Unit 13

13.1
Education for life
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EngelsMiddelbare schoolhavoLeerjaar 4

This lesson contains 44 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 30 min

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13.1
Education for life

Slide 1 - Slide

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What are the differences?

Slide 2 - Slide

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Differences

Slide 3 - Mind map

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Mr Tip: "I have been a pupil at this school."


Slide 4 - Slide

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Mr Tip: "I have been a pupil at this school."


How would you tell this 
at home or to your friends?

Slide 5 - Slide

Mr Tip said (that) he had been a pupil at this school.
Mr Tip: "I have been a pupil at this school."

--> Mr Tip said (that) he had been a pupil at this school.


How would you tell this 
at home or to your friends?

Slide 6 - Slide

Mr Tip said (that) he had been a pupil at this school.

Mr Tip: "I was at school when I saw some strange people. 
I went to them and asked them who they were. They looked at me and ran away quickly. I've never seen them again."

Slide 7 - Slide

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Mr Tip: "I was at school when I saw some strange people. 
I went to them and asked them who they were. They looked at me and ran away quickly. I've never seen them again."
How would you retell this story 
at home or to your friends?

Slide 8 - Slide

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Mr Tip: "I was at school when I saw some strange people.
I went to them and asked them who they were. They looked at me and ran away quickly. I've never seen them again."

Slide 9 - Open question

Mr Tip said (that) he had been at school when he had seen some strange people. He had gone to them and (had) asked them who they were. They had looked at him and (had) run away quickly. He had never seen them again. 
Now do:
Speaking: ex. 3 (!)
Listening 4
Vocabulary 5-9
(pp. 86-7)
Do use the next LessonUp slides, which contain valuable information/material!!!

Slide 10 - Slide

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Exercise 3
Rewrite the speech into reported speech. The first two lines have been done for you as an example. 
He said that it wasn't Simon's fault. He said he wanted to describe what really had happened.

Can you guess what the rules are with regard to the tenses regarding reported speech? - Now do the exercise

Slide 11 - Slide

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Listening
Read the statements. Underline any key (important) words. 
Do exercises 4 & 5 on p 86.
Unit 13: ex. 4

Slide 12 - Slide

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Word formation ex. 5
Verb:             to educate
Noun:           education, to educate
Adjective:  educational, educated
Adverb:       educationally

Slide 13 - Slide

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Collocations ex. 6 -9
educational qualifications, opportunities, standards
educated person

  • Do ex 7 in pairs (speaking)
  • Do ex 8, then check your answers on next slide


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Exercise 8
a) Tom Cruise  - last line
b) Paul Gauguin - hobby became career
c) Annie Lennox - London
d) Socrates - to solve the twin mysteries of life and death , wisest man alive
e) Madonna - New York
f) Agatha Christie - knowledge of poison... relevant

Slide 15 - Slide

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Exercise 9
  • A. earn/ make a day
  • B. have a talent for, determination
  • C. on leaving school - find employment
  • D. gain experience, spend x years, full time career
  • E. work long hours
  • F. take a position, unpaid assistant, qualify in, duties,, a sound knowledge of, extremely relevant

Slide 16 - Slide

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Lesson 2: unit 13.2
Grammar: Reported speech
Listening
Grammar extra
Speaking & word formation

Slide 17 - Slide

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Unit 13: Grammar
Reported Speech (talking about what 
other people have said)

Slide 18 - Slide

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What is reported speech?
Sometimes someone says a sentence, for example "I'm going to the cinema tonight". 
Later, maybe we want to tell someone else what the first person said. We report what was said. 

We will look at how to do this.

Slide 19 - Slide

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Reported speech
Direct speech: the literal, exact words someone says:
  • “I am very angry with you”. 
Often in written text with quotation marks "..."/'...'

Indirect or reported speech: when you tell someone what somebody else said. 
  • He said (that) he was very angry with me. 
No quotation marks in written text.

What changes:  - Tense  (present to past) - Pronouns ( I, we, you)  - Pronouns (here → there, this → that, these → those)  - Adverbials of time (yesterday → the day before, tomorrow→ the following/ next day)  

Slide 20 - Slide

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Changing the tense
Direct speech                      Mary: "He tells a lie"   
Reported speech               She said that he told a lie

Present simple        →          Past simple  

So what happens is that when we change the verb tense, we take a step 'back in time', as it were. Have a look →


Slide 21 - Slide

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Tense changes
Mary: "He is telling a lie"                              She said that he was telling a lie 
Present continuous       →                          Past continuous
Mary: "He has told a lie                                She said that he had told a lie 
Present perfect               →                           Past perfect   
Mary: "He told a lie"                                       She said that he had told a lie 
Past simple                       →                           Past perfect 
Mary: "He was telling a lie"                        She said that he had been telling a lie 
Past continuous             →                           Past perfect continuous  
Mary: "He had told a lie"                              She said that he had told a lie 
Past perfect                     →                            Past perfect  

Slide 22 - Slide

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Mary: "He will tell a lie"                           She said that he would tell a lie 
Will                                              →                would 
Mary: "He can tell a lie"                          She said that he could tell a lie 
Can                                             →                could 
Mary: "He should tell a lie"                   She said that he should tell a lie 
Should                                       →               should / should have + past participle   

When something is reported that is a general truth, there is often no tense change
Teacher: “Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius."
The teacher said that water boils at 100 degrees Celsius.  

Slide 23 - Slide

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Slide 24 - Slide

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Susan:"I can't remember!"

Slide 25 - Open question

Susan said (that) she couldn't remember.
Mike:"I will do it tomorrow."

Slide 26 - Open question

Mike said (that) he would do it the next day.
Tim: "I want to go first"
use 'insist'

Slide 27 - Open question

Tim insisted on going first.
OR
Tim insisted that he went first.
Mary:"Thomas killed the man!"
use 'accuse'

Slide 28 - Open question

Mary accused Thomas of killing the man.
There are different reporting verbs, which can take the following structures:
Accuse + of + -ing 
Mike: “You stole the bag”                →          He accused her of stealing the bag 

Admit + (to) + -ing / Admit + (that) 
Mike:“I lost the key”                          →           He admitted that he had lost the key  He admitted (to) losing the key 

Apologise + for + -ing 
Mike: “I am sorry that I am late”   →           He apologized for being late  

Argue + for + -ing / argue (that) 
Mike: “It is unnecessary to change anything”      →         He argued that it was unnecessary to change anything  

Claim + (that)
Jane: “He is a coward”        →             Jane claimed that he was a coward. 

Slide 29 - Slide

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Deny + (that) / deny + -ing
 John: “I don’t break any rules”       →       John denied that he broke any rules / John denied breaking any rules.  

Explain + (that) 
The mechanic: “There aren’t any problems anymore”    →     The mechanic explained (that) there weren’t any problems anymore. 

Insist + on+ -ing / insist+ (that) 
“I want to finish this first”        →              I insisted on finishing that first. / I insisted (that) I finished that first.  

Promise + (that) / promise+ to + infinitive
Dad: “I will pick you up”       →            Dad promised (that) he would pick me up. / Dad promised to pick me up. 

Refuse + to + infinitive
The boy: “I don’t want to throw the rubbish in the bin”         →         The boy refused to throw the rubbish in the bin. 

Slide 30 - Slide

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Say + (that) 
The fireman: “The fire started in the bakery".”        →      He said that the fire had started in the bakery. 

Suggest + (that) / suggest + -ing
“Let’s drive more slowly."    →       The man suggested (that) we drove more slowly. / The man suggested driving more slowly.

Urge + to + infinitive
Hugh: “Don’t worry.”          →         Hugh urged them not to worry.

Warn + (that) / warn = to + infinitive
Mum: “Santa will not come if you are naughty.”       →        Mum warned us that Santa wouldn’t come if we were naughty. / Mum warned us not to be naughty or Santa wouldn’t come.
Passive: is said + to + infinitive
- “The book contains several flashbacks"
- The book is said to contain several flashback.  

Slide 31 - Slide

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Turn into reported speech
  1. John: “She is having a dentist’s appointment tomorrow”. 
  2. Mr X: “ You should finish the job this week”. 
  3. Emma: “I have never been so embarrassed”. 
  4. Tom: “When were we supposed to call our boss?” 
  5. Mum: “ My children were at home” 
  6. I: “ I cannot do my homework”. 
  7. Teacher: “ You must open your books and copy these sentences”. 
  8. Guy: “ I loved going to America”    

Slide 32 - Slide

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Answers
  1. John said that she was having a dentist’s appointment the following day. 
  2. Mr X said that I/we should have finished/ should finish the job that week. 
  3. Emma said that she had never been so embarrassed. 
  4. Tom asked when they had been supposed to call their boss. 
  5. Mum said that her children had been at home. 
  6. I said that I couldn’t do my homework. 
  7. The teacher said that we had to open our books and copy those sentences
  8. Guy said that he had loved going to America.  

Slide 33 - Slide

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Change into reporting speech using the given reporting verb
  1. Tom: “Gerry cheats at tests.” (accuse
  2. Jerry: “you must replace A by B” (explain
  3. Joe: “ I do not know anything” (deny
  4. Mary: “I will help you” (promise
  5. Christa: “You could work harder” ( suggest
  6. We: “ stop cheating at tests” (warn
  7. The reporter: “Mr Johnston has been arrested for murder” ( claim
  8. Mum: “You must eat all your spinach” (urge)    

Slide 34 - Slide

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Answers
  1. Tom accused Gerry of cheating at tests. 
  2. Jerry explained that I had to replace A by B. 
  3. Joe denied knowing anything / Joe denied that he knew anything 
  4. Mary promised to help me / Mary promised (me) that she would help me. 
  5. Christa suggested working harder / Christa suggested that we could work harder 
  6. We warned you that you must stop cheating at tests.  / We warned you to stop cheating at tests. 
  7. The reporter claimed that Mr Johnson had been arrested for murder  
  8. Mum urged us to eat all our spinach.  

Slide 35 - Slide

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Reported speech
Still having some problems with understanding how this works? Have a look at the videos!

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Working from home on Unit 13.2:
  • Do exercises 1-3 about Reported Speech. You can work together of course.
  • Do listening exercises 4 & 5 by yourself. You can use the clip in the Lesson Up. 
  • Do listening exercises 6 & 7 + Grammar Extra by yourself. You can use the clip in the Lesson Up. 
  • You can call classmates in Teams or chat via WhatsApp for exercise 8. Make sure you note down the answers.
  • Skip ex. 9 and do ex. 10. Take your time for this one and use the slide to help you along.

  • For all exercises you can ask the teacher's assistance & of course, you can work together with classmates via Teams or WhatsApp (or Discord, whatever strikes your fancy)


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Listening ex. 4 & 5
Do exercises 4 and 5 of 13.2. Use the clip here to find your answers.
Unit 13.2: ex 4

Slide 38 - Slide

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Listening ex. 6 & 7
Do exercise 6 & 7
These exercises help you to listen carefully for information.



Now do grammar extra.  Read the examples first!
Unit 13.2: ex 6

Slide 39 - Slide

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Do ex. 8: Group discussion
timer
1:00

Slide 40 - Slide

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Now do ex 10
"You put that frog on my chair, didn't you, Charlie?" said Sally.
OF
Sally  accused Charlie of putting a frog on her chair.

Now do sentences 2 - 6 by using the reporting verbs and other constructions for reported speech.

Slide 41 - Slide

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Simon: "I'm sorry I left you alone."
(use 'apologise')

Slide 42 - Open question

Simon apologised (to me) for leaving me alone.
The politician: "A curfew is not going to help!"
(use 'argue')
(curfew=avondklok)

Slide 43 - Open question

The politician argued against a curfew.
OR 
The politician argued that a curfew is/was not going to help.
Exam Folder 7
Audio material
Ex. 1
Ex. 2

Slide 44 - Slide

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