American English in Mind

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An integrated, four-skis course for beginner to advanced teenage earners of American Engish American Engish in Mind engages teenage students of Engish through: American Engish in Mind features: M O H DV D - R Engish in Mind Herbert Puchta & Jeff Stranks with Peter Lewis-Jones Student s Book 4 A student DVD-ROM with stimuating grammar exercises, a game, video and tests Check Your Progress sections for sef-assessment Cuture in Mind sections with insightfu readings and activities Extra materia on pronunciation, vocabuary and creative projects Intereaved Teacher s Editions with suppementa materia for muti-eve casses American Engish in Mind Thought-provoking reading, istening, speaking and writing topics Cear grammar presentations, practice and recycing Contemporary, spoken American Engish in reaistic contexts Content-rich photo stories and diaogues Fun extra practice and review on the DVD-ROM American IT W Engish in Mind Puchta, Stranks & Lewis-Jones American Each eve of American Engish in Mind consists of a Student s Book with DVD-ROM, a Workbook, Cass Audio, a Teacher s Edition, presentation software and test-making software. There is aso Web support avaiabe for both teachers and students. Counci of Europe eve: A1 Cambridge ESOL exams Starter of Leve E Leve 1 A2 ket B1 Leve 3 pet Leve 4 B2 fce C1 cae Leve 2 The Cambridge Internationa Corpus (CIC) is a coection of over 1.5 biion words of rea spoken and written Engish. The texts are stored in a database that can be searched to see how Engish is used. The CIC aso incudes the Cambridge Learner Corpus, a unique coection of over 35 miion words taken from student exam papers from Cambridge ESOL. It shows rea mistakes students make and highights the parts of Engish which causes probems for students. www.cambridge.org/corpus Student s Book 4

Chaen in ives Grammar: past tense review; tag questions; be used to + gerund vs. used to + base form; shoud / shoud have; wish Vocabuary: personaity adjectives; make and do; phrasa verbs a Read and isten CD1 T02 Read and isten to Laurence Kim Peek s story. How was he specia? The Rea Rain Man Laurence Kim Peek was born in Sat Lake City, Utah, on November 11, 1951. It was cear from an eary age that he was not ike other chidren. A scan showed that the two haves of his brain were not connected in the usua way. As a resut, Laurence deveoped an amazing memory. He started to read when he was two. He used to read books and put them back on the shef upside down to show that he had finished them. He remembered everything he had read. He memorized huge amounts of information on subjects such as history, geography, sports, music and iterature. He aso had an incredibe abiity with numbers and dates. To read more quicky, he read the eft page with his eft eye and the right page with his right eye. By reading two pages at the same time, it took him ess than an hour to read a whoe book. By the age of 30, he had memorized the contents of around 12,000 books. However, in other areas, his deveopment was not as advanced. He did not wak unti he was four, and he had probems with motor skis ike buttoning a shirt or tying shoe aces. His socia skis were poor, and he was extremey sensitive about meeting new peope. In 1984, Peek and his father met Hoywood fim writer Barry Morrow. Morrow ow was fascinated by Peek and began to write a new script based on Peek s experiences. The resut was Rain Man, a movie that won an Oscar for Best Picture in 1988. This changed Peek s ife. His fame heped him become more sef-confident. He got used to being the center of attention. He appeared on TV and traveed around the country with his father to raise awareness about his condition. Sady, Peek died of a heart attack in 2009. b Read the text again. Mark the statements T (true) or F (fase). 1 The right and eft sides of Peek s brain were not connected at a. 2 Peek coud read two different pages at the same time. 3 Peek coudn t remember numbers or dates very we. 4 Peek was never comfortabe with his fame. 2 Grammar review Past tense review a Compete the text with the simpe past, past continuous or past perfect. Gies Trehin was born in France in 1972. When he was eight, his famiy moved (move) to the U.S. Whie they 1 were iving (ive) there, doctors 2 (diagnose) Gies with autism. Over the years, he 3 (deveop) a great taent for music, menta cacuation and drawing. In 1984, he 4 (begin) to draw an imaginary modern city caed Urvie. By 1987, he 5 (create) many extremey detaied drawings of the city s streets and buidings. Whie he 6 (work) on pans for the city, he aso 7 (start) creating a cuture and history for it. You can earn more about Urvie at the Urvie website. 2 UNIT 1

be used to + gerund vs. used to + base form b Underine the correct words. I used to / am used to go surfing every morning. That s how I ost my eg to a shark. I 1 used to / am used to enter competitions. Now I have to watch from the beach. It was tough at first, but I 2 m used to / used to being a spectator now. At first, it was reay weird having ony one eg. However, after six months, I 3 used to / was used to going everywhere in a wheechair. Then the doctor tod me I was ready for an artificia eg. In the beginning, I found it very hard to wak, but I 4 used to / m used to waking on it now. It s so comfortabe I sometimes forget it s not my rea eg. I 5 used to / m used to having a reay active ife. Apart from surfing I 6 am used to / used to go mountain biking and hiking. At first I thought I d ose a that, but it s amazing how much I can sti do. Of course, I m not as quick as I 7 used to / m used to be, but I can sti have fun. 3 Vocabuary review Personaity a Match the adjectives with the peope. bossy considerate sensitive 1 determined bad-tempered imaginative sensibe independent insensitive ambitious 1 Whatever you do, don t say anything about her new haircut. She gets upset when peope say anything negative about her. 2 Everyone says that Tim s not good enough for the schoo soccer team, but he says he s going to prove they re wrong. 3 Pau often visits his edery aunt. He knows how oney od peope can get. 4 Your son makes up the most amazing stories. He has a rea taent. 5 I ove Jim, but he does have a habit of saying the wrong thing at the wrong time. 6 Lucy says she s going to be a miionaire before she s 25. Good uck to her. 7 My big sister is aways teing me what I can and can t do. Who does she think she is? 8 Nathan has aways iked to do things on his own. Even as a baby, he woud never et me feed him. He aways wanted the spoon in his own hands. 9 You can eave your kids with Maria. She won t et them do anything dangerous. 10 I can t ask Jerry anything. He shouts at me every time I open my mouth. make and do b Compete the text with the correct forms of make or do. My probems at schoo began when we started to earn to read and write. A those etters of the aphabet! They just didn t make any sense to me. I tried to 1 my best, but every time I wrote a word, I just 2 a mess on the page. The other kids started to 3 fun of me. I started to hate schoo. I had to 4 a rea effort just to get out of bed in the mornings. My mom was very worried and took me to an educationa psychoogist. The psychoogist 5 some tests and found out that I was dysexic, which basicay means that I have a probem with written anguage. Finding this out 6 a huge difference because, once my teacher knew what the probem was, she coud start to hep me. Athough my writing was sti bad, I 7 a ot of progress because peope understood my probem. UNIT 1 3

4 Read and isten a CD1 T03 Read and isten to the etter from a magazine s advice coumn. Which sentence best describes Annie s probem? 1 Annie has had an argument with her father because she wants to quit schoo and get a job. 2 Annie wants to give up her job and go to coege, but she doesn t have enough money. 3 Annie and her father argued because he says she s spending too much time with her boyfriend. Dear Annie X, understand exacty how you fee. I quit high I schoo at 16 to work in a supermarket. My parents thought it was a bad idea. They tod me I shoud stay in schoo and then go to coege. For a coupe of years, it was great. I had more money than my friends, I coud spend more time with my boyfriend and, of course, I didn t have to go to schoo. Two years ater my friends a finished schoo and went to coege whie I was sti at home iving with my parents. For five years, I wished I hadn t eft schoo so eary. I wished I had done the same as my friends. Then one day I reaized that it wasn t too ate. I enroed in night schoo, and three years ater, I proudy went off to coege to get a degree in journaism. Since then, I ve never had a singe regret about my professiona ife. There are two reasons for teing this story. First, and most important, you need to reaize that it s never too ate to change your mind. The choices that you make now don t have to be for the rest of your ife. In many ways, going to coege when I was 26 was the best thing I ever did. I had more ife experience, and I was more motivated because I was oder. I certainy knew that I didn t want to spend the rest of my ife working in a supermarket. The second reason is that I want you to know your mom and dad aren t quite the foos you might think they are. My dad wasn t as forcefu as yours, but I shoud have istened to what he had to say, even if I didn t take his advice. Remember, parents want what s best for their chidren, even if it doesn t aways seem that way. The first thing you need to do is make friends with your dad again. I m sure if you sit down with him and tak things over, you both be abe to work things out. You need to et him know that you re wiing to isten to him, but that the fina decision is yours. This is not about feeing guity because you don t want to et him down. This is about doing what you think is right for you. I m sure if he can see that you are serious, he wi stand by you and offer you the support you need. And remember, if one day you decide to do things differenty, there s nothing stopping you from doing so. b Read the etter again. Check the four pieces of advice it offers Annie. 1 It s important to reaize that you don t have to do the same thing your whoe ife. 2 It s essentia to make the right decision about what you want to do when you eave schoo. 3 Listen to your parents. They can be a good source of advice. 4 You shoud understand that parents have their chidren s interests at heart. 5 Ask your mother to tak to your dad for you. 6 Don t et the bad feeing between you and your dad get any worse. 4 UNIT 1

5 Grammar review shoud / shoud have a Match the sentences. 1 You shoud go to the doctor. 2 You shoud have gone to the doctor. 3 We shoud eave in five minutes. 4 We shoud have eft earier. wish b Do these sentences refer to a present or past situation? Write present or past. 1 I wish my parents understood me better. present 2 I wish I hadn t shouted at my mom. 3 I wish I had tod her how I was feeing. 4 I wish I weren t so bad at sports. 5 I wish I had more time to do things. 6 I wish I hadn t ied to him. c Write wish sentences for these peope. 6 Pronunciation Thought groups CD1 T04 Turn to page 114. 1 I wish 2 I wish 3 I wish a You d be feeing better by now. b That s a very bad cut on your hand. c Then we won t have to run to the station. d Now we re going to miss the train. 7 Vocabuary review Phrasa verbs a Choose the correct words to compete the text. A big probem 1 b up yesterday. I spent hours thinking it 2 and trying to 3 it out. I just coudn t 4 my mind up about what to do. I 5 it over with friends but no one 6 up with a hepfu idea. So I tried ignoring it, but it just woudn t 7 away. In the end, I decided to 8 on it and 9 back to it in the morning. And guess what? When I woke up I d forgotten a about the probem! 1 a went b came c appeared 2 a over b about c around 3 a fix b sove c sort 4 a make b do c decide 5 a taked b discussed c spoke 6 a thought b came c arrived 7 a go b disappear c come 8 a seep b rest c nap 9 a think b return c come Friends b Read the poem and match the underined phrases with the meanings. Best friends? I thought you d aways 1 stand by me And be there by my side, But then you went and 2 tod on me And said that I had ied. I thought you woud 3 stick up for me When others caed me names, But then you went and 4 et me down And joined in with their games. I thought we d aways 5 get aong, I thought you were my friend. Now I know that I was wrong, And we ve 6 faen out again. a tod someone about a bad thing I did b disappointed me c have a good reationship d support me e stopped being friends f defend me UNIT 1 5

8 Read a Look at the cover of the book and read the short summary of the story. Woud you be interested in reading this book? Why / why not? By Mark Haddon This is a murder mystery nove ike no other. The detective, and narrator, is Christopher Boone. Christopher has Asperger s syndrome. He knows a ot about math but very itte about human beings. He oves ists, patterns and the truth. He hates the coors yeow and brown and doesn t ike being touched. He has never gone farther than the end of his street on his own, but when he finds a neighbor s dog murdered, he sets out on a terrifying journey that wi turn his whoe word upside down. Then the poice arrived. I ike the poice. They have uniforms and numbers and you know what they are meant to be doing. There was a poicewoman and a poiceman. The poicewoman had a itte hoe in her tights and a red scratch in the midde of the hoe. The poiceman had a big orange eaf stuck to the bottom of his shoe that was poking out from one side. The poicewoman put her arms round Mrs. Shears and ed her back toward the house. I ifted my head off the grass. The poiceman squatted down beside me and said, Woud you ike to te me what s going on here, young man? I sat up and said, The dog is dead. I d gotten that far, he said. I said, I think someone kied the dog. How od are you? he asked. I repied, I am 15 years and 3 months and 2 days. And what, precisey, were you doing in the garden? he asked. I was hoding the dog, I repied. And why were you hoding the dog? he asked. This was a difficut question. It was something I wanted to do. I ike dogs. It made me sad to see that the dog was dead. I ike poicemen, too, and I wanted to answer the question propery, but the poiceman did not give me enough time to work out the correct answer. Why were you hoding the dog? he asked again. I ike dogs, I said. Did you ki the dog? he asked. I did not ki the dog. Is this your fork? he asked. I said, No. You seem very upset about this, he said. He was asking too many questions and he was asking them too quicky. They were stacking up in my head ike oaves in the factory where Unce Terry works. The factory is a bakery and he operates the sicing machines. And sometimes a sicer is not working fast enough but the bread keeps coming and there is a bockage. I sometimes think of my mind as a machine, but not aways as a bread-sicing machine. It makes it easier to expain to other peope what is going on inside it. The poiceman said, I am going to ask you once again I roed back onto the awn and pressed my forehead to the ground again and made the noise that Father cas groaning. I make this noise when there is too much information coming into my head from the outside word. It is ike when you are upset and you hod the radio against your ear and you turn it hafway between two stations so that a you get is white noise and then you turn the voume right up so that this is a you can hear and then you know you are safe because you cannot hear anything ese. The poiceman took hod of my arm and ifted me onto my feet. I didn t ike him touching me ike this. And this is when I hit him. b Read the text quicky. What have the poice come to investigate? 6 UNIT 1