d However, the best way to learn to read may simply be just
to read.
2 Give students some time to read the paragraph and then ask
the class the question.
3 After checking the answers, you could elicit/explain that the
sentences in Exercise 1 also include the most important
points of the paragraph that they are part of.
4–5 Get students to discuss these questions in pairs, before
getting feedback.
6 Read the instructions to the class. Give students some time to
read the sentences. Then put them into pairs and get them to
do the exercise together. Check the answers with the class.
7 Ask the class this question.
Extra practice
Students can think about the reading style they used or should
have used with any text they have read.
PHOTOCOPIABLE
© Cambridge University Press 2008
More activities
Students could also discuss how the Internet has affected
and will continue to affect the reading of books. They could
devise a survey about reading and carry it out in school or if
you are teaching adults in an English-speaking country, they
could go out of school to ask their questions.
Alternatively, they could create an online reading survey on
www.surveymonkey.com.
B
How we read
1–3 Give students some time to do these exercises before
checking their answers with a partner. Check the answers with
the class.
Class bonus
Get students in their pairs to underline unknown words and/or
phrases in the text and try to paraphrase them together, using
the context around them. After an adequate amount of time,
collate diffi cult words and phrases on the board, encouraging
students to write down vocabulary from the paragraphs they
have not read, and double-check meanings.
4 While looking at the example, elicit/explain that verbal in this
context means ‘relating to words’.
When checking the answers, get students to say why
sentence c is false.
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