Education Woes - Lesson 5 PDF
Education Woes - Lesson 5 PDF
Education Woes - Lesson 5 PDF
Education Woes
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Education Woes
Warm up
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Education Woes
Warm Up
Education means:
is the process of facilitating learning, or the
acquisition of knowledge, skills, values,
beliefs, and habits.
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Education Woes
Warm up
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Education Woes
Picture Description
Education Woes: Describe and Discuss
How can we make it better?
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Education Woes
Picture Description
Education Woes: Describe and Discuss
How can we make it better?
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Education Woes
Vocabulary Exercise
Matching Type
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Education Woes
Reading
More than 10% of high schools in the US are "dropout factories."
This insulting nickname applies to schools where less than 60% of students
graduate.
Most of these schools are in large urban centers which also have a lot of
poverty. The neighborhoods may have high rates of crime, drugs, and violence.
However, some dropout factories are also located in areas with numerous blue-
collar jobs. These neighborhoods and towns often haven't
traditionally emphasized the importance of high school graduation.
Many of the students at these dropout factories enter with poor reading, writing,
and math skills. For example, some kids may enter ninth grade with a fifth grade
reading ability. Because of these difficulties, so many of these children don't have
opportunities as adults.
Japan faces a different problem. Private high schools are available to many kids
who don't have academic or social skills for traditional schools. These private
high schools are expensive, but very easy to enter. Students can fail tests, skip
homework, text friends, and even sleep in class, yet they will still graduate. These
schools have been called "degree mills."
Additional education woes come out of England. Although the government has
supported a massive program to raise reading rates, there hasn't been much
change. The reading rates are the same as the rates in the 1950s.
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Education Woes
Comprehension
TRUE or FALSE
Post Comprehension
1. What is/was your high school like? Please explain.
2. How important is education for success? Why do you think so?
3. What can be done to improve education and graduation rates?
4. Are there similar problems in your country? Are there different problems?
5. Will children receive a better or worse education in the future? Why?
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Education Woes
Speaking Activity
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Education Woes
Idioms and Collocations
Matching Exercise
1. To have one's head or A. means to study hard.
nose in the books B. to not go to class
2. To hit the books C. To learn something in such a way that
3. Cut class or Skip class you can say it from memory.
4. Pass with flying colors D. to be studying all the time.
5. To learn something E. to pass something easily and with a
high score.
off by heart
1. Did you put your nose in the books when you were a student?
2. Have you ever cut class? Why?
3. Have you ever passed with flying colors?
4. What have you learned something by heart?
5. When do you usually hit the books?
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Education Woes
Vocabulary related to education
Fill in the blanks with the correct word in the box.
Illiteracy Boarding Examiner Vocational Tertiary education Retake
Freshman Recess Doctorate Scholarship Apprenticeship Revise
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Education Woes
Speaking Activity
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Education Woes
Pronunciation
Common Mispronounced Words
1. mishap /ˈmɪshæp/ (mis-hæp); the word is mis-hap, meaning mis-happiness, i.e.
misfortune or bad luck.
2. recipe /ˈr səpi/ (res-ə-pee); “cipe” in this case doesn’t rhyme with “ripe”; it consists
of two separate syllables.
3. lettuce /ˈl tɪs/ (let-iss); remember that lettuce doesn’t grow on a spruce; and it also
doesn’t rhyme with it.
4. womb /wuːm/ (woom), tomb /tuːm/ (toom); people tend to pronounce “o” as in
“lot”. Think about “tomb” as about “to”+”mb”. “Mb” may sound nice in Swahili, but
not so much in English, so the “b” is silent. The same applies to the other words in
which “mb” is a part of the same syllable, such as numb /nʌm/.
5. caveat /ˈkæviæt/ (kæ-vee-æt) (UK), /ˈkɑviˌɑt/ (kaa-vee-aat) (US); meaning “a
warning”, it is not so common in speech, but still appears in literature or official
documents. Just remember that you can’t eat a caveat.
6. colonel /ˈk ːnəl/ (kə-ə-nl) (UK), /ˈk rnl/ (kər-nl) (US); is there a kernel inside a
colonel? Well, at least in pronunciation, there is.
7. comfortable /ˈkʌmfətəbl/ (kʌm-fə-tə-bl) (UK), in US also /ˈkʌmftəbəl/ (kʌmf-tə-
bl); if you “come for a table” to a furniture shop, it will hopefully be comfortable,
although it doesn’t rhyme with it.
8. lieutenant /lefˈtenənt/ (lef-ten-ənt) (UK), /luˈt nənt/ (loo-ten-ənt) (US); the
American pronunciation poses no problem here; just notice the British one.
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The End
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