Oliver Twist: Worksheet
Oliver Twist: Worksheet
Oliver Twist: Worksheet
Lower Intermediate
Oliver Twist
Teachers page
worksheet
Lower intermediate
Introduction
The year 2012 is the 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens's birth. Not only was Dickens a brilliant storyteller, but he
was also an invaluable witness of his time. This episode of Oliver Twist, adapted as a comic strip, will give pupils a
glimpse of orphanages and workhouses in Victorian England. No doubt they will empathise with the character.
Objectives
Material
CEFR
Speaking - Production A2: recapitulating, making sentences from keywords, giving opinions. Interaction A2: role-playing
an interview on a specific topic. Listening A2: catching the main points from a short recording. Reading A2: reading a short
comic strip. A2+: reading for information on the Internet. Writing A2: adapting a comic strip into the pages of a diary.
Final Project
After listening to the beginning of an episode of Oliver Twist, pupils complete the speech bubbles and banners in a comic
strip; in groups they read short texts from the web about Charles Dickens, child labour and workhouses. Then, they reorder the last frames of the comic strip and imagine the end of the episode. Finally, they perform an interview and write a
page from Oliver Twists diary.
Procedure
Activity 1. The Beginning of the Story Classwork
A. Getting Acquainted with Oliver Listening
Hand out copies of the worksheet. Have the class listen to
Tracks 25 and 26 and say as much as they can. Its about a
novel by Charles Dickens. The story takes place in England,
north of London, in 1833. A baby is born, but his mother
dies. There's no father. The man who is speaking must be a
doctor. The doctor calls the baby Oliver Twist.
As pupils recap, write on the board: Oliver Twist mother
dies no father: Oliver is an ? boy and play track 25 again
to help them spot and understand orphan.
Project the first two frames of the comic strip. Pupils listen
to Track 26 again and complete the bubbles. TASK 1A
B. Whats Going to Happen Next? Brainstorming
Elicit guesses about what is going to happen next. I think
Oliver is going to live in an orphanage. Perhaps he is going
to be adopted. He is probably going to die...
C. From the Orphanage to the Workhouse Listening
Play Track 27 and let pupils say as much as they can. Project
Frames 3 to 8. Play Track 27 again and have pupils listen
and complete TASK 1B.
Activity 2. End of the Story Reading Group Work
Project the last six frames, jumbled. TASK 2A In pairs, pupils
re-order the frames. They will have to reconstruct the logical
sequence of the narrative as they link the frames together:
ex. The boy makes fun of Oliver, so Oliver is mad at him.
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worksheet
student Worksheet
TASK 1
A. Listen and write the dialogue in the speech bubbles.
Frame 5
1. Im still hungry.
means:
a. I haven't eaten
enough.
b. Ive eaten enough.
c. Ive eaten too much.
2. The other childrens
situation: ______________
____________________________________________________
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Frames 6 and 7
1. a. Oliver is going
to ________________
__________________
b. One of the
children thinks
Oliver is ___________
2. Mr Bumble says:
Youre in double /
trouble / table.
It means:
a. You are going to have problems.
b. You are trembling.
c. You are hungry.
Frame 8
1.a. Place where
Oliver is: ________
________________
b. How long for: _
________________
c. Reason:
________________
________________
d. There, Oliver has nothing to _ _______________________
e. Mr Sowerberry works in a ___________________________
2. Complete:
Oliver went to a cell _______________ he asked for more
food.
3.a. Write two words with the /sel/ pronunciation:
_____________ _____________
Which word is a verb? ________________
Which word is a noun? ________________
worksheet
b. __________________________________________________
TASK 2
A. Put the frames back into the correct order. Be ready to narrate the different events using: first, then, so, because.
un couffin
un coffre
un cercueil
un lit dappoint
B.1. What is a coffin?
2. Who says: Oliver has no mother! Oliver has no father!?
one of Olivers friends
a boy working in Mr Sowerberrys shop
Mr Sowerberrys son
3. List three facts showing that Oliver was badly treated at Mr Sowerberrys.
a. __________________________________________________ b. __________________________________________________
c. __________________________________________________
4. The workhouse or Mr Sowerberrys house: which place is worse? How do you know?
_____________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________
New Standpoints - 51 - February 2012
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worksheet
TASK 3
A. An interview.
1874: the Factory Act that declared child labour illegal under
10 has just been passed. A journalist interviews a woman
aged 45 who was an orphan and who lived in a workhouse
until she was 14.
Work in pairs, read your ID cards and get ready to roleplay the interview.
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
Examples of jobs?
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
New laws to protect children?
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
C. Go to: www.woodlands-junior.kent.sch.uk/homework/
victorians/workhouses.html.
What was a workhouse?
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
Describe the living conditions there.
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
Draw a picture or find one and explain the different parts
of the building.
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TASK 4
A. Frame 1
Congratulations, Agnes, its a boy.
I want to see my baby before I die.
I love you, my baby. Good-bye!
Frame 2: Shes dead. Take the baby. Lets call him Oliver. Oliver Twist.
B. Frame 3
1. 9 2. b 3. c 4. accepts: Yes, Ma'am. Good-bye
Frame 4
1. b 2. b
Frame 5
1. a 2. hungry too.
Frames 6 + 7
1.a. ask for more b. crazy 2. trouble / a
Frame 8
1.a. in a cell b. a week c. he asked for more d. eat e. shop
2. because
3. a. sell (V) cell (N)
b. cell sell
B.1. was born 2. was put 3. was sent 4. was sold
Task 2
worksheet
At age 12, his father was imprisoned for debt and he was
forced to work in a factory to support his family.
Largely self-educated after age 15.
His first book, Sketches by Boz, was published in 1836, Oliver
Twist in 1837-39.
He had 10 children.
2. Buried in the poet's corner in Westminster Abbey.
3. Aged 12 he had to leave school and go to work in a factory to support his family because his father was in prison for
debts.
Group B
1. Children from richer homes were well fed, wore warm
clothes and had shoes on their feet. They did not work, but
went to school or had lessons at home.
Poor children looked thin and hungry, wore ragged clothes,
and some had no shoes. Poor children had to work. They
were lucky if they went to school.
2. Depends on groups choice of picture.
3. Piecers and scavengers in cotton mills.
4. 1841: The Mines Act: it stopped children under the age of
10 to work underground in a coal mine.
1847: The Ten Hour Act: it limited childrens work to 10 hours
in a day.
1874: The Factory Act: no child under the age of 10 could be
employed anywhere.
Group C
A workhouse was a place for poor people who had no job or
home. They lived and worked there. It was also for orphaned
(children without parents) and abandoned children, the physically and mentally sick, the disabled, the elderly and unmarried mothers.
A workhouse was large and there were different parts (see
picture) because women, children and men had different living and working areas in the workhouse, they didnt live together. People in the same family were separated. They could
be punished if they tried to speak to one another.
The poor wore a uniform and the food was very bad and the
same every day.(very often: soup, bread and cheese)
Children could be sold to factories or mines.
Task 3
Group A
1. (Any four): Charles (John Huffam) Dickens.
Born: 1812, died: 1870.
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worksheet
Transcript Track 25
:11
Track 26
:43
Oliver Twist
Oliver Twist is a famous character from the novel about an
orphan boy, by Charles Dickens. Listen to this story.
1:26
1:05
26
worksheet
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