Lesson aims
Students talk about what we should
and shouldn’t do to help the environment. They also
practice recognizing and producing the sound
/ər/
.
New language
We should use wind
and solar power. We shouldn’t use a lot of
electricity.
|
suggestion box, instead of
Recycled language
energy and materials,
Let’s … , help, the environment, use, a lot of,
throw away, trash, recycle, take a shower/bath, turn
off, at night, go by car, walk, cycle
Materials
CD2
|
Word cards: see page TB
1
08
|
Photographs of environmental damage / damaging
behavior, e.g., trash next to a road / in a street, plastic
and other materials in a trash can or at a dump (not
being recycled), a polar bear on an ice floe, someone
wasting water, someone using lots of electrical
devices at the same time (wastefully)
Warmer
•
Play
Elimination
(see page xv) with the word cards.
Presentation
•
Show photographs of damage to the environment and/
or people acting irresponsibly toward the environment.
Elicit sentences with
bad for
, e.g.,
Throwing trash away
in the street is bad for the environment. Using too much
electricity is bad for the environment.
After each example,
make sentences with
should/shouldn’t
, encouraging
students to help you, e.g.,
We shouldn’t throw trash away
in the street. We should put it …
(
in the trash can
)
.
Student’s Book page 7
1
5 Read and listen.
•
Point to the main photograph and present the phrase
suggestion box
. Ask
What’s it for?
Elicit/Explain that
people can write suggestions and put them in the box,
usually without writing their name. Ask where you
usually find a suggestion box (in places where people
want responses from the public/employees about their
service or company, e.g., in restaurants, offices). Ask
students if they or their parents have ever posted a
suggestion in a suggestion box or if they’ve filled in
an anonymous questionnaire (e.g., in a restaurant).
•
Ask
What are the suggestions in this box about?
(
Helping the environment.
)
•
Play the recording while students read and listen. Ask
students which of the suggestions they think are the
most important and why.
•
Play the recording again and ask students to follow and
raise their hands when they find
should
or
shouldn’t
.
Pause after each example and elicit the meaning of
the sentence.
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