Workshop Answers
Workshop Answers
Workshop Answers
Teachers notes
The series
Vocabulary
Features
Each lesson contains some or all of these features:
Before you start
Reading
Vocabulary
Speaking
Writing
Get real
Each workbook has a glossary, which contains the
words from each lesson with definitions. The
glossary defines the main words of the lesson and is
particularly useful for defining the technically
specific or unusual words not always found in a
dictionary.
Reading
Workshop contains a variety of authentic texts
related to the vocational topic. For example,
Engineering includes texts from college brochures,
newspapers, textbooks, and instruction manuals.
Reading tasks include identifying where a text comes
from (for example, a magazine, newspaper, or
leaflet), identifying the topic of a text, reading the
text to find specific information, ordering texts,
comprehension questions, gap filling, and matching
headings with paragraphs.
Speaking
The Speaking sections involve students discussing an
issue related to the topic of the lesson. For example,
in Lesson 9 The cars a star students discuss what
people consider when they are buying a car and they
choose a suitable car for different types of people. In
Lesson 18 Gadgets students are asked to decide how
useful various gadgets are.
Writing
In the Writing sections students are asked to write
short texts based on the model of the reading text in
the lesson. For example, in Lesson 3 The starting
point students read a college leaflet describing
courses in the Reading section, and then they go on
to write a leaflet describing their own course.
Get real
The Get real task at the end of each lesson is a link
between the content of the lesson and the real world.
Students are encouraged to use reference materials,
magazines, newspapers, or the Internet to investigate
ideas related to the topic of the lesson. These tasks
are also designed to be the basis of possible project
work. Teachers could expand the task so that
students do a more lengthy piece of work. For
example, in Lesson 16 Bright spark student are asked
to find out about a modern inventor from their
country. This could be an ongoing project in which
students collect information and write about
inventors and their inventions.
Teachers notes
Engineering Workshop
Answer key
1 What is engineering?
4 1
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
6 Bend it like
T 2 F 3 T 4 F
design
define
a manufacturer
solution
methodical
evaluate
everyday
1 1 formal
3 1 isnt
3 1 b
3 1 T
2 T
3 F
4 F
4 1 specialize
2 Continuous
assessment
3 Key skills
5 T
4 foundation course
5 apprentice
6 qualifications
2a
3b
applicant
interview
prepare
Communications
Welding
Fitting
b plastic
2 A Material
2 b
3 b
4 b
6 1 b
2 d
3 b
4 b
5 a
6 c
9 1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Symmetrical
Hand-drawn
Recycle
viewer
Accurate
Images
architect
Consistent
2 1 F
2 T
3 F
4 F
3 1 D
2 A
3 E
4 C
4 1 Yes
2 No
3 Yes
5 T
6 T
5 B
4 Yes
5 At the end
5 1 a
4 a
4 arent
4 A Types of engineers
1 petroleum: outdoor, dirty
2 sanitation: outdoor, dirty
3 textile: indoor, clean
4 computer: indoor, clean
5 chemical: indoor, dirty
2 a
3 c
3 are
2 1 b
2 b
2 is
3 fashionable
2 clever
2 clever
c glass
B Properties
3 a 2
b 5
c 4
d 1
e 10
4 1 b
2 c
3 d
4 f
5 a
d metal
C Uses
Get real
A fleet of Minis were used in the film.
6 e
Answer key
Engineering Workshop
Answer key
10 Made by hand
2 1 unique 2 skills 3 highly-skilled
4 traditional 5 craftsmen
3 1 F
2 T
3 T
4 F
5 F
4 (Suggested answers)
The Mini
fashionable, modern
Jobs in the Mini factory
boring, easy, organized, requires you to work
quickly
The Morgan
classic, traditional
Jobs in the Morgan factory
difficult, interesting, peaceful, requires
expertise, requires patience, requires skill,
5 A Morgan is made by hand, a Mini is made on
an assembly line.
2 d
3 b
5 1 b
2 c
3 a
6 kettle 1b
4 e
5 f
desk lamp 2c
3 unplug
6 a
3 aerial
camera 3a
4 TV
5 socket
12 Safety first
1 a on a train
b in a public WC
c on a gate
2 Hes wearing a hard hat, goggles, and gloves.
3 1
2
3
4
2 C
3 A
2 e
3 f
4 d
5 a
6 g
7 b
14 Small is beautiful
1 a wires
b waves
c pipelines
3 C
5 A
2 B
3 1 E
2 B
4 D
4 advantages = 1, 2, 3; disadvantages = 4, 5
5 1 micrometre 2 diameter 3 flammable
4 Splicing 5 ignite 6 Ducts 7 Per
8 To handle 9 Efficiently
15 Big is best
Get real
The standard European colours for health and
safety signs are:
Prohibition = red and white with black
Mandatory = blue and white
Warning = yellow with black
Safe condition = green and white
Fire equipment = red and white
4 1 How 2 Who
5 Where
3 What
4 When
5 1 b 2 e 3 i 4 g 5 j 6 a
7 k 8 c 9 f 10 d 11 h
6 1 flammable 2 corrosive
4 goggles 5 a hard hat
3 explosive
Answer key
Engineering Workshop
Answer key
16 Bright spark
20 Bridge disaster
2 b
4 1 T
2 F
3 T
4 T
5 F
5 1 Environmentally-friendly 2 Clockwork
3 unreliable 4 generator 5 solar
17 Servant or master?
1 Five: sight, hearing, touch, taste, smell
2 see, eyes, sight; hear, ears, hearing; smell,
nose, smell; taste, mouth, taste;
touch, hands, touch.
3 See and hear are the functions of the eyes and
ears, look and listen require attention.
4 1 b
2 b
5 1 b
2 f
3 e
4 a
5 c
6 d
7 g
2 react
3 device
4 sensor
18 Gadgets
2 1 radio pen 2 feet washer
3 letter opener clock 4 bed glasses
3 1 C, D
2 B
3 C
4 D
5 A
6 B
4 Suction
2 F
3 T
4 T
5 F
5
height of towers
4 1 e
2 c
3 a
4 d
5 b
21 Ancient structures
1 The Great Wall of China, The Pyramids in
Egypt
2 B
3 Great Wall of China
1 northern China
2 A defensive wall
3 before the third century BC
4 earth covered with stone
5 gangs of forced labourers
6 200km long, 3.5m high, 4.5m wide
The first pyramid in Egypt
1 Egypt
2 a tomb for a pharaoh
3 About 2600 BC
4 stone
5 2025,000 people
6 over 140m high
4 1 T
2 F
3 T
4 F
5 1 tomb 2 apex
5 population
5 F
3 defensive
4 labourers
6 Suggested answer
Hadrians Wall was the northern boundary of
the Roman Empire. It was a defensive wall
between England and Scotland. It was built
between 122 and 126 AD. Its made of earth
and stone. It was built by soldiers. The wall is
117km long, 6.5m high and 3m wide.
22 Do you understand?
2 a diagonal b horizontal c vertical
d corner e centre f top g side
h bottom i fold j point
3 1 h 2 d
8 c 9 e
3 b
4 i
5 g
6 a
7 f
2 g 3 kg
9 (x)2
4 km
5 l
6 m
7 ml
span
height above river
Answer key
Engineering Workshop
Answer key
24 Where have I heard that name
before?
1 The inventors names are used for the
products.
Chemistry: curie
Electricity: amp, hertz, joule, ohm, volt, watt
Physics: newton, pascal
Temperature: Celsius, kelvin
3 1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
4 1 chemist 2 astronomer
4 inventor 5 pioneer
3 physicist
Get real
Bunsen, Robert Wilhelm 181199, German
chemist
Diesel, Rudolph 18581913, German engineer
Geiger, Hans 18821945, German physicist
Morse, Samuel Finley Breese 17911872,
American inventor
McAdam, John 17561836, Scottish engineer
4 1 1989
5 4000
10 200
2 1 a
2 b
3 a
2 F
3 T
5 1 1971 2 2000 3 59
5 under 5 6 32
4 30
27 Your CV
2 1 b
2 a
3 1 T
2 F
3 F
2 a
3 b
4 T
5 F
6 T
7 F
4 a
5 1 a
6 1
2
3
4
5
develop
development
specialize
engineering
technology
2 D
3 A
4 F
5 B
6 E
1 1 = I; 5 = V; 10 = X; 40 = XL; 50 = L; 60 = LX;
100 = C; 500 = D; 800 = DCCC; 1000 = M
3 1 2/3 2 3.6% 3 1/4 4 0 5 2.5
6 1,000,000/1m 7 2,580 8 327
8 1
2
3
4
9 1/2
5 Student A
34.5%
6.97
1/
3
64,567
Student B
3,958
55%
1/
2
7.65
Get real
Indian and Arabic numbers were introduced to
Europe in the tenth century by Gerbert of
Aurillac.
Indian mathematicians, especially the scholar
Brahmagupta, developed the idea of zero.
Oxford University Press
Answer key