- •I. Lead-in
- •II. Vocabulary
- •III. Reading
- •IV. Speaking
- •V. Reading
- •VI. Listening
- •VIII. Writing
- •VII. Extra activities
- •IX. Grammar: Present Tenses
- •Lead-in
- •II. Reading
- •III. Speaking
- •IV. Reading
- •V. Listening
- •VI. Extra activities
- •VII. Write 10 equations and ask your partner to read them.
- •VIII. Project work
- •IX. Grammar: Past Tenses
- •I. Lead –in
- •II. Reading
- •III.Speaking
- •IV. Listening
- •V. Extra activities
- •VI. Speaking
- •VII. Grammar: will/going to
- •II. Reading
- •Read the text and check the pronunciation of the new words and elements in the dictionary.
- •Vocabulary
- •IV. Reading
- •Scan the text, find all the elements mentioned there. Then skim the text and say in what context they are used.
- •V. Writing
- •VI. Listening
- •Now listen to a “Periodic Table” song and check if you were right.
- •Iron is the 26th then cobalt, nickel ………you get
- •VII. Extra activities
- •Check the pronunciation of the elements in a dictionary or in appendix and read them aloud:
- •VIII. Grammar. Passive Voice
- •The Law of Conservation of Mass
- •I. Lead-in
- •II. Reading
- •The Law of Conservation of Mass
- •III. Speaking
- •IV. Reading
- •Read the text and check the new words in the dictionary.
- •Put the events into chronological order according to the text.
- •Find the synonyms to the words in bold from the text.
- •V. Speaking. Discuss with your partner which you think are the most important scientific discoveries of the past. Talk about:
- •VI. Video
- •Before watching the video match the words with their definitions.
- •Watch the video and complete the sentences using the words from ex. VI a.
- •VII. Translate into English.
- •VIII. Grammar: Participles
- •IX. Write a short essay to answer the question: “What are the main differences between the phlogiston theory and the Law of Conservation of mass”? Use these notes to write four paragraphs.
- •II. Reading
- •Read the text and choose the correct answer/answers and find the proof in the text.
- •VI. Reading
- •VII. Speaking /Project work
- •VIII. Video
- •Match the following words and word combinations with their Russian equivalents
- •IX. Writing
- •X. Grammar. Gerund
- •I. Lead- in
- •Reading
- •States of matter
- •IV. Translate into English.
- •V. Speaking
- •VI. Reading
- •Measuring matter: mass, weight, and volume
- •Volume V
- •Match the words and their definitions.
- •Measuring matter crossword
- •Fill in the table.
- •VIII. Listening
- •XI. Writing
- •X. Grammar. Infinitive
- •II. Reading
- •IV. Insert the missing prepositions into the blanks.
- •V. Speaking
- •VI. Reading
- •Answer the following questions.
- •VII. Fill in the blanks with the words and expressions listed:
- •Give the English equivalents for the following.
- •IX. Listening
- •X. Writing
- •XI. Grammar: Modal Verbs
- •Reading
- •Read the text and check if your definition is correct.
- •Speaking
- •Before you read
- •Reading
- •Comprehension
- •Read the text again and decide if the following statements are true or false.
- •Find synonyms for the following words in the text.
- •Speaking
- •Discuss these questions with your partner.
- •Do you agree with the following quotes? Why? Why not? Try to explain what Albert Einstein meant by saying them.
- •Writing
- •X. Extra activities
- •XI. Grammar: Reported speech.
- •Lead-in
- •Reading
- •Comprehension
- •Reading
- •Speaking
- •IX. Writing
- •Grammar: Conditionals
- •Lead-in
- •II. Reading
- •Read the text and check if your answers were correct.
- •Read the text thoroughly with a dictionary and answer the following questions.
- •Find in the text English equivalents to the given Russian words, word combinations and chemical terms.
- •III. Reading
- •Read the text and divide it into logical parts and entitle them.
- •Think of synonyms for the words in bold.
- •IV. Video
- •Look through the words before watching the video:
- •Now watch the video “Organic molecules” and find more information about carbon. Combine the information from the text and the video and tell the class about carbon.
- •Speaking
- •Translate the following sentences into English.
- •Match the names of organic chemistry reactions with their descriptions.
- •VIII. Grammar: Questions
- •IX. Choose one of the topics below and write a report (150-200 words): Properties of Carbon, Carbon bonds, Hydrocarbons and their isomers, Derivatives of hydrocarbons, Types of polymers.
- •I. Elements (symbol, atomic number, English pronunciation).
- •II. How to read chemical formulas in inorganic chemistry.
- •III. How to read chemical formulas in organic chemistry.
- •IV. Notes on reading chemical formulas.
- •V. Some abbreviations in common use in chemistry.
Chemistry with a Purpose. Учебно-методическое пособие по английскому языку для студентов 2 курса химического факультета - Изд. 2-е, переработанное и дополненное / Составители: И.С. Карпенко, Е.И. Клименко, В.И. Федосова. – Воронеж: издательство «Истоки», 2017.– 87с.
Печатается по решению научно-методического совета ф-та РГФ (протокол № 10 от 13 июня 2017 г.)
Настоящее учебно-методическое пособие подготовлено на кафедре английского языка естественно-научных факультетов факультета РГФ Воронежского государственного университета и предназначено для студентов второго курса химического факультета по направлениям 04.03.01 – Химия, 04.05.01– Фундаментальная и прикладная химия, 04.04.02 – Химия, физика и механика материалов.
Цель данного пособия – формирование профессиональной иноязычной компетенции студентов. Пособие состоит из 11 тематических модулей. Каждый модуль содержит аутентичный учебный материал и широкий спектр упражнений и заданий, направленных на пополнение словарного запаса студентов, развитие навыков устной и письменной речи, совершенствование умений высказывать свое мнение в форме минимонолога и диалога-обмена мнениями, а также на формирование навыков систематизации и обобщения получаемой информации. Текстовый материал пособия позволяет тренировать различные виды чтения (просмотровое, поисковое, детальное), а также развивать навыки диалогической и монологической речи.
Каждый раздел содержит предтекстовые упражнения, тексты для аудирования и/или видео; послетекстовые упражнения, направленные на проверку понимания и усвоение лексики; блок упражнений на обсуждение информации, полученной из текстов; а также упражнения, направленные на формирование и развитие навыков письменной речи.
Пособие может быть использовано как на аудиторных занятиях, так и в ходе самостоятельной работы студентов.
Contents:
Unit 1. What is chemistry? ........................................................ 4
Unit 2. Symbols, reactions and equations…………………….. 11
Unit 3. Laboratory equipment………………………………….. 18
Unit 4. Mendeleev and the history of the periodic table……… 25
Unit 5. The law of conservation of mass………………………. 35
Unit 6. Dalton and atomic theory………………………………. 41
Unit 7. Measuring matter (solid, liquid and gas)……………… 49
Unit 8. Basic elements…………………………………………... 57
Unit 9. Molecule…………………………………………………. 63
Unit10. Analytical chemistry and methods of analysis………….. 69
Unit 11. Organic chemistry……………………………………….75
Appendix. Chemical notation…………………………………… 82
Список литературы……………………………………………... 87
UNIT 1
What is chemistry?
I. Lead-in
Discuss these questions with your partner.
-
How would you define chemistry?
-
Think of the word chemistry. What comes to your mind?
-
Which sciences is chemistry closely related to?
II. Vocabulary
Match the words with their definitions.
1. an amount or number of something |
a. property
|
2. unmixed with any other matter; free from any impurities |
b. quantity |
3. a homogeneous mixture |
c. combustion
|
4. a quality or trait peculiar to an individual or a thing |
d. pure |
5. an act of burning |
e. solution
|
III. Reading
a. Read the text and translate it.
Text A
An introduction to chemistry
Chemistry is the central science, as it connects all other sciences. While mathematicians calculate the world, physicists explain it and biologists say what lives in it, chemistry looks at everything in the world and explains how it is made and what it can do. Chemistry began with fire. Burning changes things and ancient man must have wondered what happened to the wood he burnt. It was by burning things that ancient man discovered iron and glass, combining different substances in the fire and seeing how they combined. Once gold was found, the false science of alchemy was born. People believed they could change ordinary metals like iron into gold. Though the idea was wrong, the alchemists discovered many of the chemical processes that are in use today.
The origin of modern chemistry comes from the work of Antoine Lavoisier. He formulated the idea of the conservation of mass: that is, even though substances can be changed, their quantity or mass remains the same always. Although Lavoisier was the first to publish his ideas, in Russia, Mikhail Vasilyevich Lomonosov had reached the same conclusions some years earlier. Both men were interested in the nature of combustion and this was the first breakthrough in our understanding of chemistry.
The second great development in chemistry came later and concerned the nature of matter itself: how it was made up and what its parts were. In the early part of the 19 th century, the British scientist, John Dalton stated that all matter was made up of atoms of different elements and that these could not be broken down into smaller parts.
The third development in chemistry was made by Dmitri Mendeleev. He took Dalton's theory of atomism and arranged the elements by their atomic weight and by their chemical properties. So accurate was his classification of the elements, that he was able to predict the properties of undiscovered ones to fill the gaps in the table. Mendeleev's table is one of the most useful and important generalizations of chemistry and of all science. These three developments give us the definition of chemistry. It is the science of the composition, structure and properties of substances and how they can be transformed.
b. Look through the text and complete the summary. Use the words from the text.
Chemistry is the science which (1) … all other sciences. Through chemistry, we can study how things are made and what they can do. Alchemists discovered a lot of chemical (2)… before chemistry developed properly. There are three main areas of study in modern chemistry. The first is about how (3) … change when something happens to them. The second is about how things are made, and looks at the atomic (4) … of elements. The third is to look at the (5) …of elements.
c. Find English equivalents to the following Russian words and phrases:
алхимики, сохранение массы, вычисление (подсчет), сжигание, прорыв (в науке), атомная масса, заполнить пробел.
d. Complete the sentences below with the words from the box.
conservation of mass |
matter |
combustion |
quantity |
accurate |
breakthrough |
alchemists |
properties |
1. It is a fact that substances cannot change their ….
2. … means that no matter how a substance is changed, what it is made up of it will always stay the same.
3. When scientists make a … they succeed after trying very hard.
4. Without oxygen there cannot be …- things cannot burn.
5. … is what physical objects are made of.
6. All classifications in chemistry need to be ….
7. … believed that they could turn iron into gold.
8. Mendeleev's table classifies the elements found in nature according to their ….