Recycled language information technology, past
tense,
could/couldn’t ,
had to, (more) quickly Materials CD2
Warmer •
Play
Two minutes (see page xvii) with the heading
Communication . Leave students’ ideas on the board.
Student’s Book page 64 Let’s start! How do you communicate with your friends? •
Ask
How do you communicate with your friends? Elicit
ideas, then ask, e.g.,
How often do you send emails? How many text messages do you send in one day? 1 4 When were these forms of communication invented? Listen and match. •
Explain the meaning of
smoke signals, the World Wide Web, and
telegram . Teach
timeline and ask volunteers to
read each date on the line. Explain the meaning of
BCE .
Give students time to guess which photographs match
the dates.
•
Play the recording. Students listen and match.
Key: a 1
800 BCE
b 199
0–
1991
c 1
844
d 1
876
e 600 BCE
CD2:27 How do you communicate with people far away? Do you
call them on your cell phone? Do you email them? How
did people communicate in the past?
The oldest form of communication is the smoke signal.
People in Ancient China used the smoke signal in
1
800
BCE. They sent messages from tower to tower on the
Great Wall of China to signal danger or call for help.
People began writing letters in 600 BCE. But they couldn’t
send them in the mail. Messengers had to carry the letters
and give them to people. They took a long time to arrive!
In
1
844, Samuel Morse sent the first telegram. People
could send telegrams more quickly than letters. But they
still couldn’t talk to each other across long distances.
Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone in
1
876. Now people could talk, but they had to be near a
telephone! There weren’t any cell phones until
19
73.
Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web in
19
8
9
.
Now people all over the world can communicate quickly
and easily with the Internet.