ESOL National 5 Everyday Life Teacher Notes - SQA

Low-Voltage Electrical Power Conductors and Cables (600 Volts and Below) .... 1
: All work shown on the Base Bid minus the replacement of the terminal units on
the 2nd ..... All new air ducts shall be cleaned prior to final inspection. ......
Building/facility owner - The legal entity, including a lessee, which exercises
control over.

Part of the document







| |
|Learning Support Materials |
| |
|English for Speakers of Other Languages: Everyday Life (National |
|5) |
| |
|Teacher's Notes |
| |
| |
| |
|[pic] |





[pic] [pic]
Introduction

These materials are designed to support learning and teaching for the
National 5 Unit English for Speakers of Other Languages: Everyday Life.
They form part of a series of materials for the three National 5 Units.

The materials are not designed to be a stand-alone teaching pack but to
supplement the materials which lecturers, teachers and tutors already use
to deliver courses and to support ESOL and EAL learners.

.

The teacher's notes are arranged in 3 sections as follows:

. Teacher's Notes
. Answer Key
. Listening CD track index and Tapescripts

There are no supplementary materials for this Unit.

Table of Contents


Page

Teacher's Notes 4


Answer Key 91




Listening CD track index 114




Tapescript 117

|01 |Learning English |
| |Establishing your learning goals |
| | |
|Task: |Identifying and setting learning goals |
|Skill: |Writing, Reading |
| | |
| | |
|Materials|Monolingual and bilingual dictionaries |
|: | |
| |
|Notes: |Warmer: |
| |If this is the first lesson on the course, a general|
| |getting to know each other activity can be used |
| |instead. This activity aims to get students |
| |thinking about their past learning experiences with |
| |the English language. |
| | |
| |Activity 1: |
| |Students work individually to answer the questions. |
| |If appropriate they can share their responses in |
| |groups or with a partner. |
| | |
| |Activity 2: |
| |Students move on to setting themselves goals for the|
| |future. They also have to identify how they will |
| |achieve these goals. Some students will need a lot |
| |of help with this section. In many cultures the |
| |only goals ever set are set by the teacher so it can|
| |be difficult for some students to accept that they |
| |can take responsibility for their own learning. |
| | |
| |Short-term goals set at this stage can be checked so|
| |encourage students to keep their goals and review |
| |them periodically as a class as the course |
| |progresses. |
| | |
| | |
| |Useful language for this lesson: |
| | |
| |goals |
| |short-term |
| |long-term |
| |realistic |
| |achievable |
| |set yourself ..... |
| |strengths |
| |weaknesses |
| |improve |
| |advantage |
| |disadvantage |
| | |
| | |


|02 |Learning English |
| |Identifying your preferred learning style |
| | |
|Task: |Identifying your learning style |
|Skill: |Reading, speaking |
| | |
| | |
|Materials|Monolingual and bilingual dictionaries |
|: | |
| |
|Notes: |Activity 1: |
| |Students think about other things they have learned |
| |and make a list. Ideas from all students could be |
| |written up on the board and used to extend Activity |
| |2 if needed. |
| | |
| |Activity 2: |
| |Students now look at activities they are likely to |
| |have already learned. These can of course be |
| |adapted to suit the needs of the class. In the |
| |second column students write how they learned the |
| |activity. Some examples can be found in the Tip |
| |box. |
| | |
| |Activity 3: |
| |Students read about the different learning styles |
| |and decide which style they used when they learned |
| |the activities in Activity 2. |
| | |
| |Activity 4: |
| |Students complete a learning style survey. |
| | |
| | |
| |Useful language for this lesson: |
| | |
| |learning style |
| |questionnaire |
| |visual |
| |auditory |
| |kinaesthetic |
| | |
| | |
| |. |


|03 |Learning English |
| |New Words |
| | |
|Task: |Learning skills - understanding, sorting and |
| |learning new words |
|Skill: |Speaking |
| | |
| | |
|Materials|Monolingual and bilingual dictionaries |
|: | |
| |
|Notes: |Activity 1: |
| |Students in pairs discuss dictionaries. There are no|
| |set answers. Both bilingual and monolingual |
| |dictionaries can be useful. Advantages of bilingual |
| |dictionaries: a quick reference for new words which |
| |students find. Advantages of monolingual |
| |dictionaries: they give a more accurate definition |
| |and examples, learners do not translate when they |
| |use them. Disadvantages of monolingual dictionaries:|
| |students get into the habit of translating words. It|
| |is often very difficult to translate words. |
| |Disadvantages of monolingual dictionaries: it can be|
| |difficult to understand the definitions. |
| | |
| |Activities 2 and 3: |
| |Students move on to analyse 3 dictionary definitions|
| |and to work out what the dictionary abbreviations |
| |are. Understanding how dictionary entries are |
| |organised and abbreviations used in entries are |
| |useful skills. Get them to do the activity with a |
| |partner. You could also encourage them to look at |
|