European and International OrientationMiddelbare schoolvwoLeerjaar 1
This lesson contains 37 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.
Lesson duration is: 50 min
Items in this lesson
Slide 1 - Slide
Remembrance day
11-11-2018
Why is it so specal this year?
Slide 2 - Slide
Letters home
Slide 3 - Slide
Letters
Slide 4 - Mind map
During the First World War, how long did letters normally take to get from London to the British soldiers in France?
A
2 to 4 days
B
2 to 4 weeks
C
2 to 4 months
D
2 to 4 years
Slide 5 - Quiz
In the middle of the War, how many letters did British soldiers read every week?
A
11 thousand
B
1 million
C
11 million
D
1 hundred
Slide 6 - Quiz
What did people at home never send to the soldiers in France?
A
bananas
B
warm socks
C
cans of fizzy drinks
D
books
Slide 7 - Quiz
How often did someone else check a soldier’s letter home?
A
Always
B
Sometimes
C
Never
D
It is not sure
Slide 8 - Quiz
When they wrote home, soldiers could not write about
A
religion
B
love
C
information useful to the enemy
Slide 9 - Quiz
When a soldier wrote home, he was not allowed to write
A
his name
B
his address
C
the date
Slide 10 - Quiz
When a soldier wrote home, he was not allowed to
A
worry or upset his family.
B
make jokes.
C
ask about the weather.
Slide 11 - Quiz
Slide 12 - Slide
Slide 13 - Slide
Slide 14 - Slide
Slide 15 - Slide
Slide 16 - Slide
Life in the trenches
The photograph shows a German soldier cleaning his feet in a trench. His socks are hanging up to dry. During the First World War, soldiers dug trenches to live and sleep in.
Slide 17 - Slide
Which adjectives do you think describe life in a trench?
How easy would it be to write a letter in a trench?
Slide 19 - Open question
Read the letter from a soldier called Tom to his brother Albert. Do you think that Tom’s life is hard?
Slide 20 - Slide
Grammar
In his letter Tom uses two present tenses:
Present Simple to describe a routine, fact or feeling.
We sleep very little at night.
Present Continuous to describe an activity happening now. Right now we’re having a rest.
Slide 21 - Slide
Read the letter again and find two sentences using present simple and two using present continuous.
Write them in your note book:
Present simple Present Continuous
Example: We wake up early every morning.
Example: Are you working hard at school?
Slide 22 - Slide
Task 4 – Missing words
To censor: to change or delete something
Slide 23 - Slide
Here is another letter from Tom.
Tom’s officer read it and decided that some words might upset Tom’s family, so he crossed them out. Work with a partner and decide where the missing verbs go.
Slide 24 - Slide
Missing words: is crying, don’t protect, feel, are dying, miss, freezes
Slide 25 - Slide
Censoring a letter
Now join with another pair to make a group of four. This time it is your turn to censor a letter, but you have to work as a group and you can only cross out five words. What will you choose? When you have all agreed, tell the rest of the class about your decision.
Slide 26 - Slide
Tom
Slide 27 - Slide
Slide 28 - Slide
Class discussion
Was if fair to censor Albert's letter. How did it make you feel?
Slide 29 - Slide
Imagine that you are a soldier in a trench
Write a letter home using the present simple and the present continuous to describe your everyday routine, feelings and experiences
Slide 30 - Slide
Display your letter
Using the coloured card and glue, help make a display of your letters.
Slide 31 - Slide
https:
Slide 32 - Link
Use the link on the next slide:
Learn more about the lives of the soldiers in the First World War.
Find out about the "Christmas Truce"
Slide 33 - Slide
https:
Slide 34 - Link
https:
Slide 35 - Link
https:
Slide 36 - Link
Lesson from the British Council adapted by Susan Corrigan