Планирование

Английский язык - Книга для учителя 11 класс - Углублённый уровень - О. В. Афанасьева - 2017 год

Планирование

Учебные ситуации и часы

Новые слова1

Словосочетания

Вокабуляр и грамматика

Тексты для чтения

Тексты для аудирования

Стихи, песни,

пословицы

Письмо

Sounds of Music (Unit 1)

Periods: 1-29

1. annoy

2. annoyance

3. annoying

4. beyond

5. earnest

6. earnestly

7. earnestness

8. fierce

9. fiercely

10. fit n, v

11. fitting

12. hit

13. ignorance

14. ignorant

15. ignoramus

16. incident

17. incidentally

18. indignant

19. indignation

20. insult n, v

21. insulting

22. resist

23. resistance

24. resistant

25. irresistible

26. roar n, v

27. roaring

28. swear

29. swearing

1. to one’s annoyance

2. in annoyance

3. a fit of laughter

4. coughing fits

5. fits of depression

6. to have (throw) a fit

7. by fits and starts

8. to have a better fit

9. to hit sth on sth

10. to hit sb in the face

11. to hit sb with sth

12. to live in (total) ignorance of sth

13. to confess one’s ignorance of sth

14. to betray one’s ignorance

15. to be indignant at (over) sth

16. an insult to sb

17. to resist doing sth/the temptation of doing sth

18. to resist arrest

19. to roar with pain (laughter)

20. to swear at sb

21. to swear to sb/sth

Vocabularv. New material:

Words not to be confused

1. to chuckle, to giggle, to guffaw, to grin, to smirk;

2. to bring, to take, to fetch;

3. to cry, to weep, to sob;

4. to long, to wish, to yearn

Phrasal verbs to hit +...

Grammar. New material:

1. Syntax.

Sentence: declarative, interrogative, imperative, exclamatory

2. Use of periods, question marks, exclamation points

3. Members of a sentence:

a) predicate (nominal/verbal);

b) subject;

c) object (direct/indirect/prepositional);

d) attribute;

e) adverbial modifier (of place, time, manner)

Vocabulary and Grammar Revised

1. Russian Composers

2. First of the Great Romantics

3. Singing a “Comic” Song after J. K. Jerome

4. Kinds of Music

5. Extract from “Three Men in a Boat” by J. K. Jerome

1. They Want to Make Really Good Music

1

2. The Greatest Cellist of All Times

2

3. Henry Purcell

3

Poem: The Minstrel Boy by T. Moore

6

Writing to explain an opinion

30

Test 1

31, 32

Reading Classes 1, 2

Town and Its Architecture (Unit 2)

Periods: 33-61

30. amiable

31. amiability

32. crisp

33. crisps

34. gloomy

35. gloom

36. gossip n, v

37. linger

38. nonsense

39. ordeal

40. rattle n, v

41. spare v, adj

42. sympathy

43. sympathize

44. sympathetic

45. vague

46. flop n, v

22. to gossip about/over sb/sth

23. to linger over sth

24. to linger on sb/sth

25. to linger on (in some place)

26. to talk nonsense

27. to stand (put up with) any nonsense

28. to be an ordeal for sb

29. to rattle on (away)

30. to spare neither money nor expense

31. to spare sb sth

32. to spare sb from doing sth

33. to spare sb’s life (feelings)

34. to have sympathy for sb

35. to have sympathy with sth

36. to be in (out of) sympathy with sb or sth

37. to be

sympathetic to sb or sth

38. to have a sympathetic ear

39. to flop into an armchair

40. to flop and be taken off a theatre

Vocabulary. New material:

Words not to be confused 1. to walk, to wander, to stroll, to march, to stride, to creep, to shuffle, to stagger, to swagger, to trudge;

2. work, labour, toil;

3. customer, client;

4. chief, main;

5. amiable, amicable

Phrasal verbs to carry + ...

Grammar. New material:

1. Simple sentences, compound sentences, complex sentences

2. Faulty word order in a sentence

3. Main clauses vs subordinate clauses

4. That-clauses vs what-clauses as types of reported clauses

5. Identifying and non-identifying relative clauses

6. Relative clauses referring to the whole sentence

7. Relative clauses with whose Vocabulary and Grammar Revised

1. Russian Architects

2. Michelangelo as an Architect

3. Extract 1 from “They Walk in the City” by J. B. Priestley

4. The Golden Apples

5. Architectural Styles

6. Views of the City

7. Extract 2 from “They Walk in the City” by J. B. Priestley

1. Sir Christopher Wren

7

2. Organic Architecture

8

3. Five Guidebook Texts.

9

Poems:

1. The Daffodils by W. Wordsworth

10

2. Broadway by W. Whitman

11

Writing to give arguments (for and against)

62

Test 2

63, 64

Reading Classes 3, 4

Wonders of the World (Unit 3)

Periods: 65-93

47. background

48. confident

49. confidence

50. confide

51. disposition

52. drowse

53. drowsy

54. grumble n, v

55. lean

56. mount n, v

57. muse n, v

58. prone

59. prudent

60. strike

61. tutor n, v

62. tutorial

63. grief-stricken

64. panic-stricken

65. poverty-stricken

66. terror-stricken

67. drought-stricken

41. to come from some background

42. in the background

43. on a blue (dark) background

44. to stay in the background

45. to feel confident of/about sth

46. to be confident in one’s ability to do sth

47. to give (gain/lose) confidence

48. to do sth with confidence

49. to show a disposition to do sth

50. to grumble about sth

51. to grumble at sb over sth

52. to lean over sb’s shoulder

53. to lean against the tree

54. to lean on a cane

55. to muse (on, about, over) sth

56. to be prone to sth/to do sth

57. the right to strike

58. to strike for a ... % salary increase

59. to be struck by a thought

60. to employ a tutor for sb

Vocabulary. New material:

Words not to be confused

1. to ponder, to reflect, to consider, to meditate, to contemplate, to muse, to brood;

2. kind, kindly (adv), kindly (adj);

3. to lean, to bend;

4. to despise, contempt;

5. to mount, to go (walk) up;

6. teacher, tutor;

7. to amaze, to astonish, to astound, to surprise, to stun, to dumbfound, to puzzle, to bewilder, to nonplus, to shock, to startle;

8. odd, curious, uncanny, bizarre

Phrasal verbs to tear + ...

Grammar. New material:

1. Adverbial clauses:

a) time clauses;

b) conditional clauses;

c) purpose clauses;

d) reason clauses;

e) result clauses;

f) concessive clauses;

g) place clauses;

h) clauses of manner

2. Purpose clauses

3. Reason clauses

4. Time clauses

Vocabulary and Grammar Revised

1. New Seven Wonders of the World

2. St. Basil’s Cathedral

3. Dame Agatha Christie

4. Homecoming after A. Christie

5. Language

6. Extract from Graham Swift

1. The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World

12

2. Seven Wonders of the Middle Ages

13

3. Two Natural Wonders

14

Poems:

1. Upon Westminster Bridge by W. Wordsworth

2. Venice by S. Rogers

16

Writing an argumentative essay

94

Test 3







95, 96

Reading Classes 5, 6


68. admit

69. admittance

70. alight v

71. attachment

72. attach

73. consequence

74.consequently

75. delicious

76. drench

77. drenched

78. embroider

79. embroidery

80. gain n, v

81. glow n, v

82. misery

83. miserable

84. mutter n, v

85. prick n, v

86. remark

87. remarkable

61. to admit defeat

62. to be admitted to some place

63. to alight from the bus/train

64. to alight on a branch

65. an attachment between two people

66. an attachment to sb

67. to have consequences for sb

68. to be of (little/no) consequence

69. as a consequence/in consequence

70. to be drenched to the skin

71. to be drenched with sweat

72. to embroider sth on sth

73. to embroider sth with sth

74. to gain by doing sth

75. to glow with happiness

76. to live in misery

77. to mutter under one’s breath

78. to mutter to oneself

79. to mutter sth about sb/sth

80. to prick (up) one’s ears

81. to remark on the time

82. to cry for the moon

83. to have a fever

84. to come to the point

85. to trifle with sb

86. to put up somewhere

Vocabulary.

New material:

Words not to be confused

1. to glisten, to gleam, to shimmer, to twinkle, to sparkle, to flash, to shine, to glow;

2. high, tall, lofty;

3. sleep, slumber, nap;

4. to get, to receive, to gain;

5. thin, slender, skinny

Phrasal verbs to sink + ...

Grammar. New material:

1. Punctuation

2. Capital letters

3. Full stops

4. Commas

5. Colons and semicolons

Vocabulary and Grammar Revised

1. Deer Hunter and White Corn Maiden

2. Varyag

3. The Happy Prince after O. Wilde

4. The Women I Admire Most in the Whole World after M. Cabot

5. Extract from “The Happy Prince” by O. Wilde

1. Stone Age Man in Britain

17

2. Popular legends

18

3. Mother Teresa

19

Poems:

1. Do Not Stand at My Grave and Weep (anonymous)

20

2. Extract from

“Romeo and Juliet” by W. Shake speare

21

Writing an argumentative essay

126

Test 4

127, 128

Reading Classes 7, 8

129

Final Test

130-132

Revision, Optional Classes

1 В таблицу не включены слова и словосочетания из рубрики Topical Vocabulary, представленные списком в уроках учебника (см. с. 42-44, 108-109, 168-170, 222-225) и в словаре в конце учебника.






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