2 Ask students if they have ever interviewed anyone for a
job. Do they agree with the advice given in the texts?
PHOTOCOPIABLE
© Cambridge University Press 2008
B
Tell me about yourself
1 Before students tick the boxes, elicit that to date means ‘up to
the present time’. After completing the exercise, ask students
to suggest any other questions that people might be asked at
a job interview. Examples include: What kinds of people do
you like working with? Do you prefer working on your own
or in a group? Where would you like to be in fi ve years? How
would your colleagues describe you? What do you do in your
spare time?
2–5 Students work through the exercises.
6–7 Students compare their ideas in pairs and then with the
whole class.
Did you know …?
After reading the text, you could ask students to fi nd other
examples of each part of speech in the texts.
You might like to explain that there is another category of words
called determiners. These are words which are used before
nouns to show which person or thing is being referred to. There
are several determiners of quantity – all, every, each, both,
much, many, most, enough, a few, few, several, a little, little, no,
neither, some, more, most
.
Give students two or three more words, e.g. agree, colour,
hard
, and ask them to name other words in the same family.
Encourage them to look up the words in their dictionary.
After one student has said a word, another student could
name the part of speech, e.g. agree – verb, disagree – verb,
agreement – noun, disagreement – noun, agreeable –
adjective, agreeably – adverb
.
Make the point that knowledge of word families and the
meaning of prefi xes and suffi xes are both extremely useful tools
when reading.
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