 1870s, Elisha Gray, a professional inventor from Chicago, developed plans for a telephone. Gray saw it as no more than ‘a beautiful toy’, however. When he finally sent details of his invention to the Patent Office on February 14th 1876, it was too late; almost identical designs had arrived just two hours earlier ... and the young man who sent them, Alexander Graham Bell, will always be remembered as the inventor of the telephone.
Sarah Curringham, Peter Moor, Cutting Edge, Longman.
Reading comprehension
I. Try to explain the meaning of the following words from the text:
simply, quickly, actually, finally, nearly, however, despite.
II. Answer the following questions in pairs:
Did Caselli’s “fax machine” actually work?
Who designed the first steam engine?
Who built the first steam engine?
Who invented the first telephone?
III. Discuss the following questions in pairs:
Which information in the article did you already know?
Which information did you find more surprising?
IV. Discuss with your partner the following statement: “So, what do you need for an invention to be a success?” and make a conclusion to your groupmates.
On/offline activity
Divide into groups of 3 or 4 people and find the information from the Internet about different inventions (for ex., e-mail, ballpoint, personal computer, video recorder, dishwasher, etc.) and present the information on:
the name of the inventor;
the country this invention was made in;
what the thing was made for;
how it is used now;
how it influenced our life.
Recommended resources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-mail#Origin;
http://www.cosmopolis.ch/english/cosmo30/history_ballpoint_pen.htm
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E05EEDC1530F93BA35752C0A9619C8B
http://talkback.zdnet.com/5208-11475-0.html?forumID=1&threadID=40652&messageID=751218
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/01/07/yourmoney/mobile.php
http://philip.greenspun.com/business/mobile-phone-as-home-computer
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betamax
Online activity
Writing an e-mail (to a friend)
Work in pairs
There are no fixed rules about composing e-mails, especially to friends. But a friend will be surprised if you write in a formal style. An e-mail is rather like a conversation without the pauses and hesitations.
Read this e-mail from your friend Alex:
-
Hello!
How are you? It’s a long time since I last heard from you.
What is your news?
How are your family?
Are you still studying English? How are you getting on with it?
How was your holiday? Where did you go and what did you do?
Best wishes,
Alex.
Leo Jones, Making progress, Cambridge University Press
Before you write a reply, decide what you will say to Alex.
Write your reply to Alex.
Show your reply to a partner, and read his or her reply.
Homework
Write an adventure story about the invention which plays an important part in your life now in the Past Simple Tense and using new words from the lesson:
simply, quickly, actually, finally, nearly, however, despite, really, however.
Reply to your friend about your day, study, life...