V. Homework
VI. Evaluation Giving marks
Deputy director on educational affairs___________ Signature _________
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English Teacher:
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Dates
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Isaboyeva Durdona
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Lesson 4 Olympic Symbols
The aim of the lesson:
Educational: - to learn about the symbols of the Olympic Games
Developing: - to develop reading skills, creativity and presentation skills
Socio-cultural: - to raise awareness of the role of symbols in promoting the Olympic Games Competence: SC2, SC and LC
Learning outcomes: By the end of the lesson, pupils will be able to: talk about the Olympic Games
and their symbols.
Type of the lesson: non-standard, mixed
Method of the lesson: group work, pair work
Equipment: Textbook; the DVD of the book
TECHNOLOGICAL MAP OF THE LESSON:
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Part of the lesson
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Tasks
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Time
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1
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Organizational
Moment
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-to greet pupils.
- to check up the register
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5 min
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2
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Repeating last lesson
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- to give pupils some questions about last lesson. – to ask words from previous lesson
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5 min
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3
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Explaining new theme
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- to explain to pupils new vocabulary and theme
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20 min
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4
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Consolidating new theme.
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- to consolidate new theme and new words of the theme.
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10 min
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5
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Marking.
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- To mark pupils
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5 min
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6
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Homework.
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- Giving homework.
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The Procedure of the lesson:
I. Organizing moment: - Greeting.
- Checking the register
II. Pre-Activity
Homework checking. 5 min
In pairs the pupils ask and answer the questions.
III. Main Part
Activity 1a What do you know about Olympic symbols? 3 min
Objective: to prepare for the lesson
Establish what the pupils know about the symbols of the Olympic Games. If they do not know much, say they will learn about them in the lesson.
Activity 1b Find the words in the Wordlist. Listen and repeat. 6 min
Objectives: to introduce the new words; to enable pupils to work with the Wordlist
STEP 1: Ask the pupils to find the new words in the Wordlist.
STEP 2: Check the answers together.
Activity 2a Work in pairs. Read and answer. 7 min
Objective: to expand pupils’ knowledge about the Olympic Games
STEP 1: The pupils in pairs read and answer the questions. Ask them to cover the text in 2b.
NB: You can use the notes below to help the pupils answer the questions.
1) The five Olympic circles represent the five continents: Africa, North and South America, Asia and Australia. They are connected to symbolize the sports friendship amongst all the people in the world. 2) The rings are five interlocking rings, coloured blue, yellow, black, green, and red on a white field, known as the “Olympic rings”. The symbol was originally designed in 1912 by de Coubertin. He appears to have intended the rings to represent the five continents: Europe, Asia, Africa, Oceania, and America. According to Coubertin, the colours of the rings together with the white of the background included the colours composing every competing nation’s fl ag at the time.
3) The Olympics Motto – Citius, Altius, Fortius. A friend of Baron Pierre de Coubertin, Father Henri Martin Didon of the Dominican order, was the principal of Arcueil College, near Paris. An energetic
teacher, he used the discipline of sport as a powerful educational tool. One day, following an inter-school athletics meeting, Didon ended his speech quoting three Latin words: Citius, Altius, Fortius (Faster, Higher, Stronger). Struck by the succinctness of this phrase, Baron Pierre de Coubertin made it the Olympic motto, pointing out that “Athletes need ‘freedom of excess.’ That is why we gave them this motto ... a motto for people who dare to try to break records.” 4) The most important thing in the Olympic Games is not to win but to take part. 5) The International Olympic Committee. The IOC is the organisation that governs the games. It decides which sports and events are held at the games. The IOC also selects the host city for the summer and winter games, at least seven years before they take place. Cities that want the games must show that they have enough stadiums for all events.
STEP 2: When they finish, say they will check their answers in Activity 2b.
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