Lesson 68教案示例
Language Focus:
1. escape, conservation, robbery, description
2. Checkpoint 17.
Teaching Objectives:
1. Practise listening.
2. Revise the grammar: the Attributive Clause.
Properties: Recorder, Overhead Projector.
Teaching Procedures:
I. Showing the teaching aims
II. Revision
Check the homework
Revise the Attributive Clause.
III. Leading in
We're going to hear about a story, look at your workbook, Lesson 68 Exercise 1. Read all the questions first. Then read the numbers aloud, try to guess the answers before listening.
IV. Listening
Listening Cassette Lesson 68. Then answer:
Why is the policeman asking the woman some questions? Play the tape again for them to understand clearly. Then check the answer.
V. Presentation
Look at Exercise 2, Discuss it with the students, let them understand the information. Ask the students to answer the question, and check the answer. Then let the students practise in pairs. Pay attention to these sentences: 1. These men look like the thieves (who) you saw. 2. The man (who) I saw had black hair. 3. He had a mouth that was quite small.
VI. Practice
Look at Exercise 3, let the students choose the best answers alone, and check with the students, then read the sentences together.
Let the students make up their own sentences.
VII. Play a game
Look at Exercise 4. Student A acts as the victim who was robbed and student B is a policeman / policewoman. First spend five minutes thinking about what you will say, then ask the students to come to the front and play a game.
VIII. Practice
Look at Exercise 5. Use the information from the dialogue above lo complete the police report.
Get the students to do it first, then check the answer with the whole class.
IX. Checkpoint 17
Go through the grammar part and practise the useful expressions.
X. Workbook
For Exercise 4. Read the passage, Guess the new words first, then answer the questions.
For Exercise 6, Look at the pictures and write the story about “Cao Chong weighed an elephant”.
XI. Homework
1. Finish off the workbook.
2. Revise the grammar: The Attributive Clause.