Tuesday 1 May 2012

COLOUR THEORY
FILL IN THE GAPS 1
FILL IN THE GAPS 2
FILL IN THE GAPS 3
FILL IN THE GAPS 4
MULTIPLE CHOICE 1
MULTIPLE CHOICE 2

Monday 26 March 2012

ST PATRICK'S DAY ( PREPARED BY 5TH YEAR STUDENTS)

FIRST PART ( 0 – 03:46)
1.       WHAT CENTURY DID HE LIVE IN?
2.       WHEN DID HE DIE?
3.       WHAT DO IRISH CHRISTIANS DO ON ST PATRICK’S DAY?
4.       WHAT DO IRISH PEOPLE EAT?
5.       THE FIRST PARADE WAS IN _______ (WHERE?)  IN ________ (YEAR)
6.       WHAT DO THEY DO IN CHICAGO?
7.       WHAT ST PATRICK’S DAY SYMBOLS CAN YOU REMEMBER?
8.       WHO ARE THE LEPRECHAUNS?
9.       WHAT DO YOU KNOW ABOUT THEM?
10.   WHAT DO PEOPLE DO ON ST PATRICK’S DAY?
SECOND PART (03:50 – 06:16)
PUT THE FOLLOWING EVENTS IN ORDER
1.       THEY SELL HIM AS A SLAVE
2.       TAKES THE SNAKES AWAY FROM IRELAND
3.       SEPARATES THE BELIEVERS FROM NON BELIEVERS
4.       HE BECOMES A SHEPHERD AND LOOKS AFTER PIGS AND SHEEP
5.       LIVES IN FRANCE WITH HIS PARENTS
6.       TEACHES TO ALL THE PEOPLE OF IRELAND ABOUT GOD
7.       HE DREAMS THE PEOPLE IN FRANCE CALL HIM
8.       PIRATES KIDNAP HIIM
9.       HAS A SECOND DREAM: THE PEOPLE OF IRELAND NEED HIM
10.   THEY TAKE HIM TO IRELAND
11.   HE GOES TO FRANCE AND BECOMES A PRIEST, THEN A BISHOP 

Saturday 10 March 2012

ST PATRICK'S DAY VIDEO

After the death of winter, St Patrick’s Day is a welcome sign of spring, a day for wearing green for the Irish and non-Irish alike. It is the celebration of the Emerald Isle’s patron saint. But now it’s time to separate St Patrick facts from the blarney.
The story of St Patrick’s Day goes back to 5th century Britain where a sixteen-year-old boy, Maewyn Succat, was kidnapped by Irish marauders. He remained a shepherd slave in Ireland for six years until a vision directed him to escape. Back home in Britain, Succat had another vision beckoning him to help the people of Ireland so he took his vows as a priest, adopted the Christian name Patrick and in 432 AD returned to Ireland on a mission.
In his autobiography The Confessio, Patrick wrote about converting the Irish to Christianity while building schools and monasteries along Ireland’s North and West coasts. One popular myth has Patrick driving away the snakes out of Ireland. The truth is there were never snakes on the island. This is probably a metaphor for Patrick’s cleansing the island of paganism. Another myth has Patrick using the shamrock to teach the Holy Trinity. This legend is possible but Patrick never wrote about it.
So why does the holiday fall on March 17? Supposedly, it is the day Patrick died in 461 AD. Since then Irish Christians have marked the anniversary as a holiday. Beginning in the Middle Ages, Irish Catholics would close shop and attend church to honour the feast of St Patrick and it was time to celebrate.
St Patrick’s Day falls within Lent, the season before Easter when Catholics give up their vices as penance. The feast of St Patrick was a one-day reprieve when Irish men could down a pint or two of ale. This custom really took off.
 The first St Patrick’s Day in colonial America occurred in Boston in 1737 with the parade organized by the Charitable Irish Society. New York City followed in 1762. Today New York’s Fifth Avenue parade is America’s most famous, largest and rowdiest St Paddy’s Day tradition. During the 1840s, when Ireland was starving from the potato famine, millions were forced to leave. The mass migrations sent the Irish to Canada, Australia and America. As the Irish settled in their new countries they brought along all customs and invented a few more. In the United States it became customary to wear green on St Patrick’s Day. Towards the end of the 19th century, the smell of corn beef wafted from Irish American neighbourhood. The traditional Irish meal was boiled bacon and potatoes. But in the States, immigrants could find a cheap piece of beef, tenderized it with brine and smoke cooked it with cabbage. The dish remains a delicious Paddy’s Day tradition.
As the Irish in America gained influence in politics and culture, their exclusive holiday became a nationally recognized celebration and it all began over 500 years ago when a boy was torn from his family. Little could he know that his life would inspire parades, fashion and yes, the hoisting of a few pints to toast this special day. 

Friday 9 March 2012

Sunday 12 February 2012

PLACES IN TOWN: LINKS TO EXERCISES

Places in town 1 (match the places and the pictures)
Places in town 2 (match the places and the activity)
Places in town 3 (write the name of the places)
Places in town 4 (write the name of the places)

DAILY ROUTINES: VOCABULARY EXERCISES


Daily routines  1 (match the verbs and nouns)
Daily routines  2 (match the pictures and the activity)
Daily routines  3 (type the activity)