Unit 4 Sharing Reading and thinkingppt课件-(2022新)人教版高中英语选择性必修第四册(1).pptx
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1、人教版选择性必修(四)人教版选择性必修(四)Unit 4 SharingReading and ThinkingIn this section, you are going to:get some basic information about volunteeringunderstand the passage about volunteering in Papua New Guineaknow about the education and living conditions in less developed areasincrease the awareness of the impo
2、rtance of helping others1. What do you think is happening in the photo?2. Think about the things you do to help other people. Write them down and share with your partner.3. Share your experiences as a volunteer, if you have any.1. What do you think is happening in the photo?Some young people in Afri
3、ca are enjoying water at a new well which was provided by China.2. Think about the things you do to help other people. Write them down and share with your partner.I help at school by cleaning the classroom and picking up rubbish on the school ground. I help others farther away by donating some pocke
4、t money to the Red Cross Society of China regularly.3. Share your experiences as a volunteer, if you have any.I spent a summer volunteering to help feed homeless people. It was a wonderful but busy time. Though the work was quite hard, I felt good about my contribution to society and my role in help
5、ing others.As you grow older, you will discover that you have two hands, one for helping yourself, the other for helping others. Sam Levenson萨姆萨姆利文森利文森 美国喜剧演员、作家、教师、美国喜剧演员、作家、教师、电视主持人和记者电视主持人和记者该引言揭示了自我成长与帮助他人二者间相互该引言揭示了自我成长与帮助他人二者间相互促进的关系:帮助的前提是自强,帮助他人是促进的关系:帮助的前提是自强,帮助他人是成长的标志与担当。成长的标志与担当。Time Tes
6、ted Beauty TipsFor attractive lips, speak words of kindness.For lovely eyes, seek out the good in people.For a slim figure, share your food with the hungry.For beautiful hair, let a child run his or her fingers through it once a day.For poise, walk with the knowledge youll never walk alone.People, e
7、ven more than things, have to be restored, renewed, revived, reclaimed, and redeemed; never throw out anybody.Remember, if you ever need a helping hand, you will find one at the end of your arm. As you grow older, you will discover that you have two hands, one for helping yourself, the other for hel
8、ping others.What is volunteer? Volunteers are not paid, not because they are worthless, but because they are priceless. There are many volunteers working in different mountainous areas or developing countries.Papua New Guinea is an island nation that takes up the eastern half of the island of New Gu
9、inea along with some smaller islands. It is located just to the north of Australia. About eight million people speaking about 820 languages live in this nation, most in small villages in remote jungles. As the interior of Papua New Guinea is one of the least explored areas on the earth, it is though
10、t that there are numerous uncontacted people groups there. As a developing country, 40% of the population is self-sustainingthey raise or gather their own food and everything they need for their existence, and have little or no experience of having money, getting a salary, or buying things in shops.
11、 The countrys literacy rate is about 64%. Though education is provided for free, it is not compulsory, and many communities do not have schools. Many schools have volunteer groups teaching languages, games and sports, construction, medical work or environmental conservation.A young Australian, Jo, w
12、orked for two years as a volunteer teacher in Papua New Guinea. What challenges do you think she might have faced?It would be hard to get used to living without a TV, computer, or other modern conveniences. The food and overall lifestyle might also be a challenge, as it is so different from her coun
13、try. As a teacher, getting good teaching materials and supplies would also be hard.Read the blog entries by Jo. As you read, underline the parts of the text you read slowly. Then compare your reading pace with a partner.Adjust reading speedWhen reading a passage, adjust your speed to get the most ou
14、t of it. If the material is easy or familiar, you can read through it quickly. If it is difficult or contains useful details, read it a bit slower and try to understand more.Reasons why someone would read some parts of a passage more slowly than others:It contains words and concepts that are more di
15、fficult to understand. It is packed full of detailed information. The language is beautiful or enriching and the reader may want to savour the enjoyment of reading it. 1. What does Jo mainly talk about in her blogs? Her experience of voluntary teaching at a bush school and a visit to a local family,
16、 the challenges she met, and the positive aspects of her voluntary work. She also shared her feelings and attitudes to her voluntary work, the people, and the life there.2. Where was Jo in her two blogs and what were the places like? At the bush school and the home of one of her students. The classr
17、ooms were made of bamboo, with clay floors and roofs of grass. The students house was a low, round bamboo hut without windows, with a door just big enough to get through, and with grass sticking out of the roof. The house was dark inside, with fresh grass laid on the floor and a platform to sleep on
18、.Divide the two blogs into several parts and work out the main ideas.ParagraphMain ideaPart 1 1Jo received a parcel from home.Part 22-3The conditions about the bush school and the challenges Jo has been facing.Part 34How Jo got to Tombes home.Part 45-7What Jo has witnessed in Tombes village.Part 48J
19、os feeling after visiting the village.VOLUNTEERING IN THE BUSH8 MarchI just got a parcel from home! It took about two weeks to arrive, and it was a bit damaged, but it was so nice to get some sweets and jam from home; Ive been dying to have some of my favourite sweets, and its always nice to get mai
20、l!So Ive been here in the jungle for about a month now. My secondary school is a bush school. The classrooms are made of bamboo, with clay floors and roots of grass. It takes me only a few minutes to walk to school down a dusty track covered in weeds. When I reach the school grounds, Im greeted by a
21、 chorus of “good morning” from the boys. Unlike students in our country, these boys do not wear cotton uniforms, and many of them also have to walk a long way, sometimes for up to two hours, just to get to school.Theres no electricity, running water or even textbooks, not to mention laptops, tablets
22、, or other modern devices! All the students have are pencils, rubbers, and paper. Im still trying to adapt to these conditions. Ive had to become much more imaginative in my teaching. Science is my most challenging subject as my students have no concept of doing experiments. There is no equipment, a
23、nd since there isnt even a washroom, if I need water I have to carry it from my house in a basin! Its important not to be too rigid about rules here, too. The other day I was showing the boys a chemistry experiment when, before I knew it, the mixture was bubbling out of the test tube spilling everyw
24、here! The class became a circus as the boys, who had never come across anything like this before, started jumping out of the windows. Sometimes I wonder how relevant chemistry is to these studentsfew will ever become chemistsand most will be going back to their villages after Year 8 anyway. To be ho
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