2 Read and listen.
$
03
First read the highlighted (white or red) words in the text
•
and explain their meanings where necessary (or you could
give the children a few minutes to look up the words in
dictionaries). Model and drill pronunciation. Explain that
hardly
is often used with
ever
(
hardly ever = almost never
).
Write some temperatures on the board (e.g. 10°C, -25°C,
•
etc) and practise reading them correctly (i.e.
ten degrees
Celsius, minus twenty-five degrees Celsius,
etc).
Play the recording while the children follow the text
•
in their books. Then ask some questions to check
understanding, e.g.
What is the hottest temperature ever
recorded? Do scientists think El Azizia is the hottest place in
the world? (No, they think the Sahara desert is the hottest
place.) Does it often rain in Libya? What do we use to measure
temperature? What is the coldest temperature ever recorded?
Why is the Antarctic colder than the Arctic?
(See if the
children can find three reasons.)
Vocabulary (page 13)
3 Use the words from the text to complete the
sentences.
Look at the example together. Then tell the children to
•
write one of the highlighted words in each gap, to make
the sentences true.
Check the answers as a class.
•
Key
1
border
2
hardly
3
zero
4
Celsius
5
temperature
6
degrees
7
recorded
8
couple
9
thermometer
10
sunburn
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