30 Nov 2021

ACTIVITY BOOK 5 PAGE 18, Exercises 1 and 2

 

1.- An author writes books. A writer writes books

2.- There are lots of books in a library.

3.- Every footballer wants to score a goal.

4.- When you sleep, you sometimes dream.

5.- A detective investigates crimes.

6.- When you interview someone, you ask them questions.

7.- A football match is 90 minutes long.

8.- There are lots of houses and shops in a town.


Ellen scores the winning goal.

Ellen invites Freya to the match.

Dad phones Vanessa March. 

Freya wins the writing competition.

Freya sees a poster in the library.

Freya interviews Ellen after the match.



1.- An ............ writes books. A writer writes books.

2.- There are lots of books in a ................

3.- Every footballer wants to score a ................

4.- When you sleep, you sometimes .................

5.- A ........................ investigates crimes.

6.- When you ....................... someone, you ask them questions.

7.- A football ..................... is 90 minutes long.

8.- There are lots of houses and shops in a ........


25 Nov 2021

PRESENT SIMPLE (II)

1.- I go to school every day.

2 They don't learn German at school.

3.- Do you play the guitar?

4.- Charlie watches TV at the weekend?

5.- Do we play rugby at the at shool?

6.- Do they eat meat?

7.-  Do Susie and Ollie live in Dublin?




I DO                            I WATCH

YOU DO                    YOU WATCH

HE DOES                  HE WATCHES

SHE DOES                 SHE WATCHE

IT DOES                    IT WATCHES

 WE DO                    WE WATCH

YOU DO                    YOU WATCH

THEY DO                    THEY WATCH


Don't make a mess please?

Don't forget your bag, Mike?

Hey, walk up the stairs, don'r run!

Hey, don't jump on the bed!


I can't sleep, Do you want a story?

Oh no, Tom has a cold. I feel sick.

Sue  has a cold too.

I have a headache and I feel thirsty.

Mike has fallen over!







23 Nov 2021

Lesson November 23rd, 2021: Present simple

 Alfie usually gets up at half past nine on Saturday.

I get up

you get up

he/ she/ it gets up

we get up

you get up

they get up


He sometimes meets friends at the library at ten o'clock

After lunch he always does baking with his dad.





On Sunday he always walks the dog with his sister.







Hes granny  does gardening on Sunday morning.







He usually visits his grandparents after dinner on Sunday.







I often eat at half past twelve

I never eat fruits.

I usually  feed my fish (Pepe/ kiwi).

I always feed Lola. (Guinea pig)

I sometimes study English.





20 Nov 2021

Reading exercise

Are celebrities bad for you?

Celebrities are everywhere nowadays: on TV, in magazines, online. Is this preoccupation with famous people harmless fun or is it bad for us? How many people are truly obsessed with modern media idols? And on the other side of the coin, can fame be harmful to the celebrities?


Studies suggest that the vast majority of teenagers do not really worship celebrities. Researchers have identified three kinds of fans. About 15% of young people have an ‘entertainment-social’ interest. They love chatting about their favourite celebrities with friends and this does not appear to do any harm.


Another 5% feel that they have an ‘intense-personal’ relationship with a celebrity. Sometimes they see them as their soulmate and find that they are often thinking about them, even when they don’t want to. These people are more at risk from depression and anxiety. If girls in this group idolise a female star with a body they consider to be perfect, they are more likely to be unhappy with their own bodies.


That leaves 2% of young people with a ‘borderline-pathological’ interest. They might say, for example, they would spend several thousand pounds on a paper plate the celebrity had used, or that they would do something illegal if the celebrity asked them to. These people are in most danger of being seriously disturbed.


What about the celebrities themselves? A study in the USA tried to measure narcissism or extreme self-centredness, when feelings of worthlessness and invisibility are compensated for by turning into the opposite: excessive showing off. Researchers looked at 200 celebrities, 200 young adults with Masters in Business Administration (a group known for being narcissistic) and a nationally representative sample using the same questionnaire. As was expected, the celebrities were significantly more narcissistic than the MBAs and both groups were a lot more narcissistic than the general population.


Four kinds of celebrity were included in the sample. The most narcissistic were the ones who had become famous through reality TV shows – they scored highest on vanity and willingness to exploit other people. Next came comedians, who scored highest on exhibitionism and feelings of superiority. Then came actors, and the least narcissistic were musicians. One interesting result was that there was no connection between narcissism and the length of time the celebrity had been famous. This means that becoming famous probably did not make the celebrities narcissistic – they already were beforehand.


So, what can we learn from this? People who are very successful or famous tend to be narcissists and are liable to be ruthless, self-seeking workaholics. As we can see from celebrity magazines, they are also often desperate and lonely. They make disastrous role models.




Are celebrities bad for you?


Are the sentences true or false?


1. The article is about whether celebrity culture is harmful, for either the public or the celebrities themselves.


2. 15% of teenagers have an interest in celebrities that probably isn't a cause for concern.


3. Young people who feel they have an 'intense-personal' relationship with a celebrity do not experience any negative consequences related to it.


4. A study found that celebrities were more self-centred than business administration masters students.


5. Celebrities from reality TV were found to be the most vain and exploitative.


6. Actors were the least self-obsessed group of celebrities.


7. The research concluded that the experience of being a celebrity made people more narcissistic than they were previously.


8. The author says that celebrities tend to exhibit negative qualities and are therefore not good role models


18 Nov 2021

I like or I don't like..... LESSON TWO.

 I like going shopping!

I like playing games






I  dont like playing basketball







I like playing the piano a little bit.








I don't like playing rugby









I like gardening








I like cooking







I like walking the dogs






´I like talking to my friends.







I like building a house








1.- You do this in the kitchen. You can use flour, eggs and sugar.

A cake








2.-  You need money to do this.  Dont forget to take a bag with you.

You go shopping



3.- You can use scissorsm paper and glue

You make interesting things

I make a letter. ( crafts). 







4.- You throw  and catch a ball.

There are five players on each time.

Playing rugby







You need to take your boots with you and the coach tells you what to do.

Playing football








You  do this in the garden. You plants seeds and watch the grow.










17 Nov 2021

SHOULD WE STOP USING BOOKS FOR EDUCATION?

 Should we stop using books for education?

Currently, the debate about the use of books in school has risen. From my point of view, I think the use of books is essential for the learning process.

First of all, the use of screens is becoming a problem for kids and teenagers. Due to the use of these technologies, some kids have become addicted to electronic devices, so if these technologies were restricted in schools, kids would be less addicted, and they would also have fewer vision problems.

Books help you remember things, and when you use them, you learn faster. For that reason, I think the use of books is necessary. 

Moreover, books provide a lot of information that sometimes is difficult to find on the internet.

To summarise,  using books is essential to learn and I believe that books are an excellent educational tool so as to achieve every student's goal.  I firmly believe that the educational system should maintain the use of books in order to improve the kids' learning process.

9 Nov 2021

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ABOUT TIME , NOV. 9TH, 2021

 WHAT TIME DO YOU WAKE UP?

I wake up at  twenty past seven.

WHAT TIME DOES OUR SCHOOL START?

Our school starts at nine.

 WHAT TIME DO YOU GO HOME?

I go home at half past twelve.

WHAT TIME IS IT NOW?

It is twenty past six in the evening.



TO GO - GO/ GOES

TO WATCH- WATCH/WATCHES

TO LEAVE- LEAVE/ LEAVES. dejar/ abandonar



WHAT TIME DOES SHE GO TO SCHOOL?

She goes to school 

She goes to school at twenty-five minutes to eight.  (7:35)


WHAT TIME DOES HE WATCH TV?

He watches TV at ten minutes to seven. 18:50


WHAT TIME DOES THE BUS LEAVE?

The bus leaves at twenty-five past one.




 Hi,

I am Ada from Hong kong in China.I m eleven eyars old.

I've got a brother called Lok-to, he's eight. We live in a very tall block of flats in the city.

Our family is very international. My dad is from Hong Kong and my mum is Irish.


Ada's nationality is Chinese.

Her mum is from Ireland.

Her cousin's nationality. 

Her aunt's nationality is Mexican.

She speaks Cantonese, English and some Japanese

I can speak Catalan and Spanish .

Which continent  is she from ? She is from Asia. 



China- Chinese

Sweden- Swedish 

Mexico- Mexican

Ireland- Irish



 








2 Nov 2021

Class November 2nd, 2021

REMIDER FROM LAST WEEK'S CLASS


-PRACTISE THE KEYBOARD


-MEET FRIENDS


-DO CRAFTS


-DO BAKING


LEARNING SOME VERBS


COOK: I COOK DINNER

WALK: I WALK THE DOG

EAT: I EAT PIZZA

RUN: I DON'T LIKE RUNNING

SLEEP: I LIKE SLEEPING