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Author Topic: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor  (Read 5828 times)

Offline sheila

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Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« on: February 08, 2013, 03:16:10 PM »
This is a thread for any lesson material for J.L. Haas (2009 edition) Middle School English 1 Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor.  Please share your contributions here. Be sure to explain exactly what you are posting and please do not post multi-level materials in this thread. Also, any review lessons or materials should be posted in the review section for this grade. If you can't find what you're looking for here, be sure to check the previous edition of the book.  Best of luck in your lesson planning!
Hard work beats talent when talent doesn't work hard!
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Offline writerkho

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #1 on: August 12, 2013, 01:53:43 PM »
This is a lot like Grade 3's Lesson 6, Helping Hands. I have no games for this one.

Hope it helps.

Offline Mattaru

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #2 on: September 11, 2013, 06:50:32 PM »
for the first lesson, my at the doctor's lesson fits in perfectly, so i'm going to use that
next week, i'll grab a suggestion/advice PPT and use that.
My first day I watched a few lessons and had my first class which was a Grade 2 class or something like that. I thought every things was great until a kid ddong-chimmed me. 

Offline srweigel

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #3 on: October 31, 2013, 12:33:13 PM »
Here's a Pokemon review game for lesson 8. Questions adapted from the teacher's book.

Offline Teacherwalters

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #4 on: November 04, 2013, 12:24:24 AM »
If I cannot download, then I will have to upload this file for beginning unit 8.

Offline Warra

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #5 on: November 07, 2013, 02:49:04 PM »
Here is my PPT with two lessons worth plus a document containing a lesson plan for each lesson in the PPT.
I modified writerkho's PPT to make it suitable for lower level and added textbook activities. Thanks writerkho!
Hope it helps!
« Last Edit: November 07, 2013, 02:51:10 PM by Warra »

Offline chelsea.vaneck

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #6 on: October 17, 2014, 12:55:11 PM »
Part 2: Advice

I am doing two activities. The first one is "What is the problem?" In groups of 4, students read the sentences out loud. They have to guess what the problem is and write it down. This is reviewing part 1 of the lesson as well as helping them think about other problems that one needs advice for.

The second activity is "Ask the Doctor." Within partners, the students must take turns to ask for advice from her/his doctor (the partner). Students have to change the sentence on their paper from "You have..." to "I have.." when speaking. Then the student needs to write down the advice from their doctor.

Both activities are on the one attachment, front and back.

Offline IanTedstone

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #7 on: October 22, 2014, 04:44:23 PM »
Hello,

References: Giving advice, offering advice, advising, You should, medical problems

Hello. I have attached 2 games. The first follows on from Writerkho's Gr 1 lesson 08 ask the animal doctor powerpoint. Thanks again, that's the second time in as many chapters. I am reposting it though because I added a few slides that are directly relevant to the shuffle cups game that follows. Standard bomb game but they love it, you'll see why. I understand the pitfalls of bomb games but I find them most successful at keeping the majority of the class on task.

Next, I have attached a game that only really deals with 'you should' and lasts the whole lesson. I have attached the sort of questions I would ask as well. It is a 3 kingdoms game that I altered. I made the stars real cities rather than numbers and tried to make it more geographically realistic. 3 teams, each has a capital (Pyongyang, Ulsan, Gwangju). I would say something like 'my friend wants to go France from England, how should he get there?' Each team would then one after another tell me 'He should go by car' or 'He should go by boat' etc. The first team to take (what I considered) too long I would eliminate. Then the other 2 keep going until I have a winner. The winner attacks a town, 2nd cant be attacked (i dont always play the second rule). Now, it is definitely a fluid lesson and can get out of hand and they can get quite annoyed with your decisions. For instance, they may say a musical instrument I have never heard of and therefore I don't allow. They tend to take it easier when they see it's not only them suffering from your lack of asian instrument knowledge. However, I would say its worthwhile as I had kids speaking English that never usually talk. The only problem I found was that there wasn't really time for a team to take most of the country (I only once had a team eliminated). However, if there is less focus on speaking (maybe first to write a correct answer) or you are more militant with their hesitation, it may work better. Either way, they loved it and it was definitely successful.

Regards,

Ian
« Last Edit: October 22, 2014, 04:51:10 PM by IanTedstone »

Offline noahsaunders123

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #8 on: October 24, 2014, 04:14:26 PM »
Part 2 of my Ask the Animal Doctor unit. Used this for my open class. This lesson was scrutinized heavily by my very experienced coteacher (went through several different drafts). My gift to you. (Note: we used group white boards for the warmup and practice activity, but that can easily be replicated with paper). For the practice section: presented the picture and asked the students to identify a problem and solution, went around and corrected the students as they were working, then made a few groups read their answers out loud before moving on to the next one. This lesson went very well.

Offline noahsaunders123

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #9 on: October 24, 2014, 04:17:29 PM »
My attachments from above.

Offline noahsaunders123

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #10 on: October 24, 2014, 04:19:50 PM »
Part 1 didn't post for some reason. Worked very well.

Offline Carl Weathers

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #11 on: November 07, 2014, 10:24:14 AM »
This is a bit late but hopefully someone can use it next year. This is for the first part of chapter 8 (page 124) about health. I made a short PPT, a worksheet, and a game and the students seemed to enjoy it, even the lower levels.

I started with a picture of Kung-fu panda that they labeled with body parts. After that we talked about what we say when each body part hurts (this was all review). Then we did book activities A and B quickly and reviewed some new vocabulary and they finished the worksheet. There are two games that I tried out. The more successful one was using the Healthflashcard doc. It was basically a class memory game where students had to remember the order of the cards on the board, then everyone stood up and shouted out which illness was behind each card. If they were wrong, they sat down and the last student standing won. I played this the week before Halloween so I gave a piece of candy to the last one standing which may have increased their motivation...

Offline Carl Weathers

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #12 on: November 07, 2014, 10:35:18 AM »
This is for Listen and Talk 2 (page 125) about giving advice.

We basically reviewed illnesses with the Healthflashcards (in the post above) and then talked about some things you can do when you are sick. After doing the book work the students worked on the worksheet that I found somewhere (sorry, I can't remember where)and edited a bit to fit the target language better. The worksheet requires them to fill-in the illness and then should/shouldn't. We went around the class and each student read an answer. The last part is a hot seat game. I put the class into 3 teams and put 3 seats in the front of the class, facing the students. Each team had one member come up and sit in the hot seat. I would show the teams (not the people in the hot seats) an illness and they would have to start giving advice related to the illness. (e.g. [headache] "You should take medicine." "You should rest." "You should take a warmbath.") until one of the students in the hot seat guessed the illness. Their team would then get a point and new students would come sit in the hot seat. I told the students no miming and no Korean to try to keep them from cheating. They got really competitive and really creative with their advice!

Offline IanTedstone

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #13 on: November 07, 2014, 12:37:00 PM »
Hello,

I made a lesson on the 'When I am hungry, I eat' structure but applied it to 'he, she and they.' I took the jumbled sentences from Noah (thank you) to pad the beginning out a bit, although I skip some of the harder ones for the lower level classes. I split them into teams and whoever got the most sentences went first in the game. The game involves blowing up airplanes, tanks and soldiers. Being an all boys schools they loved it. I said the bullets destroy people, the black rockets destroy tanks and the red and white missiles destroy airplanes. You can make up your own rules. I downloaded a virtual di to my phone though which definitely made it more enjoyable for them. 1 and 2 was a miss, 3 4 5 and 6 were hits. The nuclear symbol gives them 5 shots at anything.

Regards,

Ian

Offline notkatiebolvin

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #14 on: November 17, 2014, 12:19:29 PM »
So this is all based on a review for the chapter near their final exam.

We watched adventure time Story-teller (Jake is sick in this ep) made a comic

Offline LeaKorea

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Kakao Review Game & Worksheet
« Reply #15 on: December 01, 2014, 04:40:41 PM »
Attached is a Kakao Talk review game for chapter 8. The game template and many of the pictures within it are taken from a couple of other waygook PPTs, but I don't remember who to give credit to. Sorry!
One of the questions in the game references the song "What's Wrong With You" by Phats and Small ( ). This is a fun song (dance music) with just a few lyrics that are repeated often, including the phrase "Hey! what's wrong with you?" It sticks in your mind pretty well.

Also attached is a worksheet that I made to teach the different ways to answer the question "What's wrong with you?" I wrote each of the response forms on the board (I feel _____  / I have a ______ / I have to ___ etc.) and then used the "what's_wrong_with_you" PPT to show the ailments. Students took turns completing the phrases on the board and also filled out their worksheets. Some ailments went in multiple categories (i.e. I have a cough / I have to cough / I cough a lot). 

Offline Kingeudey

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #16 on: December 11, 2014, 03:10:05 PM »
Here's a couple review activities for this chapter.

It's is simple, 2 sentences in big font.  I'm going to print them off, cut them up into chunks, and have the students race in teams to put them back together in the correct order.  I am doing the same general activities for G1 lesson 8, 9, and 10 tomorrow as they have their exams on M, T, and W of next week.

Offline lupesengnim

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #17 on: September 14, 2015, 01:27:12 AM »
Hello,

I made a lesson on the 'When I am hungry, I eat' structure but applied it to 'he, she and they.' I took the jumbled sentences from Noah (thank you) to pad the beginning out a bit, although I skip some of the harder ones for the lower level classes. I split them into teams and whoever got the most sentences went first in the game. The game involves blowing up airplanes, tanks and soldiers. Being an all boys schools they loved it. I said the bullets destroy people, the black rockets destroy tanks and the red and white missiles destroy airplanes. You can make up your own rules. I downloaded a virtual di to my phone though which definitely made it more enjoyable for them. 1 and 2 was a miss, 3 4 5 and 6 were hits. The nuclear symbol gives them 5 shots at anything.

Regards,

Ian

Just a heads up, one of the sponge bob pictures for 'when I smell bad, I shower' is watermarked 'spicy vagina tacos'. Try and fly this one over the heads of classes at your own discretion. 

Offline gyeongsandan

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #18 on: September 30, 2015, 01:02:30 PM »
I made a seven page straight-forward hot seat PPT game using the dialogue from p. 127 for the Communication Task section. I listed the URL to the online stopwatch, not smart enough to embed it into the PPT itself using the Korean version of PP.  Directions are on first page.  Team says text in blue, hot seat contestant has to say the red.

Offline shostager

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Re: Lesson 8: Ask the Animal Doctor
« Reply #19 on: October 20, 2015, 05:07:29 PM »
Here's my last lesson for the chapter. Students seem to already know "should" and "shouldn't," so I've been trying to get them used to justifying their suggestions. (For example, they've chosen their favorite animal and said why, then from a list of the top 7 first grade favorites, they've voted for a class animal and said why (not).)

This class continues with the animal theme, and uses "should(n't)" with some reasoning and justification. It may be a little difficult, but I think I've created enough support and hints in the material that the students will be okay.

This Class Contains:
- Brainstorming zoo rules with a group
- Making a class list of zoo rules, justifying them together ("You shouldn't...because...")
- Zoo animal placement suggestions practice (which animal near a heater, in the water)
- Make-a-zoo worksheet (alone or with groups)
- Check answers: show a terrible one that they argue with, then they give an ideal one
- (extra time?) Should(n't) Hotseat: all clues to the sentence must start with "should(n't)"

 

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