This activity is about phone! Can you name the ones in the picture? Did/do you own one of them? Which one would you choose for a present? Look at the following packs and discuss about them:
Read this article and debate on the experiment! Would you do the same? 'I took my kids offline' It's weird when you have to text your kids to come to the dinner table," says Susan Maushart. At the end of 2008, she was anxious about the amount of time her three teenagers spent transfixed by technology. All she usually saw of her 15-year-old son, Bill, was the back of his head as he played on his games console. Her elder daughter, Anni, 18, binged on social-networking sites and 14-year-old Sussy seemed physically attached to her laptop, often staying logged on to the internet through the night. Over a period of months, Maushart, a single mother, had a "dawning awareness" that something was not right. But when she watched Sussy receive video clips of her friends streamed live over the internet, her worries became "profound panic". "My concern," she says, "was that we had ceased to function as a family. We were
The exam can include some of the following tasks: 1. What is your favourite short story? Why? 2. Describe one character from a short story. It can be anyone!!! 3. Study the Glossary and learn the new vocabulary. Some activities might be related to the new words! 4. Explain the title and relate it to the short story. Sherlock Holmes is the greatest detective of them all. He sits in his room and smokes his pipe. He listens, and watches, and thinks. He listens to the steps coming up the stairs; he watches the door opening – and he knows what question the stranger will ask. In these three of his best stories, Holmes has three visitors to the famous flat in Baker Street – visitors who bring their troubles to the only man in the world who can help them. http://sherlockholmesexhibition.com/sherlock-in-the-classroom/ https://learnenglishteens.britishcouncil.org/uk-now/video-uk/sherlock-holmes
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