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Page 1: Guiding by Keith Harding - Onestopenglish

1 Warm up

• DrawasimpleoutlineoftheEiffelTowerontheboard.Asktheclasswhatitis.Addmoredetailifnecessary.(Note:Ifyouwanttohaveabitoffun,andifyou’refeelingbrave,youcan‘mime’it,bystandingwithlegsapartandholdingyourarmstogetherstraightintheair!)

• AsktheclasswhattheyknowabouttheEiffelTowerandwriteanyusefulinformation/languageontheboardthatthestudentsgiveyou,especiallyifitisonWorksheet1–e.g.Paris,tall,iron,lift,view.

2 Describing a famous monument

• GiveoutWorksheet1andgetthestudentstocompletethegapsinpartAinpairs.

• Focusnotonlyontheuseofprepositionsbutalsoon:

-Theuseofthepassive(simplepast)in2and3,contrastingwiththeactive(Someonebuiltitin1889.GustaveEiffeldesignedit).Pointoutthatthepassivefocusesmoreontheobjectoftheverbandisthereforeimportantintourism/guiding.

-Otherusefulchunks,suchas:itissituated,youcansee

-Pronunciation:sentencestressandweakforms(e.g.was)

• Modelanddrillthesentences.(Thisisimportantasguidinglanguageisobviouslyspokenproduction.Therewillbefurtherdrillingsuggestedintherestofthelesson.)

3 Vocabulary for describing buildings and monuments

• MoveontopartBofWorksheet1.Getstudentstobrainstormtwoorthreeotherworld-famousbuildings(youcouldpromptwithphotographsifyouhavethem).

• Inpairs,studentsdecidewhichwordsinthelistcanbesubstitutedforthehighlightedwordsinthesentencesinpartA.

• Checkstudentsunderstandthemeaningofeachwordandcanpronounceitcorrectly.

• Theywillendupwithfivelexicalsetsofwordsusedwhendescribingbuildings.Seeiftheycanaddanyotherwords/phrasestoeachofthesets.

• Askiftheyknowanyarchitectsanddesigners(andthebuildingsassociatedwiththem).

4 Controlled practice of language

• Getstudentstopractisethetargetlanguageincompletesentencesbycarryingoutaconventional‘substitutiondrill’.Forexample:

You Class1740 Itwasbuiltin1740.wood It’smadeofwood.north It’ssituatedinthenorth.50metres/high It’s50metreshigh.etc.

• Studentscanthenpractiseinasimilarwayinpairs.

5 Adjectives for describing places, people, etc.

• Writeontheboard:old,new,nice,big,famous.

• Getstudentstotrytothinkofalternatives.Iftheycan’tcomeupwithmany,writethewordsbelowontheboardandgetthemtodecide(a) whichoftheoriginalfivetheycansubstitutefor;

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© Macmillan Publishers Ltd 2009

HOSPITALITY AND TOURISM / Guiding / Elementary

level: Elementary (to Pre-intermediate)

target age: 16+

time needed: 90 minutes

Grammar / language objective: Describing buildings and places: prepositions, passive (simple past).

materials: Worksheet 1: Famous monuments; Worksheet 2: Coach commentary role-play.

Hospitality and tourismGuidingby Keith Harding

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HOSPITALITY AND TOURISM / Guiding / Elementary (to Pre-intermediate)

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Hospitality and tourismGuidingby Keith Harding

(b)whethertheyareusedtodescribebuildings,places,peopleorsomethingelse(e.g.delicious=food,lively=nightlife)

beautifulancientwonderfulmagnificentmodernmassivehistoricdeliciousinterestinglivelygrandfamous

• Youcanaddmoreifyouwant(e.g.elegant,iconic,superb,fascinating)–orreducethenumberofwordsinthelistifyouthinkyourstudentswillstruggle.

• Makesureyoumodelthewordsandmarkthemainstresswhenwritingthemontheboard.

6 pronunciation

• Getstudents(inpairs)togrouptheadjectivesintermsoftheirstresspatterns.(Thiswillobviouslybeeasierifyou’vemarkedthestressontheboard.)

Oo ancient,modern,lively,famous,massiveoOodelicious,historicOoo beautiful,wonderfuloOoomagnificentOooointeresting

• Whentheyhavegroupedthem,getthestudentstoreadoutthewordswithexaggeratedstress.Speakersofsomelanguagesmaybereluctantandfindthisunnatural,butexplainthatitwillhelptobringmorelifetotheirpronunciationandmaketheirguidinglanguagemoreexcitingandrealistic.

7 Coach commentary role-play

• Thestudentsaregoingtoprepareanddeliveranimaginaryfantasycoachtourwhichwillpasssomeoftheworld’smostfamoussights.

Stageone:preparation

• PutthestudentsingroupsofthreeorfourandgiveoutWorksheet2.

• GetstudentstolookatthenotepromptsonWorksheet2andpreparewhattheywouldsay-atthestartoftheircoachcommentary(dependingonthelevelofthestudents,youmaywanttoteachsomeoftheexpressionstothewholeclass),-abouteachofthefamousplacestheyaregoingtogopastontheirimaginaryfantasytourofworld-famousattractions,-topointoutanyothersights.

Stagetwo:thetour

• Settheclassroomfurnituretolooklikeacoach–i.e.rowsoffourseatswithanaisledownthemiddle.

• Eachgroupwilldelivertheircommentaryinturn.

• Passengersshouldmakenotesabouttheplacestheysee(whichwillhelpthemwhentheycometodotheirowntours).Ifyouwantyoucangiveamorespecifictask,suchas:GroupA:Notedownalltheadjectivesthattheguidesuse.GroupB:Notedownallthedatesandnumbersthattheguidesuse.GroupC:Notedownanynamesthattheguidesuse.

Stagethree:feedbackandevaluation

• Spendsometimediscussinghowtheactivitywentandgivingfeedback(includingcorrections,butbalancedwithpraise).

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HOSPITALITY AND TOURISM / Guiding / Elementary (to Pre-intermediate)

Worksheet 1: Famous monuments

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A. use prepositions to complete the sentences about the Eiffel tower.

1. It is situated ___ the west ___ Paris.

2. It was built ___ 1889.

3. It was designed ___ Gustave Eiffel.

4. It is ___ 300 metres high.

5. It is made ___ iron.

6. You can see all ___ Paris ___ the top.

7. It was the tallest building ___ the world ___ 1931.

b. Which of the highlighted words in A can these words replace?

West 1889 300 metres high iron

Famous monuments

Hospitality and tourismGuidingby Keith Harding

long stone 1949 north wide 60 metres the 16th century

glass wood 100 feet centre 2008 250 metres south

by from in of over until

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HOSPITALITY AND TOURISM / Guiding / Elementary (to Pre-intermediate)

Worksheet 2: Hospitality and Tourism

Hospitality and tourismGuidingby Keith Harding

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Coach commentary role-play important language

At the start

•Welcomethepassengers:e.g.“Helloeveryoneandwelcometotoday’stour.”

•Introduceyourselfandyourdriver

•Explainthetourandsomeofthe‘highlights’

•Makesureeveryoneiscomfortableandsafe

________________________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________________________

During the tour

•Onyourright/leftyoucansee …

•Wearenowgoingpast …

•Pleasetakeapictureifyouwant …

________________________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________________________

At the end

•Thankthepassengers

•Wishthemapleasantevening

________________________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________________________

Famous sights (fact-sheets)

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HOSPITALITY AND TOURISM / Guiding / Elementary (to Pre-intermediate)

Worksheet 2: Hospitality and Tourism

Hospitality and tourismGuidingby Keith Harding

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Coach commentary role-play Famous sights (fact-sheets)

London Eye, London, UK1. Situated on river Thames •

in centre of LondonBuilt 2000•Steel and glass•135m high•32 capsules •

(25 people each)Takes 30 minutes•Views for 40 km•

St Peter’s Basilica, 2. Rome, Italy

Situated in Vatican City in • RomeMostimportantchurchin•

Catholic religionBuilt 16th century•Stone•Dome is one of largest in •

world (136m high)Inside:Michelangelo’s•

Pieta, throne of St Peter

Golden Gate Bridge, 3. San Francisco, USA

Situated west coast USA • (California)

Suspension bridge • (one mile long)

Built 1930s•Steel •129,000 km of cable•Painted •

‘internationalorange’

Empire State Building, 4. New York, USASituatedinManhattan,•

New YorkBuilt 1931•Was tallest building •

in worldSteel, aluminium, glass•102stories/floors•KingKongfilm•

‘BigBen’,London,UK5. Situated in centre of •

LondonClock tower of Houses •

of ParliamentBuilt 1850s•106m high•‘Ben’=nameofbell•Clock is largest in UK•

6.

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