Part Two Topics
Part One – Part two
Restaurants – A restaurant
Reading – A book
Public Transport – Form of public transport
TV – TV programme
The sea – a river, lake or sea
Seasons – a season
Clothes – an item of clothing
Photography – a photograph
Hobbies – a hobby
Sports – a sport
Animals – an animal
Buildings – a building
The most obvious categories are as follows:
Experiences/past events
Objects/material possessions
People
Places
Media related
Others (anything that doesn’t fit into the 5 categories above)
The three-step preparation method
Step 1: Selection
Have lots of features
Be expandable
Include some “invented” aspects. (i.e lies…)
Ignore the adjective
Don’t go with the first idea
Examples: An interesting trip you have been on
An important building in your city
A subject you liked at school
Something interesting or unusual you do in your free time
A walk you take regularly
Some travelling you would like to do
A happy event in your life
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Topic
|
Easy
|
Difficult
|
An important building
A trip
A famous person
|
A shopping mall
To Hong Kong
A singer/actor
|
Your school library
To Yellow Mountain
A politician/leader
|
Step 2: Vocabulary
Ask the question: “Can this word be used for many other topics?”
Topic-related words, for example, on a question: Describe some travelling you like to do.
Tourism sightseeing backpack explore excursion
Step 3: Grammar point
In Part Two, there are 3 basic tense requirements:
Describe an object you use every day
Describe a vehicle that you would like to own
Describe a happy event in your life
Example:
Describe an activity you enjoyed in an English lesson.
(Mostly past tenses) eg: The teacher asked us to pretend…
Describe a place in a city that you know well.
(Mostly present tenses) eg: This place is quite special because it has…
Describe a vehicle which you would like to own.
(Mostly conditional tenses and some present tenses for describing)
Eg: If I had a helicopter I would be able to…
Helicopters are an expensive luxury.
The Fluency-based Strategy
First look at the following topic card.
Describe a sport that you like playing or watching
You should say:
What the sport is
How often you play/watch it
Why you like it
Whether it is popular in your country
Look carefully at the 4 prompts on any topic card and you should notice that they all share the same grammar feature.
Most people think that these are 4 questions. Look carefully – they are not questions; they are in fact a single clause or part of a sentence (statement). This fact is true for every Part Two topic card.
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