Английский язык - Книга для учителя 8 класс О. В. Афанасьева - 2015 год
Планирование
Учебные ситуации и часы |
Новые слова |
Словосочетания |
Грамматика и вокабуляр |
Тексты на чтение |
Текст на аудирование |
Песни, стихи, цитаты, пословицы |
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Слова на узнавание1 |
Слова на активное использование |
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Choosing a Career: The World of Jobs (Unit 1) Periods: 1—20 |
1. a kid 2. to park 3. soft-hearted |
1. top 2. to mind 3. to fix (sth to/on sth) 4. dumb 5. smart 6. advanced 7. terrific 8. to show off/a show-off 9. care/to care (for/about sb/sth) 10. jealous 11. to cheat 12. a cheat 13. a cheat sheet 14. a flavour 15. flavoured 16. rotten 17. silly 18. harm 19. to creep (crept, crept) 20. creeps |
1. at the top of sth/to be(come) top of sth 2. never mind 3. Mind your own business. 4. to fix sth (to fix a day) 5. to fix sth broken 6. to fix sb up 7. to be (get) smart with someone 8. a smart aleck 9. advanced in years 10. to care to do sth 11. to take care of sb/sth 12. to feel jealous of sb/sth 13. to do harm (more harm than good) 14. to give sb the creeps Phrases from the text: 1) to know for a fact 2) to tell sb off 3) to get into trouble 4) to walk off 5) to get rid of sth 6) once and for all 7) to give sth a try 8) to tell sb the truth 9) stuff like that |
Revision: 1. Names of jobs 2. The Subjunctive Mood: Present Subjunctive New Language: 1. The Subjunctive Mood: Past Subjunctive 2. Present and Past Subjunctive in Comparison Social English: offering a suggestion and reacting to it 3 Phrasal Verbs: to hand + down, in, out, over |
1. “Unusual Jobs: A Bodyguard” 22 2. “Little House on the Table” (by N. N. Click) 3. “Malcolm’s Story” (after P. Jennings) 5 |
“But You Promised You Wouldn’t Tell” (after B. Mooney) 4 |
1. Роеm “The Road Not Taken” (by R. Frost) 6 2. Song “Blowing in the Wind” (by Bob Dylan) 3. Lines: 1. Give us tools, and we will finish the job. 2. Our satisfactions in life will be in proportion with our contribution. 3. When it is dark enough, you can see the stars |
21 |
Optional Lesson |
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22 |
Optional Lesson |
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23 |
Test on Unit 1 |
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24—26 |
Home Reading Lessons 1, 2, 3 |
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Education: The World of Learning (Unit 2) Periods: 27—46 |
4. witchcraft 5. a philosopher 6. a caretaker 7. legendary 8. to concentrate 9. surroundings |
21. a dormitory 22. a wizard 23. wizardry 24. to enrol (enrolled, enrolling) 25. a queue/to queue (up) (queued, queueing/queuing) 26. to vanish 27. to tickle 28. solid 29. to force/ force 30. to squeak/a squeak 31. squeaky 32. a mess/to mess 33. messy 34. complicated 35. rare/rarely 36. to relieve 37. relief 38. to drone 39. droning 40. to warn 41. a warning |
15. to enrol at a college 16. to enrol on a course 17. to queue for sth 18. to jump the queue 19. a queue jumper 20. to vanish from sight 21. to vanish into thin air 22. vanishing species 23. solid advice 24. to force on/upon someone 25. to force one’s way 26. by force 27. from force of habit 28. to be in a mess 29. to mess up sth 30. to mess about 31. to be relieved 32. to drone on 33. to warn sb about/of/against sth Phrases from the text: 1) on tiptoe 2) to scribble down 3) to give someone a good talking-to 4) to make notes 5) to go silver and pointy 6) to have a head start 7) to get to know 8) to keep doing sth 9) to get on the wrong side of someone 10) to cross |
Revision: Unit 1 New Language: 1. More Facts about the Subjunctive Mood: Present Subjunctive versus Past Subjunctive 2. “But for” structures 3. Adverbs: Degrees of Comparison 4. Adverbs as Modifiers 5. Formation of Adverbs Social English: classroom English 9 Phrasal Verbs: to break + away, down, into, out |
1. “Secondary Education in Britain” 8 2. “Hampton School” 3. “Hogwarts” (after J. K. Rowling) 11 |
“Let There Be Peace” 10 |
1. Роеm “A Red, Red Rose” (by R. Bums) 12 2. Song “Auld Lang Syne” (by R. Burns) 3. Well-known lines: 1. Some of the best lessons are learned from mistakes and failures. 2. The love of money is the root of all evil, but the possession of it is an opportunity for much good. 3. Happiness consists not in having many things, but in needing few. 4. A person needs to be loved the most when he deserves to be loved the least. 5. Nothing is final |
47 |
Optional Lesson |
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48 |
Optional Lesson |
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49 |
Test on Unit 2 |
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50—52 |
Home Reading Lessons 4, 5, 6 |
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Shopping: The World of Money (Unit 3) Periods: 53—72 |
10. firmly 11. downwards 12. eccentric |
42. worth 43. an outfit 44. a fancy dress/fancy- dress (adj) 45. immense 46. reluctant 47. reluctance 48. to attach 49. attached 50. to detach 51. detachable 52. detached 53. to tie/а tie 54. starch/to starch 55. starched 56. stiff 57. to chew 58. chewing gum 59. ridiculous 60. to flap (flapped, flapping) 61. funeral 62. dignity 63. dignified |
34. to be worth doing sth 35. with reluctance 36. to be attached to sth 37. to be deeply attached to sb 38. to detach sth from sth 39. a detached view (of an event) 40. to tie sth to/round sth 41. a stiff collar/leg/smile 42. to flap in the wind 43. to keep one’s dignity 44. to lose one’s dignity Phrases from the text: 1) to get dressed 2) to take someone ages 3) to shriek with laughter 4) to put the lid on sth 5) jet-black 6) brand-new 7) to lose one’s nerve 8) to take (no) notice (of sth) |
Revision: Unit 2 New Language: 1. Adverbs. Degrees of Comparison. Irregular Forms (well — better — best, badly — worse — worst, far — farther — farthest, far — further — furthest, etc.; hard — hardly, high — highly, etc.; to do sth badly — to need sth badly) 2. Modal Verbs: can /could/may/might/be allowed to; could — was/ were able to/managed to Social English: the language of shopping 15 Phrasal Verbs: to come + across, down with, off, over, round Word-building with the help of un-: to lace (up) — to unlace to button up — to unbutton to buckle up — to unbuckle to zip up — to unzip |
1. “Shopping in Britain” 14 2. “What Makes Money Valuable?” 3. “Getting Dressed for the Big School” (after R. Dahl) 17 |
“The Verger” (part 1 16 A, part 2 16B) |
1. Quotations: 1. Business, you know, may bring money, but friendship hardly ever does. (J. Austin ) 2. The love of money is the root of all evil. (the Bible) 3. Money is like a sixth sense without which you cannot make a complete use of the other five. (W. S. Maugham) 4. — The rich are different from us. — Yes, they have money. (F. S. Fitzgerald) 5. Remember that time is money. (B. Franklin) 2. Song “Can’t Buy Me Love” (the Beatles) 3. Poem “Leisure” (by W. H. Davies) 18 |
73 |
Optional Lesson |
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74 |
Optional Lesson |
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75 |
Test on Unit 3 |
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76—78 |
Home Reading Lessons 7, 8, 9 |
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79 |
Optional Lesson |
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80 |
Final Test on Units 1—3 |
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Fascination and Challenge: The World of Science and Technology (Unit 4) Periods: 81—101 |
13. аn individual 14. a robot 15. a mania (kleptomania) 16. intellect 17. a combination 18. combined 19. a hybrid 20. sterilized 21. to imitate 22. potential 23. emotional |
64. to express 65. a nerve 66. nervous 67. to bother 68. indifferent 69. indifferently 70. beside 71. to require 72. equipment 73. to supply/a supply 74. irritable 75. irritably 76. a case 77. worn out 78. a record/to record 79. to predict 80. to insist 81. a desire/to desire 82. a variety 83. various 84. an advantage |
45. to suffer from nerves 46. to get on one’s nerves 47. to have/lose the nerve to do sth 48. to bother sb with/about sth 49. to be required to do sth 50. to be required of sb/sth 51. to supply sb with sth 52. to supply sth to sb/sth 53. in case 54. in any case 55. just in case 56. in that case 57. to set a record 58. to break the record 59. to hold the record 60. to insist on sth 61. for various reasons 62. an advantage over sb 63. to have the advantage of doing sth 64. to do sth to advantage 65. to take advantage of sth Phrases from the text: 1) to talk sb out of sth (into sth) 2) against one’s will 3) to pay (no) attention to sth 4) to take one’s time 5) to be in charge 6) (in) flesh and blood 7) in the near future 8) to tell the difference |
Revision: Unit 3 New Language: 1. The Place of Adverbial Modifiers in Sentences 2. Adverbial Modifiers of Time and Frequency 3. Modal Verbs: must/have to/should/ought to; have to ≈ have got to 4. Substantivized Adjectives (the deaf, the blind, etc.) Social English: notices and warnings 21 Phrasal Verbs: to see + sb around, through sth or sb, to sth or sb, sb off Do as an intensifier: do sit down, do tell me, etc.; we, you, one in the meaning of everyone; Structures: either ... or .... neither ... nor .... either, neither — any, none |
1. “The Man and His Book” (after G. Bell) 20 2. “Virtual Reality: Danger Ahead?” 3. “The Surgeon” (after I. Asimov) 23 |
“Is There Life in Space?” 22 |
1. Proverbs: 1. One cannot be in two places at once. 2. One cannot put back the clock. 3. One is never too old to learn. 4. One must draw the line somewhere. 5. One cannot serve two masters. 2. Song “Yellow Submarine” (the Beatles) 24 3. Poem “The Cloud-Mobile” (by M. Swenson) |
102 |
Optional Lesson |
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103 |
Optional Lesson |
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104 |
Test on Unit 4 |
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105—107 |
Home Reading Lessons 10, 11, 12 |
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Going to Places: The World of Travelling (Unit 5) Periods: 108—128 |
24. absolute 25. altogether 26. a cavalcade 27. commercial 28. countless 29. a fjord 30. a half- sister 31. idyllic 32. a steward 33. totally 34. a welcome |
85. to thrill/а thrill 86. thrilling 87. a nightmare 88. to clatter/a clatter 89. to confuse 90. confusing 91. rough 92. to sink (sank, sunk) 93. to groan/a groan 94. to tremble 95. annual 96. a reunion 97. to embrace 98. a tear 99. to flow/a flow 100. wrinkled 101. a destination 102. a vessel 103. bare 104. bareheaded 105. barefooted 106. a couple |
66. to be thrilled by sth 67. to have a nightmare 68. a rough sea 69. a rough drawing 70. a rough road/voice/idea 71. to sink to the bottom 72. to groan with pain 73. to give a groan 74. to tremble with sth 75. to burst into tears 76. to flow to/into sth 77. a bareheaded woman 78. a barefooted boy 79. a married couple Phrases from the text: 1) to be certain 2) in a way 3) in addition (to sth) 4) I had better ... 5) to make sure 6) within easy reach 7) to come alive 8) to be run by sth |
Revision: Unit 4 New Language: 1. Modal Verbs: to be (to), need 2. Modal Verbs with Perfect Infinitive 3. More Facts about Adverbs. Adverbs and Adjectives 4. Well as an adverb and as an adjective 5. Nation and Nationality Words (the British, the Chinese, the Dutch, etc.) 6. The Possessive Case with Inanimate Objects Social English: asking and giving directions 27 Dialogue about the London Underground ^ 28 Phrasal Verbs: to drop + in (on sbfat some place), off, on sb, out Structures: had better — would rather |
1. “Canada” 26 2. “First Rules for Travellers” 3. “Going to Norway” (after R. Dahl) 30 |
“A Drive in the Motor Car” (after R. Dahl) 29 |
1. Line: The world is a great book, of which they who never stir from home read only a page. 2. Proverb: He travels fastest who travels alone. 3. Poem “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” (by R. Frost) 31 4. Song “Pasadena” (Maywood) |
129 |
Optional Lesson |
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130 |
Optional Lesson |
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131 |
Test on Unit 5 |
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132—134 |
Home Reading Lessons 13, 14, 15 |
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Newspapers and Television: The World of Mass Media (Unit 6) Periods: 135—155 |
35. limited 36. to head (for) 37. injury 38. incapable 39. distant 40. a vacancy 41. uncomplimentary |
107. fierce 108. a memory (memories) 109. an ability 110. idle 111. illiterate 112. a point/to point (to, out) 113. to waste 114. wasteful 115. passionate 116. marvellous(BrE)/ marvelous (AmE) 117. obvious 118. obviously 119. glorious 120. flame 121. to absorb 122. to float 123. to enclose 124. a gift 125. gifted |
80. to do sth to the best of one’s ability(ies) 81. to be in flames 82. to burst into flames 83. to be absorbed in sth Phrases from the text: 1) to turn down one’s offer 2) to hold the view (that ...) 3) it’s little wonder 4) to head (for a place) 5) to give sb a month’s leave 6) apart from that 7) in your own good time |
Revision: Unit 5 New Language: 1. Ing-forms in English 2. The Infinitive 3. Verbs That Can Be Followed Both by Vto and Ving Forms Social English: giving and receiving a call Phrasal Verbs: to hold + (one-self) in, off, on, out Prefixes with the negative meaning: un-, in-, im-, il-, ir- Verbs: to allow and to let Verbs: to lie — лгать, to lie — лежать, to lay — класть, положить |
1. “The Press in Britain and Elsewhere” 33 2. “Interview with Prince William” 3. Geographical names 36 4. “How I Became a Writer” (after R. Dahl) 37 |
“Wilful Nadia” 35 |
1. Section Did you know that ... 2. Poem “If (by R. Kipling) 38 3. Song “I Just Called to Say I Love You” (by S. Wonder) |
156 |
Optional Lesson |
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157 |
Optional Lesson |
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158 |
Test on Unit 6 |
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159—161 |
Home Reading Lessons 16, 17, 18 |
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162—164 |
Optional Lessons |
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165 |
Final Test on Units 4—6 |
1 В таблицу не включены слова и словосочетания из рубрики Topical Vocabulary, представленные списком в учебнике (см. с. 34—36, 85—87, 135—137, 181—183, 186—187, 237—239, 290—293) и словаре.
2 В этом столбце тексты представлены в соответствии с порядком следования разделов в учебнике: 1. Reading for Country Studies; 2. Reading for Information; 3. Reading for Discussion. Некоторые из них предполагают прослушивание аудиозаписи.