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Unit 3 Swimming across Borders Unit 3 Swimming across Borders

Unit 3 Swimming across Borders - PowerPoint Presentation

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Unit 3 Swimming across Borders - PPT Presentation

By Dr Amal Shousha Acknowledgement This power point presentation is part of the collaborative work of fifteen ELI KAU female English language instructors The project comprises the PowerPoint presentations which are presented to the students the worksheets uploaded on the contributors we ID: 755378

answer lynne player key lynne answer key player time verb cox reading present progressive words good team swims ing

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Slide1

Unit 3

Swimming across Borders

By

Dr. Amal ShoushaSlide2

Acknowledgement

This power point presentation is part of the collaborative work of fifteen ELI / KAU female English language instructors.

The project comprises the PowerPoint presentations which are presented to the students, the worksheets uploaded on the contributors websites and the revision units.

The names of the teachers who collaborated in the project are as follows according to alphabetical order as per first name:Slide3

Acknowledgement (cont..)

Ms.

Amany

Abuliel

Dr.

Amal

Shousha

Ms. Dahlia

Yuosri

Ms. Fatima

Atteya

Ms.

Gehan

Ismail

Ms.

Hanan

Orabi

Ms.

Heba

Tantawy

Ms.

Ingie

Zakaria

Ms.

Jehan

jahin

Ms.

Manal

Bassiouni

Ms.

Marwa

Eldeeb

Ms.

Nahed

Moussa

Ms.

Ragia

Magdeldin

Ms.

Sherine

Eldeeb

Ms.

Zainab

HefnawySlide4

Main idea of the Unit

Look at the picture, answer the following questions:

Who is the person in the uniform

? Who

are all the people around him? What are they doing? Why?Slide5

Main idea of the Unit

This unit explores the characteristics, abilities, and achievements of athletes.Slide6

New Vocabulary

Athlete(n

.) : Someone who has sports abilities

heroes (n.): a man who is admired for doing something extremely brave (heroine)

Admire (v.): to respect and like someone because he/she has done something that you think is good.

League (n.): professional baseball

Plane Crash: plane accident

Tolerate (v.): not have problems with

Talent (n.): be naturally good at something

Slide7

More New Vocabulary

Broke the record: was better than the best ever

Outstanding (adj.): better than excellent

Border (n.): line separating two countries

Achievements (n.): things that you do successfully

Challenge (n.): something that is interesting because it is difficultSlide8

More New Vocabulary

Biography (n.): a book in which someone writes about his own life.

Autobiography (n.): a book that tells what has happened in someone’s life written by someone else.

Vita/ vitae (n.): a list of the most important events in a person’s life with the dates of these events.

Marathon (n.): a 26-mile 385 yards (42.2k) race.

Cross- Country: distance race across land, instead of on roads.

Championship (n.):a competition to find which player, team etc is the best in a particular sport.

Ambassador(n.): representative of one’s countrySlide9

Reading One: Swimming to open Borders PP. 41- 44

It is the story of Lynne Cox, a long – distance swimmer who has not only broken records, but who also swims to

focus attention on and

to lessen political tensions

among countries. Slide10

Reading Passage p. 42Slide11

Reading for Main Ideas

Match the sentence beginnings on the left with those on the right

a. because she wants to encourage peace.

1. Lynne Cox breaks a lot of records

b. because she is very fast and can tolerate cold water.

2. Lynne Cox can swim in very cold water

c. because she has an extra layer of fat around her organs.

3.

Lynne Cox swims between countriesSlide12

Answer Key

b

c

aSlide13

Reading for Details

1.

Put the sentences in order by time; 1 for what happened first, 2 what happened second …etc.

…… Lynne breaks the English Channel record.

…… Lynne swims off the coast of Southern California.

…… Lynne swims across the Bering Strait.

…… Lynne swims between Argentina and Chile.

…… Lynne swims around the Cape of Good Hope.Slide14

Answer Key

The order is as follows:

2

1

4

5

3Slide15

2.Complete the sentences with the number in the following list:

30 12 3 2.7 38 5

Lynne Cox started to swim when she was …… years old.

She swam …… miles across the Bering Strait.

The water in the Bering Strait was as cold as ….. degrees Fahrenheit.

Lynne swam the English Channel in less than …… hours.

When Lynne was swimming around the Cape of Good Hope, a …. foot shark came too close.

When she was swimming near Sweden, she had to watch out for …… foot- long jellyfish.

Most people would die after about ….. minutes in very cold water.Slide16

Answer Key

5

2.7

38

10

12

3

30Slide17

Reading Two: The Athlete’s Life PP.45- 46

It presents the professional achievements of three well- known athletes, Pele, Grete

Waitz

, and George Foreman, in Vitae form. A vita is a list of the most important events in a person’s life with the dates of these events.Slide18

3. Focus on Vocabulary

Match situations on the left with appropriate quotes on the right:

a. “Put up with it just a little longer.”

1. Encouraging a player to accept a challenge.

b.

“it’s hard. But I know you can do it.”

2. Telling a player that he is outstanding.

c. “you ran that race faster than anyone ever ran it before.”

3. Telling a player to tolerate a difficulty.

d. “you did very well this year: twelve wins and only two losses.”

4.

Complimenting a player who broke a record.

e. “you ‘re better than most players I know of. You ‘re the best player on the team.”

5. Summarizing the team’s achievement.

f. “you ‘re a natural athlete.”

6. Praising a player for his talent.Slide19

Answer Key

1. b

2. e

3. a

4.c

5. d

6. fSlide20

2. Complete with words from the list:

Borders- broke- encouraged- national- organs-

outstanding- tolerate- waves

athletes’ hearts, lungs, and other major ……. are in excellent condition.

An open- water swimmer must …. cold.

In the water, Lynne Cox can’t see the …… she crosses.

First, she ran in small local races; then when she was good enough, she ran in …… races.

Big …… are a problem- they make swimming difficult.

She lost the race and wanted to quit, but her friends ….. her to try again.Slide21

7.He was a (n) …… boxer; he won the heavyweight championship.

8. In 1992, Yoko ….. the world record for speed skating 1, 000 meters.

Answer key:

Organs 2. tolerate 3. borders 4. national

5. waves 6. encouraged 7. outstanding

8. broke Slide22

4. Focus on Writing

Transition words of time

They are used to :

1- show the relationships between the sentences in a piece of writing.

2- show time relationships. They help the reader

understand which event happened first, which

happened second and so on.

Transition words are like :

first, then, next, and later.

They are followed by a comma.Slide23

2. Complete the story with transition words of time from the following list.

finally first next then

Bonnie Blair could skate by the time she was two years

old, and by the age of four, she was in races

.

(1) ……….,

she skated in group races

.(2)

………., she took up speed

skating, where only two skaters race at a time. She won

many races

. (3)

………, in 1984, she made the U.S.

Olympic team, but she didn’t win any medals

. (4)

………,

in 1988, Bonnie Blair made the U.S. Olympic team again,

and this time she won both gold and bronze medals. Slide24

Answer Key

First

Then or next

Next or then

FinallySlide25

The Present Progressive Tense

We use this tense to refer to what is happening at the moment of speaking.

Form:

Is / are / am + verb +

ing

He is walking to school

now

.

They are helping their mother

at the moment.

I am writing my report

this afternoon

. Slide26

More about the present progressive

Spelling rules:

When we add the “

ing

” to the end of the verb we should:

1. cancel the “e” at the end of the verb

arrive ……………..arriving

write ……………….writing

2. double the last consonant if it has a vowel before it

run ……………..running

stop…………….stopping

3. not cancel the “y” at the end of the verb before adding “

ing

:

play……………..playing

carry …………..carrying Slide27

More about the present progressive

Negative form

:

is / are / am + not + verb +

ing

Examples:

He is not coming to the office today.

I am not watching TV now.

You are not listening to the radio at the moment.

Question form

:

Yes/ No : Is / Are / Am + Subject + verb

ing

…….?

Examples:

Is she coming today?

Are they reading now?

Am I coming with you? Slide28

More about the present progressive

Wh

questions

:

Wh

word + is / are / am + subject + verb

ing

………?

Examples:

Where are you going now?

When is she going shopping?

What am I doing at the moment?

Some words and phrases refer to the present progressive

such as: “now, at the moment, today, Look!, Listen!, this

week….” Slide29

2. Use the words to write sentences.

at/ I/ my/ friend/ smiling/ am

biking/ is/ across/ Robin/ America/ not

soccer/ they/ playing/ in/ not/ park/ are/ the

to/ game/ we/ trying/win/are/this Slide30

Answer Key

I’m smiling at my friend.

Robin isn’t biking across America.

They aren’t playing soccer in the park.

We’re trying to win this game.Slide31

3.

complete the paragraph using the present progressive tense of the verbs provided. Use contractions.

I

1.(watch)

a football game. My team

2.(play)

for the championship. For once I

3.(not watch)

the game on TV. I was finally able to get a ticket, and I’m actually at the stadium! My team’s quarterback

4.(throw)

the ball to one of his receivers. The receiver

5.(run)

down the field. The players on the other team 6.(try) to stop the receiver from catching the ball. But I think they

7.(not/ run)

fast enough. I think he might be able to catch the ball! But the man in front of me

8.(jump

) up and down. He

9.(make)

it impossible for me to see what

10.(happen).

Too bad I

11.(not/ sit)

at home in front of my TV!Slide32

Answer Key

1.’m watching 8.is jumping

2.’s playing 9.’s making

3.’m not watching 10.’s happening

4.’s throwing 11.’m not sitting

5.’s running

6. Are trying

7.’re not runningSlide33

Good Luck

Best wishes

by

Dr.

Amal

Shousha