Healthy / Unhealthy: Explanation
 

Healthy / Unhealthy

• Details

Name of Item Is It Good For You?
Activity Type Vocabulary / Discussion
Student Level Intermediate - Upper Intermediate
Time Allowance 10 - 20 minutes
Preparation Required preparing to explain unknown words
Other Items Needed nothing special
Vocabulary Digestion / Resistance to disease / High blood pressure / Healthy Teeth / Nervous / Irritable / Eyesight / Cancer / Live longer
Grammar awareness of whether phrases are nouns / verbs adjectives and how they might fit into sentences



• Instructions

Decide whether to pre-teach / elicit the vocabulary in the list or whether to ask students to use dictionaries. Then instruct students to complete the sentences with one of the phrases in each. A list of most likely answers follows but these are (a little) subject to opinion.
  1. high blood pressure
  2. eyesight
  3. live longer
  4. resistance to disease
  5. healthy teeth
  6. digestion
  7. nervous and irritable
  8. cancer
Next, get students to decide individually whether they think the various sentences are true and write "true" or "false" alongside them. Then when they have decided, divide the class into groups of four or five to compare their ideas and debate any which they don't agree about.

As a further activity to reinforce the vocabuary / sentence patterns from the 8 sentences, ask students to write a few sentences of their own about the health consequences of consuming any of the list at the bottom of the page. These sentences could be compared and discussed if time allows.



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• Download And Print

You have a choice of two different methods of getting this handout to your printer. It all depends on whether your computer has "Adobe Acrobat Reader" installed. If it has, then this would be the recommended method for printing out the worksheet. Try selecting the "PDF (Adobe Acrobat)" link below. If all goes well, a new application window should appear including a print button, which when selected will print out one copy.

If, on the other hand you do not have "Adobe Acrobat" select the "HTML (web page)" link below. (Also, this method is recommended for users of Netscape Navigator, which seems to have trouble interacting with the Acrobat program like this.) If all goes well, a new browser window will open, from which you can either click the "print button" on the toolbar or open the "File" menu, select "Print" and then adjust the "Print Dialog Box" to your own preferences.

The final link below is to enable you to print this "instruction page" if you want to. Click on the link, and when the page appears on a new screen you will be able to print it using the browser's "print button" or "file menu". After printing, close the window again so that you can continue to navigate around the site.




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