Reading pre-sessional 2013
Monday, September 2, 2013
TEEP
TEEP speaking test
http://www.reading.ac.uk/ISLC/english-language-courses/english-language-tests/islc-teep-practice-tests.aspx
4 people (2 students, examiner, teacher)
part 1. check names which candidate A B
part 2. question from teacher (on the card)
4 minutes to prepare a talk (3mins)
part 3 discussion on a topic
part 4 return to focus question (students decide if they agree/disagree with each other)
http://www.reading.ac.uk/ISLC/english-language-courses/english-language-tests/islc-teep-practice-tests.aspx
4 people (2 students, examiner, teacher)
part 1. check names which candidate A B
part 2. question from teacher (on the card)
4 minutes to prepare a talk (3mins)
part 3 discussion on a topic
part 4 return to focus question (students decide if they agree/disagree with each other)
PROJECT IMPROVEMENTS
Highlight description, problem, solution, implication, evaluation
TURN IT IN
word count
Name on work
TITLES
Title different to project 1
list of sources (journals, books, no more websites than journals/books)
12 pt 1.5 line spacing
Layout
Look at another student's work
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Friday, August 23, 2013
The Great Hunger
Listening and
note-taking: The Great Hunger
Introduction
In this talk Helen Fraser, who comes
from Northern Ireland ,
talks about an extended famine in Ireland in the
middle of the nineteenth century. The famine is often referred to as ‘The Great
Hunger’ and is regarded as a low point in relations between Britain and Ireland .
1. Before you listen discuss these
questions with a partner.
1. What are the usual
causes of famine?
2. What can people /
governments / international organisations do to help the
victims
of famine?
3. What can the
people in famine regions do to help themselves?
Helen structures her talk in the
following way:
a)
Ireland before the famine
b)
The causes and effects of the famine
c)
Help given
d)
Problems with the help given
e)
What local people did
f)
A legacy of the famine.
First extract
Before you listen to the first extract
check that you understand these words:
landlord tenant starvation disease
malnutrition
2. Listen to the first extract and make
notes under these headings.
·
Ireland before the famine
·
The causes and effects of the famine
Second
extract
In the next extract Helen talks about
the limited help the landlords and the British government gave to the starving
people and she gives reasons why the help was so limited.
Before you listen, check that you
understand these words and phrases.
cottages evict people from their homes absentee landlords overpopulated not sufficiently industrialised racial stereotyping
Catholics and Protestants
3. Listen and make notes of the reasons
Helen gives.
·
The landlords gave little help because……
·
The British government gave very limited help because….
Third
extract
In this extract Helen talks about the
help that was given and the problems with that help. In other words she talks
about the solutions and then evaluates the
solutions.
4.
Listen to the extract and write notes about these
solutions.
Concentrate
on:
·
How the solutions worked
·
What the problems were
A Imported
grain
B Public
works
C Soup
kitchens
D Souperism
E The
workhouse
Final
Extract
In the last part of her talk Helen
talks about how a lot of Irish people responded to the famine by emigrating.
She also talks about the legacy of the famine.
Before you listen work with a partner
and answer these questions.
1.
What details do you think she will give about the
emigration?
2.
What do you think the legacy of the famine might be?
3.
How, for example, do you think the famine might have
affected relations between the British and the Irish?
5. Listen
and make notes on the emigration and the legacy.
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Monday, August 19, 2013
Writing checklist
Thesis statement......you NEED one
All claims MUST be referenced eg. All students are lazy
(Doi, 2013)
alphabetical order for bibliography (no numbers for the
order)
Subtitles: Introduction, Conclusion (other titles-1 or 2
words)
Follow the structures - check the blog
Modals -use could, would, NOT can , will
Tenses for introduction: present perfect rather than past
simple or present simple
Tenses for conclusion: more present perfect
Authors claims : use present simple tense (summarizing
present perfect)
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