I£®Brief Statements Based on the Unit
This unit mainly talks about deadly diseases and attitudes towards AIDS£¬cancers£¬
etc£®A11 the activities£¬including Warming up£¬Listening£¬speaking£¬reading and writing£¬center on this topic£®Through this topic£¬the students not only get more information about diseases£¬but also learn how to keep a right and positive attitude towards diseases and people with diseases£®
In addition£¬the students can 1earn some useful language points through the materials provided in each part£¬especially a lot of words and phrases£¬which are very helpful for the students to build up vocabulary about diseases£®The Grammar--the Subjunctive Mood is also important£®The given materials and exercises give the students an opportunity to learn grammar by using it£®It helps the students learn to talk about things t}lat are not certain to happen as well as imaginary or unreal events and situations£®
All of the activities are helpful for the students to improve their knowledge about 1anguage and their skills to use language£®
¢ò£®Teaching Goals
1.Talk about deadly diseases and attitudes towards AIDS£¬cancers£¬etc£®
2.Practise talking about imaginary situations£®
3.Practise supporting and challenging an opinion£®
4.Learn to use the Subjunctive M00d(1)£ºlf 1 were you£¬¡I Wish I could¡
5.Write a personal narrative£®
¢ó£®Teaching Time£ºFour periods
¢ô£®Background Information
1£®Health Officials Struggle to Understand SARS Sever acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) has terrified the world£®The question on everybody¡¯s mind is whether SARS will become a global epidemic£®
Researchers worldwide have galvanized to combat SARS£®The challenge for public
health is to determine the nature and potential of any viral threat and to frame a battle plan£®
¡°We are in an evolutionary stage of this epidemic£¬¡±said Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Bethesda£¬Maryland. ¡°It could plateau£¬go up and down£¬disappear of explode£®This virus is highly virulent£¬potentially lethal and highly transmissible--it has the potential to cause a really bad epidemic£®¡±
A Deadly Combination
SARS is a so-called hybrid virus-the kind that always triggers a red alert£®Traditionally a virus affects a single species£®But sometimes two viruses combine their genetic material and form a new virus that¡° jumps¡± to another species altogether£®
Hybrids are dangerous because the body has never encountered them before£¬and the immune system is unprepared£®
¡°From studying the sequence we see that the SARS virus is derived from a mouse coronavirus and an avian coronavirus£¬¡±said Michael Lai£¬a pioneer in coronavirus genetics at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles£®
If the virus exists in a wild widespread host--like the West Nile virus carried by mosquitoes-then SARS could be a perennia11y recurring problem, according to Lai£®
If the host is a domestic animalÒ»like the chicken responsible for the Avian F1u virus of 1997--then the source of the virus could be eliminated£®The Avian Flu effectively stopped after the Hong Kong government ordered the slaughter of chickens in the area£®
Lai suspects that the SARS virus lurks in a wild animals. ¡°It probably doesn¡¯t bother domestic animals or we would have come across it before£¬¡±he said£®
1f people are the only carriers of SARS£¬¡°honest reporting of SARS cases and stringent quarantines could stop the virus in its tracks ,¡±Lai said£®
Knowing a Virus£¬Predicting an Epidemic
¡°Making a vaccine could be quite straightforward£¬if it is needed¡£¡±Lai said£®
Vaccines already exist for swine and chicken coronaviruses. But it isn¡¯t easy to gauge whether SARS£¬or any virus£®can trigger an epidemic£®
¡°We¡¯ve been working with influenza for over 50 years and it can sti1l evade our best attempts£®¡±
¡°In many cases of the influenza virus we don¡¯t understand the molecular properties that cause high mortality£¬¡±said Nancy Cox£¬ chief of the influenza branch at the CDC£®
¡°Outbreaks are like wildfires£¬¡±Morse said£®¡°Some fires smolder and are easily extinguished£®Others rage out of control£¬destroying everything in their path£®The WHO and the CDC are like the fire department and they need to investigate all outbreaks because you never know which way they could go£®¡±
Morse points out our long history with influenza£®SARS is only a few months old£®
Tracking and containing viruses£¬and predicting what they will do£¬Morse said£¬¡°It is as much an evolving science as an evolving art£®¡±
2£®Fight Continues Against HIV£¯AIDS
A picture£¬a calendar or even a balloon may be the best way for millions of people living in China¡¯s vast country areas to learn about AIDS£¬one of the biggest threats to public health in the world today£®
China has decided to use user-friendly methods including exhibitions, VCDs and TV programmes to spread knowledge of the disease across the nation to try to keep it in check£®
Educating people nationwide about AIDS is the top priority(ƒž(y¨u)ÏÈ™à(qu¨¢n))to prevent
the disease from getting out of hand£®The farmers wil1 be given knowledge in the easiest way that they can understand£®
A recent survey from the commission(Õ{(di¨¤o)²éˆF(tu¨¢n))of more than 7 OOO people in China
showed that nearly 20 percent of them had never heard of AIDS before£®Just over 71 percent said they knew AIDS was highly infectious(‚÷ȾµÄ),but most of them had no clear idea of how the disease could be spread£®Just over 62 percent said they knew they could do things in advance to prevent them catching AIDS but they didn¡¯t know what these measures were£®
The month-long survey£¬carried out last December£¬talked to people in seven counties and cities across China including both developed coastal areas and the less-developed in-land areas£®The interviewees changed from 15 to 49 years old£¬and country residents were about 63£¥ of the total surveyed£®
Chinese residents£¬especially those in the country£¬have very little knowledge about what AIDS is all about£¬not to mention prevention and treatment£®By the end of last year, there were 22 517 known HIV£¯AIDS cases in China£®However£¬more than 6000000 people in China have been infected£®
Since 1985£¬China has discovered 880 patients with AIDSÒ»466 of them have died£®
Sharing needles£¬prostitution(ÙuÒù)and contaminated blood transfusions are major ways for HIV to spread£®A lack of education has been the biggest difficulty against nationwide efforts to prevent AIDS£¬especially in the countryside£®
The First Period
Teaching Aims£º
1£®Learn and master the following£º
(1)Words£ºvirus£¬via£¬mosquito£¬prevention, persuade
(2)Everyday English£º
a£®Supporting an opinion
I think that¡£¬because¡
First£®¡
One reason is that¡
For example£¬¡
If we£¯they were to¡£®we£¯they could¡
b£®Challenging an opinion
Perhaps£®but what if£¯about¡?
Have you thought about¡?
What makes you think that¡?
could you please explain¡?
If 1 were you, 1 would¡
2£®Train the students¡¯ skill to use language£®
Teaching Important P0ints£º
1£®Master the use of the following words and phrases£ºvia£¬persuade£¬try to persuade
2£®Train the students¡¯ listening and speaking abilities£®
Teaching Difficult P0ints£º
1£®How to help the students understand the listening material exactly£®
2£®How to help the students finish the task of speaking£®
Teaching Methods£º
1£®A quiz to check the students¡¯ knowledge about AIDS£®
2£®Listening-and-answering activity to check the students¡¯ understanding of the listening material.
3£®Oral practice to train the students¡¯ speaking ability£®
4£®Individual£¬pair or group work to make every student work in class£®
Teaching Aids£º
1£®a(ch¨£n) tape recorder
2£®a(ch¨£n) projector
3£®the blackboard
Teaching Procedures£º
Step I Greetings and Lead-in
T£ºGood morning£¯afternoon, everyone.
Ss£ºGood morning£¯afternoon, teacher,
T£ºSit down£¬please£®We often see programmes on TV and read stories in newspapers and magazines about persons who fight against diseases£®What do you think of them?
Ss£ºThey are unlucky but great£®
T£ºWho do you think so? Li Ying£¬give us your opinion£®
S£ºThey are unlucky because the life is hard for them with diseases£®a(ch¨£n)nd they may die earlier if they get some serious or even deadly disease£®They are great because they have courage to fight against the diseases and sti11 try to make their life meaningfu1£®
T£ºVery good speech£®Sit down£¬please. How many kinds of deadly diseases do you know?
Ss£ºAIDS£¬cancers¡
T£ºYes£®AIDS and cancers are two kinds of serious diseases£®Today£¬we are going to 1earn Unit 7 Living with disease£®
(Bb£ºUnit 7 Living with disease)This unit will help us know more about diseases and people living with disease£®First£¬let¡¯s learn some new words in the first period£®Look at the screen£®
(Teacher shows the screen and then deals with the new words£®)
¡÷deadly£¯¡ädedlI £¯ adj£®
¡÷infect£¯In¡äfekt£¯vt£®
¡÷transmit/traenz¡ämIt/ vt£®
¡÷route£¯ru:t£¯n.
¡÷donation£¯d u¡äneI n£¯n.
prevention£¯prI¡även n£¯n.
¡÷cocaine£¯k u¡äkeIn£¯n.
¡÷imaginary£¯I¡ämaed3InßrI£¯adj.
virus£¯¡ävaI r s£¯n.
via£¯¡ävaI £¯prep£®
mosquito£¯m s¡äki£ºt u£¯n£®
¡÷stacy£¯¡ästeIsI /
persuade£¯p ¡äsweId£¯ vt.
¡÷heroin£¯her uIn£¯n.
(Bb£ºvia£¬persuade£¯try to persuade)
Step II Warming up
T£ºAs we a11 know£¬AIDS is a kind of deadly disease£®The government has paid special attention to its prevention and treatment£®And some ways to spread the knowledge about AIDS have been used across the country£®How much do you know about AIDS? Now£¬open your books on Page 49. Here is an AIDS Quiz for you to check your knowledge about AIDS£®First finish it individually¡£Then I¡¯ll provide the right answers for you£®You can begin now£®
(A few minutes later£¬teacher shows the following on the screen and checks
the answers with the whole class£®)
AIDS QUIZ
Decide which of these statements are true and which are false£®Tick the
correct box£®
True False
1.Only bad people get AIDS. ¡õ ¡õ¡Ì
2.I can become infected with HIV by swimming in a pool£¬sitting in a bath£¬ holding hands or kissing someone with HIV ¡õ ¡õ¡Ì
3.In 2002£¬there were 42 million people living with AIDS in the world£®¡õ ¡õ¡Ì
4.People who have not infected drugs do not need to get tested for HIV£®
¡õ ¡õ¡Ì
5.1f I had HIV£¬I would know because I would feel sick£® ¡õ ¡õ¡Ì
6.HIV / AIDS is incurable£® ¡õ¡Ì ¡õ
7.People who have H1V look different from everyone else. ¡õ ¡õ¡Ì
8.It is safe to be friends with people who are living with A1DS£®¡õ ¡õ¡Ì
T£ºWel1£¬now look at the pictures below the AIDS QUIZ£®What information do they tell us about AIDS? Liu Yang, you try£¬please£®
S£ºThe pictures tell US that the AIDS can- not be transmitted via the following
routes£»cups£¬glasses£¬toilet seat£¬swimming poo1s, mosquitoes or blood donation£®
T£ºHow do you know about that?
S£ºThat has been shown by medical studies£®
T£ºWell done£®Thank you£®Sit down, please£®
Step ¢ó Listening
T£ºNext£¬1et¡¯s come to the listening part£®The listening material will tell us
about a disease detective at the Centre for Disease control and Prevention£®Now£¬please turn to Page 50£®Let¡¯s 1ook at the instruction and the questions in Part 1 first£®Then I'll play the tape£®At the end£¬I¡¯ll ask some of you to answer the questions and we¡¯ll check them together£®Are you clear about that?
Ss£ºYes£®
(Teacher goes through the instruction and questions first£®Then play the tape£®Finally check the answers£®After that, teacher asks the students to do
Part 2£®)
T£ºWell£¬now please listen to the tape once again and take some notes of what you hear£®Then use your notes to tell your partner about how stacy works£¬how she feels about her job£¬and what advice she gives. Are you clear about that ?
Ss£ºYes¡£
T£ºAnd if you were a disease detective. What would you do to learn more about a new disease ? Talk about it with your partner at the end£®Do you remember?
Ss£ºYes£®
T£ºOK£®Now, please listen carefully£®Remember to take notes£®
(The students listen and make notes first. Then talk about the questions with their partners£®At the end£¬teacher may asks some students to report for the rest of the class£®)
(Bb£ºa disease detective£®the Centre for Disease control and Prevention£®)
Step ¢ô Speaking
T£ºAt the beginning of the class£¬we talked about some deadly diseases, and we also had a quiz on AIDS£®We know AIDS is not only one of the deadly diseases but also a most serious social problem today£®Could you please explain why? Guo Li£¬you try, please£®
S£ºOne reason is that it is incurable£¬another is that people know little about health care, prevention and education£®
T£ºWell done£®Besides AIDS there are some other most serious social problems such as drugs£¬smoking and drinking£®Which do you think is the most serious one? Now let¡¯s come to the speaking part£®Choose one of the problems listed below or think of an- other serious problem£®Prepare a role card on which you write down reasons why you think your problem is the most serious£®Use the role card in the group discussion and try to persuade the other group members that your problem is the most serious one£®Are you clear?
Ss£ºYes£®
T£ºAnd I'll show you some useful expressions on the screen to help you with your discussion£®
(Teacher shows the screen£®)
Supporting an opinion
I think that¡£¬because¡
First¡
One reason is that¡
For example£¬¡
If we£¯they were to¡, we£¯they could¡
Challenging an opinion
Perhaps£¬but what if£¯about¡?
Have you thought about¡?
What makes you think that¡?
Could you please explain¡?
If I were you, I would¡
(Teacher and the students go through the expressions together. Then the students begin to discuss in groups£®At last£®Teacher may ask some students to report for the rest of the class£®)
Step V Summary and Homework
T£ºYou all did very well in this class£®Now let¡¯s look at what we¡¯ve done in this period£®First£¬we¡¯ve had a quiz to check your knowledge about AIDS£¬which helps us know more about AIDS£®Second£¬we¡¯ve listened to the tape about a disease detective at the Center for Disease Control and Prevention£¬which helps us get some knowledge about disease detectives and their work. Third£¬we¡¯ve discussed what is the most serious problem today£®This not only makes us care more about social problems£¬but also train our speaking ability£®What¡¯s more£¬we¡¯ve learnt some useful words and phrases£®After class, please practise more and prepare for the next period£®So much for today. Class is over£®See you tomorrow£®
Ss£ºSee you tomorrow£®
Step ¢ö The Design of the Writing on the Blackboard
Unit 7 Living with disease The First Period
1. via
e. g. We can send him a note via the internal mail system£®
2£®persuade sb£®to do sth£®£»try to persuade sb£®to do sth£®
e£®g. The salesman persuaded us to buy his product£®
He tried to persuade him to change his mind£®
Step ¢÷ Record after Teaching