UNIT 1 | Authors' Acknowledgments y Scope and sequence vi Introduction x Superstitions 1 |
UNIT 2 | Two worlds 2 Lucky hats and other fishing superstitions 4 A superstition about new calendars 6 Health 9 |
UNIT 3 | Diets of the world 10 Drink, blink, and rest 12 Azeri hills hold secret of long life 14 Talent 17 |
UNIT 4 | A prodigy in mother’s eyes 18 Born to paint 20 The sound of silence 22 Beauty 25 |
UNIT 5 | Executives go under the knife 26 What makes a man attractive? 28 In the land of the mirror 30 Technology 33 |
UNIT 6 | The car that thinks it’s your friend 34 Identification, please! 36 Researchers worry as teens grow up online 38 Punishment 41 |
UNIT 7 | Spanking on trial 42 The Letter 44 Schools take the fun out of suspension 46 Loss ^ Death & superstition 50 Chapter Two 52 Funeral Blues;The Chariot 54 |
ill |
u | N | I T | 8 | Memory | 57 |
Can you believe what you see? | 58 | ||||
Man weds the wife he forgot | 60 | ||||
Repeat after me: Memory takes practice | 62 | ||||
u | N | I T | 9 | Personality | 65 |
What do our possessions say about us? | 66 | ||||
The role of temperament in shaping individuality | 68 | ||||
Mind your Ps and Qs | 70 | ||||
u | N | I T | 1 0 | Celebrity | 73 |
I’m just another kid from Brooklyn | 74 | ||||
California law has paparazzi shuddering | 76 | ||||
Fan club confessions | 78 | ||||
u | N | I T | 1 1 | The circus | 81 |
Getting serious about clowning | 82 | ||||
Circus town | 84 | ||||
Tragedy at the circus; Circus safe for animals | 86 | ||||
u | N | 1 T | 1 2 | Martial arts | 89 |
Shaolin Temple | 90 | ||||
The karate generation | 92 | ||||
Iron and silk | 94 | ||||
u | N | I T | 1 3 | Fashion | 97 |
Smart clothes | 98 | ||||
It’s a dog’s life | 100 | ||||
How to separate trends from fads | 102 | ||||
u | N | I T | 1 4 | The media | 105 |
Something strange is happening to tabloids | 106 | ||||
When our worlds collide | 108 | ||||
Media violence harms children; Media violence does not harm children | 110 | ||||
u | N | I T | 1 5 | Art | 113 |
Girl with a Pitcher | 114 | ||||
Organic architecture | 116 | ||||
How forgeries corrupt our museums | 118 | ||||
u | N | I T | 1 6 | Humor | 121 |
So, who’s the comedian? | 122 | ||||
Taking humor seriously in the workplace | 124 | ||||
Three comedians | 126 |
The publisher would like to thank the following reviewers for their helpful insights and suggestions in the development of the series: Orlando Carranza, Ann Conable, Elliot Judd, Madeleine Kim, Laura LeDrean, Laura MacGregor, Sandy Soghikian, Colleen Weldele, and Junko Yamanaka.
We would also like to acknowledge the students and teachers in the following schools and institutes who piloted materials in the initial development stages:
Associayao Alumni, Sao Paulo, Brazil; AUA Language Center, Bangkok, Thailand; Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Hokusei Gakuen University, Sapporo, Japan; Hunter College, New York, New York, USA; Instituto Brasil-Estados Unidos (IBEU), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Instituto Cultural Peruano Norteamericano, Lima, Peru; Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Korea; Miyagi Gakuin Women's College, Miyagi, Japan; Queens College, Flushing, New York, USA; Sapporo International University, Sapporo, Japan.
We also would like to thank the many additional schools in the above countries whose students responded to surveys on their reading interests and preferences.
A special thanks to Lynn Bonesteel and Robert L. Maguire for their invaluable advice and support. The authors are also grateful to Chuck Sandy for his contribution to the early development of the project.
Thanks also go to the editorial and production team: Eleanor Barnes, Sylvia Bloch, David Bohlke, Karen Davy, Tiinde Dewey, Anne Garrett, Deborah Goldblatt, Nada Gordon, Louisa Hellegers, Lise Minovitz, Diana Nam, Bill Paulk, Mary Sandre, Howard Siegelman, Jane Sturtevant, Kayo Taguchi, and Louisa van Houten.
Finally, special thanks to Cambridge University Press staff and advisors: Jim Anderson, Mary Louise Baez, Carlos Barbisan, Kathleen Corley, Kate Cory-Wright, Riitta da Costa, Elizabeth Fuzikava, Steve Golden, Yuri Hara, Gareth Knight, Andy Martin, Nigel McQuitty, Mark O’Neil, Dan Schulte, Catherine Shih, Su-Wei Wang, and Ellen Zlotnick.
Unit | Readings | Skills | Vocabulary |
: Unit 1 Superstitions | Two worlds Lucky hats and other fishing superstitions A supersition about new calendars | Guessing meaning from context Making inferences Predicting Scanning Understanding details Understanding text organization | Superstition-related terms Luck idioms |
Unit 2 Health | Diets of the world Drink, blink and rest Azeri hills hold secret of long life | Guessing meaning from context Predicting Recognizing similarity in meaning Recognizing tone Scanning Understanding details Understanding main ideas Understanding reference words | Medical terms Dictionary abbreviations |
Unit 3 Talent | A prodigy in mother’s eyes Born to paint The sound of silence | Guessing meaning from context Making inferences Predicting Recognizing sources Scanning Understanding main ideas | Talent-related terms Phrasal verbs |
Unit 4 Beauty | Executives go under the knife What makes a man attractive? In the land of the mirror | Guessing meaning from context Predicting Recognizing purpose Scanning Understanding details Understanding reference words Understanding text organization | Adjectives (beauty) Descriptions of facial features |
Unit | Readings | Skills | Vocabulary |
Unit 5 Technology | The car that thinks it’s your friend Information, please! Researchers worry as teens grow up online | Guessing meaning from context Predicting Recognizing purpose Restating and making inferences Scanning Understanding details | Computer terms Car-related terms Internet shorthand |
Unit 6 Punishment | Spanking on trial The Letter Schools take the fun out of suspension | Guessing meaning from context Making inferences Predicting Recognizing point of view Recognizing purpose Recognizing tone Scanning Understanding reference words Understanding text organization | Punishment-related terms Crimes Parts of speech |
Unit 7 Loss | Death 8c superstition Chapter Two Funeral Blues; The Chariot | Guessing meaning from context Making inferences Predicting Recognizing similarity in meaning Rhyming Scanning Skimming Understanding details Understanding main ideas | Funeral customs Homographs |
Units Memory | Can you believe what you see? Man weds the wife he forgot Repeat after me: Memory takes practice | Distinguishing main and supporting ideas Guessing meaning from context Predicting Scanning Understanding details Understanding reference words | Memory-related terms Memory idioms |
vii |
Unit | Readings | Skills | Vocabulary |
i Units Personality | What do our possessions say about us? The role of temperament in shaping individuality Mind your P’s and CPs | Guessing meaning from context Predicting Recognizing similarity in meaning Recognizing sources Restating and making inferences Scanning Understanding main ideas Understanding details • | Adjectives (personality) |
Unit 10 Celebrity | I’m just another kid from Brooklyn California law has paparazzi shuddering Fan club confessions | Distinguishing arguments Guessing meaning from context Making restatements Predicting Recognizing audience Scanning Skimming Understanding details Understanding main ideas | Celebrity-related terms Prefix out - |
Unit 11 The circus | Getting serious about clowning Circus town Tragedy at the circus; Circus safe for animals | Distinguishing arguments Distinguishing fact from opinion Guessing meaning from context Predicting Recognizing similarity in meaning Scanning Understanding details Understanding main ideas | Circus-related terms Phrasal verbs |
Unit 12 Martial arts | Shaolin Temple The karate generation Iron and Silk | Guessing meaning from context Making inferences Predicting Recognizing sources Scanning Understanding details Understanding main ideas Understanding text organization | Martial arts terms Prefix self- |
Table captionVlli
Unit | Readings | Skills Vocabulary | |
Unit 13 Fashion | Smart clothes It’s a dog’s life How to separate trends from fads | Guessing meaning from context Recognizing audience Scanning Understanding complex sentences Understanding details Restating | Fashion-related terms Acronyms |
Unit 14 The media | Something stange is happening to tabloids When our worlds collide Media violence harms children; Media violence does not harm children | Guessing meaning from context Making inferences Predicting Restating Scanning Skimming Understanding complex sentences Understanding main ideas | Media-related terms Prefixes counter -, mis-, and inter- |
Unit 15 Art | Girl with a Pitcher Organic architecture How forgeries corrupt our museums | Guessing meaning from context Making inferences Predicting Recognizing sources Recognizing tone Scanning Understanding complex sentences Understanding details Understanding reference words _ | Art, architecture and museum terms Compound adjectives |
Unit 16 Humor | So, who’s the comedian? Taking humor seriously in the workplace Three comedians | Guessing meaning from context Making inferences Predicting Recognizing similarity in meaning Recognizing tone Restating Scanning Skimming Understanding details | Performance-related terms Humor-related idioms |
Featuring adapted texts from a variety of authentic sources, including newspapers, magazines, books, and websites, the Strategic Reading series allows students to build essential reading skills while they examine important topics in their lives.
Strategic Reading 3 is designed to develop the reading, vocabulary-building, and critical thinking skills of young-adult and adult learners of English at an intermediate to high-intermediate level.
Each book in the Strategic Reading series contains 16 units divided into three readings on a particular theme. Every unit includes the sections described below:
The units begin with brief descriptions previewing the readings in the unit. These descriptions are accompanied by discussion questions designed to stimulate student interest and activate background knowledge on the theme.
This page also introduces some of the vocabulary found in the readings. These words and phrases are recycled throughout the unit to provide students with many opportunities to process and internalize new vocabulary.
Different genres of readings have been gathered from novels, plays, magazines, textbooks, websites, poetry, newspapers, and editorials to reflect realistically the varied nature of the written world. These texts increase gradually in length and difficulty as students progress through the book.
A full page of challenging exercises, divided into the following three sets of activities, focuses students on each reading.
Before you read
This section encourages students to think more carefully about a specific area of the theme. When students make predictions based on their personal experiences, a valuable link between background knowledge and new information is formed.
One Skimming or Scanning activity accompanies every reading in the book. In this section, students must either skim or scan a passage to look for specific information or to confirm predictions made in the pre-reading activity. After, students are instructed to read the whole text.
The exercises in this section concentrate on the following reading skills (see the Scope and sequence chart on pages vi-ix) developed throughout the book:
• understanding main ideas and details;
• making inferences and guessing meaning from context;
• understanding the organization and cohesion of a text;
• recognizing an audience, source, tone, or point of view;
• distinguishing fact from opinion; and
• understanding complex sentences and the sequence of events.
In order to focus on multiple skills and accommodate different learning and teaching styles, a wide variety of task types are featured in these exercises. These task types include multiple choice, matching, true/false, and fill in the blank. These varied activities are designed to practice all aspects of a particular skill, and to maintain the interest of both students and teachers.
Each reading ends with an exercise called Relating reading to personal experience that allows students to use vocabulary introduced in the unit to share their thoughts, opinions, and experiences in writing or in discussions.
Every unit ends with a one-page review section where students apply and expand their knowledge of unit vocabulary to complete a variety of fun and challenging word games and puzzles.
As a final activity, students work on a project or participate in a discussion related to the unit theme. Activities such as designing and conducting surveys, researching and presenting information, and interviewing others provide meaningful closure to the unit.
Strategic Reading 3 is accompanied by a Teacher’s Manual that contains a model lesson plan, definitions of key vocabulary, comprehensive teaching suggestions, cultural notes, unit quizzes, and answers to activities and quizzes.
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PREVIEW
Two worlds
Read an excerpt from a memoir about childhood fascination with tales of superstition.
1. Who used to tell you stories when you were a child?
2. Have you ever had your fortune told? If so, did any predictions come true?
3. Do you know someone who is superstitious? Do you think this person is rational?
What are common superstitions among fishermen? The writer of this newspaper article talks about some of them.
1. Do you like to go fishing? If so, how often do you go?
2. What equipment do you need to go fishing?
3. Do you think you need luck to succeed in fishing? Why or why not?
The writer of this newspaper article describes some problems caused by one of his childhood superstitions.
1. What do you like most about the New Year?
2. What traditions do you follow on New Year's Day?
3. Do you know any superstitions associated with New Year's Day?
Vocabulary
To find out the meanings of the words in the box, work with another student, ask your teacher, or use a dictionary. Then circle the words that you associate with superstitions.
a boogeyman a miracle a prognostication a saint
a curse the evil eye roots and herbs souls of the dead
1
Unit 1 • Superstitions
In this autobiographical excerpt about her childhood in Peru, Gabriella de Ferrari writes about how her mother, her neighbor Senorita Luisa, and her maid Saturnina look at the world.
1 Early in life I realized that there were two very different ways of looking at the world, my parents’ and Senorita Luisa’s. What she told me was what 1 assumed the world outside my house believed. At home what I was told was what people believed in that faraway place where my parents came from. I kept them separate and functioned accordingly, never suffering from the difference, at least while I was young and the lines were so easy to draw. Yet Senorita Luisa’s world, together with that of the maids in the kitchen, was far more seductive than the rational world of my parents. I liked curses and miracles, and praying for a handsome husband, and buying up heaven.
2 Mother and Senorita Luisa talked to each other constantly. They would sit under a large mulberry tree in the afternoon and become absorbed in each other’s stories. My own time with Senorita Luisa came in the evenings, when I got back from school. I would go to her house for a snack of hot chocolate and a cake she made especially for me of fresh figs held together with what she called “honey glue.” She had many stories to tell, and they were all equally outrageous. I listened, mesmerized by her tales delivered in the monotonous rhythms of her voice as if they occurred every day, like drinking milk or taking a bath.
One of my favorite activities, in which Senorita Luisa would indulge me only when she was in a good mood, was to have my fortune read. She would drip hot wax from a candle into a large container of icy water. When the wax hit the water, it formed different shapes. She read them and told me my “little future,” that is, my future for the next week. The prognostications were mostly designed to teach me to behave: “This week you will tell a lie and that will cost you, because your mother will not believe you anymore.” Only occasionally would she tell me my “big future,” the one I wanted to hear the most: A handsome man would fall in love with me, a man with green eyes and dark hair like Luisa’s brothers.
4 The maids in my family’s kitchen were also constantly reading wax, but they weren’t allowed to read wax for me. My mother thought it was nonsense. She never knew that Senorita Luisa read my fortune. Senorita Luisa also told ghost stories about the almas, the souls of the dead that came to visit at night. She used to scare me so much I had to ask Saturnina to stay with me until I fell asleep. Saturnina knew how to send the souls away: She tied a black ribbon to the window and left them a piece of bread.
5 As Senorita Luisa had saints, Saturnina and the other maids had roots and herbs. These could perform any kind of miracle, especially scaring away the “evil eye” that women gave each other when they were interested in the same man. I was constantly torn between wanting to believe Senorita Luisa and Saturnina and wanting to believe Mother, who was more interested in having me worry about geography and math.
Adapted from Gringa Latina.
31
Scan the text to understand important details. Read quickly to look for information that answers a specific question, such as the names of characters or important words and phrases.
Predicting
Look at these sentences from the text. Then check (/) the statement that you think will be the main idea of the text.
. . . there were two very different ways of looking at the world, my parents’ and
Senorita Luisas.
One of my favorite activities . . . was to have my fortune read.
The maids ... were constantly reading wax, but they weren’t allowed to read wax for me.
_ 1. The writer’s mother paid Senorita Luisa to teach her daughter about
superstitions, something that every young girl should learn.
2. As a child, the writer loved being with the maids and Senorita Luisa more than she liked being with her parents.
3. As a child, the writer lived in a world where many people believed in superstitions, but her parents didn’t.
Scanning
Scan the text to check your prediction. Then read the whole text.
Guessing meaning from context
Find the words in italics in the reading. Circle the meaning of each word.
1. When something is seductive, it is ( attractive )/ frightening / painful, (par. 1)
2. When something is outrageous, it is very unusual and surprising / happens outside / makes people feel sad. (par. 2)
3. When something mesmerizes you, it is boring / interesting / confusing, (par. 2)
4. When people indulge you, they do something you need / don’t want / want. (par. 3)
5. When you think something is nonsense, you don’t understand it / think it will happen / think it’s reasonable, (par. 4)
Making
inferences
B
/ 1. Saturnina worked for the writer’s family.
2. Senorita Luisa worked for the writer’s family.
3. Senorita Luisa and the writer’s mother were friends.
4. The writer’s parents were born in a foreign country.
5. The writer’s mother would be pleased that Saturnina had read wax for her.
6. Unlike Senorita Luisa, the writer’s mother wasn’t superstitious.
Relating reading to personal experience
1. Would you like to go to a fortune-teller? If so, what would you like to hear?
2. Do you believe in ghosts? If so, have you had any experiences with them?
3. Were you more or less superstitious as a child than you are now? Do you still believe in superstitions? If so, which ones?
READ5NG 2
1 Last January, I was fortunate enough to go to Brazil on a fishing trip. As we were boarding the vessel that would be our home for the next six nights, I looked up and saw a huge bunch of ripe bananas hanging from a hook.
2 I was horrified. For more than 20 years, I have been told again and again that bananas and boats just don’t mix. I started talking about it with my fishing companions. Not one had ever heard of such a superstition.
3 Yet just a few months earlier, I had read a paper about the banana superstition. The author was unable to find its origin. One bit of speculation is that dangerous critters lurked inside the banana bunches. But there’s no doubt that anglers throughout the world believe that bananas don’t mix with fishing boats.
4 The bananas certainly didn’t affect the fishing in Brazil. They were downright tasty and the fishing was outstanding. But it got me to thinking about other superstitions regarding fishing.
5 For example, lucky hats. I had a lucky hat for a long time, a bright red cap that I was convinced was lucky. I caught a lot of fish and a lot of big fish wearing that hat. Then one day while angry, I threw it overboard. I’m convinced I haven’t caught as many fish since.
6 Recently, a friend e-mailed me a list of “10 Fishing Superstitions” that appeared in a magazine. The lucky hat issue was addressed along with bananas. It says: “The ‘right’ hat can make or break a fishing
trip, but it can’t be one you bought yourself.” Hmmm. Come to think of it, that lucky cap of mine was a freebie.
7 There also were some I’d never heard of. For example, rabbits crossing your path were bad luck. Having a pig (or ham) on board is bad luck and so are eggs.
8 One superstition we’ve all heard is that it’s good luck to spit on your bait; but this particular list suggests that if the bait is a fish, you should kiss it. Actually, the spitting on the bait probably has some merit. Just like a spray-on fish attractant, it can help disguise a smell that fish might find offensive.
9 There’s also some merit in keeping the first fish you catch. Sheepshead fishermen, for example, don’t like to release their fish until they prepare to leave an area because it will scare the rest of the school.
10 I have a good friend who is convinced that he won’t catch any fish unless he first spills a soft drink in his boat. You can’t just pour the drink out; it has to be done accidentally. That means you need to leave the drink in a precarious position when you put it down.
11 There are other superstitions as well. If you catch a fish on the first cast, you might as well go home; it will be the only fish you will catch. Cameras are bad luck. (That’s really tough for me.)
12 I’m sure there are plenty more superstitions out there and I’d love to hear them. Let me know and I’ll pass them along somewhere down the line. And remember, no bananas.
Adapted from The Post and Courier.
Predicting
Do you think these events are good luck or bad luck for fishermen? Check (/) the correct column.
Good Luck | Bad Luck | |
1. Having bananas on a boat | ||
2. Having a pig (or ham) on a boat | ||
3. Having eggs on a boat | ||
4. Spitting on bait | ||
5. Spilling a soft drink on a boat | ||
6. Catching a fish on the first cast |
Scanning
Scan the text to check your predictions. Then read the whole text.
Guessing meaning from context
Find the words and phrases in the reading that match these definitions. Write one word on each line.
1. getting on a boat
2. insects or animals hid
3. fishermen
4. something you get for free
5. benefit or advantage
6. hide something
7. a large group of fish
8. not safe or stable
boarding _ a
vessel (par. 1)
(par. 3)
(par. 3)
(par. 6)
(par. 8 8c 9) (par. 8)
(par. 9)
(par. 10)
Making
inferences
Relating reading to personal experience
B
Table captionCheck (/) the correct column.
The writer's feelings about | Positive | Negative Neutral |
1. ripe bananas on a boat | ||
2. his fishing trip in Brazil | : i | |
3. his red cap | -1 - 1 | |
4. rabbits crossing his path | ||
5. spitting on bait | ||
6. not taking photographs on a boat |
1. Do you know any other superstitions associated with fishing (or other sports)?
If so, what are they?
2. Do you have a lucky hat (or other article of clothing)? If so, where did you get it? Why do you consider it lucky?
3. Who do you think is more superstitious - men or women? What examples can you give
READING 3
1 Don’t forget to throw that quarter into your pot of black- eyed peas tomorrow ... for good luck, of course.
2 I picked up my share of superstitions growing up, and several of them are connected with the New Year. The pot of peas seems more tradition to me than superstition, and it’s easy to ignore since I don’t cook. I can also say that another southern superstition - making sure a man is the first person to cross the threshold of your home on New Year’s Day - also has no impact on my adult life. But one superstition I can’t seem to escape is the one dealing with calendars. In my family, we believe it’s bad luck to look at a new calendar before the start of the new year.
3 I can’t ignore this because efficient administrative assistants at work hand out new calendars in late November or early December. And some of my coworkers hang them up as soon as they get them. So at any time, I’m likely to walk into a colleague’s space and confront the offending object. If I see one, I avert my eyes. Try as I might to rid myself of this superstition, I’m not willing to take any chances, either.
4 I go through the same contortions each December. What to do if I see a new calendar? How do I avert my eyes while still preserving the air of a pragmatic professional? Sometimes it isn’t easy.
5 I’ve found myself looking at the floor while talking with colleagues
or studiously examining a spot on the wall far away from a new calendar. As yet, none of my coworkers has called me on my seeming aloofness.
6 This December when the administrative aide at work asked if I wanted a calendar for next year, I didn’t immediately say no as I usually do. I didn’t say yes, either, but finally decided to rid myself of this silliness. So I did what any confident, competent adult does when confronted with a boogeyman of the past - I called my mother.
7 “Do you remember that superstition we had about putting a quarter in the black-eyed peas on New Year’s Day?” I asked her.
8 “Well, it wasn’t exactly a superstition,” she said. “We did it for you kids. We wanted y’all to eat the peas, and maybe finding a
quarter in your plate was just a way to get you to do it.”
9 “You mean you were trying to bribe us to eat?” I asked incredulously.
10 “What about calendars?” I asked, finally getting to the point of my telephone call. “Have you ever heard that it’s bad luck to look at a calendar before the New Year?”
11 “Not to look at it but to hang it,” she replied. “It’s bad luck to hang a new calendar before the New Year.”
12 There it was. I had remembered my superstition wrong. My contortions were all for nothing. No more staring at my feet in the face of a new calendar. Looking at one wouldn’t bring me bad luck. My co-workers who hung the calendars were going to have the bad luck!
Adapted from The Washington Post.
Predicting
Scanning
Look at these sentences from the text. Find out the meanings of any words you don't know. Then answer the question in the box.
1. ... administrative assistants at work hand out new calendars in late November or early December.
2. . . . I m likely to walk into a colleague’s space and confront the offending object. 3.1 go through the same contortions each December.
4. How do I avert my eyes while still preserving the air of a pragmatic professional? What do you think the writer’s superstition is?
Scan the text to check your prediction. Then read the whole text.
Understanding
details
Mark each sentence true (7) or false ( F ). Then correct the false sentences.
, . throw a quarter into a pot of
_ L _ 1. The children in the writer’s family used to eat black-eyed peas for good luck.
2. The writer thought that if a man were the first to enter the home on New Year’s Day, the family would have good luck.
3. The writer thought that if he waited until January to hang up a new calendar, he wouldn’t have bad luck.
4. If colleagues were sitting near a new calendar, the writer would not look at the people while talking to them.
5. The writer called his mother to put an end to his superstition.
6. The actual superstition was not to look at a calendar before the New Year.
Understanding
text
organization
B
a. “What about having a man be the first person in your house on New Year’s Day?” I asked. “That’s something I never believed in, but my grandmother wouldn’t let a woman into her house on New Year’s Day until a man had entered,” my mother said. “She said she didn’t want any woman bringing bad luck into her house at the start of the year. She was from the country and didn’t know any better, though.”
b. But now I wonder what other superstitions I picked up as a kid had been misunderstood. Then I remember something else I had learned very early - that my mother is always right. Hmmm.
Relating reading to personal experience
Answer these questions.
1. Do you know any holiday superstitions? If so, what are they?
2. Do you still believe any superstitions that you think are silly? If so, what are they?
3. Did your parents ever bribe you to do something? Do you think this is something parents should do? Why or why not?
A
_ - 1. be down on your luck', suffer because bad things are happening to you
2. be in luck, get what you want
3. be out of luck, not get what you want
4. better luck next time', said to make someone feel better after something bad has happened
5. bring someone luck, make good things happen for someone
6. just my luck, said when something bad happens to you and you are not surprised
7. luck out', have something good happen to you by chance
8. wish someone luck, tell someone you hope he or she succeeds
9. with my luck, said when you think something bad will happen because you have bad luck
1. He’s been down on his luck recently. He’s gotten /(fost)two jobs in the past six months.
2. You’re in luck. There are no / some tickets left for the concert.
3. You’re out of luck. The sale ended / started yesterday.
6.1 always / never wear this ring my grandfather gave me. It brings me luck.
7. He lucked out. He got / didn’t get the job he wanted.
8. Wish me luck. I am going to take / took my driving test.
9. With my luck, the test will be really easy / hard.
Work in pairs. What are some common superstitions? Make a list of at least five superstitions. Then compare lists as a class.
PREVIEW
You are going to read three texts about health. First, answer the questions in the boxes.
Read from this website to find out why people from some countries suffer fewer diet-related illnesses.
1. What do you typically eat every day? What do you avoid eating?
2. What types of food are associated with Chinese, French, and Mediterranean diets?
3. What medical problems can result from unhealthy eating?
This magazine article offers tips to help keep your eyes healthy.
1. Do you wear glasses or contact lenses?
2. How many hours a day do you spend in front of a television and/or computer screen?
3. In the past few years, has your eyesight changed? If so, how?
This magazine article reveals why an unusual number of people in Azerbaijan live to be over 100 years old.
1. What do you know about Azerbaijan?
2. What is the average life expectancy of men in your country? What about women?
3. What factors lead to long life?
of the words and phrases in the box. Then write each word or phrase next to the correct treatment.
an allergy a cataract a hacking cough high blood pressure a kidney stone
cancer diabetes heart disease an infection obesity
Medication:
Surgery:
Medication and surgery:
Unit 2 • Health
Vocabulary Find out the meanings
READING 1
1 Why do people in Asia get a fraction of the cancer, heart disease, and diabetes that Americans get? Why are the French, with their rich sauces, so slim? The secret may simmer in their food. For intense flavor and a healthier body, come visit these diets of the world.
The Chinese diet
2 For centuries, the traditional Chinese diet has been primarily vegetarian - featuring lots of vegetables, rice, and soybeans - and containing only shavings of meat for flavoring. This is far healthier than the traditional American diet, which often features meat as the focus of the meal.
3 The traditional Chinese diet consists mainly of plant foods, small amounts of fish and poultry, and only occasionally red meat, says T. Colin Campbell, professor of nutrition at Cornell University. He has been comparing the diets in the United States and rural China by tracking the eating habits of people living in 100 Chinese rural villages. According to Campbell's research, the traditional Chinese diet is comprised of only 20 percent animal foods - far less than the amount in the typical American diet.
The French diet
4 Flaky croissants, frogs' legs swimming in butter, and chocolate mousse: Despite their rich diet, the French are generally slimmer than Americans. According to research, just 8 percent of the French qualify as obese, compared to 33 percent of Americans. How do the French do it? The French tend to snack less and savor their meals more slowly - which could lead to eating less food overall.
5 The eating patterns of the French offer significant clues to their healthfulness. For one, they traditionally don't take lunch lightly. In a study that tracked the eating habits of 50 workers in Paris and Boston, the French participants consumed 60 percent of their day's calories before 2 p.m., followed later by a small dinner, so they were less likely to sleep after eating major calories. Secondly, the study found that the French participants didn't snack, generally defined as consuming one to two between-meal foods. "The French ate
less than one snack a day. Here in the United States, we have about three snacks a day," says R. Curtis Ellison, professor of preventive medicine at Boston University.
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The Mediterranean diet
6 Ask Ancel Keys, 96, the secret of his long life, and he's likely to point to tonight's meal: baked cod flavored with lemon juice and olive oil, steamed broccoli, and roasted potatoes.
7 It's quintessentially Mediterranean, befitting the man who first promoted the health benefits of the Mediterranean diet. As a young scientist more than 50 years ago, Keys showed that among people in countries where fresh fruits and vegetables are plentiful and olive oil flows freely - Greece, southern Italy, southern France, parts of North Africa and the Middle East - heart disease is rare. In countries where people fill their plates with beef, cheese, and other foods high in saturated fat - like the United States - it's a leading cause of death.
8 The original Mediterranean diet, eaten by rural villagers on the Greek island of Crete, ”. . . was nearly vegetarian, with fish and very little meat, and was rich in green vegetables and fruits," says Keys. People living on Crete get more than one-third of their calories from fat, most of it from olive oil, which is rich in monounsaturated fatty acids.
Adapted from www.webmd.org.
Dashes (-) can be used to give definitions and examples. For example, the explanation for primarily vegetarian (par. 2) is featuring lots of vegetables, rice and soybeans.
Using previous knowledge