72 Your-Name Can
72 Your-Name Can
72 Your-Name Can
Your Name
“Remember my name and you
add to my feeling of importance.”
—Dale Carnegie
Pre-Reading
A. Warm-Up Questions
2. Do you like your first name? How about your last name?
B. Vocabulary Preview
Copyright 2017, Red River Press Inc. For use by ESL Library members only. ( I N T / V E R S I O N 2 .1) 1
Your Name
Discussion Starters
Reading
YOUR NAME
The Sweetest Word You’ll Ever Hear
1. If you want people to like you, take time to remember names. This
is a common business tactic. Psychologists say that the sweetest
word you will ever hear is your own name. This may not be true if you
dislike your name or if your name is hard to pronounce. Some people
go to great lengths to change their name. How do you think this
makes their parents feel?
2. Most parents put a lot of time into naming their babies. Some babies
end up with two or three middle names because their parents can’t
agree on a name. Others feel obliged to pass names on from a
previous generation. They might secretly wish they could call their
child Apple instead of Mary. Is it cruel to give a child a unique name?
3. Some parents give their girls names that are unisex. They
don’t want their daughters to face discrimination on paper.
Discrimination is the norm for job hunters with foreign names.
After all, remembering foreign names is even harder than
remembering ones you are familiar with.
Comprehension
Discuss these questions in pairs, and write the answers in your notebook.
Copyright 2017, Red River Press Inc. For use by ESL Library members only. ( I N T / V E R S I O N 2 .1) 2
Your Name
Discussion Starters
Vocabulary Review
A. Complete the Sentences
Complete the sentences using vocabulary from the Word List. Word List
Some words will not be used. • large
• obliged
1. Business people go to • the norm
lengths to remember all of their clients’ names. • before
• unique
2. Giving a child at least one middle name is in Canada. • unisex
• previous
3. It can be difficult to pronounce • generation
names that we aren’t familiar with. • great
4. In generations, it was
common to give a daughter her mother’s name.
B. Word Placement
1. ruel
c
Some people think it’s a to give a child a name b that is difficult to c pronounce.
2. g
eneration
Many a girls were named b Jennifer in my c .
3. f amiliar
Are a you b with the book called “Let’s c Name the Baby”?
4. d
iscrimination
Rejecting a a job applicant due to his b name is a form of c .
Copyright 2017, Red River Press Inc. For use by ESL Library members only. ( I N T / V E R S I O N 2 .1) 3
Your Name
Discussion Starters
Discussion Questions
1. How important is a name in your country?
Class Opinion
Walk around the class and ask your classmates questions.
Write their answers in the chart below.
Copyright 2017, Red River Press Inc. For use by ESL Library members only. ( I N T / V E R S I O N 2 .1) 4
Your Name
Discussion Starters
Listening
http://blog.esllibrary.com/2010/03/17/your-name/
YOUR NAME
The Sweetest Word You’ll Ever Hear
2. Most parents put a lot of time into naming their babies. Some babies
end up with two or three middle names because their parents can’t
agree on a name. Others feel to pass names
on from a previous generation. They might secretly wish they could call
their child Apple instead of Mary. Is it to give
a child a name?
Copyright 2017, Red River Press Inc. For use by ESL Library members only. ( I N T / V E R S I O N 2 .1) 5
Your Name
Discussion Starters
Answer Key
LESSON DESCRIPTION: TEACHING TIPS: LEVEL: Int
Students read about the importance See Discussion Starters Teaching Guide TIME: 1.5–2 hours
of remembering names. They learn and (https://esllibrary.com/courses/72/lessons/)
TAGS: discussion, remembering names,
practise new vocabulary and discuss for a variety of ways to use the reading.
names, relationships, friends,
whether or not they like their own names.
social, business
Have students work in small groups or as a class. Discuss the quote. 1. great 3. unique 5. Unisex
2. the norm 4. previous 6. obliged
B. VOCABULARY PREVIEW
B. WORD PLACEMENT
1. h 3. a 5. g 7. f 9. b 11. l 13. m
2. c 4. d 6. i 8. e 10. j 12. k 1. a 2. c 3. b 4. c
Read individually, in small groups, or as a class. You can also play Answers will vary.
the listening as your students read along. A gap-fill version of the Can be done individually or in small groups or pairs.
Comprehension Have students walk around the class and ask their classmates
questions. They should record their answers in the chart.
Copyright 2017, Red River Press Inc. For use by ESL Library members only. ( I N T / V E R S I O N 2 .1) 6