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沙发
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发表于 2011-8-19 00:01:00
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a. Class begins.
Good morning!
Sit down, please.
b. Hey, boys and girls. How are you? Are you OK?
If there isn’t an active response, greet individuals first, then the whole again.
c. Look, we have so many teachers here. Can you say hello to them? Let’s say it together.
If there isn’t any child who is glad to do it, call a single one up and say: Let’s do it together, OK? Hello, I’m xxx. Nice to see you. Good. Only when you open your mouth and speak English, can you speak it, understand? All right, the whole class, let’s say it again. Hello, …
2. a. Children watch the flash “Can you swim?” and understand about it.
Now, let’s watch a flash: Can you swim? (Write Can you … swim? on the board.) Understand it, when you watch it.
Ask the children: Can you swim? after they watch the flash.
b. Watch again and remember the animals appeared in the flash.
Do you want to watch it again? OK, but you have to remember the animals in the flash. The animals, clear? OK, let’s go.
ii. LEAD-IN: 5 mins
1. Children speak out the animals they’ve seen in the flash
OK, here’s my question: What animals? Can you speak them out? What are they? Fish and what else? ( Write Animals and Abilities on the board, then the names of the animals after they call out.) Later, and what else?
2. Pronounce and understand “ shark, frog, penguin”.
OK, this is a shark, pointing at the picture.( Write shark on the Animals column.) In this word, ar is pronounced as /a:/(Write the phonetic symbol /a:/ next to the word.) point at sh/k, how do you read it? So how to say this word?
In the same way, teach frog and penguin.
iii. CREATING A CONTEXT AND PRESENTATION AND DRILLS OF THE LANGUAGE STRUCTURES 3 mins + 7 mins+ 5 mins
1. Children do actions and say and understand “… can … . But … can’t …”
a. Now, read it. Read aloud. You know, a frog can jump/A penguin can walk/A shark can swim. Do actions.( Write jump/walk/swim on the abilities column.)
Stand up! Let’s do and say. Jump, jump, a frog can jump. Let’s go.( Write … can …. on the board, and read can again.)
b. Draw lines between the animal and the ability, and say: A shark can swim./ A bird can fly. Put crosses on the line drew between the animal and its wrong ability, and say: But a shark can’t walk./ But a frog can’t fly.( Write But … can’t … on the board.)
2. Children get a further understanding of “… can … . But … can’t …” and imitate the pronunciation and intonation by the text.
a. Quiet down! Everybody, open your English book. Part 1, look at the pictures, listen and circle “can, but and can’t” in the sentences Are you clear? Let’s roll.
b. We’ll read the sentences together. But you just have to read aloud “ can, but, and can’t” which you circled in each sentence. I read the rest of them. Say, I read “This bird”, and you read “can”, I read “fly”, you read “But”, I read “this bird”, you read “can’t”, I read “fly”, understand? Let’s read them. Open your mouth and read aloud loudly.
c. Now read after the recording sentence by sentence, try to imitate the pronunciation and intonation of the sentences.
Read it again after my figure movements.
d. Now read the sentences by yourself. You’d better make figure movements like me when you read aloud. That’s for stress and intonation, you know.
3. Presentation of “ Can … ?/ Can it … ?” |
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