My
1,000 Ideas e-Book |
Breaking News EnglishHOME | HELP MY SITE | 000s MORE FREE LESSONS |
My
1,000 Ideas e-Book |
Monday January 10, 2005 THE ARTICLEThe Palestinian election revealed few surprises as PLO chairman Mahmoud Abbas seems to have romped home by a landslide. Exit polls show Mr Abbas, the former prime minister, to have an unassailable 46 per cent lead over his nearest rival, Mustafa Barghouti. Mr Abbas is shown as having 66.3% of the votes cast, with his challenger recording 19.7 per cent, according to the poll conducted by the independent Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research. Such a sweeping victory never really made this election much of a two-horse race, despite seven candidates running. Although Mr. Barghouti is a human rights activist, it is Mr. Abas who always had the better credentials to win, being popular with world (Western) leaders, including Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon. Mr Sharon had refused to negotiate with the late Yasser Arafat, which left the Palestinian-Israeli peace process at a standstill. The task ahead of Mr. Abbas is huge and historic he has called for an end to the armed struggle against Israeli occupation, achieve peace with his neighbour and secure a viable Palestinian statehood. The world will keep its fingers crossed for Mr. Abbas. POSSIBLE WARM UPS / COOL DOWNS1. CHAT: Talk in pairs or groups about Mahmoud Abbas / Palestine / Intifada / Israel, Middle-East prospects / Ariel Sharon / Yasser Arafat… 2. PALESTINE BRAINSTORM: Brainstorm facts from students about Palestine. Students talk together about these facts. 3. MY ELECTION: Students mill around the class and tell one another about the elections held in their countries the candidates, the system, the fairness, voter apathy ... Students from the same country could talk about local elections. 4. 2-MINUTE DEBATES: Students face each other in pairs and engage in the following (for-fun) 2-minute debates. Students A are assigned the first argument, students B the second. Rotate pairs to ensure a lively pace and noise level is kept: PRE-READING IDEAS1. WORD SEARCH: Students look in their dictionaries / computer to find collocates, other meanings, information, synonyms … of the words ‘surprise’ and ‘home’. 2. HEADLINE: Put the article headline on the board for students to talk about / predict / speculate. Pairs / groups formulate and present their own guesses as to the contents of the report. 3. TRUE / FALSE: Students look at the headline and predict whether they believe the following statements are true or false: (a) The Palestinian election pulled little surprises. T / F 4. SYNONYM MATCH: Students match the following synonyms from the article:
5. PHRASE MATCH: Students match the following phrases based on the article (sometimes more than one combination is possible):
WHILE READING ACTIVITIES1. GAP-FILL: Put the missing words under each paragraph into the gaps. Palestinian election a one horse race
2. TRUE/FALSE: Students check their answers to the T/F exercise. 3. SYNONYMS: Students check their answers to the synonym exercise. 4. PHRASE MATCH: Students check their answers to the phrase match exercise. 5. QUESTIONS: Students make notes for questions they would like to ask the class about the article. 6. VOCABULARY: Students circle any words they do not understand. In groups pool unknown words and use dictionaries to find the meanings. POST READING IDEAS1. ‘SURPRISE’/ ‘HOME’: Students make questions based on their findings from pre-reading activity #1. 2. GAP-FILL: Check the answers to the gap-fill exercise. 3. QUESTIONS: Students ask the discussion questions they thought of above to their partner / group / class. Pool the questions for all students to share. 4. VOCABULARY: As a class, go over the vocabulary students circled above. 5. STUDENT-GENERATED SURVEY: Pairs/Groups write down 3 questions based on the article. Conduct their surveys alone. Report back to partners to compare answers. Report to other groups / the whole class. Back in pairs students discuss their findings. 6. ARTICLE DISCUSSION: Students ask each other the following questions based on the article: (a) Are you interested in the Palestinian election or the Middle-East peace process? HOMEWORK1. VOCAB EXTENSION: Choose several of the words from the text. Use a dictionary or the Google search field to build up more associations / collocations of each word. 2. INTERNET: Search the Internet and find more information on Palestine. Share your findings with your class next lesson. 3. PALESTINE HISTORY: Create an information poster outlining the history of Palestine. 4. LETTER TO MAHMOUD: Write a letter to Palestinian Prime Minister (elect) Mahmoud Abbas advising him what to do in his firt six months of office. ANSWERSTRUE / FALSE: (a) The Palestinian election pulled little surprises. T SYNONYM MATCH:
PHRASE MATCH:
GAP FILL: Palestinian election a one horse raceThe Palestinian election revealed few surprises as PLO chairman Mahmoud Abbas seems to have romped home by a landslide. Exit polls show Mr Abbas, the former prime minister, to have an unassailable 46 per cent lead over his nearest rival, Mustafa Barghouti. Mr Abbas is shown as having 66.3% of the votes cast, with his challenger recording 19.7 per cent, according to the poll conducted by the independent Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research. Such a sweeping victory never really made this election much of a two-horse race, despite seven candidates running. Although Mr. Barghouti is a human rights activist, it is Mr. Abbas who always had the better credentials to win, being popular with world (Western) leaders, including Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon. Mr Sharon had refused to negotiate with the late Yasser Arafat, which left the Palestinian-Israeli peace process at a standstill. The task ahead of Mr. Abbas is huge and historic he has called for an end to the armed struggle against Israeli occupation, achieve peace with his neighbour and secure a viable Palestinian statehood. The world will keep its fingers crossed for Mr. Abbas. Help Support This Web Site
Sean Banville's Book
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2004-2019 by Sean Banville | Links | About | Privacy Policy
|