Unit-22-The-Seventh-Period-Lesson-3-Natural-Disasters-教学设计-优质公开课-北师大选修8精品.doc
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- Unit 22 The Seventh Period Lesson Natural Disasters 教学 设计 优质 公开 北师大 选修 精品
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1、Unit 22 The Seventh Period 教学案Teaching goals教学目标1. Target language目标语言 重点词汇和短语 Vocabulary about natural disasters; Word formation.2. Ability goals能力目标 Talk about natural disasters and aid.Practise using the vocabulary of natural disasters. 3. Learning ability goals 学能目标Enable students to talk about
2、natural disasters and aid.Learn one kind of word formation: Conversion.Teaching important points教学重点Talk about natural disasters and aid.Teaching difficult points 教学难点How to identify confusing words.Teaching methods教学方法 Task-based teaching method.Teaching aids教具准备Multi-computer, a good dictionary.Te
3、aching procedures & ways教学过程与方式 Step I RevisionT: Good morning /afternoon, class!Ss: Good morning/ afternoon, Mr. /MsT: Yesterday I asked you to learn more about natural disasters and what we should do so that we will suffer less disaster. Now lets do a quiz. 4Which disaster has an eye? A. Earthquak
4、es B. Wildfires C. Volcanoes D. Hurricanes 5What does a NOAA weather radio do? A. Predict the weather B. Name hurricanes C. Broadcast weather warnings D. Bring rainSuggested answers:1. A. True 2. A. Flashfloods 3. B. False 4. D. Hurricanes 5. C. Broadcast weather warnings S1: Here is a story about t
5、sunami.T: Ok. Please tell us the story.S1: I will read it. The story is about how an American survived a tsunami. On April 1, 1946, when Mieko “Miki” Browne was 18 years old, a tsunami struck her home in Hilo, Hawaii. Heres her amazing story. That morning I got dressed as usual. I was just leaving f
6、or school when I noticed that my shoes were filthy. I went back inside to polish them. Staying home those five extra minutes probably saved my life. When I came outside again, my mother was on the lawn picking flowers. Somebody yelled “tsunami!” We thought it was an April Fools joke. Then I looked u
7、p and saw a huge wall of dirty water. Palm trees 35 feet 11 meters tall were covered by water. My mother pushed me inside and slammed the door, just as the wave struck our house. It felt like wed been hit by a train. The wave picked up the house, and we floated away. Seawater came up to my knees. I
8、decided to change clothes, in case we had to swim. When I opened the closet, the back wall was gone! All I could see past my hanging clothes were waves and dead fish. It looked like a strange painting. Through the windows we could see people floating by, holding onto whatever they could. A boy was c
9、linging to a piece of lumber. The waves carried us far out into Hilo Bay and back again three times. Finally our house slammed into a factory wall. Somehow my parents and I climbed into the factory, where we found some neighbors on the upper floor. We all got busy tearing burlap sugar bags into stri
10、ps to make a rope. Whenever someone floated by, we threw them the rope. Our family was fortunate. And Im not nervous about tsunamis anymore. But when I got married, I told my husband, “Were not living at the beach. Were going to live in the mountains!” S2: I downloaded an article from the Internet:
11、How Schools Can Become More Disaster Resistant T: Good! Please read it to us.S2: During Hurricane Andrew, Florida schools were blown to pieces. During the Northridge Earthquake, California schools were damaged. And after the Red River flooded in the spring of 1997, North Dakota and Minnesota schools
12、 were inundated by mud and made uninhabitable. Federal, state and local governments have spent millions repairing or replacing schools after disasters. Further, students have been left anxious, uprooted, out of classrooms for long periods of time or relocated to other facilities -disrupting their ed
13、ucation and increasing their stress. And no state, no location, no school district is invulnerable. As gloomy as this picture is, there is much that can be done by school officials to plan for disaster, to mitigate the risk, to protect the safety of students and educators, and to ensure that schools
14、 recover quickly. The key, though, is timing. While the Federal Emergency Management Agency stands ready to mobilize when necessary to help communities pick up the pieces and recover, its preferable to expend energy BEFORE the disaster. FEMA cannot undo the damage of an earthquake on an unprepared s
15、chool or push back the clock after a flood has swept away a childs school year. Under its new Project Impact initiative, FEMA is encouraging city officials, businesses, schools, residents and others within communities to work together before disaster strikes. Prevention is always the best disaster a
16、ction.The Northridge earthquake really motivated us and had a positive effect of raising awareness about the need for community preparedness, said Peter Anderson, director of emergency services for the Los Angeles Unified School District. It raised awareness on the part of the teachers and the staff
17、 that we have to be prepared - not because its mandated, but because its real.Many states now require specific disaster preparedness activities in their school systems. In California, for example, schools are required to have a disaster plan, to hold periodic drop, cover and hold drills and to hold
18、educational and training programs for students and staff. In Kentucky, a 1992 bill mandated disaster plans, drills and training in the schools. Disaster drills in schools are required in Oregon, Montana and Missouri, and Idaho and Arkansas mandate earthquake resistant design for all public buildings
19、, including schools. In support of the growing awareness of the need for disaster preparedness in schools, FEMA offers a course several times each year at our Emergency Management Institute in Emmitsburg, Maryland. Called the Multi-Hazard Safety Program for Schools, the week-long course outlines a s
20、pecific plan of action for all schools. As discussed in this class, FEMA recommends the following actions for all school officials: Identify hazards likely to happen to your schools Mitigate against the hazards Develop a response plan, including evacuation route Plan for coping after a disaster Impl
21、ement drills and family education .T: Have you ever felt an earthquake? They can happen anywhere in the world, but compared to other natural disasters like tornadoes, hurricanes and blizzards, serious earthquakes seem to happen less frequently. No matter how little they happen, earthquakes can be in
22、credibly damaging to the communities in which they happen. How much the community is affected by earthquakes depends on many different factors. Earthquakes can be dangerous to humans. Scientists still cant predict when they might happen, and so they take us completely by surprise. After an earthquak
23、e happens, the power may go out, roads may be damaged, water and gas lines can break, and phones might not work. There is no way to be 100% safe from the destructive forces of an earthquake, but there are many things you can do before, during, and after an earthquake to stay as safe as possible. But
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