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Maurice ForgetBROOKEMEAD ENGLISHLANGUAGE TEACHING


QSESeries editor: Duncan ProwseConsultant: Rosemary HarrisEditor: Picot CassidyArtist: Belinda EvansDesign: John Anastasio, Wendi Watson, Lapiz DigitalQSE Advanced Common European Framework Level B2-C1QSE SeriesTitleQuick StartEnglish(in preparation)Quick SmartEnglishPre-IntermediateQuick SmartEnglishIntermediateQuick SmartEnglishAdvancedCommonEuropeanFrameworkA1-A2A2-B1B1-B2B2-C1ISBN: 1-905248-01-6CambridgeESOLKETPETFCECAEMichiganBCCEECCEALCE978-1-905248-01-8Also available:QSE Advanced Teacher’s DVD-ROMVideo, Audio and Text ISBN 1-905248-02-04978-1-905248-02-05QSE Advanced Student’s Book ISBN 1-905248-00-8978-1-905248-00-1QSE Advanced Student’s DVD-ROM ISBN 1-905248-03-2978-1-905248-03-2Published by:Brookemead English Language Teaching, LondonTOEFL(New TOEFL)450-525Target 485(NT 163)Target 525(NT 197)Trinity College,London, ESOL© Brookemead Associates Ltd. 2007All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, recorded, transmitted,or stored in any form whatsoever, without the prior written permission of the copyright holders.ISE 0GESE Grade 1, 2, 3ISE I,GESE Grade 4, 5, 6ISE II,GESE Grade 7, 8,9ISE III,GESE Grade 10,11EdexcelLondon Testof EnglishLevel (A1) 1Level 1- 2Level 2-3Level 3-4Other books in the QSE Series:QSE Pre-Intermediate (CEF A2-B1)Student’s Book, Workbook, Audio CDs, Teacher’sGuide with Photocopiable ResourcesQSE Intermediate (CEF B1-B2)Student’s Book, Workbook, Audio CDs, Teacher’sGuide with Photocopiable Resources


CONTENTSMaterials Map (Student’s Book, Workbook, Teacher’s Guide, Audio, Video, Exams) 4Introduction – Welcome to QSE Advanced 8QSE and the Common European Framework of Reference (CEF) 8QSE Advanced for exams 10QSE Advanced and CLIL (Content and Language Integrated Learning) 12QSE and Multiple Intelligences 12English as a meme 13QSE Advanced – At a glance 14QSE Advanced – How the sections of each unit work 16Internet sources and QSE illustrations 25Unit 1 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 26Unit 2 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 32Unit 3 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 38Unit 4 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 43Unit 5 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 49Unit 6 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 54Unit 7 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 60Extended Reading 1 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 65Unit 8 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 68Unit 9 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 75Unit 10 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 81Unit 11 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 88Unit 12 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 93Unit 13 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 99Unit 14 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 105Extended Reading 2 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 111Unit 15 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 114Unit 16 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 119Unit 17 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 125Unit 18 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 132Unit 19 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 138Unit 20 Teacher’s notes and answer keys 144Extended Reading 3 Teacher’s notes and answers key 149Using the DVD-ROM 152Audio and Video Scripts 153Exam Practice Listening Scripts 169Introduction to Exam Practice (Photocopiable Resources) 174IGCSE Exam Practice 176IELTS Exam Practice 204CAE Exam Practice 224Placement Test 251Exam Practice Answers 253Acknowledgements 256


QSE Advanced Teacher’s GuideUnit Title SubjectThe BIGquestionReadingLanguage BanksFunctions/GrammarSpeakingMATERIALS MAPKey:SB = Student’s BookWB = WorkbookVocabularyTG = Teacher’s GuidePR = Photocopiable ResourcesListeningAudio/VideoWritingQSE Advanced MATERIALS MAPCLIL (Contentand LanguageIntegrated Learning)Teacher’s GuidePhotocopiable ResourcesPages1Buy now,think laterAdvertisingMarketing:Is advertising all Decline of TVa con? SB8 commercials; Celebritiesout of a job SB9Expressionsused beforechallenging;Contradicting LB1Prepositions WB94TEAMWORK: Create a TV adSB10,114CONTROVERSY: Do spoof ads challengeadvertisers?SB10STRATEGIES: Mapping the presentation WB94Marketing,consumers,industry;Idioms WB94Audio: Cigarettewarning labelsSB10Review of an ad;LetterSB10Sales email; Productdescription WB94Public relations:Marketing, society andadvertising, governmentregulation SB11Teacher’s notes and answer key TG26IGCSE Exam PR176, 196, 203CAE ExamPR246IELTS ExamPR208Unit 1SB8-11WB94TG262ExpressyourselfThe artsAre the artsrelevant?SB12Arts:Monarchy and highculture; Spoils of warSB13SignpostingSequencing (1);Inferring LB2Word forms WB95TEAMWORK: An art manifesto SB14, 114CONTROVERSY: How does traditional artcombine with modern motifs?SB14High culture,pop culture,history;Idioms WB95Video: The BodyWorlds exhibitionSB14Biography of anartist; Letter aboutElgin Marbles SB14Diary entry:Music review WB95History of music:African-Americans,civil rights SB15Teacher’s notes and answer key TG32IGCSE Exam PR177, 193, 196CAE ExamPR236Unit 2SB12-15WB95TG323The sky’sthe limit!AmbitionsWhat would youdo to succeed?SB16Film:Success stories:Jackie Chan, ShahRukh KhanSB17Downplaying;Justifying anargument LB3Joining clausesWB96TEAMWORK: A problem tree SB18, 114CONTROVERSY: Does welfare work? SB18STRATEGIES: Rhetorical questions WB96Measures ofsocial success;Idioms WB96Video: Interviewsabout the AmericanDream SB18Being a country’sleader; Successfulperson’s life SB18Letter; Guide tospeaking WB96Careers: Jobs ofthe futureSB19Teacher’s notes and answer key TG38IGCSE Exam PR185, 192, 194, 196CAE ExamPR242IELTS Exam PR213, 221, 223Unit 3SB16-19WB96TG384Are youlookingat me?BullyingIs bullying justpart of life? SB20Youth culture:Satire: delinquent murdersteacher; Steroid use amongvictims of bullying SB21Modifying words;Expressing beliefsLB4Word forms WB97TEAMWORK: Stereotypes SB22, 115CONTROVERSY: Is it survival of the fittest?SB22Forms ofbullying;IdiomsWB97Audio: Bullying inthe workplaceSB22Letter; Story aboutsuperhero SB22Letter; Reporton bullying WB97Psychology: Prisonerrights; Effects of powerSB23Teacher’s notes and answer key TG43IGCSE Exam PR187, 196Unit 4SB20-23WB97TG435Frills andthrillsDesigner goods /FashionAre we all fashionvictims? SB24Fashion:Japanese women anddesigner fashion;Metrosexual man SB25Adjectives;Expressing opinionstentatively LB5TEAMWORK: Re-design an ordinary objectSB26, 115CONTROVERSY: Haute coutureSB26STRATEGIES: De-emphasisingWB98Fashion trends;Idioms WB98Video: PETAcampaign againstwearing fur SB26On a shopping spree;Advice columnistanswers SB26Charity letter;Instructions WB98Consumer studies:Maslow’s Hierarchy ofNeeds; ManipulatingdesireSB27Teacher’s notes and answer keyIGCSE ExamIELTS ExamTG49PR197PR217Unit 5SB24-27WB98TG496Playingto winCompetitivenessHow important iswinning? SB28Sport and leisure:Man versus machine;Sports andcompetitiveness SB29The passive;ExpressingreservationsLB6, WB99TEAMWORK: A reality TV show SB30, 115CONTROVERSY: Can there be gender equalityin sports funding?SB30Competitiveness,sports;Idioms WB99Audio: Alternativebeauty contestsSB30At the Olympics:New beauty contestSB30Press release;Sports report WB99Physiology:Effect of extreme sporton the body SB31Teacher’s notes and answer key TG54IGCSE Exam PR192, 197IELTS ExamPR223Unit 6SB28-31WB99TG547ProfitandlossEconomic issuesDoes economicsreally affect me?SB32Business:Farm subsidies;Virtual reality economySB33Intransitive andtransitive verbs;Defending a pointof viewLB7, WB100TEAMWORK: Finding the money for pensionsSB34, 115CONTROVERSY: What’s the point of Fairtradegoods?SB34STRATEGIES: Discussing graphs WB100Economics,trade;Idioms WB100Audio: How waraffects theeconomy SB34Local economy;Fairtrade letter SB34Article; Letter WB100Business Studies:Reading data from agraph; Comparing pricesSB35Teacher’s notes and answer key TG60IGCSE Exam PR194, 197, 201CAE Exam PR229, 243, 244IELTS Exam PR206, 221Unit 7SB32-35WB100TG60ExtendedReading 1Equal opportunitiesSB36Buffy the Vampire SlayerSB36Interactive Task: FilmsSB37Idioms SB36Verbs for hand /arm movementSB37Summary; Write anending for the extractSB37Teacher’s notes and answer keyIGCSETG65PR197SB36-37TG 658Into thefutureFuture of the planetDoes the Earthneed rescuing?SB38Environment:Gulf Stream; Virusesand epidemics SB39Signposting:Arguments (1);Affirming LB8Prepositions WB101TEAMWORK: After natural disaster SB40, 116CONTROVERSY: Can we really conserve fishstocks?SB40Environment;Idioms WB101Audio: The SkepticalEnvironmentalist:Bjorn LomborgSB40Letter to the EU;Preparing for disasterSB40Science article;Space colony WB101Meteorology: Climatechange and El NiñoSB41Teacher’s notes and answer key TG68CAE Exam PR224, 241, 247IELTSPR222Unit 8SB38-41WB101TG689Free tochooseIndependenceWhy do people wantto be independent?SB42Society:Leaving home;Regional independencemovements SB43Signposting:Arguments (2);Interrupting LB9Word forms WB102TEAMWORK: Equipping an apartmentSB44, 116CONTROVERSY: Do we need government? SB44STRATEGIES: Active and passive voice WB102Stateinstitutions;Idioms WB102Audio: Hanni,the seeing-eye dogSB44Independence day;Student living awayfrom home SB44Article; Story WB102History: ScottishindependenceSB45Teacher’s notes and answer key TG75IGCSE Exam PR188, 198Unit 9SB42-45WB102TG7510Do I geta say?Individual and youngpeople’s rightsCan’t we just dowhat we want? SB46Human rights:Slavery in Africa;Crackdown on anti-socialbehaviourSB47Intensifiers;Challengingopinions LB10Articles WB103TEAMWORK: Choosing politicians SB48, 116CONTROVERSY: EuthanasiaSB48Rights;IdiomsWB103Audio: Toughdisciplineschoolsfor ‘problem’teenagers SB48Mens’/womens’ rights;Behaviour-modificationschoolSB48Letter; SummaryWB103Law:Rights for minoritylanguage speakers SB49Teacher’s notes and answer keyIGCSE ExamTG81PR198Unit 10SB46-49WB103TG8111Peacearoundthe worldInternationaleventsWill we ever havepeace? SB50International news:Chávez, Latin Americanrevolutionary; PeacefulprotestSB51Tentativeexpressions;EvaluatingviewpointsLB11TEAMWORK: Conflict resolution SB52, 117CONTROVERSY: EU and US – friends or rivals?SB52STRATEGIES: Power of threeWB104News items;Idioms WB104Audio: A tropicalstorm and floodingin Haiti SB52Press release; Aninternational eventSB52Email; SummaryWB104Drama:Anti-war dramaSB53Teacher’s notes and answer key TG88IGCSE Exam PR181, 188, 198CAE ExamPR227Unit 11SB50-53WB104TG8845


QSE Advanced Teacher’s GuideMATERIALS MAPKey:SB = Student’s BookWB = WorkbookTG = Teacher’s GuidePR = Photocopiable ResourcesQSE Advanced MATERIALSMAPUnit Title SubjectThe BIGquestionReadingLanguage BanksFunctions/GrammarSpeakingVocabularyListeningAudio/VideoWritingCLIL (Contentand LanguageIntegrated Learning)Teacher’s GuidePhotocopiable ResourcesPages12Clickhere!Using the internetAre we all onlinenow? SB54Cyber news:Professional computergamers; Internet datingSB55Uncountablenouns;Deducing LB12WB105TEAMWORK: Creating a website SB56, 117CONTROVERSY: What’s the real cost of onlinegambling?SB56Computers,informationtechnology;Idioms WB105Video:Languages usedon the internetSB56Personal profile;Predictions for theinternet SB56Email; Game conceptWB105Informationtechnology:Viruses and hackingSB57Teacher’s notes and answer key TG93IGCSE Exam PR190, 198CAE ExamPR229Unit 12SB54-57WB105TG9313What’sin thenews?The mediaDo you trust themedia? SB58Media:Media mogul Berlusconi;Censorship SB59Colloquialisms;Implying LB13TEAMWORK: Fictional news stories SB60, 117CONTROVERSY: Are journalists sometimesspies?SB60STRATEGIES: Using quotesWB106TV, radio,newspapers;Idioms WB106Video:TV news channeldocumentarySB60Letter about payper-clickjournalism;Article review SB60Article; Report WB106Media studies:Media criticism;Control of freeexpressionSB61Teacher’s notes and answer key TG99IGCSE ExamPR199CAE Exam PR231, 234Unit 13SB58-61WB106TG9914HeroesandvillainsRole modelsDo we needsomeone to lookup to? SB62Pop culture:Eminem, pop cultureicon; Christopher Reeve,disability campaignerSB63Idiomatic andSofteningexpressions LB14Joining clausesWB107TEAMWORK: Role models for teenagersSB64, 117CONTROVERSY: Is there a link betweenimage and eating disorders?SB64Personalqualities;IdiomsWB107Audio:Comic booksuperheroesSB64Being a mentor;What is a ‘bad’ rolemodel?SB64Letter; Play outlineWB107Literature:Iconic writers:Maya Angelou andJack Kerouac SB65Teacher’s notes and answer key TG105IGCSE Exam PR195, 199IELTS ExamPR213CAE Exam PR227, 236, 239Unit 14SB62-65WB107TG105˚ Extended Lifestyles SB66 Snowboard Nirvana:Reading 2A snowboarder’s blogSB66Interactive Task: TravelSB67SnowboardingSB67Idioms SB66Summary; Completethe missing sectionof the story SB67Teacher’s notes and answer keyTG111SB66-67TG11115FamilymattersRoles in the familyWhat’s a normalfamily? SB68Family:New feminism;Fathers’ rightsSB69Conditionals;Generalising LB15TEAMWORK: Family and friends networkSB70, 118CONTROVERSY: Is it right to adopt fromanother country?SB70STRATEGIES: Emphasising a point WB108Family;IdiomsWB108Audio: Interviewwith a teenagemother SB70Changes in families;A friend’s weddingSB70Email; Day in the lifeWB108Home economics:Running a householdwith children SB71Teacher’s notes and answer keyIGSCE ExamIELTS ExamTG114PR199PR223Unit 15SB68-71WB108TG11416Let’schangethesubject!School curriculumAre studentslearning the rightthings? SB72Education:Rewriting the historybooks; Making the schoolsystem fairer SB73Signposting :Sequencing (2);Asserting LB16Gerund andinfinitive WB109TEAMWORK: Relevance of school subjects toeveryday life SB74, 118CONTROVERSY: Are single-sex schools better?SB74School subjects;Idioms WB109Audio:Creationism inArizona schoolsSB74Improving the schoolsystem; An exchangevisitSB74Diary entry; EssayWB109Physical education:Learning throughexperience with outdooractivitiesSB75Teacher’s notes and answer key TG119IGCSE Exam PR177, 199IELTS ExamPR221CAE Exam PR237, 242Unit 16SB72-75WB109TG11917Adventuresin scienceScientificdevelopmentsIs science makinglife better? SB76Science and technology:Bionic suit; ‘Spider-goats’super web material SB77Expressions usedto introduceassertions;Developing anargument LB17TEAMWORK: Be a futurologist SB78, 118CONTROVERSY: Where will cloning lead?SB78STRATEGIES: Knowing what is important:key wordsWB110Science;IdiomsWB110Video:Space debrisSB78Report; Scientificdevelopments SB78Article; Letter WB110Engineering:New products anddevelopments SB79Teacher’s notes and answer key TG125IGCSE Exam PR179, 191, 202IELTS Exam PR207, 222CAE Exam PR239, 240, 245, 247Unit 17SB76-79WB110TG12518Thecompanywe keepSocial issuesAre we doingenough to help?SB80National news:Hidden homeless;Waiting for medicaltreatmentSB81Expressions usedto contradict;Summarising LB18Wordforms WB111TEAMWORK: New work opportunities for yourcommunity SB82, 119CONTROVERSY: Should immigration becontrolled?SB82Social problems;Idioms WB111Audio: Computertraining for slumdwellers in BrazilSB82Report on crime;Letter abouthealthcare SB82Article; Report WB111Social studies:CommunitydevelopmentSB83Teacher’s notes and answer keyIGCSE ExamCAE ExamTG132PR183PR243Unit 18SB80-83WB111TG 13219Stressedout!StressmanagementAre we seriouslystressed? SB84Health:Prime Minister, fitnessfan; Watching fish easesstressSB85Language ofempathy andsympathy;Calming LB19TEAMWORK: How does fear turn into phobia?SB86, 119CONTROVERSY: Dealing with stress ordepressionSB86STRATEGIES: Anticipating questions WB112Ways of reducingstress;Idioms WB112Audio: LaughterClubs SB86Coping with stress;Most stressful daySB86Email; Article WB112Biology:Effects of stress on thebody and on behaviourSB87Teacher’s notes and answer keyIGCSE ExamCAE ExamTG138PR191PR249Unit 19SB84-87WB112TG13820ShocktacticsYoung people’sbehaviourAre all teenagersrebels? SB88Crime:Rock group with no drugsmessage; Jobs in themarijuana industry SB89Language ofcaution; Elicitingfeedback LB20Verbs WB113TEAMWORK: Creating programmes to helpyoung people SB90, 119CONTROVERSY: Should tattoos and bodypiercings be banned?SB90Types of teenagebehaviour;Idioms WB113Audio:Binge drinkingSB90Youth behaviour;Advice for a friendSB90Email; Story WB113Poetry and music:Analysing the meaningof a song SB91Teacher’s notes and answer key TG144IGCSE Exam PR183, 192IELTS ExamPR204CAE Exam PR242, 250Unit 20SB88-91WB113TG144ExtendedReading 3StereotypesSB92Not all Natives arecreated equalSB92Interactive Task: Stereotypes about olderpeople and different ethnicitiesSB93Non-standardEnglish SB93Idioms SB92Summary; New storyabout Big GlennSB93Teacher’s notes and answer key TG149SB92-93TG149SBWorkbook SB94-113 Teamwork Scenarios SB114-119 Unit-by-unit Glossary SB120-128SBTGExam listening practice IGCSE PR200-203 IELTS PR204-208 CAE PR244-247Exam listening scripts TG169-173 Placement Test PR251-252 Exam practice answer key TG253-255TG67


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 8QSEIntroductionTeacher’s GuideIntroduction - Welcome to QSE Advanced• Quick Smart English is a topic-based English language course for levels B2 to C1 in line with theCEF (Common European Framework).• QSE uses affective, topical and sometimes controversial reading and listening material to presentand revise structures and vocabulary and to develop communication skills.• The language structures are those found in widely-accepted international curricula.• The topic-based vocabulary is wide-ranging and based on real-life ideas and issues.• The learning tasks include integrated skills activities, with a particular focus on speaking.• Integrated CLIL (Content and Language Integrated Learning) activities are in each unit.• Although QSE Advanced is not a dedicated exam preparation course, the structure andvocabulary practice, skills work, question types and supplementary test materials areall designed to help students prepare for international ESOL examinations.• QSE Advanced is designed to cover a 70–80 hour course, although it can also be usedin modules for skills development, in particular speaking practice.QSE and the CEFThe structure and approach of the course are based onthe Council of Europe’s Common European Frameworkof Reference (CEF). Like the CEF, QSE Advancedtakes a very broad view of what language students needto learn in order to use a foreign language and whatknowledge and skills they need to develop so as to beable to communicate effectively. QSE aims to providethe widest possible cultural context, using examples fromthe great cultural diversity of global English (British,American, Australian, South African and others).QSE helps to provide learners with strategies toactivate general and communicative competences inorder to carry out the activities and processes involved inthe production and reception of texts and theconstruction of discourse dealing with particular themes.The objectives, content and methods of QSE followthe guidelines of the CEF, aiming to equip students todeal with communicating in English, not only in Englishspeakingcountries, but also in using the language as alingua franca in other countries. QSE helps students toexchange information and ideas and to communicatetheir thoughts and feelings. Its wide range of topics, manyof which are unusual in EFL courses, help students toachieve a wider and deeper understanding of the wayother people live and think and of their cultural heritage.The methods of teaching language and learning withQSE are based on the needs, motivations, characteristicsand resources of the learners themselves. The course isabove all student-centred. The language learning activitiesare based on action-orientated tasks and relevant authentictexts (oral and written).The topics (including the CLIL materials) helpstudents to face the modern challenges of internationalmobility and closer co-operation, not only in education,culture and science but also in trade and industry. QSEaims to promote mutual understanding and tolerance,respect for identities and cultural diversity through moreeffective international communication.The course visits all four domains identified by theCEF. The Public Domain, for example, is represented inmany units including environmental issues in Unit 8,society in Unit 18 and economic issues in Unit 7. ThePersonal Domain is visited in Unit 10 (Young people’srights), Unit 9 (Independence) and Unit 20 (Youngpeople’s behaviour) among others. The EducationalDomain features in Unit 16 (School curriculum), and theOccupational Domain appears in Unit 3 (Ambitions).The CEF is a framework not only for languagelearning, but also for assessment, which is central to themethodology of QSE. QSE Advanced is compatible withpreparation for a variety of international Englishexaminations. QSE Advanced features a special set ofexam preparation materials for the UCLES Cambridgesuite of exams – CAE (Certificate in Advanced English)level, IELTS (International English Language TestingSystem) and IGCSE (International General Certificate ofSecondary Education). Trinity College London recognisesthat QSE makes a valuable contribution to preparationfor the Graded Examinations in Spoken English (GESE)and Integrated Skills Examination (ISE). Other levels ofQSE are coordinated with other Cambridge exams – QSEPre-Intermediate with PET level and QSE Intermediatewith FCE. The chart below shows how the various levelsof the QSE course have been planned to match the levelsof the CEF and the requirements of internationalexaminations.8 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 9QSE AdvancedQSETeacher’s GuideQSE levels, the CEF and international examinationsCommon UCLES Trinity Michigan / TOEFL IELTS EdexcelEuropean (University of College, HAU (New TOEFL) LondonQSEFramework Cambridge London ESOL Test of(CEF) ESOL) EnglishQuick START A1-A2 KET GESE Level (A1)English (Key English Grade 1, 2, 3 1(in preparation)Test)QSE A2-B1 PET ISE 0, ISE I, BCCE 3.0 to Level 1-2Pre-Intermediate (Preliminary GESE 4.0English Test) Grade 4, 5, 6QSE B1-B2 FCE (First ISE II, ECCE 450-525 4.0 to Level 2-3Intermediate Certificate in GESE Target 485 5.5English) Grade 7, 8, 9 (NT 163)QSE B2-C1 CAE ISE III, ALCE Target 525 5.5 to Level 3-4Advanced (Certificate in GESE (NT 197) 6.5 /Advanced Grade 10, 11 7.0English)QSE Advanced takes students from Level B2 to C1. These are the CEF Reference Levels GlobalDescriptors for the two levels.Writing Spoken Spoken Reading Listeningproduction interactionB2• I can understand extended speech and lectures andfollow even complex lines of argument provided thetopic is reasonably familiar. I can understand most TVnews current affairs programmes. I can understandthe majority of films in standard dialect.• I can read articles and reports concerned withcontemporary problems in which the writers adoptparticular attitudes or viewpoints. I can understandcontemporary literary prose.• I can interact with a degree of fluency and spontaneitythat makes regular interaction with native speakersquite possible. I can take an active part in discussionin familiar contexts, accounting for and sustaining myviews.• I can present clear, detailed descriptions on a widerange of subjects related to my field of interest. Ican explain a viewpoint on a topical issue giving theadvantages and disadvantages of various options.• I can write clear, detailed text on a wide range ofsubjects related to my interests. I can write an essayor report, passing on information or giving reasons insupport of or against a particular point of view. I canwrite letters highlighting the personal significance ofevents and experiences.C1• I can understand extended speech even when it isnot clearly structured and when relationships areonly implied and not signalled explicitly. I canunderstand television programmes and filmswithout too much effort.• I can understand long and complex factual and literarytexts, appreciating distinctions of style. I canunderstand specialised linguistically complex articlesand longer technical instructions, even when they donot relate to my field.• I can express myself fluently and spontaneouslywithout much obvious searching for expressions. Ican use language flexibly and effectively for socialand professional purposes. I can formulate ideas andopinions with precision and relate my contributionskilfully to those of other speakers.• I can present clear, detailed descriptions of complexsubjects integrating sub-themes, developing particularpoints and rounding off with an appropriateconclusion.• I can express myself in clear, well-structured text,expressing points of view at some length. I can writeabout complex subjects in a letter, an essay or areport, underlining what I consider to be the salientissues. I can select style appropriate to the readerin mind.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 20079


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 10QSEIntroductionTeacher’s GuideQSE for examsQSE is not designed to be a specific exampreparationcourse, but no teacher or class thesedays can ignore the fact that exams are a veryimportant and almost unavoidable presence in thelanguage classroom. All international exams todayhave been written or have been calibrated to fitinto the levels and requirements of the CEF,however, styles of examination differ. As QSE is acourse with a very strong emphasis on spokenEnglish and developing oral skills, the authordecided to use the syllabus of the TrinityCollege, London, GESE (Graded Examinationsin Spoken English) and ISE (Integrated Skills inEnglish) examinations for the core subject areas.However, we are aware that many students willtake other exams, so there are many questiontypes, tasks and exercises in the Student’s Bookand Workbook that provide exam practice in allfour skills for several exam types. In addition,there are special photocopiable pages in thisTeacher’s Guide that practise the University ofCambridge CAE, IELTS and IGCSE – seedetails below. This makes QSE an ideal coursefor general study at the end of which studentsmay go on to take a variety of exams, includingthose of Trinity and Cambridge.QSE and Cambridge / Trinity / IELTS / IGCSE exam practiceQSE is not an exam-practice book; students takingany examinations should prepare by using actualsample papers before they sit any exams. However,QSE does provide a great deal of practice in everyskill necessary for these.Reading: Throughout the book there are manyreading comprehension tasks, many of which are inspecific exam formats, while the remainder practisethe same skills in other formats. For example, theformat of CAE Paper 1 Part 1 is specifically used inUnits 3 and 17. Also, the IELTS Reading Passage 3is covered in Units 5 and 18.Writing: The Portfolio Writing section providespractice in CAE, IELTS and ISE-style writing tasks,as does the Portfolio Writing section in theWorkbook. In particular, the ISE III PortfolioWriting tasks are seen throughout the book. Mostcan be used to simulate the Controlled WritingTasks as well. The CAE exam practice pages forUnits 4, 9 and 13 provide tasks in the preciseformat of the CAE exam, while IELTS Task 2 ispractised in Units 1, 4 and 13.English in UseIn almost every unit of the Workbook there ispractice in CAE Paper 3 English in Use tasks.These are in abbreviated form, as it is not necessaryto practice a complete exam paper for every activity.Each of the CAE exam practice pages provides tasksin the format of the English in Use paper andcovers all question types.Listening: Many of the listening activities in theunits are based on CAE and IELTS-style tasks.With 80 minutes of audio and video material, QSEprovides ample listening material.There is also additional exam listening practicefor IGSCE, CAE and IELTS on the DVD-ROM (seepage 152 and 200–203, 204–208 and 244–247).Speaking: All the speaking activities in the unitspractise the skills and functions necessary for theCambridge CAE, IELTS, IGCSE and TrinityISE III exam.Exam practice pagesIn this Teacher’s Guide there are photocopiableexam practice pages from page 176, with anintroduction about using the QSE PhotocopiableResources on page 174 of this Teacher’s Guide.There are 27 pages for the Cambridge AdvancedEnglish exam, 20 pages for the IELTS exam and 28pages for the IGCSE exam. You can use these pagesat the same time as the main units, or separately forhomework. Each set of materials can be marked bythe teacher using the exam answers section.10 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 11QSE AdvancedQSETeacher’s GuideQSE and the Trinity College London GESE and ISE examsBecause they are based on the structures, functions and subject areas ofTrinity’s Advanced (Grades 10 and 11) Graded Examinations in Spoken English(GESE) and Integrated Skills in English (ISE III) Examination (covering CEFlevels C1 and up), the units in the QSE Advanced coursebook provide athorough preparation for students wishing to take either oral or integratedskills examinations at these levels.The READING (Activity 2 of each unit) and LISTEN / WATCH AND LISTEN(Activity 4 of each unit) sections in the book familiarise students with thevocabulary specific to the subject areas in the Trinity examinations. Studentsthen learn how to present and discuss their knowledge and ideas with theexaminer in TEAMWORK (Activity 5), CONTROVERSY (Activity 6) and thetopic in English (Activity 8) in each unit, using the appropriate structuresand functions.Students should select a topic that they are interested in, knowledgeableabout and able to talk readily about. In preparing the topic, candidates shouldbe actively discouraged from producing and memorising a written text, asthis will have an adverse effect on the candidate’s pronunciation and abilityto use spontaneous spoken English. They should also prepare enough materialto discuss the topic for up to five minutes. The discussion should provideopportunities for the candidate to use the language of the specific grade, forexample at Grade 11 or ISE III, vague or imprecise language and expressionsfor downplaying.In the Topic phase of the Trinity Advanced exams the candidate needs to beprepared to:• Invite questions and comments from the examiner about the content ofthe presentation• Engage the examiner in a discussion of some of the points made in thepresentation• Respond to the examiner’s challenges and requests for clarification orelaboration.Candidates may like to take with them into the exam one or more pictures,photos, models or other suitable objects to illustrate their prepared topics.The INTERACTIVE TASK in the Student’s Book (Extended Reading Sections 1,2, 3) gives students the opportunity to prepare for the Interactive Task phaseof the GESE and ISE exams at this level. Here candidates are expected to beable to:• Take responsibility for the discourse with the examiner• Use turn-taking to maintain a natural flow to the discourse• Relate their own contributions with those of the examiner• Negotiate toward a successful conclusion.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200711


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 12QSEIntroductionTeacher’s GuideQSE and CLILOne of the most significant aims of recenteducational thinking in many countries hasbeen to make learning a relevant preparation forthe students’ real lives in the widest sense. Thiscan mean not just relevance to vocational trainingbut also to personal development, citizenship,further education and the use of informationtechnology. In addition, education reforms inmany countries now encourage a greater emphasison political, economic, historical and culturalworld awareness, as globalisation affectseveryone’s lives.QSE features a cross-curricular CLIL (Contentand Language Integrated Learning) topic as part ofevery unit. Many reflect the nature of the modernsyllabus with subjects like Business Studies, Lawand Information Technology. The course approachto CLIL also reaches out more widely to embrace arange of topics that interest and are useful tostudents even if they are not being formallystudied. These include ideas such as Psychology,Meteorology, Social Studies and Public Relations.In QSE, CLIL is truly integrated so that it becomesa natural part of what we use language for – talkingabout the things that interest us.The objective of the cross-curricular sectionsin this book is not to add to the students’ ownknowledge of subjects. Instead it is to equipstudents with an English-language strategy (and therelevant conceptual and linguistic tools) so thatthey can extend their understanding of the worldthrough the use of a foreign language.“CLIL is an approach to bilingual education inwhich both curriculum content – such as science orhistory – and English are taught together. . . .. Henceit is a means of teaching curriculum subjects throughthe medium of the language still being learned.....CLIL can also be regarded the other way round – asa means of teaching English through study of aspecialist content. … CLIL is compatible with theidea of JIT education (‘just in time learning’) and isregarded by some of its practitioners as the ultimatecommunicative methodology.” (David Graddol,English Next, British Council, 2006)QSE and Multiple IntelligencesThe theory of Multiple Intelligences, first posited byDr Howard Gardner in 1983 and modified manytimes since then, has divided teachers and educatorsas much as it has brought them together. But this isreally a matter of the details. Most educationaltheorists now agree that the long-established methodsof teaching and testing, which only appealed to alearner’s linguistic or logical-mathematicalintelligences, work well for some students but excludeothers whose intelligences are of a different type.What we have tried to do in this book is addresscertain other aspects of the theory, particularly thedistinction between interpersonal and intrapersonalintelligences. Students do not always want tointeract with each other and provision needs to bemade for ‘lone’ activities as well as pair andgroup work. Auditory learners will find plentyof stimulation in the varied audio material onthe DVD-ROM. The video extracts on theDVD-ROM will attract visual learners, as will thephotos that make the texts come alive.We have also tried to balance giving teachersand learners what they like, expect and are usedto and giving them something new anddifferent, without making them alarmed oruncomfortable.12 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 13QSE AdvancedQSETeacher’s GuideEnglish as a memeContent and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) represents an evolution insecond-language acquisition. It is an idea that is changing the way peoplelearn English. One of the key concepts of CLIL is that, by changing the contextin which a foreign language is learned, teachers can make it more relevant tothe students’ needs and thus more readily acquired.In 1976, Professor Richard Dawkins of Oxford University suggested thatthere are units of cultural inheritance and transfer which he called‘memes’. He suggested that they work in a way that is similar to the waythat genes pass on biological information. Memes are ideas (such as theEarth is flat) or fashions (like short skirts) or skills (such as skiing), whichcan be rapidly transmitted from one person to another.The skill of speaking English as a foreign or second language is now aglobally successful idea, or meme. Over a billion people worldwide arelearning English as a foreign language. Dawkins and others think that memesreproduce by both mutation and recombination, rather like genes in theprocess of biological evolution itself. A mutation in thought may takecenturies to take root. For example, Leonardo da Vinci’s ideas on mechanicalflight did not catch on in the 15th century because the technical environmentof the time could not support them. Five hundred years later, the meme offlight is so commonplace we hardly question it.Memes are also propagated by recombination, such as when existing ideasand skills come up against a new environment and adapt rapidly to suit it.Thus, mobile phones and the internet have dramatically changed the ways inwhich people communicate. We still talk and write, but now we do thisinstantly with people anywhere in the world. The result is an explosion ofglobal communication — an extremely successful meme, evolved to fit the21st-century environment.CLIL may be another example of memetic recombination. The learningenvironment is filled with subjects like geography, history and physics.If language learning moves into these new environments, it becomes animproved meme — one that combines old ways of teaching with new situationsand thus provokes students to acquire improved skills and new ideas.Students not only learn about the subject of geography or maths with CLIL,they also turn the process upside down and learn the language from thesubject. If they are already learning geography, discussing it in English enablesthem to recombine the subject with the second language, producing a form oflearning that is better adapted to their environment. It’s more fun, morerelevant and more motivating, and like a gene or a meme, more successful.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200713


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 14©Brookemead Associates, 2007ISBN:1-905248-03-2978-1-905248-03-02QSEIntroductionTeacher’s GuideQSE Advanced – at a glanceQSE Advanced consists of 20 separate units of five pages each (four pages in the main unit and a Workbook page),plus various additional materials, such as Extended Reading, Language Banks, Teamwork Scenarios and Glossary.Every unit of the course works in the same way. The activities are varied, but the instructions are kept assimple and as similar as possible. This means that students only have to learn how to use the course in the firstunit, and can then expect the same structure in the rest of the units. This makes it exceptionally clear anduser-friendly, further defining the student-centred approach of the whole course.Scope and sequence of the course:Contents pages Student’s Book and Workbook (see also Materials Map pages 4—7 of this Teacher’s Guide)Every unit consists of:4 Student’s Book pagesPage 1:Viewpoint: WordPower, Reading,Speak Your MindPage 2:Reading texts(two texts per unit)Page 3:Listen / Watch and listen,Teamwork, Controversy,Portfolio WritingPage 4:CLIL, FurtherDiscussion, Your answer1 Workbook page Teamwork ScenarioLanguage BankStudent’s DVD-ROMTeacher’s DVD–ROMStudent’s DVD-ROMVideo Audio TextAbout QSE TEXTUsing the DVD TEXTUnit 1 AUDIOUnit 2 VIDEOUnit 3 VIDEOUnit 4 AUDIOUnit 5 VIDEOUnit 6 AUDIOUnit 7 AUDIOUnit 8 AUDIOUnit 9 AUDIOUnit 10 AUDIOUnit 11 AUDIOUnit 12 VIDEOUnit 13 VIDEOAudio & video scripts TEXTUnit 15 AUDIOUnit 14 AUDIOUnit 20 AUDIOUnit 19 AUDIOUnit 18 AUDIOUnit 17 VIDEOUnit 16 AUDIOGrammar, VocabularyUse of English, Idioms,Writing, Speaking StrategiesOutline for Teamworkactivity20 Language Banks, on the coverflapsAudio and video clipsExam practice listeningPrintable exam pagesPrintable Teacher’sGuide14 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 15QSE Advanced_IGCSE R&W 2/5/07 8:50 PM Page 177Name:Class:BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2006Which section mentions the following?The largest constant source of funds for the fledgling TV stationThe effect that satellite technology has had on governmentsThe management has been changed to update the network’s focusThe size of the TV network’s audience compared to others in the marketThe belief that the network might be controlled by agents from other countriesThe network plans to compete against other major networks around the worldThe reason for the collapse of one TV network operation in the Middle EastThe issue of information control in the Middle EastThe fact that the management were overly optimistic about financial prospectsThe station likes to present the views of ordinary Arab peopleName:Class:The accusations of anti-semitism levelled against the TV stationThe audience grew with the TV station’s coverage of two big events related to the United StatesThe fact that one of their offices was forcibly closedThe government of Iraq disliked the coverage of their countryThe televising of the person responsible for atrocities in the United StatesThe fact that TV stations with specialised content were doing so wellAl Jazeera’s content was disapproved of by many governmentsThe TV station maintains its right to show graphic images of victims of warTheir journalists would ask questions that upset some people in governmentThe confidential report that disclosed a possible reason for the bombing of Al JazeeraThe staff had some experience in a rival news agencyName:Class:BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200625___26___27___28___29___30___31___32___33___34___35___36___37___38___39___40___41___42___43___44___45___177231213BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2006QSE Advanced_IELTS Exam pra#434 2/5/07 7:25 PM Page 221$70,000$60,000$50,000$40,000$30,000$20,000$10,000$0WhiteBlack$50,000$40,000$30,000$20,000$10,000$0HispanicFull-time average earnings per year for men in the USWhiteMaster'sBachelor'sH.S. DiplomaName:Class:HispanicMaster'sBachelor'sH.S. DiplomaBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007BlackFull-time average earnings per year for women in the USName:Class:Source: National Committeeon Pay Equity, 2001236 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2006 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING221195PART 1 (4-5 minutes) ***For examiner use only***Ask the student the following:1) Give a brief introduction about yourself.2) Ask about these familiar topics.(Example questions)Homes / FamiliesIs it a good place to live? Why / Why not?PART 3 (4-5 minutes) ***For examiner use only***1) Ask the student 1-2 round-off questions foreither Tasks A or B.Task Card ATask Card BPART 2 (3-4 minutes)Task Card AQSE Advanced_CAE Speaking 2/1/07 9:44 PM Page 249Stress (Describe, speculate and hypothesis)120Jobs / StudiesInterestsTask Card BUnits 1–3culture vulture a person who is very interested in 13high culture (art, music etc.)forebears ancestors 13integration a policy of including everyone in 15societyBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2006Work in pairs. Compare and contrast the following pictures showing peoplein different stressful situations.Name:Class:Look at the pictures again and decide which would be the most stressful and why?BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007Key:Student’s Book Page 18Workbook Unit Wb6Listening Unit Au12Scenario SUnit 1 Buy now, think later See pages 8–11 manifesto a statement of aims and beliefs 14big bucks (US) a lot of money; (buck = dollar) 9 mark someone / to make someone / something seem 13billboard a large outdoor board with advertising 8 something out, to obviously differentpostersmeniscus a fine membrane Au2can, to to fire 9 MTV a TV station dedicated to popular 12catchy easily remembered Wb94music and culturecelebrity promotional advertising by a celebrity 8 muddy, to to make unclear 13endorsementNAACP National Association for the 15classified ad a small advert in a newspaper 8Advancement of Colored Peoplecon a trick; deception 8 Proms, the an annual series of classical music 13corporate image the way a large business is seen by 11concerts at the Royal Albert Hall,the public, or the picture it givesLondonof itselfprophylactic preventing disease Au2ditch, to to drop 9 reign the length of time that someone is 13dump, to to drop 9king or queenfleet of lorries a group of lorries that belong to therug weaving making small carpets 12same companyWb94 segregation separating people from different 15flyer an advertising leaflet 8racial backgrounds, especially blacksgoing rate the usual rate of pay for a particular 11and whitesjobshackles things that prevent you from Wb99heartland the main area 9being freehype excessively positive advertising 8 specimen an example of something Au02jinglea short tune, often with words, usedumbrella an organisation that includes a lot of 13in advertisingWb94 organisation other organisationsjunk mail unwanted promotional material that 8comes by postUnit 3 The sky’s the limit! See pages 16–19launch when something is put on the market 8 adversity difficulty 16or is first shownaffluent wealthy 16movie trailer a short extract of a film used to 8 Bollywood the Indian film industry 17advertise the filmburgeoning growing and developing 17network a radio or TV company or group 9 Cannesa town on the south coast of Franceof companiesfamous for its film festival 18off-limits an area into which you can’t go Wb94 celluloid elite the richest or most talented film actors 17overshadowed by dominated by9 charismatic having a lot of charm 16pop-up ad an internet advert that appears 8 consign, to to put someone in an unpleasantautomatically on a computer screenplace or situation 17product using a product in a TV programme 8 consummate complete and perfect 17placement or filmcontingent a large group 17sanctuary a safe place Wb94 deadpan apparently serious, with a blankshy away from, to to avoid 9expression 17soybean (US) soya bean Wb94 downplay, to to treat something as though it is lessspam unwanted emails 8important than it is 16spoof something that appears serious but 10 fatalistic due to fate, outside our control Wb100is really a joke in imitation offlop a failure 17something elsefloundering failing; struggling 16spot a short advertisement 8 grim serious; bad or depressing 16surefire guaranteed 9 grinding which never gets better and never ends 17sweatshop a factory where the workers are 11 in the limelight getting a lot of public attention 17badly paid and working conditionsmeteoric extremely fast 16are very badmotivational a person employed to speak attarnish, to to spoil 9 speakerconferences to motivate thoseunder siege under attack 9attending in their workWb100up in the air very uncertain 9 no idle feat a difficult thing to do 17party animal a person who enjoys going to lots 17Unit 2 Express yourself See pages 12–15of partiesBlackpool Blackpool is a popular, unsophisticated 13 persona character; personality 17landladyseaside resort in northwest England;piety an insincere or conventional statement 17a landlady is someone who runs aor actsmall hotelput someone to get someone to show how well 17credentials general background and qualifications 13 through their they can do a particular thingName:Class:196 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2006 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHINGName:Class:2) Discuss the following points with the studentfor either Task A or B.Task Card A In-depth discussionTask Card B In-depth discussion249223paces, torat race a competitive way of life 18rigorous disciplined 17slapstick unsophisticated comedy that uses a 17lot of non-verbal jokesYou will hear a conversation on the radio about stem cell research. Forquestions 9–16, complete the sentences.Listen very carefully as you will hear the recording ONCE only.As opposed to regular cells, stem cells areThey can become any kind of cell under specific physiological orRoughly 2 per cent of peopleParkinson’s disease attacks the part of thewisecracking joking 17productsskin creamsLabel the map below. Where was each person when the band was playing?Write the correct letter A-H next to questions 1 and 2.BarScientists discovered that transplanted stem cells will produce dopamine inChristopher Reeve wanted to use stem cells to helpMany1615Sizelust strong desire 25StageCDance FloorName:Class:SmokingPatio204 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2006 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHINGName:Class:are against using embryonic stem cells.stem cells cannot be easily grown in the lab.Busiest in EuropeBusiest airports in the world: Atlanta, Chicago, London HeathrowNumber of passengers:Open:are affected by Parkinson’s disease.that produces dopamine.injuries.conditions.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 20061124hours912aday,Total retail space:48,000 sq. m, or bigger than Manchester United’sfootball pitchTotal staff:Total parking space: 34,000Airport documentaryHistoryFilmed at HeathrowJeremy Spake, now a television presenterOriginally owned by vicar of HarmondsworthFairey Aviation built the first airstrip toThe airport officially openedTerminal 2 originally calledBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007141013Bar245ayearN201other competitorsExample: 0 born 0Units 3– 6BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2006121Name:Class:239QSE AdvancedQSETeacher’s Guide3 Extended Reading sectionsUnit-by-unit Glossary In the Student’s BookGlossarystunt work performing dangerous and exciting 17actions for filmstoken small or unimportant, and perhaps 16not sincereUnit 4 Are you looking at me? See pages 20–23anecdotal based on what people have observed, 21not on research and statisticsAntichrist, the the opponent of Christ 21bullying using strength or words to frighten 20or hurt someonecavort, to to dance and jump around noisily 21decapitate, to to cut off someone’s head 21detention at school, making a student stay 21behind after the end of classes asa punishmentGMTV a popular breakfast TV station, 21featuring news, weather andchat showsharassment bullying or annoying someone 22holler, to to shout 21informant a person who gives people in 23authority information about othersintemperate excessive and lacking self-control 21irrefutable which can’t be denied 21multifarious many and varied 21notorious famous for negative reasons 21passive-aggressive behaviour which shows negative 22behaviour feelings in unassertive ways(not talking, being unhelpful etc.)peremptorily suddenly and without discussion 21precipitous done quickly and without thought 21psychopath a person with severe mental 21problems, who may be violentpush-up an exercise in which you lie on the 23floor, face down, and push yourselfup with your armsreinstate, to to restore 21sadistic taking pleasure from being cruel 23to otherssketchy incomplete 21smock a loose-fitting piece of clothing 24teasing laughing at someone and making 20jokes about themtruancy staying away from school without 21permissionunsubstantiated not proved 21Unit 5 Frills and thrills See pages 24–27acknowledgement recognition by others 27bling a style characterised by expensive 27jewellery, cars etc. 27brandstretching a marketing technique in which a 24brand is associated with goods notconnected with the main productfulfilment a sense of achievement and 27satisfactiongrooming products such as shampoos and 24hulk abig person 25insurmountable impossible to overcome 25Glossarymetrosexual man a heterosexual man who is 24comfortable with traditionallyfemale things (using groomingproducts, having his hair styled etc.)pawnshop people leave things at pawnshops in 25exchange for money; if they don’trepay the money, the shop sellsthe goodsprestige admiration and respect 27retroa word used to describe an old fashionwhich has become popular again 24sarong a large piece of cloth, worn wrapped 25round the lower bodyshopping spree time spent doing lots of shopping 26straight heterosexual; not gay 24suave sophisticated 24surge a large group, moving like a wave 25vintage a word used to describe an old fashion 24which has become popular againway off the mark very inaccurate 25Unit 6 Playing to win See pages 28–31back to back immediately after each other 31beauty pageant a beauty competition 30blister a bubble in the skin caused, for 31example, by shoes that rubblunder a bad mistake 29boast, to to speak with arrogance 28boorish rude 29cap, to to do something even better Wb101capitalise on, to to take advantage of 29compelling which really holds the attention Wb101draw if a game ends in a draw, the 29competitors have exactlythe same scoredrop-out rate the proportion of people who quit 30doing somethingedge an advantage 29etiquette politeness; an accepted form of 29behaviourfederal law a law applying to the whole country, 30not just to an individual state withinthe countryflaunting boasting 29good sport, a a person who accepts defeat with 28good graceLabor Day a public holiday in the US, on the 30first Monday in September,celebrating working peoplelandslide victory a victory with a huge majority 28ligament tissue that connects bones 31motto a phrase expressing a belief or ideal 28odds on very likely 28rawest crudest; most obvious 29relay team a team who run relay races; in a 29relay race, each member of the teamruns a set distance and has to handa baton to the next runnerreservation adoubt 28rivalry competition 28ruthlessly harshly; cruelly 29sleep deprivation lack of sleep 31sportsmanship respect for the rules of sport and for 28Reading, Idioms, Identify the idiom / word,Portfolio Writing, Interactive TaskExam practice photocopiable pages in this Teacher’s GuideQSE Advanced IGCSE Exam Practice Reading & Writing 2QSE Advanced IGCSE Exam Practice Reading & Writing 14 Name:Class:IGCSE Writing: Exercise 7QSE AdvancedIGCSE Speaking 1IGCSE Exam Practice Speaking 1QSE AdvancedIGCSE Listening: Part 2IGCSE Exam Practice Listening 2Name:Class:IGCSE Reading: Exercise 2Read the article below and answer the questions that follow.Art versus SportAcross the United States local school boards are governor, Bill Richardson, had initially wantedhaving to weigh up the comparative merits of to cut money from the arts programme, butthe arts versus sports. And sports are winning faced serious protests from arts groups.) Msout.Garcia cited high rates of obesity as a drivingLocal school boards have seen cuts in factor for her decision.both state and federal funding for education. A similar result was seen in Florida’s localOne underlying reason has been the No Child school boards as they tried to meet the criteriaLeft Behind programme signed into law in set by the state’s Florida Comprehensive2002.Assessment Test (FCAT), based on the NCLBThe NCLB was meant to give more money to testing criteria. One interesting difference withschools that perform well in nationalthe NCLB is that the FCAT leaves out arts asstandardised testing, but the NCLB does not one of its main testing subjects. Many criticscover the cost of buying new sophisticated data believe that rigidly adhering to passing themanagement systems, employing highly NCLB tests has led to curriculums across thequalified personnel to manage these computers US to become more focused on testing than onand software, or even paying for the intensive ‘real’ learning.efforts needed to improve the schools. This has Perhaps fuelled by the stereotype of theput many school boards in the difficult position starving artist, there appears to be manyof having to make large cuts to their education misconceptions about how useful funding thebudgets.arts is from an economic perspective. A study byStreamlined through the 1990s by earlier cuts, Kennesaw State University compared thethe schools are now making some tough economic impact in Atlanta, Georgia, of the artsdecisions about cutting programmes considered community versus Atlanta’s three professionalas not essential for the curriculum. This has sports teams, the Braves, the Falcons and theinevitably led to a choice between funding Hawks. Based on numbers of attendees, some 36physical education programmes, such as the million people attended arts events across metroquintessential high school football teams, and Atlanta in 1995 compared to 2,561,831 for thefine arts programmes, such as art, music and Braves, 496,679 for the Hawks and 456,640 fordrama.the Falcons. In economic terms, the arts bringGiven the popularity of professional sports in $624 million per year to the city’s economyAmerican culture, few elected politicians have compared to only $300 million for all threechosen to axe sports programmes. In New professional sports teams. However, until localMexico, the Education Secretary Veronica voters are willing to see their taxes increased toGarcia sought out $4 million in the state budget pay for a wider-ranging education, studentsfor new physical education spending, while wanting to study art, music and drama are goingfreezing arts programmes. (The state’sto be left behind.‘Actions speak louder than words’when it comes to role models.Write an article for your school or college magazine giving your viewson what makes a good role model. The comments below may give yousome ideas, but you are free to use your own ideas. Your article shouldbe about 150 words (Core tier) / 200 words (Extended tier) long.Many people in powerdon’t practise whatthey preach.People are human andmake mistakes.You can only judgea person by whatthey do.Setting examples ofgood behaviour is themost important thing.A ADVERTISINGDiscuss with the examiner the impact thatadvertising has on people today.You may wish to consider the following:• Style of adverts – funny, persuading, flashy• Some examples of the best adverts youhave seen• Some things you want to buy and thereasons why• Types of advertising - TV, radio, internet,newspaper• Whether there is too much advertising• Whether advertisers should advertise tochildrenYou are free to consider any other ideas ofyour own.You are not allowed to make any written notes.C AMBITIONSDiscuss with the examiner what sort of careeryou would like to have.You may wish to consider the following:• The types of jobs have you had in the past• The kind of education would you like orneed to take in the future• How money influences our career choices• Which jobs would you never considerand why• How your friends and family can influenceyour career choices• Whether everyone has a dream jobYou are free to consider any ideas of your own.You are not allowed to make any written notes.B THE ARTSDiscuss with the examiner the role of creativityin our society.You may wish to consider the following:• People who are thought to be very creative• The most creative ideas you have seen,read, or heard about• Whether we value creative as much asearlier generations• Whether creativity is a sign of intelligence• Where you find creativity in your own life• Should ideas always be about makingmoney?You are free to consider any other ideas ofyour own.You are not allowed to make any written notes.D BULLYINGDiscuss with the examiner how someoneshould defend themselves against an aggressiveperson, whether verbal or physical.You may wish to discuss:• Whether humour is an effective defence• The disadvantages of using violence tosolve problems• Situations people your age could findthemselves in• How safe you feel where you live• Whether parents, teachers or societycan help• Whether pacifism is always the best solutionYou are free to consider any other ideas ofyour own.You are not allowed to make any written notes.Listen to the following tour of London Heathrow Airport, and then fill in the details below.You will hear the interview twice.HEATHROW INTERNATIONAL AIRPORTGENERAL INFORMA TIONIGCSE exam practice: Reading, Writing, Speaking, ListeningQSE AdvancedIELTS Exam Practice Reading 2QSE AdvancedIELTS Exam Practice Writing 1QSE AdvancedIELTS Exam Practice SpeakingQSE AdvancedIELTS Exam Practice Listening 1IELTS Academic Reading Part 2: Reading Passage 2You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 15-27, which are based on Reading Passage 2.PHILANTHROPYUnless you are an avid reader of the financial or business news, you were probablyunaware of the name of Warren Edward Buffett. That was until 2006. That was whenthe world’s second richest man made the announcement that he was planning todonate 85 per cent of his current $44 billion fortune to the $30-billion charity run bythe world’s richest man, Bill Gates. Besides the fact that this was the largest single actof charitable giving in all of history, Buffett’s donation represents a significant seachange in attitude to philanthropic deeds. In the past, it was much more common formen of substantial means to leave a portion of their estate to a charitable foundationupon their death. The late 1800s and early 1900s saw the birth of numerous newfoundations dedicated to various causes: the Ford Foundation, the Lilly EndowmentCorporation, J. Paul Getty Trust, the Wellcome Trust and others.However, the super-wealthy’s relationship with money has changed significantly sinceHenry T. Ford ran his company. Many have come to embrace two core values withinAmerican culture: success based on hard work and giving to the betterment ofhumanity.Regarding the former, the nouveau riche are making a definite break with the past.It’s more than likely that they are aware of the notorious tales of ugly infighting thathave erupted in families when an extremely wealthy patriarch dies. Bill Gates hasmade it clear that his children will only inherit $10 million each out of his vast billiondollar fortune. Buffett shares his sentiments. While his children will not inherit muchof his money, they will be comfortably looked after and will continue to overseecharities in their names.The second major difference is the personal attention that many of the currentphilanthropic giants take in the actual targeting of the funds. Rather than use theirmoney to build new art galleries or opera houses, many of the famous USphilanthropists have a deep belief that their wealth needs to be used to help shapesociety for the better.A Even with the loss of $7 billion in the ill-fated AOL takeover of TimeWarner,billionaire Ted Turner continued his pledge of $1 billion to support United Nationscauses.B Hungarian-born money speculator George Soros created the Open Society Institute,which the PBS network suggests has given over $4 billion. The OSI supported manydissident movements during the Cold War in different Eastern Bloc countries.IELTS Writing: Task 1You should spend about 20 minutes on this task.This graph shows the gap in earnings for full-time United States workers 25 yearsand older with a high school diploma, bachelor’s and master’s degrees.Write a report for a university lecturer describing the information below.Write at least 150 words.IELTS Speaking: TasksTell me about your family.Tell me about the accommodation you live in.What’s your favourite place in your community?Is it easier / harder than other sports to play?Who / What is your favourite player / team?What company would you like to work for?Does the job pay well?Photocopy the following Task Cards. Give only one to each student.Describe a sport you like to watch or play.What do you do in your job?What are you studying? Why?What are your future career goals?What do you do in the evenings / at weekends?What books have you read lately?What is your favourite kind of music? Why?What do you think about drugs in sports?How has the sport changed over the years?Are professional athletes paid too much?How important is income / job / status inyour society?How well is the economy doing in your area?Compare jobs today with your parents’ orgrandparents’ generations.Describe a job you would like in the future.You should say:You should say:– why you started playing it– what the job is all about– how long you have played it– what qualifications you need for it– how popular the sport is and why– how important the job isand explain why it is important to you. and explain why you would enjoy it.You will have to talk about the topic forYou will have to talk about the topic for1-2 minutes.1-2 minutes.You will have 1 minute to think about what You will have 1 minute to think about whatyou’re going to say.you’re going to say.You can take notes to help you if you want. You can take notes to help you if you want.IELTS Listening: Section 1 Questions 1–10Questions 1–2ExampleJaneAnswer1 Katie______2 Rebecca’s boyfriend ______CRestroomsIELTS exam practice: Reading, Writing, Speaking, ListeningQSE AdvancedCAE Exam Practice Reading 4QSE AdvancedCAE Exam Practice WritingQSE AdvancedCAE Exam Practice SpeakingQSE AdvancedCAE Exam Practice ListeningQSE AdvancedCAE Exam Practice English in Use 2CAE Reading: Paper 1, Part 4CAE Writing, Paper 2, Part 2Part CAE 1 Speaking, (3 minutes) Paper 5Part 2 (4 minutes)CAE Listening, Paper 4, Part 2CAE English in Use: Paper 3, Part 2Answer questions 25 – 45 by referring to the newspaper article about the media.For questions 25 – 45, answer by choosing from the sections of the article A-D.Some of the choices may be required more than once.Choose one of the following writing tasks. Your answers should follow theinstructions exactly. Write approximately 250 words.2 You see this announcement on a community bulletin board.For questions 16–30, complete the following article by finding the missing word. Use only one wordfor each space. The exercise begins with an example (0).BEST CITIZEN AWARDWe want you to nominate someone in your community who you think deservesthe titlebest citizen. Your entry should mention:- what this person has done for the community- why is this person different from other good citizens- what we can learn from this personSTEM CELLSCharles DarwinCharles Robert Darwin was (0) ––––––––– in Shrewsbury, England on February 12th, 1809. In1825, he began (16) ––––––––– medicine under his father’s guidance. However, the horror of19th-century surgery led him into other pursuits. He eventually developed an (17) ––––––––– intaxidermy, collecting beetles and learning (18) ––––––––– natural history. Charles’ father enrolledhim in theological studies at Christ’s College at Cambridge university. (19) ––––––––– wasWrite your competition entry.3 A new student magazine is looking for a new music reviewer. You need tosubmit a review of a music group you are familiar with. Your reviewshould:• describe the band and its music• what makes the group different, interesting or exciting• the impact you think they have made on music and popular culture.thought that taking this degree (20) ––––––––– allow Charles to become a clergyman, a careerwhich would (21) ––––––––– him a reasonable income and allow him to pursue his interest innatural history.Most clergymen at the (22) ––––––––– thought the study of nature was part of their duty inunderstanding the miracle of (23) ––––––––– creation. On the advice of Cambridge professorReverend John Henslow, Charles delayed taking his holy orders. (24) ––––––––– he joined anWrite your review.4 You have been picked to become a salesperson in your company. Your firsttask will be to write a letter to a possible new customer. You shouldintroduce yourself, explain what your company does and how they do itand how this customer would benefit from using your company’s productsor services.Write your letter.expedition to map the coastline of South America aboard the HMS Beagle. This five-year (25)––––––––– undertaken in two parts, was to be a watershed in the field of biology.During the trip, Charles was (26) ––––––––– catalogue hundreds of species of animal, plants andfossils. Among the (27) ––––––––– places he visited on the way from South America to Australiawere the Galapagos Islands off the (28) ––––––––– of Ecuador. It was here that he identifiedslight variations in what appeared to be the same species from one (29) ––––––––– to the nextin the Galapagos Islands. It was these observations (30) ––––––––– led him to formulate hisground-breaking 1859 thesis, On the Origins of Species by the Means of Natural Selection, orThe Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life.CAE exam practice: Reading, Writing, Speaking, Listening, English in UseBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200715


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 16QSEIntroductionTeacher’s GuideQSE Advanced – how the sections of each unit workMATERIALS MAP OF THE COURSEStudent’s Book Contents pages 4–7Teacher’s Guide pages 4–7The syllabus of QSE Advanced is based on anextensive survey of current international standardsin EFL teaching. Increasingly these are based on theCEF, or, if non-European, they are now beingaligned with it (for example the University ofMichigan examinations). The topical basis of thecourse is the syllabus of Trinity College London,but it also takes into account the functional andstructural requirements of the University ofCambridge ESOL syllabus.Given that communicative competence is oneof the main aims of the QSE course, care has beentaken not to overload the students with grammar.There is an expectation by the author incoordination with the various exams that studentsat this level should have a thorough workingknowledge of grammar by this point, however, theworkbook does review key grammar points thatmay cause occasional mistakes. The Student’s Booktakes care to concentrate on skills work, particularlyspeaking.The Contents pages show the scope andsequence of whole book as well as each unit, withheadings for Topic (or Subject), The BIG question,Functions (Language Banks), Grammar,Reading, Listening, Speaking, Writing and CLIL.These pages can be used as a quick reference forboth students and teachers, including a list ofDVD tracks.STUDENT’S BOOK UNITSThe four colour pages of the Student’s Book unitscontain all the main language input materialof the course. There are many short units, ratherthan a few long ones, so there is lots of varietyand interest for different tastes. There are 20units, plus three Extended reading sections.There is also a series of Language Banks,examples of functional language presented inmeaningful and useful written or spokenexamples. The Language Banks are on fold-outcover flaps for easy reference in class whenstudents are working on any unit. The functionschosen for these Language Banks are takenfrom the Trinity College GESE syllabus, Grades10 and 11.The format of each unit is as follows:Unit title and What’s new?Student’s Book unit, page 1The title gives a clue to the unit topic, and theWhat’s new? box tells you what the unit covers.All three areas – Subject, Function andGrammar (where appropriate) – will preparestudents for effectively tackling the speaking andwriting requirements for the different exams. TheTeacher’s Guide includes extra questions (EQ) forevery section to allow greater control of time andmore intensive discussions as required.1 The BIG question and ViewpointEvery unit begins and ends with an importantquestion related to the central unit theme andwill be explored again at the end of the unit inthe Your Answer section. The question isintended to immediately grab the attention ofthe students when it first appears. They are notasked to give an opinion at this stage. It is simplythere to make them think. At the end of the unit,after consideration of the evidence in the unitand consultation with other students abouttheir opinions, the class will be muchmore prepared and confident to answer thequestion.Using The BIG question:• Read the question out. Check studentsunderstand it by asking questions. You willget students to answer the question at theend of the unit for review.• Ask students to write one or two sentences intheir notebooks.• Tell them that at the end of the unit you will askthem to reread their answers and see if they havechanged their minds.16 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 17QSE AdvancedViewpointTime: 5–10 minutesViewpoint gives some facts, quotes and photos to beused as warm-up activity for the unit. The facts andquotes relate either directly or indirectly to thetopics in the unit. There will be some backgroundfor these facts in the Teacher’s Guide. Use the extraquestions (EQ) in the Teacher’s Guide to explore thesignificance of these facts. Students will often be askedto comment on or interpret the photo or illustration.Note: These can be readily used by students in thetopic presentation phase of the Cambridge CAEand Trinity Advanced Spoken Grade Examinationinterview.1 WORD POWERTime: 15–20 minutesThe WORD POWER section has two main aims:• To introduce students to vocabulary and idiomsrelating to the subject area.• To introduce and practise the phrases in theLanguage Bank, so that students are usingthis new vocabulary immediately in acommunicative way by answering contextualquestions. Answers to activities are in theTeacher’s Guide.Note: Teachers should stress to students that theyshould make every attempt to use the newvocabulary when they answer related questions.This section is cross-referenced to the Workbookunit, where there are extra activities.2 READINGStudent’s Book unit, page 2Time: 25 minutesThe second page of each unit has two reading texts:authentic articles from worldwide sources – printand online (newspapers, magazines, websites). Thetopics have been chosen in line with thespecifications of the Trinity College spoken examsand other exam curricula. Occasionally the textsshock or surprise, but will always draw the attentionof the reader. It also provides a strong motivation toread ELT materials as well.QSETeacher’s GuideThe Reading activity is a communicative activitytied to the two articles. It helps students practiseextensive and intensive reading skills.The Reading section also aims to provide thestudents with material to help them deal with lateractivities in the unit, including Your Answer(Activity 10) to The BIG question at the end.There are various activities including:• Vocabulary exercises: finding words in the articlefrom definitions given and matching headlineswith parts of the text.• Summarising information in the articles.• Evaluating or comparing the two articles.Important! After skimming, students should readthe article twice. The first time should be withoutthe glossary to try to understand the meaning of thewords in context. This can be done as a group toalso practise pronunciation as well. The second timestudents could actively use the glossary list at theback of the book to confirm their understanding ofthe new vocabulary.Using READING:The comprehension activities:• Read out the questions or ask students toread them silently. Ask questions to checkcomprehension.• Put students into pairs or small groups to discusstheir answers. Alternatively, give students time tothink about their answers individually. Elicitanswers, giving the answer yourself if necessary.Where appropriate, ask students to justify theiranswers by quoting the sentence(s) from the text.Reading in class:Ideally, students should be encouraged to read thearticles before coming to class. This allows themtime to read through the comprehension questionsand think about their answers. However, the articlescan also be read in class, which would simulate thetime constraints of the various exams’ readingcomprehension. In either case, each student shouldhave an opportunity to read part or an entire articlealoud in class. The teacher should use thisopportunity to check for possible pronunciationerrors, which can be identified after the text hasbeen read. Proper pronunciation is critical at thislevel.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200717


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 18QSEIntroductionTeacher’s GuideSome extra suggestions for Reading:• Students can be asked to read a text at home anddo some preparatory work of their own, and thencome to class with questions about the content.• The teacher can pre-teach certain words andexpressions in a dialogue of discovery with theclass, and then the students can read the textin silence.• In large groups, students can work in pairs orgroups with a new text, using their own knowledge,dictionaries, and questions from the teacher.• The teacher can assign the text to be read insmall sections, a paragraph for example, eachsection to a different group. The different groupswork on their fragment of text and then tell therest of the class about it. One of them can read italoud, as long as the others can’t see the textthemselves.3 SPEAK YOUR MINDTime: 20–30 minutesThis section is an innovative way of combining thechance to discuss the topic and also activate somekey functional language. Four or five questions inthis section give the class an opportunity to voiceopinions on a wide variety of issues related to theunit’s subject area. It is important to try to getstudents using the Language Bank phrases, whereappropriate. Although this can be somewhatmechanical if pursued too rigorously, using thephrases will enable further practice and allow you toevaluate the accuracy of the phrasal usage.This activity can be extended as long as classtime allows. Use the extra questions (EQ) to helpkeep the discussion going if necessary.It is also important to bear in mind that withany productive task, speaking or writing, successfulcompletion of the task is more important thanactually using the target functional language. Inother words, if students carry out the tasksuccessfully, but don’t use any of the targetexpressions, this is not a reason to criticise them!Using SPEAK YOUR MIND:• Go through the relevant Language Bank. Eitherread out the sentences yourself or ask students toread it out. Teach any new language.• Read out the questions or ask students to read themout. Check comprehension by asking questions.• Put students in pairs or small groups to discusstheir answers. As students talk, walk round andlisten to students, noting major errors.Alternatively, give students time to think abouttheir answers individually.• Elicit answers and encourage discussion. Makenotes of students’ major errors, particularly errorsinvolving the target structure and vocabularyitems. It’s probably best to point out major errorsafter the discussion and write the correct versionson the board.• It can prove to be very helpful, in a follow-upsession, to briefly go through the activity againas a way of revising the language.4 LISTEN / WATCH AND LISTENStudent’s Book unit, page 3Time: 20–25 minutesListening is a vitally important language skill and itis important that listening material should soundauthentic as well as interesting. The DVD-ROMincludes 20 tracks, with a video or audio clip foreach unit. The blue symbol (❿) next to the titleshows the track number on the DVD-ROM.The audio and video script for the audio andvideo clips is also on the DVD as PDF files that canbe opened on a PC and in the Teacher’s Guide onpage 153. See Using the DVD-ROM on page 152.The clips have been carefully chosen forprovocative content to stimulate discussion.They also reflect a global perspective with a mixof different accents from the UK and otherEnglish-speaking countries.Using LISTEN / WATCH AND LISTEN:• This section always has an opening discussionfeaturing questions relating to the issue in thelistening activity. There is also a photo or photosas a prompt. The Teacher’s Guide containsbackground information on the context ofthe track.• The next question asks students to predict whatmay happen in the listening activity based onwhat they already know about the subject. Atthis point, you play the track for the first18 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 19QSE Advancedtime so students can answer a set of listeningcomprehension questions. These questions testthe students’ ability to find specific information.The students can answer these questions as agroup. Answers are provided in the TG.• In some of the listening activities there is a questionto allow students to speculate on what will happennext in the clip. This helps students practisecommenting on or imagining how the narrativemight continue. The audio or video clip pauses forthe teacher to discuss the question with the students.• The final question asks students to addressthe underlying theme. You can again stress thatstudents should try to practise the Language Bankphrases and new vocabulary from Word Power.5 TEAMWORKTime: 15 minutesThis section is a creative brainstorming activity. Theidea is to help students become more spontaneousin generating ideas for discussion. This isparticularly important in the interactive andconversation phases of the GESE. Each unitprovides different brainstorming techniques thatwill be helpful outside the class.The outline of the activity is explained in theScenario section of the book. These activities aredesigned for pairs or groups of threes, which willmaximise the students’ speaking time. If you feelthe students need more work on presentations,most Teamwork activities can be adapted so that thefindings can be presented to another pair or theclass. In addition, each unit provides importantbackground information and additional questionsto extend the activity as desired.Using TEAMWORK:• Divide students into pairs or groups, according tothe numbers needed in the Teamwork activity.• Ask students to read the Scenario and askquestions to check comprehension.• Encourage students to enjoy themselves! Walkround and listen.• Remember the golden rule of brainstorming – allideas are valid and should be recorded. Editing,criticising or rejecting ideas should wait untilafter all ideas have been elicited.• Students can present the results of theirbrainstorming session to the class.QSETeacher’s Guide6 CONTROVERSYTime: 25–40 minutesThis is one of the most innovative sections of theQSE Advanced Student’s Book. It deals with adeliberately controversial issue related to the topicof the unit to ensure that students practise usingtheir argument skills in a debate. It is essentially anopinionated role-play. The roles are explained inabbreviated form on the page of the Student’s Book.Usually, the students divide into groups of four,but this is only recommended because it reflects thetraditional number for debate teams. The activitywill also work with groups of three, two or evenone-on-one debates. Consider your class size andneeds in making this decision.Once the class is divided into groups, you caneither let the groups pick a side for the debate orassign them a side. The students should have aboutfive to ten minutes to brainstorm arguments for theirside, then you can then let them begin debating.In formal debating, usually one member fromone side gives a statement, followed by a statementfrom a member of the other group, until all groupmembers have spoken. Then each member can offerrebuttals in turn. However, you can let the debatebe as formal or informal as you wish. You can findmore rules about debating at:http://debate.uvm.edu/default.htmlwww.debate-central.orgwww.qub.ac.uk/edu/nicilt/fd/fredebate.htmThe Teacher’s Guide notes for each unit provideimportant background information and additionalquestions to extend the activity as required.In many cases, students are being asked to takeon the role of someone who may be outsidetheir experience and, more important, who mayhave opinions and beliefs which are not be thesame as their own. There are two ways to dealwith this:a) Tell students that they don’t have to play the roleif they feel uncomfortable with it.b) Tell students to try the role anyway, as it will begood communication skills practice and maycome in useful in an examination.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200719


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 20QSEIntroductionTeacher’s GuideThe problem with the first of these solutions is thata lazy class can end up doing nothing at all! Theproblem with the second is that students may feelupset about having to express certain opinions,especially if there are cultural reasons why theyobject to taking a certain role. The teacher willknow where there are sensitivities, and could opt toomit this activity, if it is too controversial. Butcontroversy is the name of the activity!Even so, we feel that the second option is thebetter one, and students can be mollified byknowing that the tasks are designed in a verysystematic way to help them with their fluency.Using CONTROVERSY:• Divide students into groups.• Make sure the students have time to familiarisethemselves fully with their role. Ask questionsto check comprehension.• Ask students to look at the points made for eachside, which they can pick up on, as well asadding their own ideas.• Students have their debate. Encourage them toenjoy themselves! Walk round and listen.• Ask the class for their comments, both positiveand negative.• Ask students for their real opinions.7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGThis section provides guidance for the students tocarry out writing tasks. The tasks include emails,letters, articles, reports and creative writing.Portfolio Writing is a student-centred activity thatmany teachers and learners will find motivating andcreative.An ISE III writing portfolio should include thethree best samples of the student’s work; one from:• Letters or emails• Reports, articles or reviews• Creative writing.Each unit provides sources for additional on-line orlibrary research. This section helps students withthe Topic discussion and Conversation phases.This section can alternatively be used as acontrolled writing activity by asking students towrite the essay in class in a given time. This wouldhelp students with the Writing sections of theCambridge CAE, IELTS and IGCSE.Using PORTFOLIO WRITING:Writing• Let students choose either activity A or B foreach unit.• Writing activities should be done outside class.• Actively encourage students to practise newvocabulary, phrases or idioms in their writing.• Make sure students use the correct writing styles(formality, diction, etc.) and formats (letters,emails, etc.)• Get students to use a thesaurus and dictionaryactively.• Get students to brainstorm ideas for their workin groups or pairs.Corrections• If students use a word processor, make sure theyfirst try to write without using a spellchecker or agrammar check. They can do this by turning offthe autocorrect function, or simply changing the‘text language’ of the document.• Students could correct each other’s work in thenext class before handing them in.• Prepare a sheet with examples of mistakesfrom different students. Discuss in class howto correct these.8 CLIL in EnglishStudent’s Book unit, page 4Time: 20–30 minutesIn this section, the cross-curricular aspects of thecentral unit theme are explored. The title of eachCLIL (Content and Language Integrated Learning)section makes this connection clear. Titles includePSYCHOLOGY in English or BUSINESSSTUDIES in English. This also addresses a majorcomponent in the Advanced Stage of the TrinityGESE – topic presentation and topic discussion.The input material to be read is more dense andchallenging (although it is always short) anddifferent from the articles in the Reading section.Information is also presented as statistics, chartsor maps, as well as more conventional reading texts.Cross-curricular material is more and more in20 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 21QSE Advanceddemand by teachers and syllabi. We think there isgreat value in cross-curricular study, with studentsusing English to accomplish tasks which referdirectly to other aspects of their studies or work.The activities are done in pairs and sometimesgroups of three. In mirroring the small group size ofone-on-one interviews, this activity allows forincreased speaking time and reduces the students’fear of public speaking. The activity has two parts: apresentation followed by a discussion of thepresentation and an associated question or questions.After the presentation, it is important that the othersask the presenter a question. This helps practise thesituation that requires students to answer examinerquestions about their chosen presentation. There willalso be EQ or other material in the TG to help youbegin or extend these sections.Students who excel in the particular subjects underdiscussion in this section may of course find themeasier to deal with. They will even be able to help therest of the class who may not be as expert in thesesubjects as they are. For example in ENGINEERINGin English in Unit 17 students who are engineersshould be encouraged to show the rest of the class(and the teacher) what they know – as long as it is inEnglish. The advantage of this is that these studentscan then help other students.Using the CLIL section:• Explain the task and check comprehension.Students work individually or in pairs or smallgroups to complete the task.• Give the students between 10 to 15 minutesto read the text and prepare the material for apresentation. You can circulate at this point toanswer any questions students may have andto discuss any background material which maybe included in the TG. Encourage students touse the vocabulary from Word Power, whereappropriate, and phrases from the LanguageBank.Note: The workbook includes Speaking Strategiesactivities students can use to help them improvetheir presentation techniques.Alternative suggestions:• You can give the presentation part of this activityfor homework to be presented in the next class.QSETeacher’s GuideThis allows for extra research but may cut backon presentation spontaneity.• You can choose different students to make theirpresentation in front of the whole class. Themore exposure that students have to publicspeaking, the better the students will do in thetopic presentation, however, this may be fairlyintimidating to some students and should beconsidered carefully.• You can have the pairs join another pair togive their presentations again. This time ask thestudents to evaluate the presentation accordingto the content, speaking style, eye contact, bodylanguage and so on.9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONTime: 20 minutesThis section allows students to address morequestions about issues relating to the subject area.This section will help students in the conversationphase of the different exams.The students work in pairs again to make surethey have more speaking time in class. Youshould again try to get the students to practiseusing the phrases from the Language Bank andthe vocabulary in Word Power, whereappropriate.Using FURTHER DISCUSSION:• Make sure that the students understand thequestions they are going to discuss.• Put students into pairs to discuss the questions.• While students are discussing the points, walkround and listen to monitor students’ use oflanguage and grammar. You can also help thediscussions along by using the EQ in the TG.• After students have finished discussing thequestions in pairs, you could ask one or twopairs to re-enact their conversation in front ofthe class to present their ideas to the class oryou can discuss the main points again as a class.• Go through any significant errors and write thecorrect versions on the board.• In a follow-up session, you could ask studentsto go through the conversation again with adifferent partner. This is a good way to revisethe language.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200721


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 22QSEIntroductionTeacher’s Guide10 Your answerTime: 5 minutesAnd finally, we come back to The BIG questionwhich started the unit and which serves as areview of the unit as a whole. Students will nowbe in a much better position to answer it. Toprove this, we recommend that, before you startusing the book with your class, you experimentby reading The BIG question of a particular unitand making a note of what your answer would beon first reading. Then read and listen to the unitcontent, and read the question again. Is thereanything you would change or add? We think so,and we are sure that students will benefit fromthis approach.As usual with QSE activities, this section offersguidance, and even lists opinions that the studentsmight feel happy to express themselves. Somestudents will of course prefer to express themselvesin their own words, but the ‘sample opinions’ arevaluable for equally opinionated but less articulatestudents.Using YOUR ANSWER:• Ask students to look back to The BIG questionand the answers that they noted down. Askthem to think about their answers for a fewminutes and whether their opinions havechanged.• Read out the questions and the answers or askstudents to read them out. Explain that theanswers are just examples – they don’t have toagree with them.• Put students into groups to discuss thequestions. Walk round and listen, notingmajor errors.• Afterwards, or alternatively, have a whole classdiscussion, encouraging students to reply to eachother. You can also use the EQ in the TG toaddress any related issues.• Point out major errors and write the correctedversions on the board.• Ask students if their opinions have changed sincethey first answered The BIG question, and ifso, why?• For homework, ask students to write one or twoparagraph answers to the questions.EXTENDED READINGTime: 20–30 minutesThree Extended Reading units are placed afterunits 7, 14 and 20. The authentic reading texts hereare longer than the reading texts on page 2 of themain units. As the main units are heavily weightedtoward speaking activities, these three units aim tobalance out the amount of reading and writingpractice. Each text is approximately a thousandwords, which places them within the examframework for the ISE III and the UCLES exams’long reading sections.Each unit contains five activities. These unitscan be done in class or most often as homework.In either case, you will need to go through theanswers in class. Answers are given in theTeacher’s Guide.Using the EXTENDED READING:ReadingThis activity is similar to the Reading activity inmain units. The TG includes answers and EQ.IdiomsAt advanced level, it is important for studentsto be able to show a knowledge of and abilityto use idioms. In this activity students findidioms in the text based on definitions. Thestudents must then put the idioms into theappropriate gaps.This activity asks students to read the text inmore depth trying to find a certain number ofidioms or phrases. To make sure studentsunderstand the meanings of these you can ask EQwhen you are going through the answers.Portfolio WritingThis section is similar to the main units. The firstquestion in each of the three units complies withthe ISE III Controlled Writing Task 1 requirementsand the IGCSE Part 2. It can also help studentssummarise opinions about the subject area. Thesecond question is a creative writing activity that issuitable for Trinity ISE and Cambridge CAE,IGCSE and IELTS. There is a third question inExtended Reading 3 that is not exam-specific, but itdoes challenge students to develop their ideas muchfurther.22 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 23QSE AdvancedInteractive taskThis activity is based specifically on the InteractiveTask in the Trinity GESE. However, it is anexcellent way for students taking other exams todevelop their spoken abilities. A student is requiredto take the responsibility for maintaininginteraction in a discussion for up to five minutes.• Go through the relevant Language Bank asoutlined in Speak Your Mind and Controversynotes above. Elicit ways of incorporating thefunctional language into the students’ conversation.• Put students into pairs or groups to make notesin preparation for the task. It can be helpful toask one of the more confident groups to gothrough the task. As they do so, make notes ofhelpful new vocabulary and phrases. Afterwards,elicit / teach these items.• Students then go through the task.• Proceed as outlined above at the same stage inthe Speak Your Mind and Controversy notes.GLOSSARYAt the back of the Student’s Book there is aunit-by-unit monolingual Glossary section. Thiscontains approximately 20–40 head words perunit, with English-language explanations in thestyle of popular learner’s dictionaries. This doesnot replace a dictionary, which students will needand should use frequently, but it does provide aquick reference to the most difficult vocabulary ina lexically rich book.LANGUAGE BANKSThere are 20 Language Banks (LBs) on the coverflaps of the Student’s Book. In this way they can bekept open in front of the students for constantreference. There is a LB for each of the functionslisted in the scope and sequence of the course(see Contents pages 4–7 of the Student’s Book).Students should be encouraged to use the LBs forready reference in speaking activities particularly.Each LB can be used in conjunction with manydifferent units of the book. However, each one isintroduced and practised for the first time in theorder of units shown in the contents. Reference tothe new LB for each unit is usually made for thefirst time in Activity 1 Word Power. ThereafterQSETeacher’s Guidestudents are expected to be able to use the LBs ontheir own initiative, and when prompted in thetext.WORKBOOK UNITSThe QSE Advanced Workbook section is designedto be done as homework, but you should gothrough the answers in class to discuss particularpoints, notably the idioms. There are four parts toeach unit, with a Speaking Strategies activity thatappears in every other unit (see below). Answers canbe found in the Teacher’s Guide.The contents follow those of the Student Bookunits, the aim being to reinforce knowledge of themain themes as well as provide further practice withvocabulary and the Language Bank functions,language structures and writing skills in the main unit.Using the WORKBOOK pages:Word PowerThis activity picks up from where the main unitWord Power leaves off. Students will need to makeuse of the vocabulary, phrases and / or idioms inthe Language Bank.English in UseThis activity gives students the chance to practisesome key grammar points. This section usually hasexercise material in the format of the CambridgeCAE, Paper 3, of English in Use. Students will findsome of the grammar points covered in theLanguage Bank. Refer to the contents page formore information.In most cases, this section will also be in the formof a text that will allow students the opportunity forfurther reading and more information on the subjectarea. If you feel it is appropriate and you have timein class, you can use the EQ to help you explore theissues brought up in the texts.WritingThis section gives students even moreopportunities to write for their ISE III Portfoliosand practise their writing for use in CambridgeCAE, IGCSE and IELTS. Refer to the PortfolioWriting section above for tips on use. The choiceof tasks is of the length and type specified invarious exams. The writing tasks are diverse andBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200723


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 24QSEIntroductionTeacher’s Guideinclude conversations, interviews, letters, emailsand for / against opinion pieces. We hope toencourage students to appreciate the differences inregister and style that are needed when writing fordifferent purposes. The tasks here are useful ideasfor homework, as they follow up work covered inthe Student’s Book unit.Speaking StrategiesThis section (which appears in every other unit) isvery important for helping students to improvetheir presentation skills and their presentations ingeneral. These are written activities, but theyprovide phrases, practical tips and techniques fororganising presentations, opening lines, creatingemphasis and creating rapport that can be used inthe actual GESE topic presentation. Aftercompleting each WB unit, you should try to getstudents to incorporate these tips into their nextpresentation.IdiomsAs discussed above in the Extended Readingsection, appropriate use of idioms is an importantpart of determining whether a student cancommunicate on a more advanced level. Idiomsmay appear last in the WB units, but they arecertainly not least in the terms of importance. Youshould make sure that students answer the question:What do these mean? This will help you todetermine whether they have a real grasp for themeaning and use or not.There are several ways you can try to incorporatethese idioms into communicative practice. Firstly,you can use the EQ in the TG, which will getstudents using the idioms in a real way. Secondly,you can ask students to use the idioms in writingtasks. Thirdly, you can try to organise the use ofthese idioms into a continuing ‘competition’: forexample, whoever correctly uses the idioms first inthe next class gets a point. You can keep track ofthese points over the course.TEAMWORK SCENARIOSThis section contains the scenarios for theTeamwork activity in the main units. SeeTeamwork notes above.QSE DVD-ROMsThere are two versions of the QSE AdvancedDVD-ROM. The Student’s DVD-ROM containsthe video and audio clips and scripts and Using theDVD-ROM. The Teacher’s DVD-ROM alsoincludes over 250 pages of text files (PDF), whichconsist of teacher’s notes, answer keys, practicepages for the CAE, IELTS and IGCSE exams, plusaudio files for the exam practice Listening tests.(Teacher’s and Student’s will need a version of thefree program Adobe Reader (or equivalent) to openthe PDF files on the DVD-ROMs.) This meansthat teachers can in fact do without the printedcopies of the Teacher’s Guide if they wish to.From the opening menu of the DVD theteacher is able to scroll through to various menus,in addition to the audio and video clips:1. About QSE – information about the book andthe QSE Series2. Using the DVD-ROM – instructions for use3. Audio & Video scripts – all the transcripts of thevideo and audio clips4 Teacher's Notes – all the pages of the Teacher’sBook in printable PDF files. These include theIntroduction to the course, Contents, MaterialsMap, Teacher’s Notes for all 20 Units and threeExtended Reading sections5. Exams (CAE, IELTS, IGCSE) – all the printedpages of the exam materials for IGCSE, CAE andIELTS. There are six audio files for the ListeningTests, with transcripts. There is a Placement Testfor use at the beginning of the course. There is alsoan Introduction to using the exam materials.QSE METHODOLOGYThe units are topic-based. The topics we havechosen are genuinely affective – stimulating,controversial and designed to make students want toexpress their own views in speaking and writing andto help them do it. Activities promote the sharing ofideas and opinions, the aim being to present bothsides – or sometimes many sides – of a highlydebatable issue. The issues chosen are those thataffect everyone in our globalised society – from thehighly personal (exams, ambition, education, findinga partner) to the most public of debates(environment, oil, peace, fame).24 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p08-25 3/7/07 3:32 PM Page 25QSE AdvancedVocabulary enrichmentBecause all the topics are real life issues, and theinput materials for them are from authentic sources,the vocabulary range is challenging. QSE isintentionally a rich source of new vocabulary forstudents’ use. The benefit for students is that theyhave to deal with language they would actuallymeet in genuine written or spoken exchanges withnative English speakers.In addition, we provide activities to help studentsunderstand and activate new terms or concepts,both before they read or listen and afterwards.Then, after they have worked through the Student’sBook activities, the workbook section recycles andpractises vocabulary items. This too helps learnersto consolidate their knowledge and to become moreconfident in using the structures and expressionsthey have learnt.Unit developmentThere is a systematic and structured developmentin each unit, which follows a logical cognitivepattern – words, ideas, grammar awareness, reading,discussion, listening, writing, followed by thecross-curricular (CLIL) information which relatesthe topic to other subjects the students may bestudying. Finally, the wheel comes full circle andstudents, older and wiser, answer the question thatstarted the whole thing off.Internet sourcesThere are lists of internet references for furtherresearch in each of the unit-by-unit sections of thisTeacher’s Guide. We also recommend that teachersand students take advantage of the fantasticresearch and study opportunities offered by searchengines such as Google. Online sources are correctat time of print. The publishers cannot guaranteethat websites will not change. This is the reasonwhy the internet links have not been printed in theStudent’s Book. Both teachers and students shouldbe aware that all websites and online resources areconstantly changing. They should be checkedbefore they are used for educational purposes. Thecontents of any online references cited in thisQSETeacher’s Guidebook do not represent the opinions of or anymanner of endorsement from the publishers,who cannot be responsible for any onlinecontent beyond their control.QSE illustrationsThe illustrations in this book have been carefullychosen to be an affective resource in their ownright. They are mainly news-style photographs, notincluded simply to decorate the page, but to beused as a resource. As in the best of printed andonline competitive media, the pictures are designedto draw students’ eyes when they open the book ata particular spread.We suggest that, especially when you look at theopening double-page spread of the unit, you shouldstart with an activity about the photos. Studentscan describe them but they may also want tocomment on them.In the Viewpoint and CLIL sections there areoften graphs, diagrams and charts. Students goingon to business English qualifications, such as theCambridge BEC and IELTS for academicqualifications, have to be familiar with describingand using graphs in English.Many forms of testing today require students todiscuss and comment on images, and the pages ofQSE provide ample opportunities for students todevelop this form of visual awareness, which issuch an important part of modern literacy andcommunication.QSE Photocopiable ResourcesOn page 174 there is an introduction to the QSEAdvanced Photocopiable Resources, which starton page 176 of this Teacher’s Guide, forexamination practice.We hope you enjoy using Quick Smart EnglishAdvanced and find the ideas in this Teacher’s Guideuseful.Maurice ForgetKen Wilson, Mary TomalinRebecca Robb BenneBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200725


Unit 1 Buy now, think later Teacher’s Guide See pages 8–11 SB, 94 WBWHAT’S NEW!Communication Ss will be able to use:Objectives: – contradicting expressions and expression used before challenging.– advertising-related vocabulary, phrases and idioms.Educational Ss will explore the social, economic and political impact of advertisingObjectives: in society.Connected – Corporate advertising – Political advertisingTopics: – Types of advertising – Corporate image– Celebrity endorsements – Trends– Subtle advertising – Future of advertising– Cigarette warning labels – Private versus public mediaGrammar: PrepositionsKey Vocabulary: junk mail heartland put the spotlight onflyer under siege sticky situationmovie trailer blindside tarnishproduct placement sticker surefire waysponsorship buzzword packetcelebrity endorsement big bucks spoofpop-up ads dump sloganfull-page ads execs sweatshopspam celebs corporal punishmentbrand names overshadow watchdog organisationlaunchhigh-profileremedycanThe BIG question: IS ADVERTISING ALL A CON?This question deals with a common perception in thegeneral public that advertising is somehow dishonest.VIEWPOINTFacts: The list of the ten largest global advertiserschanges nearly every year depending on marketfactors for each industry. From the list, thesecompanies work in the following industries: Procterand Gamble (beauty products, household goods,drugs, baby care, etc.), Unilever (foodstuffs,household goods, beauty products, etc.), GeneralMotors (cars, trucks, etc.), Toyota (cars, trucks, etc.),Ford (cars, trucks, etc.), AOL / TimeWarner(internet services, magazines, movies, etc.), Daimler /Chrysler (cars, trucks, etc.), L’Oreal (beautyproducts, etc.), Nestlé (foodstuffs, etc.) and Sony(electronics, films, music, etc.).Source:www.adage.comEQ: What do you think this money bought? Was thismoney well spent? What would you do with a billioneuros?Quotes: William Penn Adair ‘Will’ Rogers (1879–1935) was a celebrated Cherokee Native Americancowboy-humourist who worked in vaudeville, wrotefor newspapers and acted in films.EQ: Do you agree with this quote? Some critics suggestthat some industries rely on planned obsolescence (thatis, they build products to fail after a set period oftime). What do you think of this idea? Could productsbe made better?Quotes: John Wanamaker (1838–1922) was aUS businessman responsible for creating the firstUS department store and pioneering truth inadvertising.EQ: Why is this quote funny? How do advertisers targetadvertising to their customers? How often do adverts youare interested in make you want to buy something?What about adverts you are not interested in?26 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 8–11 SB, 94 WBUnit 1Teacher’s GuideStudents should be encouraged to discuss whetherproducts or lifestyles are being advertised. Whatdoes this say about emotions in advertising?1 WORD POWERA gets students to consider different types ofadvertising.1 WORD POWER A Answers1 Billboards, posters (near roads, pavements);celebrity endorsements (newspapers, radio, TV);classified ads (newspapers); full-page ads (magazinesor newspapers); junk mail, flyers (in the post);movie trailers (cinemas, DVDs, TV); pop-up ads(internet pages / sites); product placement (films,TV); radio spots (radio, internet radio); spam(email inbox); sponsorship (sporting events); TVcommercials (TV).3 Government, politicians, charities, etc.B gets students to practise contradicting phrases.1 WORD POWER B Answers1 Even a product placement in a top action filmwon’t convince anyone to buy that. Well, I don’tsee it that way, many people follow what theiridols do. If Britney Spears drinks Pepsi, lots ofkids will think it’s good to drink Pepsi too.2 Brand names use bad English like luv and kwik.But what about all the other brand names thatuse good English? Bad English is only used ina minority.3 Ad campaigns are only good if they’re funny. Iunderstand what you’re saying, but I thinkother types of campaigns can be interesting,entertaining or informative as well.ARTICLESGone in 30 SecondsThis article discusses recent trends in the marketingindustry, with a discussion of how the dominanceof traditional advertising, such as the 30-secondTV commercial, has begun to wane. It is forcingadvertisers to become more creative and allowingfor more subtlety in the message. One drivingforce behind this trend is the development of newtechnologies, such as TIVO that allows TV viewersto record TV programmes and skip theTV commercials.Another factor is the development of new waysof advertising like ‘viral’ advertising which relies onusing the internet to spread messages amonginterested consumers by giving the message toimportant bloggers and websites. It is not clear yetwhether these new forms of advertising will cometo dominate the market or whether the subtleradvertising will have the desired effect foradvertisers.EQ: How has advertising developed with technology?Compare newspapers, radio, TV and the internet.With technology that allows TV viewers to skipcommercials, will we see the end of advertising on TV?Companies Ditch Celebrity EndorsementsThis article discusses the concept of the celebrity brandand its impact on advertising. Up to now brands havebeen defined as commercial products and services, butcelebrities have begun to be thought of in the sameway and packaged for media presentation. This hasled some companies to re-think the usefulness oflinking celebrities with their products.EQ: Do you see celebrities as brands? How arecelebrities and products the same or different? Whatdo you think of the celebrities discussed in the article?2 READINGA is a common skimming activity. It will helpstudents writing the English In Use part of the CAEand the Trinity Controlled Writing ISE III section.1 READING A Answers1 primetime 2 blindside 3 buzzword 4 logo.B gets students to formulate more complexarguments using specific information. You can getstudents to try using contradicting phrases again.C 1 This inference question tries to get student toaddress the issue from the perspective of themselvesand people they know.2 This inference question requires students to thinkabout the approaches of modern advertising.Students should try to provide concrete examplesfrom TV, the internet, magazines or even the article.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200727


Unit 1 Buy now, think later Teacher’s Guide See pages 8–11 SB, 94 WB3 This inference question gets students to thinkabout the personal point of view of the celebrities.3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of celebrityendorsements, celebrities and companies in troubleand banned advertising (for example, alcohol,cigarettes).A EQ: What do you think of celebrities who talkabout politics? Religion? Personal problems?B There are many celebrities who have been introuble with the law: Michael Jackson, KobeBryant, Winona Ryder, O.J. Simpson, HughGrant, Robert Downey Jr. For more, see:www.thesmokinggun.com.EQ: What has led these celebrities to these problems?Do you think the law is applied in the same way tocelebrities as to ordinary people? Do scandals hurt orhelp a celebrity’s career? Why? / Why not?Some companies in trouble: Financial (Enron,WorldCom, Parmalat), Deaths (Union Carbide),Product Problems (Ford / Firestone for problemswith tyres, Dow Corning for breast implants, ABBfor asbestos) For more, see: www.bbc.co.uk/watchdog or www.multinationalmonitor.org.EQ: What are some common image / legal problemsfor companies? What leads companies into thesesituations? How should these companies be disciplined?How long do you think the public remembers theseproblems?C EQ: What kinds of cigarette and alcohol advertshave you seen? Do you think these industries market tochildren or teenagers?4 LISTEN DVDThis audio clip deals with Canada’s controversialcigarette warning labels introduced in 2001. Thetobacco industry has been quite outspoken aboutthem and has tried unsuccessfully to challengethem in court. These new labels seem to have beenquite effective at reducing smoking rates inCanada. The Canadian Cancer Society polled2,000 smokers in 2001 and found that 43 per centof smokers are more concerned about healtheffects, 21 per cent said the labels stopped themfrom taking a cigarette when tempted, and 18 percent of smokers have asked for a different packetbecause of the label.1 LISTEN A3, B1 AnswersA 3 Tobacco companies: Would not be happyabout people giving up smoking because of thewarning labels (not mentioned in listening clip);Smokers: Man 1 is shocked, but he is not surethese would stop him from smoking. Woman 2thinks they might help her quit smoking and findsthem shocking. Non-smokers: Woman 1 is infavour and thinks it would help her boyfriend quitbecause of the picture. Man 2 hates smoking andthinks the labels are a good idea.B 1 360,000 people2 Woman 1: supports the idea; Man 1: against it;Man 2: supports it; Woman 2: supports it.3 Smoking is seen as ‘cool’.4 These rates have dropped from 28 per cent to18 per cent between 1999 and 2003.5 TEAMWORKThis activity will give students a chance to createtheir own TV advert. Students should use their ownexperience and knowledge of fashion marketing tohelp them. The customer file includes somecompany information. Based on a creative thinkingactivity, the Idea Generator is to help students intheir creative effort. Pairing seemingly unconnectedideas or words can lead to some original ideas. It isimportant to remind students not to be critical ofany ideas until after all the brainstorming has runits course.Sources:The Blue Jean, Alice Harris.www.diesel.co.ukwww.levi.com6 CONTROVERSYPolitical activists have become more creative in theway they criticise corporations. Given the budgetavailable to corporations around the world, it takessomething particularly shocking or new to catch a28 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 8–11 SB, 94 WBUnit 1Teacher’s Guideconsumer’s attention. One of these latest trendshas been to co-opt the brand image of a productand use it to criticise the company. These havebeen highly controversial and have led companiesto resort to legal action to protect their brandimage. One example of this has been the case ofGreenpeace and Exxon / Mobile. Exxon tookGreenpeace into France for infringement of itstrademark for its ‘E$$O’ campaign. TheGreenpeace campaign against Esso, a trade namefor Exxon in several countries, suggested thatEsso was more concerned about money than theenvironment. Greenpeace won the case onappeal – the court said that freedom of speechallowed for this logo parody.Sources:www.adbusters.orgwww.greenpeace.orgEQ: What do you think of the companies in the ads?Should protestors be allowed to protest this way? Arethese effective protest methods? Do they change yourview of the products shown?7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.Sources:www.pg.comwww.unilever.comwww.gm.comwww.toyota.comwww.ford.comwww.timewarner.comwww.daimlerchrysler.comwww.loreal.comwww.nestle.comwww.sony.com8 PUBLIC RELATIONS IN ENGLISH (CLIL)This activity was chosen because of the mediadiscussion about the social responsibility ofcorporations. This is a difficult and complex issue.Nike is, by no means, a bad company nor anisolated case, but its experiences over the last decadewith outsourced production in developing countriesreflect the ethical difficulties faced by a globalcorporation. When a company makes the hardfinancial decision to change countries to lowercosts, how is it able to decide which social, labour,environment standards to follow? Either way, thedecision has real effects for both the corporateimage, the workers involved and the consumers ofthe product. Nike now has a staff of 97 that justmonitors conditions in its foreign factories.EQ: When a company moves its factory abroad, whichlabour, environmental or social standards should itfollow: its home country or the developing country?Why? Who is to blame for sweatshops: the companies,consumers, sweatshop factories in developing countries,workers in developing countries, governments indeveloping countries?Sources:Naomi Klein, No Logo.www.nike.comwww.oxfam.org.au/campaigns/nikewww.videa.ca/resources/global_issues.htmlwww.cleanclothes.orgwww.adbusters.org9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers the topics of trends, the futureof marketing, influence of advertising on the media,public versus private media.A Try to get students thinking about the amountsof money first.EQ: Do you think news agencies (TV, newspapers)would ever not publish stories about advertisers incase they lose advertising revenue? If your businessdepended heavily on customers, what would you bewilling to do to keep them happy?B Try to get students to analyse different public andprivate TV / radio stations.EQ: What are the advantages and disadvantages ofpublic ownership? Does the government monitor orcensor public TV or radio stations?C Try to get students to think of concrete examplesof trends: hip hop, reality TV, etc.EQ: Could you ever start a trend by yourself? If so,how? If not, why not? What is meant by a ‘trendsetter’?Give an example.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200729


Unit 1 Buy now, think later Teacher’s Guide See pages 8–11 SB, 94 WB10 Your answer: IS ADVERSING ALL A CON?This question attempts to address the very realconcern about spending vast sums of money onadvertising. The students should by this pointhave developed some very definite opinions on thesubject. The students can look at the enormouscost in real money terms, at the effects marketingmessages have on society, at the development ofproduct image over product value, and corporatesocial responsibility with the right to conductbusiness. You can get students to imagine a worldwithout advertising: products without labels;television without commercials; email withoutspam. What would it be like?WORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity is a cloze-form version of the EnglishIn Use section of the CAE which gives students anopportunity to review their understanding of theuse of prepositions in English. It also introducesstudents to further advertising-related issues.1 WORD POWER Answers1 with 2 in / with 3 from / against 4 on 5 by6 on 7 to 8 into 9 with 10 at2 WRITINGA As spam often makes inflated claims for theproducts it is selling, you can encouragestudents to use hyperbole and very persuasivelanguage.Sources:Antarctica, Peter Carey (Lonely Planet)www.antarctica.ac.ukwww.aad.gov.auwww.antarcticconnection.comwww.coolantarctica.comB This is a realia-based activity. You canencourage students to try to use advertising-stylelanguage.3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES: Mapping thepresentationThis activity is the first of several techniques to helpstudents give better presentations. This one addressesthe important issue of structure by giving severaldifferent ways of structuring a presentation.3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES Answers1 Categorical: circles, triangles, squares; red, green,blue:Commodities (grapes, oranges, soybeans, rice)2 Chronological: Past, present, future:4000 BC, 1565, 1688–1715, 19703 Compare/contrast: vs. , us vs. themGrapes, oranges (Fruit) vs. Soybeans, rice(Vegetables/Grain)4 Confucius principle: Individual, family, community:How each relates to the person / town / countryHow important each is to person / town / country5 Geographical: North, south, east, west:France, Brazil, Thailand, Florida6 Hierarchical: Top, middle, bottom:7 Cost: Champagne, oranges, soybeans, rice8 Sequential: First, secondly, thirdly / lastly:9 History (4000 BC, 1565, 1688–1715, 1970)10 Status (Champagne, oranges, soybeans, rice)11 Order first appeared in your country4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s book.4 IDIOMS Answers1b on the bandwagon, 2a a blank cheque, 3c anarm and a leg, 4d seen dead, 5e round the clock.1 jump on the bandwagon choosing the popularside / whatever is most popular. 2 give a blankcheque allow someone to spend as much as theylike. 3 cost an arm and a leg cost a lot of money,be very expensive. 4 be seen dead would neverdo something. 5 round the clock all hours, a lotof hours, day and night.Ask students to use the idioms when answeringthese questions orally. This can be done as pairwork or as a class.30 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee page 94 WBUnit 1Teacher’s Guide• Does advertising affect your buying habits very much?– I must admit I do follow fashion trends a lot,but I don’t think I jump on the bandwagon allthe time.– I think cost is the most important factor. If itcosts an arm and a leg, forget it.– Not always. They can sometimes advertiseclothes that I wouldn’t be seen dead in.• How should companies with bad reputationsimprove them?– They could just sign a blank cheque to a PRcompany and say, “Fix it.”– I think they need to work around the clock ontheir image.• Can advertising fix all problems?– No, even if the US wrote a blank cheque, itcouldn’t solve the country’s social problemsovernight.– It can. But in some cases, it just costs an armand a leg.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200731


Unit 2 Express yourself Teacher’s Guide See pages 12-15 SB, 95 WBWHAT’S NEW!Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – use inferring and signposting phrases.– use arts-related vocabulary, phrases and idioms.Educational Ss will develop a critical appreciation for the arts.Objectives:Connected – High culture vs. pop culture – Traditional art formsTopics: – Spoils of war – Music history– Life of the artist – Relevance of art– What is art?Grammar: Word formsJoining sentences in sequence using signposting phrasesKey Vocabulary: artefact culture vulture muddy vcommission v high / popular culture reigncredentials integration umbrella organisationThe BIG question: ARE THE ARTS RELEVANT?Here Are the arts relevant? questions the idea of thearts and what they represent.VIEWPOINTFacts: The British Museum information givesstudents some perspective on the enormousdifference in the size of the collections in theGreek and British national museums. Using theinformation as a prompt, ask students to describeany experiences they have had in art galleries ormuseums.EQ: What are the main art galleries or museums inyour country? Have you visited them this year, recentlyor ever? How important is it for a student’s educationto go to museums or art galleries? What do you like ordislike about being in a gallery or museum?The Van Gogh fact introduces the stereotype of the‘starving artist’. Using the information as a prompt,ask students to describe what the life of a typicalartist would be like (lifestyle, looks, attitude).What makes Van Gogh’s art more popular now thanin his lifetime? This question addresses the situationthat most artists are only popular after their deathsand often not understood or appreciated in theirlifetime.EQ: The Portrait of the Artist survey in New Zealandfound that on average artists made $20,700 a yearcompared to other New Zealanders who made $27,934.Does this fit your idea of the life of the artist? Why doyou think artists make so little money? What motivatesthem to continue producing art? What art forms wouldgive artists the greatest opportunity for success?Quote: Pablo Picasso (1881–1973) was a Spanishpainter and sculptor. His quote introduces the ideaof art as a means of self-expression and touches onthe purity of creative ideas.EQ: What do you think Picasso meant (by this quote)?Do you agree that there is a connection between childrenand artists?1 WORD POWERA Students consider ‘what is art?’ By trying to associateit with particular types of creative expression, they willbegin to have a clearer idea and to express in theirvocabulary what art means to them or even what artmeans to society in general. You can’t discuss something,until you can agree on a common definition.B helps students to look at some vocabularyassociated with the articles.1 WORD POWER B2 AnswersB 2 patron 2 performer 4 monarch5 composer 6 collectorC practises inferring in Language Bank 2 howvarious people in B feel about the arts.32 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 12–15 SB, 95 WBUnit 2Teacher’s GuideARTICLESWhy the Queen is No Culture VultureThis article is part of a larger debate on whether theQueen and the monarchy in general are stillrelevant today. It should be pointed out that therelevance of monarchs today is often a controversialsubject in many countries. If you have the time orfeel it is appropriate to explore this issue, you canask: In the 21 st century should a country have a kingor queen? What do monarchs do for a country?Elgin Marbles Campaign LaunchedThe case of the Elgin Marbles is a continuingdiplomatic row between Greece and Britain. TheMarbles were loaned to Greece for the 2004Olympics, but it is unlikely that they will bereturned permanently. If you have the time or feel itis appropriate to explore the issue, you can ask:Does your country have any minor disagreements withother countries? How do history and geography affectdiplomatic relations?2 READING2 READING A, B, C AnswersA The Queen: has only bought 20 paintings in herreign; is not a fan of classical music (patron oforchestra but doesn’t go very often); she collectsglass animals rather than other artworks; not a fanof the arts.B Henry VIII was a passionate supporter of musicand composers. The Queen is not really interestedin the arts. / In Lord Elgin’s time it was acceptableto buy the Greek sculpture and take it from Greeceto London; now it would not be allowed.C 1 It may help to mention that monarchs havetraditionally commissioned works of art includingmusic. In the Middle Ages artists could also be paidmembers of royal staff. If students are unsure, youcan also ask: How are pop albums produced today?How does this compare with the way music wasproduced in the past?C2 If students are not sure how to answer this, youcan ask: Do you think it has something to do with...national pride, British self-identity as a former imperialpower, its history or the reasons given by the museum?3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of the successfulartist, modern art versus traditional art, therelevance of classical art forms, and art ownershipversus cultural heritage.A EQ: What do you think their lives are like? Howmany artists do you think are successful?B EQ: Should art only try to imitate real life or berealistic like a photo?C EQ: Who watches / listens to opera, ballet or classicalmusic? There has been some crossover between classicalmusic and rock over the years. What do you think of this?D This discussion could be extended to include thereturn of lands and property.EQ: What would happen to Africa, Asia, Australia,Europe, North and South America, if all conqueredlands were returned to the people who lived there before?4 WATCH AND LISTEN DVDThe Body Worlds exhibition was created byGerman anatomist Gunther von Hagens toeducate people about the anatomy of the humanbody. Although von Hagens says that his displaysare simple educational tools rather than art, hisdescriptions, the display arrangements andexhibitions in art galleries belie this assertion.The exhibition continues to tour the world.Source:Body Worlds homepage: www.bodyworlds.comAlthough the video clip documents the exhibit asvisitors would view it, some students may not wantto see it. It may be worth asking students about thisafter activities A and B. For these students, you cansubstitute an alternative silent activity: Write a letter(180–210 words) to Gunter von Hagens expressingtheir views about the Body Worlds exhibit.3 WATCH AND LISTEN B, C AnswersB Gunther von Hagens gives the reasons:education, the Renaissance.C The clip shows people looking at the exhibits.Students would probably answer the question byBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200733


Unit 2 Express yourself Teacher’s Guide See pages 12–15 SB, 95 WBdiscussing something relating to what Von Hagenshas said in the interview, mortality or just theexhibition itself.3 WATCH AND LISTEN D AnswersD 1 Everyone is mortal. 2 Educational tool: it canhelp people understand their bodies better. Lessonabout choices we make: unhealthy lifestyles can bepresented in a very concrete way. 3 Renaissanceanatomists: Leonardo da Vinci and AndreasVesalius. 4 Vesalius was the first to assemble askeleton, which he took from the grave.E These questions will help students to explore howthese seemingly divergent fields are in many waysconnected. Example: Painting has been helped bychemistry (how chemicals create different colours),physics (how light is defracted, colour wavelengths),biology / anatomy (how humans / animals move).Source:www.asci.org5 TEAMWORKThis activity relates to the idea that art can be radicalin nature and the expression of ideas is at the core of alot of modern art. When students look at the Scenario,try to make them think about how art develops orchanges when an artist begins work with a particularidea in mind. Students’ ideas can be funny, serious,entertaining or anything that interests them.When you are finished, you could discuss: Does thischange your view of modern art? Do you think art takesitself too seriously? How might some famous works of art(for example: the Mona Lisa, David) have been differentif they had been created with a different idea in mind?Source:Futurist painters / manifestos: www.unknown.nu/futurism6 CONTROVERSYThis activity opens up issues about the context ofart. The meaning and value of art often exists withina certain society. It looks at traditional art forms inother countries (see also A in 9 Further Discussionbelow) and how art is often relevant to the times.EQ: Why do you think the Afghan rug weaverscreated these rugs? Do you like these rugs? Why / Whynot? If rug weavers from your country were to makerugs like these, what would the rugs look like?Source:War rugs homepage: www.warrug.com7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Book.A SourcesArtist biographies: www.ibiblio.org/wm/Nobel laureates: www.nobelprize.org/literature/laureates/index.htmlSome important writer biographies:www.xs4all.nl/~pwessel/writers.html#winnersActor biographies: www.imdb.com/(Note: ‘Actor’ used for men and women in a formalsense is becoming more common.)B SourcesElgin Marbles: www.museum-security.org/elginmarbles.htmlBritish Museum: www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/National Archaeological Museum: www.culture.gr/2/21/214/21405m/e21405m1.html8 HISTORY OF MUSIC in English [CLIL]Music historians debate about when these musicalforms started. Many of the musical forms alsooverlap, as musicians play many different types ofmusic and are influenced by different music forms.Civil rights has had a strong impact on thedevelopment of African-American music. Beforethe 1964 Civil Rights Act, African-Americanmusicians could not go into the hotels or concerthalls where they played. They had to use the backdoor and to leave as soon as they had finishedplaying. A lot of the 1960s and 1970s soul, R&B,blues and funk musicians sang songs about thehardship of life in the ghettos (segregated areaswhere African-Americans lived in many northernUS cities) and racial inequalities. With the deathof Martin Luther King, many blacks become angrywith the system – race riots in 1967 and thedevelopment of the Black Panthers.34 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 12–15 SB, 95 WBUnit 2Teacher’s GuideA Begin by brainstorming with the class a list ofdifferent African-American musicians through thedecades or musical styles.Gospel: Thomas Dorsey (1899–1993), MahaliaJackson (1911–72), James Cleveland (1931–91),Sam Cooke (1931–64), The Winans.Jazz: Soloists: Louis Armstrong (1901–71), BillieHoliday (1915–59), Ella Fitzgerald (1917–96);Big Band / Swing: Edward ‘Duke’ Ellington(1899–1974), William ‘Count’ Basie (1904–84),Cabel ‘Cab’ Calloway (1907–94); BeBop / Cool /Fusion jazz: Charlie ‘Bird’ Parker (1920–55), DizzyGillespie (1917–93), Miles Davis (1926–91),Thelonious Monk (1917–82).Blues: Mamie Smith (1883–1946), Robert Johnson(1911–38), Howlin’ Wolf (1910–1976), Buddy Guy(b 1936) John Lee Hooker (1920–2001), MuddyWaters (1915–83), Etta James (b 1938), B.B. King(1925–), Stevie Ray Vaughn (1954–1990).R&B (Rhythm and blues): James Brown (b 1933),Aretha Franklin (b 1942), The Temptations, TheSupremes, Jackson 5, Stevie Wonder (b 1950), RayCharles (1930–2004), Whitney Houston (b 1963),New Edition (1983–89), Boyz 2 Men.Rock ‘n’ roll (Rock and roll): Chuck Berry (b 1926),Little Richard (b 1932), Jimi Hendrix (1942–70), Slyand the Family Stone, Michael Jackson (b 1958),Prince (b 1958), Bad Brains, Living Colour, Fishbone,Lenny Kravitz (b 1964), The Roots.Soul: Aretha Franklin (b 1942), Otis Redding(1941–67), Percy Sledge (b 1940), Marvin Gaye(1939–84), Al Green (b 1946).Funk: James Brown (1933–2006), Parliament /Funkadelic / P-Funk Allstars, Sly and the FamilyStone, Herbie Hancock (b 1940), Stevie Wonder(b 1950), Earth, Wind & Fire.Rap: Afrika Bambaataa, Run DMC, Public Enemy,NWA, BDP, MC Hammer, Tupac Shakur(1971–96), Salt-N-Pepa, Beastie Boys, De La Soul,Queen Latifah, The Fugees, Outkast.B In its early years, blues and jazz were consideredpopular art forms, but today they are oftenconsidered high culture.EQ: Can you see any current music styles becominghigh culture in a hundred years? Why / Why not?9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers: traditional arts in differentcountries; technology and the arts; the idea of theRenaissance man; controversial art and publicfunding. Encourage students to continue using thephrases in Language Bank 2.A Students can brainstorm about what is traditionalart in their country, then compare these with othercountries. Examples: Japan (paper crafts, kimonos,textiles), Canada (Native American woodcarving,beadwork), Sweden (iron work, woodcarving,basket weaving), India (scroll painting, rug weaving,wood / sculpting).B Encourage students to think about the uses ofcomputers (architecture, music, drawing), industrial design(pop art), video (art), audio (music, installation art).EQ: How have computers changed writing? How havevideo cameras (film / TV) changed acting? How hasmodern printing changed art?C Ask students to think about how careers are oftenvery specialised. Look at people who have tried touse different art forms (actors who are also artists orphotographers (Leonard Nimoy, Dennis Hopper),musicians who are also writers (Henry Rollins,Leonard Cohen).EQ: Do you miss anything by specialising in only onearea? What could other fields bring to another area (forexample, music and medicine)?D EQ: Should individuals have a say in what governmentspends its money on? Who should decide what art is?10 Your answer: ARE THE ARTS RELEVANT?Arts funding is always a touchy issue with strongfeelings on both sides especially about controversialart. You could ask students:EQ: Why do we create art? What does it tell us aboutsociety? What is the social value of art? Is it importantenough that we should spend money on unpopular(financially unviable) art forms? How can we justifysponsoring art when there are so many socialprogrammes that are short of money?BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200735


Unit 2 Express yourself Teacher’s Guide See pages 12–15 SB, 95 WBWORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will introduce students to some artmovements. It also gives students a chance to usethe signposting expressions in Language Bank 2 ina more natural way.1 WORD POWER Answers1 To begin with, the Renaissance (15th–16thcenturies) was an important period of artistic andideological revival. It mixed elements of classicalstyle, scientific inquiry and Christian themes.Artists included Michelangelo, Da Vinci andRaphael.Now that brings us to the next point – the Baroqueperiod (16th–17th centuries). It saw artists oftentrying to capture emotions and drama in their work.However, they often sought more realism in their art.Artists include Rubens, Rembrandt and Caravaggio.Let’s move on to the subject of Impressionism (late19th century). Here, art was used to convey subtlefeelings or the impressions of the artist. It began tomove away from the idea that art must representactual things. Artists included Monet, Renoir andCézanne.Now that brings us to another importantmovement – Expressionism (late 19th–early 20thcenturies). The expressionists believed that directcommunication of feelings can be shown, especiallyanxiety and despair. Artists included Van Gogh,Munch, Grosz, Dix and Beckmann.Let’s leave that and go to Surrealism (early 20thcentury). Surrealism was strongly influenced by thepsychological works of Freud and Jung. The artoften sought to explore the subconscious. Artistsinclude Breton, Dali and Man Ray.2 USE OF LANGUAGE: Word formsThis activity introduces an important era for artistic,intellectual and political expression. You may wantto discuss or mention the bohemian lifestyle – livinghand-to-mouth outside society’s traditional values(career, family, home ownership) usually in search ofsome greater truth for the sake of art.The activity is based on an authentic activity usedby the University of Cambridge Local ExaminationsSyndicate in the Certificate in Advanced Englishand Certificate of Proficiency in English.2 USE OF LANGUAGE Answers1 cultural 2 massive 3 movements4 freedom 5 productive 6 happiest7 sitting 8 imagine3 WRITINGA SourcesAmong the Bohemians: Experiments in Living1900–39, Virginia NicholsonWomen of the Left Bank: Paris, 1900–40, Shari Benstockwww.newbohemian.comB SourcesJazz: A History of America’s Music, Geoffrey C. Wardwww.allaboutjazz.comExamples of music reviews:www.rollingstone.comwww.downbeat.comwww.vibe.com4 IDIOMSSee the introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1 She’s a budding artist. We expect big things fromher in the future.2 I found the whole conversation went over myhead. What did he mean by Existentialism?3 You often need to keep an open mind when itcomes to modern art.4 I really think Picasso was ahead of his time.5 He can’t seem to write the last chapter of thebook. I think he has writer’s block.6 You would have to pay a king’s ransom if you wantto buy that Matisse.1 budding developing, promising. 2 to go over myhead so complex I don’t understand. 3 to keep anopen mind be objective. 4 to be ahead of histime very advanced in his ideas, way of thinking.6 to pay a king’s ransom pay a lot of money.36 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 12–15 SB, 95 WBUnit 2Teacher’s GuideAsk students to use the idioms orally by answeringthese questions. These can be done as pair work oras a whole class.Give some examples of radical new artists, writersor musicians. Ask:• How would you describe them and their work?– They are ahead of their time.– Their stuff goes over my head.• Would you ever buy any of the following: a book ofpoetry, a Mozart CD, a war rug, a sculpture or aPicasso painting? Why?– It would cost a king’s ransom for a Picasso, soI’d never buy one.– You would need an open mind to want awar rug.• What difficulties do you imagine writers, artistsand other creative individuals have in theirwork?– I would imagine writers often get writer’sblock.– I imagine sometimes creative work can go rightover the heads of the public.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200737


QSE Advanced_Unit03 2/1/07 8:46 PM Page 38Unit 3 The sky’s the limit! Teacher’s Guide See pages 16–19 SB, 96 WBWHAT’S NEW!Communicative Students will be able to:Objectives: – justify an argument and downplay expressions.– use ambition-related vocabulary, phrases and idioms.Education Ss will explore a variety of issues relating to ambition, especially the rootObjectives: causes and effects.Connected – Race and future potential – Welfare and motivationTopics: – Fame and fortune – Biological drive– Asia’s film industries – Ethics of success– The American Dream – Rejecting the systemGrammar: Collocations Joining clauses Rhetorical questionsKey Vocabulary: adversity data miner forensic rigorousaffluent deadpan grim stintbioinformatician diminutive in the limelight tokenburgeoning elaborate adj meteoric wisecrackingcelluloid elite ferocity personacharismatic flop n pietyconsummate floundering rat raceThe BIG question: WHAT WOULD YOU DO TO SUCCEED?The question here asks what people are prepared todo to succeed in life.VIEWPOINTFacts: The information on poverty in the USA isbased on US Census Bureau data. This study usesthe US Census Bureau’s definitions of poverty andaffluence (ten times the poverty level). Source: ‘Ragsor Riches? Estimating the Probabilities of Povertyand Affluence across the American Adult Life Span’Social Science Quarterly, Vol. 82, No. 4, Dec 2001Mark R. Rank et al.www.weap.org/scholarship/rags_or_riches.pdfThis point is brought up again in 4 Watch andListen and 9 Further Discussion A.EQ: Name some successful African-Americans.Why are they successful? What influence do youthink this has on the ambitions of youngAfrican-Americans?The quote is a common saying meaning you haveto work hard to succeed.EQ: What do you think is meant by this quote?Do you agree with its meaning?The question under the graph addresses theessence of the rags to riches story that underpinsmost discussions about success. How do peopleget ahead?1 WORD POWERA asks students to consider symbols of success. Byassociating success with concrete or abstract constructs,students will have a clearer idea and vocabulary forwhat ambition and success means to them.B gives practice in matching collocations linked toambition and success.1 WORD POWER B Answers2b 3e 4c 5d 6aC allows for further practice in using the collocationsand Language Bank 3 phrases.ARTICLESChan the Man: The Early YearsThis article is an extract from a longer piece onJackie Chan’s career. Mention to students thatJackie Chan was a huge star in Asia before moving38 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit03 2/1/07 8:46 PM Page 39QSE AdvancedSee pages 16–19 SB, 96 WBUnit 3Teacher’s Guideon to Hollywood. He tried several times to breakinto the American market, before finding successthere with Rumble in the Bronx (1996). Chan’smovies often combine action and martial arts withcomedy, but he does all his own stunts.EQ: What types of films do you like? Which tend to bethe most popular in your country?The Shah of BollywoodBollywood films are often characterised by singingand elaborate dance choreography, while the musicalhas become less popular in American cinema.Unlike actors from other countries (Italy, China,UK), Indian actors have had little cross-over successin other countries. Some Indian films have beensuccessful around the world; for example: Bride andPrejudice (2004), an adaption of Jane Austen’s novel,Pride and Prejudice.EQ: Do you think there is discrimination againstnon-white actors in Hollywood? Why / Why not?2 READING2 READING A AnswersA 1 JC 2 neither 3 both 4 SRK 5 JCC 1 You can bring up what talents or skills an actormay naturally possess (beauty, charisma, charm,intelligence) and may need to learn (fencing,martial arts, horse riding, singing).C 2 It may help to discuss types of movies made,actors and directors, and then more general aspectsof Hollywood, Bollywood or Hong Kong movies.Hollywood – large budgets, special effects,American-centred plots.Bollywood – musical aspect, dancing / singing,stylised acting.Hong Kong – action and martial arts.3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers childhood ambitions, futureambitions, making it in other countries, and takingrisks and ambition.A EQ: Why do you think ambitions change as you getolder? Do people change jobs and careers often in yourcountry? What three careers would you like to have?B EQ: How realistic do you think these goals are?C EQ: Has anybody from your country gone on tobecome successful in other countries?D EQ: Is risk taking common in your country?4 WATCH AND LISTEN DVDThe video interviews are with ordinary people inNorth Carolina. Generally, the interviewees expressoptimistic views of the system.4 WATCH AND LISTEN B, C1 AnswersB (Sample answers) White Americans are generallythe most optimistic. African-Americans talk aboutequality and are aware of difficulties of life. AsianAmerican person / woman emphasises the value ofeducation, family and community.C 1 Girl: wants to be a famous musician.2 Woman: thinks it is because there are morebroken families in the African-American communityand that many fewer African-Americans have accessto higher education. 3 Man: says that a lot ofAfrican Americans are born poor and don’t have theadvantages that other people get, so they find ithard to change their lives.D These questions will help students to explorethe reality of the American Dream and aspects ofsuccess and failure.5 TEAMWORKThe problem tree is a common tool to help peoplesimplify rather complex problems. Visualising theproblem in different stages from difficult to easycan provide a means for tackling these in a moreproductive order.Example: becoming an astronautDifficultYou need many years of experience in afield related to space exploration.You need to possess some skill valuable tothe mission.You need to have a good knowledge of science.You need to pass many tests: physical,mental and emotional.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200739


QSE Advanced_Unit03 2/1/07 8:46 PM Page 40Unit 3 The sky’s the limit! Teacher’s Guide See pages 16–19 SB, 96 WBEasy6 CONTROVERSYYou need to undergo a lot of training.You need to live in a country with a spaceprogramme.You need to speak the language of thatcountry.You need to be physically fit.Welfare systems are always a heated issue, as theyoften take up a large percentage of a state’s annualbudget. The two main views are that:• Welfare recipients are lazy and don’t want to work.• Welfare recipients should be given help to rebuildtheir lives.Often these views overlap depending on social andpolitical positions; for example, people who areeconomically vulnerable (lower and middle class)are often welfare’s largest supporters, while peoplewho are economically secure are often welfare’sgreatest critics.7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A SourcesLearning to Lead: A Workbook on Becoming a Leader,Warren BennisThe Time 100 leaders: www.time.com/time/time100/leadersLeadership in Business: www.nwlink.com/~donclark/leader/leader.htmlB SourcesGoals! How to Get Everything You Want – Faster thanYou Thought Possible, Brian TracySeven Habits of Highly Effective People,Stephen R. Coveywww.mygoals.com8 CAREERS in EnglishYoung people leaving school often need advice oncareers. This activity is designed to give someperspective in this area, as some career choiceswill have a much better future than others.8 CAREERS in English Sample answersA Reasons for choosing each job:Bioinformatician: A relatively new field whichcombines a good knowledge of computer scienceand medical science. They can run complexcomputer models to test drugs before field trials.Wireless engineer: Wireless equipment is set tobecome more and more common in the future,making these engineers in high demand.Forensic accountant: Based on events in the US(Enron) and Europe (Parmalat), there is a growingneed for accountants who can independentlyanalyse the financial information in companyreports and accounts.Data miner: Customers prefer personal service, butin the age of large corporations, this can bedifficult. Creating software that can tell companieswhat individual people like or dislike lets businessespersonalise their services.Home-care nurse: As the number of older peoplein the population grows, there will be a sharpincrease in the need for nurses giving care at home.AI programmer: Artificial intelligence is becomingcloser to reality. Programmers are teaching computershow to learn like humans.Adventure travel guide: Extreme sports andadventure travel are becoming more popular.There will be a greater demand for experiencedprofessionals who can safely guide people inthese trips.Fuel-cell engineer: With oil supplies growingscarcer, hydrogen fuel cells will be the nextimportant technological development for transport.Energy and car companies will be looking forpeople with this expertise.Lawyer: Intellectual property rights are veryimportant for many companies, for example theentertainment industry. Companies need lawyers tohelp stop people illegally downloading music fromthe internet and CD / DVD piracy.Odd-job person: As there are more people whodon’t have time to jobs for themselves or are too oldto do them, there will be more demand for helparound the house.40 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit03 2/1/07 8:46 PM Page 41QSE AdvancedSee pages 16–19 SB, 96 WBUnit 3Teacher’s GuideB EQ: Which of these jobs would be likely to lastlongest? Why?9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers: fame, reasons for ambition,ambition and the law, rejecting society’s expectations,and equality in society.A You can begin this question by asking studentsto give examples of famous people in theircountry.EQ: Is being famous the same as being successful?B Ask students to think about what drives them tosucceed. Is it parents, community values, personalexpectations or something else?C Students should consider whether success shouldbe the ultimate goal.EQ: Does the end justify the means? Are successfulpeople who commit crimes treated differently fromordinary criminals?D This brings in the idea of people who do notfollow the usual way in society.EQ: Is dropping out of society just a luxury ofdeveloped countries?E This is one of the central issues in this unit. Tryto get students to think about how life might bedifferent for other people in their country or evenin other countries.EQ: Does it really matter? Is there anything thatsociety can or should do about this?10 Your answer: WHAT WOULD YOU DOTO SUCCEED?The question relates in ways to the issue of ethicsand ambition and how committed someone needsto be to succeed. Can you be ethical and ambitious?Are the sacrifices worth the gains? In part, it comesdown to what the person and their culture valuesmost. In some cultures, it is the family; in otherssuccess in career and life is the ultimate goal. Thisdiscussion of work-life balance will be looked at ingreater depth in Unit 15.WORKBOOK1 USE OF LANGUAGE: Joining clausesThis activity introduces students to an extremelysuccessful writer, J.K. Rowling, author of theHarry Potter books. At the same time, studentswill practise their knowledge of clauses. Theactivity itself is related to an authentic test activityused by the University of Cambridge LocalExaminations Syndicate in the Certificate inAdvanced English and Certificate of Proficiencyin English.1 USE OF LANGUAGE Answers1 that 2 who 3 who 4 after 5 where6 whom 7 although 8 while 9 after 10 which2 WRITINGA Sourceswww.writing-world.comConversations with J.K. Rowling, Lindsey Fraserwww.jkrowling.comB SourcesThe 100 Simple Secrets of Happy People, David NivenUnlimited Power: The New Science of PersonalAchievement, Anthony Robbinswww.motivation123.comhttp://dir.yahoo.com/Business_and_Economy/Business_to_Business/Speakers/Motivational3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES: Get rhetoricalThis activity aims to get students to incorporaterhetorical questions into their presentations. It is auseful skill to emphasis points, strengthen argumentsand build rapport with listeners.3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES Answers1b 2e 3c 4d 5f 6a4 IDIOMSSee the introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200741


QSE Advanced_Unit03 2/1/07 8:46 PM Page 42Unit 3 The sky’s the limit! Teacher’s Guide See pages 16–19 SB, 96 WB4 IDIOMS Answers1e 2f 3a 4b 5d 6c1 down-to-earth very practical, sensible.2 workaholic addicted to work, working very longhours. 3 control freak likes to control everythingpeople do. 4 movers and shakers important andinfluential people. 5 stick-in-the-mud dull,boring, unadventurous. 6 shark hard, focusedon getting what he wants.Ask students to use the idioms orally by answeringthese questions. These can be done as pair work oras a whole class.• Do any of these idioms describe you? Do theydescribe people you know?– I am a bit of a control freak. I like to be incharge of everything I do.• Which of these do you think would be successful in acareer, family, or life in general?– I don’t think a stick-in-the-mud would be verysuccessful in a career. They don’t seem verymotivated to do anything.• What kind of goals do you think each of themhas?– I think a shark would only be interested inwinning at any cost – no matter whatthe area.42 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p43-48 3/6/07 3:16 PM Page 43Unit 4 Are you looking at me? Teacher’s Guide See pages 20–23 SB, 97 WBWHAT’S NEW!Communication Ss will:Objectives: – use modifying words and phrases for expressing beliefs.– use bullying-related vocabulary, phrases and idioms.Educational Students will be able to understand the psychological, moral, social andObjectives: legal implications of bullying.Connected – Satire and difficult issues – Dynamics of powerTopics: – Steroids and other illegal drugs - Stanford Prison Experiment– Workplace bullying - Big versus small countries– Social Darwinism – Bullying and sportsGrammar: Word forms and modifying wordsKey Vocabulary: anecdotal irrefutable push-upbullying intemperate reinstatecavort local education authority sadisticClass A drugs multifarious sketchycompetition notorious survival of the fittestdetention passive-aggressive behaviour teasingexclude peremptorily truancyharassment precipitous unsubstantiatedinformant psychopathThe BIG question: IS BULLYING JUST PART OF LIFE?While the unit title is framed as the typicalchallenge of someone who is behaving in aggressiveway, as if just looking is an aggressive act in itself,The BIG question asks whether bullying isinevitable.VIEWPOINTFacts: The information is from a survey byChildLine, a leading UK children’s charity, andthe UK government’s Department for Educationand Skills. They interviewed over a thousandpupils in Years 5 and 8 from 12 different schoolsfrom across the UK.Source:www.childline.org.uk/pdfs/bullysum.pdfMore statistics:Two-thirds of bullying victims say they are bulliedevery day.Two-thirds of bullying victims say their schools donothing to help.More than a third of bullying victims say bullyingstopped after they told someone.Source:CBBChttp://news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/uk/newsid_2516000/2516997.stmEQ: Why do you think there is a difference betweenthe rate of bullying in primary and secondary schools?Quote: Jimmy Carter Jr. (b 1924) was the 39thpresident of the USA from 1977–81. Hisadministration supported social inclusion, humanrights, peace in the Middle East and nucleardisarmament. Nowadays he is better known for hishuman rights work.EQ: Do you agree with Jimmy Carter’s quote? Howwould you assess your country’s treatment of its weakestand most helpless members?Poster: This poster is from an Australian anti-bullyingwebsite - www.sangrea.nte/bully. This poster is froman Australian anti-bullying website. The studentsshould be encouraged to think about self-esteem.1 WORD POWERA asks students to consider different types ofbullies. By associating bullying with different socialBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200743


QSE Adv TG p43-48 3/6/07 3:16 PM Page 44Unit 4 Are you looking at me? Teacher’s Guide See pages 20–23 SB, 97 WBroles, students will begin to make the association ofbullying and abuse of power.B Students find antonyms in the articles to completethe activity.1 WORD POWER B Answers2c 3b 4 e 5d 6aC This activity gives practice in using vocabularyfrom B and the phrases from Language Bank 4.D More practice in using vocabulary and LanguageBank 4 phrases while discussing the issue of bullyingfrom different points of view.ARTICLESLeave the Poor Psychopath AloneThis Guardian editorial was written after anincident at the Glyn Technology School in Surrey,UK. Two 15-year-old boys were caught throwingstones at school windows and were given adetention by the Physical Education teacher, SteveTaverner. The boys then left 44 threateningmessages on the teacher’s answering machine andmobile phone, including: “You are going to diesoon. You are going to get stabbed in the back ofthe head.” and “You have five days to live.” Theschool’s headmaster and governors decided toexclude the boys. After an appeal by the boy’sparents, the appeals panel of the Surrey LocalEducation Authority overturned the verdict. Thepanel members chose not to listen to the tapes ofthe threats. Mr Taverner took sick leave for stress.The teachers at the school threatened to strike ifthe boys were allowed back. The UK Educationsecretary finally stepped in and reversed the appealdecision, so the boys have not returned to theschool. The article was written directly after theappeal panel made its decision.EQ: How could this sort of incident happen?Drug Warning as Bullied Children turn to SteroidsThis article expands on the worrying trend amongsecondary school boys in the UK and elsewhere.Steroids are often thought of as a sports-relatedproblem, but they appear to be a social one as well.Some effects of abusing anabolic-androgenicsteroids (male hormones) are: psychiatric effects(extreme mood swings, aggressive behaviour (’roidrage), extreme irritability, paranoia, delusions), highblood pressure / heart disease, liver damage / cancer,strokes / blood clots, stopping growth (adolescents),severe acne, baldness, nausea, insomnia. It also haseffects on the reproductive system. Steroids can betaken orally or intravenously. Sharing needles wheninjecting can also increase the risk of HIV / AIDSand hepatitis.EQ: Is taking steroids as serious as taking other drugslike marijuana, LSD, cocaine or heroine?2 READINGB It might help to go through the article pointby point. One key to understanding whethersomething is satirical is by deciding if the eventscan be taken seriously. You can get the studentsto discuss whether each of these events wouldever happen.The crime:– Student killing a teacher.– Mounting the head on 40-foot pole outside theteachers’ room.– Dancing around the pole naked, whooping andhollering and invoking the Antichrist.Sample comment: If it’s a real crime, it would be oneof the most bizarre and brutal this century.Reasons for committing the crime:– Being punished: detention and exclusion– According to Ms. Bennett (Darren’s mother):history of bullying by teacher for punishingBennett for clear school and legal offences(truancy and possession of Class A drugs)Sample comment: These are rather absurd reasons tosuggest that the murder was in any way justifiable.Response by the local school authority– To overturn the exclusion because the threat ofthe student’s rage was removed with the death ofMr. McCreevey.– To accept Ms. Bennett’s explanation and repealthe exclusion.Sample comment: The response of the local schoolauthority in this fictional case is absurd and ridiculous.(The author is suggesting that the ‘real’ appeal verdict44 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p43-48 3/6/07 3:16 PM Page 45QSE AdvancedSee pages 20–23 SB, 97 WBUnit 4Teacher’s Guideis similarly absurd and ridiculous.) It is against mostnormal ideas of justice.EQ: Why do people use satire? Think of some newsevents (especially controversial / unpopular ones). Howcould you speak about them in a satirical way?2 READING A, B AnswersA1decapitate 2 repercussion 3 remonstrate4 precipitousB 1 First article satirical: Events that are extremeand exaggerated are described as if they arenormal, for example Darren killed his teacher butthis was apparently justified because the teacherpunished Darren for truancy and having illegaldrugs, although this was what a teacher shouldnormally do.B 1: It may help to discuss the effects of steroidson the human body. (See effects of steroid abuseabove.)EQ: Why do people take steroids (use and abuse)?What do they do? Should steroids be legal and easilyobtainable? Would you take steroids if you werebullied?2 READING C2 AnswersC 2The students are getting steroids from drugdealers pushing other drugs because they want to bebigger as a way of dealing with bullies.3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers: the frequency of bullying, howbullying changes over time, the use of technologyfor bullying, bullying and physical violence, and theattitude of society to bullying.A EQ: How common is bullying in schools? Do schoolstake bullying seriously? How does / did your schooldeal with bullying?B EQ: Do adults experience bullying too? If so, giveexamples. Is the type of bullying the same at differentages?C EQ: Does the anonymity of an email or a mobilephone increase this kind of behaviour? How can it bedealt with?D EQ: Is teasing just something harmless thateveryone does?E EQ: Would you defend someone from being bulliedif it meant you might get injured? When should theauthorities be brought in (for example: headmasters,police, employers)?4 LISTEN DVDAlthough bullying is not new to the workplace,it seems to have increased recently. With less jobsecurity, workers often feel they cannot protectthemselves from a bully who might have controlover their job. The most important point to betaken from this audio clip is that the problem ofbullying in the workplace is due to the poorenforcement of existing workplace harassmentpolicies in many companies.4 LISTEN B, C AnswersB (Sample answers) Bullying is widespread. Ittakes many different forms. / Bullying issomeone look small or humiliating them in frontof others. / Bullies can often be people withresponsibility over other people. / People shouldstand up to bullies and help them change theirbehaviour.C 1 Gemma’s boss would shout and swear atpeople. He would also call all the time when hewas out of the office. 2 Passive-aggressive behaviourwould be spreading negative rumours aboutsomebody or not talking to them, not returningphone calls, or delaying action on something aco-worker needs to do a job. 3 Lack of will forcompanies to enforce their anti-bullying policies.4 It causes a lot of mental and emotional stress,and 22 per cent of the people in a study said theyworked less hard when they were bullied. Half ofthem worried about bullying or whether the bullywould target them again. Companies don’t realisethe negative effect on efficiency.D Students might say that Roger’s bosshumiliated him.E These questions will help students discuss how todeal with bullying.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200745


QSE Adv TG p43-48 3/6/07 3:16 PM Page 46Unit 4 Are you looking at me? Teacher’s Guide See pages 20–23 SB, 97 WB5 TEAMWORKMany of the victims of childhood and teenagebullying are targeted because of their physicalappearance. The teenage years are often markedby trying to conform to social peers. While manypersonality traits can be adapted to ‘fit in’, differencesin physical traits are not so easily changed. A studyin Canada found that overweight or obese childrenwere much more likely to be bullied. Obese girlswere 90 per cent more likely to suffer from bullyingthan other girls. The study also found that victimswere more likely to become bullies themselves.EQ: Do you think discrimination or racism is a formof bullying?6 CONTROVERSYThis issue is controversial as it touches on many topicsthat some might find difficult to talk about, althoughsome nationalities may still consider themselvessuperior to others either morally, historically,financially, intellectually or militarily. It is importantto mention a few obvious points before you begin:1 People may be different around the world, but allpeople should be considered equal (one group ofpeople is not by nature or design better than another).2 Nationalism is good, but it also has an ugly side(too much nationalism can produce racism,prejudice and ignorance).3 This activity is NOT an opportunity to target andattack different groups.SourcesOn the Origin of Species, Charles DarwinSocial Darwinism in European and AmericanThought, 1860–1945, Mike HawkinsMaus: A Survivor’s Tale, Art SpiegelmanAnne Frank: Diary of a Young Girl, Anne FrankThe Prize, Marilyn LaCourtwww.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Darwinismwww.royalinstitutephilosophy.org/articles/midgley_genes.htmwww.darwinmag.com/read/060102/process.html7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A Sourceswww.education.guardian.co.uk/classroomviolence/story/0,12388,814816,00.htmlwww.news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/uk/newsid_2321000/2321379.stmwww.news.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=572&id=1129982002B SourcesHow to be a Superhero: Your Complete Guide toFinding a Secret Headquarters, Hiring a Sidekick,Thwarting the Forces of Evil, and Much More!!Doctor Metropoliswww.bbc.co.uk/science/hottopics/superheroes8 PSYCHOLOGY in English [CLIL]The Stanford prison experiment was conducted byDr. Phillip Zimbardo and his team of psychologyresearchers at Stanford University in 1971.Everyone involved became identified with theirroles to the point where the line between realityand experiment began to blur. Researchers becamewardens and parole board members. Volunteersbecame guards and prisoners.Many ‘prisoners’ began to believe that theexperimental ‘prison’ was a real prison and thattheir situation was hopeless. Although they wereoverseen by the warden-researchers, the guards werefree to use their own set of rules for the prison, andthey began to develop harsher and harsher methodsof control. The experiment was originally to lasttwo weeks but it was shut down on Day 6 after acolleague of Dr Zimbardo witnessed the brutalityand complete personality change in one of the moresadistic guards. It left a lasting impression on mostof the people involved; many of the volunteersbegan careers in psychology, law, law enforcementand prisoner rights. See www.prisonexp.org.EQ: Do you think prison naturally leads to these kindsof abuse? What rights do prisoners have?9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers: victims becoming bullies,bullying and sports, how bullying happens,popularity and status, and powerful versus weakercountries.46 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p43-48 3/6/07 3:16 PM Page 47QSE AdvancedSee pages 20–23 SB, 97 WBUnit 4Teacher’s GuideA Begin by discussing what emotions the victimsmight be going through and how they can dealwith them.EQ: A US Secret Service report found bullying to be amajor factor in school shootings. Who is to blame inthese cases: shooters, bullies, parents, schools, society orsomething else?B Discuss what makes sports violent or aggressive.Some examples: boxing, martial arts, rugby,Australian Rules football.EQ: Do sports increase or decrease violence andaggression in society?C Discuss how people can be drawninto bullying.EQ: Do people get involved in bullying by doingsomething or doing nothing?D Ask students to think about how the search forpopularity or social acceptance might be tied tobullying.EQ: Are popular people often bullies?Why / Why not?E This question will help students to think aboutbullying and relationships of power.EQ: Which countries do you think use their power tobully other countries?10 Your answer: IS BULLYING JUST PART OF LIFE?This question relates to the issue of bullying insociety. Is it just a phase of social development thatwe can’t change, just part of our nature? You can getstudents to think about the nature of power andhow it can be used and abused.WORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will give students the opportunity toreview their understanding of key vocabulary foundin the Student’s Book. At the same time, studentspractise using modifying words.1 WORD POWER Answers1 The gang in Raul’s neighborhood really / certainlyintimidated him when they walked past him inthe street.2 It is basically / really / essentially / naturallythe role of parents to stop older brothers andsisters from picking on younger ones in thefamily.3 The teacher actually / really / essentiallyseemed to blame the victim rather thanthe bully.4 Mitsuko’s threatening behaviour actually /certainly became so bad that the head teacherwanted to exclude her from school.5 Sophia felt she was weak and really / quitehelpless because her father shouted at her allthe time.2 USE OF LANGUAGE: Word formsThis activity introduces an interesting aspect ofbullying: that it can be as prevalent among girls asamong boys. The activity is based on an authentictest activity used by the University of CambridgeLocal Examinations Syndicate in the Certificatein Advanced English and Certificate of Proficiencyin English.2 USE OF LANGUAGE Answers1 hidden 2 secretive 3 calling 4 understanding5 actions 6 relationships 7 psychological8 publicised3 WRITINGA Sourceswww.bullying.org www.bullying.co.ukwww.nobully.org.nz www.antibullying.netB SourcesTaking The Bully By The Horns, Sam HornWhen You Work For A Bully: Assessing Your OptionsAnd Taking Action, Susan Futtermanwww.bullyonline.org/workbully4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200747


QSE Adv TG p43-48 3/6/07 3:16 PM Page 48Unit 4 Are you looking at me? Teacher’s Guide See pages 20–23 SB, 97 WB4 IDIOMS Answers1f played 2a cross 3d flogging4b driven 5e went 6c fight1 to play into someone’s hands to put yourselfin a weak position. 2 to cross swords to provoke,argue with. 3 to flog a dead horse to dosomething that will have no effect. 4 to drivesomeone over the edge to push someone intodoing something desperate. 5 to go to greatlengths to make a lot of effort. 6 to fight itout to face someone about a problem.Ask students to use the idioms when answeringthese questions orally. This can be done as pairwork or as a class.• Would you try to avoid a bully or confront him / her?– I would try to fight it out.– I wouldn’t want to play into his / her hands.I would avoid the bully.– I wouldn’t cross swords with a bully. I’d likelystay away from him.• How much effort does it take to stop a bully?– You might have to go to great lengths to stop abully.– I imagine it might be like flogging a dead horsetrying to get the school to take it seriously.• How might bullying affect someone emotionally?– I would imagine it might drive some peopleover the edge.– I imagine always trying to avoid crossing swordswith a bully would eventually leave someonefeeling desperate and depressed.48 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p49-53 3/6/07 3:21 PM Page 49Unit 5 Frills and thrills Teacher’s Guide See pages 24–27 SB, 98 WBWHAT’S NEW!Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – express opinions tentatively and correctly use of vivid adjectives.– use designer goods-related vocabulary, phrases and idioms.Educational Ss will explore the origins, meaning and implications of fashion andObjectives: designer goods.Connected – Fashion trends – Haute coutureTopics: – Japan and designer goods – Hierarchy of needs– Metrosexual males and gender roles – Cost versus price– PETA and animal products – Media and fashion demand– Process of design – Art and designGrammar: Vivid adjectives Reported speechKey Vocabulary: beauty / grooming products metrosexual (man) suavebling minimalist surgebrandstretching personal fulfilment tell-tale signscyclical prestige vintageinsurmountable retro way off the markmaterialisticsarongThe BIG question: ARE WE ALL FASHION VICTIMS?The question here refers to the common expression‘fashion victim’ for people who follow every fashiontrend regardless of whether it is appropriate for them,but it asks students to reflect on whether we are allfashion victims, although some more than others.VIEWPOINTFact: The huge shoe collection made by ImeldaMarcos, wife of ex-Philippines President Marcos,caused a scandal because at the time she wasspending so much on shoes many Filipinos livedin great poverty. When she and her husband fledthe country in 1986, the shoes were put ondisplay to show her extravagance and are nowin the Marikina City Footwear Museum.EQ: What would be an excessive collection of clothesor shoes? Is collecting fashion something to admire?Quotes: Gore Vidal (b 1925) is an American novelist,essayist and screenwriter. The latter half of his careerhas focused mainly on political discussion, and heoften criticises the American government.EQ: What does Gore Vidal mean by this comment? Doyou agree with it? Do you think the attitude applies to you?Stella McCartney (b 1971) is a successful Britishfashion designer and the daughter of the formerBeatle, Paul McCartney. Like her mother, Linda,and her father, she is a strict vegetarian and choosesnot to use animal products in her designs.EQ: What do you think of celebrities who wear fur? Isfur glamorous? Do you think of fur or leather as deadanimals? Why / Why not?The question about the photos can be addressedseveral ways: the difference between teenage and adultfashion, the difference between boys and girls.1 WORD POWERA requires the students to actively expresstentative expressions and adjectives fromLanguage Bank 5. Although you can give thestudents some preparation time, this activityshould stress the spoken use of the phrases so itshould be more spontaneous.B looks at the meanings of some more adjectives.It may be helpful to go through each wordindividually. Check that students understand,then ask whether the word is positive or negative.Remember to ask why.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200749


QSE Adv TG p49-53 3/6/07 3:21 PM Page 50Unit 5 Frills and thrills Teacher’s Guide See pages 24–27 SB, 98 WBARTICLESJapanese Girls Go Crazy forForeign Designer GoodsThis article explores a long-term consumer trendin Japan. Although this article has been written bya foreign journalist, the question is also widelydebated in Japan.EQ: How does the situation in your country compareto the situation in Japan?A New Male Market EmergesThis article addresses the recent phenomenon of themetrosexual man.EQ: Could this happen in your country?2 READINGPronunciation note: mania [ ] ispronounced differently from most words startingwith ‘m-a-n’. See: manage, manner, many.A Matching headlines to the paragraphs requiresstudents to read for gist. This type of activity isdrawn from the Section 1 of the Reading part ofthe First Certificate in English exam.2 READING A Answers1c 2f 3e 4b 5a 6dB Reported speech is a grammatical structure thatstudents should know how to use at this level.However, it may be helpful to review the rules.How to report…A statement maderecently“I’m wearing a Guccisuit.”A statement made inthe past“I bought a LouisVuitton bag.”Orders, advice orrequests“Please sit down.”“You should go to Parisfor couture fashion.”We report it…Using verbs in presenttense→ He says (that*)he is wearing aGucci suit.Using verbs in pasttense→ She said (that*)she bought aLouis Vuitton bag.Using ‘to’→ He asked me to sitdown.A question“Is that Prada?”“When will the storeopen?”* Note: that is optionalin reportingstatements.C 1This can be a challenging question as itrequires people to think about why we worry abouthow others see us.EQ: Is the demand for fashion all due to marketing?Do you think designer goods or fashion help or hurtpeople’s self-esteem?C 2 It may be helpful to define what might beconsidered masculine and feminine things. Insome cases, these are historical and culturaldifferences; for example: a Scottish kilt, SouthPacific sarong.EQ: What are typical clothes for men and women? Whydo we make distinctions between men’s products andwomen’s products? Do only women have fashion sense?3 SPEAK YOUR MIND→ She advised meto go to Paris forcouture fashion.By changing the wordorder→ She asked me if itwas Prada.→ He wanted to knowwhen the store willopen.This section covers: the essence of fashion, thequality issue in designer goods, designing as acareer, and mean using expensive toiletries.A EQ: What makes us want to buy new clothes so often?Why do we often find past fashions funny? Give examples?B EQ: Name some designers or designer labelsyou have heard of. Which kinds of goods do they make?C EQ: What do you think a designer’s life is like?’D Note: the question about men usinggrooming products refers to expensive ‘designergrooming products’ like moisturisers, not ordinaryproducts like shampoo and deodorant.EQ: One assumption behind the ‘metrosexual’ manis that appearance-enhancing goods are very feminine.Do you agree? Why / Why not?50 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p49-53 3/6/07 3:21 PM Page 51QSE AdvancedSee pages 24–27 SB, 98 WBUnit 5Teacher’s Guide4 WATCH AND LISTEN DVDThis video material was produced by the People for theEthical Treatment of Animals (PETA) in the USA.Note: the video contains some rather disturbingdescriptions of the condition of animals in a fur farmand students should be told this before you watch.The video talks about a highly publicisedcampaign: ‘I’d rather go naked than wear fur’. Whilethis campaign is a few years old now, the issue of furhas been back in the news with the trend in musicvideos for displays of wealth and status, in whichmany rappers and singers, including Jennifer Lopez,Beyoncé Knowles and Lil Kim, appeared wearingfur. Another incident involved the model NaomiCampbell. She had participated in the PETA ‘I’drather go naked…’ campaign, but later appeared ona fashion show in Milan wearing fur.EQ: What did you think of the ‘I’d rather go naked...’campaign?4 WATCH AND LISTEN B, C AnswersB Sample answers: Trapping animals for fur coats iswrong. / Activism can be effective. / Advertising canbe useful to change people’s attitudes about wearingfur coats.C In 1990. 2 An (animal-rights) activist in Floridawho had a fur protest. 3 There were 779 in 1972,and in 1992 only 211 were left. 4 They get boredand stressed, and hurt themselves. 5 Give them tohomeless people, use them to make bedding fororphaned wildlife, distribute them to refugees inAfghanistan.D The clip shows a homeless woman receiving a furcoat for the winter. Students would probablyanswer the question by thanking the person andcommenting on how warm the fur coat is.E Students have an opportunity to express theirviews about the PETA campaign.5 TEAMWORKThis activity is based on a classic brainstormingtechnique widely used by groups when they aredeveloping products and processes, for example,engineers and managers.EQ: Who might benefit from using SCAMPER? Why?Could you see yourself using SCAMPER in otherstudies?6 CONTROVERSYThis issue touches on an interesting question for amodern society based on equality. Do people witha lot of money have a responsibility to those whodo not? Haute couture is for a small elite of verywealthy women, perhaps only 3,000 women inthe whole world who afford to buy these clothesregularly. Couture is an extreme example of themaxim ‘you get what you pay for’. Haute couturecustomers pay for the best in original design,fabrics, workmanship and service. It can take upto a thousand hours to make a hand-embroideredevening dress.SourcesThe Art of Couture, Victor SkrebneskiHaute Couture, Harold KodaThe Wealth and Poverty of Nations: Why Some Are SoRich and Some So Poor, David Landeswww.fashion-era.comwww.pierrecardin.comwww.fashion.dior.com7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A SourcesConfessions of a Shopaholic, Sophie KinsellaThe Lucky Shopping Manual: Building andImproving Your Wardrobe Piece by Piece, Kim Francewww.shopping.comwww.shopping.yahoo.comB SourcesMale Impersonators: Men Performing Masculinity,Mark Simpson.Both Feet on the Ground, David Beckham8 CONSUMER STUDIES in English [CLIL]The theories of American psychologist AbrahamMaslow (1908-1970) are often considered thethird force in psychology after psychoanalysisBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200751


QSE Adv TG p49-53 3/6/07 3:21 PM Page 52Unit 5 Frills and thrills Teacher’s Guide See pages 24–27 SB, 98 WB(Sigmund Freud) and behaviourism (B.F Skinner).His view of the causes of human behaviourcentred on the need for humans to make decisionsto fulfill certain needs. These needs are arrangedin a hierarchy from the most basic up. Maslowfocused on normal, healthy people, seeking tounderstand their motivations.When looking at the Hierarchy of Needs, workfrom the bottom up.• Physiological needs are the purely physical needsfor basic human existence, including: oxygen,water, food, vitamins, minerals, sleep, physicalactivity, rest, excretion of waste and sex.• Safety needs relate to the mainly psychologicalneed for structure in a chaotic world – safety,stability and protection. These could include asafe neighbourhood, stable relationships, jobsecurity, insurance, some savings.• Social needs are the love and belonging needs thatmake people look for close relationships; forexample: marriage, friends, children, or belongingto a group like a church or a gang. Careers comein here because of the human need for humaninteraction, and there may be associated problemswith loneliness and social problems.• The esteem needs are where Maslow believedthat psychological problems in Western societyoften originate. He defined two types:– Higher esteem needs to do with self-esteem,the desire for self-confidence, achievement,independence and freedom.– Lower esteem needs relating to the respectof others, the need for fame, recognition,attention, reputation, dignity and dominance.• Self-actualisation is the idea of becoming thebest person you can be. Maslow estimated thatperhaps only 2 per cent of people are capableof reaching this level. The idea is that once wehave met all the other needs, we may still feelunfulfilled because we are trying to discoverand fulfill the calling in life we are most suitedfor. For Maslow, people such as Albert Einstein,Eleanor Roosevelt and Aldous Huxley areexamples of people who have reached this level.EQ: Do you think everyone has a calling in life? Whatdo you think your calling in life might be? Do you thinkit is as difficult to reach the stage of self-actualisation?9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers: the process behind design; themedia and fashion trends; art and design; the costof designer goods, and status symbols.A Ask students to begin by listing what items areconsidered designer goods and the adjectives theycan use to describe them.EQ: (adjectives) How else can we describe thesedesigner goods? How do trends affect designer goods?B Students can discuss the images on MTV, byanalysing different music videos they have seen.EQ: Could these images influence what youngpeople do? If so, should or can anything be doneabout it?C Ask students to think of some famous artists.EQ: If these artists were designers, how might theydesign various households items?D Students could start with specific examples:clothes, utensils, glassware, furniture and perhapsrefer back to the 5 Teamwork activity; for example,how replacing different materials might increase ordecrease the costs.EQ: Fake designer goods are becoming more and morecommon. Where are these made and sold? Shouldmaking and selling fake designer goods be a crime?Would you ever buy fake designer goods?E Ask students to think about how we determinethe value of anything.EQ: How is supply and demand related to status?How do you personally feel about owning designergoods?10 Your answer: ARE WE ALL FASHION VICTIMS?This question asks student to focus on the values ofWestern society. Is materialism positive or negative?Is materialism a means to an end or is it an end initself? If everyone in society does the same thing,can this action be considered wrong? What isnormal and abnormal? Although these questions aremeant to analyse society as a whole, students couldconsider their own buying habits.52 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p49-53 3/6/07 3:21 PM Page 53QSE AdvancedSee pages 24–27 SB, 98 WBUnit 5Teacher’s GuideWORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will give students the opportunity forfurther practice of the adjectives and tentativeexpressions.1 WORD POWER Sample answers1A exquisite, 2B Maybe we could think aboutbuying it?2A derivative, 2B It seems to me that we could getsomething better.3A spectacular, 3A Why don’t you try it on?4A impractical, 4B Does that suggest we shouldbuy a larger one?5A fresh and functional, 5B I tend to think itwould work well at home.6A gaudy, 6C Why don’t we try somewhere else?2 WRITING2A SourcesCharity, Mark PetersonLearning About Charity from the Life of PrincessDiana, Caroline Levchuckwww.charitynavigator.orgwww.charitychoice.co.ukB SourcesNew Complete Do-It-Yourself Manual Reader’s DigestThe Book of Home Design Using IKEA HomeFurnishings, Anoop Parikhwww.ikea.com3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES: De-emphasingThis activity will help students who plan tode-emphasise contradictory points brought upby the invigilator.3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES Answers1j / g / i 2f 3 g / i 4a 5b6e 7h 8d 9 j / i / g 10k4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1b 2d 3a 4c 5e1 keeping up with the Joneses competing withother people by buying whatever is the latest fashion.2 trendsetter someone who starts a fashion trend.3 empty existence not emotionally or spirituallysatisfying. 4 to pay a pretty penny to pay a lot ofmoney. 5 upmarket more sophisticated.Ask students to use the idioms orally by answeringthese questions. These can be done as pair work oras a whole class.• How do you feel when you buy some new clothes?– Mostly good, but you often have to pay apretty penny for them, which is not so good.– I like being a trendsetter, so I always like it.• Do you think buying things makes you happy?– I think always shopping and buying thingsmight be an empty existence.– It’s difficult to keep up with the Joneses. If that’sall you worry about, I don’t think you’d be happy.• Where would you place fashion on Maslow’sHierarchy of Needs?– I think if you are talking about upmarketgoods, it would be esteem needs.– In some countries, I think clothes are reallyabout physiological needs, staying warm, beinga trendsetter comes second.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200753


QSE Advanced_Unit06 2/1/07 8:52 PM Page 54Unit 6 Playing to win Teacher’s Guide See pages 28–31 SB, 99 WBWHAT’S NEW!Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – express reservations and correctly use the passive verb form.– use competitiveness-related vocabulary, phrases and idioms.Educational Ss will explore various examples, roles and effects ofObjectives: competition in society.Connected – The Olympics – Reality TVTopics: – Artistic competition – Men versus Women sports– Intellectual competition of – Hierarchical structuresman and machine– Extreme sports– US athletes and sportsmanship – Nationalism and team spirit– Beauty contests – World recordsGrammar: Passive verbsKey Vocabulary: beauty contest / drop-out rate rub someone the wrong waypageant etiquette ruthlesslyblister flaunt v sportsmanshipblunder heat exhaustion stakes were high, theboast v hierarchy stem fromboorish implement sunstrokebrute force landslide victory team spiritcap v motto triathaloncapitalise odds on underdogdehydration reservation (doubt) walkoverdraw / tie n rivalry win hands downThe BIG question: HOW IMPORTANT IS WINNING?The question here is framed to make studentsthink about what motivates people in the searchof success, and whether the end always justifiesthe means.VIEWPOINTFacts: The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts andScience has about 6,000 members most of whomare actors. The Academy Awards, or the Oscars,were first handed out in May 16, 1929.EQ: Do you think the Oscars represent the best moviesof the year? Is it really possible to compare films oracting performances? What criteria should be used?Quotes: Vince Lombardi (1913–1970) was one ofthe most successful coaches in the NFL, theAmerican football league. From 1959 to 1967,his Green Bay Packers won five championship titles.EQ: What do you think of the quote? What kinds ofvalues would be associated with this statement?Dwight Whitney Morrow (1873–1931) was aUS politician. He began as an investment bankerwith J.P Morgan and Co., but World War IIled him into political life.EQ: Do you agree with the quote? Is hard workalways given credit? Do winners always deserve towin? Do losers always deserve to lose?1 WORD POWERA gets students to think about some key ideas aboutcompetitiveness in terms of how these apply tocompetitors, and how sometimes apparentlynegative qualities can be useful for success in sport.1 WORD POWER A Answers2h 3g 4f 5a 6e 7b 8b54 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit06 2/1/07 8:52 PM Page 55QSE AdvancedSee pages 28–31 SB, 99 WBUnit 6Teacher’s GuideB gets students to practise expressing reservations.At the same time, it introduces new vocabulary andidioms relating to competition.1 WORD POWER B AnswersB1There will be a landslide victory in the election.I’m not entirely sure about that. The oppositionseems to be doing better in the polls.2 The Czechs will win hands down in ice hockey. Iknow what you’re saying, but I think they may stillface some serious competition from theCanadians.3 Estonia is odds on to win the next song festival.You have a point there, but I wouldn’t discountBritain’s or Sweden’s entry.4 It was a walkover for our team; the score was 5-0.That might be true, but they were missing theirthree best players.5 New Zealand will come first in the race. Thatmight be true (they have a strong team), butI wouldn’t rule out the Australians.ARTICLESMan Versus Machine Chess Match DrawnThis article discusses the continuing intellectualcompetition between man and machine. As chess isconsidered one of the most mentally challenginggames, it was a natural choice for IBM’s computerteam to ask arguably the world’s greatest chessplayer, Garry Kasparov. Kasparov was the worldchess champion from 1985 to 2000. The X3D Fritzmatch was one in a series of matches between IBMsupercomputers and Kasparov. The first match waswith IBM’s Deep Blue in 1986 which Kasparovwon 3, drew 2 and lost 1. The second match withan updated Deep Blue ended with Kasparov losing3.5 to 2.5. (Half points mean a draw.)EQ: ‘A chess genius is a human being who focusesvast, little-understood mental gifts and labors on anultimately trivial human enterprise.’ (GeorgeSteiner) Do board games like chess prove intelligence?Are these games worthwhile? Why / Why not?USOC: Be Good SportsThis article discusses the importance of sportsmanshipin international sporting events. In recent years, theboisterous nature of American athletics has developeda rather bad reputation for the country abroad. Thearticle discusses how the US Olympic Committee istrying to address the situation. It should be noted thatmuch of this phenomena originated in basketball.‘Court talk’ as it is known in the US is the veryaggressive, almost violent banter between players onthe basketball court. It is in some ways a psychologicaltechnique to intimidate opponents. Court talk hasspread to other popular US sports and has becomepart of the American sporting experience.EQ: Is sportsmanship outdated? Does an athleterepresent the values of a county? Why / Why? AreAmerican athletes confident or arrogant?2 READING2 READING A AnswersA Kasparov used a long-term strategy and kept thegame closed (meaning: fewer moves are possible).X3D Fritz tried to keep the game open so it coulduse ‘brute force’ calculations to determine the bestpossible moves out of a larger number of options.B gives students to express personal feelings andbeliefs about competitors and competition.2 READING B AnswersB 1 a) The 4 100 relay was won by the US team.b) Victory was achieved by Kasparov’s long-termstrategy.c) Things had been made difficult in 2000 byboastful behaviour.d) In closed games long-term strategy can be usedby humans.B 2 Up to a point Lloy Ball does support beingmodest, but he thinks boasting is just part of theAmerican fighting spirit.C asks students to infer about the situations posedin the articles.1 It may be useful to have students discuss thesignificance of computers that may be smarterthan humans.EQ: Is it a positive or negative development?2 It may be useful to generalise the question to allcelebrities and discuss:BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200755


QSE Advanced_Unit06 2/1/07 8:52 PM Page 56Unit 6 Playing to win Teacher’s Guide See pages 28–31 SB, 99 WBEQ: Can we know what kind of person a celebrity isbased only on press reports?3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of competitiveness,favourite sports team, intellect versus athleticismand the Olympics.A EQ: Which sports do you play or watch? Isamateur sports less competitive than professionalsports?B EQ: Which teams are most popular in your country?How else does money affect competition?C EQ: Will computers and machines be better thanhumans in the future? Why / Why not? Do you likeplaying board games like chess or trivial pursuit? Why /Why not?D EQ: Are the Olympics the ultimate in humanachievement? Why do countries worry about the numberof medals won?4 LISTEN DVDThe photos try to show views of beauty thatmay challenge cultural standards. These includemuscular women and plastic surgery beautycontestants.4 LISTEN B, D AnswersB (Sample answers) Relationships are a negativething in the Miss America competition.Contestants must be single, without childrenand must sign pledges not to date during theirreign. Mrs. America allows contestants to bemarried.Plastic surgery is discussed as a counterpoint to theother rules about relationships. The Miss Americacontest does not have any rule against it. In addition,there was recently the Miss Artificial Beauty inChina where all contestants had undergone plasticsurgery.American values are discussed briefly in termsof the rules governing the current Miss Americacontest. Contestants need to be very pure (forexample, no marriage, dating or children).D 1 Atlantic City, USA 1921. 2 She steppeddown after rumours she dated several bachelors.3 Plastic surgery: The Chinese pageant was allabout plastic surgery. There is no rule against MissAmerica contestants having plastic surgery, whichassumes some have. 4 For acceptance of AIDSsufferers. The Miss Stigma Free HIV Botswana.5 TEAMWORKThis activity is designed to give students a chance todiscuss both the most popular trend on television –reality TV and one of the most controversial showson US TV. This activity is based on CelebrityBoxing 1 & 2, in which pairs of well-known, lessercelebrities are pitted against each other. The firstshow was watched by 15.5 million viewers andfeatured several matches including one betweenTonya Harding (the US figure skater implicated inthe assault of a rival US skater) and Paula Jones(a woman who claimed to have had an affair withformer President Bill Clinton). The second eventfeatured several matches including a match betweenJoey Buttafuoco (his young lover killed his wife)and professional female wrestler, Chyna. As realityshow formats are often bought by other countries,it is possible that this show will appear elsewhere.EQ: What kinds of reality TV shows are there in yourcountry? How are reality TV shows different fromother shows? What do reality TV shows say about itsviewers, producers and contestants? Would you everwant to be on reality TV?6 CONTROVERSYThe debate over equality in funding for women’ssports is an offshoot of the larger issue of equalityand women’s rights. Although you should try tokeep the students on the topic of sports andcompetition, the discussion is likely to incorporatethese larger issues of equality. You should thereforebe prepared to field questions about women’s rights.It may also be worth discussing the professionalstatus of women in different sports; for example:tennis, football, basketball. Note also the way thatsports leagues make a distinction between men’s andwomen’s sports by adding ‘women’s’ or ‘ladies’.56 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit06 2/1/07 8:52 PM Page 57QSE AdvancedSee pages 28–31 SB, 99 WBUnit 6Teacher’s GuideEQ: Do you think women and men will ever beconsidered equal in sports? Should they be? Whydon’t men and women play in the same leagues?SourcesOut of Bounds: Women, Sport and Sexuality, HelenLenskyjwww.dol.gov/oasam/regs/statutes/titleix.htmwww.olympic.org/uk/organisation/missions/women/index_uk.aspwww.wta.comwww.lpga.comwww.nwhlhockey.com7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A SourcesAthens to Athens: The Official History of the OlympicGames and the IOC, 1896-2004, David MillerTales of Gold, Patrick Collinswww.olympic.orgB SourcesPageant: The Beauty Contest, Keith Lovegrovewww.msgoldenamerica.com8 PHYSIOLOGY in English [CLIL]The triathlon was first created in MissionBay, California in 1974. Since then, the triathlonhas been the benchmark distance for creatingultra-sporting events. Today, there are double,triple, quadruple, quintuple and decatriathlonsfrom Finland to Mexico. The World ChampionshipDecatriathlon was first run in 1995. While it israther difficult for the average person to understandfully the physical and mental anguish involved, youcan get some kind of an idea by reading Britishultra-athlete Bobby Brown’s blog entry on hiswebsite: www.bobbysrun.co.uk/ironman.html. Ittook him two years to fully recover.The fastest time for a man was set byFabrice Lucas in 1997 with a time of 8 days,0 hours and 26 seconds. The fastest time fora woman was set by Silvia Andonie in 1992with a time of 10 days, 9 hours, 14 minutes,52 seconds.EQ: Imagine you just finished the event. What wouldit feel like? Could you see yourself ever competing inthis sport?Sources:Going Long: Training for Ironman-DistanceTriathlons, Joe FrielTriathlete magazine.www.iutasport.com9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers the topics of competition inartistic endeavours, the role of sports on the worldstage, the value of sport versus intellect, and recordkeeping.A This question picks up from the Oscars statisticand the question in Viewpoint.EQ: How do subjectivity and objectivity enter intocompetitions? Are contest judges ever unbiased? Why /Why not? Why do commercially successful authors likeStephen King or Danielle Steele never seem to winawards?B Try to discuss the relative values of sport andintellectual ability.EQ: How do time, money, energy and society changethis relationship?C Try to discuss concrete aspects of nationalism.EQ: How do you show your nationalism? What areother examples of nationalism you have seen or heardof? Which of the following are acceptable and why:chanting ‘We’re number 1’, painting your country’s flagon your face, or booing the actions of other countries’competitors?D Try to get students to consider examples ofnational or world records for different sports.EQ: Which sports records have you heard about? Whoholds the world record in…?10 Your answer: HOW IMPORTANT IS WINNING?This question attempts to personalise the entirediscussion. Here it would be helpful to get studentsto give concrete examples from school, work, sports,BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200757


QSE Advanced_Unit06 2/1/07 8:52 PM Page 58Unit 6 Playing to win Teacher’s Guide See pages 28–31 SB, 99 WBhobbies, computer games, or elsewhere. You canremind students about the winning paradigm thatthere is only one winner.EQ: If there can be only one winner, should everyoneelse feel like losers? Why / Why not? How do / shouldyou feel when you lose? Does participation or ‘givingit 110 per cent’ have any effect on these feelings?5 Although the contest was won,6 Mr. Europe, the Best Built Man in Europe andthe International Powerlifting Championship wouldbe entered and won by him.7 the event would be dominated by Arnold.8 This would be capped3 WRITINGWORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will give students the opportunity toreview some key unit vocabulary and further practiceusing the phrases in Language Bank 6.1 WORD POWER Sample answers1 I think the opposition party is heading for anotherlandslide victory in the polls. I’m not sure aboutthat...2 The Russian team will win hands down in thiscompetition. That might be true, but...3 I don’t think you can expect rivals to be goodsports. You have a point there, but...4 The Australian swimmer was the favourite. I’mnot entirely sure about that.5 Any competition leads to team spirit. You have apoint there but...6 The game show proved to be a walkover for her.That might be true, but...2 USE OF LANGUAGE: The passiveThis activity introduces the students to somebiographical information about Arnold Schwarzeneggerand his strong competitive streak. It will also givefurther practice with the passive verb form.2 USE OF LANGUAGE Answers1 He was thought to be a little crazy,2 a year in the Austrian military had to be served.3 he would not be given permission4 Arnold was not deterred.A SourcesDrug Testing in Sports, David L. Black, ed.Drug Testing: Issues and Options, Robert HCoombs, ed.www.olympic.org/uk/organisation/commissions/medical/index_uk.aspwww.drugtestingnews.comB SourcesThe Best American Sports Writing of the Century,David Halberstam, ed.Associated Press Sports Writing Handbook, SteveWilsteinwww.news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/default.stmwww.espn.go.com4 IDIOMSSee the introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1e 2d 3b 4a 5f 6c1 the name of the game the most importantthing / aim. 2 to play the game to take part.3 a sporting chance a chance to win. 4 to givesomeone a run for their money to make itdifficult for someone to win. 5 a whole new ballgame the situation was completely changed. 6 tothrow in the towel to give up / in, admit defeat.Ask students to use the idioms when answeringthese questions orally. This can be done as pairwork or as a class.• What would happen if your class played a footballmatch against Real Madrid?– I don’t think we would give them a run fortheir money.58 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit06 2/1/07 8:52 PM Page 59QSE AdvancedSee pages 28–31 SB, 99 WBUnit 6Teacher’s Guide– I am guessing that we’d have to throw in thetowel after the first ten minutes.• What does it take to get ahead in … (business /sport / school)?– I think practice is the name of the game.The more practice you get, the betteryou’ll be.– If you want to succeed, you have to playthe game.– I think today it’s a whole new ball game, a teamneeds lots of money to be the best.• Do you ever feel sorry for losers?– I do, when I know they don’t have a sportingchance like when too many players areinjured.– I don’t. You should know when to throw in thetowel and accept defeat.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200759


Unit 7 Profit and loss Teacher’s Guide See pages 32–35 SB, 100 WBWHAT'S NEW!Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – defend a point of view and correctly use transitive and intransitive verbs.– use economics-related vocabulary, phrases and idioms.Educational Ss will explore the impact of different economic indicators on theObjectives: global economy.Connected – Consumer spending – Fair trade and free tradeTopics: – Unemployment – Oil and other commodities– Agricultural subsidies – Privatisation and nationalisation– Internet economy – Black market goods– War and economic progressGrammar: Transitive and intransitive verbsKey Vocabulary: across the board decrease v gross national product subsidyassets depression inflation spawn vblack economy fair trade privatisation targetclose a deal free trade recession transactioncommodity free-market economy robust watchdogconcession gross domestic product scrapThe BIG question: DOES ECONOMICS REALLY AFFECT ME?This question deals with the distance that manypeople feel from the larger economic issues.lower, and demand for products / commodities isoften higher.VIEWPOINTFacts: The statistic on consumer spending showshow dependent the USA and the world economiesare on US consumers’ spending habits. Consumersin the US are spending more and more usingconsumer debt (credit cards and mortgages). Manyeconomists worry that this level of consumer debtwill lead to problems, as consumers may not beable to maintain this level of debt.Quotes: Jay Leno is a popular late-night talk showhost in the US with the long-running Tonight Show.EQ: Do you agree with the quote? Do we takeunemployment rates seriously enough? Why dounemployment rates not have the same emotionalimpact as the effects of unemployment on individuals?1 WORD POWERA asks students to use intransitive verbs inLanguage Bank 7 to describe the graph inViewpoint. In the economy, when the GDP ishigh, generally output is higher, unemployment is1 WORD POWER A Sample answersAfter 1980 growth declined / decreased / wentdown, but by 1985 GDP had gone up / increasedagain. / In the 1990s growth went down at first,then increased / went up around 1995. In the late1990s growth increased sharply but dropped in2000. After 2005 it stopped expanding until 2007.B introduces new economics-related vocabulary thatwill be discussed in the unit and gives studentspractice in defending or rejecting the statements.Note: ‘I can’t accept that’ and ‘I think you might bemistaken’ are most often used as interjections andshould go at the beginning of the sentences.1 WORD POWER B Sample answers1 If you look at the facts, you can see that thebubble collapse DID affect the economy.2 It seems clear that we DID have a recessionfrom 1988–1991.3 I think you might be mistaken. Commoditieswould NOT have sold better in 1991 than 1984.60 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 32–35 SB, 100 WBUnit 7Teacher’s Guide4 Perhaps you are overlooking the fact thathigh growth that year would mean relatively lowunemployment. Unemployment rates wouldprobably have been highest in 1982.5 I can’t accept that. We do NOT see steadygrowth from 1990 to 1998.C gives students an opportunity to discuss aspectsof economics.ARTICLESFarm Subsidies Key as WTO Works on Trade PlanThis article discusses an important internationaltrade issue: farm subsidies for farmers in developedcountries. As much of the developing world relieson agriculture as a major source of employment andincome, levels of poverty and development will notchange significantly until the issue of subsidies isresolved. In the developing world, farmers canproduce much more cheaply but they have nosubsidies to help them.EQ: Will free trade solve all the problems in developingcountries? Why do developed countries promote freetrade but keep farm subsidies?Virtual World Grows Real EconomyAs will be further discussed in Unit 12, playing gameson line is increasing. Cheaper high-speed internetaccess means there are now a few dozen video gamesplayed by multiple players on different types of PCand gaming consoles. Computer industry analysts arepredicting even more in future decades.EQ: Do you see Norrath as a real economy? Why /Why not? How do you feel knowing that Norrath as avirtual economy is wealthier than over a hundredother real countries?2 READING2 READING A AnswersA 1 Switzerland (get most) 2 European Union(37%) 3 United States (18%) 4 New Zealand(get least)B You can bring up the issue of both the real andvirtual economies mentioned in the second article.For virtual economies, it would be helpful tomention the importance that some people place onentertainment activities like video games.EQ: How important are video games to you? Do youthink you could make a living playing video games?2 READING B, C AnswersB1enthusiast 2 currency 3 robust 4 transactionC 1 (Sample answers) Less competitive farmers indeveloped countries would want to keep farmsubsidies, as without subsidies they could go out ofbusiness. Large agri-businesses receive much largeramounts of subsidies compared to small farmers,but these large-scale farming operations are alsohighly profitable. Farmers from developing countrieswould not have to compete against artificially lowprices from developed countries and would earnmore, and poverty levels would go down. US andEU food manufacturers would be likely to beginimporting more commodities from developingcountries, as these would be cheaper.C 2 You can bring up the issue of both the realinternet economy and the virtual economy inEverquest’s Norrath. For virtual economies, discusswith students the importance that they place onentertainment activities like video games.EQ: How important are video games to you? Would youever make real-life purchases to help you in a video game?C 3 It is a simple question of supply and demand.The ‘platinum pieces’ are in demand, and the goodplayers are willing to supply these. This is whathappens in real economies.3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers: trends in the economy, effectsof social or political developments in the world onthe economy, tax and IT industry compared toagriculture.A EQ: Do you ever read the financial pages of a newspaperor watch reports about the economy on television?B EQ: How has the 2004 Asian tsunami affected theeconomies of Asian countries? How has the Iraq waraffected the world economy?BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200761


Unit 7 Profit and loss Teacher’s Guide See pages 32–35 SB, 100 WBC EQ: Should everyone pay the same rate of tax?D EQ: How have computers affected business? Domany people work in agriculture in your country?4 LISTEN DVDThe photo is of an American soldier in Iraq. You cantry to get students to think about current conflictsaround the world. The dichotomy is that industryusually benefits (military, oil, (re)construction), butwar often has a financial impact on the ordinarypeople through destruction of buildings andinfrastructure.4 LISTEN B AnswersB1By printing more money, which leads to inflation.2 High inflation, so food costs went up and inGermany prices went up every day; very highunemployment.3 21 per cent4 15 per centC1Like a jolt / shock of electricity to get theeconomy started. 2 Women took on jobs inindustry, but there were still labour shortages. 3 Notclear yet; it had a bad effect on the Iraqi economyand an impact on the price of oil (negative), and onconsumer and business confidence.5 TEAMWORKFor many students, pensions and retirement maynot seem relevant to their daily lives. It will affectthem, however, because when they start work theywill have to pay for pensioners and towards theirown pensions when they retire. Many of the optionsin the activity would have a direct effect on studentsand their lives; for example, cuts in education orhealthcare; people having to retire later.6 CONTROVERSYThe Fairtrade movement began in 1986 in theNetherlands when Max Havelaar created the firstFairtrade label for coffee from Mexico. There are now19 different international Fairtrade organisations,under the umbrella organisation Fairtrade LabellingOrganisations International.For many developing world farmers, it has been alifeline. Different food commodity markets havedropped since the late 1990s; for example, in thecoffee market between 1994 and 2001, the price ofrobusta beans (used for instant coffee) dropped from180 cents / lb to 17 cents / lb. For a cappuccino ina London café costing £1.75, a grower might getaround 5p. As a result, many farmers have had toabandon their fields or in some cases even turned togrowing illegal crops like coca or opium poppies,which provide more income.Fairtrade pays a premium price to producersfor all products carrying its label, so coffee growerscan make more through Fairtrade than ordinarymarkets.Sourceswww.fairtrade.org.ukwww.fairtrade.org.uk/downloads/product_prices.xls7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A Sourceswww.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbooknews.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/country_profiles/default.stmwww.economist.com/countriesB SourcesThe No-Nonsense Guide to Fair Trade, David RansomThe Conscious Consumer: Promoting Economic Justicethrough Fair Trade, Rose Benz Ericsonwww.fairtrade.org.ukwww.fairtradefederation.com/8 BUSINESS STUDIES in English [CLIL]The airline industry has had a lot of financialdifficulties since 2001. After the World TradeCentre attacks (11 September 2001) many in NorthAmerica and Europe were afraid to travel by air, thenthere was an outbreak of SARS (Sudden AcuteRespiratory Syndrome) in some Asian countries. Thesecond war in the Persian Gulf (the Iraq War) beganin March 2003, and some travellers cancelled theirbookings. The real problem for the airline industry,however, was the rapid rise in oil prices. (Note: Theprice of oil has always been calculated in US dollars.)Mention to students the dramatic oil price rise.To stay in business airlines have begun to cut costs62 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 32–35 SB, 100 WBUnit 7Teacher’s Guideby cutting jobs and wages. Many have also addedfuel surcharges to the price of air tickets.EQ: Has your attitude to air travel changed since the11 September attacks, SARS and the war in Iraq? Ifyou were the head of an airline, what would you do tomanage the present situation?9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers: unemployment, moving jobs toother countries, the black economy, the privatisationdebate.A This question picks up on the quote in Viewpoint.EQ: Is the government doing enough to create jobs?What can the government do about unemployment?What kind of help do unemployed people get?B Discuss the outsourcing trend to countries likeChina (manufacturing) and India (IT / customerhelplines).EQ: Is your country very competitive in getting newcompanies? What would you think of major companiesfrom your country moving away for cheaper taxes? Ispaying taxes a patriotic thing to do?C Discuss which kinds of goods are produced orimported illegally (computer software, CDs, DVDs,brand name clothing)? (Note: Black economy black market AmEng)EQ: Do you see piracy (software, brand-name clothing,CDs) as theft? Why / Why not? Would you buy thesegoods?D Ask students to consider examples of privatisedor government-controlled companies where theylive.EQ: Why do you think businesses might be moreefficient than governments?10 Your answer: DOES ECONOMICS REALLYAFFECT ME?This question aims to take the idea of economicissues from the abstract to the personal. Studentsmight question how their life might be affected ifthere was a deep recession, stock market crash orbanking crisis; for example, unemployment,bankruptcies, cutbacks in the public sector (effectson education or healthcare), freezing of bankaccounts, ability to buy a home. The students canthink of what they can actually do to stimulate theeconomy – spend more, buy a house, invest more,start their own business (creating jobs), furthereducation or training, pay taxes.WORKBOOK1 USE OF LANGUAGE: Transitive andintransitive VerbsThis activity will introduce students to thetremendous growth in the Chinese economy. Atthe same time, this will get students to review thekey grammatical structure of the transitive andintransitive verbs. The activity is based on anauthentic test activity used by the University ofCambridge Local Examinations Syndicate in theCAE and CPE in English.1 USE OF LANGUAGE Answers(several verbs possible)1 rose / increased / expanded / grew / went up2 declining / decreasing / dropping / going down3 pushed up / increased / expanded / boosted4 go up / increase / expand / grow5 went up / was up / increased / expanded / grew6 went up / were up / increased / expanded / grew7 declined / decreased / dropped / was down8 cut / decrease2 WRITINGA SourcesJob Creation in America: How our SmallestCompanies Put the Most People to Work, David BirchGreen Job Creation in the UK, Victoria Wiltshirewww.europa.eu.int/scadplus/leg/en/s02304.htmwww.tbr.co.uk/consultancy/projects/dti_job_generation3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES: Discussing graphsThis activity will help students who are using graphsin language presentations to use the appropriatephrases for pointing out key facts and figures.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200763


Unit 7 Profit and loss Teacher’s Guide See pages 32–35 SB, 100 WB3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES Answers1e 2d 3a 4c 5b4 IDIOMSSee the introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1b 2d 3a 4e 5f 6c1 to fall off the back of a lorry to be stolen.2 to be the driving force behind to be the mainforce pushing or making changes.3 cracks in the relationship first difficulties in therelationship.4 to be caught in the poverty trap to be poor andnot able to change this.5 to be in the red to be in debt.6 to have a windfall to receive some goodluck, often money (sometimes a large amount)unexpectedly.Ask students to use the idioms orally by answeringthese questions. These can be done as pair work oras a whole class.• What do you think of Kofi Annan’s attempts to putpoverty at the top of the UN agenda?– I think it’s good that he was the driving forcebehind this measure.– Many people around the world are caught in thepoverty trap. You need some large organisationsto help if you want things to change.• How would it affect the economy if your city werechosen to host the Olympics?– I think it would be like having a windfall. A lotof money would be spent on new facilities andlots of jobs would be created.– I think there might be some cracks in therelationship with other parts of the country.– If we were in the red before, we wouldn’t beafterwards.• How does poor government regulation affect theeconomy?– I think it allows for a black economy todevelop; more people sell things that havefallen off the back of the lorry.– I think it can cause some cracks in the relationshipbetween business and government whengovernment does decide to take tougher actions.– I think a country can quickly be in the red if itdoesn’t collect taxes efficiently.64 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


ER 1 Buffy the Vampire Slayer Teacher’s GuideSee pages 36–37 SBWHAT’S NEW?Communication Ss will be able to use phrases or grammar from:Objectives: Unit 1: Contradicting expressions / Expression used before challengingUnit 2: Signposting phrases: Sequence / InferringUnit 3: Expressions for downplaying / Justifying an argumentUnit 4: Modifying words / Expressing beliefsUnit 5: Adjectives (grammar) / Expressing opinions tentativelyUnit 6: The Passive (grammar) / Expressing reservationsUnit 7: Intransitive and Transitive verbs (grammar) / Defending a point of viewEducational Ss will explore the issue of equal opportunities for both genders.Objectives:Connected – Vampire mythology – Unconventional occupationsTopics: – Superheroes – Historical inequalitiesGrammar: Phrasal verbs IdiomsKey Vocabulary: alacrity flank v remainsbe clued into flaw scowlcome to one’s senses fleeting skull and crossbonescope frown spot vcountenance glower staggercremate headstone stakecrooked husk stand one’s groundcrumbling jargon strandeddart v lay to rest stuffeddenial syndrome lumber tautdepleted lunge undertakereasy pickings newbie vampeccentric no muss, no fuss waddedexterminator prey yank vfeeding frenzy prowessferocitypuffyEXTENDED READING: Background InformationThis extract was taken from an original novel calledPrime Evil based on the popular American TV seriesBuffy the Vampire Slayer, which ran for seven seasons.The programme is about an ordinary California highschool student was chosen by some higher powers tobe the only killer (slayer) of vampires on Earth. She isendowed with incredible strength and speed, but shecan be killed. Buffy is not entirely alone, however, shegets help from a Watcher (an advisor), who alsohappens to be the school librarian. Her friends alsohelp her fight various vampires and demons.EQ: – Have you seen this television programmebefore? What do you think of the idea of theprogramme? Who do you think this programme appealsto more: men or women? Why? Why would eithergroup want to watch this show?– How does having a female lead instead of male leadcharacter make this programme different?– Do you believe in the supernatural (vampires, ghosts,werewolves)? Why do people believe in these? Why doyou think these myths have survived so long?1 READINGA is a common skimming activity. It will helpstudents writing the Reading part of the CAE, theTrinity Controlled Writing ISE III section, IELTSReading Part 2, and IGCSE Reading Parts 1 and 3.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200765


ER 1 Buffy the vampire slayer Teacher’s GuideSee pages 36–37 SB1 READING A, B, C AnswersA 287 lb: the weight of Big Jack Perkins, the latestvampire victim (para 19, page 37)Jelly: peanut butter and jelly (or jam in Br Eng) is apopular sandwich filling the USA (para 13, page 36)Butterflies: tattoo pattern (para 3, page 36)Car: a motorist’s car has broken down near thegraveyard (para 22, page 93)B1Joyce is not able to help Buffy in her dangerousjob. Joyce wants to make sure that the few thingsthat she can help with are done to the fullest; that is,making Buffy eat so much.2 Two reasons, people in Southern California drivetheir cars everywhere and people generally realisedthat the streets were dangerous at night (Too manypeople never returned from walking the dog).3 She heard that he Big Jack Perkins had been attackedand killed when closing up Tom’s Tattoo Emporium.C (Sample answers) 1 Vampire myths include: Youneed to ‘kill’ vampires by staking them through theheart. Vampires die, but come back from the grave.Vampires drink blood, so they bite people withfangs and kills people. Sunlight can kill vampires.2 IDIOMSThis activity follows the specifications of the Trinitysyllabus Grades 10 and 11 which call for studentsto have a good understanding of and ability to usevarious idioms. The correct use of idioms will helpstudents in other exams as well.2 IDIOMS AnswersA 1 to be laid to rest, 2 to come to terms with,3 easy pickings, 4 to meet someone’s match,5 to take a breakB 1 Six hours of studying? You should take a breakand come and play tennis with us.2 They had trouble coming to terms with the deathof their grandmother.3 The zebra was easy pickings for the lions as itstood alone in the tall grass.4 Oscar Wilde, Jim Morrison and Edith Piaf werelaid to rest in the same cemetery in Paris.5 The chess champion had met his / her match inthe latest supercomputer.3 UP IN ARMSThis section follows the specifications of the Trinitysyllabus Grades 10 and 11, which call for studentsto have a good understanding of and ability to usevarious phrasal verbs. It may be worthwhile topractise these verbs further. The correct use of phrasalverbs will help students in other exams as well.As these verbs all deal with physical movements,you could get students to play ‘charades’. Write thedifferent verbs on small pieces of paper. Put thepieces of paper in a cup or box. Ask a student to pickout one piece of paper and to act out the verb(without talking), while other students try to guess it.3 UP IN ARMS Answersset downthrow awaywiped offpulldipped inshoveservedthrewreached forgrabset asideyankstack somethingclawclear (the table)gripflip open something threw someone’sdumparms aroundhesitate (pause in action) drive (a stake)place backbrush offrollfist4 PORTFOLIO WRITINGA You should remind the students that this is afirst-person point of view, for example, Joycemight say: “I cooked Buffy dinner before shewent out.”A SourcesBuffy the Vampire Slayer: Prime Evil, Diana G.Gallagher. London: Pocket Books, 2000.The Elements of Style, William I. Strunk.http://owl.english.purdue.eduB SourcesHow to Write Short Stories, S. Peterson.www.bbc.co.uk/cult/vampireswww.short-stories.co.ukwww.classicreader.com/toc.php/sid.666 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 36 –37 SBER 1Teacher’s Guide5 INTERACTIVE TASKThis activity is directly based on the InteractiveTask phase of the Trinity Language Spoken ExamGrades 10 and 11. It would also be useful practicefor developing stronger communicative skills andconfidence for Parts 3 and 4 of the spoken phase ofthe CAE English exam.This activity requires students to lead theconversation, which can be a challenge for somestudents. It is important that you go round theroom to monitor the students’ communicativeleadership in this activity. They should becommenting and asking their partner questions.Silence is not an option; it is up to them to keepthe dialogue active and flowing if, and when, theirpartner begins to falter. They should already haveexperience with leading the dialogue duringTeamwork, presentation and Further Discussionactivities in previous units.To help in general, you can get students tothink of the different brainstorming activitiesthey have encountered so far in the Teamworkactivities.Comment 1: If students seem to have troublebeginning, you can help them by suggesting thatthey brainstorm some well-known action films.Have they seen these films?Comment 2: If students are having troublebeginning, you can help them by suggesting theybrainstorm more strong fictional women figuresfrom films and television. Are they the same as ordifferent from ordinary women?BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200767


QSE Advanced_Unit08 2/15/07 6:01 PM Page 68Unit 8 Into the future Teacher’s Guide See pages 38–41 SB, 101 WBWHAT’S NEW!Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – use expressions for affirming and signposting words: arguments.– use vocabulary, phrases and idioms related to the future of the planet.Educational Ss will explore current theories about possible global catastrophes.Objectives:Connected – History of natural disasters – Natural disastersTopics: – Population problems – Overfishing and ecology– Global warming – El Niño– End of the Gulf Stream – Technology as a panacea– Destruction of the rainforest – Religion and the end of the world– Super-bugs (new flu strains) – Global destruction as a film plotine– The Environmental SkepticGrammar: Verbs and prepositions Adverbial clausesKey Vocabulary: abrupt emissions (return) with a vengeanceagent epidemic rogueallegiance eradicate routineantibiotics glacier sanitationasteroid global warming shortagebiodiversity grade subsidybioweapon halt surgeblaze n helping hand sustainableblueprint ice cap swillcatastrophic infectious trawlerclimatologist ozone layer triggercontaminated patch ulterior motivedeliberate perpetrator virulentdepletionrampagingTHE BIG question: DOES THE EARTH NEED RESCUING?This question is related to the continuing politicalconflict between environmentalists and industry,and an apparently growing apathy in the generalpublic over the extent of the problem.VIEWPOINTFacts: The previous mass extinctions include:• Ordovician-Silurian extinction: 439 million yearsago, caused by the decrease and increase of waterlevel by glacier formation killing 60 per cent ofmarine genera• Late Devonian extinction: 364 million years ago,unknown causes killing 57per cent of marinegenera Permian-Triassic extinction: 251 millionyears ago, caused by asteroid impact killing 95per cent of all species• End Triassic extinction: about 200 million yearsago, caused by massive volcanic eruptions killing52 per cent of marine genera• Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction: about 65 millionyears ago, caused by asteroid, volcanic eruptionsor global warming, killing 47per cent of marinegenera and 18 per cent of land families.(Note: Hierarchy of organisms: kingdom, phylum, class,order, family, genus – pl. genera, specie – pl. species.)Source:http://biology.about.com/od/evolution68 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit08 2/15/07 6:01 PM Page 69QSE AdvancedSee pages 38–41 SB, 101 WBUnit 8Teacher’s GuideEQ: Does this worry you at all? Is there anything thatcan be learned by these previous catastrophes? How arethese previous catastrophes different from what mighthappen? Would humans survive?About half of the people aged 10–19 are poor. Aquarter of them survive on less than $1 dollar a day.These young people also represent half of all newHIV infections. Young girls are often marrying andhaving children at too young an age. In 2000, aspecial UN summit developed the MillenniumDevelopments Goals (MDGs), which had, amongothers goals, to halve poverty by 2015. These goalsare already behind schedule.Source:www.unfpa.org/swp/swpmain.htmEQ: Does this information make you optimistic orpessimistic? Why? How can young people help with theproblems with the Earth? Do you think most youngpeople care about the future of the Earth? How oftendo you think about the environment and otherproblems? What effect would worrying about things allthe time have on someone?Quotes: Richard Buckminster ‘Bucky’ Fuller(1895–1983) was an American designer, architectand inventor known for his geodesic domes. Later,the spherical molecules, carbon-60, were nicknamed‘bucky balls’ after his geodesic designs.EQ: How well do you understand how the Earthworks? Do you see humans as the drivers of the planet?Are we good or bad drivers?Photos: The photos are linked to questions toencourage students to think about overpopulationand the destruction of the environment.1 WORD POWERA gets students to consider the most likely threatsto life on Earth and the causes for the next massextinction. This activity can be extended by gettingstudents to agree or disagree with other students. Ifthey agree, they should try to use the affirmingphrases from Language Bank 8.B gets students to practise the affirming phrases fromLanguage Bank 8. Note: Mention to students thatthey may need to adapt the phrases in Language Bank8 replacing ‘you’ with ‘pessimists’ in these phrases.1 WORD POWER A, B AnswersA Control over: nuclear war, overpopulation, globalwarming, pollution, thinning of the ozone layer,shortage of fresh water, infectious diseases, loss ofbiodiversity. (Sample answers) Well, most othermass extinctions have resulted from asteroidimpacts, therefore, I think it would probably be themost likely. – I have to admit, you are probablyright there. / I would guess that overpopulationwill be the reason. We are able to sustain life at themoment with over 6 billion people, however, thenumber of humans is expected to grow to 9 billionby 2050. – That’s a good point.B (Sample answers) 1 I completely agree with thepessimists who say politicians are not doing enoughabout / to stop pollution. 2 I have to admit thepessimists are probably right there when they say thatpoliticians aren’t doing enough to stop nuclear war.ARTICLESNorth America, Europe May Cool in Warmer WorldThis article takes up a much less discussed pointabout the possible impact of future global warming.If the Earth heats up by a few degrees along theEquator, it will heat up many degrees more in northernregions and at the poles. Initially, the climate wouldbe warmer in northern regions, causing the melting ofthe polar ice caps. This would slowly release millionsof litres of fresh water into the oceans, and the risingwater could flood many coastal cities.There is another worse consequence. Scientistshave come to understand that the Gulf Stream thatsupplies Europe and eastern North America withwarmer weather could shut down, making Europeand eastern North America much colder. Thiswould have a significant impact on agriculture(imagine no grape growing in France), trade (frozensea ports and rivers in Northern Europe) andenergy costs (energy needs for heating wouldincrease; many houses are not insulated).EQ: What’s the warmest and coldest weather you haveexperienced? How might your city be different if itwere 10ºC warmer or colder throughout the year? Doyou think politicians in your country or others takeglobal warming seriously?BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200769


QSE Advanced_Unit08 2/15/07 6:01 PM Page 70Unit 8 Into the future Teacher’s Guide See pages 38–41 SB, 101 WBOpen to AttackThis article discusses developments regardinginfectious diseases. Besides the two cases mentionedin the article, anthrax and foot-and-mouth disease,there have been several cases of infectious diseasesince 2001. Severe acute respiratory syndrome(SARS) in 2003 killed 10 per cent of the 8,096people infected in 28 countries. Avian influenza(‘bird flu’) in 2003 / 2004 killed 58 per cent of the88 people infected in three countries. If this bird fluvirus begins to spread through human-to-humancontact, a pandemic may be possible. Already aproblem in the UK and other European countries,Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE, also called‘mad cow disease’) was detected in 2003 in Canadaand the United States. In 2005, a killer Asianinfluenza virus was accidentally sent in a standardlab testing kit to labs in 18 countries. It could havecaused a pandemic similar to 1957 in whichbetween 1 to 4 million people died. People bornafter 1968 have little or no immunity to the virus.EQ: Which diseases around the world worry you? (e.g.AIDS, malaria, Ebola, dengue fever, tuberculosis,leprosy) How likely is it for someone from your countryto contract these diseases? What is the relationshipbetween poverty and disease?2 READINGA is a skimming activity that requires student tofind differences in how global warming will affectdifferent countries.B gets students to find answers to specific informationin the article. See Articles section above.C 1This question tries to put the reality of thecolder temperatures in context.C 2 This question gets students to consider thereasons for experimenting with germs. You maywant to help them by asking leading questions.EQ: Should governments be experimenting withlethal viruses? If so, what can be learned from theseexperiments? If not, why not? There are permanentnuclear and chemical weapons inspectors, but nopermanent biological weapons inspectors. Why do youthink this is?2 READING A, B, C AnswersA (Sample answers) Eastern Canada / US areincorrectly assumed to not be affected by the stoppingof the Gulf Stream, but they too would experiencecolder temperatures. / Scandinavian countries willactually see a drop in temperature of 5–10ºC.Germany will see a drop in temperature of 3–4ºC. /Australia and France are getting too hot and too drycausing forest fires.Ba)Global warming melts the polar ice caps, whichrelease lots of cold water into the North Atlantic andthis could stop the warm Gulf Stream / current ofwarm waters from the Gulf of Medico towardsEurope. b) Diseases: anthrax, foot and mouthdisease; viruses: mousepox virus. Anthrax killed fivepeople; mousepox accidentally created might havebeen used to create a dangerous bioweapon; becauseof foot and mouth disease in the UK four millionanimals were slaughtered and around £3 billion lostin trade and tourism and the cost of eradicating thedisease.C 1a) (Sample answers) Germany might not beable to grow so many crops – no beer, wine, grainor other agricultural goods. It could affect theeconomy, tourism and transport. 1b) Swedenwould definitely not be able to grow many crops. Itwould also affect the economy, tourism, trade andtransport. It might make the EU’s CommonAgricultural Policy unmanageable, if many northerncountries were no longer active food producers.3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of global warming, theKyoto Protocol, rainforest depletion and epidemics.A Global warming – EQ: What effects will globalclimate change have on you and your country? Howwould the projected 50 cm to 2 m increase in sea levelsby 2100 affect your country? What impact would thishave on countries near sea level like the Netherlands,the Maldives or Bangladesh? Does global warmingworry you? Why / Why not?B Kyoto Protocol – EQ: Carbon dioxide (CO 2),methane (CH 4) and nitrous oxide (N 2O) are the three70 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit08 2/15/07 6:01 PM Page 71QSE AdvancedSee pages 38–41 SB, 101 WBUnit 8Teacher’s Guidemain ‘greenhouse’ gases (six gases in total). Where andhow are they produced? (e.g. CO 2– cars, humans /animals, industry; CH 4– industrial livestock (cows,pigs), rotting vegetation (hydro-electric dams);(N 2O) – cars, industry, industrial agriculture.) Doyou support cutting greenhouse gases? Even if it hurtsthe economy or means losing your job? Which is moreimportant – the economy or the environment? Why? Isit possible to have a healthy economy and a healthyenvironment?C Rainforest – EQ: Why are plants and treesimportant to the world climate? Is deforestation aproblem in your country? Why / Why not? When theenvironment conflicts with human development,which usually wins? Which should win? Why?D Epidemics – The 1918–19 Spanish Influenzapandemic killed between 20 and 50 million peoplearound the world, that is more people died thanwere killed in World War I. About 10 per cent ofthe global adult population died.EQ: Will the next pandemic be natural or manmade?How would more air travel increase its spread? Are weready to deal with a global pandemic? Global warmingis expected to spread tropical diseases (malaria, yellowfever) to warmer Northern countries. What impactmight this have?3 SPEAK YOUR MIND A AnswersA (Sample answer) Greenhouse gases insulate theEarth’s atmosphere. This traps the heat given off bythe sun. Temperatures rise around the world / globally.4 LISTEN DVDThis audio clip deals with Bjorn Lomborg, acontroversial Danish professor of statistics. Afterreading a book by American economist JulianSimon, Lomborg, a self-professed green, tried todebunk Simon’s theories that the Earth was in factgetting better. As Lomborg wrote in his 2001 book,The Environmental Skeptic (note AmEng spelling), heactually found Simon’s arguments to be statisticallysound. He contends that mortality rates, consumptionrates, natural resource supplies and several otherpoints are getting better. He has many notable criticsespecially for his suggestion that the money to bespent on the Kyoto Protocol (up to $350 billion)would be better spent elsewhere. Lomborg suggestsin a pure cost-benefit analysis it would be better tospend that amount of money on bringing cleandrinking water to developing countries.4 LISTEN B AnswersB1Greenpeace, 2 American economist,3 debunked, 4 Kyoto Protocol, 5 $350, 6 sanitation,7 comparisons, 8 ice cream. C (Sample answer)Lomborg might say that he thinks global warming isreal but we only have a limited amount of money tospend so the Kyoto Protocol looks too expensive forthe results we might get.5 TEAMWORKThis activity is based on the situation inYellowstone National Park, which stretches acrossthree US states – Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.The last time Yellowstone Supercaldera exploded640,000 years ago, it left a giant crater, killedeverything in within 1,600km, and spread volcanicash across western North America. Today,Yellowstone is a fairly active geological region, withactive geysers, hot springs and between a thousandand three thousand earthquakes every year. Morerecently, geologists have discovered a large bulge,about the length of seven football pitches, beneathYellowstone Lake, which is evidence of a build-upof gas or magma. The scenario is based on whatgeologists believe would have happened during thelast eruption, however, make sure that studentsknow that geologists are only moderately concerned.The odds of another caldera-size eruption are lesslikely than winning a lottery.Source:www.nps.gov/yell, http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/yvo6 CONTROVERSYThe issue of overfishing is a very serious globalissue. A large part of this problem is created bygovernments which give large subsidies tocommercial fishing fleets. The World Wildlife Fundestimates that government subsidies account foralmost 20 per cent of the value of the world’sannual commercial fish catch, an estimated $76–$80BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200771


QSE Advanced_Unit08 2/15/07 6:01 PM Page 72Unit 8 Into the future Teacher’s Guide See pages 38–41 SB, 101 WBbillion. The countries which subsidise most areJapan, the USA, China and from the EU. Anexample of what may happen can be seen inCanada’s east coast cod fishery. Once the largestsupply of cod in the world, this fishery closedcompletely in 1992 due to depleted stocks, andthese stocks have still not recovered. The problemdoes not have any easy solution, but many nationalpoliticians want to keep subsidies because they donot want to lose votes from fishing communities ifjobs are lost.EQ: Do you go fishing or eat fish often? How wouldunemployed fishermen earn a living? What problemswould coastal communities face? Is fish farming thesolution? What would happen if there were no fish left?Source:www.fao.org, www.wwf.org7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A SourcesThe End of the Line: How Overfishing is Changingthe World and What We Eat, Charles CloverFish, Markets and Fishermen: The Economics ofOverfishing, Suzanne Ludicellowww.panda.org/stopoverfishing, http://archive.greenpeace.org/oceans/globaloverfishing/deadahead.htmlB SourcesCatastrophe: Risk and Response, Richard A. Posnerwww.aoml.noaa.gov/general/lib/hurricbro.htmlwww.bt.cdc.gov/disasters, www.unep.org8 METEOROLOGY in English [CLIL]The El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) has anenormous effect on global weather patterns. El Niño(Spanish for ‘the child’) was named after the InfantJesus by early Peruvian fishermen who noticed theunusually warm water around Christmastime. ElNiño (ENSO warm episode) pushes warm waterfrom Australia / SW Pacific Ocean to the west coastof South America. La Niña (also called the ‘Littlegirl’, ‘El Viejo’, anti-El Niño, or a cold episode)pushes cold water from Antarctica up towards thewest coast of South America and toward Australia.These warm / cold movements have alternatedregularly in past centuries with fairly even numbersof warm and cold years; since 1950, however,climatologists have noticed a trend in which El Niñooccurred 31 per cent to 23 per cent for La Niña (theremaining time was normal). Since 1990 El Niñooccurred five times compared to two for La Niña.Some climatologists, such as Kevin Trenberth of theUS National Center for Atmospheric Research,believe that global warming is contributing to morefrequent and intense warm episodes, but computermodels can not yet prove this conclusively.The effect of more El Niños has led to dramaticchanges in weather. Oceania, north and eastAustralia, SE Africa, NE South America, the Indiansub-continent, western North America and thesouthern Caribbean had extremely dry weather,causing fires and droughts. Other regions, such asthe SE United States, Central Africa, NW and SESouth America and Northern Europe, saw morefloods and landslides.EQ: Do you think El Niño has affected your country?Have there been very wet or very dry years? Have you everhad floods, landslides, droughts or large fires? If so, whathappened? If not, what effect would these have? Howmight changing weather patterns affect your country?SourcesOur Affair with El Niño, S. George PhilanderEl Niño: The Weather Phenomenon that Changed theWorld, Ross Couper-Johnstonwww.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov, www.pmel.noaa.gov,www.cdc.noaa.gov9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers the topics of: Malthus’population theory, reliance on technology, religionand apocalyptic beliefs, and apocalyptic film plots.A Try to get students to consider the current 6billion population and the projected 9 billion by2050 and the resources available on the Earth.EQ: What effects does human overpopulation have?How large is your country’s population? Is it increasingor decreasing? What social, economic and politicaleffects might this have? Genetically modified (GM)foods may provide a solution to world hunger. Do youagree with GM food production?72 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit08 2/15/07 6:01 PM Page 73QSE AdvancedSee pages 38–41 SB, 101 WBUnit 8Teacher’s GuideB This question looks at the belief that technologycan solve most of humanity’s problems.EQ: Give some examples where technology has solvedworld problems. Give examples where technology hascreated world problems. Given that most technology isdeveloped for business purposes, is there a market forsaving the environment?C Some conservative US politicians openlyadvocate anti-environmental policies on religiousgrounds. See also www.apocalypsesoon.org andwww.raptureready.com.EQ: What do different religions believe about the endof the world? The environmental movement is a 20thcentury phenomenon. Most religions are manycenturies old. How can you reconcile ancient beliefswith the modern world?D Some apocalypse movies: Armageddon, The Core,Deep Impact, Independence Day, Godzilla, Outbreak,Hellboy, 28 Days Later, The Day after Tomorrow,Terminator 1, 2 and 3, Constantine, Dr. Strangelove,Planet of the Apes, Mad Max.EQ: Why do you think the media is so interested indoomsday scenarios? Are films about the end of theworld just light entertainment or just in bad taste?10 Your answer: DOES THE EARTH NEEDRESCUING?This question tries to get students to address themain theme of the unit: Are they optimistic orpessimistic about the future of the Earth? Optimistscan discuss what will lead to these improvements(e.g. technology, human activity) and whether theEarth’s looming environmental catastrophe has beenoverstated (e.g. the environmental sceptic, Malthusand GM foods). Pessimists can discuss what can bedone locally and globally to help (e.g. grassrootsaction, changing government policy, ending subsidies).WORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will give students the chance topractise signposting words for arguments fromLanguage Bank 8.1 WORD POWER Answers1 Although / Whereas 2 As a result3 Similarly 4 However / But5 In the same way / Similarly / As a result.2 USE OF LANGUAGE: Verbs and prepositionsThis activity gives information about the problemsrelating to geomagnetic reversal, the process inwhich the Earth’s magnetic poles are reversing.The magnetic field around the Earth protects alllife from lethal cosmic radiation. During thesereversals, the field weakens and cosmic radiationcan shower the Earth killing everything. Theactivity is based on an activity type for the CAEand CPE exams.2 USE OF LANGUAGE Answers2 1 to 2 of 3 by 4 in 5 during 6 up7 off 8 with 9 from 10 up 11 about, by3 WRITINGA SourcesOECD, Energy to 2050: Scenario for a SustainableFutureGlobal 2050: A Basis for Speculation, John Colewww.futurist.com, www.census.gov/ipc/www/worldpop.htmlwww.wfs.orgB SourcesTerraforming: Engineering Planetary Environments,Martyn J. FoggA Traveller’s Guide to Mars, William K. Hartmannwww.redcolony.comwww.bio2.com4 IDIOMS4 IDIOMS Answers1e 2a 3d 4c 5f 6b1 the tip of the iceberg only a small part of thewhole (often used for a problem). 2 to turn over anew leaf to change one’s ways / what you do.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200773


QSE Advanced_Unit08 2/15/07 6:01 PM Page 74Unit 8 Into the future Teacher’s Guide See pages 38–41 SB, 101 WB3 a recipe for disaster very likely to lead to a verynegative result. 4 to go against the grain to goagainst your or other people’s wishes. 5 a smallworld for unexpected connections betweenpeople or things that seemed unknown to eachother / unconnected. 6 a ray of hope some hope.Ask students to use the idioms when answeringthese questions orally. This can be done as pairwork or as a class.• How worried are people in your country aboutenvironmental problems?– I think they’ve turned over a new leaf since the1960s. Many people are concerned about theenvironment today.– It’s such a small world. I wouldn’t have thoughtthat something like El Niño so far away couldaffect the weather here.– I think you are going against the grain if you arenot worried about the environment.• Does it bother you that so many species are dying out?– I think there is still a ray of hope that thingswill improve. I mean at least everyone isdiscussing it it now.– I’ve heard that the loss of species today is just thetip of the iceberg compared to the future. Millionsof species could die because of global warming.– Yes, I think it would a recipe for disaster iftoday’s species died out.• Do you think there will be a global pandemic inyour lifetime?– I think you would go against the grain not to sayyes when so many scientists are predicting it.– I think there is still a ray of hope that a pandemiccould be contained, as SARS was in 2003.74 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit09 2/10/07 7:01 PM Page 75Unit 9 Free to choose Teacher’s Guide See pages 42–45 SB, 102 WBWHAT’S NEW!Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – use interrupting expressions and signposting phrases relating to arguments.– use independence-related vocabulary, phrases and idioms.Educational Ss will explore the value of having personal and national independence.Objectives:Connected – Newly independent countries – Independence movementsTopics: – Moving out for the first time – Physical challenges to independence– Rates of independence between – Anarchygenders– Scottish independence– Italian mammoni – Financial dependence– Responsibilities and place to – Terrorism and freedom fightinglive — own apartmentGrammar: Word forms PronounsKey Vocabulary: accessible elated reliableacquaintance family nest redressautonomy futile step upbarter grievance sueceasefire handiwork temperedcold-blooded handout trustworthycredibility leave the nest unfurnisheddeplore male chauvinist upkeepdevolution proclivity violatedump v rebel v yearnThe BIG question: WHY DO PEOPLE WANT TO BE INDEPENDENT?This questions deals with the fundamental drivein both individuals and among nations to seekindependence.VIEWPOINTCartoon: The issue of nest-leaving has been studiedquite actively within the European Union. It isbelieved to have significant effects on consumerbuying habits and the long-term financial statusof older individuals. EU policy makers need tounderstand the typical EU household dynamics ifthey aim to develop workable policies for acrossthe region.Sourceswww.eco.rug.nl/~espe2002/Mazzuco.pdfwww.iza.org/iza/en/papers/transatlantic/1_kluve.pdfwww.demogr.mpg.de/Papers/Working/WP-2001-038.pdfEQ: Why do you think there are such differencesbetween these countries? Would you want to be stillliving at home at 30 years old?Facts:• East Timor: Having been colonised by thePortuguese, invaded by the Japanese andoccupied by the Indonesians, East Timorbecame independent following severaldecades of resistance to Indonesia rule.Some 250,000 East Timorese are believedto have died.• Serbia and Montenegro: Yugoslavia underwenta bloody civil war through the early 1990swith atrocities committed by all sides. Note: In2006 people in Montenegro voted to becomeindependent of Serbia.• Tuvalu and Tongo: Both former British protectorates,they became independent in the 1970s. They did notseek UN recognition until recently.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200775


QSE Advanced_Unit09 2/10/07 7:01 PM Page 76Unit 9 Free to choose Teacher’s Guide See pages 42–45 SB, 102 WB• Andorra: It has been a co-principality since 1278ruled by France and Spain. In 1993, it became aparliamentary democracy with two heads of staterepresented by France and Spain.• Eritrea: Annexed by Ethiopia in 1962, Eritreafought a 30-year war of independence. Anotherborder war began with Ethiopia in 1998 to2000.Source:CIA World Factbook. www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/index.htmlEQ: Why do you think these countries sought UNrecognition? Why does it matter if other countriesrecognise your existence or not?Quote: Bill Cosby became a US cultural iconthrough his work in stand-up comedy and television.Although he is most remembered for The CosbyShow and Fat Albert TV programmes, he is also anoted educational philanthropist and an outspokenleader in the African-American community.EQ: Why is this quote funny? Is it unnatural forchildren to return home?1 WORD POWERA gets students to consider vocabulary related toindependence.1 WORD POWER A Answersgovernment, decentralisation, legitimate, nationalism,freedom, emancipation, individualistB gets students to practise signposting phrases andthe vocabulary in A.ARTICLESMummy’s Boys (and Girls)This article discusses the interesting Italian culturalphenomenon whereby grown children tend toleave the parental home considerably later than inother EU countries. Although among Westerncountries, this may be unusual, close family tiesinto adulthood predominate elsewhere. In parts ofthe Middle East, Asia and Africa, clan structuresunderline the question of residence. For instance, inSaudia Arabia, tradition and traditional architecturemake it common for newlyweds to set up homewithin a family compound. Also Saudi womenusually don’t leave their parental home until aftermarriage.As was seen in the reading text for Unit 5, Japanesechildren often get financial help and live at homelonger due to the high cost of living. Historicallyspeaking, the situation was not that different in thepast in most Western countries where adult childrentended to live with their parents until marriage.EQ: Is independence from parents seen positivelyor negatively in your culture? Why? How is adultindependence similar to or different from teenagerebellion?Surprising ceasefireThis article discusses a very controversial issue thatexists in both North Ireland and Spain. In bothcases, groups have sought independence from agovernment power they do not recognise.• Basque region: The Basque people are anindigenous group located in four Spanish and threeFrench provinces. They have a long history in theregion, but much of the current nationalist fervourstems from the Spanish civil war era. After the1937 Basque government defeat, General Francointroduced laws repressing minority cultures acrossSpain. In 1959, the Euskadi Ta Askatasuna (‘BasqueCountry and Liberty’), or ETA, was formed.Although initially ETA was peaceful and popularduring the Franco years, it quickly turned toarmed resistance and lost public support as Spainbecame democratic. Over thirty years, ETA hasbeen responsible for the deaths of 817 people.• Northern Ireland: In 1801, the kingdoms ofIreland and Great Britain joined under the Actof Union to become the United Kingdom. In1921, the Government of Ireland Act allowedthe different counties of Ireland to opt out ofUnion. Six counties in the North Irelandprovince of Ulster were largely for the Unionand chose to stay in it. This has lead to theongoing situation between Ulster Unionists andIrish Republicans. With militant groups formedon both sides, there have been over 3,500 deathssince 1969.76 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit09 2/10/07 7:01 PM Page 77QSE AdvancedSee pages 42–45 SB, 102 WBUnit 9Teacher’s GuideEQ: What do you think of these groups? Do youthink attitudes to terrorism have changed over theyears?2 READINGA covers an important language skill that might notbe present in some countries. The polite way tointerrupt is to wait until the person takes a breathand use one of the appropriate phrases in LanguageBank 9.B reflects an upper intermediate structuralunderstanding highlighted by both Trinity andCambridge exams. Students need to work outwhat the pronouns refers to in the text.2 READING B Answers1 ‘It’ refers to the fact that ‘Italian children leavehome so late in life’.2 ‘It’ refers to the situation of “Italian students(who) don’t graduate until their late twenties.3 ‘It’ refers to the child not paying for housekeepingeven though they can afford to pay.4 ‘He’ refers to the 29-year old man who sued hisparents to support him.5 ‘They’ refers to the mothers of these young women.C will help the students focus their arguments aboutthe two main types of independence in the unit.D 1 This question tries to personalise the issue ofthe mammoni. However, if the issue is difficult forstudents, culturally or otherwise, you may want todiscuss the issue more in terms of the society as awhole.D 2This question requires students need to knowa bit about their country’s history. It would helpto provide students with concrete examples. Forinstance, how would the United States be differentif Britain was still in charge? How would Francebe different if Nazi Germany was still in control?It may require you to give a hypothetical scenarioas well.EQ: At what age, do most children move out in yourcountry? How does this compare with other countries?Do daughters move out before sons in your country?Why / Why not?3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of causes of leavinghome, community values, and independencemovements.A EQ: Have you moved out of your parent’s home?If so, what has it been like? If not, why not? Whatmotivated you or would motivate you to leave homefor the first time? What difficulties can someoneexpect when they first move out?B EQ: Do you see this as positive or negative thing?Why? Is it possible to have independence in a culturewhich stresses very strong family and community ties?Do you think globalisation is affecting these ties?C EQ: Are there or have there been any independencemovements in your country or countries nearby? Ifso, what effect have they had? Do you viewindependence movements positively or negatively?Why? Give examples. Should all people haveindependence? Why / Why not?4 LISTEN DVDThis audio clip deals with Beth Finke and herguide dog Hanni as they cross the busy Chicagostreets. Ms Finke lost her sight at the age of 26after developing complications from diabetes.She has written a book, Long Time, No See, abouther experiences of learning how to live without hereyesight. She is regular contributor to public radioin the US. It is worth visiting her website,www.bethfinke.com, to read more about her lifeand listen to other audio clips. Note: When Bethis out on the street she is describing how she andHanni work together, and sometimes she is talkingto the dog. ‘Lab’ is short for Labrador (a breed ofdog).A You can try to get students to think aboutthe five senses and what it would mean to loseeach. Likewise, you can discuss what it wouldbe like to lose the use of different parts of thebody.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200777


QSE Advanced_Unit09 2/10/07 7:01 PM Page 78Unit 9 Free to choose Teacher’s Guide See pages 42–45 SB, 102 WB4 LISTEN B, C AnswersB1Guide dogs don’t understand street lights.2 Guide dogs can identify danger.3 Guide dogs are not meant to be guard dogs.4 Guide dogs can lead someone down the street.C1mix (of Labrador and Golden Retriever)2 She waits for the lights to change, listens to thetraffic stop, waits for next light then can go.3 It means to wait for the traffic lights to changefrom one direction then the other direction.4 (Sample answer) Beth needs to correct Hanni alot, but she uses an encouraging tone of voice,almost as if she is taking to a child. It could beunsafe to let Hanni do whatever she wanted. Bethtalks normally to the listeners.5 TEAMWORKThis activity was designed to give students anopportunity to discuss the reality involved in beingindependent for the first time. Because this activityis supposed to represent an authentic situation, itmight be helpful for students to have access to localnewspapers (classifieds section for rentals or usedfurniture), home furnishing catalogues(www.ikea.com), or home decoration magazines toremind them about things they might like to haveor need. It would also be useful to get the studentsto think about the apartment room by room. Forexample, in the kitchen, the friend will need plates,cups and saucers, pots and pans and so on.SourcesMr. Thrifty’s How to Save Money on AbsolutelyEverything, Jane FurnivalLeaving the Nest: The Complete Guide to Living onYour Own, Dorinne and Richard Armstrongwww.interiordec.about.com/od/firstapttips6 CONTROVERSYAnarchism is a related group of political philosophiescharacterised by their opposition to an imposedauthority (government) and social hierarchy.Fundamentally, they have an optimistic belief thatleft to their own devices, humans could operatetogether without need of a higher power. Its originsare not entirely clear, possibly dating back to Athensin 404 BC.Modern anarchy shares many of its basics ideaswith communism, and early anarchists often workedwith communists. Some anarchists have in the pastadvocated the violent overthrow of government. Thiswas the case of the young anarchist, Gavrilo Princip,whose assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinandof Austria helped trigger World War I. Likecommunism, anarchy was an enigma that was fearedin the West. By the 1950s, it had by and large begunto fade into academic obscurity. However, it hashad something of a renaissance with the Sex Pistols1976 song Anarchy in the UK. Today, it is commonto see black-clad anarchists protesting at variousInternational Economic Forums like the World TradeOrganisation meetings. It should be pointed out tostudents that some, but not all, anarchists advocateviolent overthrow of government.EQ: What do you think of anarchy? Would the worldwork without governments? Why / Why not? Wouldit be a better place?SourcesAnarchism: A Documentary History of LibertarianIdeas: From Anarchy to Anarchism (300CE to 1939),Robert GrahamThe Philosophy of Punk Rock: More than Noise!!Craig O’Harahttp://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archiveshttp://www.greenanarchy.org7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A SourcesAfrica Since Independence: A Comparative History,Paul NugentA History of Cyprus: From Foreign Domination toTroubled Independence, Stavros PantelliThe Oxford History of the British Empire: 20thCentury, Vol. 4., ed. Judith Brownwww.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbookwww.economist.com/countriesB SourcesThe Real Freshman Handbook, Jennifer HansonFreshman Dorm series, Linda A. Cooneywww.personal.u-net.com/~ic/fr_guide.htmlMost universities also have webpages regarding lifeon campus.78 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit09 2/10/07 7:01 PM Page 79QSE Advanced8 HISTORY in English [CLIL]See pages 42–45 SB, 102 WB9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONUnit 9Teacher’s GuideThere is archaeological evidence pointing to the firstinhabitants of Scotland arriving around 8000 BC,however, the first written history of Scotland datesback to the Roman rule of Britain. The Romansinvaded around AD 79. Having met with fierceresistance from the Northern Celtic tribes, mainlyScots and Picts (the ancestors of modern Scots),Roman emperor Hadrian had a wall built to dividethe south from the Northern barbarians in AD 122.When the Germanic tribes (Angles, Saxons, etc.)invaded in 440, the Celts were pushed further north.Between 843 and 1034, the Celtic tribes wereconsolidated under a single Scottish kingdom. Muchof the consolidation in this period was over fears ofthe Viking invaders. While most of the Viking raidshappened south of Scotland, the Vikings did occupyparts of Eastern Scotland and the Orkney Islands. In1314, Robert Bruce succeeded in creating a Scottishkingdom independent of England. Historianssometimes date the beginnings of Scotland as acountry back to 834, but it did not become fullyindependent of English control until Robert Bruce.Note: Great Britain includes England, Scotland andWales. The United Kingdom includes Great Britainand Northern Ireland.EQ: What did you know about Scottish people andScotland, or its history before? Does this change youropinion at all?The ‘modern’ Scottish independence movement waslargely peaceful. Is peaceful independence the exceptionto the rule? How does the Scottish experience compare toyour country’s history?Robert Bruce is a hero to many Scots. Do ancestorsreally have any connection to the reality of modern life?The Scottish diaspora (emigrant communities) can befound today in Australia, Canada, the United Statesand other countries. Was there a diaspora from yourcountry in other countries? How similar are diasporacommunities to their mother country? Give examples.Sourceswww.britannia.com/celtic/scotland/history_scotland.htmlwww.rampantscotland.com/history.htmwww.bbc.co.uk/scotland/historywww.scotshistoryonline.co.uk/This section covers the topics of financialindependence, distance from the family, andterrorism versus freedom fighters.A EQ: If a country accepts financial help (IMF, aid,etc.), is it really independent? With globalisationand the integration of the world economy, is anycountry truly independent?B Try to discuss the need for family bonds.EQ: Does absence really ‘make the heart grow fonder’?How would moving to another country affect yoursense of belonging to your family, culture and country?C EQ: How would you define terrorism? Is nationalindependence more important than human life? Whydo terrorist groups often target civilians?10 Your answer: WHY DO PEOPLE WANTTO BE INDEPENDENT?This question tries to get students to think aboutthe underlying themes in this unit. The studentscan address this question any number of ways. Itcan be looked at in terms of:• Nationalism – why do we care whether webelong to one country or another• Economics – having a place to live in, being ableto earn a living• A purely emotional level – the sense of belongingand owning something of one’s own. Try to getstudents to think about the deeper meaning ofpersonal and national independence. You mayeven get them to answer the hypotheticalquestion: What if you had no independence?WORKBOOK1 USE OF LANGUAGE: Word formsThis activity introduces another perspective on theissue of independence with the case of Nicaragua inthe 20th century. The activity is based on an authentictest activity used by the University of CambridgeLocal Examinations Syndicate in the CAE and CPE.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200779


QSE Advanced_Unit09 2/10/07 7:01 PM Page 80Unit 9 Free to choose Teacher’s Guide See pages 42–45 SB, 102 WB1 USE OF LANGUAGE Answers1 leaving 2 nationalised 3 immunisation4 democratically 5 assassination2 WRITINGA SourcesMost countries have government internet sitesdealing with the history of their country, however,you can encourage students to write this from anemotional perspective. This also ties in with theunit’s Big Question.www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbookwww.economist.com/countriesB SourcesYou can encourage students to write this as either ahumorous satirical piece or as a serious thoughtexercise. Some examples of city states:www.visitsingapore.comwww.visitmonaco.comwww.tuvaluislands.comwww.vatican.va3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES: Using the active andpassive voicesThe passive voice is identified by the use ofthe verb ‘to be’ and with the (optional) useof ‘by’, for example He was struck by a car. Itis often used in formal writing to put somedistance between the speaker and the action inthe sentence.4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1d 2b 3e 4c 5a1 to reach a turning point to come to a key /important moment. 2 an eye-opener a surprisingexperience. 3 a red-letter day a memorable,important or very happy moment. 4 a goldenopportunity an excellent opportunity. 5 a close-knitfamily a family whose members are very close toeach other.Ask students to use the idioms when answeringthese questions orally. This can be done as pairwork or as a class.• How important is family to you?– We are a close-knit family so it is very important.– It was a real eye-opener when my uncle died. Ididn’t realise how important family was to meuntil then.• What will it be like / what was it like to move outfor the first time?– I think it will be a golden opportunity to proveto my parents that I can take care of myself.– It was certainly a red-letter day. My mumcried when I left for college. My dad was veryproud.– It was an eye-opener for sure. I hadn’t realisedhow hard it might be.• How do people feel about independence movementsin your country?– Given the negative public feeling towards thesegroups, it would be a golden opportunity forthem to try peaceful political means.– I think the bombings have been a realeye-opener for many people who didn’t takethese issues seriously.80 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p81-87 3/6/07 3:53 PM Page 81Unit 10 Do I get a say? Teacher’s Guide See pages 46–49 SB, 103 WBWHAT’S NEW!Communication Ss will be able to use:Objectives: – expressions for challenging arguments and opinions.– intensifiers.– vocabulary, phrases and idioms related to individual rights.Educational Ss will explore the issue of individual rights.Objectives:Connected – Road to individual rights – Dilemma of the political prisonerTopics: – Limits of free speech – Minority language rights– Prisoner rights – The state versus the individual– Slavery in the 21st century – Power, wealth and status and– Immigration laws and human rights equality of rights– Political elites and the – The right to bear armsright to hold office– Differences between countries’ rights– EuthanasiaGrammar: Adverbs Reported speech ArticlesKey Vocabulary: assembly hunger strike sinisterasylum storm of controversy regimeacquaintance detain demiseindigenous spate tolerantchorerootsprevalence quick to jump onThe BIG question: DO I GET A SAY?This expression used when people are arguing andwant to give their point of view draws students’attention to the desire of individuals to feel they areallowed to give their opinion or have some controlover their lives.VIEWPOINTFacts: This was part of the Teens and Freedomsurvey conducted by USA Today’s USA Weekend.219,350 students aged 13 to 19 from across the USwere asked about their views on many differentsubjects.Source:www.usaweekend.com/97_issues/970504/970504teen_cov.htmlEQ: Do you think the situation is similar in yourcountry? Why do you think young people feel this way?When you were a teenager, did you feel your parentsrestricted your freedom too much? If so, how? If not,why not?Separation of state and religion is often a divisiveissue in many countries. Conservative groups oftenprefer greater government adherence to religiousprinciples. Liberal groups often prefer religion tobe totally excluded from government. Much of thedebate revolves around whether the religious rules(Biblical – ‘ten commandments’, canonical laws,Koranical) should apply in the legal systems.While most governments do explicitly state a trueseparation, there is often an implicit historicalacknowledgement of religious doctrines.Source:Pew Research Institute, “Views of a changing world2001” 2002. p. 115. From: http://people-press.org/reports/pdf/185.pdfEQ: Do you agree that ‘it’s necessary to believe in Godto be moral and have good values’? This dichotomysuggests that non-believers or believers of differentfaiths are immoral. Do you agree?Quote: Hubert Humphrey (1911–78) was a US VicePresident from 1965–69 under President LyndonJohnson. Although a social reformer, he is moreBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200781


QSE Adv TG p81-87 3/6/07 3:53 PM Page 82Unit 10 Do I get a say? Teacher’s Guide See pages 46–49 SB, 103 WBremembered for his support for the Vietnam War andlosing the 1968 presidential election to Richard Nixon.EQ: Why is this quote funny? What does this implyabout free speech? Do you think everyone should beheard? Do you like to listen to different points of views?The picture is symbolic of the restrictions that manyyoung people feel in the transition from childhoodinto adulthood.1 WORD POWERA gets students to consider different individual rights.1 WORD POWER A Answers1b 2h 3d 4c 5f 6e 7i 8a 9gNotes:The plural of paparazzo is paparazzi.Under the United Nations’ Universal Declaration ofHuman Rights (1948).Article 3: Everyone has the right to life, liberty andsecurity of person. (This is the case referred to inExercise 1 for 1b.)It should also be noted that in the US and UK,the expression ‘right to life’ is often used byanti-abortion campaigners as a way of emphasisingtheir belief in the rights of the unborn child.B gets students to practise expressions forchallenging arguments and opinions and thevocabulary in A.1 WORD POWER B Sample answerPaparazzi arrested for spying on a celebrity: Theevidence simply doesn’t support your argument.Where’s the proof? My client took the pictureswhile the person was on a public beach.ARTICLESSlavery in Niger – Battling Against The OddsThis article discusses a controversial and taboosubject in parts of Africa. Although banned byinternational treaties – the League of Nations 1926Slavery Convention, UN’s 1948 UniversalDeclaration of Human Rights and the UN’s 1956Supplementary Convention on the Abolition ofSlavery, slavery still exists around the world, fromthe trafficking of women and children in the sextrade, forced unpaid labour by prisoners, andvarious other forms of indentured service.The case in Niger is especially troubling given thatslavery is officially banned according to the 1999Niger Constitution and Penal Code, yet an estimated8 per cent of the population are still slaves. Accordingto the local anti-slavery group Timidria, local andstate governments have been allowed slavery tocontinue; the slave-owning classes often refuse evento acknowledge it exists. However, education andpublic-awareness campaigns seem to be bringingabout change, as can be seen with the case of Assibit.Source:www.antislavery.orgEQ: Why do you think slavery continues into the 21stcentury? What can be done to stop it? Do you thinkpeople in your country are aware of or care about theproblem?Police Powers Extended in Yob CrackdownThis article discusses a very controversial law in theUK. British tabloids have for many years usedexamples of yob violence to create sensationalistheadlines. The police have found the law useful forcracking down on the troublemakers within theirjurisdictions. Aimed at nuisance neighbours androwdy youth, the law does away with the entiredue process procedure, which remains a crucialcivil rights issue. Police or city council can basicallyban individuals from being in an area by issuing aanti-social banning order, or ASBO. One family inScotland was even banned from their own housebecause of their continued rowdy behaviour.Note:ASBO is pronounced EQ: What do you think of this law? Do you have thesame kinds of problems as in the UK? What can policein your country do if some troublemakers refuse toabide by laws? Do you think ASBOs would work or beneeded in your country?2 READINGA is a skimming activity that allows furtherexpansion of students’ knowledge of idioms.82 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p81-87 3/6/07 3:53 PM Page 83QSE AdvancedSee pages 46–49 SB, 103 WBUnit 10Teacher’s Guide2 READING A Answers1 crackdown 2 hotspot 3 disperse 4 vandalB gives students a chance to practise reported speech.C 1 This question tries to contextualise the issueof slavery in terms of how the slave-owning classeswould view the issue. It requires the students toattribute beliefs and emotions not inherent in thetext. You may need to ask the obvious relatedquestion: Why do the slave owners and others insociety not want to talk about this issue?C 2 gets students to speculate from their ownexperience. This requires only anecdotal evidence.3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of status of rights inthe student’s country, free speech, the right to freemovement, slavery, and dealing with anti-socialbehaviour.A EQ: Describe the historical development ofindividual rights in your country. Has everyone alwayshad the same rights as you have now? Do people reallycare about their rights today? If you did not have allthese rights, would you miss them?B EQ: Should hate speech or any kind of speech becensored? Why / Why not?C EQ: If you could live anywhere, where would youchoose?D EQ: How and why were slaves used? Manycountries and people are wealthy today from the workof slaves. Should descendents of slaves be paid bydescendents of slave owners for their ancestors’ unpaidlabour? Why do you think former slave-owningnations such as the USA or Brazil refuse to discuss thetopic of reparation payments to African slavedescendants?E EQ: Is it fair to target all young people for theactions of a few?4 LISTEN DVDThis audio clip is about the Tranquillity BayWWASP facility in Jamaica. WWASP is only onechain of schools among a group of schools forso-called troubled young people. Many others oftenemploy military-style boot camps. In many cases,these schools are located away from the continentalUS, which frees them from United States laws.These laws would for instance not allow beatings,forced confinement, kidnapping, starvation andother behaviour-modification measures. The solepurpose of these measures is to force the ‘students’ atthese schools to submit to the will and authority oftheir superiors, the staff and parents. It is notdissimilar to the basic training for US Marines.Parents are often not given access to the childrenduring the treatment. They get the end result, but theyare often unaware or unconcerned about any abuses –the ends justify the means. As for the students, therehave been a number of suicides and accidental deathsat different schools over the years, including the 2004suicide of a girl at a Montana WWASP facility.4 LISTEN B, C AnswersB What actually happened: Child is put in isolationfor a few days. Head is shaved, given a uniform andjoin a family. They are forbidden to speak, move,stand up or sit down.C 1The teenagers come from the USA, Canadaand the UK. Most are American.2 A group of 20 other children.3 The programme costs $40,000 a year.4 Missing / Not going to school, not getting goodgrades / marks at school, having undesirablefriends, trying cannabis; girls having a boyfriend theirparents don’t approve of or becoming sexually active.D You should try to get students to understand thesituation from the parents’ point of view.5 TEAMWORKThis activity is loosely based on the ancient Greek‘boule’ system. The boule was the city council forthe city-states. In democratic city-states like Athens,the boule positions were chosen in a random lotteryfrom the city’s aristocrats. These city councillorswould then be required to run the daily affairs ofthe city for one year.Although students should be given freedom tocreate whichever types of candidates they want, theyshould try to analyse how these people’s backgroundBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200783


QSE Adv TG p81-87 3/6/07 3:53 PM Page 84Unit 10 Do I get a say? Teacher’s Guide See pages 46–49 SB, 103 WBmight affect the rule of law. Given this analysis,they should try to focus more on authentic orrealistic people.SourcesThe Greeks, H.D.F. Kittowww.ancientgreece.comwww.bbc.co.uk/schools/ancientgreece/main_menu.shtml6 CONTROVERSYEuthanasia became a national issue in theNetherlands following the case of Dr. GeertruidaPostma in 1973. She gave her mother a lethalinjection of morphine following her mother’sprolonged suffering after a brain haemorrhage.Postma was convicted of voluntary euthanasia butreceived only a suspended sentence. The court laidthe groundwork for what later became the conditionson which a person may be allowed to choose to die:an incurable illness, unbearable (mental or physical)suffering, a request to die, to be in the final stageof illness and the consent of the physician. TheTermination of Life on Request and Assisted SuicideAct was passed into law in the Netherlands in 2002.EQ: What do you think about euthanasia? What arethe laws in your country? If someone should chooseeuthanasia, under what circumstances should it beallowed? Some Dutch politicians worry that this rightmay lead to euthanasia tourism. Is this a real fear?SourcesEuthanasia (Just the Facts Series), Robert PoolNegotiating a Good Death: Euthanasia in theNetherlands, Linda A. Jacksonwww.nvve.nl/englishwww.euthanasia.comwww.kevork.org7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A SourcesThe Future of Women’s Rights: Global Visions andStrategies, Joanna Kerrwww.un.org/Overview/rights.htmlwww.hrw.org/womenhttp://iwraw.igc.orgB Sourceswww.wwasp.comwww.nospank.nethttp://fornits.com/anonanon/docs/wwasp/mvm8LAW in English [CLIL]Although there has been some cultural frictionbetween the Francophones in Quebec and theAnglophones in the rest of Canada, a tenuousbalance had been managed through powersharing in the national government. However,this changed in the 1960s when Quebecunderwent the Quiet Revolution. A combinationof events lead to a polarisation in Quebec politics,stressing Quebec’s right to separate administrativepowers such as tax collection. The French-speakersfumed at the indifference displayed in severalwell-publicised labour disputes, while muchof Canada was unaware of the growingresentment.The desire for recognition shifted to a demandfor independence. By the end of the decade, apro-independence terrorist group called the Front deliberation du Québec (FLQ) had begun a bombingand kidnapping spree leaving the Quebec LabourMinister, Pierre Laporte, murdered. Although theFLQ was quashed by instituting martial law, thedemands for independence continued to grow. By1976, the Parti Québecois was elected in Quebecwith a mandate to hold an independencereferendum.After several failed independence referendums,several failed attempts at constitutionalreconciliation and a generally buoyant economy inQuebec, the independence movement has stalled.Although the French language is not a direct causeof this dispute, the French language and its placein Canadian society is symbolic of the largerconstitutional dispute. So for many Quebeckers,controlling language rights is necessary to exhibitsome sense of control in a process they feel to beoutside their control.EQ: How are minority languages treated in yourcountry? How should they be treated? What is thesignificance of a language being defined as an officiallanguage?84 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p81-87 3/6/07 3:53 PM Page 85QSE AdvancedSee pages 46–49 SB, 103 WBUnit 10Teacher’s GuideMany international companies use English as theirofficial company language. What do you think ofthis practice?Sourceshttp://archives.cbc.ca/IDD-1-73-1297/politics_economy/bill101www2.marianopolis.edu/quebechistorywww.cric.ca/en_html/guide/language/quebec.htmlNote:The EU now spends over € 800 million every year ontranslation or € 2.55 for every person in the EU. TheEU employs over 2,500 interpreters and translators(more than a hundred per language). Every year, theEU translates over two million pages of text. Mosttranslations between smaller language groups are donethrough a ‘relay language’ like English, French orGerman. The top four languages by population areGerman (24%), French (16%), English (16%) andItalian (16%). The most spoken languages are English(47%), German (32%) and French (28%).Source:http://europa.eu.int/translation_enlargement/index_en.htmEQ: Should the EU use all 20 official languages?Wouldn’t it make more sense for everyone to just useone lingua franca? Why / Why not? How might onlyusing a second language affect democracy?9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers the topics of individual rights,equality in the eyes of the law, and the right tobear arms.A This question is meant to analyse how differentcountries view individual rights and differentgovernments legislate different rights. It is notnecessary to expand on each point unless you feel itis appropriate.EQ: Which does your country hold as rights? Do youapprove of your country’s individual rights in this case?What values does this suggest of your country? Howwould you view countries which value differentindividual rights than your country? Is there a rightand wrong way to legislate individual rights?At what age, are / should these activities be accessiblein your country: property ownership, sexual consent,voting, matrimony, operating a vehicle, use of alcohol /cigarettes, gambling?B Try to get students to think in concrete terms.EQ: Give examples of politicians, wealthy or otherpowerful individuals who have been in trouble withthe law. What happened to them? Do you think theyreceive the same justice as a poor person who cannotafford an expensive legal defence?C Try to get students to imagine what living in gunculture might be like.EQ: Would you feel safer? Why / Why not? There is apopular pro-gun slogan ‘guns don’t kill people, peoplekill people’. Do you agree?10 Your answer: DO I GET A SAY?This question tries to get students to think about therelationship between individuals and individual rightsand society as a whole. The question targets one of thefundamental philosophical dichotomies of humanexistence. On the one hand, you have the idea firstproposed by Rene Descartes in Meditations on FirstPhilosophy (1641). By rationally subtracting whatcould not be explained by logic, Descartes was limitedto being able to prove only his own existence. So doessociety even exist for us? Moreover, should we care? Byextension, do we actually have any obligations toothers? This is contrasted with the point brought up inJohn Donne’s famous line from Mediations XVII: ‘NoMan is an Island unto Himself.’ At heart, humans aresocial animals and need society. Much of what we haveaccomplished as a human species is due to our abilityto cooperate and live relatively harmoniously witheach other. How do we maintain this cooperation – bylimiting human freedoms, our individual rights?WORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will give students the chance to practisethe intensifiers and phrases for challenging argumentsand opinions from Language Bank 10. The answersbelow are only examples, there is more than oneanswer possible for each.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200785


QSE Adv TG p81-87 3/6/07 3:53 PM Page 86Unit 10 Do I get a say? Teacher’s Guide See pages 46–49 SB, 103 WB1 WORD POWER Sample answers1 Everyone I know agrees (wholeheartedly) withme, we (definitely / absolutely) need to restrictimmigration. That can’t be true. What about me?I disagree with you.2 It goes (completely / entirely) against ourcountry’s beliefs to restrict freedom of speech.Regardless of that, the fact remains the countryneeds to restrict free speech sometimes. / If youlook at the facts, they would show that ourcountry has at times needed to restrict freespeech.3 Police should (definitely / clearly) have(absolutely / totally / completely) unlimitedpower to stop terrorists. That can’t be true. Whatabout the right to privacy? / The evidence simplydoesn’t support your argument. Where’s theproof? Do the benefits outweigh the costs?4 It’s (absolutely / definitely / totally /completely / entirely / clearly) wrong to taxinheritance. It goes (utterly / completely / entirely /totally / completely) against the right to property.The evidence doesn’t support yourargument.5 I (totally / completely / fully) disagree, criminalsdon’t deserve any rights. Regardless of whetherthey deserve them, if you take them away, itbecomes a slippery slope argument. / That can’t betrue. What about people who commit very minorcrimes?6 It is (extremely) important to have people from avariety of backgrounds as candidates for politicaloffice. Regardless of that, the fact remains thatyou need a lot of money to run for office.2 USE OF LANGUAGE: ArticlesThis activity introduces the issue of individualrights in the age of the internet. The activity isbased on an authentic test activity used by theUniversity of Cambridge Local ExaminationsSyndicate in the CAE and CPE.2 USE OF LANGUAGE Answers1 the 2 a 3 0 4 0 5 the6 The 7 the 8 an 9 a 10 03 WRITINGA SourcesMany developed countries have organisationscampaigning to lower the voting age to 16.Taking Back the Vote, Jane Eisner.www.votesat16.org.ukwww.youthrights.org/votingage.shtmlwww.youthvote.org/B SourcesYou can find assessments and other informationabout rights for most countries at:www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbookwww.amnesty.orgwww.unhchr.ch/html/intlinst.htmwww.ilhr.org4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1b 2f 3c 4e 5a 6d1 a sacred cow person or thing that is abovecriticism or attack. 2 a kangaroo court anunofficial or illegal court. 3 not to see eye to eye to disagree, have different ideas. 4 to sit on thefence not to join any side / be uncommitted in acontroversy. 5 to put the clock back to go backin time, make things as they were before. 6 tocome face to face with to make direct personalcontact with.Ask students to use the idioms when answeringthese questions orally. This can be done as pairwork or as a class.• How does justice in your country compare to othercountries?– I don’t know a lot about other countries, but Ihave heard that some countries often usekangaroo courts for political dissidents.– I think some countries really put the clock backon individual rights.– I haven’t come face to face with courts inother countries so I couldn’t tell youfor sure.86 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p81-87 3/6/07 3:53 PM Page 87QSE AdvancedSee pages 46–49 SB, 103 WBUnit 10Teacher’s Guide• How would you react if some individual rights weretaken away?– I would definitely not sit on the fence. I think Iwould protest right away.– I think we have already seen the clock put backon some rights in our country.– Well, I think it would really depend onwhich ones. I mean some rights arelike sacred cows, while othersare not.• What would you say to someone who thought theirrights were more important than yours?– I’d probably tell them that we don’t see eye toeye on this issue.– I haven’t really met anyone like that face to face,but I would guess I would have to object.– I would have to explain that rights areuniversal. To think that one person’s rights aremore important than another’s leads to unjustgovernment and kangaroo courts.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200787


QSE Advanced_Unit11 2/1/07 9:07 PM Page 88Unit 11 Peace around the world Teacher’s Guide See pages 50–53 SB, 104 WBWHAT’S NEW?Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – use expressions for evaluating different standpoints and tentativeexpressions.– use vocabulary, phrases and idioms related to international events.Educational Ss will address issues of the impact of events that have occurredObjectives: within recent years.Connected – Nobel Peace Prize – Peaceful solutionsTopics: – Diplomacy – EU versus US– Events making headlines – Anti-war theatre– European Union – Technology and warfare– Conflicts around the world – Civilians and war– Natural disasters – Rogue statesGrammar: Adjectives Collocations IdiomsKey Vocabulary: abduct founding member repressivebe at odds immunity rivalbulwark initiative secularcivilian intent on surpasscounterpoint irritant suspend a lawcoward largesse uprisingcredit worthiness mission voidcrude obliterate windfalldraft n pet project withholdenvoy profiteer witness vextraditionrecall vfoereclaim vThe BIG question: WILL WE EVER HAVE PEACE?This question deals with the fundamental issue ofthe innate nature of humans. Are we by natureviolent beings?VIEWPOINTFacts: Reasons for winning Nobel Peace Prize:Shirin Ebadi for promoting children and women’srights in Iran; Mohamed El Baradei for trying toidentify a nuclear weapons programme in Iraqbefore the US invasion in 2003; WangariMaathai’s work with deforestation relates to alarger more complex issue of the roots of warfare.In many instances, war happens when resourcesare scarce.Source:http://nobelprize.org/peace/EQ: What is the significance of the Nobel Peace Prize?Should people promoting peace be recognised? Shouldthese people have been recognised? Are Peace Prizerecipients as well known as war leaders?Quote: Lester B. Pearson (1897–1972) was thePrime Minister of Canada from 1963 to 1968. Hewon the Peace Prize for ending the Suez Canalcrisis.EQ: How important is diplomacy for you country?Internationally? Can you think of any instance wherediplomacy helped solve a possible conflict? If so, whathappened? Do you think diplomacy and talking aboutissues really solves anything?1 WORD POWERA gets students to practise their knowledge ofadjectives and word partners.88 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit11 2/1/07 9:07 PM Page 89QSE AdvancedSee pages 50–53 SB, 104 WBUnit 11Teacher’s Guide1 WORD POWER A Answers1c 2a 3b 4h 5g 6f 7d 8enature natural disasterdiplomacy diplomatic envoypopulation popular uprisingterror terrorist attackregion regional conflictfinance financial crisispolitics political corruptionpeace peaceful protestB 1 gets students to look at how these commonworld events have affected the own country.2 gets students to create dialogues using phrasesfrom Language Bank 11. It would be worthwhileto have students role play these dialogues together.ARTICLESChavez, Seeking Foreign Allies, Spends BillionsThis article discusses the growing tensions betweenVenezuelan president Hugo Chavez and the UnitedStates. The United States is strongly opposed toChavez because of his left-leaning policies. An admirerof Fidel Castro, Chavez supports wealth redistributionand is opposed to US economic policy in LatinAmerica. Many Latin Americans blame US policiesfor the continuing widespread poverty in the region.Chavez is trying to export his Bolivarian Revolutionto other countries in the region by giving thesecountries financial help to offset US influence.EQ: What do you think of Hugo Chavez? Shouldcountries with great inequalities of wealth try toredistribute this wealth? How would you feel about thisif you were one of the poor or one of the very wealthy?Hope Ends 29-year March of Mothersof the Plaza de MayoThis article discusses the legacy of the Mothers of thePlaza de Mayo. Formed at the beginning of the ‘DirtyWar’ in Argentina, these women worked tirelessly toprotest against the injustice that was happening intheir country. Their non-violent protests haveeventually led to a slow and steady recognition inArgentina of a need to reconcile the past.EQ: How would you react in these women’s position?Would you continue this long?2 READINGA is a skimming activity that will help students withthe Reading section in the CAE exam.2 READING A AnswersA For: Fidel Castro (friend and political ally), Brazilians(supports Samba parades), poor Mexicans (eyesurgery), poor US citizens (subsidized heating fuel),Against: US government (anti-communist history),George Bush (has had war of words with Chavez),Antonia Ledezma (political opponent), HeritageFoundation (right-wing think tank)B relates to a type of question in the Trinity examwhich requires students to speculate on the unstatedfeelings of people. You should make sure studentsprovide some information from the article to supporttheir opinions.C 1This question touches on United States’ foreignpolicy in Latin America and the rest of the world.Students will get to practise the conditional here.2 You can give the students some help by pointingto several countries which have had to deal withthis problem: South Africa after apartheid, post-ColdWar Russian / US relations, Germany afterreunification.3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of recent worldevents, UN peace-keeping, citizen’s protests, whatmakes good and bad government.A EQ: How do you think the world has changedbecause of these events? How have these events affectedyour country? Have there been any significant eventsin your country which have affected the world? Doyou think people will care about these events 25 yearsfrom now?B EQ: What conflicts are going on at the moment?Does your country provide UN peace-keeping troops?C EQ: Have you ever protested against anything? Didit help? What issues do you feel strongly enough aboutto protest?D EQ: Are all governments good, bad or something inbetween? How good is your present government? Why?BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200789


QSE Advanced_Unit11 2/1/07 9:07 PM Page 90Unit 11 Peace around the world Teacher’s Guide See pages 50–53 SB, 104 WB4 LISTEN DVDWhile much of the world is aware of the 2004 AsianTsunami, few save neighbouring Caribbean countriesremembers the impact of the torrential flooding thathit Haiti and the Dominican Republic in the sameyear. While both countries had significant losses fromthe event, the floods were worse in Haiti due to thedeforestation in the mountains and its endemicpoverty. It is by far the poorest country in theWestern hemisphere with 80 per cent of the countryliving in poverty and 3.5 per cent of its 8.1 millioninhabitants living with HIV / AIDS.A Photos: Some disasters: hurricanes / typhoons,flooding, mudslides, tsunamis, earthquakes,avalanches, ice storms, tornados, hailstorms,lightning storms.4 LISTEN C AnswersC160 centimetres. 2 50,000 people. 3 people havebeen cutting down trees / the forest for fuel / shelter.4 The helicopters stopped airlifting / flying food andwater too soon. 5 Importing wood / propane for fuel.5 TEAMWORKThis activity is designed to get students to thinkabout reasons for war and to brainstorm creativeways of resolving these issues. Students can createwhichever solutions they want. The third part ofthis activity is controversial.6 CONTROVERSYRelations between the United States and theEuropean Union can be difficult. Recently, the USgovernment has emphasised a need for a moredominant role for the US in world politics, placingUS interests over those of possible rivals. Whileseveral countries including the UK and Italy havebeen able to maintain close ties, on trade the EUand US have had several bitter disputes on issuessuch as GM (genetically modified) foods, internettrade, Boeing / Airbus subsidies and steel tariffs aswell as disagreements over the handling ofinternational conflicts and diplomatic issues.The US today prefers bilateral agreements andnegotiations to take advantage of its immense militaryand economic advantage compared to the EU, whichcontinues to favour multilateral institutions likethe United Nations. The reality remains that the USand the EU need each other for trade and for security.SourcesTransatlantic Economic Disputes: The EU, the USand the WTO, Ernst-Ulrich PetersmannManaging EU-US Relations, Rebecca Steffensonwww.eurunion.orghttp://europa.eu.int/comm/external_relations/us/introwww.useu.beEQ: Why do you think the US and the EU seem at oddstoday? What do you think the future relationship betweenthe two powers will be like? Are the US and the EUright in their current attitudes toward each other? Whichone do you think developing countries favour? Why?7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A SourcesSee local newspapers for examples of announcements.Entertainment announcements are likely the bestexamples.B SourcesSee the website of most major media outlets forexamples of world event coverage.www.bbc.co.ukwww.guardian.co.ukwww.cnn.com8 DRAMA in English [CLIL]Theatre and the arts in general have often expresseddivergent viewpoints. Anti-war protest pieces haveexisted since the beginning of Western theatre inancient Greece. Present-day activism does not comewithout a price. Actors, especially film actors likeSusan Sarandon and Tim Robbins, have comeunder considerable criticism for expressing anti-warviews in the United States over the Iraq War.EQ: Does anti-war theatre have as much impact asprotest rallies? Do you think old anti-war plays arestill relevant? Why / Why? What do you think of streettheatre as a form of protest? How political or activistare actors and theatre groups in your country? Should90 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit11 2/1/07 9:07 PM Page 91QSE AdvancedSee pages 50–53 SB, 104 WBUnit 11Teacher’s Guideactors give their political views in public? Think offive things people often protest about. Choose one anddevelop a short plot summary for a drama or comedythat protests against it.Note:The quote from Hair is derived from a 1967anti-speech by civil-rights activist StokelyCarmichael.SourcesThe Oxford Dictionary of Plays, Michael Pattersonwww.sfmt.org/www.lysistrataproject.com/www.thawaction.org9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers involvement in conflicts, civiliansin war, technology and war, and rogue states.A Try to get students to think about their country’srole in world politics and its role in any internationaldisputes, whether as a combatant, a peacekeeper ornegotiator.EQ: Was your country right to join this? Can youforesee any future possible conflicts? What effect doesbeing the victor or loser in a battle have on a country?What effect does being the aggressor in a conflict haveon a country? Can a country ever escape its past?B Try to get students to think about the reality ofliving in a war zone.EQ: What would it be like to live in a war zone? Whyare civilian deaths so under-reported?C Try to get students to think about new weaponsdeveloped since medieval times.EQ: Name five early (medieval) weapons and fivemodern weapons. Which weapon / military vehicle hashad the biggest impact: knife, horse, gun, chemicalweapon, fighter jet, tank, nuclear bomb, submarine,aircraft carrier? How has the nuclear bomb changedinternational diplomacy and war?D Some countries considered rogue nations by theUS: Syria, North Korea, Iran, Sudan and Cuba.EQ: What do you think of Syria, Iran, North Korea,or Cuba? Are they dangerous? Should people in yourcountry be worried about them?10 Your answer: WILL WE EVER HAVE PEACE?This question tries to get students to address themost fundamental question regarding peace. Thereare obviously many obstacles to overcome rangingfrom dictatorships to ignorance and greed. Beyondthis, we need to ask the fundamental question: is itin human nature to be peaceful? Is war a normalmeans of solving international conflict? Is war anextension of the violence in society? Do people carewhen wars are fought in far off countries?WORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will get students to practise evaluatingdifferent standpoints and using tentative expressionsfrom Language Bank 11.1 WORD POWER Sample answers1 Historically speaking, regional conflicts haveoften been a threat to stability in the world.Perhaps, it’s hard to say.2 If you look at it from another perspective, I amoptimistic that the world will always send moneyand help after natural disasters. Maybe you’reright. Who knows?3 While I respect your position, I think peace comesfrom understanding others; globalisation will helpincrease both. Well, I guess we’ll have to wait and see.4 If you look at it from another perspective, theUN needs forces for peace-making as well as forpeace-keeping. Well, I’m not so sure.5 If I were playing devil’s advocate, I’d say allelections should be monitored by internationalobservers. Perhaps, it’s hard to say.6 On the other hand, you need to consider thatcivilians should never be caught up in wars. Maybe,you’re right. Who knows?7 While I respect your position, I think peacefulprotest is the best way to change things. Maybeyou’re right. Who knows?8 While I respect your position, I think politicalcorruption nearly always leads to a financial crisis.Well, I’m not so sure.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200791


QSE Advanced_Unit11 2/1/07 9:07 PM Page 92Unit 11 Peace around the world Teacher’s Guide See pages 50–53 SB, 104 WB2 WRITINGA SourcesPeacemonger, John Murray.We did Nothing: Why the Truth Doesn’t Always ComeOut When the UN Goes In, Linda Polmanwww.un.org/Depts/dpko/dpko/index.aspB SourcesThe Penguin Companion to the European Union,Timothy Bainbridgehttp://europa.eu.intwww.euobserver.com3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES: The power of threeThis activity is one of the techniques to helpstudents give better presentations. This providesstudents with a great way to make theirpresentations more interesting and compelling.3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES Answers1d 2c 3b 4f 5a 6e4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1f 2a 3e 4c 5b1 to bury the hatchet to make resolve differences,make peace. 2 to build a bridge to make contactto resolve differences / conflicts. 3 to reopen oldwounds to go back / to bring up old differences /reasons for past conflict. 4 to pick up the pieces to begin to sort things out after something difficulthas happened. 5 to explore every avenue to try /investigate any possibilitiesAsk students to use the idioms when answeringthese questions orally. This can be done as pairwork or as a class.• How does history affect international relations?– Many countries have trouble burying thehatchet over old grievances.– I think many countries prefer to buildbridges when there are obvious economicbenefits.– I think it is hard not to reopen old woundswhenever a dispute happens. Look at Chinaand Japan.• How will the EU develop in the future?– I hope they will explore every avenue ofcooperation with the US.– I think the EU has sometimes been left topick up the pieces in former Communistcountries.• What can your country do to help find peace in theMiddle East?– I hope we could help build bridges betweenwarring parties.– I think we could help them to explore everyavenue towards a peaceful resolution.– I hope we could help pick up the pieces whenthe conflicts are resolved.92 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p93-98 3/6/07 4:11 PM Page 93Unit12 Click here! Teacher’s Guide See pages 54–57 SB, 105 WBWHAT’S NEW?Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – use expressions for deducing and uncountable nouns.– use vocabulary, phrases and idioms related to using the internet.Educational Ss will address issues of internet technologies and evolving reasons forObjectives: internet use.Connected – Languages use on the net – Gambling onlineTopics: – Computer security – Hackers– Online gaming – Computer viruses– Using the internet – Protecting children online– Internet access rights – Mobile internet– Online dating – Spam mail– Webpage designGrammar: Uncountable nounsKey Vocabulary: Anglocentric hacker six-figure incomebroadband connection intervene social engineeringcasual hairdo spectator sportChinese characters landmark spywareconsole log on take offdaring lose one’s head tax havendot-com lure textingepaulette mecca the oneexecute netiquette tunicface off packed venuefrantically pro video conferencegambling prospect virtualgaugeroll outgooglesearch engineThe BIG question: ARE WE ALL ONLINE NOW?Here the students should think about ‘we’ in thecontext of the whole world.VIEWPOINTGraph: Although the British Council estimatesthat about half the world population will speakEnglish by 2015, other reports suggest that it willbegin to decline by 2050 to be overtaken byHindi-Urdu and Arabic. Currently, there are 514million English speakers in the world (as a first orsecond language). This is second only to MandarinChinese with 1,075 million (as a first or secondlanguage).Source:www.glreach.com/globstats/index.php3EQ: Why is English so common on the internet? Doesthis give English-speaking people or companies anunfair advantage in the world? Do you think Englishwill continue to dominate the internet in the future?Facts: The cost includes internet protection (firewalls,anti-virus software), dedicated IT specialists, ITconsulting fees, damage and repair of networks aftera virus infection, fraud from Trojan software, spywareand social engineering (phishing), equipment theftand denial of service attacks (stop a website fromoperating).Source:Trend Micro, Inc.EQ: Name some viruses or worms that you have heardof. What do / did they do? How might they cost people,businesses or the government? Who should pay thesecosts: businesses, governments, jailed hackers, consumers?BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200793


QSE Adv TG p93-98 3/6/07 4:11 PM Page 94Unit 12 Click here! Teacher’s Guide See pages 54–57 SB, 105 WBQuote: This is a play on the old adage: Give a mana fish and you feed him for a day. Teach him to fishand you will feed him for a lifetime.EQ: How much of a distraction is the internet? Which isthe most common reason to use the internet: education,business work, personal work or entertainment? Why?1 WORD POWERA1gets students to discuss common uses of theinternet.2 gets students to practise using uncountable nouns.B gets students to practise using the deducingphrases from Language Bank 13.1 WORD POWER B Sample answers1 I think we can assume that / My conclusionabout this would be that / This leads me tobelieve that hackers are a continuing problem.2 It’s fair to say that / My conclusion about thiswould be that / This leads me to believe that heis a fairly well-known individual.3 This would clearly suggest that / My conclusionabout this would be that countries that have investedin broadband, like Korea, have an advantage.ARTICLESDon’t Tell the Kids: Computer GamesCan Make You RichThis article discusses the enormous culturalphenomenon in South Korea and other Asiancountries surrounding internet gaming. MassiveMultiplayer Online Role-Playing Games(MMORPGs) allow many people to play the samegame simultaneously via the internet. As the articlestates, game consoles used to be very expensiveleading to a rise in demand for games that could beplayed online.Internationally, online gaming attracts tens ofmillions of users. Yahoo! Games and MSN Gamescan have up to 150,000 to 200,000 players at atime, with over half being adult women. The successof online gaming has even spawned the WorldCyber Games with more than 700 contestants fromover sixty countries. Korea continues to be a leaderin the trend; the games market there reached some$4.3 billion in 2005.EQ: Do you think video games are as competitive assports? Do video games work as a spectator sport?What kind of training do you think these competitorsundertake? Why would Samsung or Coca-Cola wantto sponsor these online gaming events?A Few Emails and She Knew He Was The OneThis article deals with the increasing interest inonline dating. The largest US internet dating site,Match.com, boasts over 4.5 million users withnew users every day. Online dating was in manyways a natural progression from the computer datingcraze of the 1980s. It combines the ease of a searchengine with the anonymity of the internet. Thecase discussed in the article also demonstrates thegrowing acceptability amongst the youngergeneration compared to older generations.EQ: How easy or difficult is it to meet people whereyou come from? Do you think everyone has a perfectmatch waiting for them somewhere? Would you oranyone you know try online dating?2 READINGA is a skimming activity that will help students withone of the Reading sections of the CAE exam.2 READING A, B AnswersA Lim = 1, 4B (Sample answers) 1-2 Andy / Katrina have fallenin love. 3 Katrina’s grandmother doesn’t know thatKatrina met Andy through a website becauseKatrina thinks she wouldn’t understand. 4 Katrina’sgrandmother doesn’t know anything about Venus.She might not approve of her granddaughtermeeting her husband through the internet.C 1This question relates to a type of question inthe Trinity exam which requires students to speculateand conclude on the unstated feelings of people.You may want to extend the discussion by asking:Would you want to be a professional gamer? Whatwould be some benefits or drawbacks? Is professionalgaming something you could do for the rest of your life?2 This question requires students to speculate onthe unstated reasons for the past negative impressiongiven to dating services. You should try to getstudents to look at the deeper issue of findingsomeone. Does admitting you are lonely mean you94 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p93-98 3/6/07 4:11 PM Page 95QSE AdvancedSee pages 54–57 SB, 105 WBUnit 12Teacher’s Guideare unwanted or something else? What are the rulesof attraction? How does dating / relationships relateto a person’s ego / self-confidence?3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of internet use, rightsto internet access, online gaming and online dating.A EQ: Do the benefits of the internet outweigh anynegative aspects? Does the internet unite or divide people?B EQ: Should the internet be free (ie. cost nothing)?How can we bring the internet to people who don’thave it? Why do you think some countries are afraid oftotal internet access for their citizens? How should theinternet be controlled or monitored?The United States FBI has a computer program calledCarnivore which can monitor and access e-mailsanywhere. What do you think of this?C EQ: What is the appeal of playing a character in avirtual world? How similar or different are video gamesto movies? Why?DEQ: Would you ever date someone you met online?Do you think these relationships last?4 LISTEN AND WATCH DVDThis video clip was produce by the BBC for theweekly computer show Click Online. It covers adifficult issue that may actually prove ratherexplosive. While the American-based InternetCorporation for Assigned Names and Numbers(ICANN) actively seeks an international agenda,there are some logistical problems arising with theidea of incorporating other language scripts intothe internet addresses. The main reason is a hugedisparity between meanings of a single characteracross different languages. Unfortunately, this hasthe potential to eventually lead to a separateinternet developing in China.4 LISTEN AND WATCH B, C, D AnswersB Many people are unhappy with not having theirown language available. They want to use them.Japanese and Korean use Chinese characters withdifferent meaning. There might be a separateChinese internet.C (Sample answers) I would hope they could find acompromise. / Or what if we never find a solutionthat makes everyone happy? / Maybe, the UNcould help provide a framework.D1In the early days, it was English-speaking, butnow it’s multicultural.2 150,000 and it is growing.3 Same word, different companies in differentcountries.4 More than 100 million.5 TEAMWORKThis activity is designed to get students to work withauthentic material in the form of a web page. Thisactivity should be used to develop the students’impression of what is possible online. It will also givethem the chance to think about what goes into webpage design. Students should be given the freedom tocreate whichever type of web page they want. Toextend the activity you can ask: Do you have yourown web page? If so, what’s it like? If not, why not?Have you ever designed web pages before? How difficultdo you think it is? Do you think it is a very creativemedium? Is there still information you can’t find online?SourcesThe Complete Idiot’s Guide to Creating a Web Pageand Blog, Paul McFedrieswww.webstyleguide.comhttp://www.wpdfd.com6 CONTROVERSYOnline gambling started in 1994. The island state ofAntigua and Barbuda passed the Free Trade andProcessing Zone Act which allowed the governmentthe right to issue licences for online gambling. Withlater developments in securing payments, visualgraphics and different gambling software, onlinegambling spread to dozens of countries. In 2004,online gamblers lost $237 billion to gamblingcompanies worldwide, with 12 million online users.Some countries have recently passed laws to banonline gambling. Although politicians often claimthat they are only worried about a lack of regulation,many critics believe the actions are simply anattempt to regain lost tax revenue, however, even theBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200795


QSE Adv TG p93-98 3/6/07 4:11 PM Page 96Unit 12 Click here! Teacher’s Guide See pages 54–57 SB, 105 WBcritics admit that there remains the same problem –gambling addiction. Many governments supportiveof online casinos are often reluctant to discuss thenegative aspects of gambling.SourcesThe Complete Idiot’s Guide to Online Gambling,Mark Balestrawww.gamblingonlinemagazine.comwww.onlinegambling.com/online-gambling-news.htmEQ: How common is gambling in your country? Do youever gamble? What can be some problems associated withgambling? Should gambling be made illegal? What kindof help is available to addicted gamblers? Do you thinkof lotteries or contests as gambling? Why / Why not?7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A SourcesOnline Dating: The Early Years, Cosmo FoxThe Rules for Online Dating, Ellen Feinwww.pearmatch.co.uk/personals/online-dating.htmlB SourcesFuturenet: the Past, Present and Future of the Internetas Told by its Creators and Visionaries, Sally RichardsNetworks and Netwars: The Future of Terror, Crimeand Militancy, John ArquillaFuture Active: Media Activism and the Internet,Graham Meiklewww.elon.edu/predictions/RecentSubmissions.aspx8 INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY in English [CLIL]Further examples of hackers and what they do.Some Cracking Techniques• Buffer overflow: Too much data sent to a site canleave a hole for the hacker to enter.• Sniffing: Software that monitors informationpassed between networked computers.• Vulnerability scanning: Checking for holes in thefirewall or computer programs.• Spoofing: Forging a computer authentication sourceaddress; tricks a server into allowing access.• Cracking open wireless networks using ‘wardriving’(scanning neighbourhoods for open wireless networks).Famous Hackers / Crackers1988: Robert Morris sends out first worm, nearlyshuts down the internet. Fined US $10,000 and3 months probation.1988: Kevin Mitnick stole equipment and accesscodes to make long-distance phone calls(A year in prison.)1993: Kevin ‘Dark Dante’ Poulsen and friends rigphone lines to win a radio call-in contest. (Threeyears in prison.)1994: Matthew Bevan and Richard Pryce crack USmilitary. Bevan is cleared. Pryce gets €1,200 fine.1994: Vladimir Levin steals $400,000 from Citibank.(Three years in prison and a US $240,015 fine.)1998: Hao Jinglong and Hao Jingwen (twin brothers)hack into a Chinese bank and stole 720,000 yuan($87,000). They were sentenced to death.2000: Russians Alexei V. Ivanov and Vasiliy Gorshkovextort money from US companies by threatening toshut down their sites. (Three years in a US prison andfine of $700,000)2003: Lynn ‘Danny-boy’ Htun breaks into UScomputer security companies’ websites. Arrested atLondon’s InfoSecurity Fair.EQ: How big of a problem are hackers in your country?Why do hackers want to break into computers? Havethere been any examples of hacking into business orgovernment computers in your country?Hackers are often portrayed as heroes in literature andmovies. Do you see them that way? Why / Why not?Why would someone want to write a computer virus?Do you think hackers and virus writers are punishedstrongly enough? Should governments / businesses hire orpay known hackers to help protect their secure networks?SourcesA Complete Hacker’s Handbook, Dr. KThe Art of Computer Virus Research and Defense,Peter Szorwww.2600.comwww.defcon.orgwww.vmyths.com9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers favourite web pages, surfingthe net safely, mobile internet access, and politicalhacking.96 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p93-98 3/6/07 4:11 PM Page 97QSE AdvancedSee pages 54–57 SB, 105 WBUnit 12Teacher’s GuideA Try to get students to think about concrete examples.EQ: What do you consider are effective web pagedesigns? Give examples of different web pages. Do youprefer lots of graphics or just text? What are the fivepages you visit most? Why? What are the most innovativefeatures available on web pages today?B Try to get students to think about dangers thatmight exist online for children or teenagers, such asviewing pornography; the case of the Germancannibal Armin Meiwes, who found his willingvictim online, or sexual predators.EQ: Is it possible to prevent children from viewingpornography? Do you trust people are who they say theyare online? Why / Why not? Do you think the police andpoliticians are doing enough? What recommendationswould you make to parents about this issue?C Try to get students to think about how mobileinternet access might be helpful.EQ: How might mobile internet access help with: gettingdirections, transport, shopping, finance, personal safetyor entertainment? Would you be willing to pay moneyto watch TV, play games or download music on yourmobile phone?D Try to get students to think about whichgovernments have been unpopular in recent years.EQ: Why are some countries targeted for politicalhacking? Think of different important websites, whatcould happen if some of these sites are hacked into?Can anything be done to stop this? Is hacking alegitimate form of protest?Some hackers are now hacking for profit, that is, payus or we crash your site. What do you think about thisdevelopment?10 Your answer: ARE WE ALL ONLINE NOW?This question tries to get students to consider thereality of the internet. In many respects, the netremains the domain of wealthy, industrialisednations, creating a digital divide between them anddeveloping countries. However, the net alsoprovides many opportunities for developingcountries, for example outsourced call centres andsoftware development in India to hardwaremanufacturing in China.What if the net wasn’t there tomorrow? As manybusinesses rely so heavily on the net and computers,any stoppage to the net would in effect shut downthe world economy. It is one reason why many areworried about the amount of spam online. See theWorkbook section.EQ: What would happen if the internet stoppedworking tomorrow? Do you think everyone gets fairaccess to the internet? What advantages would aninternet user (in the developed world) have over anon-internet user (in the developing world)?WORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will get students to practise using newvocabulary from the unit and the deducing phrasesfrom Language Bank 12.1 WORD POWER Answers1 googled 2 broadband 3 downloading4 hackers 5 chat rooms 6 surfing1 I googled / used the Google search engine for all myresearch info. This would clearly suggest that a lotof students use it for their research.2 Korean broadband connections are so good, you canwatch TV online. It’s fair to say that many countrieswill probably follow South Koreas’s lead.3 A lot of people don’t consider downloading / usingthe internet to get music without paying is a criminalactivity. My conclusion about this would be thatpeople don’t see the crime affecting other people.Here, it only seems to hurt companies.4 Many companies produce special software toprotect computer networks against hackers. It’s fairto say that this should help with the problem.5 Chat rooms can be fun, but also a bit risky. Thisleads me to believe that people are so curious theywill take risks sometimes.6 In my spare time I spend hours surfing theinternet / looking at websites on the internet. Myconclusion about this would be that / Thiswould clearly would suggest that you don’t getenough exercise.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200797


QSE Adv TG p93-98 3/6/07 4:11 PM Page 98Unit 12 Click here! Teacher’s Guide See pages 54–57 SB, 105 WB2 USE OF LANGUAGE AnswersThis activity introduces the problem of spam mail.The activity is based on an authentic test activityused by the University of Cambridge LocalExaminations Syndicate in the CAE and CPE.2 USE OF LANGUAGE Answers1 research 2 productivity 3 equipment4 junk 5 progress 6 excitement7 help 8 money 9 mailNote: Other uncountable (or sometimes uncountable)nouns in the text: email, news, history, hope, postage.Other uncountables in the text show in bold italics:A growing amount of (0)_traffic_ on the internet isnow caused by spam. A type of (1) __ suggests thatspam accounts for over 40 per cent of all emailsglobally. If you consider that annually each employeereceives about 2,100 junk emails and each takesabout 6 seconds to delete, you can understand justhow much (2) __ is lost. In the same way, ifcorporate servers need to hold that much extraemail, this means companies are buying a lot of extra(3) __ just to store a lot of useless (4) __. There hasbeen some (5) __, with spam filters keeping outsome spam. So what else can be done? Well, therewas plenty of (6) __ about the news that a lot of (7)__ is on the way and spam will be soon be history.Although several solutions are being explored, a lotof (8)__ and hope is being placed on exploring theidea which gives each email an identifiable ‘postage’stamp. If the email is returned as spam, the senderwill have to pay a few cents for postage. A lot ofreturned (9) __, say ten million, would indeed makespamming very expensive.3 WRITINGA SourcesThe Rough Guide to the Internet 2005, Peter Buckleyhttp://netforbeginners.about.com/od/internet101www.internet101.orgB SourcesDesigning Virtual Worlds, Richard BartleGame Design Workshop, Tracy Fullertonwww.vancouver.wsu.edu/fac/peabody/game-book/Coverpage.htmlwww.gamedev.net/reference4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1d 2f 3e 4a 5b 6c1 to go haywire to go crazy, be out of control.2 to bring to a standstill to make somethingstop.3 to be a lone wolf to live or act on your own.4 Sparks will fly there will be trouble / anargument.5 to start from scratch to start from the verybeginning.6 to be a bit of an unknown quantity to besomething / someone that people don’t knowabout.Ask students to use the idioms when answeringthese questions orally. This can be done as pairwork or as a class.• What can be done about spam mail?– I’m not sure, but if they can’t do somethingit might eventually bring the internet to astandstill.– That’s a bit of an unknown quantity.– It will make sparks fly if they don’t do somethingsoon.• Why do hackers do what they do?– I think he’s just a lone wolf. He has somethingto prove.– I think knowing they can make computers gohaywire is just a power trip.– I think it’s a bit of an unknown quantity.• How would a problem with the internet affect yourcity or country?– Business would go haywire trying to rely onordinary mail.– I think many basic services would be broughtto a standstill.– It’s a bit of an unknown quantity.98 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit13 2/1/07 9:56 PM Page 99Unit 13 What’s in the news? Teacher’s Guide See pages 58–61 SB, 106 WBWHAT’S NEW?Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – use expressions for implying and colloquialisms.– use vocabulary, phrases and idioms related to the media.Educational Ss will address issues of censorship, freedom of the press andObjectives: media ownership.Connected – Sensationalism – Censorship and dystopian novelsTopics: – Public versus private media – Media as a component of– Television content democracy– Life of a journalist – Technology and the media– Political parties and the media – Entertainment journalism– Journalists and the – Fake storiesintelligence communityGrammar: Prepositions ColloquialismsKey Vocabulary: ban exile mass mediabiased fake media freedomcaste system foreign correspondent point the fingerclone free press rankingconstrained headlines real timedisinformation impact sensationaldistort install slippery slope argumentdrive integrity slogandumbing down legitimate spindystopialowest common denominatorThe BIG question: DO YOU TRUST THE MEDIA?VIEWPOINTFacts: Reporters without Borders published thesefindings in 2005. The index is based on surveyingjournalists, researchers and legal experts aboutmany areas affecting press freedom (censorship,pressure, media monopolies, arrest and murderof journalists).Source:http://www.rsf.org/rubrique.php3?id_rubrique=554EQ: Can you draw any conclusions about why somecountries have more or less press freedom? Was thereanything surprising about these figures? How doyou think Reporters without Borders analyses pressfreedom?Quote: Rose Macauley (1881–1958) was aBritish novelist and essayist known for satirisingmiddle-class life.EQ: Is Macauley being serious, ironic orsomething else? Why? Do you believe everythingyou read / see / hear about in the media? Why /Why not?1 WORD POWERA gets students to practise their knowledge ofprepositions.1 WORD POWER A Answers1 for 2 in, from 3 with4 of 5 about 6 atB gets students to analyse differences betweenbroadsheet (more serious news providers) andtabloid (more sensational news providers)journalism and practise using colloquialisms inLanguage Bank 13.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 200799


QSE Advanced_Unit13 2/1/07 9:56 PM Page 100Unit 13 What’s in the news? Teacher’s Guide See pages 58–61 SB, 106 WB1 WORD POWER B Answers1 Arrested for pinching cop car2 Pensioner bought shares in dodgy deal frombest mate3 What’s up with the Prime Minister?4 Cost of living too pricey? Fed up with (Tired of )being broke?5 Politicians touchy about electoral scam6 Do blokes do their fair share at home?B 2 (Sample answers)Based on this third headline, you could get theimpression that there was some problem with thePrime Minister. (Headline 3)I would suggest that the fourth headline deals withthe cost of living. (Headline 4)I believe that refers to men not helping withhousework. (Headline 6)ARTICLESItaly Trail in Press FreedomThis article discusses the debate about thecontroversial former Italian Prime Minister SilvioBerlusconi and press freedom in Italy. Many in themedia suggested that Italy’s wealthiest man had aserious conflict of interest because of his mediaownership and should have divested some of hisholdings. Between his ownership of Mediaset andhis party’s control of state-run RAI (the Italianpublic broadcaster) he controlled 90 per cent ofItalian TV.While Berlusconi rejected claims that this hadled to press censorship, several cases involvingRAI gave cause for concern. When Berlusconipublicly stated dislike of the criticisms aired againsthim by the respected journalists Enzo Biagi,Michele Santoro and comedian Daniele Luttazzi.RAI ended its relationship with all three. InNovember 2003, Sabina Guzzanti’s satiricalprogramme was taken off the air after she criticisedone of Berlusconi’s companies. By and large, theItalian public seems largely ambivalent aboutBerlusconi’s media ownership. In fact, many see hisability to run a large corporate empire as evidenceof his leadership skills.EQ: Would it worry you if your country’s leaderowned 90 per cent of the media in your country?Pay-Per-Click JournalismThis article discusses an interesting phenomenon,which seems set to upset the traditional roles inprint journalism of editor and journalist. While manydetractors worry that this will inevitably lead todumbing down or the lowest common denominatorin journalism, it could lead to greater choice. Nolonger will an editor choose what should be printed,but the public will choose themselves.The Korean internet newspaper, Ohmynews(http://english.ohmynews.com/), has taken this onestep further with letting the public write their ownstories. Ohmynews has some 32,000 citizen-reportersaveraging several million hits per day. The popularityof the site has shaken the Korean press.EQ: Do you think the public is only interested insensational news? What kind of news stories interest you?What news stories have interested you the most recently?2 READINGA is a skimming activity that will help students withthe English in Use section of the CAE exam.2 READING A AnswersMediaset, main private TV company in Italy;controls a large share of publishing and newspapermarket, including Mondadori, Italy’s largest bookand magazine publishing group, and Il Giornale, aleading national newspaper.B requires students to analyse and imply similaritiesand differences between unrelated people. Youshould encourage the students to cite actual examplesfrom the text and to use implying phrases inLanguage Bank 13.C1This question relates to a type of question in theTrinity exam which requires students to speculateand conclude on the unstated feelings of people.2 This question requires students to discuss the roleeditors play in choosing the news that is printed.You can help students by introducing words such ascensorship, bias and tabloid journalism.EQ: What does it take to become a journalist or editor?Do you think an editor’s education and experience givesthem the right / ability to choose the stories that matterto the public? Do editors make the right choices?100 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit13 2/1/07 9:56 PM Page 101QSE AdvancedSee pages 58–61 SB, 106 WBUnit 13Teacher’s Guide3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of news sources andcurrent events, television content, life of a journalist,political control over the media and media as apillar of democracy.A EQ: What are the advantages or disadvantages ofgetting your information from only one source? Namesome current events. How might these stories bereported on differently by different networks? How isnews reporting different and similar between television,radio, newspapers, news magazines and the internet?B EQ: The average American watches over four hoursof TV per day. How does this compare to your country?Is television an important part of your free time activities?Why / Why not? Should television viewing be restrictedin any way? Can television be educational? Do youthink television influences you in any way?C EQ: What would it be like to interview famouspeople? To report from war zones? To break animportant story? Do you think there is a differencebetween TV and newspaper journalists’ jobs?D EQ: How might news stories sound different ifdifferent political parties reported them? Giveexamples. Should you know everything? Can a countrybe democratic without a free press?4 LISTEN DVDThis video clip is part of the controversialdocumentary, Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch’s Waron Journalism by director Robert Greenwald.Outfoxed analyses the rise of the Fox News Channel,the 24-hour US cable news channel owned byAustralian-born media tycoon, Rupert Murdoch.Fox News was created to counter what conservativesviewed as an inherent liberal bias in the media andis one of the first news networks to openly supportthe political agenda of a single party, the right-wingUS Republican party. Although it uses the slogan‘Fair and Balanced’, Fox News often mixesjournalism and conservative opinions that may blurthe lines between conservative opinion and facts.While cable news remains a small market (Foxhas just over 1 million viewers) critics argue that thenetwork has created a shift in US media towardsthe right. Greenwald and others also worry aboutthe extent of Murdoch’s total media empire.Murdoch’s company News Corporation owns 9satellite TV networks, 100 cable channels, 40 TVstations, 40 book companies, 175 newspapers and1 movie studio. News Corp. is estimated to reachan audience of 4.7 billion.B The text inside the box is a special review of theOutfoxed video clip. It was written in the firstperson by the author and publisher of Quick SmartEnglish. This unusual step of reviewing a video clipin this way in an EFL textbook was to ensure thisbook’s compliance with the fair use of copyrightedmaterial. Students should be strongly encouraged tocompare this style of journalism with that ofjournalists in their own country.C You decide: Was this programme reporting newsin a biased or fair way? After watching this, what doyou think of Fox News’ slogan, ‘Fair and balanced’?5 TEAMWORKThis activity is designed to get students to developideas for fictional story lines. This activity is designedto aid students in their creative effort and is basedon an actual creative thinking activity. By pairingseemingly unconnected ideas or words, the resultingconnection can lead to some original ideas. It shouldbe viewed as both a fun activity and a serious attemptto think about the importance of truth in journalism.Students should be given the freedom to createwhichever type of headlines or story ideas they want.SourcesWeekly World News. Bat Boy Lives!: The WWN Guideto Politics, Culture, Celebrities, Alien Abductions, andthe Mutant Freaks that Shape our World.www.weeklyworldnews.com6 CONTROVERSYIn 1976, the US Senate Select Committee onIntelligence discovered that more than fifty Americanjournalists had worked as CIA agents during the ColdWar. The Committee condemned the practice, butduring the next twenty years, the CIA simply limitedthe practice. In 1996, the US Council on ForeignRelations suggested that the law limiting the use ofjournalists as spies should be re-examined. In response,BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007101


QSE Advanced_Unit13 2/1/07 9:56 PM Page 102Unit 13 What’s in the news? Teacher’s Guide See pages 58–61 SB, 106 WBformer CIA director John Deutch told Congress thatthere was no need to change the law because underthe guidelines the CIA director still had the right toapprove the use of journalists as spies when needed.This use of journalists appears to be the normamong major powers rather than the exception.Colonel Stanislav Lunev, a defector from Russia’smilitary intelligence, stated in 2000 that at least halfof all Russian journalists working in Washington andthe US were spies. According to Major General YuryKobaldze of Russia’s SVR, “There is no essentialdifference between the work of a spy and a journalist;both collect information in the same way – just theend consumers are different. Journalists make thebest spies; they have more freedom of access thandiplomats. The Americans’ moral stand on not usingjournalists is artificial, and not a little duplicitous.”SourcesThe Thin Ink Line: Spies, Journalists, Espionage andthe Media, David GrantThrough the Eyes of the Enemy: Russia’s HighestRanking Military Defector, Stanislav Lunevwww.cpj.org/attacks96/sreports/cia.htmlwww.aarclibrary.org/publib/church/reports/contents.htmEQ: Should governments use reporters or cameramen asspies? If so, under what circumstances? If not, why not?How could working for an intelligence agency affect howstories are reported? Do you think this puts journalists’lives and integrity at risk? Is intelligence gathering moreimportant than reporting news stories?7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A SourcesBerlusconi’s Shadow: Crime, Justice and the Pursuit ofPower, David LaneSilvio Berlusconi: Television, Power and Patrimony,Paul Ginsborgwww.economist.com/countries/Italy/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3034600.stmwww.forza-italia.it/notizie/int_2815.htmB SourcesWriting Feature Stories, Matthew RicketsonWriter’s Digest Handbook of Magazine Article Writing,Michelle Rubergwww.journalism.org/resources/tools/print.aspwww.cjr.org/tools8 MEDIA STUDIES in English [CLIL]The idea of a utopian society can be traced backas far as Plato’s The Republic (360 BC), however,the idea of a dystopian society is much morerecent. The first recorded use of the term was byJohn Stuart Mill in 1868 to the UK Parliament.The idea seems to have gained ground in popularthought and literature, perhaps with the rise inimportance of new technologies and the developmentof the modern state. New technologies were pushingthe Industrial Revolution and changing thetraditional roles in society. In this new age, Europeexperienced a lot of social unrest from the 1840s to1870s, as the divide between rich and poor began togrow. It is no coincidence that Mills’ comments cameonly a year after the printing of Marx’s first volumeof Das Kapital.In dystopian visions of the world, several themesemerge that have a direct relationship to this historicalperiod, mostly dealing with control or a lack of it:the influence of machines and technologies as socialcontrol; an autocratic, centralised authority that careslittle for the individual, but cares a lot for maintainingorder; the rise of crime, as social stability and controldecreases. Like utopias, dystopias are set in the not sodistant future as a warning to change and a generalfear of the unknown.The novels presented in the unit are examples ofhow controlling the media is part of the formationof a dystopian state and where it could lead.EQ: Which do you think is more likely in the future:utopia or dystopia? Why? Do you think these particulardystopias are possible? Is it fair to draw similaritiesbetween these novels and today’s media and society?Can you see examples today of each of the criticismsmentioned in these novels? What can we do to preventthese dystopias from occurring?SourcesBrave New World, Aldous Huxleywww.huxley.netFahrenheit 451, Ray Bradburywww.raybradbury.com102 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit13 2/1/07 9:56 PM Page 103QSE AdvancedSee pages 58–61 SB, 106 WBUnit 13Teacher’s Guide9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers the influence of the media,technology and the media, entertainment as news,and the case of NY Times journalist Jayeson Blair.A Try to get students to think about how they formtheir views on different issues, how the media createsconsensus in a society, and how people can affect themedia in the age of PR and social activism.EQ: Which media figures do you respect? Why? Howmuch do they influence your opinions? Is it possibleto form opinions independent of or contrary to themedia? How important is consensus in your society?B Try to get students to think about how newstravelled before each new technological invention(internet, satellites, TV, telephone, radio, telegraph,ship, printing press).EQ: How important is speed in receiving news?Give some current news examples. What effect would ithave if the story was reported a day, a week, a monthor a year later? Do you think technology has given us abetter or worse understanding of world events? Why?C Try to get students to think about how oftennews covers issues relating to celebrities or theentertainment industry.EQ: Name five celebrities. What is happening in theirlives at the moment? Do you know as much aboutyour neighbours’ lives? Does reporting about celebritiestrivialise the importance of other stories?D Try to get students to think about the realityof a high-pressure job like being a journalist,meeting deadlines, and reporting on importantpeople.EQ: If you might lose your job, would you ever lieto keep it?10 Your answer: DO YOU TRUST THE MEDIA?This question tries to get students to addressthe most fundamental question regarding themedia in today’s society. The media is often seen asan important pillar in democracy. If the media is notproviding us with accurate, unbiased information,what does this say about the democracy in ourcountries? How can we be informed citizens andparticipate fully in our society without knowingabout the reality of the world around us. Does themedia actually have much control over individuals?WORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will get students practising the useof colloquialisms and the implying phrases fromLanguage Bank 13.1 WORD POWER Answers1 All these documentaries on television are reallydaft. Based on this, you could get the impressionthat people don’t want to watch anything morechallenging.2 I read in the paper that train fares are going upby 10 per cent. They’re going to be really pricey. Somepeople say that we are only paying half the real cost.3 I heard there was more hooliganism at the footiematch last tonight. I would suggest that the footballleague could do more to stop violence.4 Did you see that telly programme about that bankmanager who pinched a million pounds? I suspectthat he knows more than he is letting on.5 Are you still keen on going to see that filmtonight? I would suggest that the film next weekwould be better.6 It’s such a media stereotype! Not everyone fromthere is posh. Don’t you think it points to lazyjournalism to use stereotypes like that.2 WRITINGA Sourceswww.thenation.comwww.motherjones.comwww.nationalreview.comwww.conservativenews.orgB SourcesThe Web of Deceit: Britain’s Real Role in the World,Mark CurtisTell Me Lies: Propaganda and Media Distortion inthe Attack on Iraq, David Millerwww.cpj.orgwww.freedomhouse.orgBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007103


QSE Advanced_Unit13 2/1/07 9:56 PM Page 104Unit 13 What’s in the news? Teacher’s Guide See pages 58–61 SB, 106 WB3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES: Use some quotesThis activity is the one of the techniques to helpstudents give better presentations. This providesstudents with a great way to make theirpresentations more interesting, more concise andbetter planned.3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES Answers1d 2b 3a 4c 5b4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1b 2c 3d 4e 5a1 to have a thick skin not be sensitive tocriticism. 2 to break the story give theinformation / tell the story in public. 3 to have asharp tongue to be very critical, rude. 4 onthe box on the television. 5 through the rumourmill from the gossip that goes round.Ask students to use the idioms when answeringthese questions orally. This can be done as pairwork or as a class.• Do you think you could handle answering questionsat a televised press conference?– I think you would need a thick skin to handlesome of the questions.– I would be nervous. Some news commentatorshave very sharp tongues.– I don’t see why a press conference on the boxwould be any harder.• What would you do if the media printed a falsestory about you?– I think it happens often when the media iscompeting to break a story.– I wouldn’t worry. If they printed somethingfrom the rumour mill, I could just sue for libel.– I don’t know if my skin is thick enough not tobe very upset.• Can you trust reporters to keep a secret?– I think the papers would print everything. Therumour mill is just too powerful.– Reporters can’t resist breaking a story. They justcouldn’t keep it a secret.104 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit14 2/1/07 9:12 PM Page 105Unit 14 Heroes and villains Teacher’s Guide See pages 62–65 SB, 107 WBWHAT’S NEW?Communication Students will be able to:Objectives: – use idiomatic expressions and softening propositions.– use vocabulary, phrases and idioms related to role models.Educational Students will address the relationship of positive and negativeObjectives: role models to human development.Connected – Teenage role models – Fashion industry and role modelsTopics: – Parents as role models – Literary role models– Eminem and music role models – Male and female role models– Superheroes – Evolving role modelsGrammar: Joining clausesKey Vocabulary: advocate foul-mouthed paralysisair play gutter-dwelling pressure woundbigot icon quick fireconglomeration idolise slutconjure up in your face sparkcontemporary invincible stereotypedeep down mentor surpassembrace non-compromising up in armsfeat outrage viciousThe BIG question: DO WE NEED SOMEONE TO LOOK UP TO?VIEWPOINTFact: The UK teenage girls’ magazine, Sugar, holdsan annual readers’ poll of the top 100 inspirationalwomen. The information is in the form of agraphic based on this poll of young women from13 to 18.Source:www.sugarmagazine.co.ukEQ: Do you think these are positive role models forgirls? Why / Why not? What kinds of lessons could thesewomen teach girls? How popular are these women inyour country?Quote: Albert Einstein (1879–1955) Germanphysicist, who later became a US citizen. Famous fordeveloping his theory of relativity, he won the 1921Nobel Prize for Physics. Aware of how his theoryhad laid the groundwork for the later developmentof the nuclear age and nuclear weapons, he becamean advocate of nuclear disarmament after WorldWar II.Photos: The photos show:• Kofi Annan (from Ghana), the Secretary-Generalof the United Nations up to December 2006. Hehas worked in a number of different area at theUN, including at United Nations HighCommissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).• Christina Aguilera (from the USA), best-sellingpop star who went topless on the cover ofone of her albums. She is involved in aYouthAids.org campaign to raise awarenessand funds to help protect young people fromHIV / Aids.• Tanni Grey-Thomson, Britain’s best-knownwheelchair athlete, who has won gold medalsat the Paralympics and broken world recordsat distances ranging from 100 m to themarathon.EQ: Do you think Albert Einstein / Kofi Annan /Christina Aguilera / Tanni Grey-Thomson is a goodrole model? Who would each of them appeal to as arole model?BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007105


QSE Advanced_Unit14 2/1/07 9:12 PM Page 106Unit 14 Heroes and villains Teacher’s Guide See pages 62–65 SB, 107 WB1 WORD POWERA gets students to discuss common adjectives thatcould be attributed to role models. You can suggeststudents associate each adjective with a particularperson. It is unlikely they will find someone to fit allthe adjectives, so there will be room for discussion.B 1 gets students to practise using the softeningexpressions from Language Bank 14.1 WORD POWER B1 Sample answersI’m sorry. It’s just that I don’t see Britney Spears as agood role model. / It’s quite difficult, but I thinkChristina Aguilera can be a positive role model. / If Icould just mention one thing, I think Kofi Annanis a good role model despite the Oil for Foodscandal. / Actually, I had thought that / I oftenwonder if maybe Tanni Grey-Thomson wouldn’t bea role model if you don’t like sport.ARTICLESEminem – Is He A Poet Or Bigot?This article discusses the influence of Eminem andother popstars on young people. The article waswritten by a youth organisation, Children’s Express,which writes for the Belfast Telegraph. Eminem (realname Marshall Bruce Mathers III) is a controversialfigure in hip hop and the music industry in general.Beyond the fact that he is one of the few successfulwhite rappers accepted by the black community, hisMarshall Mathers LP was attacked for containingmisogynistic and homophobic lyrics. To counterthese claims, he famously appeared on stage withElton John at the Grammy Awards to perform Stan.EQ: What do you think of Eminem? Is his musicmisogynistic, homophobic or violent? Why is hip hop sopopular outside the African-American communitywhere it originated? How popular are rap and hip hopartists in your country?Reeve Was Real-Life ‘Superman’This article is a tribute discussing the life and deathof Christopher Reeve. After his accident, he did notgive up hope for a cure, and became an ardentadvocate for people with spinal cord injuries andthe possibility that repairing spinal cord injurieswould be possible in the future. Reeve was alsoan outspoken defender of stem cell research andcritic of the US government anti-stem cell researchposition. While he will stay in people’s minds asSuperman, he will probably be remembered morefor his dedicated work after his injury.EQ: What made Reeves a role model? Are disabledpeople generally seen as role models? Why / Why not?2 READINGA 1 is a skimming activity that will help studentswith one of the Reading sections of the CAE exam.2 READING A1 AnswersEminem: foul-mouthed, pop star, poet, icon,gutter-dwelling bigot, Brit award winner, biggestselling male artist, anti-women, anti-gay;Christopher Reeve: actor, champion of sufferers ofspinal cord injuries, advocate of stem cell research,real-life Superman, his courage was extraordinary,our champion.A2 This question relates to a type of question in theTrinity exam which requires students to speculateand conclude on the unstated feelings of people.A 3 Students should first identify key adjectivesdescribing both Eminem and Reeves.B1requires students to contrast opinions ofdifferent people.2 READING B Answers1 Drew and Lisa don’t think pop stars are not goodrole models for young people, Mairead thinksEminem is a good role model because he tells / saysit how it is.2 (Sample answer) The irony is that he playedSuperman, an invincible super hero, but he wasnot invincible. In real life, he could be injured likeanyone else. / He played a superhuman man ofsteel but in real life, when he was paralysed in anaccident, he showed more courage than animaginary character.B 2The irony is that he played Superman, aninvincible super hero, but he was not invincible.In real life, he could be injured like anyone else.106 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit14 2/1/07 9:12 PM Page 107QSE AdvancedSee pages 62–65 SB, 107 WBUnit 14Teacher’s GuideC 1 This question relates to a type of question inthe Trinity exam which requires students tospeculate and conclude on the unstated feelingsof people. You may want to extend the discussionby asking: If you were a pop star would you carewhat others thought of you? Do you think a celebrity’slife belongs to them or the media?C 2This question requires students to speculate onthe differences between Eminem and ChristopherReeve. Ask students to look at the types of careersboth men have had, how their actions are presentedin the media and the causes they support.EQ: Which person do you think most young peoplewould prefer as a role model?3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of: personal rolemodels, personal and impersonal role models,messages given by pop stars, popularity ofanti-establishment role models, and role modelsin different groups in society.A EQ: How does someone choose a role model? Arerole models a question of personal taste, popularity orsomething else? Can you judge someone withoutknowing them personally?B EQ: Why are parents and other family membersoften overlooked as role models? Teenagers often rebelagainst their parents. Is it possible to idolise and rebelagainst the same person?C EQ: Who are your favourite music stars? Do youthink young people act on the messages sent by popstars?D EQ: Think about different groups in your country:for example, ethnic groups or people with disabilities.Who are some role models for them? How important isit to have a positive role model in a group?4 LISTEN DVDWhile the popularity of comic books has changedover the years, many comic book characters arepopular now because of Hollywood films basedon comic books. In films, the special abilitiesof superheroes are brought to life usingcomputer-generated images (CGI). Superheroes infilms include: Superman, Batman, the X-Men, theHulk, Spider-Man, and the Fantastic Four.A Photos: The pictures are of Batman and LaraCroft, played by Angelina Jolie, from the popularTomb Raider video games and movies.B is a CAE-type listening activity.4 LISTEN B, C, D AnswersB Spider-man: complex hero and very human, lotof problems but faces them, an accidental hero:Superman: an early blueprint for superheroes, goodguy, helps people; Wonder Woman: independent.C (Sample answer) Comic book genre dominated bymale characters, but some strong female characterssuch as Wonder Woman.D 1 1938–1954; 2 His grandfather drew cartoonsfor comic books / comic book cartoonist; 3 Thegood guys against the bad guys, fighting crime andhelping people. 4 Wonder Woman – independent,Batgirl – helper, extension of a male character likeBatman.5 TEAMWORKThis activity is designed to get students to thinkhow parents concerned about their child’s well-beingmight view teenage role models. There is a deepermeaning to this activity in that many parents’ firstinstinct is often to restrict children’s and teenagers’access to negative influences, without consulting theyoung people themselves. There have been numerousgrassroots movements to restrict children andteenagers access to different things. For instance, theParents Music Research Center in the USA pushedfor a film-style rating system on music that led tothe ‘Parental Advisory: Explicit Content’ sticker onmany CDs.Source:Raising PG kids in an X-Rated Society, Tipper Gorewww.concernedpta.com.gh/index_old.html,www.ncac.orgEQ: Should teenagers’ access to negative role models berestricted? How do you think your parents would rateyour role models?BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007107


QSE Advanced_Unit14 2/1/07 9:12 PM Page 108Unit 14 Heroes and villains Teacher’s Guide See pages 62–65 SB, 107 WB6 CONTROVERSYThe fashion industry has been criticised about thekind of body images that they promote, especiallyfor young women. Some people say the fashionindustry is simply pandering to the desires of themajority of women when they choose thin models.Thin models reinforce this ideal body image thatthe majority of women can only hope for. Recently,larger-size models have appeared more in fashionmagazines. Dolly, an Australian women’s fashionmagazine, saw a 13 per cent increase in readershipafter introducing larger models in their fashionspreads. Similarly, a popular TV reality show in theUS, America’s Next Top Model 3, also featured alarger-size model as one of the ten finalists.Sources:www.cosmopolitan.com, www.adiosbarbie.comEQ: Does the fashion industry affect people’s idea ofbody image? What can be done about this? Do youthink men are also affected by men’s fashion magazines?7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A SourcesThe Art of Mentoring, Sinclair GoodladStudents as Tutors and Mentors, Mike Peggwww.mentoring.org, www.womenswork.org/girls/refs/mentor.htmlB requires students to write satirically. It would beworth asking students to review Unit 4’s first articleLeave the Poor Psychopath Alone as an example ofwriting satire.8 LITERATURE in English [CLIL]The two authors represent two of the 20th century’smore critically acclaimed American authors. Theyare generally regarded as ‘cool’, accessible andappealing to younger readers because they discussedtopics that represented a break from the normalnarrative in American literature.Maya Angelou tackled racial issues that were stillbeing worked out in 1970s America, followingthe rise of the civil rights movement in the 1960s.In addition, she was a woman writing about issuesthat few women were addressing in contemporaryliterature: rape, murder and bigotry. Even in theface of these adversities, she maintained anoverwhelming sense of hope for the future. Andwhile it was a simple act of autobiographicalstorytelling, she was clearly breaking new ground.Jack Kerouac wrote about being young in the1950s. Trapped by a culture that demandedconformity – a family, a house, a car and a regularjob, this younger generation wanted more. InOn the Road Kerouac discusses travelling the openroad, bohemian lifestyles, jazz, race relations, druguse, sexuality and even homosexuality with acompelling, naïve curiosity. Like Angelou, it wasa major break from contemporary authors.SourcesI Know Why The Caged Bird Sings, Maya AngelouOn The Road, Jack Kerouacwww.mayaangelou.com,www.jackkerouac.com/index.phpEQ: What kinds of books do you like to read? Namebooks and authors who have influenced you? Do youthink literature is cool? Do authors make good rolemodels? Why / Why not?9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers the topics of: gender and rolemodels, friends as role models, careers as a basis forbeing role models, evolving role models, and rolemodels and stereotypes.A Try to get students to think about role models interms of gender.EQ: Are there role models that are common to bothsexes? What is your reaction if a boy has Britney Spearsas a role model and a girl has Arnold Schwarzeneggeras a role model?B Students should think about specific friends andthe positive things that they can draw from them.EQ: Do your parents see your friends as positive ornegative role models? Who has more influence on you:parents or friends?C Ask students to list specific careers: for example,lawyers, businesspeople, nurses, firefighters, criminals.EQ: Do some careers make for bad role models?108 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_Unit14 2/1/07 9:12 PM Page 109QSE AdvancedSee pages 62–65 SB, 107 WBUnit 14Teacher’s GuideD Try to get students to think about the role modelsthey had as children. You can brainstorm these as aclass.EQ: Do you think the role models you had as a childhad much influence on you? Do some role modelsremain the same throughout your life?E Ask students about unusual role models to seehow these do or do not fit with stereotypes.EQ: What is the most unusual role model you haveheard of?10 Your answer: DO WE NEED SOMEONETO LOOK UP TO?There is a phrase often attributed to Isaac Newtonoften quoted: “If I have seen further it is by standingon the shoulders of giants.” It means that he was onlyable to explore further by having learned from peoplewho came before him. This is true even with thesimplest of acts; we are part of those who surroundus. The question here tries to get students to considerthe basic need for role models. Is it simply an evolvingdrive in our natural development? Or is it somethingwe could develop without? In the absence of others aspossible role models, would we be who we are today?WORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will get students to practise the softeningexpressions from Language Bank 14.1 WORD POWER Sample answers1 I’m sorry. It’s just that I disagree with youabout Eminem. – Well, there’s always a firsttime for everything. 2 I often wonder if maybeparents expect celebrities to be unreasonablyresponsible. – You’ll have your work cut out foryou if you think you can change their minds.3 It’s quite difficult to know for certain, but Ithink a teenager’s friends are their most importantrole models. – It stands to reason. 4 If I couldjust mention one thing, I have always looked upto my father. – It stands to reason. 5 I’m sorry.It’s just that we’ll only play if she coaches theteam. – Well, don’t hold your breath! 6 If Icould just mention one thing. When I wasgrowing up my hero was Spider-man. – It standsto reason. He was my hero too. 7 Actually, Ihad thought that most people were shocked withthe arrest of the star. – The bigger they are, theharder they fall. 8 I often wonder if maybe sheinspired me to become a doctor. – There’s alwaysa first time for everything.2 USE OF LANGUAGE: Joining clausesThis activity discusses athletes as role models. Theactivity is based on an activity type for the CAEand CPE exams.2 USE OF LANGUAGE Answers1 that / which 2 that 3 what4 who 5 When 6 which / that7 because / when 8 that3 WRITINGA SourcesConfessions of a Hero-Worshipper, Stephen J. Dubnerwww.myhero.com/myherowww.jerryjazzmusician.com/mainHTML.cfm?page=heroesindex.htmlB SourcesHow Not to Write a Screenplay, Denny Martin FlinnComplete Idiot’s Guide to Screenwriting, Skip Presswww.pubinfo.vcu.edu/artweb/playwriting4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1f 2e 3a 4b 5d 6c1 babes in arms very young children so not ableto do things for themselves. 2 to take their cue tofollow the example of. 3 to show guts to showcourage, be brave. 4 to be in good hands to behelped by reliable people. 5 in someone’s goodbooks in favour with someone. 6 to take undersomeone’s wing to be given someone’s protection.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007109


QSE Advanced_Unit14 2/1/07 9:12 PM Page 110Unit 14 Heroes and villains Teacher’s Guide See pages 62–65 SB, 107 WB• What would you do if your parents thought yourfriends were bad role models?– I think my parents would respect my choices.I’m not a babe in arms any more.– I think it would take a lot of guts to follow myparents’ wishes.– I want to stay in my parents’ good books soI might find some new friends.• Do you follow everything your role model does?– I take some cues from her, but I am my ownperson. I make my own choices.– It takes more guts to follow your own path thanto follow a role model.– I think it’s important for a role model to takeyou under their wing, but this doesn’t meanyou can’t be your own person.• How are you as a role model?– My younger brother takes cues from what I do,so I have to be careful what I do.– I’ve taken a younger student under my wing.She’s doing better at school since I’ve beenhelping her.– My friends are in good hands when they askme for advice and help. I’m always there forthem.110 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_ER2 2/1/07 4:07 PM Page 111ER 2 Snowboard nirvana Teacher’s GuideSee pages 66–67 SBWHAT’S NEW?Communication Ss will be able to use phrases or grammar from:Objectives: Units 1–7, Extended Reading 1Unit 8: Signposting words and phrases: Arguments (1) / AffirmingUnit 9: Interrupting / Signposting phrases: Arguments (2)Unit 10: Challenging Arguments and opinions / IntensifiersUnit 11: Evaluating different standpoints / Tentative expressionsUnit 12: Deducing / Uncountable nouns (grammar)Unit 13: Colloquialisms / ImplyingUnit 14: Idiomatic expressions / Softening expressionsEducational Ss will explore how making decisions (career, marriage) lead toObjectives: different lifestyles.Connected – Snowboarding – Bohemian lifestyleTopics: – Cultural differences – Global warmingGrammar / IdiomsVocabulary: Jargon / slangKey Vocabulary: Aussie footie pipeawesome gain a reputation plagued bybad conditions ingenious quick smartbattered judge a book by its cover snap out ofbroken English mag spurt outcrack a joke make a mental note stock questiondaze misnomer stroll vdodgypark (see Ex. 3) [place forfluorescentdoing snowboard tricks]EXTENDED READING: Background InformationThis snowboard blog comes from the website forthe Board the World magazine. The editors of themagazine travel to different ski or snowboard resortsaround the world and give (we)blog editorials onhow good or bad a resort was.It is interesting to note how much the snowboardinghas changed within only a few decades.Although it originated in the 1920s, it wasn’t untillater in the mid-1970s that the sport becamepopularised. Up until the early 1990s,snowboarding was banned from many ski resortspartly due to its association with teenagers and theskateboarding and surfing culture.EQ: 1 What do you think of boarding sports likesnowboarding, surfing, skateboarding and windsurfing?Why are they so popular today? Why do you thinksnowboarding was banned from many ski slopes untilthe early 1990s?2 Snowboarding was first an official sport at in the1998 Winter Olympics. How are sports chosen forthe Olympics? Can you think of any sports thatshould be added to or left out of the Olympics? Why?3 Some people travel their whole lives for work or bychoice. What would it be like to travel round theworld all the time? Would it suit you? Why do peopleneed ‘roots’?1 READINGA is a common skimming activity. It will helpstudents writing the Reading part of the CAE,the Trinity Controlled Writing ISE III section,IELTS Reading Part 2, and IGCSE ReadingParts 1 and 3.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007111


QSE Advanced_ER2 2/1/07 4:07 PM Page 112ER 2 Snowboard nirvana Teacher’s GuideSee pages 66–67 SB1 READING A Answers1 The snowboarders travel to Laax Crap based onthe advice of the snowboard shop guy in Verbier,Switzerland.2 They are shocked and awed by its size. Later theysaid, “Laax rocks!”3 Swiss Germans were friendlier and drink aboutten times as much.2 IDIOMSThis activity follows the specifications of theTrinity Language Exam Grades 10 and 11 whichcall for students to have a good understandingof and ability to use various idioms. The correctuse of idioms will help students in CAE as well.2 IDIOMS AnswersA 1 snap out of something, 2 gain a reputation for,3 give something a go, 4 pull someone’s leg, 5 notjudge a book by its cover, 6 make a mental note ofsomething.B 1 Why don’t you give surfing a go? You’ll like it.2 Ron quickly gained a reputation for drinkingtoo much.3 You’re pulling my leg. Nobody can hold theirbreath for six minutes.4 I made a mental note of what she said in case shedenied it later.5 Hey! Snap out of it! You almost stepped in frontof that bus.6 You can’t judge a book by its cover. He’s not asmean as he looks.3 IN THE POWDERThis section follows the specifications of theTrinity Language Exam Grades 10 and 11, whichcall for students to be able to understand wordsin context.EQ: What do these words mean? In what other areasdo people use jargon? How is jargon a positive andnegative thing?3 IN THE POWDER Answerslift stationMammoth Mountain (major snow boarding resort)mountain(rockin’) parkrockin’ cool, very goodpark short for snowboard park, a outdoorcomplex designed for snowboarders withequipment for doing snowboard tricks]peak(good) pipepipe half-pipe, a semi-circular slope designedfor snowboarding aerial trickspowderresortridesnowboard mag(azine)snowboard shopvertical (metres) heightWhistler Blackcomb (ski resort)4 PORTFOLIO WRITINGYou should remind the students that both activitiesare from a first-person point of view. Juz might say,“We went to Verbier. I couldn’t board anywherethough because of no snow.”A SourcesSnowboarding Skills: The Back to Basic Essentials forAll Levels, Cindy Klehwww.snowboarding.comC SourcesThe Weblog Handbook, Rebecca Bloodwww.blogger.comwww.blogwise.com5 INTERACTIVE TASKThis activity is directly based on the InteractiveTask phase of the Trinity Language Spoken ExamGrades 10 and 11. It would also be useful practicefor developing stronger communicative skills andconfidence for Parts 3 and 4 of the spoken phase ofthe CAE exam.112 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Advanced_ER2 2/1/07 4:07 PM Page 113QSE AdvancedSee pages 66–67 SBER 2Teacher’s GuideThis activity requires students to lead theconversation, which can be a challenge for somestudents. It is important that you go round theroom to monitor the students’ communicativeleadership in this activity. They should becommenting and asking their partner questions.Silence is not an option; it is up to them to keepthe dialogue active and flowing if, and when, theirpartner begins to falter. They should already haveexperience with leading the dialogue duringTeamwork, presentation and Further Discussionactivities in previous units.To help in general, you can get students to thinkof the different brainstorming activities they haveencountered so far in the Teamwork activities.Comment 1: If students seem to have troublebeginning, you can help them by suggesting a fewcities: London, Paris, Athens, Madrid, Tokyo,Sydney, Rio De Janeiro. You can further suggest afew activities: going to new restaurants, seeingfamous places, doing interesting activities (trainrides, parasailing).EQ: What would you need to know before going onthis journey? How much should you know about aculture before you travel to a country?Comment 2: If students are having troublebeginning, you can help them by suggesting theybrainstorm what they can learn by experiencingother cultures. Some suggestions to help withtourism: income for tourist industry (types ofcompanies depending on tourism), environmentalconcerns, obnoxious tourists, social problems(illegal immigration, sex tourism, etc.)EQ: What would happen if the tourist trade weresuddenly stopped (for example, Asian tsunami,border closures, disease epidemic)? What wouldhappen if no one travelled? Can you learn as muchabout a culture by watching it on TV or readingabout it?BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007113


Unit 15 Family matters Teacher’s Guide See pages 68–71 SB, 108 WBWHAT’S NEW?Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – use expressions for generalising and conditionals.– use vocabulary, phrases and idioms related to roles in the family.Educational Ss will analyse the cultural meaning and significance of relationships betweenObjectives: parent and child, husband and wife and other family members.Connected – Birth rates – Childcare – Household choresTopics: – Modern families – Teenage mothers – The extended family– Working mothers – Generation gap – How to be a parent– Fathers’ rights in divorce – International adoptions – Arranged marriages– Work-life balance – Large familiesGrammar: ConditionalsKey Vocabulary: adopted desert in-laws monk rotaallocate domestic bliss job pool newlyweds separatedblood ties droves juggle nuclear family skyrocketboast dual leeway onslaught sparkcontentious extended family liberation paternity leave step-childrencorporate jungle frazzled lobbying patriarchal stormcustody battle frown upon maternity leave pelt tacticsdangle high-powered matriarchal rabid thwartdescendant impresario mirror recourse vicarThe BIG question: WHAT’S A NORMAL FAMILY?Here students should think about the definitionof family and family values. Can any family beconsidered normal when every family situationis unique?VIEWPOINTFacts: The significance of these figures lies in thefact that some countries have a low birth rate andhow this affects their ability to maintain theirpopulation base. Two babies have to be born inevery family to maintain population size. It ispossible, however, to offset a declining populationwith more immigration, which is a commonsolution for many countries.Source:UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs,Population Division.EQ: How does your country compare? Why do somecountries have more or less than two children perfamily? What might these countries’ population sizelook like in fifty years? How might the following affectthe estimate: death rates, immigration / emigrationrates, poverty and disease rates? What effect woulddeclining / increasing population size have?Quote: Delia Ephron is an American author andscreenwriter.EQ: How accurate do you think this description ofan extended family is? Has the concept of familychanged much in your lifetime? Is the changing familya good thing?1 WORD POWERA 1 gets students to consider the differentrelationships within the family construct.Students will need to present an argument fortheir choices.A 2 It is important that students should not bepressed to answer this question if they are reluctantto, as discussion about one’s family can be difficultfor some.114 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 68–71 SB, 108 WBUnit 15Teacher’s Guide1 WORD POWER A1 Sample answersTop picture: whole picture – extended family; backrow from left – cousins, nuclear family, newlyweds;middle row from left – divorced / separated, uncle /aunt, adopted child, cousins, in-laws; front rowfrom left – single-parent family, nuclear family,cousins (young children). Lower picture: newlyweds.B gets students to practise the generalising phrasesin Language Bank 15.1 WORD POWER B Sample answersIt’s usually the case that people have extendedfamily. Most people say that the nuclear family isnot that common, but I think it is. Everyone seemsto think that adopted children are not common,but I think they are more common than peoplethink. I don’t know anyone who hasn’t got unclesand aunts.ARTICLES‘New Wives’ Opt For Home LifeThis article discusses an apparent trend in Australiaand other developed countries. Through much of thelast half of the 20th century women have workedhard to ensure equality in all areas of society. Oneof the most contentious was of course equality in theworkplace. For most women this meant showing thatthey were the equals of men in terms of work outputand efficiency. Although a great many womenmanaged to create careers for themselves, many menmaintained the gender roles of the previousgeneration. This meant women had to handle boththeir jobs and the workload at home. Some of today’snew mothers have apparently largely decided toabandon this busy lifestyle for a more traditional one,taking advantage of the maternity leave offered. Inthe UK mothers are entitled to 26 weeks maternityleave. Many other countries offer up to a year.EQ: How busy do you think your mothers’ livesare today? Do you think the trend in the article iswidespread? What is more important – having childrenor having a career? How long should mothers get formaternity leave? How old should children be beforethey go into childcare?Fight for Fathers’ RightsThis article discusses the issue of fathers’ parentalrights after a divorce. The divorce rate in manycountries has been increasing. In the UK, forexample, nearly half of all marriages end in divorce,and the children are caught up in the process.Numerous studies point out some possible effectsto these children’s emotional, social and mentaldevelopment. While many countries grant jointcustody, UK courts take the view that childrenshould be given solely to one parent, in most casesthe mother. As the article states, some mothers canmake it near impossible for fathers to have anyvisiting rights.EQ: What is the divorce rate in your country? Whatare some common reasons for divorce? What effect doesdivorce have on children? In the US, several stateshave special marriage contracts which make itextremely difficult to get divorced. What do you thinkof this idea?2 READINGA 1 is a skimming activity that will help studentswith the English in Use section of the CAE examand the reading section of IGCSE.1 WORD POWER A1, A2 Answers1 Many women don’t return to paid work untilafter the children are at school. A small number stayat home and don’t go back to work at all.2 (Sample answers) If I have children, I will putthem before career. / If I have children, I will dothings differently from my parents. / If they hadfamilies and careers, they would be busy but morecontent. / If I was an older woman, I would pointout that women nowadays only had a choice becauseof what we did before. / If I was an older woman,I would advise my daughter to take it easier.B reflects on-the-spot discussions that appear in theTrinity Spoken exam. Encourage the students to usevocabulary from the text and try to be concrete intheir arguments.C1This question relates to a type of question in theTrinity exam which requires students to speculate onBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007115


Unit 15 Family matters Teacher’s Guide See pages 68–71 SB, 108 WBissues that are not explicitly stated. You may want tohelp the students by suggesting different areas, suchas marriage, children, careers, education, fun.C2This question requires students to speculate onthe possible benefits of having children with onlyone parent. You can make this discussion morecontroversial by asking students to compare how wellsingle mothers would do compared to single fathers.3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of: the meaning offamily, work-life balance, childcare, and fathers’versus mothers’ rights.A EQ: What does family mean to you? Do couplesneed children to be a family? Are your views on familysimilar or different to the rest of society?B EQ: Is it possible to have two working parents anda happy family? Can you have it all? Many people arechoosing to work fewer hours to balance their lives.What would life be like only working 20–25 hours?C EQ: How expensive are each of these childcareoptions? Do mothers get maternity leave in your country?If not, why not? If so, how long do / should they get?D EQ: Why are mothers more likely to be given custodyof children? Do fathers make good single parents?4 LISTEN DVDThis audio clip is from a BBC Northern Irelandradio show. The interviewer is from NorthernIreland and Courtney Cassidy, the teenage mother,is from the English Midlands. The issue of singlemothers leads to frequent debates in British society.Conservatives often believe that social constraintshave become too lax and welfare only perpetuatesthe problem. More liberal people see the issue as anunfortunate result of poor education and poverty.1 WORD POWER B Answers1 She planned the pregnancy, she thought shecould do it if her mum had. 2 She can give herchildren as much love as a 34- or 38-year oldwoman. 3 She wants to go back to work andhave a career when her children are older.1 WORD POWER C Answers1 He left her for another woman after the first babywas born. 2 When she was 15, she went out andgot drunk, then had sex with a man she didn’tknow. 3 When she was already pregnant with herfirst daughter.5 TEAMWORKThis activity is designed to get students to do twothings. Firstly, it will allow them to discuss theirfamilies, using vocabulary that will be useful in theexam, but they can talk about friends too if this iseasier. Secondly, it will give them the opportunityto discuss generational differences. Overall, thisactivity will prepare the students to discuss theirfamilies in a much more concrete way in the exam.6 CONTROVERSYIn some developed countries the topic of internationaladoptions is not even discussed, while in others itseems to be an issue that is strongly debated and evenresented. It is clear that the people adopting fromother countries show their commitment to thechild they are adopting by going to great expense tocomplete often complicated administrativeprocedures, but it is hard to deny that these adoptionsare often made possible only through a large disparityin the standard of living between the developedcountry and the developing country. Is it in the bestinterest of the adopted children to remain in theirown country with few future prospects or to beadopted by a foreign family with a better standard ofliving who can offer them more prospects in life?SourcesThe Complete Guide to Foreign Adoption, BarbaraBascomFrom China with Love: A Long Road to Motherhood,Emily Buchananhttp://international.adoption.com,/www.dfes.gov.uk/adoptionEQ: Do you see these international adoptions asbaby-buying? How do you think people in the UK orother developed countries would react if individualsfrom developing nations came to adopt children fromtheir countries?116 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 68–71 SB, 108 WBUnit 15Teacher’s Guide7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A SourcesFrom Family History to Community History, W.T.R. Prycewww.bbc.co.uk/history/familyhistorywww.thefamilyhistoryproject.co.ukB SourcesWedding Invitations, Announcements, Place Cards,and More, Bette Matthewswww.timesonline.co.uk/section/0,,20989,00.html,http://listings.nytimes.com/classifiedsmarketplace/8 HOME ECONOMICS in English [CLIL]The family was initially a little wary about sharingtheir particular situation, as they had encounteredproblems with media interest in the past. Similarly,Catherine has observed that there are oftenmisperceptions about large families. In her family’scase, she says on her website that many peopleassume that she must be religious, not believe inbirth control, or be very rich. None of which is true.With a great sense of humour, she states quite simplythat she and her husband Reg simply love children.There are of course some difficulties in managinga large family. They need an extra-large van to takethe whole family. Catherine has to do 12 loads ofwashing, twice a month, but she does get a lot ofhelp from her husband and children. The childrenhave home schooling, mainly because it is to far togo to the nearest English-speaking school every day.The family is English-speaking, but they live in amostly French-speaking part of rural Quebec.Source:www.plomp.com/mabearEQ: How common are large families in your country?How are large families viewed in your country? Whatwould it be like to have 10 brothers or sisters? In whatother ways would being part of a large family affectyour life? Would you want that many children yourself?9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers household chores, membersof extended family, parenting skills, and arrangedmarriages.A It might be useful to brainstorm vocabularyrelating to household chores on the board, forexample, washing up, doing laundry / washing, etc.).EQ: How do these compare with people your age?Should parents have to pay children a weeklyallowance to help with the chores?B Try to get students to compare these relationshipswith other cultures.EQ: Do your grandparents or other relatives live withyou? What are the advantages and disadvantages ofhaving extended family nearby? Should extended familymembers have a say in how your family operates?C Ask students to think about parenting as anotherstage in life.EQ: If we expect people to behave in a certain way,should we make sure that parenting is standardised?If parenting were regulated, who should decide howit should be done? Is having children a right or aprivilege?D Try to get students to think about countries thathave arranged marriages and what the culturalreasons behind it might be.EQ: Why do people marry? Why might people choosenot to marry? Do you think parents know better thantheir children about who they should marry?10 Your answer: WHAT’S A NORMAL FAMILY?This question tries to get students to address avery basic concept of family. Marriage and familyare often seen in ideal terms, whereas in manydeveloped countries they have been evolving.Non-standard families from divorce, separation,single-parenting, adoption, step-children, all seemto be in the increase. The question must then beasked is it fair to present the nuclear family offather, mother and 2.4 kids as the model for allfamilies to live up to? Or is it simply anothervariation of family?WORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will get students practising conditionalsas shown in Language Bank 15.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007117


Unit 15 Family matters Teacher’s Guide See pages 68–71 SB, 108 WB1 WORD POWER Sample answers1 If I need advice, I ask my parents. 2 If I see her, Iwill tell her. 3 If I won the lottery, my family wouldbe very excited. 4 If it had been me, I would havegone out of the room. 5 If I’m late, my parents getworried. 6 If you love each other, you will have ahappy family. 7 If I was / were a divorced father inBritain, I would try to see my children as often aspossible / every day / week. 8 If I had known tenyears ago what I know now, I would have become ateacher.2 WRITINGA You can help students by suggesting they startwith themselves, then cover each immediate familymember’s activities over the past five to ten years.B You can help students by getting them to thinkabout how life might be different. Ask them tothink about: technology, politics, world affairs,economy, natural resources and the environment.3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES: Emphasising a pointThis activity is the one of the basic techniques thatstudents should learn to give better presentations.In trying to emphasise modal verbs and negatives,the students will grasp how the rhythms of speechdiffer when used for emphasising.1 WORD POWER Sample answers1 do not 2 never expect 3doplace4 is not 5 should not 6 do function7 would argue 8 should matter4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOM Answers1e 2f 3c 4a 5d 6b1 a chip off the old block exactly like your parent.2 Blood is thicker than water Family is moreimportant than other people. 3 a mummy’s boy spoiled, immature man. 4 a family man manwho considers his family very important. 5 aready-made family step-children through marriage,without giving birth to them or adopting them. 6 theblack sheep of the family person in family who isnot considered respectable or successful.• Why are some family members more successful thanothers?– I think it really depends on whether someone isthe black sheep of the family. Some people justdon’t seem to do very well.– Well, it depends a lot on the success of parents.Children tend to be chips off the old block andfollow their parents’ lead.– I suppose it has to do with how much freedomyou have as a child. I’m sure that being amummy’s boy would stop you from taking risks.• Is it easy to be independent from your parents?– I am not a mummy’s boy, so yes I am veryindependent.– Blood is thicker than water. You have to acceptthat those ties are there forever.– I’m the black sheep of the family, so I’ve alwaysbeen pretty independent.• When do you think people are ready to settle downand have a family?– I’m not sure all men are family men. Maybesome will never settle down.– When I met my husband he already hadchildren, so I had a ready-made family.– I’m a chip off the old block alright, just like mymum, I want kids right away.118 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


Unit 16 Let’s change the subject! Teacher’s Guide See pages 72–75 SB, 109 WBWHAT’S NEW?Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – use expressions for asserting and signposting phrases for sequencing.– use vocabulary, phrases and idioms related to school curriculum.Educational Ss will address curriculum planning, theory and implementation.Objectives:Connected – Student needs, parental wishes – Primary educationTopics: and the demands of the state – Single-sex schools– Favourite subjects – Physical education– Academic versus – Experiential learningcareer-oriented education– Literature– Budget constraints – Well-rounded education– History: Who tells the story – Testing– State of UK schools – Life-long learning– Evolution versus creationismGrammar: Gerunds and infinitivesKey Vocabulary: adolescent echo literateallocate gap manipulateapartheid gender bias neglectautonomy gender-stereotyping reconciliationBantu hail reiteratebrains heritage scholarco-educational hands-on specialistcondemn inclusive standardised testingcreationism inherit unmaskdiversitykayakdyslexicliteracyThe BIG question: ARE STUDENTS LEARNING THE RIGHT THINGS?The idea is to ask the students to think about whatthey learn / learned at school.VIEWPOINTFacts: This information comes from the sameProgramme for International Student Assessment(PISA) study produced by the Organisation forEconomic Co-operation and Development. Thestudy looked at 41 countries in 2003, testing morethan 4,500 15-year-old students in each country.EQ: What can this graph tell us and not tell us?Why do you think Italy has three times fewer universitygraduates than the USA? Does it matter? Howcommon and how important is a universityeducation in your country? Do you think there is aconnection between higher education and economicgrowth?Quote: This anonymous quote presents what mightseem an odd dichotomy, but what many academicswould probably agree with.EQ: Is this statement true? Why / Why not? Do youthink you know enough? Or will ever know enough?Is it better to be ignorant?1 WORD POWERA gets students to consider some of the key criteriathat teachers consider in preparing courses. As thisactivity is opinion-based, the following are onlysuggested answers. If time allows, you may askstudents to expand on the reason for their choices.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007119


Unit 16 Let’s change the subject! Teacher’s Guide See pages 72–75 SB, 109 WB1 WORD POWER A Sample answersI’d put student needs first. The next most importantis standardised testing. Equally important is thesubject matter. And again the curriculum has tofollow government policy. Then I’d put the amountof budget available to allocate, and the classroomresources would come next. And finally, the need tounderstand adolescent psychology.B This activity gives practice in using vocabularyfrom A and the phrases from Language Bank 16.1 WORD POWER B Sample answers1 I would put forward the idea that the teacherwould need to give extra lessons for the dyslexicstudent.2 I am confident that a newly arrived immigrantstudent would get English / ESL lessons to allowthem keep up with regular classes.3 We should realise that a pregnant student is still astudent. She should be treated with the same respectand given the same opportunities to learn as others.4 It can be argued that a new teacher might trymany new activities until they find a formula thatworks.5 I can confirm that excessive budget cuts wouldmake it difficult for teachers to include as manyactivities as they would like.C More practice in using vocabulary and LanguageBank 16 phrases while discussing what is taughtin schools.ARTICLESTeary Asmal Hails New History of South AfricaThis article discusses South Africa’s educationalsystem. From 1948 to 1990, South Africa had asystem of racial segregation called apartheid(Afrikaans word meaning ‘separateness’). Althoughthe country is today about 60 per cent black, thewhite minority had established itself through thecolonial rule of first the Dutch and later the British.During apartheid, the South African educationsystem spent about ten per cent on each black childcompared to each white child. Moreover, it was nearlyimpossible for blacks to get a university education.Similarly, textbooks were written to maintainwhite supremacy. For instance, it was often wronglysuggested that South Africa was largely uninhabiteduntil the Dutch settlers arrived, but the San andKhoekhoe people lived here at the time of the firstDutch arrivals. Some archaeological evidence showsmodern human presence there from 100,000 yearsago. Another important issue was the language ofclassroom instruction. Black students had to betaught in Afrikaans, English and Bantu. Later, itwas only English and Afrikaans. It should be notedto students that the use of textbooks and theeducation system to promote political ends is notisolated to South Africa or the past.EQ: Do you think your country’s textbooks are writtenwell? How can you tell?If people are taught incorrect information in school ortextbooks, how would people learn about the truth?Should it be a crime to provide false information inschools or textbooks? Why / Why not?Can education solve social or racial problems? Haseducation contributed to these problems?Call For ‘Fairer’ Schools SystemThis article discusses a number of issues in the UKschool system. The first point to be addressed wasmore findings from the OECD’s 2003 PISA study(see Viewpoint). UK students had a very poorshowing compared to other OECD countries. Asthe article discusses, the British government wantsto create more specialist schools, which are oftencentred around a particular skill. These schools arerequired to meet certain UK curriculum standards,but are given flexibility in how they achieve thesegoals and how much each subject is taught. Criticssay that these schools force disadvantaged studentsinto vocational areas when they could be betterserved by attending an ordinary school.Similarly, many critics are worried by theincreasing number of specialist religious schoolsand the information taught at these. Among these,the schools run by the Emmanuel SchoolsFoundation sponsored by multimillionaire cardealer and evangelical Christian, Sir Peter Vardy.These schools teach creationism over the dominantUK curriculum which mandates the teaching ofevolution. (See Ex. 4 Listen.)120 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 72–75 SB, 109 WBUnit 16Teacher’s GuideEQ: Is it useful or fair to compare different countries’education systems? What might be some reasons fordifferences in educational levels?2 READINGA is a skimming activity that will help students withthe reading section of the CAE exam.2 READING A Answers1 transformation 2 reconciliation 3 inclusive4 manipulated 5 neglectedB requires students to identify specific information,but also to provide the supporting arguments tothese ideas.2 READING B Answers1 talks about hunters and lion to describe history,natural history / cultural connection with traditionalway of life.2 Generally negative – gives statistics plus doesn’t havewhat Finland does, but minister is optimistic at end.3 Up to the students to decide: (Suggested answers)South Africa: government policy, subject matter,student needs. UK: student needs, governmentpolicy, adolescent psychology.C 1 This question relates to a type of question inthe Trinity exam which requires students tospeculate on issues that are not explicitly stated. Youmay want to help the students by directing them tothink about concrete examples.EQ: Who would you not want to write textbooks onethics, science, religion, or language?C2 This question requires students to speculate onthe students’ own education system compared to theUK’s. This is highly speculative so there is no definiteanswer. You could of course ask students to researchthe matter at PISA’s website, but the question is moreoriented toward looking critically at their own schools.3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of favourite schoolsubjects, practical / vocational versus academiceducation, budgetary concerns, and re-writing history.A EQ: Why are some classes interesting and othersboring? Is it the teacher, the subject, the students,personal taste or something else? Can all subjects beinteresting or boring? Why are some students better insome subjects than others? How much is determined bytheir abilities?B EQ: Are vocational or other practical subjects seenpositively in your country? Many countries have ashortage of skilled labour. Why do you think this is?Should governments try to meet the needs of industrywhen they plan a curriculum? Why / Why not?C EQ: Are any subjects expendable? US schools oftencut art or music rather than sports. Is this fair?Who should finance schools: the government, parents,industry or someone else?Of the different departments in your country’sgovernment, how important is education? Shouldschools be allowed to go bankrupt? Whose fault isunderfunding for schools?D EQ: Do you believe everything you read? Howwould your country’s history be different if it werewritten by other countries?Some historians argue that history is simplystorytelling. The story tends to change with the teller.Do you agree?Is history about facts or interpretation of facts? Howare we able to tell whether something is a historicalfact?4 LISTEN DVDThis audio clip comes from an Arizona correspondentfor the US National Public Radio (NPR). The debateover creationism and evolution has persisted in theUnited States since Charles Darwin published his1859 book, The Origin of Species. Although widelyaccepted in much of the Western world and by manydifferent religions, evolution has been passionatelyresisted especially in the US Bible Belt – the highlyreligious area in the Southern United States.Creationism is the belief that humans and theworld were created exactly as was written in theBook of Genesis in the Bible. Many southernstates had laws which made it illegal to teachevolution. These laws proved unworkable afterthe 1925 Scopes ‘Monkey’ Trial overturned anBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007121


Unit 16 Let’s change the subject! Teacher’s Guide See pages 72–75 SB, 109 WBanti-evolution Tennessee law. By 1958, theNational Science Foundation created theBiological Sciences Curriculum Study, whichstressed the teaching of evolution in biologyclasses. Since the 1968 ‘Epperson versus Arkansas’Supreme Court case, the US Federal Governmentrepealed all creationist laws. Today most USproponents of creationism defend their case ongrounds of religious freedom.4 LISTEN B, C1 AnswersB The science teacher is against. The local residentis in favour. The supporter of science education isagainst.C 1 Science teachers are worried that there istoo much of a buffet style to science topics; notenough in-depth study. Some subjects arebeing taught too soon. Genetics is not coveredin cells.2 Arizona education superintendent Tom Horneproposed to change the wording of the objectives sothat students can ‘evaluate’ fossil evidence ratherthan use it to prove evolution.3 He’s worried about changing the language of thecurriculum. By presenting arguments for and againstevolution, you can introduce creationism, which isbad science.4 No, because there was hardly any public notice orpress coverage.5 TEAMWORKThis activity is an attempt to discuss thepracticality of basic education. While mostpeople have an understanding about the needfor education, the basic knowledge and skillslearned in school are often so fundamental anduseful as adults that they are often overlookedas important.EQ: Do you think most people are aware of how orhow often they use their school education? Do youthink people would be able to learn this basic knowledgeand these basic skills without a school education? Howdo you use your school education?How has your school education changed you as aperson? How important are teachers in society?6 CONTROVERSYAlthough co-educational classes have existed sincemedieval times due to the practicality of educating insmall communities, these examples were often limitedto primary education. Single-sex education has been astaple of the primary, secondary and post-secondaryeducation systems in the UK and many other countries.An important early factor was the Victorian-eraassumption that the genders had considerably differenteducational requirements according to their societalgender roles. Beyond the primary education of readingwriting and arithmetic, women’s education was largelygeared toward domestic tasks such as preparing food,sewing and taking care of babies. Men were accordinglytaught much of everything else. However, as thewomen’s rights movement developed through the later1800s and early 1900s, women showed they had boththe interest and talent for the many different fields ofstudy. School systems begrudgingly had to admitwomen to secondary and post-secondary schools.Today, however, much debate centres around howthe different sexes may or may not benefit fromhaving members of the opposite sex present. Recentstudies out of the United States seem to indicate thatthere is no statistically significant difference in testperformance between pupils in co-ed or single-sexschools. That aside, this does little to change thereality that many students and parents simply prefersingle-sex schools for their lack of distraction andfreedom from gender stereotypes.SourcesBeyond the Great Divide: Co-education or Single-sex?,Judith GillGoing Co-ed: Women’s Experiences in Formerly Men’sColleges and Universities, 1950–2000, Leslie Miller-BernalSame, Different, Equal: Rethinking Single-SexSchooling, Rosemary C. SalomoneEQ: Which kind of school did you attend? What doyou think it would have been like to attend the othertype? Do you think the opposite sex is a distraction inyour studies? Do you think there is gender-stereotypingof certain school subjects?7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.122 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 72–75 SB, 109 WBUnit 16Teacher’s GuideA SourcesTransformative Learning: Educational Vision for the21st Century, Thomas BerryThe End of Homework, Etta KralovecDoes Education Matter?: Myths about Education andEconomic Growth, Alison WolfB Sourceswww.travelcanada.cawww.australia.comwww.southafrica.net8 PHYSICAL EDUCATION in English [CLIL]“Tell me, and I will forget. Show me, and I mayremember. Involve me, and I will understand.” With thisadvice, Chinese philosopher Confucius illuminates oneof the fundamental debates in educational theory andepistemology (philosophy of knowledge).Some argue that people learn best through abstractconceptualising. Others believe that we need concreteexperiences to learn concepts fully. Outward Bound andthe Danmark Tall Ship Maritime School follow this idea.By immersing the learners in the experience, theparticipants are shown how things work and mustdevelop the necessary skills themselves by completingthese tasks themselves. Both programmes have a longtrack record of success and safety.EQ: Would you like to take a course like this? Wouldyou learn as much if you read about the experiencein ordinary classes? How might these courses benefityou later in life?Although both programmes have exceptional safety records,there always remains a small possibility of injury or loss oflife. Do you think teenagers are capable of handling thedangers? Should education contain any risk?SourcesPrinciples and Practice of Informal Education:Learning through Life, Linda Deer RichardsonThe Outward Bound Earthbook, L. Crenshawwww.outwardbound-uk.orghttp://soefart.inforce.dk/sw232.aspwww.fuldskruefrem.dk/eng.htm9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers the influence of literature,balance of subjects at school, value of tests andexams, and life-long learning.1 Try to get students to discuss concrete examplesof books they have read.EQ: What can literature tell you about your culture oryour country? How does your country’s literature differfrom other countries? Have you read literature in otherlanguages?2 Try to get students to think about how ideas cancome from other areas.EQ: What ideas could a scientist get from studyingEnglish, Anthropology, Music, History or Law? Howmight studying Astronomy, History, Religion,Psychology or Political Science affect someone studyingEnglish at university? Do you agree that people need awell-rounded education? Are there any problemsassociated with too much specialisation?3 Try to get students to think about the types oftests (government or final exams) they have doneat school.EQ: Is standardised testing fair? Do tests like the IQ testserve any real purpose? IQ tests and other standardisedtests are often criticised for having a cultural or racialbias. What do you think? Is it possible to create astandard test for everyone?4 Try to get students to think about whether theysee finishing school or university as the end of theireducation.EQ: What would people in older age groups (forexample, in their thirties or fifties) want to study? Ofthe older people you know, are they still trying to learnnew things?10 Your answer: ARE STUDENTS LEARNINGTHE RIGHT THINGS?This question tries to get students to thinkabout the essential value of their education.While students are acutely aware that the lawrequires them to go to school, not all of themappear to appreciate the need for it. Studentsshould be encouraged to critically analyse whatthey get from their studies. With either positiveor negative opinions, students should be asked tojustify their opinions with relevant arguments andexamples.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007123


Unit 16 Let’s change the subject! Teacher’s Guide See pages 72–75 SB, 109 WBWORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will get students practising thesignposting phrases for sequencing from LanguageBank 16. These are suggested answers as the listcan differ with different opinions.1 WORD POWER Sample answersI’d put ‘gather information about differentuniversities’ first. The next most important wouldbe ‘take a tour or look at web pages of prospectiveuniversities’. Then I would ‘send an application tothe university’. Equally important is to ‘apply for aloan and scholarships’. This would be followed by‘apply for accommodation if the university is awayfrom you live’. Also I would ‘see an advisor todiscuss which classes you should take’. And finally,I would ‘register for classes’.2 USE OF LANGUAGE: Gerund and infinitiveThis activity introduces the issue of universitytuition fees. The activity is based on an authentictest activity used by the University of CambridgeLocal Examinations Syndicate in the CAE and CPE.2 USE OF LANGUAGE Answers1 to lead 2 continuing 3 to pay4 raising 5 being excluded 6 to learn7 to end up 8 ensuring 9 to decide10 to live3 WRITINGA SourcesFair Wind and Plenty of It: A Modern-Day Tall ShipAdventure, Rigel CrockettJolie Brise: A Tall Ship’s Tale, Robin BryerTall Ship (video), James Lipscomb, director.B SourcesLies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your AmericanHistory Textbook Got Wrong, James W. LoewenArcheology of Knowledge, Michel Foucaultwww.csulb.edu/~ttl4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1f 2a 3d 4e 5b 6d1 to speak your mind to say what you think openly.2 to broaden your mind to increase yourexperience through travel, education, contact withother people, etc.3 to pick up (a language, a skill) to acquire /learn (a language, etc.).4 to set the bar high to have high standards.5 to have a memory like a sieve to have a verybad memory, forget everything.6 to pass with flying colours to succeed with verygood marks.Ask students to use the idioms when answeringthese questions orally. This can be done as pairwork or as a class.• Should students be allowed to voice all opinionsin class?– I think it’s important for students to speaktheir minds. It motivates them to participate.– I think people can help broaden their minds bylistening to other opinions.– You can pick up new information if everyonecan honestly give their opinions.• Should learning be about memorising things?– Some students like me have a memory like asieve, so it’s not fair.– Say you take a test based on memorisinginformation, what does it prove? If you passit with flying colours, you only prove youhave a good memory, not that you understand.– If you want to set the bar high, you shouldknow everything. Memorising helps.• If you could do your studies again, what would youdo differently?– I would study more to pass everything with flyingcolours.– I might have taken many different classes, tobroaden my mind more.– I would have set my bar a little higher to getbetter grades.124 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


Unit 17 Adventures in science Teacher’s Guide See pages 76–79 SB, 110 WBWHAT’S NEW?Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – use expressions for developing an argument and expressions usedto introduce assertions.– use vocabulary, phrases and idioms related to scientific developments.Educational Ss will address recent and future concerns in the differentObjectives: fields of science.Connected – History of the Earth compared to – Future devicesTopics: the history of humans – Human cloning– Recent scientific discoveries – Use of chemicals in everyday life– Ethics in science – Nanotechnology– Patents and innovation – Biometric scanning– Bionics and robotics – Large engineering projects– Genetic engineering – Non-lethal weapons– Mission to Mars – Cold fusionKey Vocabulary: AI (artificial intelligence) genetically modified (GM) non-lethalalternative energy greater good pave the wayamino acid herd pouchapplied science / engineering holy grail power-assist vbiodegradable housings prototypebioelectric human genome purificationbionics hybrid purifybody armour hydrogen fuel cell retinabuilding block ignite roboticsbulky integrate shrunkcloning iris sought-aftercompensate levitation submergecybernics limb superconductordetectable macro suturedisplace mass-produce tendonembryonic material science unclogexoskeleton micro unveilfibre mimic vapourforensic sciencenanogenetically alterednurture1 The BIG question: IS SCIENCE MAKING LIFE BETTER?VIEWPOINTFact: The age of the universe can be measured bymeasuring the furthest point of the universe andmultiplying this by the rate of expansion from thecentre. The age of the Earth can be measured severalways. The most common is the measurement ofradioactive decay. Uranium (U) is known todecompose into lead (Pb) isotopes at a given rate. Bymeasuring the amount of lead isotopes, we knowhow much the uranium has decomposed over timeand the age of the Earth. Homo sapiens sapiens(modern humans) can be dated by carbon datingof the oldest skulls and by studying the rate ofmitochondrial DNA mutations.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007125


Unit 17 Adventures in science Teacher’s Guide See pages 76–79 SB, 110 WBSources:http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/science/mysteries_l1/age.htmlwww.nasa.gov/worldbook/earth_worldbook.htmlwww.mnh.si.edu/anthro/humanoriginsEQ: What do you think this comparison says abouthumans? About the Earth? About the universe? Howdoes this compare to the age of human inventions:Gutenberg’s printing press (1452), the first telescope(1608), the first telephone (1870), the first computer(1936)?Quote: Dr. Magnus Pyke (1881–1958) was aBritish scientist known for trying to make scienceunderstandable to ordinary people.EQ: How accurate do you think this descriptionis? How well does the average person understandthe different areas of science today? Is it importantfor average people to understand science? Why /Why not?1 WORD POWERA 1 gets students to consider some scientificdevelopments that have attracted public interest.1 WORD POWER A1, A2 Answers1c 2b 3e 4a 5d2 (Sample answers) As you are probably aware,magnetic levitation trains can greatly improvethe flow of traffic in cities. As a matter of fact,bionics might lead to technology that would allowparalysed people to walk. The simple fact is thathydrogen fuel cells might be the answer to globalwarming.B gets students to practise the phrases for developingan argument in Language Bank 13.1 WORD POWER B, C Sample answersB 1 Consequently, this means that we could curemany types of spinal injuries.2 It follows logically then that we should becareful about how much of it we eat.3 From here, we can conclude that we should trainmore people as engineers than scientists.C1The project for mapping the human genomepromises many great benefits from geneticallycustomised drugs to identifying the genesresponsible for different diseases.2 This is the classic debate in psychology. Whatis the greatest influence: our parents and the waythey raise us or the genes passed onto us by ourparents? The 1990 Minnesota Study on TwinsReared Apart (Science. Bouchard et al) found littledifference between identical twins brought uptogether and brought up apart in terms oftemperament, career and leisure interests andsocial attitudes.ARTICLESBionic Suit Offers Wearers Super StrengthThis article discusses Yoshiyuki Sankai’s inventionof the cybernetic exoskeleton. While his design isquite innovative, the premise behind Sankai’sinvention has a long history in technologies likedeep-sea pressure suits as well as in science fiction.Many have also drawn the comparison betweenSankai’s cybernetic exoskeleton and the one thatappears in the 1986 movie Aliens, which featuresan industrial-sized exoskeleton machine for movingcargo. Although the first commercial suits ofSankai’s exoskeleton are expected to cost 11,000 to15,000 euros, they do seem to be out of the pricerange of many potential users such as the elderlyand disabled.EQ: How do humans have artificial componentsalready? Do you see the exoskeleton as an extension ofartificial limbs (legs, hands)? Do you think usingcybernetic parts will be more common in the future?‘Spider-Goats’ Start Work on Wonder WebThis article discusses the issue of transgenics,the movement of genetic sequences from oneorganism to another, and bioethics. This particularcase is interesting in that the new organism’s vastpotential to benefit humans has made manypeople overlook transgenic concerns. Firstly, isthis manipulation a violation of that organism’srights? Secondly, it raises the issue of transgenichumans. Scientists have already produced126 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 76–79 SB, 110 WBUnit 17Teacher’s Guidetransgenic pigs that can be harvested for organdonations. It only seems a matter of time beforehumans begin to experiment on human DNA toproduce more useful models: better immunesystems (like rice needing no pesticide), fasterdevelopment (like salmon which grow six timesfaster), or increased muscle mass for athletes (like amouse with double the muscles).Some scientists believe that we may soon seeorganisms that may have the ability to talk andreason like humans, which would cause a seriousrethink about the rights of animals and humans.In 1998, Jeremy Rifkin and Stuart Newmanapplied for a patent in the US for a Humanzee(part human, part chimpanzee) to bring attentionto this issue. The patent was denied, but thedebate was left unresolved.EQ: Do you see transgenic animals as monsters,miracles of science or something else? Are weblurring the lines between species?The success of the transgenic spider-goats has lead tousing the milk of different animals to deliver thingslike drugs and vaccines. Do you think this is agood thing? What might be the effects if transgenicanimals escaped into the wild?2 READINGA is a skimming activity that will help students withthe English in Use section of the CAE exam andthe reading section in IGCSE.2 READING A Answers1 both 2 spider-goat 3 HAL 3 4 spider-goatB reflects the on-the-spot discussions that appear inthe Trinity Spoken exam. You should encourage thestudents to use vocabulary from the text and try tobe concrete in their visual descriptions.C1This question relates to a type of questionin the Trinity exam which requires students tospeculate on issues that are not explicitly stated. Youmay want to help the students by pointing outexamples of industry or areas of government whichmight need this technology: oil, logistics, tourism,agriculture, forestry, aerospace, firefighting, police ormilitary use.EQ: Why might business be interested in cyberneticexoskeletons?2 This question requires students to speculate onthe ethics of transgenic spider-goats. You can givestudents some help by asking students to give thepositive (easy to produce, can be mass produced,can be used to help police, industry) and negative(long-term, unknown health effects to goats andoffspring, creating organisms for profit and humanbenefit) aspects.EQ: Do the positive aspects outweigh the negative?3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of benefits anddrawbacks to science, important discoveries(past and future), the ethics of science, andmedicine and patenting scientific discoveries.A EQ: Give five examples of each. How do you thinkthe public sees scientists (caring / uncaring, analytical /illogical, emotional / unemotional, funny / boring)?Do you think the public generally trusts scientists?Think about the different fields: biologist, nuclearphysicist, geneticist or chemist?B EQ: How would your life be different withoutthese inventions? What do you think it takes to makethese discoveries? Do you think there are too manytechnological or scientific discoveries for people tokeep up with? Is it possible to learn everything aboutthe world?C EQ: What are the positive and negative aspectsof genetic engineering? What are some ‘wonders ofnature’ – unique abilities among plants and animals?Give some examples. How might these special geneshelp other plants, animals or even humans? Why /Why not?Why is it alright to do transgenic work on animals andnot on humans? Will we see transgenic humans in ourlifetime? Will we need to reconsider what we think ofas normal? What would happen if scientists developedanimals with human-like intellect, ability to talk orto think?D EQ: Some patented medicines (AIDS medicines)could save countless lives in the developing world, butBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007127


Unit 17 Adventures in science Teacher’s Guide See pages 76–79 SB, 110 WBare too expensive. Should countries be allowed tooverride patent law in these cases?Is it right to patent parts of the human gene? Dopatents help or harm innovation? Do you think patentholders (medicine or software) are viewed as innovatorswho should be rewarded, exploiters of a common good,or something else?4 WATCH AND LISTEN DVDThis video clip is from the European SpaceAgency, which provides public access to mediacoverage of its space and technology programmes.The video contains an interview with HeinerKlinkrad, an ESA expert on space debris. Heexplains the problems posed by space debris,which looks set to be an increasing problem forfuture space exploration. The implications of thisproblem could be very far-reaching, including anend to all space exploration.Note: ESA is pronounced .4 WATCH AND LISTEN B, C AnswersB Satellites can run out of energy or fall out oforbit. Fuel tanks are explosive and don’t always fallback to Earth. Astronauts could easily be killed inspace by this debris, and can create it if they arenot careful.C19,500; 2 almost 200, 3 hit by a sphere 1.2 cmin diameter, caused a lot of damage.D You can encourage students to speculate on theimpact an end to space exploration would have on aspace scientist.E EQ: Would you like to travel in space? Why / Whynot? Have we really learnt anything valuable fromsending people into space?5 TEAMWORKThis activity is designed to get students thinkingabout how scientists, inventors and businesses mightapproach developing new technology or conductingresearch. Students should be encouraged to exploreany ideas, even wacky ones. Some of the mostinnovative products were not understood for theirpotential before they became better known.To expand the discussion, you can also brainstormalternative energies before the students address thesubject: wind power, tidal power, biomass (agriculturalwaste, peat), hydroelectric energy, biodiesel. Andask the questions: Which of these are used to powerconsumer products today? Which could be used in thefuture?Sources:Why didn’t I think of that?: Bizarre Origins ofIngenious Inventions We Couldn’t Live Without,Allyan FreemanRenewable Energy, Godfrey Boylehttp://inventors.about.com/library/bl/bl12.htm6 CONTROVERSYThe public have been aware of the prospect of humancloning since scientists announced the birth of Dollythe sheep in 1996. One important downside tocloning is that all cells have telomeres, a sequenceof DNA that limits the number of cell divisions. Itis widely believed that the length of telomeresindicates the age of a cell, and therefore the organism.Telomeres tend to shrink over time so the numberof cell divisions remaining, and therefore the yearsremaining, continues to grow smaller. Some scientistsbelieve that Dolly’s much shorter telomeres indicatedthat she might have been physically much older thanher six-year lifespan. Although it cannot be provedconclusively, her arthritis and early death from a lunginfection fit the pattern for much older sheep.Theoretically, a baby born from the DNA of a70 year-old man may share the life expectancy ofa 70-year old.Sources:A Clone of Your Own?: The Science and Ethics ofCloning, Arlene Judith KlotzkoWhose View of Life?: Embryos, Cloning and StemCells, Jane Maienscheinwww.sciencemuseum.org.uk/antenna/dolly/index.aspwww.globalchange.com/sciencestop.htmlEQ: What do you think of human cloning? Wouldyou want to be cloned? Why do you think peopleare horrified by human cloning, but not animal128 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 76–79 SB, 110 WBUnit 17Teacher’s Guidecloning? How does religion affect the debate overcloning?7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A SourcesThe Elements: A Very Short Introduction, Philip Ballwww.chm.bris.ac.uk/webprojects2002/dean/u.htmhttp://c3.org/http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NitrogenB SourcesSome sites with have ideas about scientificdevelopments that students can then research further:www.sciencemap.orgwww.newscientist.orgwww.seedmagazine.comhttp://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/researchhttp://news-service.stanford.eduhttp://news.bbc.co.uk8 ENGINEERING in English [CLIL]While some fields of engineering, such as softwareengineering, have existed for relatively shortperiods, humans have used the principles of naturein practical applications since ancient times.From at least 3000 BC, early humans were alreadyusing levers and smelting metals and developinglarge-scale projects like open-pit mining. TheGreeks developed the ratchet and the waterwheel. The Romans built roads, aqueducts andsewage systems. They also concentrated a lot oftheir engineering skills on military uses, such asbuilding fortresses and weapons. These ties betweenthe military and engineering continue to this day.While this activity includes one example relatingto military use, there are thousands of examples ofeveryday technology that originally had military oraerospace applications. These include GPS, smokedetectors, satellite dishes and zips. The largestadvances of engineering, however, came as a result ofthe scientific revolution and the Industrial Revolution.Many of the engineering work done today follows inthis line. Large-scale projects like the Three GorgesDam are designed to benefit the needs of industry.In many cases, it does seem that modernengineering attempts to do what people oftenthought was impossible. Both nanobots and theThree Gorges Dam would have been consideredimpossible only a few decades ago.EQ: Can you see any dangers of using nanobotsfor medical purposes?Do these security measures or any others affectpersonal freedom?New evidence suggests that hydroelectric dams are aspolluting as coal-burning electricity power stations.Given this and the effect on fish and people alongthe dam, should we still use hydroelectricity? Why doyou think countries are always interested in buildingthe ‘biggest __ in the world’?Should microwave guns be used on people?Sources:www.crnano.orgwww.biometrics.orgwww.wcsscience.com/giant/dam.htmlwww.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/cst/csat11.pdf9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers types of engineering, similaritiesbetween animals and humans, forensic science, andhow things work.A Try to get students to think about how differentresearch is from practical applications.EQ: What large engineering projects have there beenin your country? How important has engineering beento your country’s development? Do you have enoughengineers in your country?B EQ: Koko the gorilla can use over a thousand signsand understands 2,000 words of spoken English. Shehas a tested IQ of 75–95 (100 is normal humanintelligence). (See: www.koko.org) Does this changeyour view of animal intelligence? Why do humansplace ourselves as superior to animals? Are we? Thinkabout compassion / intolerance, intelligence, ability tocreate / destroy, or use of resources. If animals areintelligent and can feel emotion and pain, is it rightto do experiments on them?C Try to get students to think about the popularity ofcriminal investigations on television and in movies.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007129


Unit 17 Adventures in science Teacher’s Guide See pages 76–79 SB, 110 WBEQ: Name some high profile crimes or unsolvedcrimes in your country. What do you think reallyhappened? How would a forensic scientist try tosolve the crime? Do you see forensic science astrue science?D Try to get students to think about the complexitiesof things we often take for granted.EQ: If you had to make these products yourself,could you? Imagine what your life would be likeif you had to produce everything: food, shelter,fuel or soap.10 Your answer: IS SCIENCE MAKING LIFEBETTER?This question tries to get students to addressthe utility of science. The way that science andscientists focus on the rational is often seen bythe public as being more focused on the processthan on people. It may be worth asking whetherthis is a fair criticism given the difference betweenlarge engineering projects and cures for diseasescompared to some genetic engineering and nuclearweapons.EG: Do you think scientists are looking at thebigger picture or at the wrong picture? Do thebenefits of advances in science outweigh thedrawbacks?WORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will get students practising the phrasesfor developing an argument from LanguageBank 17. The phrases are interchangeable, sostudents could use any of them.1 WORD POWER Answers1 It follows logically then that… (e)2 Consequently, this means that… (c)3 From here we can conclude that… (a)4 Clearly then, this indicates that… (b)5 It follows logically then that… (d)2 WRITINGA SourcesA Short History of Nearly Everything, Bill Brysonwww.newscientist.comwww.sciencemuseum.org.ukwww.sciencedaily.comB Sourceshttp://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/ghr/page/Homewww.foodfuture.org.ukwww.who.int/foodsafety/biotech/enstemcells.nih.gov/index.aspwww.genengnews.com3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES: Key wordsThis activity is the one of the basic techniques thatstudents should learn to give better presentations.In trying to summarise arguments in two to threewords, they will learn to memorise their presentationsand produce better visuals. The following aresuggested answers, but others answers may be asacceptable.3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES Sample answers1 The initial experiment, 2 What went wrong,3 The research continues, 4 300 scientific papers,5 Evidence of nuclear reactions, 6 Problems remain.4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1c 2a 3d 4e 5b1 to break new ground to do something otherpeople have not done before. 2 to pick yourbrains to get information from someone anduse it to your own advantage. 3 to hit theheadlines to be in the news (literally on thefront page of the newspapers). 4 to loom large onthe horizon to appear imminent, likely 5 to be acornerstone to be the basis of, be an essentialpart of.130 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 76–79 SB, 110 WBUnit 17Teacher’s GuideAsk students to use the idioms when answeringthese questions orally. This can be done as pairwork or as a class.• Why do you think people know so little aboutcutting edge research?– I think most research doesn’t hit the headlinesunless it is something that will affect a largenumber of people.– Ordinary, everyday research is the cornerstoneof science. It just doesn’t get reported.– I think the mainstream press is not interestedin picking scientists’ brains unless it is aboutgenetics or weapons.• Should scientific research only be done for profit?– I think you are more likely to break newground when people are motivated by profit.– I can’t see why we can’t pick the scientists’brains about this.• Will humans travel to Mars in your lifetime?– It is definitely looming on the horizon.– Politicians like to talk about travelling toMars to hit the headlines, but I don’t think itwill happen.– I think Mars Express is intended to be thecornerstone of a future European missionto Mars.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007131


Unit 18 The company we keep Teacher’s Guide See pages 80–83 SB, 111 WBWHAT’S NEW?Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – use expressions used to contradict and summarising information,ideas and arguments.– use vocabulary, phrases and idioms related to social issues.Educational Ss will address social problems that governments must deal withObjectives: for the benefit its citizens.Connected – Immigration and refugees – Substance abuseTopics: – Crime – Social integration– Healthcare reform – Slums and ghettos– Homelessness – Public transport– Job creation – Affordable housingGrammar: Word forms Reported speech IdiomsKey Vocabulary: assimilate homelessness sciaticaaudit n hostel social integrationconsultant illegal immigration squatcope imminent statutorycrush intolerance stem fromdigital divide job creation substance abusedrug rehabilitation centre on sufferance utterlyera prolapsed disc vandalismfavelarough sleepergapscandalousThe BIG question: ARE WE DOING ENOUGH TO HELP?VIEWPOINTFacts: These two sets of information are completelyunrelated. They were meant to introduce differentsocial issues. It may be worth pointing this out tostudents in case there may be any possiblemisunderstanding.The refugee information comes from the Officeof the United Nations High Commissioner forRefugees. Established in 1951 by the Conventionrelating to the Status of Refugees, the UNHCR hashelped over fifty million people.Source:www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/homeEQ: Some famous refugees include Albert Einstein,Victor Hugo, Madelaine Albright, ClaudeLévi-Strauss, Czeslaw Milosz, Vladimir Nabokov,Haing Ngor, Sitting Bull and Maria von Trapp.Does knowing this change your opinion of refugees?Why do you think negative opinions of refugees persistin developed countries? How does the UN helprefugees?The crime statistics are from the UK Home Office,which reports that overall crimes have declinedfrom a peak in 1995 of nearly 20 million crimes.Source:www.crimestatistics.org.uk/output/Page54.aspEQ: Although overall crime appears to have declinedsince the 1990s, media coverage of crime hasincreased substantially. Do you think we worry toomuch about crime? Do people always report crime?If not, why not?Quotes: Aristotle (384–322 BC) was an influentialGreek philosopher known for his analytical way ofstudying the natural world.EQ: Is this statement true? How are these thingsconnected? Is there much poverty in your country?Do you think most people worry about poverty, orworld poverty in general? Is there a gap betweenpoor and rich?132 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 80–83 SB, 111 WBUnit 18Teacher’s GuideJohn Florence Sullivan – ‘Fred Allen’ (1894–1956)was an American comedian known for his radioprogrammes in the 1940s.EQ: Why is this funny? Do you think people shouldfeel regret about being human?Photos: The photos show a refugee and her child ina refugee camp, and some illegal immigrants whohave been stopped by police.1 WORD POWERA 1 gets students to consider some of the key socialissues facing governments today. It is up to studentsto decide on the order of importance and whetherthey are social or individual problems.1 WORD POWER B Sample answersB Summarising – To sum up, I think thegovernment is doing a great job with job creation. /For this reason, I feel social integration is working. /As I have already pointed out, we have lesshomelessness today.Contradicting – Frankly, I can’t see it. Healthcareis worse today than a decade ago. / Do you honestlythink so? Illegal immigration is continuing to rise. /In actual fact, it’s just the opposite. Substanceabuse is increasing every year.C 1This addresses the issue in many Westerncountries about who should pay for healthcare andhow well healthcare is run. The US privatehealthcare model is often shown as a model ofefficiency, but 47 million people do not have healthinsurance and many more are underinsured.2 Students should be encouraged to decide whetherthey see drug addicts as criminals or victims ofan illness. Many people continue to blame theindividual for the drug addiction and wouldtherefore not like to see their tax money beingspent on helping them.3 This is a touchy issue that should be handledwith some discretion. Students should beencouraged to question their own feelings onthe matter. However, it may be easier to allowthem to explore the issue from the point of viewof people around them.ARTICLES380,000 Homeless ‘Going Unrecorded’In the UK, especially in the urban areas aroundLondon and Manchester there is a chronic shortageof housing. In the London area many people comefrom other parts of Britain and abroad to look forwork. As people have moved into the region, thecost of buying and renting housing has soared,making the London area one of the most expensiveplaces to live in the world. In many cases this haspriced many low-paid workers out of the housingmarket. Add this to the social problems, such asunemployment and family breakdown, asmentioned in the article, and it is not difficult tosee why there are so many people living without afixed address.EQ: Why do you think so many people in Britain arehomeless? Do you think the situation is the same inyour country? What can be done about it?Ex-Soldier Told of 70-Week Waitto See NeurologistThis article discusses one of the worst examplesof inefficiency in the UK healthcare system. Thiscase was in Scotland, where since devolution theScottish government has taken control of manyaspects of government including healthcare (seeUnit 9, Exercise 8). This has meant making a lotof difficult choices to balance the budget, includingclosing many clinics and hospitals. Some criticsbelieve the Scottish government has in fact madetoo many cuts, and there have been several casesof pregnant women giving birth on their way tothe nearest hospitals over 50 km away. In the restof Britain, some people also often have to wait along time for medical treatment.EQ: Does your country have public or private healthcare?Which is better? Why? Do you think governments make agood job of running healthcare systems?2 READINGA is a skimming activity that will help students withthe English in Use section of the CAE exam andthe reading section in IGCSE.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007133


Unit 18 The company we keep Teacher’s Guide See pages 80–83 SB, 111 WB2 READING Answers1e 2c 3a 4d 5bB requires students to identify specific information,but also to provide the supporting arguments tothese ideas.2 READING B AnswersB 1The hidden homeless are hidden because theyare not recorded in official statistics as homeless.They are homeless because they do not have apermanent place to live that they can call ‘home’.2 Rough sleepers are people who sleep rough on thestreet.3 Here see means to have a meeting with; stem (from)means to come / originate from; face means toconfront something or someone, usually a challenge.C It may be useful to have students work in pairsfor question C.1 This question gives students a chance to practisereported speech. They can make up a story here.2 Students can role-play this situation, one of themtaking the role of Graeme Martin and the other, therole of someone who is one of the hidden homeless.D1This question relates to a type of question inthe Trinity exam which requires students to speculateon issues that are not explicitly stated. You may wantto help the students by asking them to think aboutconcrete examples.EQ: Where would you get food, have a shower orsleep?2 This question requires students to make the kindof decisions that people administering a healthcaresystem must make. Ask students to look at the issuetwo ways: what if there was no money for expensivetreatments, or what if someone close to you wasseriously ill?3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of: social responsibility,homelessness, and universal healthcare.A EQ: How does your government try to help withsocial problems? Are they doing a good job? Are theydoing enough?B EQ: How big a problem is homelessness in yourcountry? Why? Do you think the hidden homeless are asbadly off as rough sleepers? Why / Why not? Should allforms of begging be against the law? Why / Why not?C EQ: How good is your healthcare system? Why?How should the government try to improve healthcare?Do you think doctors, nurses, paramedics and hospitalsupport staff are: not well enough paid, paid enough,paid more than enough? Why?4 LISTEN DVDThis audio clip comes from Interworld Radio, anon-profit organisation that provides free access toradio programmes from around the world. The aimis to give people an international perspective onissues and to stimulate debate on issues relating todifferent countries. The clip deals with the issue ofbridging the digital divide in the favelas (slums) ofBrazil. There is a significant gap between the richand poor in Brazil, which means that the poor areoften lost or forgotten when it comes to importantnew advances such as the internet and computers. Asa result, a community action group called theCommittee to Democratise Information Technologywas set up by local favela residents to give faveladwellers with IT education and access to the internetin the hope of providing employment opportunities.This programme has been so successful that it hasspread to many neighbouring countries as well.4 LISTEN B AnswersTrue: They have computer education programmes.They use the internet.4 LISTEN C Answers1 Over one million live in the favelas. 2 Eloisamakes a living filming children’s party videos.3 Nearly 75,000 young people. 4 Columbia,Uruguay, Mexico and Chile.E You can also encourage students to discuss otherissues where people take action themselves ratherthan wait for the government to do it for them.You can introduce vocabulary such as grassroots andpeople power.134 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 80–83 SB, 111 WBUnit 18Teacher’s Guide5 TEAMWORKThis activity is an attempt to discuss a difficultaspect of globalisation. As companies seek to cutcosts and protect their profits, they often have tomake difficult decisions such as relocating jobs orproduction facilities. Relocating to another countrycan bring advantages from cheaper labour costs tolower business tax rates. For the community losinga large employer, the results can be devastating,especially in small communities with limitedemployment opportunities. Unemployment ratesrise and people move away to look for work.Poverty and crime rates also begin to increase. Likemost problems, there are some limited solutions.This activity tries to address some of the morecommon ones. It may be helpful to get students todiscuss any concrete examples they have heard of.EQ: How well do small, medium-sized or largecommunities cope with a loss of a large employer?Do you think globalisation has helped or hurt yourcountry? Why?Do you agree that the government should spendmoney to attract new jobs to an area? Should thesebe public works projects?6 CONTROVERSYImmigration is a major issue for any country.Although it is very complex because eachimmigrant’s case must be looked at individually, it iscommon for the public, the media and conservativepolitical groups to put all immigrants together asone group. This is often the case where communitieshave unemployment rates higher than the nationalaverage. When people feel their jobs are threatened,they often tend to react negatively towardsnewcomers, feeling that immigrants are takingaway jobs from locals. The reality in many cases isthat most immigrants through necessity, lack ofeducation or not having their qualificationsrecognised abroad take jobs that many locals wouldnot choose to do. These are often low-paid manuallabour jobs. In some countries, entire industrieswould not be able to operate without immigrantworkers, for example, intensive agriculture wherefruit or vegetables are picked by hand.EQ: Do you see immigration as a positive or negativething? What do immigrants bring to a country? Manyconservative groups like to blame immigrants for manysocial problems such as crime. What do you think of this?7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A Sources:Global Report on Crime and Justice, Centre forInternational Crime Preventionwww.interpol.int, www.uncjin.org/Statistics/statistics.htmlB Sources:Critical Challenges for Healthcare Reform in Europe,Richard Saltmanwww.scottish.parliament.uk/home.htm,www.therightssite.org.uk8 SOCIAL STUDIES in English [CLIL]Chicago is the third largest city in the UnitedStates and the largest city in the state of Illinois.It has had a unique history in US history,serving as the main junction point betweenthe western and eastern US. Most rail linesand truck routes travel through Chicago, makingit an important commercial hub.There has also been a long history of social andpolitical challenges, from racial integration andunrest to organised crime. The city and suburbsof Greater Chicago continue to be divided alongracial lines. A case in point is the two areas ofHighland Park and Englewood. Highland Parkhas wealthy celebrity residents like sports starMichael Jordan, while Englewood was the sceneof race riots in the 1950s and 1960s.Sweden generally sees itself to be a model ofsocial integration, priding itself on its social equalityand finding consensus among its citizens. The realityis that immigrants have often found themselvessocially isolated on the outskirts of larger urbancommunities. Although, compared to Chicago,the welfare state in Sweden has managed to limitthe gap between rich and poor in Stockholm,economic opportunities can still be limited for manyimmigrants. Many Swedes complain of new SwedishBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007135


Unit 18 The company we keep Teacher’s Guide See pages 80–83 SB, 111 WBdialects (such as Rinkeby Swedish) developing, as thesocially isolated immigrants begin peppering brokenSwedish with words from different languages.Notes:– The Fittja statistics include children ofnon-Swedes born in Sweden. Ethnic Swedes makeup only 12 per cent.– For the state of Illinois there are 722 vehicles per1,000 people.– The urban density given is for the city of Chicago.– Violent crime includes homicide, rape, robberyand assault.EQ: How do these cities compare to communities inyour country? What solutions to social and racialintegration would you suggest? What would life be like inEnglewood or Fittja? Highland Park or Ostermalm?How important is it to have parks and lakes or riversin a city? What effect does population density have ona community?9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers types of social issues in politics,crime, city planning and transport, immigrants, andhousing.A Ask students to discuss concrete examples ofissues that are currently in the news.EQ: How do social issues benefit and hurt politicians?How much real control do politicians and the governmenthave over social problems?B Try to get students to think about crime on alocal level.EQ: Do you know anyone who has been a victim ofcrime? How does crime affect people? Do you think thepolice are doing a good job managing crime in yourcommunity?C Students should think about different types oftransport in their area.EQ: How important is public transport in yourcommunity or country? How good is it? Who uses it?Is there any way of getting people out of their carsand reducing car use?D Try to get students to think about immigrationin their community.EQ: What effect does immigration to Western countrieshave on the countries that the immigrants leave? Whatwould it be like to emigrate to another country?E You can make this question more concrete by gettingstudents to look at the classified ads of newspapers.Look at house prices or rents and work out how muchthey would need to pay for mortgage or rent andcompare this with the minimum wage in your country.EQ: If there is not enough affordable housing available,what options do people have?10 Your answer: ARE WE DOING ENOUGH TO HELP?This question tries to get students to think aboutsociety and the individual’s role in solving society’sproblems. Students should be encouraged to make acritical assessment of their government’s policies fordealing with the social problems mentioned in theunit. With either positive or negative opinions,students should be asked to justify their opinionswith relevant arguments and examples.WORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will get students practising newvocabulary in the unit and expressions to contradictfrom Language Bank 18. Sample answers aregiven, but there may be different opinions.1 WORD POWER Sample answers1 Intolerance towards foreigners is the root cause ofanti-immigration feelings. – Do you honestly thinkso? I think it is much more complex. 2 Two-tieredhealthcare, for those who can and can’t afford to pay isthe way of the future. – Not if we consider that thissame system has led to big problems in the UnitedStates. Many people think the system there is notworking there. 3 Vandalism only occurs in deprivedareas. – I would argue that it’s actually happening inall areas of the community. 4 Substance abuse canlead to involvement with crime. – In actual fact,it’s just the opposite. It’s involvement with criminalsselling the drugs that leads to the abuse. 5 Young136 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 80–83 SB, 111 WBUnit 18Teacher’s Guidepeople move to large cities to find work but many endup sleeping rough. – Come on, you have to admitthat many of those people don’t really want to have ajob and responsibilities. 6 The government isn’t doingenough to stop illegal immigration. – Frankly, I can’tsee it. They spent millions on new border security.2 USE OF LANGUAGE: Word formsThis activity introduces the issue of anti-immigrationpolicies in different countries. The activity is based onan activity type for the CAE and CPE exams.2 USE OF LANGUAGE Answers1 remains 2 immigration 3 employment4 falling 5 crashing 6 nationality7 dangerous 8 shortage3 WRITINGA Sources:Getting By: Begging, Rough Sleeping and the BigIssue in Glasgow and Edinburgh, SuzanneFitzpatrick Sleeping Rough Stories of the Night,Christina Dunhillwww.homeless.org.ukB Sources:Class and schools: Using Social, Economic andEducational Reform to Close the Black-WhiteAchievement Gap, Richard RothsteinEffective School Intervention, Enid LeeBeyond Heroes and Holidays, Natalie Rathvonhttp://europa.eu.int/comm/employment_social/soc-prot/index_en.htm4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1b 2d 3e 4a 5f 6c1 to tighten our belts to make economies to savemoney. 2 out of the public purse from public orgovernment funds. 3 to throw the book at topunish severely. 4 to fight a losing battle to try todo / change something but failing. 5 to take thedrastic step of to perform a very strong or extremeaction. 6 to kick the habit to cure / stop theaddiction.Ask students to use the idioms when answeringthese questions orally. This can be done as pairwork or as a class.• Should drug users be convicted or treated for theircrime?– I think we are fighting a losing battle againstdrugs. It would be better to provide moretreatment facilities.– I think we need to take the drastic step ofdecriminalising some drugs.– It’s too hard for some drug users to kick the habit.They should go to jail where they can’t get drugs.• Are immigrants given fair treatment?– Many think we pay too much out of the publicpurse to help them.– If you want my opinion, we are fighting alosing battle against illegal immigration.– If you ask me, they should throw the book atillegal immigrants.• What would you change about your government’ssocial policies?– I think we should tighten our belts. Too muchmoney is spent on frivolous projects.– I would take the drastic step of making healthcarea legal right.– I would make sure that if something is paidfor out of the public purse it is something wereally need.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007137


Unit 19 Stressed out! Teacher’s Guide See pages 84–87 SB, 112 WBWHAT’S NEW?Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – use expressions for minimising and the language of empathy and sympathy.– use vocabulary, phrases and idioms related to stress management.Educational Ss will address sources of stress and assess techniques for coping with stress.Objectives:Connected – Stressed teenagers – Laughing clubsTopics: – Stress reduction – Phobias– Post-traumatic stress disorder – Drugs and alternative treatments– Watching fish – Physical symptomsGrammar: IdiomsKey Vocabulary: at odds with impaired red-eye flightbeneficial incentive regimebid induce stone (weightchair(person) industrial tribunal 14 pounds)contagious medication stress-bustingcreep back up migraine strokecriss-cross v pebble supraventriculardread pet v tachycardiafare better phobia switching offflutter placebo thyroidfrail post-traumatic working outgiggle vstress disorderimmune system pounding the treadmillThe BIG question: ARE WE SERIOUSLY STRESSED?VIEWPOINTFacts: The statistics are from an annual USschool survey, The National Survey ofAmerican Attitudes Substance Abuse VIII: Teensand Parents, conducted by The National Centeron Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA).The three main factors leading to teenage useof drugs and alcohol are high stress, frequentboredom and more than $25 a week spendingmoney.Source:http://alcoholism.about.com/cs/teens/a/blcasa030819.htm, www.casa.orgEQ: Why do you think this is the case? Based onyour own observations, is this true? Do you knowany high stress teens? What causes their stress? Howdo they cope with this stress?There are many factors which can trigger depression:genetic predisposition, environment, medicalproblems, certain thinking patterns and stressfulevents in life. About 80 per cent of those who tryto get treatment will get better.EQ: What kinds of things make you depressed orunhappy? What do you think could cause long-termdepression? What do you think life would be like ifyou were depressed for long periods?Quotes: Natalie Goldberg (born 1948) is an Americanauthor known for teaching writing through Zen.EQ: Why is stress an ignorant state? Do you agreewith the quote? Is the stress you feel in proportion tothe level of emergency?Charles Schulz (1922–2000) was the Americancartoonist known for the Peanuts comic strip.138 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 84–87 SB, 112 WBUnit 19Teacher’s GuideEQ: What is the meaning of this philosophy? Is itmeant to be serious or humorous? Why? What do youthink of the Peanuts comic strip?Cartoons: The pictures are of:– a patient about to receive some bad news– a scary plane flight– giving a speech in publicAccording to the Book of Lists, fear of publicspeaking ranks number one in fears, even over fearof death or disease.1 WORD POWERA 1 is based on a CAE speaking test activity thatgets students to comment on pictures.EQ: How are these situations the same or different?Have you ever experienced any of these situations?If so, what was your reaction?A 2 gives students an opportunity to practise thelanguage of empathy and sympathy in LanguageBank 19.1 WORD POWER A2 Sample answersI know exactly how you feel you feel. I’ve had myappendix out. It was scary going into the operatingtheatre. / I can imagine what that flight must havebeen like. I’ve flown through rough weather too. /I know exactly how you must feel. I hate speakingin front of an audience.B gets students to analyse the efficacy of somecommon stress-reducing methods.1 WORD POWER C Sample answers1 Some events which can cause post-traumaticstress disorder: military combat, natural disasters,car accident, near-death experiences or violentpersonal assaults like rape.2 When overly stressed people become burnt out,they can develop depression over feelings of notbeing able to cope.ARTICLESBlair The Fitness FanThis article discusses Tony Blair’s health andstress-reducing techniques. He was diagnosedwith the supraventricular tachycardia (SVT). SVTis a heart condition where the upper chambersof the heart (the atria) can be up to 250 times aminute or faster and which can be corrected bysurgery or use of a pacemaker. Politics can beone of the most stressful occupations with longworking days, always being the public eye andmany public speaking engagements.EQ: How stressful do you think a politician’s life is?What would a day in the life of the British PrimeMinister be like? Is bad health linked to stressfuloccupations?Watching Fish Found To Ease Human StressThis article discusses a recent scientific study thatlooked at the relationship between stress andwatching fish. There is the old saying that a dogis a man’s best friend and in terms of stress theyare just that. Petting an animal can lower bloodpressure and heart rate. A New York City Hospitalstudy found that heart patients were more likely tosurvive their first year after surgery if they owned apet. The study of fish and stress-reduction is morerecent. Fish have shown to calm children withAttention Deficit Disorder (ADD). Alzheimerpatients have also found some benefit. HerbertBenson’s Relaxation theory supposes four conditionsfor relaxation: the presence of an object to focus on,a passive attitude, a quiet environment and acomfortable position, which may be the reasonswhy watching fish helps reduce stress.EQ: Do you have a pet? Do you think pets reducestress? Do you think some pets reduce stress more thanothers? Why / Why not?2 READINGA is a skimming activity that will help students withthe English in Use section of the CAE exam andthe reading section of the IGCSE.2 READING Answers1 frail 2 procedure 3 random 4 bid 5 provenB1This question relates to a type of question in theTrinity exam which requires students to speculate andBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007139


Unit 19 Stressed out! Teacher’s Guide See pages 84–87 SB, 112 WBconclude on the unstated feelings of people. Studentsshould provide some basis for their responses.2 READING B2 Sample answersPeople were stressed by reading out loud. Then,blood pressure was measured to see if the presenceof fish in an aquarium reduced stress. It did.C 1You may want to help the students by pointingout other techniques covered in Word Power.C 2This question requires students to speculateon the ethics of keeping pets for supposedly selfishreasons. You can give students some help by askingstudents to look at the interaction between animalsand humans, and whether these might change giventhe circumstances suggested.3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of stress as a naturalfunction of the body, personal stress and stressfuloccupations, teenage stress, and owning pets.A EQ: Why do you think we are equipped to feelstress? Do you think it would be helpful or harmful tohave no stress at all in your body?B EQ: If you were overstressed, which treatmentsfor stress would you try? Why do some people findsome relaxation techniques helpful, but others do not?What would you consider the ten most stressful jobs?Would you work in these jobs? Would the benefits everoutweigh the stress?C EQ: Is teenage stress ‘just a phase’ they go through?Does the cause of the stress make the stress more serious;for example, what about exam stress versus divorce?D EQ: If animals communicate through bodylanguage, what signs would tell you an animal wasstressed? What kinds of stress could animals have?4 LISTEN DVDThis audio clip is from the Australian BroadcastingCorporation (ABC). Laughter Club Internationalwas founded by Dr Madan and Madhuri Kataria,with the aim of teaching people ‘laughter yoga’, a20-minute session of exercises to make peoplelaugh. As this is done in groups, it is difficult not tolaugh when everyone around you is laughing. Thehealth benefits of laughter have been known forsome time. Laughter can lower blood pressure,reduce stress hormones, boost the immune systemand release endorphins – the body’s naturalpainkillers.4 LISTEN B, C, D AnswersB True: People’s health improves; people giggle.False: People tell jokes; people talk to each other.C If you see other people laughing, you startlaughing yourself / too.D 1 5,000 members. 2 You see other peoplelaughing. 3 On 13 March, 1995, Madan Katariawent to a park and said she wanted to start alaughter club. 4 Laughter yoga.5 TEAMWORKThis activity is designed to get students thinkingabout the reality of living with debilitatingirrational fears. Each of these phobias are real,although some are much more common andsocially acceptable than others. Try to get studentsto think about all the situations where the illnessmight have some kind of effect.Source:The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook, Reneau Z.Peurifoy,Anxiety, Phobias, and Panic, Edmund J. BourneEQ: Do you know anyone with a phobia? What canbe done to help phobia sufferers?6 CONTROVERSYThe pharmaceutical industry and medicalcommunity is sometimes criticised for seeming tobe over dependent on drug treatments when saferalternatives are available. In one US study, 65 percent of doctors recommended sleeping pills topatients who would have been better off takingexercise or reducing their caffeine intake in theevenings, which the doctors might have found outif they had asked the patients further questions. Inseveral studies published by the Universitiesof Toronto and Harvard, doctors were found tobe treating drug side effects with more drugs.140 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 84–87 SB, 112 WBUnit 19Teacher’s GuideThere have been examples of how over-prescribingantibiotics has led to strains of antibiotic-resistantbacteria. In the US alone, more than 1.5 millionpeople are treated in hospital every year from adversereactions to drugs; another 100,000 die. Many ofthese deaths are largely preventable. That is not to saythat there is not a place for pharmaceuticals, becausemany illnesses can only be controlled this way.However, the debate hinges on whether prescribingdrugs is the doctor’s first or last line of defence.Sources:www.abpi.org.uk, www.pharmaceuticalindustry.infoListening to Prozac, Peter KramerThe Instinct To Heal, David Servan-SchreiberDangerous Drug Interactions, Joe Gaedonwww.worstpills.orgEQ: Do you think we use drugs too often for stress?Do you think alternative treatments might helpstress as much?7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A Sources:Work Stress, Lorne SulskyHandbook of Work Stress, Julian Barlinghttp://stress.about.com/cs/workplacestress/a/jobstress.htm, www.cdc.gov/niosh/stresswk.html8 BIOLOGY in English [CLIL]Stress as has been discussed in this unit as abiological reaction triggered by external, andoccasionally internal, stimulae. Our normal stateof being is homeostasis, in which our body triesto maintain this balance. It regulates our breathing,our heart rate, our temperature and our stressreactions. The body always tries to be in balancewith the environment we are in. When we comeunder increased stress, our body compensates, andthis leads to knock-on effects in other areas. Thelong-term effects of stress and increased cortisollevels have been linked to physical problems likehypertension, migraines, cancer, arthritis, ulcers andcolic. There may also be mental problems, such asanxiety, panic attacks, alcoholism and depression.Note: In the flight-or-fight response people havefeelings of aggression or the need to run away(avoidance).Sources:Overcoming Job Burnout, Ellen S. BernsteinThe Physiology Of Stress And Stress Reduction,Beverly A. PotterEQ: Are you aware of any health effects whenyou are very stressed? Have you ever felt thefight-or-flight response? What do you think burnoutwould feel like?9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers the way stress may change overtime, school-related stress, job-related stress andtime management.A Try to get students to think about how stressevolves over time.EQ: Is there ever a stress-free period in anyone’s life?Why? Why not?B Try to get students to consider commonschool-related stress.EQ: How stressful is school and learning for you? Howis school fun and stressful?C Try to get students to think about reasonsfor increasing stress – less job security, greaterworkload.EQ: The Japanese have a word – karoshi – meaningdeath from overwork. How would stress be linked tothis? What would motivate someone to work thathard? What would you consider the ten most stressfuljobs? Would you work in these jobs? Would the benefitsever outweigh the stress?D Try getting students to think about how theymanage their time.EQ: Do you tend to arrive for appointments orclass early, on time or late? Is this common in yourcountry? How does your culture view arriving lateor on time? Is time management only a businessconcept? Do you manage your time effectively? If so,how? If not, why not?BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007141


Unit 19 Stressed out! Teacher’s Guide See pages 84–87 SB, 112 WB10 Your answer: ARE WE SERIOUSLYSTRESSED?This question tries to get students to address howseriously society takes the effects of stress. In manycultures, it is still not acceptable to talk about beingvery stressed, especially in countries where men arenot allowed to show any signs of weakness.EQ: What do the types of programmes for stressreduction say about how seriously your governmenttakes stress? Do you think men and women react tostress differently?WORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will get students practising vocabulary fromthe unit and the phrases from Language Bank 17.1 WORD POWER Sample answers1 I injured my back while I was working out at thegym. – You must be feeling absolutely terrible.Have you seen the doctor? / There’s nothing toworry about. Take some painkillers. 2 I took thered-eye flight to Lisbon and feel really tired andstressed today. – I can see how difficult it must befor you to stay awake. You look really tired. / It’s notsuch a big thing. Have some coffee. 3 My doctorsaid I need to watch my diet if I want to improve myhealth. – I know exactly how you must be feeling.My doctor said I needed more exercise. / Let’s try tokeep things in perspective. Just eat smaller portions.4 I felt better after taking those anti-depressants, but Ididn’t like the side-effects. – That must have beenvery hard for you. Is there anything I can do? /Everything’s going to be fine. You’ll soon get used tothem. 5 I’m worried about my husband – he finds itdifficult to switch off and gets stressed. – I feel sosorry for both of you. It can be hard to leave workbehind. / Try to calm down; worrying won’t help.He just needs a hobby. 6 After serving in the army,my father developed post-traumatic stress disorder. – Ican imagine how painful it must have been forhim. Can he get any help for that? / There’s nothingto worry about. It’s a common reaction.2 WRITINGA SourcesThe Complete Idiot’s Guide to Dealing with Stress forTeens, Sara Jane SlukePressure? No Problem, Michelle Steelewww.stress.org.ukB Sourceshttp://health.msn.comhttp://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/default.stmwww.cnn.com/HEALTHwww.menshealth.com3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES: Anticipating questionsThis activity is the one of the basic techniques thatstudents should learn to give better presentations.In trying to anticipate questions, students will bebetter prepared for the presentation in the Trinity orCAE exams.3 SPEAKING STRATEGIES Answers1f 2c 3d 4b 5a 6e4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1b 2d 3c 4a 5f 6e1 to lose the plot to feel stressed or out of control.2 to pay the price to suffer the consequences. 3 tocompare notes to check each other’s informationabout something. 4 just what the doctor ordered exactly the right thing. 5 to let off steam toexpress strong feeling, release pent-up emotion.6 an emotional rollercoaster lead to very strongswings / variations in feelings / emotions.Ask students to use the idioms when answeringthese questions orally. This can be done as pairwork or as a class.• What would you do if you felt your life was outof control?– If I was beginning to lose the plot, I would seekprofessional help.142 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 84–87 SB, 112 WBUnit 19Teacher’s Guide– I think I would need to do something to let offsteam, like sports.– I would say a few days off would be just whatthe doctor ordered.• What happens if you work too hard?– You will pay the price with poor health andhigh stress.– I think overwork can take you on an emotionalrollercoaster.– I haven’t compared notes with others, but I tendto get sick and need time off.• What is your number one stress-reducer?– I like to go for walks to let off steam.– I begin to lose the plot if I can’t spend a fewhours by myself from time to time.– A weekend away from the kids is alwayswhat the doctor ordered.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007143


Unit 20 Shock tactics Teacher’s Guide See pages 88–91 SB, 113 WBWHAT’S NEW?Communication Ss will be able to:Objectives: – use expressions for language of caution and eliciting feedback.– use vocabulary, phrases and idioms related to youth behaviour.Educational Ss will critically assess common examples of positive and negativeObjectives: youth behaviour.Connected – Straight Edge – Tattoos and piercingsTopics: – Young people and drugs – Poetry and music– Young people and crime – Behaviour relativism– Typical male and female young people – Age of consent– Reputations – Experimenting– Group mentality – Life lessons– Binge drinking – Youth rebellion– Youth programmesGrammar: Word choice Collocations IdiomsKey Vocabulary: abstain holiday rep promiscuous sexadhere hostile recruitall-terrain vehicle illicit rep / reputationattire intimidating seizureclose-minded Latino skip schoolconsume lure thrashingcult mosh pit vegando-gooder off the mark vicedrive-by shooting patch vigilantefree-for-all pickerhardcore music politically correctThe BIG question: ARE ALL TEENAGERS REBELS?VIEWPOINTFacts: The statistics on teenage drinking are fromthe Waltham Forest Crime and Disorder and DrugAudit 2004. UK schoolchildren are the heaviestteenage drinkers in Europe.Source:www.lbwf.gov.uk/8.5.6-alcohol.pdfEQ: Why do you think this is the case? How does thiscompare to teenagers in your country? What effect candrinking at this age have?The statistics on cannabis are from the BritishCrime Survey 2001.Source:www.drugscope.org.uk/druginfo/drugsearch/ds_report_results.asp?file=%5Cwip%5C11%5C3%5C008chapter6.htmlEQ: What is the attitude to cannabis use in yourcountry? Has anyone you know every tried it? Do youthink there is a difference between soft drugs (likemarijuana) and hard drugs (like cocaine)?Quotes: Robert MacKenzie (1928–) is a retired politicianfrom the Ontario, Canada, provincial legislature.EQ: How do you think adults see teenagers? Is this afair stereotype?George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950) was an Irishplaywright and winner of the 1925 Nobel Prize forLiterature.EQ: Do you think this is true? How do the youth oftoday shock the old?1 WORD POWERA 1 gives students an introduction to some newvocabulary.144 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 88–91 SB, 113 WBUnit 20Teacher’s Guide1 WORD POWER B Sample answers1 Straight-A students have problems too. If I wereto hazard a guess, I might say that we all needhelp sometimes. 2 There is a generation gapbetween parents and young people today. It couldbe the case that there is one, but every generationthinks the same thing. 3 Something needs tobe done about these yobs. I would be a littleconcerned that people will overreact about this.4 Peer pressure pushes young people into riskybehaviour. It seems as if peer pressure is verystrong, but parents can play their part.ARTICLESWalking the Straight EdgeThis article discusses the US teenage movementcalled Straight Edge. The movement originated inthe mid to late 1980s out of the hardcore punk rockmovement. It is widely believed that the movementtakes its origins from the lyrics of Ian MacKaye ofMinor Threat, and later of Fugazi, fame. His songStraight Edge was written about a friend who hadoverdosed on heroin and is a warning to youngpeople about avoiding dangerous activities.Much of the movement’s image is related tothe larger hardcore punk rock movement: tattoos,black clothing, piercings and loud aggressivemusic. What makes the movement different isthe abstinence from sex, drugs and alcohol.Many of its followers are also vegans. The movementis largely non-violent, but there have been incidentsspecifically among male members, who tend totravel in groups. Several police organisationsincluding the Salt Lake City Sheriff’s office identifyStraight-Edgers as being involved in gang activity (inrelationship with the Animal Liberation Front, anextremist animal rights group).EQ: Is there a relationship between people whobelieve very strongly in an idea, religion or philosophyand violence? Do the positive aspects of Straight Edgeoutweigh its negative aspects?Marijuana Growers Hire Rural Quebec StudentsThis article discusses marijuana growing in theCanadian province of Quebec. Canada is developinga reputation as a major producer and exporter ofmarijuana, especially to the United States. Themarijuana industry is estimated to be worth $7billion, second only to oil and gas extraction ($15.3billion). The largest producing provinces are BritishColumbia, Ontario and Quebec with much of theproduction now being done in ‘grow-ops’ (smallscaleindoor cultivation inside houses). This is thereason why organised crime has such a big stake inQuebec and is willing to pay so much to helpers.Canada is considering de-criminalising marijuanapossession with the hopes of moving production outinto the open where it could be taxed. The UnitedStates Department of Justice is not happy with thisdevelopment.EQ: Should cannabis use or production be illegal?What is the best way to combat drug taking?If you were approached to do illegal work for verylarge wages or work at a boring job for low wages,which would you do? How important is it to havemoney as a teenager? Is it important enough to riskgoing to jail?2 READINGA is a skimming activity that will help students withthe Reading section of the CAE and IGCSE exams.2 READING A AnswersA 1 no 2 yes 3 yes 4 noB This question relates to the type of question inthe Trinity Exam where students must determinefeelings or thoughts that are not explicitly stated.C 1 You can give students some help by gettingthem to look at the different aspects of the StraightEdge image and philosophy.EQ: What can you do in a group that you couldn’t doalone?C 2 You can give students some help by looking atthe values of people at this age and the prospect ofa large income to people with limited opportunities.3 SPEAK YOUR MINDThis section covers the topics of typical teenagers,reputations, group membership, and youth crime.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007145


Unit 20 Shock tactics Teacher’s Guide See pages 88–91 SB, 113 WBA EQ: How are / were you similar to otherteenagers? Would you describe yourself as typical?Is there anything positive or negative about beingtypical?B EQ: Do you care what others think of you?Can someone ever change their reputation? Howimportant is personal / family honour in yourcountry? Is a reputation or honour worthdying for?C EQ: Why do you think police might considerStraight-Edgers to be gangs? Are there any groups inyour country which might get labelled as gangs? Whatwould be the appeal of joining a gang?Do you consider yourself an extrovert or introvert?Which do you prefer more spending time with people orby yourself?D EQ: What attracts people to crime? Are youthcriminals treated differently from adult criminals?What are the purposes of prison: keeping criminalsaway from the public or rehabilitating criminals?Which does your country favour? Can criminals gostraight?4 LISTEN DVDThis audio clip features a meeting among holidayreps for a travel company that organises packageholidays for young people. Many of these packageholidays have a focus on partying and drinking.The issue of binge drinking is an important issuein the UK, where many young people go out todrink large quantities of alcohol on Friday orSaturday nights. Holiday trips to other countrieswhere alcohol is much cheaper than in the UKoften leads to bouts of drunkenness and violentbehaviour.4 LISTEN B AnswersSwimming: not mentioned. Responsible drinking:Not mentioned, they want to bring enoughalchohol so they don’t run out. They provide onlynachos and light snacks. And they are onlyconcerned about the drinking in terms of theimpact on locals. Fun party games: Yes, Mexicantheme. Sightseeing: Yes, they visit a nearby island.4 LISTEN C Answers1 Mexican (Getaway). 2 Mexican music, tranceand deep house. 3 A lot to drink, but only a littlefood (including nachos with salsa and guacamole).4 People getting into trouble with the police forcarrying open bottles of alcohol through the townand being fined (50 euros), or making too muchnoise. 5 They don’t really seem to be.D In the event that students cannot think ofanything, you can get them to discuss: What kindsof evening activities do they have in Ibiza or otherresorts? What sort of activities would appeal to you?5 TEAMWORKThis activity is designed to get students to thinkabout the very real situation that can affect anycommunity with large-scale economic or socialproblems. It may be wise to avoid discussing ratesof youth crime, suicide and unemployment directlyin this context.SourcesHandbook on Counseling Youth, John McDowellCommunity Youth Development, Francisco A.VillarruelEQ: Do you have youth programmes or youth centresin your community? Do these programmes work? Areprogrammes designed by adults for young people alwaysappropriate? What kinds of programmes would youngpeople want to create?6 CONTROVERSYTattooing originated in Asia and is still a muchadmired cultural practice among the island statesof the Pacific. It spread to the West with sailorswho travelled to these ports of call. From aWestern perspective, tattoos were historically wornonly by prisoners and sailors, however this hasbegun to change as tattoos become a much morecommon way of expressing individuality. Manycultural anthropologists point to the role thatmusic videos and MTV have had in makingtattoos popular as so many rock and pop starsand other celebrities now have them.146 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 88–91 SB, 113 WBUnit 20Teacher’s GuideSourcesBad Boys and Tough Tattoos: A Social History of theTattoo with Gangs, Sailors and Street-Corner Punks1950–1965 Samuel, M. StewardThe Tattoo Encyclopedia, Terisa GreenModern Primitives, V. ValeReturn of the Tribal, Rufus C. CamphausenEQ: Is tattooing and piercing just a trend? Why dosome people find tattooing and piercings intimidating?7 PORTFOLIO WRITINGSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.A SourcesSee your country’s government website for examplesof information pamphlets.B SourcesThe Girl’s Book of Love: Cool Quotes, Super Stories,Awesome Advice and More, Catherine Dee52 Lessons on Communicating Love, Dr. RuthWestheimerwww.loveadvice.com/LIBRARY.HTM8 POETRY AND MUSIC in English [CLIL]This activity could be made more personal for thestudents by asking them to bring examples of musicthey like. The lyrics can be analysed in the same wayas the song in the activity. The example can beconsidered more as a back-up in case students do nothave time to research and bring in examples. There aremany places online which offer lyrics to songs for free.Sourceswww.azlyrics.comwww.lyrics.comwww.sing365.comEQ: Why does music evoke and appeal to our emotions?Why is music such an important part of youth culture?What would youth culture be without music, musicstars or MTV?9 FURTHER DISCUSSIONThis section covers relative behaviour, youthexperimentation, life lessons, and youth rebellion.A Try to get students to think in concrete termsabout their own behaviour. If you are daringenough, you can discuss the use of swearwords indifferent circumstances.EQ: Would you use swearwords in each situation(school, work)? Why / Why not? What motivates youto do good? Do you think your parents, friend or,co-workers know how you act when you’re with otherpeople? Why / Why not?B Try to get students to discuss the reasons behindexperimenting.EQ: Why do young people experiment? Is it a naturalprocess?C Try to get students to think about the lessonsthey have learned.EQ: Do you think you could learn these all onyour own? Do you think we rely on TV too muchfor educating young people? What wouldsomeone who learnt about life only from televisionbe like?D EQ: Who do you find more interesting: rebels orconformists? What does this tell us about ourselves?Is youth rebellion healthy?10 Your answer: ARE ALL TEENAGERS REBELS?This question tries to get students to addresshow young people behave. While there aremany different viewpoints among young people,society often works from the Hollywoodstereotypes of the ‘rebel without a cause’. Whatare young people rebelling against? Shouldyoung people rebel? Will teenagers always rebel?How does youth rebellion become adultconformity?WORKBOOK1 WORD POWERThis activity will get students practising thelanguage of caution from Language Bank 20.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007147


Unit 20 Shock tactics Teacher’s Guide See pages 88–91 SB, 113 WB1 WORD POWER Answers1 Young people say they want to be individuals, butthey just copy each other. I’m not sure I would saythat, they are just doing their best.2 Young people should be allowed room to makemistakes. It seems as if that is the case.3 Young women are never as bad as young men.I’m not sure I would agree with your statement.What about girl gangs?4 Television is responsible for making young peoplebehave badly. I would be a little concerned thatwe blame television for everything. Parents have arole to play as well.5 Teenagers can always get drugs or alcohol if theywant. I don’t think anything can stop that. I wouldbe a little concerned that that if you give up hope,it won’t help.6 We can only hope a good education will keepyoung people safe. If I were to hazard a guess, Imight say education is the most important thing inhelping young people find the right path in life.2 USE OF LANGUAGE: Word FormsThis activity introduces the brief history ofskateboarding and it being banned on the streetsof many US cities. The activity is based on anauthentic test activity used by the University ofCambridge Local Examinations Syndicate in theCAE and CPE. It will also help Reading section ofthe IELTS.2 USE OF LANGUAGE Answers1 sharpen 2 revolutionised 3 increase4 banned 5 fear 6 remains7 organised 8 requesting3 WRITINGA Sourceswww.vanishingtattoo.comhttp://tattoo.about.comB Sourceswww.drugscope.org.ukwww.drugs.gov.uk/Homewww.nida.nih.gov4 IDIOMSSee the Introduction to the Teacher’s Guide.4 IDIOMS Answers1 were 2 saw / sees 3 open4 nip 5 kept 6 scratching1 to be on the same wavelength to understandeach other and think alike. 2 to see everythingin black and white to see things in veryclear terms, not in nuances. 3 to open thefloodgates to allow something to get out ofcontrol. 4 to nip something in the bud to stopsomething before it really starts. 5 to keep hisnose clean to behave well. 6 to scratch theirheads over to worry about what to do, to beconfused about what to do.Ask students to use the idioms when answeringthese questions orally. This can be done as pairwork or as a class.• What do you think of very conformist youngpeople?– I think there’s nothing wrong with keepingyour nose clean.– I guess if they’ve been raised a certain way theyjust see everything in black and white.• Why are some young people into binge drinking?– When some young people are suddenlygiven too much freedom, it just opens thefloodgates.– I’m just left scratching my head– I think some parents don’t nip it in the budearly enough with proper discipline.• If you could give parents advice on rowdy teenagers,what would it be?– I would tell them to try and be on the samewavelength. They need a lot of empathyfor teens.– I think you should nip problems in the budby openly discussing things.– They should not open the floodgates on theirteenager’s freedom too early.148 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


ER 3 Not all Natives are created equal Teacher’s GuideSee pages 92–93 SBWHAT’S NEW?Communication Ss will be able to use phrases or grammar from:Objectives: Units 1–7, Extended Reading 1Units 8–14, Extended Reading 2Unit 15: Generalising / ConditionalsUnit 16: Signposting words: Sequencing / AssertingUnit 17: Developing an argument / Expressions used to introduce assertionsUnit 18: Summarising information, ideas and arguments /Expressions used to contradictUnit 19: Calming expressions / Language of empathy and sympathyUnit 20: Eliciting feedback / Expressing cautionEducational Ss will explore how stereotypes shape our views and understandingObjectives: of the world.Connected – Native American stereotypes – Interacting with strangersTopics: – African-American stereotypes – Hollywood stereotypesGrammar / IdiomsVocabulary: Non-standard English grammar and vocabularyKey Vocabulary: a cold chill engulf real worldain’t frown n reservationbig deal glow scowlbigotry harsh sincerityblurt out ’hood smart assbooming ignorant stink vchatter Injun strollcomfort zone jerk stuttercontemplate jut out tip backcrack a smile loathing unclinchcrack (voice) malcontent unwittinglycurl one’s lip melt away warm and fuzziesdead silent naive willdimly not going to bite you worrisomedimple vprejudicedrop dead profilingEXTENDED READING: Background InformationThis text is part of an editorial column called Beein the Bonnet, which appears in Canada’s FirstNations Drum magazine. It highlights the takethat the Native American humourist, B.H. Bates,has on many different issues from the perspectiveof First Nation people. (Note: In Canada, NativeAmericans are called First Nation people.) Othertopics in the series have included Canadianpolitics, life on the reservation, poverty amongFirst Nations, residential schools, Aboriginalachievement and so on.The title is a play on words that echoes ‘Allmen are created equal’ from the United StatesDeclaration of Independence (1776).Note: Paragraph 1, line 7 should read ‘dimly lit’.Sourceswww.firstnationsdrum.comEQ: 1 What is a stereotype? Why do we create stereotypes?2 What stereotypes exist about your country? Arestereotypes harmful, helpful or something else? Whendo stereotypes become racism?3 Imagine you meet a foreigner in your city. Theyknow little about your country. How would youBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007149


ER 3 Not all Natives are created equal Teacher’s GuideSee pages 92–93 SBexplain what your country is like? What is it like tocome from your country? What customs, habits ortraditions are unique in your country?1 READINGA is a common scanning activity. It will help studentswriting the Reading part of the CAE, the TrinityControlled Writing ISE III section, IELTS ReadingPart 2, and IGCSE Reading Parts 1 and 3.1 READING A Answers1 He has preconceptions of African-Americans asdangerous. Without realising it, he walks into a barwhere there are only African-Americans.2 He speaks to Big Glenn, who makes him feel atease and changes his perception of blacks.3 If he could feel like he did about blacks even aftermeeting Glenn, he wonders how whites would seehim.2 IDIOMSThis activity follows the specifications of the TrinityLanguage Exam Grades 10 and 11 which call forstudents to have a good understanding of and abilityto use various idioms. The correct use of idioms willhelp students in CAE as well.2 IDIOMS AnswersA 1 big deal, 2 comfort zone, 3 the real world,4 blurt out, 5 smart ass, 6 to put someone at ease.B 1 put everyone / at ease, 2 the real world,3 smart ass, 4 comfort zone, 5 blurted out,6 big deal.3 WHAZZUP?This section follows the specifications of the TrinityLanguage Exam Grades 10 and 11 which call forstudents to be able to understand words in context.EQ: Some linguists have begun to speculate thatnon-standard English may become the norm in thefuture, as the number of speakers of English as asecond language increases. What do you think ofthis? If English is used as the global language, cananyone claim ownership of the language?3 WHAZZUP? AnswersGrammarWhere you from, boy? – Where (are) youfrom, boy?Hi, where ya from? – Hello, where (are) you from?I ain’a goin’a bite you – I(’m not) going (to)bite youYo, cool! – Oh, cool!Where you from, boy? – Where are you from, sir /mister?You’z sure in’a hell ain’t from round here. – Youare sure in the hell not from around here.Ya’ll take care now! – You take care now.What the __ you lookin’ at? – What the __ (are)you looking at?Wordshood – neighbourhoodInjun – Indianain’t – is / are notyo – you / you’reya – youyou’z – you arey’all – you (all)hi – hello4 PORTFOLIO WRITINGYou should remind the students that activity Ais in the third person “He went into a bar.” andactivity B is in the first-person point of view.“I saw B.H. outside talking to some boys.”A SourcesA Native American Encyclopedia: History, Cultureand Peoples, Barry PritzkerStereotypes and Prejudice: Essential Readings,Charles Stangorwww.firstnationsdrum.comwww.afn.cawww.si.edu/resource/faq/nmai/naster.htmB SourcesCountering the Conspiracy to Destroy Black Boys,Jawanza KunjufuBlack Youth, Racism and the State, John SolomosBlack like Me, Robert BonazziAfrican-American Lives, Henry Louis Gates150 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE AdvancedSee pages 92–93 SBER 3Teacher’s Guide5 INTERACTIVE TASKThis activity is directly based on the Interactive Taskphase of the Trinity Language Spoken Exam Grades 10and 11. It would also be useful practice for developingstronger communicative skills and confidence for Parts3 and 4 of the spoken phase of the CAE exam.This activity requires students to lead theconversation, which can be a challenge for somestudents. It is important that you go round theroom to monitor the students’ communicativeleadership in this activity. They should becommenting and asking their partner questions.Silence is not an option; it is up to them to keepthe dialogue active and flowing if, and when, theirpartner begins to falter. They should already haveexperience with leading the dialogue duringTeamwork, presentation and Further Discussionactivities in previous units.To help in general, you can get students to thinkof the different brainstorming activities they haveencountered so far in the Teamwork activities.Comment 1: If students are not sure where tostart, ask them to say what they expect a workingenvironment to be like and what they expect fromrelationships with other co-workers.Comment 2: If students seem to have troublebeginning, you can help them by suggesting: peoplefrom different countries – Japanese, Spaniards /Spanish, Swedes, Indians; people in differentoccupations – doctors, teachers, janitors, models.EQ: Why do filmmakers use stereotypes in film? Whoare more often stereotypes – main or supporting actors?Why? Imagine what movies would be like today if allthe white characters in films were played by actors ofdifferent ethnic groups.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007151


QSE Advanced_Using the DVD 2/14/07 9:06 PM Page 152QSE Using the DVD-ROM Student’s DVD-ROMQSE Advanced Student’s DVD-ROMThe QSE Advanced Student’s DVD-ROM containsall 20 audio and video clips to go with Exercise 4(Watch and Listen, or Listen) for each Unit of theStudent’s BookAs well as the audio and video clips, there arealso PDF files of the transcripts of the audio andvideo clips that can be printed out. You will needa version of the free program Adobe Reader(or equivalent) to open the PDF files. You candownload this free from the internet through thelink shown on the opening menu of the DVD(see Link to download Adobe Reader).The DVD can be played on a DVD player or apersonal computer with a DVD player. From themain menu you can access all the different parts ofthe DVD. To return to the main menu at anytime, click on the BACK button in the bottomright-hand corner of the screen.Units 1-20 Audio and Video ClipsThe audio and video clips are each approximatelythree to four minutes long. There are six videoclips and 14 audio clips. Units 2, 6, 12 and 19have a pause in the clip linked to an activity inwhich you are asked to speculate on what willcome next or what people may be thinking abouta situation. Just before the pause, the wordsPAUSE coming up appear on the screen. After thepause, the clip continues. To hold the pause forlonger, press the pause button on the DVD. Tocontinue, press the play button on the DVD. Ifyou do nothing, the clip will restart automaticallyafter the pause.DVD CONTENTSUnits 1-20 Audio/Video Clips(American=type of English)Unit 1 Using photo health warning labels oncigarette packets (Interviews with British people).Unit 2 Interview with Gunther von Hagens,creator of the Body Worlds exhibition (BritishEnglish commentary and voiceover of interviewwith German person).Unit 3 Interviews with various American peopleabout the American Dream.Unit 4 Bullying in the workplace (Interviews withBritish people).Unit 5 PETA’s I’d rather go naked campaign againstwearing fur (American commentary).Unit 6 Talking about beauty contests (Interviewswith British and American people).Unit 7 Is war good for the economy? Britishteenagers talking.Unit 8 Bjorn Lomborg, author of The SkepticalEnvironmentalist (American interviewer talking toDanish scientist).Unit 9 Behaviour-modification camps for teenagers(British teenagers talking).Unit 10 Hanni, the seeing-eye dog (Interview withan American).Unit 11 Tropical storm causes flooding in Haitiand the Dominican Republic (British newsreader).Unit 12 Click kanji: Is English the only languagefor the internet? (British commentary, interviewswith people from Australia and SE Asia).Unit 13 Extract from the film Outfoxed containinginterviews with Americans (The O’Reilly Factorinterview with Jeremy Glick).Unit 14 Radio programme about comic booksuperheroes (Interviews with British people).Unit 15 A teenage single mother talks about herlife (Northern Irish interviewer talking to a girlfrom the British Midlands).Unit 16 The science curriculum in Arizona(Interviews with Americans).Unit 17 Space debris – European Space Agency(British commentary, interviews with Germansspeaking English).Unit 18 Brazil: Bringing computers to thechildren of the favelas. (Brazilian interviewertalking to Brazilians in American English andtranslation – voiceover in British English.)Unit 19 A laughter therapist talks about LaughterClubs (Australian interviewing English-speakingpeople in India).Unit 20 Holiday company representatives meet in aSpanish seaside resort (People from Britain,Australia and New Zealand talking).PDF files (printable text computer files)Audio and video scripts for the text of each audioand video clip.152 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p152 Teacher 3/7/07 3:35 PM Page 152QSE Using the DVD-ROM Teacher’s GuideQSE Advanced Student’s DVD-ROMThe QSE Advanced Student’s DVD-ROM containsall 20 audio and video clips to go with Exercise 4(Watch and Listen, or Listen) for each Unit of theStudent’s Book. There are also PDF files of thetranscripts of the audio and video clips that can beprinted out.The DVD-ROM can be played on a DVD player ora personal computer with a DVD player. From themain menu students can access all the different partsof the DVD-ROM. To return to the main menu atany time, students click on the BACK button in thebottom right-hand corner of the screen.Units 1-20 Audio and Video ClipsThe audio and video clips are each approximatelythree to four minutes long. There are six video clipsand 14 audio clips. Units 2, 6, 12 and 19 have a pausein the clip linked to an activity in which the student isasked to speculate on what will come next or whatpeople may be thinking about a situation. Just beforethe pause, the words PAUSE coming up appear on thescreen. After the pause, the clip continues. To hold thepause for longer, press the pause button on the DVD.To continue, press the play button on the DVD.QSE Advanced Teacher’s DVD-ROMThe QSE Advanced Teacher’s DVD-ROM containsall the material on the Students DVD-ROM, plusprint and audio files for all the exam materials in theTeacher’s Guide. See also page 24.DVD-ROM CONTENTSUnits 1-20 Audio/Video Clips(American=type of English)Unit 1 Using photo health warning labels oncigarette packets (Interviews with British people).Unit 2 Interview with Gunther von Hagens,creator of the Body Worlds exhibition (BritishEnglish commentary and voiceover of interviewwith German person).Unit 3 Interviews with various American peopleabout the American Dream.Unit 4 Bullying in the workplace (Interviews withBritish people).Unit 5 PETA’s I’d rather go naked campaign againstwearing fur (American commentary).Unit 6 Talking about beauty contests (Interviewswith British and American people).Unit 7 Is war good for the economy? Britishteenagers talking.Unit 8 Bjorn Lomborg, author of The SkepticalEnvironmentalist (American interviewer talking toDanish scientist).Unit 9 Behaviour-modification camps for teenagers(British teenagers talking).Unit 10 Hanni, the seeing-eye dog (Interview withan American).Unit 11 Tropical storm causes flooding in Haiti andthe Dominican Republic (British newsreader).Unit 12 Click kanji: Is English the only languagefor the internet? (British commentary, interviewswith people from Australia and SE Asia).Unit 13 Extract from the film Outfoxed containinginterviews with Americans (The O’Reilly Factorinterview with Jeremy Glick).Unit 14 Radio programme about comic booksuperheroes (Interviews with British people).Unit 15 A teenage single mother talks about her life(Northern Irish interviewer talking to a girl fromthe British Midlands).Unit 16 The science curriculum in Arizona(Interviews with Americans).Unit 17 Space debris – European Space Agency(British commentary, interviews with Germansspeaking English).Unit 18 Brazil: Bringing computers to the childrenof the favelas. Brazilian interviewer talking toBrazilians in American English and translation –voiceover in British English.Unit 19 A laughter therapist talks about LaughterClubs (Australian interviewing English-speakingpeople in India).Unit 20 Holiday company representatives meet in aSpanish seaside resort (People from Britain,Australia and New Zealand talking).Exam Practice Listening Tests 1-6PDF files (printable text computer files)• Using the DVD• Audio and video transcripts for the text of eachaudio and video clip.• Teacher's Notes• Exams (CAE, IELTS, IGCSE)• Placement Test152 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 153Units 1–2Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s GuideUnit 1Using photo warning labels on cigarettepacketsInterviewer: Around four million people worldwidedie every year from smoking-related illnesses accordingto the World Health Organisation. It is estimated thatsome 360,000 people are admitted to hospitals in theUK every year because of smoking-related illnesses.Cancer groups from Britain and the EU have begundemanding the introduction of warning labels similarto those introduced in Canada in 2001. So we wentout on the streets of London to find out whatLondoners feel about this.Interviewer: Excuse me, could I ask you what doyou think about smoking?Woman 1: Well, I don’t smoke, but my boyfriendsmokes and, to be honest, I’d like to see him stop.Like a lot of people, I think he smokes ’causeit’s cool.Man 1: What? I thought that was part of myappeal. No, but seriously, I don’t see anything wrongwith smoking. It’s a question of personal freedom.Interviewer: British anti-smoking groups arepressuring the government to introduce photographicwarning labels like these ones used in Canada oncigarette packets? What do you think of them?Man 1: Oh, this is too much.Woman 1: Wow, I think these are brilliant, a reallygood idea. I think it would be pretty hard to lookcool with a photo of mouth cancer sitting on thetable in front of you.Man 1: I’m not so sure. I don’t spend much timethinking about whether to give up smoking or not.She does most of that for me.Interviewer: Hello...what are your views on smoking?Woman 2: Well, I’d like to quit...sure, but it’s noteasy when so many of my friends smoke.Man 2: I hate it. Every time you go out with peoplewho smoke, you come out reeking of smoke. It’sreally a nasty habit.Interviewer: Here are some anti-smoking warninglabels from Canada. Would you like to see them oncigarette packets here?Man 2: Um, well, I think we should have them here,but the problem is that the Government makesabout £8 billion a year from cigarettes. I think it’s aquestion of whether the UK government can give upits addiction to taxes on cigarettes.Woman 2: Mmm... These are certainly very graphic.Are they for real?Interviewer: Yes, they are. Do you think these mightconvince you to give up smoking?Woman 2: Well, I think they might. I’d hate tohave to look at one of those labels every timeI reach for a cigarette.Interviewer: To date, the Canadian government hashad considerable success with its anti-smokingprogramme. Smoking rates among young peopledropped from 28 per cent to 18 per cent between1999 and 2003. The question remains, do the EUand the British government have the courage tofollow Canada’s lead? It may just come down to aquestion of image. Reporting from London, this isPatricia Connelly for Channel Six news.Unit 2Interview with Gunther von Hagens,creator of the Body Worlds exhibitionVon Hagens: Remember that you are mortal.That is what is suggested to everyone who attendsthe exhibition, especially by the gestalt plastinatesthemselves. I was what you are. You can becomewhat I am. And that brings us to body donors.The people who are exhibited here made a veryconscious decision during their lifetimes to beavailable to the next generation for the sake ofanatomical instruction.First, people attending the exhibition should get aclearer idea of their own bodies. We live in an artificialworld. Normal persons are no longer conscious thatthey themselves are nature. Secondly, the intentionwas to present anatomy in a very concrete way.This exhibition is not about art or science, it’s aboutinstruction. Instruction in the fullest sense of theword in that people attending the exhibition canrealise their own vulnerability. In a prophylactic sense,since if people see how unhealthy habits or lifestylesconcretely affect their own bodies, for examplesmokers’ lungs, heart attacks, or meniscus damage,it will help them to gain a greater appreciation andperhaps a renewed sensitivity toward their bodies.My models are the Renaissance anatomists whopioneered the initial enlightenment in this field:Leonardo da Vinci and Andreas Vesalius. For the firsttime, they discovered the beauty of bodily interiors atBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007153


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 154Units 2–4Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s Guidea time when the beauty of bodily exteriors was thefocus of an entire artistic epoch.[PAUSE ]In the late Middle Ages, Andreas Vesalius was thefirst to assemble a skeleton. He literally took it fromthe grave and returned it to society.I see myself in this tradition and I am continuingit with the possibilities of plastination. By making itpossible to solidify soft tissue, plastination permitsbodies to be exhibited not only as skeletons, but alsoas skeletons with muscles and organs at the sametime. And I do not display people as incompletespecimens. I do not use dissection to remove organs.Instead, I provide insights into bodily interiors.People can look inside.Unit 3The American DreamInterviewer: What is the American Dream?Girl (15 years): My American Dream is to be afamous musician.Man 1: I perceive it as the opportunity or equalopportunity to set goals and to be able to achievethem and have an education and an environmentthat’s equal for everyone so everyone can workand set their goals and live the lifestyle in theenvironment they wish to live in.Man 2: The American Dream means different thingsto different people depending on their background,their experiences they’ve had in life so far and theirheritage. For me the American Dream is to preservethe freedoms that our ancestors have worked so hardto acquire for us and to leave a situation thatcontinues to better for the generations that follow.Interviewer: Do you think you are living theAmerican Dream?Woman 1: I have no complaints. I have a family, ahome, an education, privilege of going to churchwhen I want to.Man 3: Well, I don’t know if I’m living theAmerican Dream, but I’m certainly striving to getthere. Right now, I’m in college to obtain my degreeso that I can get a better job and provide a better lifefor my family.Interviewer: According to a recent study, 79 percent of African Americans will only experiencepoverty in their lifetime. For white Americans, thepercentage is only 24. Why do you think this is?Woman 3: The number of individuals who havebroken families within the African-Americancommunity is much greater than within the whitecommunity. Education is another big part of it.Having a good education will allow someone to gofurther within this country. And unfortunatelyAfrican Americans...the number of individuals inthat group having higher education is much lower.Man 3: There are a lot of African Americans that areborn into poverty. And a lot of them don’t get out ofthe environment. They succumb to the environmentand become a part of the environment rather thantrying to seek a life outside of it. I think also too thesystem in some ways there are some advantages thatare handed down to folks that the African-Americancommunity doesn’t get to experience.Interviewer: How would you describe a successfulperson?Girl: Having a job, having a family, making money,not exactly being rich but at least having some foodand shelter.Woman 2: Someone who’s happy and productive inwhatever capacity they choose, law-abiding. I thinksomeone who has chosen an outlet, creative orotherwise, and is working towards fulfilling it.Woman 1: Living the good life of friends, security,that sort of thing, but it’s not how many playthingsyou have.Interviewer: How important is success to you?Woman 3: Very important. For me, there are a lotof different areas of success. And for me, it’s morebuilding a stable community, family and being ableto contribute something back.Man 1: I think success is the American Dream. SoI would rank it number one for me to be successfulin that raising my family and providing for myfamily.Unit 4Bullying in the workplaceCynthia Banks: Welcome to Straight Talk. I’mCynthia Banks. When someone brings up the subjectof bullying, people often think of school playgroundsand badly behaved children. But there is another typeof bullying that is nearly as widespread — bullying inthe workplace. To talk about it, we are joined todayby management consultant Martin Halverson.Martin Halverson: Hello, Cynthia.154 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 155Units 4–5Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s GuideC. Banks: Hello, Martin. First, let’s hear fromGemma, an executive assistant whose boss bulliedthe whole office.Gemma: As far as I’m concerned, this guy wasreally over the top. Some of us were actuallywondering whether he had some kind of mentalproblem. Take meetings, for example. If someonestarted to make a comment or a suggestion, he’djust shout, “Shut up, who’s talking to you.” Andworse, you know, swearing at people. Personally, Ifelt traumatised. Even when he wasn’t in the officethere was no let-up, he was calling every twominutes to scream at people about somethingor other.C. Banks: So Martin, what do you make of this?M. Halverson: Well, this behaviour certainly seemsto be extreme, although incidents can take manyforms, not just the more obvious ones like shouting,making someone look small, or humiliating them infront of others.C. Banks: Such as?M. Halverson: There’s also a lot of passive-aggressivebehaviour, for example, spreading negative rumoursabout somebody, or simply not talking to them,not returning phone calls, or delaying action onsomething a co-worker needs to do a job.C. Banks: How widespread would you say thisproblem is?M. Halverson: A number of studies have looked atthis in depth. In a recent University of NorthCarolina study, researchers followed 1,600 workersover four years. The results were fascinating. Thereis a definite lack of social stability in the USworkplace; rudeness, disrespect and bullying – allof these are becoming more and more common.Lots of swearing, even fighting. We even heard ofscientists throwing equipment at colleagues.C. Banks: Where does this problem originate?M. Halverson: Researches say that intensecompetition and rapid change are often to blame.And we have to remember that the bullies oftenhave a special status in the company, perhaps theyare higher up the corporate ladder, or they havesome special talent or skill. Most companies usuallyhave a well-defined policy about bullying in theworkplace. The problem tends to be a lack of willto enforce these anti-bullying rules, especiallyagainst people in positions of authority.C. Banks: Are you saying management sometimesmakes exceptions for these people? What effect doesthis have?M. Halverson: Yes, there can be serious side-effectsif the policy is not enforced. It causes a lot of mentaland emotional stress. In the North Carolina study,22 per cent of people said they actually worked lesshard when they were bullied. About half said theylost work time worrying about an incidentor whether the bully would target them again. Andmost dramatically, 12 per cent of the people whoresponded actually changed their jobs to get away.C. Banks: That’s a big loss to the company. Whatcan be done about it?M. Halverson: Basically it’s best to adopt azero-tolerance policy. No exceptions, no matter howsmall the offence is, no matter who the person is.Companies really should become aware of howmuch this kind of behaviour costs them – just howmuch it reduces efficiency.C. Banks: Well, now let’s hear from Roger, a formercomputer technician for a software company, whohas experienced...Unit 5PETA’S I’d rather go naked campaignagainst wearing furNarrator: The ‘I’d rather go naked than wear fur’campaign began in 1990. The Wonder Years were onTV. Nelson Mandela was out of jail. And theGo-Gos were planning a reunion.Go-Gos: We’re the Go-Gos and we’d rather gonaked than wear fur.Dan Mathews: And when the Go-Gos announcedthat they were having a reunion tour and they’re allPETA supporters. We asked them if they wouldpose for a poster.Narrator: The poster ‘I’d rather Go-Go naked thanwear fur’ was inspired by an activist in Florida.D. Mathews: There was an activist down therenamed Holly Jensen who had a fur protest. Andshe outfitted herself in a flesh-coloured leotard andmade a sign with a magic marker that just said I’drather go naked than wear fur. And she sent usphotos of this protest, as a lot of activists do. Andwhen I was going through the photos, I saw thatone and I thought, you know, there’s somethingthere.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007155


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 156Units 5–6Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s GuideNarrator: There was definitely something there.The poster was used by newspapers nationwide. Andsoon the whole country was talking about the furissue. A ‘Go’ was dropped and the campaign spreadwith protests in Italy, Germany and Japan.Celebrities were enlisted. Singers, supermodels, actorsall bravely disrobed. PETA staffers volunteered by thedozens: interns, campaigners, founders.And a funny thing happened, fur sales slipped.From Fur Industry Magazine, the Trapper andPredator Caller, Sept. 2001, fur industry directoriesreveal that in 1972, there were 779 established furgarment makers in the United States. Twentyyears later, in 1992, that number had dwindledto only 211.But what is this craft that sparked a decade ofnaked activism? Simply put, it’s a billion-dollar-a-yearindustry that has taken fur-bearing animals out ofthe forests of fairytales and the Discovery Channeland dropped them straight into the middle of ahorror novel.On a fur farm, what you first notice is thepacing, round and round in psychotic circles.Animals crazed with boredom and stress. Next, yousee the filth. Urine and faeces encrust the cages offastidious animals, who, in the wild, would spendhours cleaning themselves. Finally, the mutilationssink in. Legs gnawed to the bone. Eyes and earslost to infection. Cage mates cannibalised. The cagedoors do eventually open. But the world outside isbrief and horrible.The animals whose lives have been lost to thefur industry can’t be brought back. But over tenthousand fur coats have been donated to PETAfrom people sickened by animal cruelty. Over theyears these furs have been distributed to homelesspeople who can’t afford to buy their own coats,have been used to make bedding for orphanedwildlife, have been distributed to refugees in frozen,war-torn Afghanistan.Woman: Don’t go out in the woods. Them animalactivists will get you.Unit 6Talking about beauty contestsCommentator 1: ...yeah, yeah, beauty pageants, orcontests as you call them in the UK, have beenaround for over eighty years.Radio presenter: Yes, they still seem to be goingstrong, although we don’t see the Miss World conteston TV in the UK anymore, because a lot of peoplehere see it as old-fashioned and out of date. Evenadding intelligence and personality tests to the MissWorld contest didn’t keep the UK TV audiencesinterested, although the show is still broadcastaround the world. But how did beauty contests start?Commentator 1: The first beauty pageant tookplace in Atlantic City in 1921. Called the NationalBeauty Tournament, it was basically to get touriststo stay in Atlantic City after the end of the summerseason – after the Labor Day holiday in earlySeptember.Radio presenter: So how exactly have the beautycontests changed since those days?Commentator 1: Well, it took several decades formany of the basic rules to become established, suchas only being able to win a competition once, notbeing married and having no children, well, withthe exception of the Mrs America beauty pageants...Radio presenter: Why exactly is it that contestantsneed to be unmarried and have no kids?Commentator 2: Well, that’s a good question...I mean, as the beauty contest has developed theseearly rules have stayed the same.Commentator 1: There were a number of highlypublicised scandals over the years involving MissAmerica contestants. Several early winners ran offwith their male chaperones. One Miss USA winnerin 1957 actually turned out to be married withtwo children.Commentator 2: There were problems with someMiss World contestants too. The 1974 winnerturned out to be a single mother, and in 1980 MissWorld resigned after posing naked for a magazine!Radio presenter: I find it quite interesting that thecontest doesn’t have a rule against plastic surgery,given the other strict rules.[PAUSE ]Commentator 1: Yes, it does seem a littlehypocritical, but how are you supposed to provesomeone has breast implants or other cosmeticsurgery? It would be quite difficult to do.Commentator 2: Well, I tend to think that the beautycontest is more about some kind of ‘ideal’ world, andnot the real world. And I think a lot of the newerbeauty contests you see today are a reflection of that.156 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 157Units 6–8Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s GuideRadio presenter: Such as?Commentator 1: Well, to go back to the questionof plastic surgery. China has recently had its firstMiss Artificial Beauty contest for plastic surgerypatients, one of whom used to be a man. But shedidn’t win though.Commentator 2: True, it seems to me that that’s agood example of how the beauty pageant is beingused today to promote acceptance of differentpeople...the idea that ‘everyone is beautiful’. InBotswana, they hold the Miss HIV Stigma Free,which I think is a brilliant way to promote the issueof AIDS and acceptance. The contest shows justhow far beauty contests have come today...Unit 7Is war good for the economy?Teacher: Hello, everyone.Class: Hi.Teacher: OK, in this session we’re going to look atanother aspect of economics – how war can affectthe economy of a country. Carla and Steve are doinga presentation on this for us today. Carla, Steve...Carla: The question is: Is war good for theeconomy? Well, it’s an interesting question, but likemost economic issues, it’s difficult to answer it witha simple yes or no. The truth of the matter is thatalthough wars can be both a positive and negativeeconomic stimulus, economies are often drivenforward by wars.Class: That’s true.Steve: If you look back to the 19th century and WorldWar 1, you will find that governments paid for war byprinting more money. And, of course, printing moneytends to increase inflation. People need more andmore cash just to pay for basic necessities, like food. InGermany after World War I, in the 1920s, there wassuch hyperinflation that prices went up every day.Carla: While the US economy survived World War Iintact, it faced its own crisis with the stock marketcrash of 1929. This led to huge unemployment whenmany companies went bankrupt, and later non-stopdeflation as the price of goods began dropping, butno one was buying because they had no jobs ormoney. To counter this, President Franklin D.Roosevelt’s government adopted a key idea ofeconomist John Maynard Keynes...increasinggovernment spending.Steve: It’s a bit like jumpstarting a car, when thebattery’s dead. You need a huge jolt to get theengine roaring again. US government money wasthe huge jolt of cash needed to get the economygoing again, and large-scale New Deal projects,such as the Tennessee Valley Authority, gave workto thousands of people. When World War II came,many more jobs were created in arms manufacturingand related industries like steel and coal.Carla: While the number of manufacturing jobsdoes go up during a war, war often still leads toheavy damage to industry and infrastructure inwar-torn regions. Also, there is the high cost inhuman life. Many European countries lost nearly awhole generation of men in the two world wars.More women entered the workforce, but there werestill significant labour shortages as a result.Steve: And we come back to the issue of inflation.Since 1945, you can see a pattern of increasedinflation with each war. The Korean War began in1950. In that year wholesale prices increased by 12per cent in the US and 21 per cent in Britain.Vietnam was arguably even worse. The USgovernment spent about 15 per cent of its GDPon the war, and this led to a deep recession inthe 1970s.Carla: If we take the example of more recent wars,like the one in Iraq, war has certainly been bad forthe Iraqi economy, but for America the biggestimpact has been on oil prices, which were pushedup to record levels. There may have also been someeffect on consumer and business confidence, whichis much harder to calculate.Teacher: Thank you, Steve and Carla. Does anyonehave any questions...Unit 8Bjorn Lomborg: The SkepticalEnvironmentalistPeter Heinlein: The Earth’s environment is steadilyimproving. Global warming is nothing much toworry about. The real danger is the Kyoto Treaty,which will cost too much and do almost no good.Those are the ideas of a Danish professor andformer Greenpeace activist who has written a booktitled, The Skeptical Environmentalist. The book,which has recently been published in English, iscausing outrage in the environmental community.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007157


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 158Units 8–9Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s GuideHis fans call Bjorn Lomborg an outstandingrepresentative of a ‘new breed of scientists –mathematically-skilled and computer-adept’. Onefavourable review predicts his new book willoverturn our most basic assumptions about theworld’s environment. But to his detractors he is nota scientist at all, but a fraud: a statistics professorwho they claim makes selective use of statistics tosupport a right-wing, anti-environment agenda.He explains that he started out as anenvironmental activist.B. Lomborg: I’m an old Greenpeace, left-wing kindof guy and thought basically, yes, things weregetting worse and worse. When I read an interviewwith Julian Simon, an American economist, thattells us things were actually getting better andbetter, contrary to common knowledge. I thought,No, it can’t be true. But then he said, ‘Go check ityourself,’ ... so I’ll have to get his book, to see thatit was probably wrong. And it was sufficiently good,and it looked sufficiently substantiated that itwould actually be fun to debunk. So I got some ofmy best students together and we did a studycourse in the fall of ’97.... We wanted to show, youknow, this is entirely wrong, this is just right-wingAmerican propaganda. As it turned out over thenext couple of months, as we did this, we weregetting debunked for the most part.P. Heinlein: Professor Lomborg says the projectconvinced him that environmental groups, theso-called Greens, are exaggerating their claims ofglobal environmental gloom and doom.But he says those exaggerations and sometimes, headds, even outright falsehoods, often become part ofconventional wisdom, often accepted by a majority ofpeople because he says green groups seem to enjoymore credibility than government or business lobbies.B. Lomborg: Now everybody knows that businesses,you know, when they come and say ‘don’t worryabout the environment,’ that may be true, but theymight also have a good reason for saying this, profitreasons, ulterior motives. So we’re sceptical aboutthem. But we’re not in the same way sceptical aboutgreen groups, but they also have an agenda. They arealso lobby groups.P. Heinlein: One of Professor Lomborg’s favoritetargets is the Kyoto Treaty on global warming. Ahost of recent studies predict catastrophicconsequences for the environment from a rise inglobal temperatures. The United Nations Panel onClimate Change, backed by 3,000 scientists, hasthrown its full weight behind the argument thatglobal warming is happening faster than expected,and that ratification of the Kyoto Protocol is urgent.Professor Lomborg concedes that global warmingis real, but calls the Kyoto Treaty a monumentalwaste of money.B. Lomborg: Basically, Kyoto will do very little tochange global warming. On the other hand, Kyotowill be incredibly expensive. It will cost anywherefrom $150–350 billion a year, now that’s a lot ofmoney that should be compared to the total globalaid of about $50 billion a year. And so basically theidea is to say just for the cost of one year of Kyotowe could give clean drinking water and sanitationto every single human being on Earth. This wouldavoid two million deaths a year, and would helphalf a billion people from not getting seriously ill.P. Heinlein: That argument has sparked a furiousoutcry from environmentalists. Klaus Heinberg, aprofessor of environmental sciences at Denmark’sRoskilde University, accuses Professor Lomborg oftwisting facts and manipulating statistics.Klaus Heinberg: His main argument is that we canuse the money we have earned through industrialismto repair all the bad things going on, and that kind ofargument is dangerous. And he made these weirdcomparisons which normal people make to makefun, I mean, like ‘if all children in Europe would stopeating ice cream, then we could have enough moneyfor eliminating some diseases in Africa.’ He uses thatkind of argument seriously, and he does that in theclimate and Kyoto connection.P. Heinlein: Peter Heinlein for VOA NewsUnit 9Hanni, the seeing-eye dogPresenter: Traversing the busy streets of Chicago isn’talways easy, especially in the winter. On any givenday, a pedestrian has to deal with unpredictabletraffic, sidewalk holes, snow, ice and city buses. Now,imagine that you’re blind. Writer Beth Finkenavigates Chicago’s many obstacles with the help ofher seeing-eye dog Hanni. Hanni is a tail-waggingmix of yellow Lab and Golden Retriever. She wasschooled at the Seeing Eye in Morristown, New Jersey.158 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 159Units 9–10Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s GuideIt’s the oldest school of its kind in North America andtomorrow it celebrates 75 years of training dogs ascompanions to the blind. Hanni’s eyes and Beth’spatience have formed an effective bond that make anordinary walk home from the gym an example of truecollaboration. We accompanied Beth and Hannirecently as they walked home from Michigan andBalbow in Chicago’s South Loop.Beth: I think most people think you’re standing at anintersection; you’re with a dog; the dog looks up, seesthe green light and then pulls you ahead. What reallyhappens is you’re at an intersection; you listen to yourparallel traffic so that is the traffic that’s going withyou, the same direction you want to cross. When youhear the parallel traffic going forward and you sensethat the traffic in front of you has stopped, then youtell the dog. In Hanni’s case, I would say: “Hanni,forward.” And then she’ll look right and left to makesure it’s safe and then she’ll go.Okay, here, I can hear parallel traffic, but I don’tknow how long they’ve been going so I’m going towait and let the whole cycle begin, because I can hearthe car idling in front of me. And when he goes,then I’ll know...I’ll know to listen until we go parallelagain. There are some intersections where I actuallycount...one, one thousand, two, one thousand, but Ihaven’t done it at this one. At Clark and Pope, Icount sometimes to get a general idea about when it’sgoing to cycle again. This one’s a fairly easy one tocross because it’s...there’s a steady flow of traffic inboth directions. And it’s generally pretty predictableexcept for when the L (train) comes by. [To Hanni]Leave it! Thatta girl.There are certain times when the dogs will stop.And you’ll feel in front of you with your foot andthere’s not a kerb there. And you feel in front withyour hand and there’s not an obstruction there andyou don’t know why they’re stopping.It must be a car pulling out of a garage, I guess?Or a parking lot? It’s never happened before. Iusually...actually, it’s not exactly rush hour, but I dotry not to walk at this time of day, because there’smore traffic. If I can avoid it... [To Hanni] Hanni,can you go forward? No? Good girl. There you go. Goodgirl, Hanni! That was perfect. What a good girl you are.You pretty proud of yourself? You should be. You shouldbe. That was very good. Because I didn’t know whatwas going on.I feel kind of bad for Hanni. Sometimes we’re at acorner and she...it’s green and she’s not going. And Ithink the people around me are thinking: “What aloser seeing-eye dog!” But really, she’s waiting forme. I’m waiting to hear the people going.Unit 10Behaviour-modification camps forteenagersPeter: I don’t believe it! Have you read this article?Mary: No, why?David: What article are you talking about?Peter: Well, it’s about this school in Jamaica calledTranquillity Bay. If you want to call it a school, itsounds more like a maximum security prison to me.It’s a ‘behaviour-modification programme fortroubled teenagers’.Mary / David: Oh!Mary: Oh, wait a second, I think I’ve heard aboutthat. Isn’t that the one where really strict Americanparents send their kids?Peter: Yeah, most of the kids are American, but afew come from Canada and the UK. Let’s see, it’spart of some larger group called the ‘WorldwideAssociation of Specialty Programs and Schools’, or‘WWASP’ for short.David: Never heard of it.Peter: It’s just so harsh. Listen to this ‘the childrenare often taken from their beds in the middle of thenight by private guards, handcuffed, and flown offto Jamaica.’ Oh, and then, get this, when they getthere ‘they are put in isolation for up to a week untilthe staff think the child is under control. Then,they’re given a uniform, a haircut and join a “family”of 20 students. Boys and girls are kept separate. Andan older student, a “buddy”, is given completecontrol over the new student’.Mary: Family? Sounds a bit like a cult.David: Well, I think brainwashing is par for thecourse. This got me thinking...my sister wroteme about this guy she met on an exchange visitin Massachusetts who’d been to a behaviourmodification camp in the US. It really messedhim up. He said staff members beat him and usedpepper spray on him.When his parents came six months later, theydidn’t believe anything he told them. Anyway, hewas 18 the next year and the school couldn’t holdBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007159


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 160Units 10–12Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s Guidehim anymore, so he left. He’s in university now, buthe still gets nightmares about the place. And hedoesn’t speak to his parents any more.Mary: How can they get away with this kind ofstuff? Aren’t there laws against it?Peter: Well, the article said that most parents gavetheir permission, not knowing or maybe not evencaring what the staff did so long as they got results.And I guess it does work for some ‘troubled teens’.Well, I guess it’d better, since it costs $40,000 a year.David: Uh, I suppose if you have a choice betweengetting nightmare treatment or conforming to theirrules, most people eventually give in... But I meanwhat does that do to someone’s mental state to betreated that way.Mary: So are these like the worst teenagers in theworld or what? Tell me they’re murderers or heroindealers or something really bad.Peter: That’s actually the worst part. Many childrenwere sent there for doing things like playing truant,not working at school... oh, and trying cigarettes oreven cannabis. Oooooh. And sometimes, if they’regirls, they might have become ‘sexually active’ orhad a boyfriend the parents didn’t approve of.David: Really?Mary: That makes me really angry. How couldparents do that to their children?David: Yeah.Unit 11Tropical storm causes flooding in Haitiand the Dominican RepublicReporter: On May 24th, excessive tropical rainshowers drenched the Caribbean island shared bythe Dominican Republic and Haiti. NASA’s weathersatellites reported that within 24 hours, over 60centimetres of rain had fallen on the centralmountain regions dividing the countries. By earlymorning on the 25th, several rivers had burst theirbanks sending walls of mud, water and debris downinto the low-lying areas. This was the worst disasterto hit Haiti in over a decade.In the two countries more than three thousandpeople have died in the floods. In Haiti, there were1,191 dead and 1,484 have ‘disappeared’. In theDominican Republic, 691 are reported dead ormissing. And more than 50,000 people have beenleft homeless in both countries.The situation in Haiti was made much worse fora number of reasons. As the poorest country in theAmericas, the majority of Haiti’s 8 million peoplehave been cutting down the island’s limited forestresources for fuel and shelter. It is estimated byofficials that over 90 per cent of the forests in thecountry are gone. The United States Agency forInternational Development reports that it hasplanted some 60 million trees in the region, but itestimates that 10 to 20 million trees are being cutdown every year. Without the trees and their rootsystems to hold back the deluge of water, smallstreams quickly became torrents, carrying withthem gravel, silt and mud.US forces had been sent to Haiti to provide securityafter the fall of Haiti’s President Jean-BertrandAristide, and US Marine helicopters airlifted 100,000tonnes of food and water in the first few days of thedisaster. However, some international aid agencieshave complained that the US helicopters stopped theirrelief efforts too soon. A Marine spokesman said it wasdue to pilot fatigue. As a result, the rest of the aidsupplies had to be carried by foot into the areasaffected. United Nations forces which have just arrivedare expected to aid in this effort.In a cruel irony, the floods came on the tail endof one of the country’s worst droughts. A largenumber of crops had already failed and manyHaitians were by now in dire need of food aid.Officials are also concerned about the possibleoutbreak of disease with the large number of bodiesunaccounted for.Haitian officials and international governmentsare now looking at solutions to the problem ofHaiti’s deforestation in an effort to alleviate futurefloods in the region. Some solutions proposed haveincluded importing wood from Canada, the UnitedStates and Guyana, and possibly propane fromVenezuela or Trinidad. This is Jenny...Unit 12Click kanji: Is English the only languagefor the internet?JonathanKent: Kuala Lumpur, in many ways, it’s rather likethe internet. In the early days, it was English-speakingpeople, in this case, it was the British who built muchof its infrastructure, like the railway station and the160 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 161Units 12–13Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s Guidecourthouses. But as it’s grown, people of many raceshave left their mark, and its future is without doubtmulticultural. And like the internet, communicationin Kuala Lumpur takes place in many differentlanguages. But when you want to find your wayaround, the street signs in Kuala Lumpur all useWestern letters. It’s the same on the net. It makesthings simple for those familiar with the 26 letters ofthe English alphabet, but more difficult for everyoneelse. People from countries that use their own scriptsare demanding equal treatment. The biggest group areChinese speakers. They want email and web addressesincluding top level domain names like ‘.cn’ for Chinain Chinese characters – characters, which are veryclose to Chinese people’s hearts.Tso Yu Ling: It’s a part of our life, our culture andeverything that we do every day. And take forexample, the name in Chinese cannot be translatedinto other languages, you know, the same as it is. Sowhy couldn’t it be allowed on the internet? We wantour name. That’s our identity.J. Kent: But that’s a task in itself. These charactersmay have originated in China but variations are usedright across East Asia –150,000 in all – and thenumber keeps growing. The internet’s old 16-bitcoding wasn’t up to the task, so programmers have hadto upgrade to cope with the thousands of symbols. Tomake matters worse, there are often clashes betweenone country’s set of characters and another’s.James Seng: Because the Chinese characters areused in different languages from Chinese, Japanese,Korean and Vietnamese, some characters that lookthe same mean different things in differentlanguages. Some characters that look differentactually mean the same thing in some languages.J. Kent: In Japan, these characters mean ‘male’ – inChina, ‘napkin’. These ones mean ‘modern’. InChina, they say ‘zian dai’; in Japan ‘gendai’; in Korea‘hyundai’ – each the name of a major corporation,but the characters are the same. So who will get touse them on the internet? These are major headachesfor the people who make the net work smoothly. Sothe Internet Corporation for Assigned Names andNumbers, or ICANN, has been meeting in KualaLumpur to try to find a solution. It’s partly atechnical problem. Some languages, for instance, arewritten right-left, not left-right. But mainly, it’s apeople problem.Paul Twomey: How do we get communities tocome together and agree that you express certaincharacters in similar ways across countries or evenacross languages? [PAUSE]J. Kent: That means getting agreement on astandard way of writing things in Chinese, Arabic,Thai, Tamil and other scripts, perhaps 300languages in all. And that’s the hard part, not leastbecause some people think the internet’s frameworkshould stay in English. They say that by allowinginternet addresses in different scripts, you’ll destroythe web’s ability to connect. Others disagree, sayingthat if you don’t, countries like China will simplyset up their own internet, inaccessible to the rest ofthe world. However, most believe that commonsense will win out.P. Twomey: I got a business card today in Japanese,but in this part of the world they also give it inEnglish. Because the person who’s giving it to meknows that they are interacting with people inJapanese and people in English. We’ll probably havepeople having email addresses potentially in both,but the key question is: ‘Does the mail system stillwork in either case?’J. Kent: And that’s going to matter to a lot of people.There are now more than 100 million broadbandusers worldwide and almost half of them are here inAsia. In a few years’ time, most internet users will livehere. And experts say it’s set to transform theeconomy of the region. Like it or not, the internet isfast outgrowing its Western roots.Unit 13 Extract from: Outfoxed: RupertMurdoch’s War on Journalism with The O’ReillyFactor interview with Jeremy M. GlickB. O’Reilly: In the Personal Story segment tonightwe were surprised to find out that an Americanwho lost his father in the World Trade Centreattack had signed an anti-war advertisement thataccused the USA itself of terrorism.Al Franken: Jeremy Glick is the son of a PortAuthority worker who died in 9/11. He had signed ananti-war petition and O’Reilly had to have him on.Jeremy Glick: And they were so persistent aboutgetting me on the O’Reilly show ’cause they foundout that I was on the advisory board and signed astatement that was against the war and that I wasBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007161


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 162Unit 13Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s Guidedirectly impacted by 9/11. The success that I had onthe O’Reilly show had to do with just practice andpreparation. I taped the shows and what I did wasI took a stop watch that I used to use for runningsprints in high school and I would see when he has ahostile guest and I would time how long it takes forhim to cut them off.B. O’Reilly: I was surprised and the reason I wassurprised is that this ad equates the United Stateswith the terrorists.J. Glick: I said I’m shocked that you’re surprised, andbasically just made the only point I wanted to make.Our current president now inherited a legacyfrom his father and inherited a political legacy that’sresponsible for training militarily, economically andsituating geopolitically the parties involved in thealleged assassination and murder of my father andcountless of thousands of others, so I don’t seewhy...B. O’Reilly: Let me stop you here. Alright...J. Glick: ...it is surprising that I would want tocome back and want to support escalating Bush’saggression to that area...B. O’Reilly: It is surprising and I’ll tell you why. Youare melding a far-left position...J. Glick: It was extremely intimidating sitting downthe studio, ’cause he’s really tall, and like dude, helords over you.B. O’Reilly: You see, I’m sure your beliefs aresincere, but what upsets me is I don’t think yourfather would be approving of this.J. Glick: Well, actually my father thought thatBush’s presidency was illegimate.B. O’Reilly: Maybe he did, but I don’t think he’d beequating this country as a terrorist nation as you are.J. Glick: Well, I wasn’t saying that it was necessarilylike that.B. O’Reilly: Yes, you are. You signed this and itabsolutely said that.A. Franken: Jeremy was pretty cool during it and hewas giving his political views, which were very to theleft of O’Reilly’s.J. Glick: And he said I don’t really care what youthink politically. And I said obviously you do carebecause: a) you brought me on the show, and b) Itold him that he uses 9/11 and sympathy with the9/11 families and the lives lost to rationalise hisnarrow right-wing agenda.J. Glick: You evoke sympathy with the 9/11 familiesB. O’Reilly: That’s a bunch of crap.J. Glick: ...so that means...I’m a 9/11 family...B. O’Reilly: I’ve done more for the 9/1l families,by their own admission I’ve done more for themthan you will ever hope to do.J. Glick: OK.B. O’Reilly: So you keep your mouth shut.J. Glick: Well, you’re not representing me...B. O’Reilly: You shouldn’t be exploiting those people.J. Glick: You’re not representing me.B. O’Reilly: And I’d never represent you. Youknow why?J. Glick: Why?B. O’Reilly: Because you have a warped view ofthis world and a warped view of this country.J. Glick: Well, explain that. Let me give you anexample of a parallel experience...B. O’Reilly: No, I’m not going to debate thiswith you.J. Glick: ...let me give you an example of parallelexperiences...B. O’Reilly: No...J. Glick: ...on September 14th, on September 14th.B. O’Reilly: Here’s the record, here’s the record.Alright. You didn’t support the action againstAfghanistan to remove the Taliban. You wereagainst it.J. Glick: Why would I want to brutalise and furtherpunish the people in Afghanistan?B. O’Reilly: Who killed your father!J. Glick: The people in Afghanistan...B. O’Reilly: Who killed your father!J. Glick: The people in Afghanistan didn’t killmy father.B. O’Reilly: Sure, they did! The Al Quaeda peoplewere trained there.J. Glick: The Al Quaeda people, well what aboutthe Afghan...B. O’Reilly: See, I’m more angry about it thatyou are!J. Glick: So what about George Bush.B. O’Reilly: What about George Bush? He hadnothing do with it.J. Glick: The director, senior, as director of the CIA.B. O’Reilly: He had nothing to do with it!J. Glick: So the people that trained a hundredthousand mujahadeen, who were...162 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 163Units 13–15Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s GuideB. O’Reilly: I hope your mom is not watching this.J. Glick: Ah...B. O’Reilly: I hope your mother is not watching this.J. Glick: It was unfair for O’Reilly to evoke bothmy mom and my father in the interview, especiallywhen I wasn’t.Unit 14Talking about comic book superheroesPresenter: We’re coming to you live today from theComic Book Expo. In this part of the show, we’ll belooking at comic book superheroes. Are they goodrole models for children? Joining us today, we havecomic book cartoonist Jim Bailey.Jim Bailey: Hello.Presenter: ...and comic book historian Dr. JoanneSykes.Joanne Sykes: Hi.Presenter: I’d like to start with you, Joanne. Maybeyou can give us some background on comic booksuperheroes.J. Sykes: Probably we should start with the goldenage of comics...that’s from 1938, when Supermanfirst appeared, to 1954. We find the basic blueprintfor this group of heroes was along the same linesas Superman. Mostly, they were superiorbeings...invincible. In fact, it’s not until about tenyears later that Superman’s only weakness, greenkryptonite, was introduced.Presenter: Jim, your grandfather was a comic bookcartoonist at this time. What did he tell you aboutthis period?J. Bailey: Well, a lot of these characters were createdduring World War II. The types of characters andplots often reflected the uncertainty of this time. Imean, you could argue they were really propagandapieces, you know, invincible heroes versusevil-doers... and the heroes always win. A goodexample is the cover of the first Captain Americacomic in 1941 showing him punching Hitler.Presenter: What about these early superheroes asrole models for young readers?J. Sykes: To put it simply, these early superheroeswould have helped children to learn about society’svalues early on. I mean it’s quite straightforward –good guys against bad guys. It’s good to fight crimeand help people. Vulnerability aside, they’re not verydifferent from the heroes in Ancient Greek mythology.Presenter: How does this change as comics develop?J. Sykes: By the 1960s, we have characters likeSpider-man... He’s a teenager...J. Bailey: Yeah, with a lot of problems in his life.J. Sykes: That’s right. He lives with his Aunt Maybecause his parents are dead, and he worries abouteverything...about the women in his life, his careeras a photographer and paying the bills. He evenbecomes a hero by accident, after getting bitten bya radioactive spider.Presenter: You’re a big Spider-man fan, Jim. Whatdo think about him as a role model?J. Bailey: Spider-man is a very complex character.He’s the super teen, facing all the same problemsteenagers face, but even more so. And in termsof what kind of role model he represents, I thinkit’s a very positive one. He’s human, just akid really.Presenter: Joanne, are comic book superheroes justfor boys?[PAUSE]J. Sykes: Do comic book superheroes appeal toeveryone? Well, yes and no. Obviously, as a genrecomic books are dominated by male figures. Interms of the female characters you find two basictypes. There’s the Wonder Woman type, anindependent character like the men. Then, there’sthe Batgirl type, which tends to be just a helper, anextension of a male character like Batman.Generally, in terms of the empowerment of girls,many critics point out that these women all have aBarbie-doll look – an ideal that can’t be met. Well, Iwonder... how many men could have or would wantto have a body like the Incredible Hulk?J. Bailey: If I could just mention one thing...Unit 15A teenage single mother talks abouther lifeStephen Nolan: Now, Courtney Cassidy has beencreating quite a stir recently. The young blonde ladyhas had the press queuing up for interviews in thepast. She does not have an agent. She does not havea public relations company. She doesn’t have arecord deal. She doesn’t have a film deal. She doesn’thave a television deal. She has no rich, famous orwell-connected parent, or friend or lover. She’ssimply had three lovers who’ve produced childrenBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007163


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 164Unit 15Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s Guidewith her. And, well, she’s very young. Courtney hadher first kid aged fourteen years. Good morning,Courtney.CourtneyCassidy: Hello. Good morning.S. Nolan: Courtney, nice to talk to you today.Obviously, I’ve been reading about you in thepapers. You first became pregnant at fourteen.C. Cassidy: Yeah, that’s right. I was in arelationship for four and a half years. It took metwo and a half years before I actually fell pregnantor had intercourse.S. Nolan: And how was that for you?C. Cassidy: Um, I planned the pregnancy myself soit wasn’t so shocking because I wanted a baby.S. Nolan: And did you not think at fourteen yearsof age you were too young?C. Cassidy: No, my sister is...become pregnant atthe same age as well. So I thought if she could doit, I could.S. Nolan: Now, obviously, some people will befeeling very, very sorry for you. They will be givingyou a lot of sympathy. Do you think it’s sympathythat you need, Courtney?C. Cassidy: I don’t want people to feel sorry for meor give me sympathy. I can do it on my own. Idon’t need people to feel sorry for me.S. Nolan: Do you think you can be a good motherat fourteen years of age?C. Cassidy: I can give my babies as much loving as a34, 38-year-old woman could.S. Nolan: You might be able to give them as muchlove but you can’t really give them experience. You’restill developing yourself at the age of fourteen,aren’t you?C. Cassidy: Yes, but...I don’t know, I bring mychildren up...I’ve brought all my children up asgood as any other woman could, if not better.S. Nolan: What makes you think that?C. Cassidy: ’Cos...I don’t know, I gave them stability.I’ve gave them love. I’ve gave them caring. I’ve gavethem what they wanted basically in life.S. Nolan: Now of course, what you haven’t giventhe first child is a father because you’ve fallen outwith him, haven’t you?C. Cassidy: Yeah, I fell out with him. That was nofault of my own though. He had another girlfriendwhilst I was pregnant and me not knowing. Twoweeks after my little girl was born, he finished withme to go out with this girl.S. Nolan: Did you not feel like getting marriedto him?C. Cassidy: I wanted to get married, yeah. Butobviously he’d got another girl...sorry, a girlfriendwith him by that time.S. Nolan: So that was your first child, age fourteen.Then, you had your second child, what age wereyou then?C. Cassidy: I was fifteen or sixteen. Sixteen, I was.S. Nolan: Two children by sixteen. And you didn’tknow the father’s last name?C. Cassidy: No.S. Nolan: Why not?C. Cassidy: ’Cos it was one night out after havingmy first daughter, I was going out with all myfriends. I got too drunk, gone home, had intercoursewith someone I don’t know. Woke up the nextmorning and he wasn’t there.S. Nolan: Do you regret doing it now?C. Cassidy: Yes.S. Nolan: So that was the second child. Have youtried to seek out the father? Have you tried tofind him?C. Cassidy: No, ’cos my partner I’m now withbrings up all my three children the same.S. Nolan: And you had the third child, aged?C. Cassidy: My third child, how old was I when Ihad it?S. Nolan: Yes.C. Cassidy: I was seventeen.S. Nolan: Now obviously Courtney, when you getto seventeen years of age and you’ve three kids,you’re surely saying to yourself the majority of myfriends are not like this. I am doing somethingthat is rather extraordinary here. Should I bedoing this?C. Cassidy: Well, I don’t care what people think ofme. At the end of the day, this is the life that Iwanted. I can live my career when I’m older and mychildren are older. I’ll still be young at the end ofthe day. So that’s what I think...S. Nolan: What kind of sex education were yougiven in school?C. Cassidy: By the time, I had sex education, Iwas already pregnant with Laina, my firstdaughter. So...164 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 165Unit 16Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s GuideUnit 16The science curriculum in ArizonaAnne Minard: Late last month, the Arizonadepartment of education visited Flagstaff as part ofa quick series of public meetings around the state toget new input for classroom standards for science.They got an earful from people you might expect tocare, like science teachers. Julie Bias, a teacher atGranite Mountain Middle school in Prescott, showedup to tell the department she worries about theproposed buffet-style plan for middle schools whichwould touch on a variety of science topics each year,rather than going in depth into one area per gradelevel like the schools do now.Julie Bias: We’re teaching an incomplete unit incells, where genetics is not covered and then, movingon to a weather unit, doesn’t make much sense. Onnumber three, this seems to be surface sampling ofthe science areas instead of learning an area in depth.A. Minard: Some local teachers worry about theeffects of the new standards on existing in-depthprogrammes like the third-grade focus on astronomyat Flagstaff’s DeMiguel School. Another teachercomplained that the fourth grade is too soon forstudents to get a lesson on the parts of an atom likethe new standards suggest. But not everyone wasthere to criticise the nuances of the standards. Justlike it has in every other state that’s grappled withnew science standards, the process in Arizona hasbrought out the age-old debate between creationand evolution. Al Scott is a Flagstaff resident whosays evolution has no place at all in the sciencecurriculum.Al Scott: The theory of evolution is not science.And I submit to the board that it ought to beremoved from the scientific curriculum and placedin philosophy or some other curriculum, not inscience. Because it’s not science, it is in fact areligion. It believes that the origin of life startedwith a rock. Now, I don’t know whether any of youhere evolved from a rock, but I didn’t. And myancestors aren’t monkeys.A. Minard: Others took a gentler approach andsimply asked the committee to present the theory ofevolution in such a way that students are invited tocritique it and not just accept it as fact. TomHorne, Arizona’s superintendent of education,seems to agree. He says he thinks his departmenthas found a pretty good solution that will work forpeople on both sides of the debate. It has to dowith changing a couple of key words in theteaching standards themselves, like in this example.Tom Horne: Reforms Objective 9, the original onewas: ‘Use patterns in the fossil records to support thetheory of organic evolution.’ The proposed revision is:“Evaluate patterns in the fossil records that supportthe theory of organic evolution.” I think the use ofthe word ‘evaluate’ helps convey the idea that you canboth support and criticise different forms of evidence.A. Minard: Horne says supporters of evolution neednot worry about the future of science education inArizona as long as he’s in charge.T. Horne: Well, as long as I’m state superintendentof schools, we are going to have generally acceptedscientific knowledge in our science classrooms. Andevolution is part of that.A. Minard: But Skip Evans, network project directorwith the National Center for Science Education, iswary. His group’s main focus is keeping an eye on thenation’s science classrooms to make sure creationismdoesn’t get any more time at the chalkboard. But hesays the proponents of creationism and its sistertheory called intelligent design are sneaky.Skip Evans: Creationists have switched their tacticsover the last couple of years. In the past, they’vewanted to bring in some kind of alternate theories,you know, even traditional biblical creationism ormaybe now it’s sort of the next evolutionary step increationism – intelligent design creationism. Butthat’s largely failed so what they’ve done is resorted tothis sort of fall-back procedure and say, you know:‘We want to teach both the evidence for evolutionand the evidence against evolution.’ Now to theaverage person that sounds very reasonable. However,what they’ll bring in to the curriculum as evidenceagainst evolution is bad science. It used to be a loteasier just to knock down, you know, creationscience. But like any organism that’s going to surviveit’s going to have to adapt. And anti-evolutionism hasadapted very well to its current environment.A. Minard: Evans worries that changes like someof those proposed for Arizona’s curriculum are afoot in the door for sacrificing good science infavour of religion.The three-week public comment period on thenew science teaching standards has come and goneBROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007165


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 166Units 16–18Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s Guidewith hardly any public notice and no press coverage.And that alarms Skip Evans. The revised standardsare expected to go to the state board for finalapproval as early as next month. And they could bephased into classrooms over the next several years.For Arizona Public Radio, I’m Anne Minard inFlagstaff.Unit 17Space Debris – European Space AgencyNarrator: Space. This is the year 2005 whensatellites have been launched into space for nearlyfifty years. Thousands of these manmade objects areorbiting the Earth. And most will remain there fordecades. Only a few are still in use. The rest arespace debris.HeinerKlinkrad: What one can say is the number of spaceobjects that we know of is in the order of 9,500.And these objects are typically larger than 10centimetres in the low Earth orbit, up to 2,000 km.And they are typically larger than about one metrein the geostationary orbit. Now if you go to smallersizes, the number of objects increases dramatically.And if you go to one-centimetre objects, thenprobably we have half a million objects up there.Narrator: The dramatic increase of space debris –the result of a lack of awareness during the earlyphases of space exploration. Back in the 1980s,several hundred satellites per year were put in orbitaround the Earth, mostly as spy satellites. With themcame the upper stages of rockets that lifted them inspace. Today, even fuel tanks and old astronaut glovesare migrating in space around the Earth.H. Klinkrad: Space debris is a big problem becausethere are many objects, sometimes very smallobjects which have a very high velocity and a highkinetic energy, which can cause lots of damage.Narrator: Space debris or micrometeoritessometimes crash into abandoned rocket fuel tanksor batteries orbiting Earth. This causes explosionscreating clouds of new space debris withinnumerable tiny bits and pieces. Since thebeginning of the space age, there have been almost200 explosions in orbit, under half of which involveold rocket bodies. Because space debris is travellingso fast, even pieces of one centimetre or less in sizecan cause big damage.H. Klinkrad: The object that we see here is analuminium block, a solid aluminium block whichwas hit by a tiny sphere which is 1.2 centimetres indiameter. And you see that this caused quite a bit ofdamage. This bullet if you like was fired at thisblock at a velocity of 6.8 km a second, which is lessthan the orbital speed. You don’t just have thiscrater morphology, but you can also havedetachments like this. So in a worse case, this couldhave separated. And with high velocity, thisdetachment could have moved through a cabin of aspace station and might have caused lots of damage.Narrator: So space debris is not only anaesthetical or an environmental problem, if thedebris increases further, there is danger that evenspace exploration could suffer dramatically, saysHeiner Klinkrad.H. Klinkrad: If you do not enforce space debrismitigation measures in very near future, it mayhappen that collision events become prevailing inthe long term. And then you may reach a situationwhere collisions totally dominate and whatever youdo, you cannot get control of the situation anymore. Ultimately, this may lead to a situation wherein certain altitude regions you cannot conduct anysafe space missions anymore.Unit 18Brazil: Computers in the favelasPaula Gobbi: This small courtyard in front of thechurch is the only recreation area in the San Carlosfavela – slum of forty thousand people. This hillsideshanty town is one of the 630 favelas in Rio DeJaneiro, where poverty, unemployment and drugdealers reign. Over a million people live in Rio’sinfamous favelas surviving on little more than theminimum wage of 80 dollars a month. Yet thisinformation technology school set up in a smallroom of the church is helping the poor strive fora better future.A simple clicking on the keyboard, two dollarsinscription tuition and five dollars monthly fee hastransformed life for 21-year-old Eloisa Fajeira. Eloisamakes a living filming children’s party videos. Andwith the newly acquired computer skills, her businessis growing.Eloisa Fajeira: I work with my brother filmingparties. We have a video and a karaoke. And the166 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 167Units 18–19Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s Guidecomputer has helped us because we can now makebrochures and attractive covers for the videos. Wecan now put the child’s photo on the front of thevideo along with our name and address to get morebusiness. We can also add graphic designs to makeit look better. Before we only had local clients herein the poor areas. Now we get work from otherneighbourhoods, even from rich people.P. Gobbi: Eloisa says it’s hard for her and her brotherto find traditional jobs because nobody wants toemploy people from the favelas. And it’s also hard toget qualifications if you live in the slums. Formercomputer analyst Rodrigo Baggio set out to closethat gap six years ago when he founded theCommittee to Democratise Information Technology.He started out with just five PCs donated by a biginternational company. Today, nearly 75,000 youngpeople have been trained in basic computer skills.Some have gone on to higher training programmesin one of over 240 schools in the slums where thescheme operates.Rodrigo Baggio: In our project, we have a veryconcrete product, the information technologycitizenship school. Each school needs to be aself-sustainable and self-management school. Withthe technology, we talk about citizenship, humanrights, ecology, sexuality, non-violence. The idea is touse information technology like a citizenship tool tochange lives and to change poor communities.P. Gobbi: Rodrigo Baggio confirms that changeis possible.R. Baggio: About eighty-six per cent of our studentssaid they changed their lives after our class. Thismeans things like they come back to the publicschool. They change their behaviour inside thepublic school. They change their behaviour insidetheir families. They didn’t work more in drug dealers.They have a productive way to spend their time.P. Gobbi: Rodrigo Baggio’s next goal is to provideinternet access for all the schools participating in thisscheme – creating an online exchange for the poorcommunities to discuss their problems, and providingmore opportunities for people to better themselvesand their communities through better employmentprospects. And following on from the success of thisproject in his homeland, Baggio’s ambition has goneglobal with similar schemes in Columbia, Uruguay,Mexico and Chile.Unit 19A laughter therapist talks aboutLaughter Clubs.Mark Colvin: India’s giggling guru, Doctor MadanKataria, is no stranger to ABC audiences, our DelhiBureau discovered him more than a decade ago, andhe’s appeared on ABC Radio, TV News, and theForeign Correspondent programme. But he’s neverbrought his laughing gear to our shores till now.This weekend, Doctor Kataria will touch downin Melbourne to kick-off a belly-laughing tour,which will also take in Sydney and Brisbane. SouthAsia Correspondent Geoff Thompson spoke toDoctor Kataria today, after visiting a laughter clubin New Delhi this morning.Geoff Thompson: Laughter Club starts with awarm-up, as about 15 people standing in a New Delhipublic park begin their day with a giggle about... well,anything really. Leading this group is local gigglingguru, Doctor Umesh Sahgal, who balances his stressfuldaily life as a dentist with morning of cackling and sillymovements – a bit like an exercise group in whicheveryone’s as a high as a kite.Umesh Sahgal: But we do it in a different way. Wedo all by laughing, we don’t do it seriously, we keepon laughing through all the exercises for 20 minutes,and after that we just laugh for no reason. So thateveryone is happy, you know, when they leave thisplace. They are just fresh for the whole day. Theycan go and fight their own stress and tension in agood, better way.G. Thompson: Is it difficult to laugh on cue earlyin the morning?[PAUSE]U. Sahgal: Well, on your own you can’t laugh, butwhen you see others laughing you start laughingyourself.G. Thompson: And laugh you do. It’s hard not towhen surrounded by complete strangers all gigglingthemselves stupid, jumping on one leg or pretendingto make milkshakes or even flapping and squawkinglike birds.Mumbai-based Doctor Madan Kataria is thefounder of Laughing Clubs and has spread hisguffawing enthusiasm for laughter’s health benefits allover the world. This weekend, Doctor Kataria kicksoff a new tour of Australia in Melbourne. But thelaughter bug is already booming in Australia, with 30BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007167


QSE Adv TG p153-168 3/6/07 4:30 PM Page 168Units 19–20Student’s Book Audio and Video ScriptsTeacher’s Guideclubs and about five thousand members. And it allstarted with Doctor Kataria’s idea nine years ago.Madan Kataria: The idea of Laughter Club came tomy mind on 13th March 1995, and I went to a publicpark and told people, “I want to start a LaughterClub”, and they started laughing at me, they said,“Doc, are you all right?” I said, “No, I’m serious aboutit. Let’s start a Laughter Club.” And they ridiculed,they said, “This is not a good idea”, and then I couldfind four people who were ready to laugh at me. Thatwas the beginning of the Laughter Club.G. Thompson: Laughter Clubs are sometimescalled Laughter Yoga, and do involve breathingexercises. But for the most part you just standaround and laugh, something which even cynicaljournalists can help finding contagious. You gotanything that can make Australian people laugh?U. Sahgal: Yes, I think we can. We can. We canmake everyone laugh. See we made you laugh also...weren’t you laughing...G. Thompson: Yes, you did.U. Sahgal: That’s what I told you. This is acontagious disease, you know. Even if you are notlaughing, when you see others laughing you startlaughing yourself. So at least you have a smile onyour face when you see others laughing, and whenyou join the stream you start laughing yourself.Club member 1: But start laughing with me. Andnow you laugh more. You see, this way the laugh isspread all over world, not only in India, all over theworld, this is pretty.Club member 2: Now you have to laugh andrecord your voice.Unit 20Holiday reps meet in a Spanish seasideresortAndrew(Manager): Well, we can’t wait any longer. Let’sget started.Justin: Sorry, sorry. I overslept, must have forgottento set the alarm.Andrew: Alright, you’re here now. Look can everyonetry to be here on time tomorrow? I mean, how hardis it to get up in time for a meeting at 11? Now, let’stalk about today. Lindsay, what’s on for today?Lindsay: OK. Today things begin at one o’clock. I’veorganised a boat trip over to Las Salinas. The theme isMexican Getaway. To get them in the mood everyonegets a cheap Mexican sombrero as they go on theboat. Nicole is handling the activities on board.Andrew: Nicole, what have you got?Nicole: Well, I hired a local DJ...Tom ‘Mega’Watts...he plays mostly trance and deep house.Those girls from Bristol were wanting more deephouse, so I think he fits the bill. We’ve found someCDs of Mexican music, so we can have some ofthat on the way back. And we’ve got Mexicancostumes for all of the reps.All: Oh, right.Andrew: Okay, that sounds about right. What arethey going to do besides dance and drink?Nicole: Well, Lindsay and I’ve got a few party gameslined up too, with shots of tequila for the winners.Andrew: Yeah, well, that’ll liven things up. Whichreminds me Justin, what else will they be drinking?Justin: Well, it goes with the Mexicantheme...margaritas, two kinds of light Mexicanlager, and the tequila too of course.Andrew: Anything to eat?Justin: Oh...yeah,...some nachos with salsa andguacamole and a few other things.Andrew: OK...Just remember when we get backthat the local cops don’t want anyone carrying openbottles of alcohol through the town. It’s a 50-eurofine on the spot. We want people to have a goodtime but we need to try and keep the noise downtoo. We don’t want them coming off the boatshouting and yelling and throwing up all over thepolice like last time...and we definitely don’t wantanyone to get arrested.Oh...and I had an email from Head Office,saying there’s been a lot of bad publicity at homeabout Brits binge drinking in Spanish holidayresorts, so I have to remind all you reps that wehave to keep on good terms with the people wholive here, and the police too.Justin: No worries. I’ll be sticking with thoseScottish lads to keep ‘em in check. Remember thosetwo guys who passed out after a drinking bout in themain street in June. Someone took all their clothesand they got their pictures all over the papers. Mindyou, the police were pretty restrained about that one.All: That’s true.Andrew: That’s what I like to hear. Oh, I need tosay something about the rep show...168 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p169-173 2/20/07 2:16 PM Page 169Tests 1Exam Practice Listening ScriptsTeacher’s GuideTest 1 IELTS only: IELTS Listening Section 1Narrator: You will hear a woman named Janetalking to a colleague at work about a concert shesaw the previous evening. First you have some timeto look at Questions 1 to 5. [PAUSE: 30 seconds]Narrator: You will see that an example that hasbeen done for you. Jane was standing in front of thestage, so C has been written in the space.Now we shall begin. You should answer thequestions as you listen because you will not hearthe recording a second time. Listen carefully andanswer Questions 1 to 5.Mike: Hi, Jane...Jane...I said, ‘Hi’.Jane: Oh, hi, Mike. Sorry, my ears are still buzzingfrom last night’s concert.Mike: So how was it?Jane: It was fantastic. I went with someflatmates. You remember meeting Katie andRebecca, right?Mike: Sure. Was it at the Centre Space?Jane: Yes, I love that place.Mike: So where did you watch it, inside?Jane: Well, it was really crowded. We all endedup in different places while the concert was on.I think I had the best place though. I followedthis guy and ended up only a few feet from thelead singer.Mike: So where were Katie and Rebecca?Jane: Well, Katie still hasn’t managed to give upsmoking, so I think she went out for a cigarette.She said she met a friend there. When the concertstarted though, they made their way to the cornerbar to the left of the dance floor. She has a crush onthe bartender so she stayed there the whole timeflirting with him.I guess Rebecca met some friends and satwith them in the booth nearest the entrance.That was until her new boyfriend showed up.By the time the band started, she had wanderedover to the main bar with him. I guess they werejust off the dance floor so they had a really goodview.Mike: So what happened after the concert?Jane: Well, I went looking for them for about halfan hour. But I gave up because it was so crowdedand decided to have a drink and sit with Rebecca’sfriends. Ten minutes later, Katie and Rebeccaarrived. Katie was very upset.Mike: Oh, why?Jane: Katie said she must have left her pinkdesigner handbag on a table on the patio. Katiewent to look for it, but it wasn’t there. She was soupset. She had found Rebecca and they went tothe bar to ask if someone had handed in ahandbag, but nothing. Katie looked like she wasgoing to cry.Narrator: Before you hear the rest of theconversation, you have some time to look atQuestions 6 to 10. [PAUSE: 30 seconds]Narrator: Now listen and answer Questions 6 to 10.Mike: Did she have much in it?Jane: Luckily, she said that she had left her wallet athome, so she didn’t lose her credit cards or her bankcard. Unfortunately, she had about £40 in it for hertaxi fare home. She thought she had lost her mobilephone too, but it was in her back pocket. She didhave her keys in the bag, but that was okay becausewe all had keys to the flat. I guess it was mostly thatthe handbag itself was really expensive.Mike: Well, did she ever find it?Jane: Well, that was the funny part. She hadcompletely given up and said she wanted to go home.When we went to get our coats, she gave the coatcheck person her number. When the man came backhe had her coat in one hand and her bag in the other.She had completely forgotten she’d left it there.Mike: That’s pretty funny.Jane: I know. Katie’s always doing stuff like that.Mike: But tell me, what was the band like?Jane: They were great live, maybe better than theiralbum. And they looked really wild.Mike: What do you mean?Jane: Well, the lead singer had his trademarklong brown hair under a cowboy hat. He waswearing just black leather pants so you could see hehad a big Japanese samurai tattoo on his chest.The lead guitarist was another story. He had a redMohawk. And he was wearing these crazy pantsmade of cuddly animals. When he turned aroundyou could see he had tattoos on his back that lookedlike two angel wings. It’s funny, we each had ourfavourite band members. Rebecca liked thedrummer, Katie thought the lead singer wasreally good-looking and I liked the guitarist best.Mike: Sounds like you had a good time.Narrator: That is the end of Section 1.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007169


QSE Adv TG p169-173 2/20/07 2:16 PM Page 170Tests 2–3Exam Practice Listening ScriptsTeacher’s GuideTest 2 IGSCE only: IGCSE Listening Part 1For Questions 1 – 6 you will hear a series ofshort sentences. Answer each question on theline provided. Your answer should be as brief aspossible.You will hear each item twice.1 Benny is travelling to Paris next week. Accordingto the weather forecast, on which weekdaymorning would it be best for him to sit outsideat a café?Weather presenter: And now the weather for ourholiday travellers. Berlin should be hot and sunnyall week with a high of 25 degrees. Amsterdammight experience some thunderstorms, as a coldfront moves in from the west. And Paris willcontinue to see rain until mid-week, but this shouldclear up by Thursday afternoon.2 Your English class is planning a trip to Londonthis Friday. Where must you meet your classand when?Alex: Sorry Peter, I came late to class today. What’sthe plan for the London trip on Friday?Peter: Oh, well, Mr. Ferguson suggested we meetin Terminal 1 by the information desk. He saidyou need to be there two hours before we take offat 4 pm.3 Pamela is going to the cinema. When will herfilm start?Cinema: Good afternoon. This is the New Havencinema hotline. How may I help you?Pamela: Oh hello, I was wondering if you still haveany tickets available for the late show.Cinema: Let me see, was that for the film inStudio One or Two?Pamela: Studio Two.Cinema: OK, that would be the 9.25 show. Justlet me check. Yes, we still have a few ticketsavailable.4 Richard needs a map of the Underground. Howmuch does he pay for it?Richard: Hello, I’d like a packet of crisps andI’d like to buy a London Underground mapplease.Kiosk assistant: Well, that will be one pound forthe crisps. The maps are free to the public.5 Scott is going to play a game of football with hisfriends. What three things does he need to bringwith him?Dharmash: Oh, hi, mate. Are you still coming tothe pitch tomorrow?Scott: Hi, Dharmash! Yeah, definitely. I was justgoing to call you to ask whether I should bringanything with me.Dharmash: Well, it’ll be pretty hot out, so you betterbring a bottle of water. Other than that, just makesure you’ve got a good pair of football boots. Thegrass is slippery. Also, we usually go for some chipsafter so remember to bring some money with you.6 Sharon and her friend are out shopping. Whydoes her friend suggest she buy some shoes?Sharon: Beth, what do you think of these?Beth: Mmmn, those are okay. Do they come in blue?Sharon: I don’t know. I could ask.Beth: Hey Sharon, what do you think of thosepumps? They’re red, so they’d go with yourfavourite top.Sharon: Yes, but...they’re a bit pricey.Beth: You’ll get a lot of use out of them though,trust me.Sharon: Well, alright, I’ll try them on.Test 3IGSCE / CAE / IELTSNina: Hello, and welcome to London HeathrowAirport. My name is Nina and I’m here to give youa tour of our facilities. Now if you’ll just follow me,we will start off in Terminal 2.Heathrow is the busiest airport in Europe andthe third busiest in the world just behind Atlantaand Chicago. To accommodate the flow of morethan 67 million passengers who pass through theairport every year, we stay open 24 hours a day,365 days a year. We have four terminals rightnow, with our big new fifth terminal scheduledto open in 2008.In case this is your first time here. I’d like to giveyou a few statistics to show just how vast this placeis. We have a total retail space of 48,000 squaremetres, that is, about six and a half times biggerthan the football pitch at Manchester United.Every year nearly half a million planes land here.To make sure passengers reach their planes on time,we have over 500 check-in desks. And Heathrow170 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p169-173 2/20/07 2:16 PM Page 171Tests 3–4Exam Practice Listening ScriptsTeacher’s Guideemploys the equivalent of a small city, around68,000 people. There are also over 34,000 carparking spaces, with about half reserved for staff.Speaking of staff, how many of you have seen theBBC TV documentary Airport?Okay, that’s quite a few of you. Well, as many ofyou are probably aware that programme was filmedhere on location at Heathrow, using some of ourvery own staff. Although some of the staff havemoved on, many of the people who appeared in itstill work here. And before you ask, Jeremy Spakewasn’t a professional actor when he was on theprogramme. But I must say, he has managed a fairlysuccessful career as a presenter since then.At any rate, I saw at least two people you mightrecognise from the show earlier today. If you’re lucky,you might get a chance to say hello to one of themlater in this tour.Now, I’ll tell you a little bit about the history ofLondon Heathrow. The land that was used to createthe first airstrip in this area was originally ownedby the vicar of Harmondsworth. He sold the landto Fairey Aviation, an early British aeroplanemanufacturer, who used the airstrip to test theiraircraft. In 1944, the Ministry of Air took controlof the site for use in World War Two, although itnever in fact saw any military use.The airport itself gets its name after the smallvillage of Heath Row, which was where Terminal 3stands now. The village was demolished in 1945when the airport site was developed.On 1 January, 1946, the Royal Air Force gavecontrol of the airport to the Ministry of CivilAviation, and the airport officially opened. The firstplane to leave that day was a flight headed forBuenos Aires.The terminal that we are in now, Terminal 2, isin fact the very first terminal building. It wasoriginally called Europa Building and was openedby the Queen in 1955.If you’ll look over here, you can see...Test 4IGSCE / CAE / IELTSPresenter: Welcome to Science Today, your weeklyscience news and interviews show. I’m your hostJonathan Peel. On our show today, we are going tolook at a subject that everyone seems to be talkingabout – stem cells. To help us understand this a bitbetter, I’ve asked cellular biologist Dr. VeronicaRandall to join us. Welcome Dr. Randall.Veronica: Please just call me Veronica.RandallJonathan Peel: OK. Well, Veronica. Let’s beginwith the basics. What are stem cells?V. Randall: Well, stem cells are basically unspecialisedcells. They have not yet ‘quote-unquote’ been toldwhat to become. They are also remarkable in thatthey will continually renew themselves through celldivision for long periods.J. Peel: So why are these cells so special?Veronica: The best way to think about these cells isthat they are literally blank slates. Under certainphysiological or experimental conditions, these cellscan become any kind of specialised cells you want.You just need to tell them what they are going to beand they become it. Now some of your listenersmight already be thinking what the potential of thisdiscovery might be. Well, to tell you the truth, thepotential does seem limitless.J. Peel: Well, could you give us some examples?V. Randall: Sure. Take for example the case ofParkinson’s disease. It affects about 2 per cent of thepopulation over 65 years.J. Peel: Yes, and some people much younger thanthat. The actor Michael J. Fox developedParkinson’s, if I’m not mistaken?V. Randall: Yes, that’s true. Along with the boxerMuhammad Ali. With Parkinson’s disease, in thebrain there is progressive degeneration and loss ofneurons which produce the hormone dopamine.Eventually, the decreasing levels of dopamine causea whole host of problems from tremors and rigidityto less mobility. It can start with the hands shaking,then later the head and legs.However, Parkinson’s has also been shown to beone of the first diseases to benefit from stem celltherapy. In a recent study on mice, embryonic stemcells were made to become specialised dopamineneurons. When these were introduced into micewith Parkinson’s-like neurological problems, thecells began working, producing dopamine andimproving the motor function of the mice.Scientists are currently working on a way to do thesame in humans.J. Peel: That’s fantastic.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007171


QSE Adv TG p169-173 2/20/07 2:16 PM Page 172Tests 4–5Exam Practice Listening ScriptsTeacher’s GuideV. Randall: And the same possibilities exist foreverything from creating insulin-producing cells fordiabetes sufferers to regenerating nerve-cells forspinal cord injuries. Before he passed away, theactor Christopher Reeve had become a majorproponent of stem cell research for finding a curefor spinal cord injuries.J. Peel: I understand there is still a lot of oppositionto this research. Why is that?V. Randall: Well, it comes from the fact that there aretwo types of stem cells – embryonic stem cells andadult stem cells. The embryonic stem cells are cellsformed in the earliest stage of life and they are capableof developing into any cell in the body. It should benoted that these cells come from embryos which havebeen created in the lab, mostly by in vitro fertilisationclinics, and have been donated for research purposes.Many religious groups oppose the use of embryonicstem cells because the cells come from embryos.J. Peel: Does it make a difference if we useembryonic or adult stem cells?V. Randall: Actually, it does. Embryonic stem cells arewidely available and can become any cell in the body.Adult stem cells are very rare in mature tissue andseem to only be able to become specific types of tissue.As far as we know, bone marrow cannot produce hearttissue, for example. As well, the embryonic stem cellscan be grown easily in the lab, but a way to do this foradult stem cells has yet to be discovered.On the other hand, adult stem cells from atransplant patient would not carry the risk oftransplant rejection. However, it has not beendetermined whether embryonic stem cells wouldin fact cause tissue rejection.Presenter: So what does the future hold for stem cells?Test 5IGSCE / CAE / IELTSSteve Law: Welcome to this week’s LondonBusiness Review podcast. I’m your host Steve Law.This week, we’ll be discussing the life and work ofsomeone who had a huge impact on the advertisingworld – David Ogilvy. To discuss his extraordinaryinfluence, we have brought in two advertisingexecutives, Stanley Montgomery and LaurenMackenzie. I’d like to thank you both for coming.Let me start this discussion with you, Lauren. Howwould you describe Ogilvy’s impact on advertising?LaurenMackenzie: Well, I think you could call him the‘father of advertising’. Besides creating some of themost innovative advertising campaigns of the 20thcentury, Ogilvy also helped develop many techniquesin print and television advertising that are todayconsidered standards in the business.StanleyMontgomery: I’d certainly agree with Lauren onthat. He was one of the first to apply a morescientific approach to advertising.S. Law: Why was that so important?S. Montgomery: Well, one of the biggest challengeswith any advertising campaign is to find out whetheror not your work is actually having an effect on sales.Are people buying more because of it? If so, why? Ifnot, why not? I think the famous department storeowner, John Wanamaker, put it best when he said:“Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted;the trouble is I don’t know which half.” And Ogilvymade it one of his key aims to find this out.L. Mackenzie: Yes, I think a lot of this goes backto when he worked for George Gallup’s AudienceResearch Institute. As you probably know, Gallupwas the statistician responsible for modern pollingfor market research surveys. And it was throughGallup that Ogilvy became very aware of just howuseful doing meticulous research could be.S. Law: What kind of research do you mean?S. Montgomery: Well, he would get all kinds ofresearch on simple, yet important things. Take printads for newspapers. For example, when you put aheadline in quote marks, readers will be able toremember your headline 28 per cent better. Or if youdon’t hit the readers with what a product is or what itcan do for you immediately, they will remember it20 per cent less than with normal adverts.L. Mackenzie: Yes, the same goes with the USPs,or unique selling points. We all know howimportant this can be. If you wait to explain aproduct’s USP until the main text of an advert, youshould remember that only 5 per cent of peoplebother to read this far. This means you are losing95 per cent of your readers, who won’t read aboutthe USP at all. Mind you, nowadays most print adstend to be just headlines anyway.S. Law: But have all of Ogilvy’s ideas aboutadvertising been correct?172 © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007 BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING


QSE Adv TG p169-173 2/20/07 2:16 PM Page 173Tests 5–6Exam Practice Listening ScriptsTeacher’s GuideL. Mackenzie: That’s a good question. Somehave dated, others have taken time to becomefashionable. Take, for example, using celebritiesfor endorsing products. Now, there have been somebrilliant examples of matching the product to thecelebrity. I mean, look at Nike and Michael Jordan.However, there has been a recent development thatOgilvy was aware of. Pepsi is a good example of this.A few years back, they decided to drop Britney Spearsand Beyoncé Knowles from Pepsi ads on the groundsthat these commercials tended to promote these stars’own brand identity and did little to help Pepsi.S. Montgomery: I agree. While many companiescontinue to use celebrity endorsements like DavidBeckham and Gillette or Bill Cosby and Jell-O,there has been a steady shift away from them.S. Law: So you’re saying the stars are getting paidto promote their own brand?S. Montgomery: Well, yes,...TEST 6 CAE only: CAE Listening Part 4Narrator: You will hear five short extracts in whichdifferent people are talking about science. Look atTask One. For questions 23-27, choose from the listA-H each speaker’s occupation. Now look at TaskTwo. For questions 28-32, choose from the list A-Heach speaker’s aim for the future.You will hear the recording twice and while youlisten you must complete both tasks. You now have40 seconds to look at Part 4. [PAUSE: 40 seconds]Narrator: Speaker 1Speaker 1: Well, I’ve been working on this issuefor company for the last twelve years. We havedeveloped several concept models in recent yearsand are pleased to see a growing interest in themedia. As the public becomes more aware of thepossibilities, I think we will see an increaseddemand among consumers for a cleaner alternative.By making a shift away from fossil fuels to a fuelbased on water, we will ensure that we can cutcarbon dioxide emissions. And I am very pleasedto know that I will be making a contribution tohelping make the Earth a better place.Speaker 2: Actually, I’m very concerned abouttraffic in my city. My son has asthma so I knowfirst hand the effect too much air pollution canhave. I’m glad that in my work, I can make apositive difference. Our department is in charge ofmany things such as building new roads. Manypeople would say that creating more roads leads tomore cars on the road. But I would counter thatcars left idling in slow traffic lead to much greaterfuel consumption and air pollution. Cars aren’tgoing away any time soon. The better you canmanage traffic in a city, the better the air qualityand way of life.Speaker 3: Honestly, I don’t give global warmingmuch thought. My entire livelihood depends onmoving good from one city to the next. Dieselfuel powers my truck and my truck pays my billsso I’ve got no problem using oil. What I amconcerned about though is the rising price of fuel.Just a few years ago, it seemed the price of oil wasabout half what it is today and every week thecost of litre of diesel goes up. If these prices keeprising, I might need to consider some other lineof business.Speaker 4: I lead a team of experts who have beeninvestigating this issue for the government since themid-1970s. In the past two decades, technologysuch as infrared satellite imaging has provided uswith fairly conclusive evidence that, indeed,temperatures on Earth are warming. And it isbecoming clearer that human activity in the formof transport and energy production is a significantdriving factor behind this. I would have to assumeat some point we will be forced out of necessity toswitch to some other fuel than oil. Unfortunately,by then, it may be too late to stop the changes inthe climate.Speaker 5: Think about it for a minute. Carbondioxide is a part of the cycle of life. We take it outand plants take it in. It’s ridiculous to label carbondioxide a pollutant. If it was, everyone includingenvironmentalists would be polluters. Don’t get mewrong, I’m worried about the environment as muchas you are. Our industry is looking at the possibilityof developing new modern fuels like hydrogen andsugar ethanol. But let’s be realistic. Until these fuelscan be supplied at a reasonable price, society willneed to continue using oil. And we will continue toprovide this valuable commodity.BROOKEMEAD ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING © Brookemead Associates Ltd 2007173

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