say, wow work with a partner. first practice the conversation in the picture. then make new conversations. use jobs and places from activity 3a.
say a dialogue with a student. point to the word waiter in activity 3a and then to the picture of the restaurant. ask a student. where does he work? guide the student to answer using the correct place: he works in a restaurant. then ask. what does he do? and guide the student to answer, he's a waiter.
as students work in pairs, move around the room monitoring their work. offer language support as needed.
4 this activity provides listening and speaking practice using the target language.
call attention to the pictures in the book showing how to play the game. say, you will draw a picture of someone working. other students will ask questions about the kind of job you are drawing. after two questions someone can try to guess the job.
demonstrate by drawing a picture on the board of a stick figure reporter. add details (microphone, notebook, etc.) until students guess what job it is.
ask a student to go to the board. say, draw a picture of a person working. if necessary, help the student add details that show the job the person is doing. he or she can add a bank interior to show that the person is a bank clerk. a student could also use an eye chart on the wall to show that the place is a doctor's office and the person is a doctor.
ask two different students to ask questions about the job, and then ask a third student to guess what job it is.
play the game using drawings by several different students.
alternative: if you do not want students to move from their seats, then you can ask them to do this activity sitting down in groups of four. they will need pieces of paper on which to draw their pictures. they will also need pencils.
section b
new language
words that describe jobs, such as exciting, dangerous, boring, difficult, busy, fun
additional materials to bring to class:
help wanted ads from an english-language newspaper
1 a this activity introduces the key vocabulary.
focus attention on the six pictures. ask, what job does the person have? where does the person ivnrk?
point out the numbered list of words. say each one and ask students to repeat. then use simple explanations and short sample sentences to help students understand what each word means. for example, exciting means very interesting and very fast-moving. a police officer has an exciting job. the job is always changing. something is always happening. for dangerous you might say, dangerous means not safe. you might be hurt or killed in a dangerous job.