This lesson contains 37 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 2 videos.
Lesson duration is: 45 min
Items in this lesson
Slide 1 - Slide
learning goal
- I will have practiced with Holmwoods (2 passes for reading + 2 passes for listening for Monday)
- I will have practiced in Blooket with examenidioom
Slide 2 - Slide
Holmwoods / Herkansing of Inhaal check
timer
25:00
2 passes for listening
2 passes for reading
Slide 3 - Slide
Translate to Dutch: to prompt
timer
0:30
Slide 4 - Open question
Translate to Dutch: to prolong
timer
0:30
Slide 5 - Open question
Translate to Dutch: notorious
timer
0:30
Slide 6 - Open question
The delay played (= caused) havoc with their travel arrangements. What does havoc mean you think?
timer
0:45
Slide 7 - Open question
Some people like to show off by using archaic words. What do you think archaic means?
timer
0:45
Slide 8 - Open question
Make a sentence using: equal - eligible
timer
1:00
Slide 9 - Open question
Make a sentence using: to prolong - to prompt
timer
1:00
Slide 10 - Open question
play.blooket.com
examenidioom!
Slide 11 - Slide
Slide 12 - Slide
learning goals
I can understand a talk about climate and diets.
I know how to use the words from basiswoordenlijst F - I
Slide 13 - Slide
Homework
Look at the text again and notice the linking words.
In which way has the writer structured the text to make it easier for you to understand his point?
Slide 14 - Slide
bbc.com
Slide 15 - Link
Why I'm a weekday vegetarian
What do you expect to hear?
Slide 16 - Slide
While listening
What are his main arguments?
Pay attention to the linking words he uses to structure his talk.
Slide 17 - Slide
Slide 18 - Video
Listen again
Write down the words he uses that might appear on your exam.
Slide 19 - Slide
Slide 20 - Video
Look through the list (F-I)
timer
10:00
Slide 21 - Slide
Find the words described by the following definitions.
Slide 22 - Slide
a payment made to a professional person or to a professional or public body in exchange for advice or services. (F)
Slide 23 - Open question
a number, especially one which forms part of official statistics or relates to the financial performance of a company. (F)
Slide 24 - Open question
relating to the whole world; worldwide. (G)
Slide 25 - Open question
to comprehend fully. (G)
Slide 26 - Open question
causing or likely to cause physical injury (H)
Slide 27 - Open question
having or showing compassion or benevolence (H)
Slide 28 - Open question
treating all rivals or disputants equally/being objective (I)
Slide 29 - Open question
feeling or showing anger or annoyance at what is perceived as unfair treatment. (I)
Slide 30 - Open question
a number or set of items distributed at one time./ each of a regular series of publications. (I)
Slide 31 - Open question
MOST OF THE FIVE MILLION people in the UK who are wholly
vegetarian or eschew red meat choose their diet on the grounds of ethics (intensive farming, animal welfare) or health (high blood pressure, cholesterol). Those in the ethical camp are often passionate about green issues, but a non-meat diet as a way to combat climate change has only recently been suggested. A UN report, Livestock's Long Shadow, argued that beef and dairy farming globally create more climate-changing gases (18 per cent) than the world's transport system (13 per cent). Although
some have questioned the details of this report, there is no doubt that the carbon footprint of livestock production is hugely significant ─ and growing.
Slide 32 - Slide
Have you got the professional credibility to support and challenge head teachers and senior managers to recognize the issue and tackle the causes while offering creative and evidence based solutions?
Slide 33 - Slide
A report from the computer security firm McAfee this week declared cyber-crime to be almost as big as the global drugs trade and costing the UK £6.8 billion a year. Some experts took issue with McAfee's big numbers ─ including a global cost of £266 billion, and an estimate of '150,000 European jobs lost' a year. But all agree that the problem is a serious threat to growth in the advanced economies and that its measurable size is misleading anyway, because so much of it goes unreported.
Slide 34 - Slide
I can recall the ridiculous headlines when this summer’s forecast was issued, saying it was going to be a sweltering summer when the Met Office just said that it was going to be slightly above average.
Slide 35 - Slide
Body-worn video cameras are quickly becoming standard-issue for American police, especially at departments in the process of reform. And in New Orleans, the troubled police department is now requiring almost all officers to wear the cameras. It has a dark history of corruption, racism and brutality.
Slide 36 - Slide
The polar vortex is nothing new. On the contrary, it's thought that the term first appeared in an 1853 issue of E. Littell's Living Age.