Улучши свой английский: курс усовершенствования
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Тематика:
Английский язык
Издательство:
ФЛИНТА
Год издания: 2024
Кол-во страниц: 420
Дополнительно
Вид издания:
Учебное пособие
Уровень образования:
ВО - Бакалавриат
ISBN: 978-59765-0123-2.
Артикул: 618337.03.99
Настоящая книга адресована всем, кто интересуется современным английским языком. Собранные в ней материалы помогут желающим успешно сдавать различные экзамены и тесты по английскому языку. Несомненную помощь данное пособие окажет и преподавателям, так как автор на собственном опыте анализирует и объясняет наиболее распространенные ошибки студентов в использовании языка. О практической направленности книги говорит собранный справочный материал по главным трудным вопросам грамматики, подборка современных английских оборотов и выражений, употребляемых в различных коммуникативных ситуациях, интересный материал лексического характера, советы по подготовке к сдаче экзаменов. Для круга лиц, изучающих английский язык как самостоятельно, так и в высших учебных заведениях, а также для преподавателей английского языка.
Тематика:
ББК:
УДК:
ОКСО:
- ВО - Бакалавриат
- 45.03.02: Лингвистика
- ВО - Магистратура
- 45.04.02: Лингвистика
ГРНТИ:
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В.С. Матюшенков IMPROVE YOUR ENGLISH A Refresher English Course УЛУЧШИ СВОЙ АНГЛИЙСКИЙ Курс усовершенствования 4-е издание, исправленное и дополненное Москва Издательство «ФЛИНТА» 2024
ISBN 978-5-02-034632-1 (Íàóêà) (Ôëèíòà) УДК 811.111(078.8) ББК 81.432.1я73 М35 Матюшенков В.С. М35 Улучши свой английский : курс усовершенствования / В.С. Матюшенков — 4-е изд., исп. и доп. — Москва : ФЛИНТА, 2024. — 420 с. — ISBN 978-59765-0123-2. — Текст : электронный. Íàñòîÿùàÿ êíèãà àäðåñîâàíà âñåì, êòî èíòåðåñóåòñÿ ñîâðåìåííûì àíãëèéñêèì ÿçûêîì. Ñîáðàííûå â íåé ìàòåðèàëû ïîìîãóò æåëàþùèì óñïåøíî ñäàâàòü ðàçëè÷íûå ýêçàìåíû è òåñòû ïî àíãëèéñêîìó ÿçûêó. Íåñîìíåííóþ ïîìîùü äàííîå ïîñîáèå îêàæåò è ïðåïîäàâàòåëÿì, òàê êàê àâòîð íà ñîáñòâåííîì îïûòå àíàëèçèðóåò è îáúÿñíÿåò íàèáîëåå ðàñïðîñòðàíåííûå îøèáêè ñòóäåíòîâ â èñïîëüçîâàíèè ÿçûêà. Î ïðàêòè÷åñêîé íàïðàâëåííîñòè êíèãè ãîâîðèò ñîáðàííûé ñïðàâî÷íûé ìàòåðèàë ïî ãëàâíûì òðóäíûì âîïðîñàì ãðàììàòèêè, ïîäáîðêà ñîâðåìåííûõ àíãëèéñêèõ îáîðîòîâ è âûðàæåíèé, óïîòðåáëÿåìûõ â ðàçëè÷íûõ êîììóíèêàòèâíûõ ñèòóàöèÿõ, èíòåðåñíûé ìàòåðèàë ëåêñè÷åñêîãî õàðàêòåðà, ñîâåòû ïî ïîäãîòîâêå ê ñäà÷å ýêçàìåíîâ. Äëÿ êðóãà ëèö, èçó÷àþùèõ àíãëèéñêèé ÿçûê êàê ñàìîñòîÿòåëüíî, òàê è â âûñøèõ ó÷åáíûõ çàâåäåíèÿõ, à òàêæå äëÿ ïðåïîäàâàòåëåé àíãëèéñêîãî ÿçûêà. УДК 811.111(078.8) ББК 81.432.1я73 ISBN 978-5-9765-0123-2 © Матюшенков В.С., 2017 © Издательство «ФЛИНТА», 2017
The mediocre teacher tells. The good teacher explains. The superior teacher demonstrates. The great teacher inspires. William Word In a completely rational society, the best of us would be teachers and the rest of us would have to settle for something else. Lee Iacocca
Contents How To Be a Good Teacher .................................................................. 6 Classroom Speaking ............................................................................. 8 Classroom language for very young learners ................................... 15 The English Language ......................................................................... 16 English Grammar .............................................................................. 20 Present Simple ................................................................................... 21 Past Simple ........................................................................................ 26 The Past Habitual Tense ................................................................ 28 Future Simple ..................................................................................... 30 Will or Going to? ............................................................................... 31 The Future in Adjectival Clauses ................................................... 33 Other Ways of Indicating the Future .............................................. 33 Forward Planning from the Time in the Past ................................... 34 Future Simple in the Past .............................................................. 34 Present Progressive ............................................................................ 35 Present Progressive Used for Proposed Future Action ..................... 37 Past Progressive ................................................................................. 40 Past Simple versus Past Progressive ............................................... 43 Future Progressive ............................................................................. 45 Future Progressive in the Past ....................................................... 46 Present Perfect ................................................................................... 47 Past Simple versus Present Perfect .................................................. 50 Past Perfect ........................................................................................ 52 Past Simple versus Past Perfect ....................................................... 53 Future Perfect .................................................................................... 54 Future Perfect in the Past .............................................................. 54 Present Perfect Progressive ............................................................ 55 Present Perfect versus Present Perfect Progressive ........................... 56 Past Perfect Progressive ................................................................ 57 Future Perfect Progressive ............................................................. 58 4
Future Perfect Progressive in the Past............................................ 58 Passive Voice ..................................................................................... 59 Structures after Verbs, Adjectives, and Nouns ........................................ 64 Verbs with Two Objects ................................................................ 64 Phrasal Verbs ................................................................................64 Infinitives with and without “to” .................................................... 66 “-ing” forms ............................................................................... 69 Past Participle .............................................................................. 73 Sequence of Tenses and Reported Speech ...................................... 74 Modals ........................................................................................ 77 Subjunctive Mood and Conditionals ............................................... 85 Tag Questions ............................................................................. 91 Nouns ......................................................................................... 96 Adjectives .................................................................................. 101 Adverbs ..................................................................................... 108 Articles ............................................................................................ 112 Determiners .................................................................................... 118 Pronouns ........................................................................................ 120 Numerals ........................................................................................ 124 Prepositions .................................................................................... 126 Strategies for Unlocking Word Meaning .............................................. 133 Part A. Determining a Word’s Meaning from Context ..................... 133 Part B. Determining Meaning Through Word Analysis................... 135 Concise Dictionary of Difficulties in English…………………………………...149 Some Recommendations and Preparation Tips for Exams .................. 327 Reading ..................................................................................... 327 Writing ...................................................................................... 328 Listening and speaking ............................................................... 332 Functional English ........................................................................... 333 Useful Language in Some Special Cases ....................................... 352 Some Common Topics ...................................................................... 358 Bibliography .................................................................................... 418 5
How To Be a Good Teacher Teaching is a professional activity, requiring human warmth, tact, sensitivity, resolve and professional detachment. The management of pupils needs to be calm, patient and measured. Your comments should be as positive as possible and finally systematic evaluation is the key to any effective teacher development. A good lesson is fun, includes games, has a varied pace, gives students a sense of achievement, matches the students’ expectations, makes students feel involved, follows methods the students are used to, has a wide range of activities, has clear goals for the students, doesn’t depart from the teacher’s lesson plan. Children especially like playing roles. This is an opportunity when they have to be creative and to enter a world of imagination and fantasy — a world of their own. How good are you at organizing your time at work? Punctuality 1. Do you allow enough time to: (a) work (b) your lesson. 2. Do you keep breaks to the right length? 3. Do your lessons usually last the right length of time? Lesson Time 4. When do you plan your lessons? 5. When do you make any materials for your lessons? 6. Do you always check beforehand that machinery for your lesson is working? 7. When do you get together your books, etc. for your next lesson? 8. Do you find the correct place on a cassette / video before the lesson? 9. How quickly do you usually return your students’ homework? 6
Improving Classroom Management (a) make your classroom look attractive. (b) show videos. (c) arrange furniture in the way you need. (d) move around the room a lot. (e) decide where pupils should sit. (f) plan a range of work to suit everyone. (g) vary your activities. (h) repeat all instructions. (i) have quiet times and noisier times. (j) praise rather than punish. (k) be consistent in your behaviour. (l) never threaten. (m) run for help when you need to. (n) evaluate your lessons. The Qualities of a Good Teacher Strictness, willingness to communicate, gentleness, fairness, under- standing, empathy with the student as someone who needs to have things explained, being able to put oneself in the same position as / on the same level as the student, respect, kindness, patience, tolerance, personality, a basic teaching knowledge, being able to help students rather than order them, pleasure in contact with others, sociability. Be patient, empathise with your students, be sociable, enjoy teaching, help your students, be tolerant. Good teachers care more about their students’ learning than they do about their own teaching. They use variety within a secure setting and need to walk a fine line between predictability and surprise, without lurching into either monotony or anarchy. A Teacher’s Character The most important traits for a teacher: dynamism, thoughtfulness, care for people, sense of humour, love of performing, generosity, tough- ness, intelligence, determination, enthusiasm, patience, calmness, flexi- bility, sensitivity, imagination. 7
Classroom Speaking Agreement: Right; Absolutely; Exactly; That’s it. Disagreement: I doubt it; That’s very unlikely; That’s just not the case; I don’t agree. Classroom instructions: OK, now this time we’re going to listen (to) the excerpt again but in greater detail; I want you to complete the summary of the excerpt as you listen. OK? That’s right, fill in the blanks in this passage; Now before you listen again, could (would, can) you read the summary to make sure (certain) you understand it and to know what are you listening for? If there are any words you don’t understand, just ask me. Hesitation: Now, let me think. Correcting yourself / rephrasing: I mean...; Sorry what I meant to say...was; What I mean is...; How can I put it? Or rather... . Stopping interruptions: Hold on; Just a minute; I just wanted to add. Classroom instructions: Introducing a conversation lesson Right, now today we’re going to do something (very quite) different from anything we’ve done before; It’s a kind of conversation (practice / activity). OK? Now I’m going to ask you to (get / split / divide) into 8
groups of six and I’m going to give each group a cassette recorder. Right, now, in your groups you’re going to (have / hold) a conversation and you are going to record what you say. OK? Now while (as) you’re talking I’ll be here, walking around, and if there’s anything you (want, need) to ask me, like how to say this or that, you just call me and I’ll come and help; Now what are you going to talk about?; I’d like to choose a topic from... Interest: Really? Did you? Were you? Right. Sympathy: I can imagine; How awful; That sounds dreadful; Oh, dear. That must have been horrible. Admiration: How amazing!; That must have been really exciting; That sounds wonderful. Classroom instructions: Introducing a reading activity Right, now we’re going to move (on) to something different; We’re going to read a passage in which a teacher talks about his experience as a teacher. Now the first time you read it, I’d like you to read it fairly quickly and don’t pay attention to the details of the passage or worry about any words you don’t understand — we’ll come back to them later.; OK? Right, now, I just want you to read it (through) quickly and answer the question. I’ll write it on the board. OK. Are you clear about what are you’re going to do? Could someone explain (to) us, please. OK, fine, thanks, yes, that’s right. Now the passage starts on page 22. So, could you find it, please? Everybody, OK? Can you start reading? Special ways of changing the subject: Anyway; Sorry, but; By the way...; I’d just like to say something else...; That reminds me of ...; Another point; Besides that... 9
Classroom instructions: Introducing a writing activity OK, now I’d like you, (us) to move on to (do, doing) some writing. What I’d like you to do is to write a review of a course book you know well. And I’d like you to imagine that your partners are the people you’re writing the review (for). Because after you’ve written your reviews I’d like you to (stick, put) them up on the wall somewhere where everyone can read them, so you’ll be able to (get, have) an idea about what some course books are like. OK? Is that (OK, clear) all right? You are going to write a review of a course book and (afterwards, then) display it on the wall where everyone else will be able to read it. If you want to, you can (refer, go) back to the questionnaire on pages 31 and 32 for ideas. Classroom instructions: Preparing for a speaking activity OK, can you stop what you’re doing? Right, we’re going to go (on) to something else, some speaking practice. Can you look at Section 5, Activity 1 on page 41 (in, of) your books? Got it? Now in that activity, there are ten statements. Wait a minute; Hold on a minute. If you agree with the statements, I want (you) to tick them. If you don’t agree, what do you think you should do? Yes, that’s right, put a cross next to them. OK, so do you understand what you’ve got to do? Read the statements and tick the ones you agree with. OK, off you go. Bringing people into a conversation, inviting people to give their opinion What / How about you, Maria? What do you think? Would you agree with that? What’s your opinion, Maria? Would you go along with that? How does that strike you? How does that sound? Classroom instructions: Giving instructions for homework Right, I’d like to give you some homework. We’ve done a lot of listening and speaking today but we haven’t done much reading, so I’d like you to do some reading. It’s the texts and tasks on pages 48 and 49 of your books. Can you look at them now? Just read the exercises through to make sure you know what you have to do. OK? Now for Activity 1 just write a very short answer; for Activity 2 just write the feeling against / next to / beside the number of the text and for Activity 3 write me a 10