Teachers' File: Activities
Teachers' File: Activities
Teachers' File: Activities
Teachers’ File
This Teachers’ File (TF) contains a lesson plan and activities based on
the magazine and the CD. The TF, along with the recording scripts, is available
for online users. Registration password: secret.
Activities
Found on the Internet Beach Bums and Party Beats
Mysterious Cleaner Discovering Perth and Darwin
CD Track 6
Warm-up
Listening for Specific Detail Teacher’s guidance: Important – do this activity before
Listen to the CD recording based on the text “Mysterious mentioning the topic of the article!
Cleaner” in the magazine. Ten words have been replaced
with different ones in the recording. Can you spot them? Divide the class into pairs and give each pair 2 of
the 6 pictures. The pairs should come up with possible
_____________________________________________________________ links between the pictures. Then recombine pairs into
groups of 3, making sure each person in the group has
_____________________________________________________________ a different picture. See if the groups can find the one link
between all the pictures. If no one finds the link, create
_____________________________________________________________
groups of 4, then 5, then 6. When at least one group has
_____________________________________________________________ found the link (Australia), elicit suggestions for how each
picture connects to the topic. Then ask them to open
_____________________________________________________________ their magazines to the article about Australia and find
a reference in the article to go with each picture.
What links…?
Your Lying Eyes
The Scary World of Deepfakes
CD Track 7
Listening
Listen to two speakers discussing some new technologies
for creating deepfakes. Answer the questions.
1 The quokka was once described as “a kind Australia is a very big country. It is in
of ________________ as big as a common the southern hemisphere, so the north of
________________ ”. the country is hotter and the south is
cooler. The capital of Northern Australia
2 The name Rattennest (Rottnest) Island means
is Perth, which is very far from any
a ________________ .
other city.
3 Quokkas eat ________________ .
There have been people where Perth is now
4 They are most active at ________________ . during over 50 thousand years. The first
European colonists were the Dutch in
5 Quokkas face danger from European ________________
the late 1690s. British prisoners are used to
which were brought to Australia for hunting.
being sent there to work. Today, Perth is
6 In 2012, a person ________________ with a quokka. known for it’s surfer culture.
7 Tourism brought new ________________ to protect Darwin is in the north of Australia. Darwin
the quokka. is like other regional capitals in that it
has a tropical climate. It is a fun city and
has lots of festivals. The city gets tropical
cyclones. Cyclone Tracy, in the 1980s, has
killed more than 70 people and destroyed
most of the city’s houses.
task 1 task 3
Look at these usernames. Can you tell anything about the people Work in small groups. Tell each other (some
from their usernames? of) the usernames you use or have used. How
many different tricks did the people in your
A Janine_Mansfield_83 E GlasgowGuy group use to make up your usernames? What
are the advantages and disadvantages of each
B ddoTkcaJ F SportsBetChannel
method?
C iluvariana G ɹǝsᴉǝMɔɹɐW
Someone had
already taken my
I made a new name, so I wrote I want to use
Insta account it backwards. my username
when I left to promote my How to Get Things Done
home. business. Simple Tricks To Be More
Productive
CD Track 11
Listening
Eat the Frog!
Listen to a person speaking about
the expression “eat the frog” and its history.
Fill in the missing information.
2 We were well ahead of schedule, but then one 2 The Pomodoro Method recommends alternating
between different tasks in 25-minute blocks as a way
problem after another started popping _________ ,
to achieve a better focus.
and by the time we’d dealt with them we were late.
T F
3 My computer has been so slow lately. I need to figure
3 Multitasking increases productivity.
_________ what’s wrong with it.
T F
4 The UK is made _________ of England, Scotland,
4 In the Pomodoro Method, you should save looking up
Wales and Northern Ireland. information for your break periods.
5 Could you turn _________ the TV, please? I need to T F
study and it’s really distracting.
5 Tips for helping you to focus include disconnecting
from social media, shutting the door of the room
6 I don’t know what this word means. Pass
where you work, avoiding coffee and switching off
the dictionary, please. I need to look it _________ . your phone.
T F
7 I’ve been in this job for ten years and I feel burnt out.
It’s time to move _________ to something new. 6 The problem with a to-do list is that we tend to
do the wrong jobs first.
8 The shop is going to be closed for a week. Let’s stock
T F
_________ so that we don’t have to travel somewhere
further to buy things. 7 The Pomodoro Method helps people multitask more
efficiently.
9 After several very busy days, I’ve got _________ to
T F
trying my new camera. I love it!
8 The benefit of “eating a frog” is that you can then
10 Wait, let me note _________ the phone number take the rest of the day off.
before I forget it. T F
11 Can you help me put _________ the poster on 9 You shouldn’t prioritise household chores that take
my wall? more than two minutes.
T F
12 I need to free _________ some time this weekend and
finally wash the windows. 10 Nature sounds are better than music to help you to
focus.
T F
c d
A b
e f
I could ____________ the trouble coursing through your But if you carry on abusing*, you’ll be robbed from us
veins
I ____________ to lose another friend to drugs
Now I know it’s got a hold*
Just ____________ home, don’t let go
Just a phone call left unanswered, had me sparking up*
Chorus
These cigarettes won’t stop me wondering where you are
And I know you don’t know oh, but I need you to
Don’t let go*, keep a hold ____________ brave
Chorus: Hiding from the truth ain’t gonna make this all okay
If you ____________ into the distance, there’s a house I’ll see your pain if you don’t feel our grace
upon the hill
And you’ve ____________ your way
Guiding like a lighthouse to a place where you’ll be safe
to feel at grace* I will leave the light on
____________________________________________________
Because of that, people think he has a kind of
_______________ . ____________________________________________________
____________________________________________________
He’s All Right ____________________________________________________
Nice Guy Tom Walker
____________________________________________________
Reading, Gap-fill
Read part of the lyrics of “Just You and I” and put ____________________________________________________
the words back in the correct places. ____________________________________________________
thing light step anything ____________________________________________________
time sun world
2 Kipling’s Most Famous Books – Matching A The British bring the light of civilization
Activity to the world, so where the British go, it is
Handout B never dark.
5–8 min Reading, Speaking Pair Work B The British Empire will last forever.
Put students into pairs and distribute HANDOUT B – Kipling’s C The British have territories all
Most Famous Books (descriptions). Ask students to match each over the world, so there is always
description to the right book and write the titles on their handouts. a British‑owned country where it is
Go through the “Which book…?” questions (the answers to these daytime.
are not explicitly stated in the descriptions, but anyone who has
read and understood the texts should find them easy). D God watches over the British everywhere.
SOLUTIONS
Warm-up: Example speculations on Reading Questions: 1 The tiger in Age of Empires See HANDOUT E. Note: E was used, F was banned, G were
Kipling: English, lived in India, went to The Jungle Book, 2 The Nobel Prize This was the Empire’s largest extent, not freed, H were lost, I was founded, J was
a posh school, from a posh family, had for Literature (won by Kipling in 1907), all the countries that were ever colonies. controlled, K are located
children, interested in Englishness, 3 (over) 25%, 4 Colonel Reginald Dyer; The 13 colonies in the west of what is The Life of Rudyard Kipling: 1 novelist
lived around the turn of the 19th and he ordered the shooting of hundreds now the US, for example, were held at (example), children, childhood, 2 brutal,
20th centuries. of Indians in the Jallianwala Bagh a point when the Empire was smaller disliked, abandonment, 3 visitor, better,
Kipling’s Most Famous Books: 1&D Puck massacre, 5 Natives, 6 Public school, than in 1922. Not all borders correspond editor, 4 colonial, Suffering, successful,
of Pook’s Hill, 2&A Kim, 3&B Stalky & 7 The colonies/India, 8 “The White Man’s with modern borders. 5 publisher, friendship, children,
co, 4&C, Just So Stories, 5&E The Jungle Burden”, 9 The indigenous Filipinos, The British Empire Fact Sheet: A was 6 sickness, tragically, finally, 7 famous,
Book 10 Stay calm and in control of yourself based, B were shipped/taken, C were nationalist/nationalistic, illness
taken/shipped, D were exchanged,
HANDOUTS
HANDOUT A
In this children’s novel, published in 1906, two kids meet one 2 What links Kipling with Sully Prudhomme
of the fairies that Shakespeare wrote about in A Midsummer (FR, 1901), Theodor Mommsen (GER, 1902),
Night’s Dream. The fairy brings people from the past to meet Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson (NOR, 1903), Frédéric
and talk to the children. The stories they tell are partly history Mistral and José Echegaray (FR, SP, 1904),
and partly stories of magic and myth. Henryk Sienkiewicz (PL, 1905) and Giosuè
Carducci (IT, 1906)?
2 TITLE: _________________________________________________________
3 What percentage of the world’s population
This 1900 spy adventure is set in British-occupied India around was ruled by the British at the peak of
the 1880s. It is about an Irish orphan boy in India. He lives in the Empire?
the streets and not many people realise he is a white child.
The book is famous for its detailed descriptions of Indian 4 Whom did Kipling call “the man who saved
culture at the time. India”, and why does this anger many
Indians?
3 TITLE: _________________________________________________________
5 What term did people of Kipling’s
This fun book for teens, published in 1899, is about three generation use for indigenous populations?
brilliant but rebellious schoolboys in an expensive English
public school. They have a series of conflicts with their 6 In Britain, what is the term for an
schoolmates and teachers, and they use cleverness to win expensive private school that is mainly for
every time. the children of the upper classes?
Which book…
B … gives an idea of what posh schools like Eton and Rugby used
to be like?
What do you know and what can you guess about the author’s life?
HANDOUT e
“The empire where the sun never sets” 6 After a big fight with Carrie’s brother, the Kiplings went back to
(I) ____________ by private companies. In England. During a visit to Carrie’s family in 1899, however, both
Kipling and his eldest daughter developed a serious _____________ .
the early 19th century, for example, much of
_____________ , the young girl died, and the family _____________
India (J) ____________ by the East India Company
left America forever.
and its private army of 260,000 soldiers.
sick, tragic, final
The company’s cruelty was so bad that
the British government took over in the 1850s. 7 Kipling became more and more _____________ . He also became
increasingly _____________ , and when the first world war began,
Even now, the UK still owns 14 sovereign he told his son John to join the army. John was killed in the first
territories, called the British Overseas Territories. year of the war. Kipling continued to write for the rest of his life,
Most are very, very tiny (the Pitcairn Islands, but never again wrote the kind of fun adventures that made him
for example, have a population of 50), but they a celebrity. He died after a long _____________ in 1936.
(K) ________ all around the world – so technically fame, nation, ill
SOLUTIONS
ACROSS 2. resident (FOTI), 4. love interest (SA), DOWN 1. demolish (FOTI), 3. indigenous (TFLT), ARTICLE KEY FOTI = Found on the Internet,
6. abuse (SA), 8. photoshopped (LE), 9. logging (TFLT), 5. experimental (FT), 7. uniform (FT), SA = Stardom and Anxiety, TFLT = They Fall Like Tears,
11. lipstick on a pig (TFLT), 17. essay (SA), 18. palm 10. villain (SA), 12. crazy (FOTI), 13. impostor FT = Forever Trends, LE = Your Lying Eyes
oil (TFLT), 19. apartment (SA), 21. dry season (TFLT), syndrome (SA), 14. privacy (FT), 15. wannabe (FOTI), BONUS JOKE: He never made scents (= perfume/sense).
25. biodiversity (TFLT), 26. superfood (FOTI), 16. athlete (FT), 20. graffiti (FOTI), 22. swoosh (FT),
29. go viral (LE), 31. weird (LE), 32. big budget (LE), 23. profitable (FOTI), 24. mimic (LE), 27. evergreen (FT),
33. extinct (TFLT), 35. worthwhile (SA), 28. sceptical (LE), 30. rainbow (FOTI), 34. tailor (FT),
37. respond (LE), 38. anxiety (SA) 36. shrink (FT)
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Bonus Riddle!
Fill in the letters in the grey squares to find the punchline to the joke.
A: __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __