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Friday February 4, 2005 THE ARTICLEA new force has emerged in the portable music race to challenge the dominance of Apple’s i-Pod and i-Tunes. The once illegal music download service Napster has unveiled a brand new method of downloading music, which they believe will be as popular, if not more, than Apple’s MP3 products. It is called Napster To Go and consists of subscribers paying a set fee of $14.95 a month to rent an unlimited number of songs for four weeks. After a month, the secret code contained in the download for each song automatically deletes the song from your music player, unless you keep up with the monthly payments. If you stop paying, your music disappears, unless you have recorded them elsewhere, like a CD-R or your desktop! But that’s illegal. Napster’s homepage says, “Now with Napster To Go, you can fill and refill your compatible MP3 player with your choice of over a million tracks without paying 99 cents a track”. Apple’s I-Tunes store currently charges 99 cents a track, but you are buying the song, which means you can keep it forever. In a $30 million advertising campaign to start Sunday, Napster ask the public to “Do the Math”, pointing out that it would cost $10,000 to fill an i-Pod (if you bought the songs and not file-shared them). Subscribers will be able to play their music on a number of portable music players, but not on Apple’s I-Pod. Surprise, surprise! WARM UPS / COOL DOWNS1. CHAT: Talk in pairs or groups about music / music players / CDs / MDs / records / tapes / MP3 / iPod / Apple / downloading music… To make things more dynamic, try telling your students they only have one minute (or 2) on each chat topic before changing topics / partners. Change topic / partner frequently to energize the class. 2. MUSIC PLAYER BRAINSTORM: Spend one minute writing down all of the different words you associate with portable music players. Share your words with your partner / group and talk about them. 3. MY MUSIC HISTORY: Talk to your partner about how your musical tastes have changed throughout your life / this year / since you heard the latest Beyonce single …. What was the first single / CD / record … you bought and what do you think of it now etc. 4. MUSICAL DAY: Talk to your partner about the role music plays in your everyday life. Write a brief timeline of when you listen to music, where, how, why; and include the other places you get to hear music in an elevator, in a store, the local Starbuck’s etc. 5. MP3 WARS: MP3 is the latest way to store and listen to music. Look at the following opini ons. Student A agrees with them. Student B disagrees with them. Discuss: (a) Apple’s I-Pod is the greatest music player ever. It is unbeatable. PRE-READING IDEAS1. WORD SEARCH: Students look in their dictionaries / computer to find collocates, other meanings, information, synonyms … of the words ‘music’, and ‘race’. 2. TRUE / FALSE: Students look at the headline and predict whether they believe the following statements about the article are true or false: 3. DEFINITIONS: Students match the following words with the most likely definitions (Please think about the headline!): (a) force (n) (b) emerged (v) (c) dominance (n) (d) unveiled (v) (e) subscribers (n) (f) fee (n) (g) keep up with (v) (h) illegal (adj) (i) refill (v) (j) portable (adj) 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. Napster a rival for i-Pod?
2. TRUE/FALSE: Students check their answers to the T/F exercise. 3. SYNONYMS: Students check their answers to the synonyms 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. GAP-FILL: Check the answers to the gap-fill exercise. 2. QUESTIONS: Students ask the discussion questions they thought of above to their partner / group / class. Pool the questions for all students to share. 3. VOCABULARY: As a class, go over the vocabulary students circled above. 4. 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. 5. ‘MUSIC’/ ‘RACE’: Students make questions based on their findings from pre-reading activity #1. 6. DISCUSSION: Students ask each other the following questions: 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 Napster. Share your findings with your class next lesson. 3. MUSIC POSTER: Create a poster of your favorite musical artist. 4. PROS AND CONS: Write a short article for a music consumer magazine comparing the pros and cons of i-Tunes and Napster-To-Go. ANSWERSTRUE / FALSE: (a) A new force has emerged in the portable music race. T DEFINITIONS: (a) force (n) (b) emerged (v) (c) dominance (n) (d) unveiled (v) (e) subscribers (n) (f) fee (n) (g) keep up with (v) (h) illegal (adj) (i) refill (v) (j) portable (adj) SYNONYM MATCH:
PHRASE MATCH:
GAP FILL: Napster a rival for i-Pod?A new force has emerged in the portable music race to challenge the dominance of Apple’s i-Pod and i-Tunes. The once illegal music download service Napster has unveiled a brand new method of downloading music, which they believe will be as popular, if not more, than Apple’s MP3 products. It is called Napster To Go and consists of subscribers paying a set fee of $14.95 a month to rent an unlimited number of songs for four weeks. After a month, the secret code contained in the download for each song automatically deletes the song from your music player, unless you keep up with the monthly payments. If you stop paying, your music disappears, unless you have recorded them elsewhere, like a CD-R or your desktop! But that’s illegal. Napster’s homepage says, “Now with Napster To Go, you can fill and refill your compatible MP3 player with your choice of over a million tracks without paying 99 cents a track”. Apple’s I-Tunes store currently charges 99 cents a track, but you are buying the song, which means you can keep it forever. In a $30 million advertising campaign to start Sunday, Napster ask the public to “Do the Math”, pointing out that it would cost $10,000 to fill an i-Pod (if you bought the songs and not file-shared them). Subscribers will be able to play their music on a number of portable music players, but not on Apple’s I-Pod. Surprise, surprise! Help Support This Web Site
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