Mini project

Transcription

Mini project
1
2
Elementary,
Head
my dear…
Our pro
ject
Pour réussir notre projet, nous allons...
Dans cette unité, je vais...
Utiliser :
Utiliser :
find:
lass,
tos and
o
h
p
e
s
nifying g e,
e
g
h
a
t
t
m
a
a
,
k
e
p
1 Loo
police ta
d messag
t, a code castle, a str ip of
in
r
p
r
e
g
• aafikney, a crop circle,vae, a walking stick
ipe, a glo
a hat, a p
de?
ck the co
a
r
c
u
o
y
2 Can
Rédig
ar ticle d er un
e jour
un fait d nal sur
ivers
Leprésent
prétéritsimple
simpleet le présent en be + V-ing
Le
Be
prétérit
Le au
prétérit
en be + V-ing
There was/wasn’t et There were/weren’t
Les relatives avec who, which, when et where
Le lexique des métiers et de la personnalité
Lesexpressions
question tags
Des
idiomatiques pour parler du caractèr
Le lexique du suspense et des enquêtes policières
Découvrir :
Quelques expressions sur le monde des gendarmes
Des personnalités du monde anglophone
et des voleurs
Découvrir :
Conan Doyle et son héros, Sherlock Holmes
n court film de fiction sur une enquête menée
U
par des élèves
Mini
MiniProjects
projects
Lesson 1
Interviewer
Raconter
uneune
histoire
personne
à suspense.
célèbre.
Lesson 2
Rédiger
biographie
Faire
un la
rapport
sur und’un
vol.Prix Nobel féminin.
t
Our Projec
n candidat
u
r
e
t
n
e
s
é
r
P
of
aux Person
ards
the Year Aw
Unit
2
Lesson
1
➜ Je vais raconter une histoire à suspense
Lesson
The truth is out there
now…?
Did you k
right
old volcano
e name of an
th
otland.
is
Sc
at
of
l
Se
ta
s
pi
hur'
rgh, the ca
bu
** Art
in
of
Ed
of
re
the location
in the cent
r's seat was
ng
hu
Ki
rt
A
of
ve
ce
Many belie
ur t and pala
gendar y co
le
e.
e
bl
th
Ta
,
d
ot
Camel
of the Roun
his Knights
is
Arthur and
n Scotland
us in easter
ng
A
as
ar
w
ne
ho
le
mis Cast
re child w
** Gla
d by a vampi
te
e.
di
un
to
ha
ft
ly
le
apparent
amber and
in a br ick ch
impr isoned
SUSPECT Nº2
4:12
4
Mike imperioli
SUSPECT Nº3
anatoli kir
ilenko
pale, sk
inny,
blond ha
ir
now...?
ther.emdl
.
ge
s•
xe
ic e s
tif
•E
rc
a
inter
greatest
one of the
5 – 1851) is
77
n as
(1
ow
er
kn
rn
e
iam Tu
. He becam
** Will
ape painters
he
sc
ay
nd
w
la
e
sh
th
Briti
cause of
r of light' be
es
'the painte
his landscap
in
s
ur
nt colo
used br illia
pes.
and seasca
10 CLASSE
05 ÉLÈVE
La musique de l’anglais
fr
to
Listen to the detective
cross-examining the suspects.
Were you right? ➜ WB p24
09 CLASSE
c
A. Listen and say if the voice goes up
Clues:
nd the
Laura was looking arou
ibi?
library at 10pm — al
or down at the end of the sentences.
1. You were at the party, weren't you?
2. He can swim, can't he?
3. They don't like paintings, do they?
B. Listen and repeat. ➜ WB p37
28 • twenty-eight
What about you? Do you know other mysteries like the one in the video?
- According to the legend, there is a castle near Nantes where Gilles de Rais,
or Barbe-bleue, a Breton knight, killed...
5 Choose at least one element in each card to create a story. Use relative pronouns
(who, which, when, where) and your imagination! ➜ WB p26
One day, a teenager found an old book…
Did you k
2
2
Make your own hypotheses about the story. ➜ WB p25
Turner. Read the detective's notes and find out more about the events. ➜ WB p24
tanned, well-built,
tattoo on his back
Unit
3 Watch this video about amateur detectives and a very mysterious monster.
1 Yesterday, during a party in a house in Chelsea (London), someone stole a painting by
—The room where the painting was kept is on
the second floor.
— All the suspects were at the party.
— Mike Imperioli has a criminal record.
— Laura Jones was taking a look at the books
in the library when the robbery took place.
— The suspect who has a criminal record thought
the painting was a fake.
— Anatoli Kirilenko says he was talking
on the phone in the dining room when
the robbery took place.
SUSPECT Nº1
— Laura Jones is an amateur painter.
— Mike says he was swimming in the pool
at 10 pm.
— The amateur painter
was wearing gloves.
— The only part of the house which was closed
Laura Jones
was the dining room.
red hair, blue hat,
medium height, slender
— The robbery took place at 10 pm.
1
Characters
a teenager
a thief
a policeman
a dog
a butler
Event
to fall in love
to quarrel
to steal
to run away
to fight
Object
an old book
a bicycle
a ring
a walking stick
a treasure
Mini project
socle
C2
Place
a prison
a forest
a city
a castle
a beach
The end
?
• Rendre compte de faits
• Écrire un court récit, une description
• Pouvoir décrire un événement, une
expérience personnelle ou imaginée
Tell a mystery story
1.
11 CLASSE
06 ÉLÈVE
The Dawson family spent a week in a
mysterious house. Listen to the sounds and take notes
of what happened.
2. I n pairs, relate the story using
some of these words: a nightmare,
a storm, stairs, boots, an animal,
a candle, a clue, a glove, a vehicle…
Grammar
✶ Les relatives en
who, which, when
et where et les question tags p127 et 128
➜ wb p27
twenty-nine • 29
Unit
2
Lesson
2
➜ Je vais lire un article de presse
➜ Je vais écrire un témoignage pour une enquête policière
Lesson
Listen to a radio phone-in programme. Which three
types of crime are the callers talking about? ➜ WB p29
the North west weekly
INCREDIBLE BUT TRUE!
SHOPLIFTING
HIJACKING
Each week here at The North West Weekly we
choose one of our readers’ best stories about
something real but amazing that happened to
him or her. This week’s story is from Jennifer
Dos Santos, now living in Santa Fe, who tells
us about the mysterious Dan Cooper.
THEFT
I’ll never forget that journey. It was a cold November day in 1971 and I was flying from Portland to Seattle to visit my family. I was reading
a magazine on the plane, so I didn’t speak to the
businessman next to me. But I remember him
very clearly. He was wearing a smart suit and
dark sunglasses and he wasn’t acting strangely
or doing anything unusual at all.
HACKING
VANDALISM
MUGGING
2 Now match the news headlines
with the types of crime above.
➜ WB p30
30 • thirty
- I think some accomplices were probably waiting for him…
- Or maybe he…
- Once I was shopping in the
supermarket when I saw a man
who looked suspicious…
socle
C2
• Écrire un message simple
• Respecter des consignes
• Mobiliser le lexique et les formes verbales
adéquates pour produire un écrit adapté
Write a witness statement
ther.emdl
.
ge
s•
Nouns
a victim
a witness
a pickpocket /ˈpɪkpɒkɪt/
a shoplifter /ˈʃɒplɪftə/
a vandal
a hijacker
Mini project
rc
Verbs
ic e s t erac
in
to be missing
to witness
to vandalize /ˈvændəlaɪz/
to catch (caught, caught)
to steal (stole, stolen) /stiːl/
to snatch
tif
Vocabulary
13 CLASSE
07 ÉLÈVE
xe
e
he ad ph on es
ne w ta rg et of
s
br ig ht on th ug
Discuss it in pairs.
been the victim or the witness of a
crime? When? Where? What happened?
What were you doing?
•E
d
now...?
Did you k
6 What do you think happened to Dan Cooper?
What about you? Have you ever
fr
Neighbours complain
about graffiti
in shopping centre
What happened next? Nobody knows… Dan
Cooper just disappeared into thin air!
headline. Which one is it? Write the
missing headline. ➜ WB p30
to
c
Pickpockets steal items from
more than 1,000 tourists this summer
I only learnt the truth the next day when I read
the headlines in the newspaper. In fact, the
plane didn’t stay in Seattle but it flew down to
Mexico. Apparently the man in the suit – Dan
Cooper – was a hijacker! He told the flight
attendant that he had a bomb in his briefcase,
and he demanded $200,000 and four parachutes. When the plane landed in Seattle, the
pilot received the money and the parachutes.
Then the hijacker forced the plane to fly to
Mexico. Suddenly, Dan Cooper put on his parachute and opened the door of the plane. Then he
jumped – with all the money in his briefcase!
es
Orient Airlin
Nor thwest
ue
of
tr
g
a
in
is
ck
e
ja
tl
hi
to Seat
** The
om Portland
,
ed
en
flight 305 fr
happ
year af ter it
stor y. One
ar ted
st
S
U
e
th
airpor ts in
y machines.
to use X-ra
a
b
After an hour, he called the flight attendant. He talked quietly to her and
opened his briefcase, but I didn’t see
what was inside. Next he got up and
followed her to the front of the plane and he
didn’t return to his seat for the rest of the trip.
Anyway, we arrived safely in Seattle, and all
the passengers got off the plane. At least, that is
what we thought happened.
3 There's one crime with no
4
2
imagine the contents of the story. Then read the article and check. ➜ WB p31
12 CLASSE
on
d
n
o
L
o
i
d
a
R
!
Talk about it
Unit
5 Look at this article. Use the headline, the subheadline and the illustrations to
Breaking the law?
1
2
1. You witnessed a theft in your street
last night. The police ask you
to write a witness statement.
2. You have to answer these
questions:
When…? / Where…?
What…? / How…?
3. Imagine how it ended. Did they
escape? Were they arrested?
Grammar
✶ Le prétérit
simple et le
prétérit en be +
V-ing p122
➜ wb p32
thirty-one • 31
2
Unit
Don't get me wrong
Our project
Write a newspaper article
about local news
Caught
red-handed
socle
How to proceed ...
L’expression to be caught red-handed
signifie qu’un coupable a été pris « la main
dans le sac » ou « en flagrant délit », selon le
terme juridique. En anglais, l’expression fait
directement allusion à la couleur du sang.
2. Read the facts that the detective has written down in her notebook
and look at the three pieces of evidence she has found.
3. Reconstruct what happened. Who's the thief?
4. Write a newspaper article telling the story.
to do a runner
b
f
d
➜ WB p34-35
a wolf in sheep's clothing
c
a
5. Don't forget to include a headline, a subheadline and
some quotes.
to set a thief to catch a thief
to cover one's tracks
to let the cat out of the bag
e
tober, at 8
- On Friday, 10 Oc
work (by
o'clock, victim 
of the
on
fr
car, parked in ing) t
company's build
work
- 1 pm victim leaves
 lunch.
d)
Car (Ford Focus, re
Missing!!
= coffee
- 10.30 am victcaimfé, car still
at the corner
there
ty guard
- Company's secuperiop
:
remembers 3 (glelasses,
1. young woman smoker)
long dark hair,
3 Work in pairs: mime a situation illustrating one of these expressions.
32
24 • thirty-two
twenty-four
2. middle-aged manair(suedit)
)
3. teenager (red-hiting his mother
 secretary's son, vis
young woman
- Bartender servedma
ring
and middle-aged n du
morning
ng
- Remembers man (ralleasadindwich +
newspaper) = sm
coffee
the phone
- Woman (talking on
e)
id
ts
ou
while smoking
from
- 11.25 am, workernear
by saw
ion
petrol stat
iver ??
dr
s,
cu
Fo
red Ford
Evidence #3
Cigarette butts
found where the
car was parked
2 Can you find the equivalent expressions in French? ➜ WB p36
The class must guess which one it is!
• Écrire un court article de journal pour relater un événement
• Mobiliser le lexique adéquat, les temps verbaux et utiliser
des connecteurs simples
• Planifier le travail d'écriture à partir de ressources externes
C2
C7
1. You're a journalist working for a local newspaper. A detective is
investigating a car theft and she has sent you the information
for you to write an article about it.
1 Match the pictures below with the expressions.
to have a skeleton in the closet
2
Unit
Evidence #2
Keys found on the
table outside
the café
Evidence #1
Receipt found in
the suspect's pocket
TIPS & Tricks
Tu peux ajouter de
s photos et des
citations pour illu
strer ton ar ticle.
Prends un vrai jou
rn
comment les ar tic al et regarde
les sont
présentés : le tit
re, la
le nombre de colon typographie,
nes…
S
E
M
I
LY T
T
I
A
D
HE
n
e
l
o
t
e S light
l
c
i
h
Ve ad Day corner café
e
in Broing a coffee atptehared
v
was ha his car disap
tigati
n
a
m
inves
A
s
i
n
e
e
v
h
i
w
ct
A dete
r, at 8
ctobe ike
O
h
t
,M
10
rning
iday,
d
On Fr in the mo to work an r,
k
g
a
c
c
n
o
i
l
s
o'c
s go
t hi
the ca
se.
an
derst ”
n
u
t
’
d
“I don happene
t
a
h
w
t case
Unit
2
English mag
English mag
sherlock holmes
A Victorian gentleman
“ When you have excluded
the impossible, whatever
remains, however improbable,
must be the truth.”
rthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930)
was a Scottish writer who created the well-known1
fictional detective Sherlock Holmes.
5
The Sherlock Holmes mystery stories, set2 in Victorian
London, represented the good, the bad, and the ugly of
British society at the time: its hopes, its achievements,
and its deepest fears. Sherlock first appeared in
A Study in Scarlet, published in 1887.
Five years later, The Adventures of
10 Sherlock Holmes was published and it
was a huge3 success – both the readers
and the publishers wanted Arthur
Conan Doyle to write more.
2
S
15
20
A
Unit
herlock Holmes was a complex
and moody character. A pipe smoker and
violin player, he was famous for his ability to
gather5 evidence using his outstanding6 skills
of observation and deduction. His assistant,
Doctor Watson, was always amazed by
Sherlock Holmes who, in the film adaptation,
famously said to him: “Elementary, my dear
Watson!” Holmes was a man of his time who
believed, above all, in the power of reason.
4
FORENSIC SCIENCE
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
had a significant influence
on popularising a scientific
approach to criminal
investigation. Today, there are
a variety of forensic techniques – as seen on famous TV shows
– that include the examination of fibres, glass, paint, firearms
and the chemical analysis of drugs, liquids, fingerprints and
many more. These techniques provide
efficient tools7 in catching criminals for
the London police, based at their famous
headquarters8 called Scotland Yard.
Read more: History of DNA Fingerprinting
http://together.emdl.fr
It’s your turn!
In the Baker Street underground station,
the tiles are decorated with the
detective’s pipe-puffing silhouette.
221b Baker Street is the fictional
London address of Sherlock Holmes.
In the photo you can see the plaque
on the famous building.
1. well-known = célèbre • 2. to be set = se dérouler • 3. huge = énorme • 4. moody = ombrageux • 5. to
gather = recueillir • 6. outstanding = remarquable • 7. tools = des outils • 8. headquarters = quartier général
34 • thirty-four
socle
C4
• S’informer, se documenter, chercher et sélectionner l’information
• Exploiter la structuration d’un document numérique afin d’accéder avec efficacité aux informations recherchées
1. You are the detective! Find someone in the class who…
a) is wearing a watch
b) has skipped class today
c) has two pairs of glasses
d) has a book in his/her bag
e) has a 5 euro note in his/her pocket
f) was wearing a red T-shirt yesterday
g) has a smartphone in his/her pocket
h) was playing football yesterday afternoon
2. B2i What do you know about Scotland Yard? Find information on the
Internet and prepare a short presentation for the class.
http://together.emdl.fr
thirty-five • 35
xe
rc
1. Lorsque l'antécédent est un humain, on utilise who.
• A thief is a person who steals other people's property.
2. Lorsque l'antécédent n'est pas un humain, on utilise which.
• A fingerprint is a piece of evidence which will help the police.
3. Lorsque l'antécédent est un lieu, on utilise where.
• This is the place where they found the clue.
4. Lorsque l'antécédent est un moment, on utilise when.
inter
A2+
Complète les phrases avec who,
which, when ou where.
1
1. A murderer is a criminal ... kills
someone.
2. A hijack is a crime ... involves taking
control of a vehicle.
3. Vandalism occurs in a public place ...
a person damages buildings, breaks
windows or paints graffiti.
4. Mugging is ... someone robs in a public
place.
5. A hacker is someone ... uses a computer
to gain unauthorized access to data.
auxiliaire + négation contractée + pronom personnel sujet + ?
Complète avec des question tags.
2
1. He was talking on the phone at 10 pm, ...?
2. You finally took the plane, ...?
3. It was a British painting, ...?
4. Mike Imperioli is Italian, ...?
5. They arrived late at the party, ...?
2. On emploie le prétérit en be + V-ing (was/were + base verbale
+ -ing) pour décrire une action en train de se dérouler dans le
passé, pour décrire des circonstances.
• I was shopping in the supermarket...
3. Le prétérit en be + V-ing installe le décor de l'histoire, le prétérit
simple décrit l'action qui coupe, interrompt le fil de l'histoire.
On emploie souvent ces deux temps pour décrire une action qui
vient en interrompre une autre dans le passé.
• I was shopping in the supermarket when I saw a man
who looked suspicious.
36 • thirty-six
1
2
3
4
What did Brian find?
Where did he find it?
What did he do with it?
What did the police discover
about the origin of the
discovery?
5 What happened six years later?
Arthur Conan Doyle
yle
Sir Ar thur Conan Do
a
d
an
r
ite
wr
ish
ott
was a Sc
rn
physician. He was bo
in 1859. He became
famous thanks to his
detective stories and his
hero Sherlock Holmes,
but he also wrote plays,
romances, poetry and
historical novels.
ty of Edinburgh
He entered the Universi
where Dr.
,
Medical School in 1881
Doyle had him
.
ing
ch
Joseph Bell was tea
him as a model
as a professor and took
lmes.
for his hero Sherlock Ho
out the brilliant
He wrote four novels ab stories, which
ort
detective and several sh
sful.
ces
suc
ely
ns
me
im
all
were
Speaking
A scary moment
Speak about a situation in the past
when you felt scared. What were
you doing? What happened?
- Once I felt really scared.
I was going to…
Writing
I had a dream
1
2
3
4
5
Write about a dream you had.
I was walking down
the street when…
2 Le prétérit simple et le prétérit en be + V-ing
1. Le prétérit simple décrit une action appartenant au passé,
ponctuelle.
• I saw a man who looked suspicious.
Read this short biography and answer the
questions.
Je peux rédiger un paragraphe
sur un rêve que j'ai fait.
• You speak English, don’t you?
3
Choisis la forme correcte.
1. They took the CCTV pictures of the
shoplifter while she stole / was
stealing CDs.
2. The robbers were trying to steal an
enormous diamond when the police
arrived / were arriving.
3. He was walking in the forest when he
found / was finding a gun.
4. Robbers entered the house when
everyone slept / was sleeping.
➜ Précis grammatical p122, 127, 128
wb p27 et p32
A2+
Reading
Arthur Conan Doyle
Je peux comprendre les points principaux
d'une biographie.
Listen to Brian's story about his
last holidays and answer the questions.
B1-
• You were at the party, weren’t you?
Lesson
B1-
14 CLASSE
08 ÉLÈVE
Je peux raconter une histoire
qui m'est arrivée.
Si la phrase qui précède ne comporte pas d'auxiliaire, on utilisera
toujours do/does ou did, selon le temps de la phrase.
Listening
Lucky holidays
Je peux comprendre un récit au passé.
B1-
1 Les question tags
Les question tags sont des morceaux de phrases ressemblant à
des questions. Elles sont généralement employées, comme
l'expression française « n'est-ce pas ? », pour confirmer quelque
chose dont le locuteur est déjà quasiment sûr. C'est pourquoi
l'intonation des question tags est descendante.
Dans le cas d'une affirmation, le tag comprendra :
2
ac
• The only time when he could have committed this
theft was between 2 and 3 am.
Lesson
ic e s
1 Les relatives en who, which, when et where
Les pronoms relatifs permettent d'ajouter des informations
complémentaires à propos d'un nom (l'antécédent), de relier
deux phrases simples pour en faire une phrase plus élaborée.
Unit
s•
•E
Lesson
Check your progress
tif
How grammar works
to
2
fr
Unit
ther.emdl
.
ge
What were Conan Doyle's two professions?
Apart from novels, what else did he write?
What university did he go to?
Who was Dr. Joseph Bell?
Why was he important for Doyle?
Interacting
Questioning your partner
Je peux poser des questions. Je peux répondre à des questions.
Two weeks ago at 8 pm an Egyptian mummy was stolen from
the British Museum in London.
Activities
Places
A. You are the detective. Ask your partner at
least three questions to find out if he/she has
an alibi.
B. You are the suspect. You were seen at the
museum when the theft took place. Choose
your alibi using the help box. Try to be credible!
socle
C7
People
ice-skating
at home
grandmother
watching TV
Birmingham
sister's boyfriend
visiting sister
burger bar
a group of friends
driving home
M25 motorway
brother
eating chips
maternity ward
work colleagues
• Savoir s’autoévaluer et être
capable de repérer et identifier
ses acquis, ses compétences
Fais le point sur
tout ce que tu as
appris en
remplissant
la grille
d'autoévaluation
de ton workbook
➜ WB p40
thirty-seven • 37