Periode 2- Week 9

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EngelsMBOStudiejaar 1

This lesson contains 12 slides, with text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 100 min

Items in this lesson

English

Slide 1 - Slide

To Do
  • Planning
  • Reading 
  • Examen gesprekken: Alie-Hiske
  • Examen gesprekken voorbereiden

Slide 2 - Slide

Planning
17 januari: lezen + examen gesprekken (Alie-Hiske)
24 januari: lezen + examen gesprekken (Kijan + Hendrik)
31 januari: examen gesprekken (Méthode+ Tjerk+Johannes+Kevin+Elger)
7 februari: examen gesprekken (Mike + Willem-Jan + Naël)

Periode 3: examen spreken + examen lezen/luisteren 
Periode 4: examen schrijven



Slide 3 - Slide

Unit 3
Exercise 1:  Read the article quickly. Match the names (1–3) with the information (a–c)
Exercise 2A: Complete the diagrams about the project management process with Agile
or Waterfall.
Exercise 2B: Read the article again and answer the questions
Exercise 3: Complete the table with the words in the box.
Exercise 4: Match the words from the article (1–5) with their definitions (a–e).
Exercise 5: Complete the summary with words from Exercise 4.

Finished: prepare the conversations exam

Slide 4 - Slide

Examen Gesprekken
-Voorbereiding: opdracht + steekwoorden
-Uitvoering: 4 minuten + spiekbriefje + gesprek met docent
-Beoordeling: samenhang, woordenschat, grammatica, vloeiendheid, uitspraak, afstemming publiek
-Data examen: zie planning Teams.

Slide 5 - Slide

Taalblokken- Building Blocks B1
Unit 5

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Learning goals:
You can:

  • distinguish between major and minor details in a text.
  • read for orientation.
  • read instructions.
  • find out the meaning of words you don’t know.

Slide 7 - Slide

Text Structure
Topic: the overall subject of a text.
Main idea: the main message or thought that the author wants to express about the topic.
Topic sentence: the sentence that states or suggests the main idea of the entire text or a paragraph within a text.

Slide 8 - Slide

Text Structure
Major and minor details
The main idea is always supported by details. Some of these details are important. They support the main idea directly. These are called major details.
Other details illustrate the major details or support them in some other way. They are often less important and not always directly connected to the main idea of a text. They can contain examples, jokes, and anecdotes. They are called minor details.

Major detail: supports the main idea of a text.
Minor detail: illustrates or supports a major detail.

Slide 9 - Slide

Text Structure

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5.2 Reading
Taalblokken > Unit 5 >5.2 > Exercise 13-26 (+1-12)
Finished? > conversations exam


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Slide 12 - Slide