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IV. If teaching is a job for some and a lifestyle for others, what does it mean?
V. Are teachers born or made in your opinion?
SUPPLEMENT
I. For questions 41-55, read the text below and look carefully at each line. Some of the lines are correct, and some have a word which should not be there.
If a line is correct, put a tick (ü) by the number on the separate answer sheet.
If a line has a word which should not be there, write the word on the separate answer sheet. There are two examples at the beginning (0 and 00).
had | |
ü |
Examples:
ONE OF MY FAVOURITE STUDENTS
0 I was only 22 when I had started teaching and I was very nervous
00 at first but the teachers and pupils were warm and welcoming.
41 This may be why I remember Siobhan well, as she was one of the
42 first pupils I ever taught. She had a mind of the her own, even
43 then. She was a natural performer and always played at the piano
44 enthusiastically, despite of a few wrong notes. I remember one
45 concert when some boys outside the hall started to tapping on the
46 window. Siobhan saved the day. She turned round and started
47 singing for them. They decided to come in and listen her instead.
48 She always said she was nervous of playing or singing in the
49 front of people, but all she needed was a little encouragement. She did
50 never let me down. She had long hair, which it was right down her back.
51 When playing piano duets, she was used to fling her hair back and it
52 would wrap itself around the other girl's neck, almost strangling her.
53 She would often come up to the music room to discuss about her
54 problems. I have always had a several pupils who like to sit and talk
55 to me. That's one of the things I like best about to teaching. I love it
when some pupils feel comfortable enough to come and talk to me.
II. Define the meaning of:
- a welcoming pupil;
- to have a mind of one’s own;
- to come to a music room;
- to play at the piano enthusiastically.
III. Do you think it’s important for a teacher and a pupil to come and talk to each other?
TEACHING INFANTS
Helen Doron explores both the principles and practice of teaching the very, very young.
Teaching English to infants is becoming increasingly popular. The long-term effects are validated by research which supports the view that the only way a child will learn a spoken language and know it like a mother tongue as an adult is if she has learnt it before the age of seven.
Working with infants is fun, satisfying and truly worthwhile. However, you need to know the whys and hows — in that order! I'd like to give some general principles for working with one to four year olds and some pointers as to how these can be implemented in practice.
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II. Say why few men-teachers go into the profession. | | | Repeated hearing |