Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Elementary Listening practice




Four Conversations


A - verbs

 

Prepared

Did

Asked

Weren’t

went


 


Man: How did it go?

Woman: Umm, I think it _________ quite well. I did a lot of research and _________ a lot. I was in there for ... I don't know ... half an hour?

Man: And? What _______ they say?

Woman: Nothing much. At the end I _________ them, 'What happens now?', and the woman said, 'We'll call you back with news in three or four days.'

Man: Really?

Woman: Yeah, I think I've got the job. There _________ a lot of other people there. I was the only interview that day, you know?

Man: Well, good luck with it.


B - nouns

 


Room

It

Photos

flash

Photographs

Museum

things


 

Man: Anyway, you were saying ...

Woman: Oh, yeah, um ... let's see. Yes, so I was in the _________ and there were, I don't know, a hundred people waiting to get into the________. Finally, I got in, and I tried to see the Mona Lisa but I couldn't look at ________ .

Man: Why not?

Woman: Because the room was filled with people taking ___________ of it!

Man: Oh, right.

Woman: Yes! And selfies.

Man: Wait a minute. You can take _________ while you're in there?

Woman: Yes, but you can't use ________. I don't know ... Why do we take photos of everything we see when we travel?

Man: I know. And we never look at the photos after.

Woman: Exactly! I'm tired of always taking photos. I don't feel I'm enjoying ________.


C- adjectives

 


Young

funny

long

nice

nice

polite


 

Man: Who took this?

Woman: I can't remember. Hmmm ...

Man: What am I doing?

Woman: You're sitting on the sofa, watching TV and eating chocolates. Nothing changes!

Man: Ha! Very_________ . You look very _______, though.

Woman: I know. Look at my hair – it was so________!

Man: Mine too, look at me! Hey … I think I know who took this photo.

Woman: Umm … who? Was it Dad?

Man: No, it wasn’t Dad or Mum. Do you remember Barry?

Woman: No.

Man: Yes, YES! You do remember. Barry, your boyfriend at high school. You were seventeen and he was sixteen and he was so very________: 'Hello, I'm Barry. It's very ________ to meet you ...'

Woman: Stop it! He was_________.

Man: Yeah, well, he took the photo.


D- prepositions


About

In

To

of

of

with


 

Woman: Let's see. OK. I'm glad we could talk ________ this. It's not easy to say.

Man: What?

Woman: Well, you're not _______ our group – for the class project.

Man: What do you mean? You know I'm always in a group ______ you.

Woman: I know. It's just that this time … this time we made the group differently and because you were late ...

Man: I see. You don't want me in the group?

Woman: No, no. It isn't that. It's that we've already made the group, see? There's four ______ us already.

Man: So? We can't be a group _______ five?

Woman: Well, the teacher said four people per group.

Man: Oh.

Woman: It's not about you or your work or anything like that. It's ... errrr ... well, we already have the group.

Man: So I have _______ find another group.

Woman: I'm sorry.







Maths and numbers

  1. Do you like maths? Why / why not?
  2. Which is easier for you: numbers or words?
  3. Do you ever use maths when shopping?
  4. What is you favourite number?

 

 

Number patterns

  1. Look at these numbers: 2, 4, 6, 8. What comes next?
  2. Look at these numbers: 5, 10, 15, 20. What is the pattern?

3.      1, 2, 4, 8, 16, ___, ___

4.      100, 50, 25, 12.5, ___, ___

5.      1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, ___,_____

 

 

Following an explanation

  1. Is it easy or difficult for you to follow explanations in English?
  2. What can you do if you don't understand?
  3. Which questions can you ask when you need clarification?
  4. Which is easier: reading an explanation or listening to one?

 

 

Useful questions

 


Can

do

don't

understand

give

say

does

 


 

  • _____ you explain?
  • I ______ understand.
  • What _____ “depressed” mean?
  • Could you ______ an example?
  • Can you ______ that again?
  • What _____ you mean?
  • I'm not sure I ________.

 

 


continue

understand

want

bring

hope

explain

mean

were

Is

get

give

See

see

works

go


 

Professor: OK, before we_________, does anybody have a question? Oh, lots of questions, I see. OK, we'll ________one at a time. Yes?

Student: Thank you. You talked about Fibonacci numbers in the lecture. Sorry, I don't_________. Can you explain?

Professor: Of course. What do you __________to know?

Student: OK … I __________ this isn't a silly question, but what does Fibonacci actually___________?

Professor: No question _________ ever silly – it's always good to ask. OK, it's the name of a person. Fibonacci was a European mathematician in the Middle Ages.

Student: Ah, OK. Thanks. So, we know he was a person, but what are the Fibonacci numbers? I don't __________ it.

Professor: The Fibonacci numbers are a sequence of numbers. They go 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8 and so on. Do you see the sequence? Do you _________ how it works?

Student: I'm not sure.

Professor: OK. This is how it_________. The first number is 1, then 1 again, then 2. The third number is the first number plus the second number. The fourth number is the second number plus the third number: 1 plus 2 is 3. The fifth number is the third number, 2, plus the fourth number, 3. So the fifth number in a Fibonacci sequence is 5.

Student: Ah! I think I understand now. But what about their importance? You said these __________ very important.

Professor: Yes, let me__________. This sequence of numbers is important because we see it in many things. Fibonacci numbers are common in geometry, they are common in nature, for example in plants. We __________ the sequence everywhere.

Student: Could you _________ us some more examples?

Professor: OK ... well, we don't have time right now but I can _________ more examples in for next class, OK?


Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Inventions / Six Hats


What is this invention?


Image result for ancient chinese sunglasses


What is the benefit of it?
Does it have any drawbacks?









What is this invention?

Image result for ancient greek showers



What is the benefit of it?
Does it have any drawbacks?




What is this invention?



Image result for ancient chinese match sticks




What is the benefit of it?
Does it have any drawbacks?







What is this invention?



Image result for Ancient chinese gas lantern

What is the benefit of it?
Does it have any drawbacks?







What is this invention?

Image result for ancient greek air pump


What is the benefit of it?
Does it have any drawbacks?







What is the benefit of it?
Does it have any drawbacks?







Read the heading - what do you think the story will be about?



MUA


A Chinese start-up has invented a long-distance kissing machine that transmits users’ kiss data collected through motion sensors hidden in silicon lips, which simultaneously move when replaying kisses received.

MUA – named after the sound people commonly make when blowing a kiss – also captures and replays sound and warms up slightly during kissing, making the experience more authentic, said Beijing-based Siweifushe.

Discuss: What is your gut reaction to this idea? Red Question

Write down some of these feelings

-

-

-

-

 

Read this paragraph

 

The invention was inspired by lockdown isolation. At their most severe, China’s lockdowns saw authorities forbid residents to leave their apartments for months on end. “I was in a relationship back then, but I couldn’t meet my girlfriend due to lockdowns,” said inventor Zhao Jianbo.

 

Does this information make you see the idea more positively? (Yellow and White question)

Write down some positive ways of thinking about this product

-

-

-

-

 

A remote kissing device called “Long Lost Touch” is displayed on the table at its owner Jing Zhiyuan’s home, in Beijing, China.

 

The device is available in several colours with the same unisex lips. It has received mixed reviews, with some users saying it was intriguing whereas others said it made them feel uncomfortable. Among the top complaints was its lack of tongue.

 

What other criticisms can you imagine being made about this concept? (Black question)

Write down some of your criticisms

-

-

-

-

-


Discussion

1. Is this a useful method of thinking possibilities through in various projects?

2. Why do you think de Bono invented the method?

3. Do you think it's necessary to use all the hats every time?

4. Do some hats feel more inherently useful than others, or should we give each hat equal importance?




Lost in depthless green







Thor played by Chris Hemsworth kissing a green screen Hulk


Look at the photograph

What is going on in the photograph?



painstakingly       Plus,    sometimes it     their best performance

 in front of        nightmare     shows up as


For years, green screens have dominated big-budget movie production.

Actors run about 1_______ bright green backdrops, emoting with anonymous figures in bright green bodysuits. Then later, months after this filming stage has been completed, an army of computer-generated imagery (CGI) artists 2_________ create a fantastical world pixel-by-pixel.

The end results can be amazing, but the process is a 3_________. The lack of visual information means actors struggle to give 4_______, while cinematographers sometimes choose the wrong kind of lighting.

"All the actors see is green," says Noah Kander, who wrote the Virtual Production Field Guide for Epic Games book.

"The camera people don't necessarily love it because they're lighting to something that isn't complete."

5______ those green walls create their own problems. Green-tinged light 6_______ green reflections or "spill" on uniforms and props, which have to be removed in post-production.

"I don't know anybody who loves working on green screen because it's a compromise," Noah says.

"Sometimes it looks good and 7_______ looks silly."




Here's one solution 




Watch the tech video to get a sense of how it works....

What are some pros and cons of this technology?




Also:









Discuss

Is it enough to think in terms of benefits and drawbacks when trying understand the impacts of inventions? 










Do we miss something when we talk only in terms of what is good and bad about something?

Image result for six hats





What do you like to focus on when you’re thinking?

Emotions?

Information and facts?

Possibilities?

Criticism?

Creativity and imagination?

Organising ideas?


De Bono's 6 Thinking Hats stand for these different ways of thinking. No hat has the answers, only a perspective.

  • White: neutral, objective.
  • Red: emotional, passionate.
  • Black: serious, somber.
  • Yellow: sunny, positive.
  • Green: growth, fertility.
  • Blue: cool, sky above.



Intuitively put the hats is the order to show your typical preferences. How do you most / least like to think?

Discuss

1. What colour hat… Manages the other thinking hats, time, the flow of ideas?

2. What colour hat… Worries about facts and figures? Reminds us of the difference between a checked fact and unchecked fact (belief)? Asks us to take the mindset of a computer?

3. What colour hat… Wants to think about opportunities we should expand upon?
Is open to risk?

4. What colour hat… Asks “what are the failure scenarios?”

5. What colour hat… Opposes the black hat. Takes more effort than black hat.

6. What colour hat… Says “What is your initial reaction?
“What is your gut feeling?”



Look at the questions: which "hat" do they belong to?

1. What is our focus? _______
2. What information do we have?  _______
3. What's the best thing that could happen? _______
4. How are we feeling about this? _______
5. What ideas do you have? _______
6. What's your gut instinct? _______
7. Which hat shall we use? _______
8. Can anybody think of a weakness to this idea? _______
9. How will this help us? _______
10. How could this go wrong? _______
11. Can we imagine some interesting applications of this? _______
12. Is there anything we need to know first? _______
13. Can we add any data to this? _______
14. What is the current economic situation? _______
15. What are the risks? _______
16. What have we covered so far? _______
17. Are there any suggestions we can now discard? _______

 Task:

Plan a school trip together – you have ten minutes.

Present to rest of class. Use the six hats method.


Watch:

Six Hats




Read the following paragraphs:



A Chinese start-up has invented a long-distance kissing machine that transmits users’ kiss data collected through motion sensors hidden in silicon lips, which simultaneously move when replaying kisses received.

MUA – named after the sound people commonly make when blowing a kiss – also captures and replays sound and warms up slightly during kissing, making the experience more authentic, said Beijing-based Siweifushe.

What is your gut reaction to this idea? (Red Question)








Read this paragraph

The invention was inspired by lockdown isolation. At their most severe, China’s lockdowns saw authorities forbid residents to leave their apartments for months on end. “I was in a relationship back then, but I couldn’t meet my girlfriend due to lockdowns,” said inventor Zhao Jianbo.

Does this information make you see the idea more positively? (Yellow and White question)









A remote kissing device called “Long Lost Touch” is displayed on the table at its owner Jing Zhiyuan’s home, in Beijing, China.
The device is available in several colours with the same unisex lips. It has received mixed reviews, with some users saying it was intriguing whereas others said it made them feel uncomfortable. Among the top complaints was its lack of tongue.
 
What other criticisms can you imagine being made about this concept? (Black question)



Discussion


1. Is this a useful method of thinking possibilities through in various projects?
2. Why do you think de Bono invented the method?
3. Do you think it's necessary to use all the hats every time?
4. Do some hats feel more inherently useful than others, or should we give each hat equal importance?





Practice - role play

Create a "board" of students to interview a product developer. 

Assume this is the first time you have ever heard of this product (perhaps it's another period of history). Now shoot questions at the product developer using different hats. 

The product developer needs to be as agile as possible in answering questions.








First try the green or yellow hats

Ask the developer about creative or positive aspects of their product.
Now switch to the white and black hats

Ask for information, facts etc. Ask some tough questions. Criticise the product. Get the product developer to defend their idea.




Green
Black





Try the red hat now.

How does this product make people feel?





Start with yellow, then do green, then do red, then do black





Task: make one invention out of two inventions

Create a new invention by merging these two things. 

Present your invention to the whole class.




































Kahoot on inventions