A
Welcome to Summertown
Explain that you can often read or hear Welcome to … when
you arrive in a place.
1 Go through the instructions and the options with the class.
Then get students to skim (look quickly at) the leafl et and
decide what it is about.
After you have checked the answer, ask students Where is
Summertown?
Explain that Summertown is a suburb of Oxford.
Learning tip
Give some examples of types of text we scan, e.g. dictionary,
telephone directory.
2 Students can do this exercise in pairs. They can either work
together to fi nd the answers, or they can work on their own
and then compare answers.
3 Look at an example with the class before students do the
exercise. Elicit that the bike rental store is in Banbury Road.
4 Ask students to write the list in pairs. This could be made into
a team game with the longest list written in a short time limit,
e.g. three minutes, winning.
5 Look at the example with the class. Ask students to say why
sentence a is true.
Check answers with the class. Ask one student to say whether
the sentence is true or false and another student to read out
the information from the text which gives the answer.
Class bonus
Divide the class into two large groups. Students in one group
write questions like those in Exercise 2 and students in the
other group write true/false statements like those in Exercise
5. Students can work in pairs or on their own to do this. Each
student then exchanges their questions/statements with
someone from the other group. Students who wrote questions
decide if statements are true or false, and students who wrote
true/false statements answer questions.
PHOTOCOPIABLE
© Cambridge University Press 2008
6 Encourage students to tell the class about shops and services
they would like to fi nd. They could say either I’d like to fi nd
a/an … or I hope there’s a/an …
.
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