Unit 5
CD2
26
13
Read and listen.
Are you OK, Ruby?
Something you
send … An email?
A text message?
Great! We need to
climb this mountain
to get to Emoclew.
4
7
5
8
3
2
6
The fi fth clue is something
you send to give your news to
a friend.
Pick this up and take
it with you on your journey to
Emoclew.
Be careful, Ruby.
It’s dangerous.
Whoa!
Phew!
Thank you.
Yes.
Let’s follow the yeti
into the cave.
Don’t sit
down, Jack!
Phew!
It’s a snake!
Something
you send to
give news to a friend.
The address is
in Emoclew.
We need to take
it with us.
Wow! We’re in
the mountains!
Look, a letter.
➞
Workbook page 5
63
1800 BCE
600 BCE
1844
1876
1990–1991
c
d
b
e
a
Skills:
Listening and speaking
Which do you use the most?
Which forms of communication do you use?
What do you use it for?
I use … the most.
I use …
I use it for …
CD2
27
14
When were these forms of communication invented? Listen and match.
Let’s
start!
How do you communicate with your friends?
CD2
27
15
Listen again and answer the questions.
Which is the oldest form of communication?
2
Could people send letters in the post in 600 BCE?
3
Could people send telegrams more quickly or more slowly than letters?
4
What did Alexander Graham Bell invent?
5
Is communication easier or more difficult with the Internet?
CD2
28
16
Talk about forms of communication with a friend.
the
World Wide Web
telephone
smoke signals
telegram
letters
➞
Workbook page 52
64
Skills Functional language
Lesson aims
Students practice
the skills of listening
and speaking, with reading in the Workbook. They also
talk about which forms of communication they use.
New language
communicate, timeline, BCE,
smoke signals, the World Wide Web, telegram, Ancient
China, tower, signal danger, call for help, in the post,
messenger, take (time) – They took a long time, across
long distances, invented, Which forms of communication
do you use? Which do you use the most?
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