IF YOU PASS YOUR EXAMS WELL
UNIT 3. WHY GO TO SCHOOL?
LESSON 22
IF YOU PASS YOUR EXAMS WELL…
Цілі: вдосконалювати навички вживання 1st Conditionals і навички вимови; вдосконалювати навички усного мовлення, читання й письма; розвивати культуру спілкування й мовленнєву реакцію учнів; виховувати зацікавленість у розширенні своїх знань.
Procedure
1. Warm-up
1) Why do students cheat during tests and exams?
2) How do they cheat?
3) What is your attitude towards cheating?
4) What are the dangers of cheating?
2. Listening and speaking
Listen to your classmates’ essays and share your own ideas. (Checking the homework)
3. Grammar practice
Do ex. 1, 2, p. 40.
4. Reading
Do ex. 3, 4, p. 41.
5. Writing
Do ex.
6. Reading and speaking
Read the website page of Charterhouse boarding school and say what is the difference between a boarding school a secondary school.
Would you like to study at such school? Prove your answer.
CHARTERHOUSE |
13-18 year old boys boarding school |
16-18 year old girls and boys boarding and day school |
Charterhouse is a happy, stimulating and demanding environment, as is appropriate for the place where pupils spend some of the most important years of their lives. |
Our ambition is to ensure that, by providing support, encouragement and inspiration, each pupil fulfils his or her potential |
Pastoral Care (relating to the duties of a teacher in advising students about their personal needs rather than their schoolwork)
At Charterhouse we are actively committed to providing the highest standards of pastoral care to ensure the wellbeing of all our pupils.
The pastoral care team comprises:
The Assistant Headmaster, Pastoral
Housemasters
Head of Girls
Matrons
Tutors
The Master of Yearlings
Chaplain (a priest or other religious minister responsible for the religious needs of a club, the army, a hospital etc)
Medical Staff
Counsellors (someone whose job is to help and support people with problems)
The Assistant Headmaster, Pastoral, Mr Nigel Cooper, oversees all pastoral care and reports directly to the Headmaster.
All pupils are under the care of their resident Housemaster, who is their day-to-day mentor and is responsible for looking after them throughout their time at Charterhouse.
Each Housemaster also has a team of around six tutors. Every pupil is allocated a tutor who takes a particular interest in his academic work and extra-curricular commitments. A tutor has around two pupils to look after in each of the five year groups giving a very good tutor/pupil ratio. Tutors meet with their tutees each week in the 15 minute mid-morning tutorials and on the tutor’s weekly duty night in House. One of these tutors will be appointed the Assistant Housemaster; he or she too will have a very close working knowledge of the House.
For girls, there are is also the Head of Girls, Mrs Maggy Swift, and her team of staff who run Chetwynd, Northridge, Stainers and Long Meadow which collectively make up the girls’ residential accommodation.
Housemasters and The Head of Girls are supported by a resident Matron who looks after the domestic needs of each pupil in the House, dispenses routine medication and offers homely advice and support.
There is also a structure of care amongst the pupils in each House. The Housemaster appoints a Head of House and House Monitors to help care for pupils in the House. And during their first few weeks in the House, each new pupil is allocated to an older pupil whose responsibility it is to make sure they settle in, find their way around and learn quickly how the School and House works.
The Master of the Yearlings keeps a special eye on the new boys (known as ‘Yearlings’), organizing informal meals and opportunities to talk through any issues they may have as new boys in the School.
There is also the chaplaincy, the medical staff and counsellors whom any pupil can make an appointment to meet and discuss any problems they may have.
7. Summary
1) People say knowledge is power – is this true?
2) Are things that your school teaches you that you think are not important?
8. Homework
Ex. 6, p. 41.