MODUL 9 CUTTING EDGE (INT.)
Chia sẻ bởi Phạm Tấn Hoàng |
Ngày 08/05/2019 |
35
Chia sẻ tài liệu: MODUL 9 CUTTING EDGE (INT.) thuộc Tiếng Anh 10
Nội dung tài liệu:
Teacher in charge: Pham Tan Hoang
Designer : Pham Tan Hoang
MODULE
5
Appearances
I. Objectives:
1. Educational aim: Describing people
2. Knowledge:
Student knows: - How to talking about physical appearance.
- How to describe the suspect and to ask about the suspect.
- How to use student’s book and workbook
3.Skill: -Comparative and superlative adjectives
- Listening: Word stress, Comparative and superlative
II. Method: Integrated, mainly communicative
III. Teaching aids: Student’s book and pictures showing celebrities or different nations, famous paintings
IV. Procedure:
1. Warm up:(5 minutes) Ask students :Who do you think is the most attractive man/woman in the world?
2.Before you read: Let students look at the screen and read the content , after that teacher click any number in turn which part teacher wants to teach
While you read
Click1: Ask students to look at the picture and answer the questions on the slide (5 minutes)
Click2: Ask students to read carefully and silently the paragraphs on the screen or in the textbook.(10 minutes)
Click3: Ask students to match the headings to the correct paragraphs.(5minutes)
Click4: Ask students whether these statements true or false and ask students why to chose it.(5 minutes)
Click5: Ask students to find words in the text .(5 Minutes)
Click6: Ask students to opposites to the words in the box (5 minutes)
After you read
Click7: Show students the diagram with words from the text (5 minutes)
Click8: Ask students to listen and mask the stessed syllable in each word.(5 minutes)
Appearances
MODULE 5
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Pictures
Reading
Headings
True or False
Finding the words in the text that mean
Finding opposites to the words
Diagram
Pronunciation
9
Film
Physical Appearance
Who do you think is the most attractive man/ woman in the world? Why?
Which the people in the pictures do you think are most attractive? Why?
Home
Reading
1
For many people, German-born supermodel Claudia Schiffer is the perfect beauty: tall and slim, blue-eyed, tanned and athletic-looking with long, blond hair. No wonder people have described her as ‘The most beautiful woman in the world’.
2
But people have not always had the same ideas about beauty. Until the 1920s, suntans were for poor people, ‘ladies’ stayed out of the sun to keep their faces as pale as possible. Five hundred years ago, in the times of Queen Elizabeth I of England, fashionable ladies even painted their faces with lead to make them whiter – a very dangerous habit as lead is poisonous!
3
And people in the eighteenth century would certainly not have thought much of Claudia Schiffer’s hair! Ladies in those days never went out without their wigs, which were so enormous – and so dirty – that it was quite common to find mice living in them! As for the ‘perfect beauties’ pained by the Rubens in the seventeenth century, if they wanted to be supermodels to day they would have to spend months a diet!
4
Ideas of the beauty can be different according to where you live, too. For the Paduang tribe in South-East Asia, traditionally the most important sign of beauty was a long neck. So at the age of five or six, girl each year they added new rings. By the time they were old enough to marry, their necks were about twenty-five centimeters long!
5
And what about the ideal man? If you ask women today to name an attractive man, most mention someone like Russell Crowe, Mel Gibson or Denzel Washington: someone tall and strong, brave and ‘manly’.
6
In the eighteenth century, however, ‘manliness’ was very different from what it is today. As well as wearing wigs, perfume and lots of make-up, a true gentleman showed his feeling by crying frequently in public. According to one story, when the British Prime Minister, Lord Spencer Percival, came to give King George IV some bad news, both men sat down and cried!
And even now, Russell Crowe might not find it so easy to attract women if he visited the Dinka Tribe of Sudan. They have always believed in the saying that ‘big is beautiful’. Traditionally, each year, men compete to win the tile of ‘the fattest man’. The winner is sure to find a wife quickly: for a Dinka woman, if a man is fat, it is also a sign that he is rich and powerful!
7
Home
Each heading below summarises one of the paragraphs in the text. Read the text and match the heading to the correct paragraphs.
Ideas of beauty 200-300 years ago
The bigger the better
Pale is the beautiful!
The importance of a long neck
The perfect modern woman
Showing your emotions
The world’s most handsome men
Check
3
7
2
4
1
6
5
Home
Reading
Are these statements True or False? Explain your answers.
a Pale skin was more popular than tanned skin until the twentieth century.
b Elizabethan make-up was not safe.
c In the eighteenth century, fashionable ladies had mice as pets.
d Women in Rubens’ time probably never went on diets.
e Paduang women with short necks couldn’t get married.
f In the eighteenth century it was OK for men to cry.
g Dinka women from Sudan think that thin men are very ugly.
Check
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
Home
1. (for hair) light-coloured or yellow.
2. Pleasant to look at.
3. Having skin made darker by the sun.
4. Of more than average height.
5. (for skin) light-coloured.
6. Looking physically strong and good at sport.
7. Having the good qualities of a man.
8. Thin in an attractive way.
9. Having a lot of courage.
10. With blue eyes.
Find words in the text that mean:
Home
Find the opposites to the words in the box below in part above.
Cowardly
Dark-haired
Fair-skinned
Fat
Short
Ugly
Home
Home
Home
End
For many people, German-born supermodel Claudia Schiffer is the perfect beauty: tall and slim, blue-eyed, tanned and athletic-looking with long, blond hair. No wonder people have described her as ‘The most beautiful woman in the world’.
Reading
But people have not always had the same ideas about beauty. Until the 1920s, suntans were for poor people, ‘ladies’ stayed out of the sun to keep their faces as pale as possible. Five hundred years ago, in the times of Queen Elizabeth I of England, fashionable ladies even painted their faces with lead to make them whiter – a very dangerous habit as lead is poisonous!
Reading
And people in the eighteenth century would certainly not have thought much of Claudia Schiffer’s hair! Ladies in those days never went out without their wigs, which were so enormous – and so dirty – that it was quite common to find mice living in them! As for the ‘perfect beauties’ pained by the Rubens in the seventeenth century, if they wanted to be supermodels to day they would have to spend months a diet!
Reading
Ideas of the beauty can be different according to where you live, too. For the Paduang tribe in South-East Asia, traditionally the most important sign of beauty was a long neck. So at the age of five or six, girl each year they added new rings. By the time they were old enough to marry, their necks were about twenty-five centimeters long!
Reading
And what about the ideal man? If you ask women today to name an attractive man, most mention someone like Russell Crowe, Mel Gibson or Denzel Washington: someone tall and strong, brave and ‘manly’.
Reading
In the eighteenth century, however, ‘manliness’ was very different from what it is today. As well as wearing wigs, perfume and lots of make-up, a true gentleman showed his feeling by crying frequently in public. According to one story, when the British Prime Minister, Lord Spencer Percival, came to give King George IV some bad news, both men sat down and cried!
Reading
And even now, Russell Crowe might not find it so easy to attract women if he visited the Dinka Tribe of Sudan. They have always believed in the saying that ‘big is beautiful’. Traditionally, each year, men compete to win the tile of ‘the fattest man’. The winner is sure to find a wife quickly: for a Dinka woman, if a man is fat, it is also a sign that he is rich and powerful!
Reading
Teacher in charge: Pham Tan Hoang
Designer : Pham Tan Hoang
MODULE
5
Appearances
Thank you for learn
Designer : Pham Tan Hoang
MODULE
5
Appearances
I. Objectives:
1. Educational aim: Describing people
2. Knowledge:
Student knows: - How to talking about physical appearance.
- How to describe the suspect and to ask about the suspect.
- How to use student’s book and workbook
3.Skill: -Comparative and superlative adjectives
- Listening: Word stress, Comparative and superlative
II. Method: Integrated, mainly communicative
III. Teaching aids: Student’s book and pictures showing celebrities or different nations, famous paintings
IV. Procedure:
1. Warm up:(5 minutes) Ask students :Who do you think is the most attractive man/woman in the world?
2.Before you read: Let students look at the screen and read the content , after that teacher click any number in turn which part teacher wants to teach
While you read
Click1: Ask students to look at the picture and answer the questions on the slide (5 minutes)
Click2: Ask students to read carefully and silently the paragraphs on the screen or in the textbook.(10 minutes)
Click3: Ask students to match the headings to the correct paragraphs.(5minutes)
Click4: Ask students whether these statements true or false and ask students why to chose it.(5 minutes)
Click5: Ask students to find words in the text .(5 Minutes)
Click6: Ask students to opposites to the words in the box (5 minutes)
After you read
Click7: Show students the diagram with words from the text (5 minutes)
Click8: Ask students to listen and mask the stessed syllable in each word.(5 minutes)
Appearances
MODULE 5
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Pictures
Reading
Headings
True or False
Finding the words in the text that mean
Finding opposites to the words
Diagram
Pronunciation
9
Film
Physical Appearance
Who do you think is the most attractive man/ woman in the world? Why?
Which the people in the pictures do you think are most attractive? Why?
Home
Reading
1
For many people, German-born supermodel Claudia Schiffer is the perfect beauty: tall and slim, blue-eyed, tanned and athletic-looking with long, blond hair. No wonder people have described her as ‘The most beautiful woman in the world’.
2
But people have not always had the same ideas about beauty. Until the 1920s, suntans were for poor people, ‘ladies’ stayed out of the sun to keep their faces as pale as possible. Five hundred years ago, in the times of Queen Elizabeth I of England, fashionable ladies even painted their faces with lead to make them whiter – a very dangerous habit as lead is poisonous!
3
And people in the eighteenth century would certainly not have thought much of Claudia Schiffer’s hair! Ladies in those days never went out without their wigs, which were so enormous – and so dirty – that it was quite common to find mice living in them! As for the ‘perfect beauties’ pained by the Rubens in the seventeenth century, if they wanted to be supermodels to day they would have to spend months a diet!
4
Ideas of the beauty can be different according to where you live, too. For the Paduang tribe in South-East Asia, traditionally the most important sign of beauty was a long neck. So at the age of five or six, girl each year they added new rings. By the time they were old enough to marry, their necks were about twenty-five centimeters long!
5
And what about the ideal man? If you ask women today to name an attractive man, most mention someone like Russell Crowe, Mel Gibson or Denzel Washington: someone tall and strong, brave and ‘manly’.
6
In the eighteenth century, however, ‘manliness’ was very different from what it is today. As well as wearing wigs, perfume and lots of make-up, a true gentleman showed his feeling by crying frequently in public. According to one story, when the British Prime Minister, Lord Spencer Percival, came to give King George IV some bad news, both men sat down and cried!
And even now, Russell Crowe might not find it so easy to attract women if he visited the Dinka Tribe of Sudan. They have always believed in the saying that ‘big is beautiful’. Traditionally, each year, men compete to win the tile of ‘the fattest man’. The winner is sure to find a wife quickly: for a Dinka woman, if a man is fat, it is also a sign that he is rich and powerful!
7
Home
Each heading below summarises one of the paragraphs in the text. Read the text and match the heading to the correct paragraphs.
Ideas of beauty 200-300 years ago
The bigger the better
Pale is the beautiful!
The importance of a long neck
The perfect modern woman
Showing your emotions
The world’s most handsome men
Check
3
7
2
4
1
6
5
Home
Reading
Are these statements True or False? Explain your answers.
a Pale skin was more popular than tanned skin until the twentieth century.
b Elizabethan make-up was not safe.
c In the eighteenth century, fashionable ladies had mice as pets.
d Women in Rubens’ time probably never went on diets.
e Paduang women with short necks couldn’t get married.
f In the eighteenth century it was OK for men to cry.
g Dinka women from Sudan think that thin men are very ugly.
Check
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
Home
1. (for hair) light-coloured or yellow.
2. Pleasant to look at.
3. Having skin made darker by the sun.
4. Of more than average height.
5. (for skin) light-coloured.
6. Looking physically strong and good at sport.
7. Having the good qualities of a man.
8. Thin in an attractive way.
9. Having a lot of courage.
10. With blue eyes.
Find words in the text that mean:
Home
Find the opposites to the words in the box below in part above.
Cowardly
Dark-haired
Fair-skinned
Fat
Short
Ugly
Home
Home
Home
End
For many people, German-born supermodel Claudia Schiffer is the perfect beauty: tall and slim, blue-eyed, tanned and athletic-looking with long, blond hair. No wonder people have described her as ‘The most beautiful woman in the world’.
Reading
But people have not always had the same ideas about beauty. Until the 1920s, suntans were for poor people, ‘ladies’ stayed out of the sun to keep their faces as pale as possible. Five hundred years ago, in the times of Queen Elizabeth I of England, fashionable ladies even painted their faces with lead to make them whiter – a very dangerous habit as lead is poisonous!
Reading
And people in the eighteenth century would certainly not have thought much of Claudia Schiffer’s hair! Ladies in those days never went out without their wigs, which were so enormous – and so dirty – that it was quite common to find mice living in them! As for the ‘perfect beauties’ pained by the Rubens in the seventeenth century, if they wanted to be supermodels to day they would have to spend months a diet!
Reading
Ideas of the beauty can be different according to where you live, too. For the Paduang tribe in South-East Asia, traditionally the most important sign of beauty was a long neck. So at the age of five or six, girl each year they added new rings. By the time they were old enough to marry, their necks were about twenty-five centimeters long!
Reading
And what about the ideal man? If you ask women today to name an attractive man, most mention someone like Russell Crowe, Mel Gibson or Denzel Washington: someone tall and strong, brave and ‘manly’.
Reading
In the eighteenth century, however, ‘manliness’ was very different from what it is today. As well as wearing wigs, perfume and lots of make-up, a true gentleman showed his feeling by crying frequently in public. According to one story, when the British Prime Minister, Lord Spencer Percival, came to give King George IV some bad news, both men sat down and cried!
Reading
And even now, Russell Crowe might not find it so easy to attract women if he visited the Dinka Tribe of Sudan. They have always believed in the saying that ‘big is beautiful’. Traditionally, each year, men compete to win the tile of ‘the fattest man’. The winner is sure to find a wife quickly: for a Dinka woman, if a man is fat, it is also a sign that he is rich and powerful!
Reading
Teacher in charge: Pham Tan Hoang
Designer : Pham Tan Hoang
MODULE
5
Appearances
Thank you for learn
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