英语优秀教案(人教版):必修五(Unit 1 Great scientists Period 4)
英语优秀教案(人教版):必修五(Unit 1 Great scientists Period 1)

Unit 1Great scientistsBrief Statements Based on This UnitThis unit centers on Great scientists, including some scientists both at home and abroad like John Snow and Copernicus.The students should be encouraged to practise talking about these scientists.The whole unit can be divided into seven parts: warming up, reading, listening and speaking,In warming up, there is a quiz for the students to do, which will arouse the students’ interest in knowing about the famous scientists and help the students to know science is very important in our daily life.Group discussion and brainstorming will be used in this period to help the students to communicate with each other using their previous knowledge.In the reading passage, the students will learn about John Snow, who defeats“King Cholera”, and get a general idea about how to examine a new scientific idea.This will help the students to form their own attitude towards science.In learning about language, the students are encouraged to learn the following words and expressions: engine, characteristic, radium, theory, scientific, examine, conclude, analyze repeat, defeat, attend, expose, cure, control, absorb, severe, valuable, blame, immediately, handle, announce, instruct, virus, construction, contribute, positive, movement, backward, complete, enthusiastic, spin, reject, view, steam engine, put forward, draw a conclusion, in addition, link...to..., be strict with, lead to, make sense, point of view.While practising using the language, the students will learn about Copernicus’ RevolutionaryIn listening and speaking, more chances will be given to the students to learn about other scientists and their spirit.The students are encouraged to make up their mind to make contributions to science.The students will be asked to write a letter to Copernicus on the basis of the understanding ofAssessment will help the students to look back what they have learned and focus on the difficult and important points.So, this unit will be divided intoPeriod 1Period 2Period 3Period 4Period 6Period 7Knowledge aims:Key words in this unit: engine, characteristic, radium, theory, scientific, examine, conclude, analyze, repeat, defeat, attend, expose, cure, control, absorb, severe, valuable, blame, immediately, handle, announce, instruct, virus, construction, contribute, positive, movement, backward,Key phrases in this unit: put forward, know about, look into, in addition, prevent sth.fromdoing, lead to, make sense, punish sb.for, suggest doing sth.steam engine, draw a conclusion, link...to..., be strict with, lead to, point of view.Key sentence patterns:1 But he became inspired when he thought about helping ordinary people exposed to cholera.3 Only if you put the sun there did the movements of the other planets in the sky make sense.Grammar in this unit:Ability aims:2.To guess what will be talked about iEmotion aims:and how science helps to improve our society and change our life.Meanwhile, inspire the students to learn from the scientists and form their positive attitude towards science.Period 1Welcome to the UnitThe General Idea of This PeriodThe unit centers on“great scientists”.This is the first period of this unit.During this period, the students should be encouraged to give their previous knowledge of some of the famous scientists, participate in the activities in class and try to get more information from the discussion.They will take part in different forms of activities, including pair work, group work, competition, andWords and expressions in this unit will help the students to talk about the topic“great sci entists”.So at the beginning of this period, the teacher should spend some time training the students to read them and help the students pronounce them correctly.The students are encouraged to learn the new words in groups by themselves, using dictionaries and other reference books.Then more time should be given to the students to get familiar with the words and stly, several sentences will be given to the students to help them to know how to use some of the phrases.This unit is about“great scientists”, so from the very beginning, the teacher canstudents brainstorm something about great scientists.The students are free to say anything that they know.The students will be quite interested in this topic.This activity gives the students a chance to express their feelings about their favorite scientist.At the same time, this activity can stir the students’ enthusiasm in science.Then the teacher can have the students match the famous scientists with their discoveries, inventions or theories, making sure that they have some common sense about some world-famous scientists.and let other students guess who he or she is talking about.In this way, the students should learn toAfter that, the students will feel comfortable to do the quiz in the text.The students should beMeanwhile, the students’ interest in scientists and science should be cultivated.So two topicThe post-class activities are designed to arouse the students’ interest in science and encourage them to“DIY—do it yourself” in their daily life if they have some doubt in some areas.Teaching Important PointsHave the students discuss great scientists.Encourage the stUnderstand and learn the following words and expressions: engine, characteristic, radium, theory, scientific, examine, conclude, analyse, repeat, defeat, attend, expose, cure, control, absorb, severe, valuable, blame, immediately, handle, announce, instruct, virus, construction, contribute, positive, movement, backward, complete, enthusiastic, spin, reject, view, steam engine, put forward, draw a conclusion, in addition, link...to..., be strict with, lead to, make sense, point ofTeaching DifficultiesTeaching AidsCAI equipment with a Multi-media classroom and other normal teThree Dimensional Teaching AimsKnowledge AimsKnow about the outstanding discoveries, inventions and theories from some well-known scientists.Try to understand and learn the imporAbility AimsEmotional AimsEncourage the students to learn more about the great scientists and learn fromHelp the students to form the good habit in learning and encourage the students to take part inHelp the students to realize that it is scientific spirit that makes those scientists successful.Encourage the students to develop thTeaching ProcedureStep 1 GreetingStep 2 Lead inT: I’m very glad to see you all here.After a long holiday, all of you look energetic and happy.I hope that we will work hard together happily all through the year.I do believe that a bright future is waiting for you.We are sure to realize our dreams in the near future.By the way, I’d like to know what you would like to be in the future.Let me share your dreams.Anyone who gives your idea will get a star for your group.Ready?Go!S: I admire Yang Liwei very much, who is a great honour to our motherland.I’d like to be an astronaut like him.T: Yeah, the spacecraft, Shenzhou V, orbited the earth 14 times in 21 hours, making China the third country to have successfully sent an astronaut into space.I hope you will realize your dream.S: I want to be a doctor.I hope I’ll be an outstanding one and be expert in finding cures forT: That’s a good idea.There are s o many patients with cancers in the world, who are sufferingS: I want to be an English teacher like you.For one thing, I like English very much; for another, you are not only strict with us but also patient with us.You are just our friends and maybeT: I’m really glad to hear that.It’s my great honor to be your friends and I like my job very much.S: I’d like to be an expert in environment.You see, with the development of industry, our globe is seriously polluted.Dirty water, polluted air, and loud noise make our living conditionsT: Yes, someone predicted that the last drop of water in the world would be the tear of human being’s.I t hink all of us should pay attention to our environment, and make our contributions toS: I’m so interested in physics.And I have read Stephen Hawking’s A Brief History ofll know, the development of our society will go hand in hand with the development of science.T: Yeah, I can’t agree with you more.Science plays an important part in the development of our society.There are so many examples in the history of human beings.Ss: ...T: I’m so glad to share your dreams.Your ambition and careful thoughts really leave a good and amazing impression on me.I like them.In this unit, you will learn something about“Great scientists”.Maybe you will know what you need in your efforts to realize your dreams after we talk about some world-famous scientists.Before we come to“Warming up”, I’d like you to come toStep 3 Word puzzlesT: Open your books and turn to Page 92.Let(Let the students read the words and expressions together.Help them pronounce the new words and expressions ter give them some time to practise reading and remember some easy and important ones.GiveT: Here are some definitions of some of the words from this unit.Please work in pairs andWords Definitions or explanationsA.examine 1.geneB.repeatC.theoryD.immediatelypleteF.valuable 6.having all its parts;G.announceH.controlI.positiveJ.conclude 10.quite certain or sureT: Now, let’s check the answers.A—4, B—2, C—1, D—3, E—6, F—5, G—7, H—9, I—10, J—8. You have done a good job.I will give you some more minutes to go over all the words and1.“All roads lead to2.This sentence doesn’t make any sense3.Our English teacher is not only strict with4.He is good-looking, apart from5.It is announced that the spacecraft, Shenzhou Ⅵ6.It is not Tom but you who are to blame7.In 1995, the Chinese government put forward a plan for“rejuvenating the nation by relying8.Have you drawn any conclusion after you read this passage?T: Well done.So much for the learning of the new words and expressionsStep 4 BrainstormingT: Now let’s come to the title of this unit Great scientists.When we talk about greatS1: Madame Curie, who got two Nobel Prizes, one for physics and the other for chemistry, isS2: It reminds me of the great inventor named Thomas Alva Edison and one of hissayings“Genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration.”S3: Yes, we lead a better life now with the help of science.Without Edison, maybe now we are still living in a dark world.They really make our life easier and more comS4: I also think of one of the quotes from Albert Einstein, “Imagination is more important than knowledge.”S5: All the scientists are devoted to the career that they choose, and they set good examples toS6: Take all the scientists for example, if we want to be successful in the future, we should not only learn something from our textbooks, but also take part in social practice and get close toS7: I like plants very much.I just think of the two key scientists in the field of botany, Carl Linnaeus and Joseph Banks.The former one laid the foundation for the classification of plants, while the latter one also made great contributions to the development and direction of botany.Ss: ...T: I’m glad t o see that you have a great deal of previous knowledge of famous scientists in the world.Step 5 Previous knowledgeT: Now let’s match some of the great scientists with their famous discoveries, inventions or theories.Let me see who is the quickest in mindFamous scientistsA.Isaac Newton 1.Evolution (进化论B.Charles Darwin 2.Discovery of Radium(镭)C.Madame CurieD.Albert EinsteinE.Thomas Alva EdisonF.Nicolaus CopernicusG.Stephen HawkingH.Zhang Heng(Check the answers with all the students: A—3, B—1, C—2, D—5, E—4, F—8, G—7, H—6.)T: Since you have a better understanding of some of the great scientists, let’s play a game. Please work in groups and describe one of the great scientists, and then let other students guessGroup 1: In the eighteenth century, there lived a great scientist who conducted a number of experiments in which he showed what electricity is.Once he did a famous kite experiment on aS: Benjamin Franklin.Group 2: It is said that this English gentleman was sitting in his garden one day when suddenly he was hit by a falling apple.The story is probably not true, but this man did mention that he got one of his best-known ideas while watching apples fall from a tree.His name makes youdrew up a system of how objects move.His laws for motion are still used in physics today, at leastS: SirGroup 3:Food is what sets this great mind on fire.Rice, to be exact.This great mind has spent most of his life looking for ways to help farmers grow more rice so that all of us will have enough food to eat.He is known as the father of modern rice, but because of his long friendshipGroup 4: He was born on 8 January 1942 in Oxford, England.He has worked on the basic laws which govern the universe.He sh owed that Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity implied space and time would have a beginning in the Big Bang and an end in black holes.He has three popular books published: his best seller A Brief History of Time, Black Holes and Baby Universes and OtheSs: ...Step 6 QuizT: You have already known some information about some of the great scientists.Now let’s do a quiz, trying to find out who these scientiQuiz Questions1.Which scientist discovered that objects in water are lifted up by a force that helps them float?2.Who wrote a book explaining how animals and plants developed as the environment changed?4.Who used peas to show how physical characteristics are passed form parents to their7.Who was the painter that studied dead bodies to improve1.Archimedes2.Charles Darwin3.James Watt7.Leonardo davinciHawkingT: Please work in groups and have a discussion to find as much information as possible about these ten great s(The teacher had better join in the discussion and give them some guidance whenever necessary.After the discussion, ask some students to give a short report about what the group have(Refer to the information about these scientistsStep 7 PracticeT: Today we have learned a lot about great scientists in the world.We can learn from them to live our dreams.And we teachers are too willing to help you.In your opinion, what should our school /teS: Our school should give the students more chances to take part in social practiceS: Our teachers should help the students use their imaginationsS: We students should solve the problems on our own.(Ask more students to give their opinions.The teacher should encourage them, join them,Step 8 Discussion (Group Competition)T: Your ideas are so wonderful and amazing.I admire them very much.Now let’s com e to our topic.(Give the students several minutes to have a discussion.Then let them have a group competition.)Step 9 Summing upT: In this period, we have talked a lot about great scientists.You have a lot of previous knowledge and you are full of imagination and creativity.Those scientists set good examples to us.And I think all of us are happy about learning more of them.After class, it’s better to read some books about them and you can surf the Internet to get more information.And I’d like you to makeThe Design of the Writing on the BlackboardUnit 1Great scientistsPeriod 1Welcome to the UnitBrainstormingResearch and ActivitiesDIY1.Cover a glass of water with a piece of thick paper.Put one hand on the paper and turn the2.Fill one glass with fresh water and another glass with salt water. Put an ice cube in each glass.What happens?Why?3.Find out as many famous sayings from those scientists as possible.Reference for Teaching1.Charles Darwin was born in Shrewsbury(shropshire) to a moderately wealthy family with a strong intellectual heritage.His grandfather, Erasmus Darwin, was a physician, poet and biologist who laid some of the groundwork for the grandson’s revolutionary ideas.Charles attended Christ’s College at Cambridge with initial thoughts of entering the clergy, but soon took up studies in biology, zoology and geology.From 1831 to 1836, he served as a naturalist aboard the HMS Beagle on its scientific mission to South America and the Pacific.Back in England, he published a series of scientific treatises which established his reputation as one of the prominent thinkers of his day.From 1842 onwards, he lived on a country estate in Kent and pursued his studies among itsBy 1844, he had written the initial draft of his groundbreaking treatise on evolution and natural selection.However, he left this work unpublished for several years, preferring to refine and elaborate its core ideas.In 1858, he read a forthcoming paper by a fellow scientist Alfred Russell Wallace whose thesis closely parallele d Darwin’s own unpublished ideas, an event which pushed Darwin to go public with his own research.Both Wallace’s and Darwin’s papers were presented to the Linnean Society in a famous July, 1858 meeting. Darwin published The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection in 1859, sparking decades of contentious debate which ultimately led to the universal scientific recognition of Darwin’s thesis.In later years, he developed his ideas further in monographs on different types of plant and animal life.Notes:Shrewsbury: 什鲁斯伯里[英国英格兰西部城市physician: 内科医生(注意区分physicist, 物理学家revolutionary: 创新的HMS: (英国)皇家海军舰船treatises: 论文2.Stephen William Hawking was born on 8 January 1942 (300 years after the death of Galileo) in Oxford, Engl and.His parents’ house was in north London, but during the Second World WarOxford was considered a safer place to have babies.When he was eight, his family moved to St Albans, a town about 20 miles north of London.At eleven Stephen went to St Albans School, and then on to University College, Oxford, his father’s old college. Stephen wanted to do Mathematics, although his father would have preferred medicine.Mathematics was not available at University College, so he did Physics instead.After three years and not very much work he was awarded a first class honours degree in Natural Science.Stephen then went on to Cambridge to do research in Cosmology, there being no-one working in that area in Oxford at the time.His supervisor was Denis Sciama, although he had hoped to get Fred Hoyle who was working in Cambridge.After gaining his Ph.D.he became first a Research Fellow, and later on a Professorial Fellow at Gonville and Caius College.After leaving the Institute of Astronomy in 1973 Stephen came to the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, and since 1979 has held the post of Lucasian Professor of Mathematics.The chair was founded in 1663 with money left in the will of the Reverend Henry Lucas, who had been the Member of Parliament for the University.It was first held by Isaac Barrow, and then in 1663 by Isaac Newton.Stephen Hawking has worked on the basic laws which govern the universe.With Roger Penrose he showed that Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity implied space and time would have a beginning in the Big Bang and an end in black holes.These results indicated it was necessary to unify General Relativity with Quantum Theory, the other great Scientific development of the first half of the 20th Century.One consequence of such a unification that he discovered was that black holes should not be completely black, but should emit radiation and eventually evaporate and disappear.Another conjecture is that the universe has no edge or boundary in imaginary time.This would imply that the way the universe began was completelyHis many publications include The Large Scale Structure of Spacetime with G F R Ellis, General Relativity: An Einstein Centenary Survey, with W Israel, and 300 Years of Gravity, with W Israel.Stephen Hawking has two popular books published: his best seller A Brief History ofProfessor Hawking has twelve honorary degrees, was awarded the CBE in 1982, and was made a Companion of Honour in 1989.He is the recipient of many awards, medals and prizes andStephen Hawking continues to combine family life (he has three children and one grandchild), and his research into theoretical physics together with an extensive programme of travel and public lectures.3.Humphry Davy, a woodcarver’s son, was born in Penzance in 1778. After being educated in Truro, Davy was apprenticed to a Penzance surgeon.In 1797 he took up chemistry and was taken on by Thomas Beddoes, as an assistant at his Medical Pneumatic Institution in Bristol.Here he experimented with various new gases and discovered the anesthetic effect of laughing gas (nitrous oxide).Davy published details of his research in his book Researches, Chemical and Philosophical (1799).This led to Davy being appointed as a lecturer at the Royal Institution.He was a talentedIn 1806 Davy published On Some Chemical Agencies of Electricity. The following year he discovered that the alkalis and alkaline earths are compound substances formed by oxygen unitedwith metallic bases.He also used electrolysis to discover new metals such as potassium, sodium,Davy was now considered to be Britain’s leading scientist and in 1812 was knighted by George Ⅲ.With his assistant, Michael Faraday, Davy travelled abroad investigating his theory ofIn 1815 Humphry Davy invented a safety lamp for use in gassy coalmines, allowing deep coal seams to be mined despite the presence of firedamp (methane).This led to some controversy as George Stephenson, working in a colliery near Newcastle, also produced a safety lamp thatOne of Davy’s most important contributions to history was that he encourage manufacturers to take a scientific approach to production.His discoveries in chemistry helped to improve several industries including agriculture, mining and tanning.Sir Humphry Davy died in 1829.4.Leonardo da Vinci(b.1452, Vinci, Republic of Florence [now in Italy]—d.May 2, 1519, Cloux, Fr.), Italian painter, draftsman, sculptor, architect, and engineer whose genius, perhaps more than that of any other figure, epitomized the Renaissance humanist ideal.His Last Suppe (1495-1497) and Mona Lisa (1503-1506) are among the most widely popular and influential paintings of the Renaissance.His notebooks reveal a spirit of scientific inquiry and a mechanical5.Madam Curie is a French professor of physics.She was born in Poland in 1867.In 1891 she went to study in Paris University because at that time women were not admitted to universities in Poland.When she was studying in Paris, she lived a poor life, but she worked very hard.In 1895 she married Pierre Curie, and then they worked together on the research into radioactive matter.They discovered two kinds of radioactive matter—polonium and radium.In 1904 she and her husband were given the Nobel Prize for physics.In 1906 Pierre died, but Marie went on working.She received a second Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1911.So she became the first scientist in the world to win two Nobel Prizes.6.James Watt: British engineer and inventor who made fundamental improvements in the steam engine, resulting in the modern, high-7.Gregor Mendel was an Austrian botanist and founder of the science of genetics.Through years of experiments with plants, chiefly garden peas, he discovered the principle of the8.Archimedes: Greek mathematician, engineer, and physicist.Among the most important intellectual figures of antiquity, he discovered formulas for the area and volume of various geometric figures, applied geometry to hydrostatics and mechanics, devised numerous ingenious mechanisms, such as the Archimedean screw, and discovered the principle of buoyancy.9.Michael Faraday (September 22, 1791—August 25, 1867) was a British scientist(a physicist and chemist) who contributed significantly to the fields of electromagnetism and electrochemistry. He also invented the earliest form of the device that was to become the BunsenMichael Faraday was one of the great scientists in history.Some historians of science refer to him as the greatest experimentalist in the history of science.It was largely due to his efforts that electricity became a viable technology.The SI unit of capacitance, the farad(symbol F) is named after him.。
高中英语Unit 1《Great scientists》Period 1 优秀教案(人教版必修5)

Unit 1Great scientistsBrief Statements Based on This UnitThis unit centers on Great scientists, including some scientists both at home and abroad like John Snow and Copernicus.The students should be encouraged to practise talking about these scientists.The whole unit can be divided into seven parts: warming up, reading, listening and speaking,In warming up, there is a quiz for the students to do, which will arouse the students’ interest in knowing about the famous scientists and help the students to know science is very important in our daily life.Group discussion and brainstorming will be used in this period to help the students to communicate with each other using their previous knowledge.In the reading passage, the students will learn about John Snow, who defeats“King Cholera”, and get a general idea about how to examine a new scientific idea.This will help the students to form their own attitude towards science.In learning about language, the students are encouraged to learn the following words and expressions: engine, characteristic, radium, theory, scientific, examine, conclude, analyze repeat, defeat, attend, expose, cure, control, absorb, severe, valuable, blame, immediately, handle, announce, instruct, virus, construction, contribute, positive, movement, backward, complete, enthusiastic, spin, reject, view, steam engine, put forward, draw a conclusion, in addition, link...to..., be strict with, lead to, make sense, point of view.While practising using the language, the students will learn about Copernicus’ RevolutionaryIn listening and speaking, more chances will be given to the students to learn about other scientists and their spirit.The students are encouraged to make up their mind to make contributions to science.The students will be asked to write a letter to Copernicus on the basis of the understanding ofthe text.The letters are sure to be full of imagination and creativity.Assessment will help the students to look back what they have learned and focus on the difficult and important points.Period 1Period 2Period 3Listening andPeriod 4Period 6Period 7Knowledge aims:Key words in this unit: engine, characteristic, radium, theory, scientific, examine, conclude, analyze, repeat, defeat, attend, expose, cure, control, absorb, severe, valuable, blame, immediately, handle, announce, instruct, virus, construction, contribute, positive, movement, backward, complete,Key phrases in this unit: put forward, know about, look into, in addition, prevent sth.from doing,lead to, make sense, punish sb.for, suggest doing sth.steam engine, draw a conclusion, link...to..., be strict with, lead to, point of view.Key sentence patterns:1 But he became inspired when he thought about helping ordinary people exposed to cholera3 Only if you put the sun there did the movements of the other planets in the sky make sense.Grammar in this unit:Ability aims:Emotion aims:To encouand how science helps to improve our society and change our life.Meanwhile, inspire the students to learn from the scientists and form their positive attitude towards science.Period 1Welcome to the UnitThe General Idea of This PeriodThe unit centers on“great scientists”.This is the first period of this unit.During this period, the students should be encouraged to give their previous knowledge of some of the famous scientists, participate in the activities in class and try to get more information from the discussion.They will take part in different forms of activities, including pair work, group work, competition, and quiz.Group competition will be carried out all through the class.Words and expressions in this unit will help the students to talk about the topic“great scientists”.So at the beginning of this period, the teacher should spend some time training the students to read them and help the students pronounce them correctly.The students are encouraged to learn the new words in groups by themselves, using dictionaries and other reference books.Then more time should be given to the students to get familiar with the words and stly, several sentences will be given to the students to help them to know how to use some of the phrases.This unit is about“great scientists”, so from the very beginning, the teacher canthe students talk about their dreams in the future.Then the teacher can let the students brainstormsomething about great scientists.The students are free to say anything that they know.The students will be quite interested in this topic.This activity gives the students a chance to express their feelings about their favorite scientist.At the same time, this activity can stir the students’ enthusiasm in science.Then the teacher can have the students match the famous scientists with their discoveries, inventions or theories, making sure that they have some common sense about some world-famous scientists.Later the students will be divided into several groups, describe one of the greatand let other students guess who he or she is talking about.In this way, the students should learn toAfter that, the students will feel comfortable to do the quiz in the text.The students should beMeanwhile, the students’ interest in scientists and science should be cultivated.So two topicThe post-class activities are designed to arouse the students’ interest in science and encourage them to“DIY—do it yourself” in their daily life if they have some doubt in some areas.Teaching Important PointsHave the students discuss great scientists.Encourage the students to hold their views about their future career.Understand and learn the following words and expressions: engine, characteristic, radium, theory, scientific, examine, conclude, analyse, repeat, defeat, attend, expose, cure, control, absorb, severe, valuable, blame, immediately, handle, announce, instruct, virus, construction, contribute, positive, movement, backward, complete, enthusiastic, spin, reject, view, steam engine, put forward,Teaching DifficultieTeaching AidsCAI equipment with a Multi-Three Dimensional Teaching AimsKnowledge AimsKnow about the outstanding discoveries, inventions and theories from some well-known scientists.Ability AimsDevelop theEmotional AimsHelp the students to form the good habit in learning and encourage the students to take part inHelp the students to realize that it is scientific spirit that makes those scientists successful.Teaching ProcedureStep 1 GreetingStep 2 Lead inT: I’m very glad to see you all here.After a long holiday, all of you look energetic and happy.I hope that we will work hard together happily all through the year.I do believe that a bright future is waiting for you.We are sure to realize our dreams in the near future.By the way, I’d like to know what you would like to be in the future.Let me share your dreams.Anyone who gives your idea will get a star for your group.Ready?Go!S: I a dmire Yang Liwei very much, who is a great honour to our motherland.I’d like to be an astronaut like him.T: Yeah, the spacecraft, Shenzhou V, orbited the earth 14 times in 21 hours, making China the third country to have successfully sent an astronaut into space.I hope you will realize your dream.S: I want to be a doctor.I hope I’ll be an outstanding one and be expert in finding cures forT: That’s a good idea.There are so many patients with cancers in the world, who are suffe ring aS: I want to be an English teacher like you.For one thing, I like English very much; for another, you are not only strict with us but also patient with us.You are just our friends and maybe more thanT: I’m really glad to hear that.It’s my great honor to be your friends and I like my job very much.S: I’d like to be an expert in environment.You see, with the development of industry, our globe is seriously polluted.Dirty water, polluted air, and loud noise make our living conditions worse.IT: Yes, someone predicted that the last drop of water in the world would be the tear of human being’s.I think all of us should pay attention to our environment, and make our contributions totwice.I hope I will be a scientist like him.As we all know, the development of our society will go hand in hand with the development of science.T: Yeah, I can’t agree with you more.Science plays an important part in the development of our society.There are so many examples in the history of human beings.Ss: ...T: I’m so glad to share your dreams.Your ambiti on and careful thoughts really leave a good and amazing impression on me.I like them.In this unit, you will learn something about“Great scientists”.Maybe you will know what you need in your efforts to realize your dreams after we talk about some world-famo us scientists.Before we come to“Warming up”, I’d like you to come to thenew words in this unit, which will help you to learn this unit.Step 3 Word puzzles(Let the students read the words and expressions together.Help them pronounce the new words and expressions ter give them some time to practise reading and remember some easyT: Here are some definitions of some of the words from this unit.Please work in pairs and match the words with their definitions.(group compWords Definitions or explanationsA.examineB.repeatC.theoryD.immediatelyplete 5.oF.valuableG.announceH.controlI.positiveJ.conclude 10.quite certain or sureT: Now, let’s check the answers.A—4, B—2, C—1, D—3, E—6, F—5, G—7, H—9, I—10, J—8. You have done a good job.I will give you some more minutes to go over all the words and1.“All roads lead to Rome2.This sentence doesn’t make any sense3.Our English teacher is not only strict with4.He is good-looking, apart from5.It is announced that the spacecraft, Shenzhou Ⅵ6.It is not Tom but you who are to blame7.In 1995, the Chinese government put forward a plan for“rejuvenating the nation by relying on science and education”.And it has helped Chinese scientists make m any breakthroughs.8.Have you drawn any conclusion after you read this passage?T: Well done.So much for the learning of the new words and expressionsStep 4 BrainstormingT: Now let’s come to the title of this unit Great scientists.When we talk about grS1: Madame Curie, who got two Nobel Prizes, one for physics and the other for chemistry, isS2: It reminds me of the greatsayings“Genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration.”S3: Yes, we lead a better life now with the help of science.Without Edison, maybe now we are still living in a dark wS4: I also think of one of the quotes from Albert Einstein, “Imagination is more important than knowledge.”S5: All the scientists are devoted to the career that they choose, and they set good examples toS6: Take all the scientists for example, if we want to be successful in the future, we should not only learn something from our textbooks, but also take part in social practice and get close to natureS7: I like plants very much.I just think of the two key scientists in the field of botany, Carl Linnaeus and Joseph Banks.The former one laid the foundation for the classification of plants, while the latter one also made great contributions to the development and direction of botany.Ss: ...T: I’m glad to see that you have a great deal of previous knowledge of famous scientists in the world.Step 5 Previous knowledgeT: Now let’s match some of the great scientists with their famous discoveries, inventions or theories.Let me see whoFamous scientistsA.Isaac Newton 1.Evolution (进化论B.Charles Darwin 2.Discovery of Radium(镭)C.Madame CurieD.Albert EinsteinE.Thomas Alva EdisonF.Nicolaus CopernicusG.Stephen HawkingH.Zhang Heng(Check the answers with all the students: A—3, B—1, C—2, D—5, E—4, F—8, G—7, H—6.) T: Since you have a better understanding of some of the great scientists, let’s play a game. Please work in groups and describe one of the great scientists, and then let other students guess whoGroup 1: In the eighteenth century, there lived a great scientist who conducted a number of experiments in which he showed what electricity is.Once he did a famous kite experiment on aS: Benjamin Franklin.Group 2: It is said that this English gentleman was sitting in his garden one day when suddenly he was hit by a falling apple.The story is probably not true, but this man did mention that he got one of his best-known ideas while watching apples fall from a tree.His name makes you think that heof how objects move.His laws for motion are still used in physics today, at least in schools and uGroup 3: Food is what sets this great mind on fire.Rice, to be exact.This great mind has spent most of his life looking for ways to help farmers grow more rice so that all of us will have enough food to eat.He is known as the father of modern rice, but because of his long friendship with all theGroup 4: He was born on 8 January 1942 in Oxford, England.He has worked on the basic laws which govern the universe.He showed that Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity implied space and time would have a beginning in the Big Bang and an end in black holes.He has three popular books published: his best seller A Brief History of Time, Black Holes and Baby Universes and OtherSs: ...Step 6 QuizT: You have a lready known some information about some of the great scientists.Now let’s do aQuiz Questions1.Which scientist discovered that objects in water are lifted up by a force that helps them float?2.Who wrote a book explaining how animals and plants developed as the environment changed?4.Who used peas to show how physical characteristics are passed form parents to their6.Who invent9.Who invented the earliest instrument to tell people1.Archimedes2.Charles Darwin3.James Watt7.Leonardo davinci enHawkingT: Please work in groups and have a discussion to find as much information as possible about(The teacher had better join in the discussion and give them some guidance whenever necessary.After the discussion, ask some students to give a short report about what the group haveStep 7 PracticeT: Today we have learned a lot about great scientists in the world.We can learn from them to live our dreams.And we teachers are too willing to help you.In your opinion, what should our schoolS: Our school should give the students more chances to take part in social practiceS: Our teachers should help the students use their imaginationsS: We students should solve the problems on our own.(Ask more students to give their opinions.The teacher should encourage them, join them, praise them, and make comments on their ideas.Step 8 Discussion (Group Competition)T: Your ideas are so wonderful and amazing.I admire them very much.Now let’s come to our topic.(Give the students several minutes to have a discussion.Then let them have a group competition.)Step 9 Summing upT: In this period, we have talked a lot about great scientists.You have a lot of previous knowledge and you are full of imagination and creativity.Those scientists set good examples to us.And I think all of us are happy about learning more of them.After class, it’s better to read some books about them and you can surf the Internet to get more information.And I’d like you to make a“Scientists AlbuThe Design of the Writing on the BlackboardUnit 1Great scientistsPeriod 1Welcome to the UnitBrainstormingResearch and ActivitiesDIY1.Cover a glass of water with a piece of thick paper.Put one hand on the paper and turn the glass2.Fill one glass with fresh water and another glass with salt water. Put an ice cube in each glass.What happens?Why?3.Find out as many famous sayings from those scientists as possible.Reference for Teaching1.Charles Darwin was born in Shrewsbury(shropshire) to a moderately wealthy family with a strong intellectual heritage.His grandfather, Erasmus Darwin, was a physician, poet and biologist who laid some of the groundwork for the gra ndson’s revolutionary ideas.Charles attended Christ’s College at Cambridge with initial thoughts of entering the clergy, but soon took up studies in biology, zoology and geology.From 1831 to 1836, he served as a naturalist aboard the HMS Beagle on its scientific mission to South America and the Pacific.Back in England, he published a series of scientific treatises which established his reputation as one of the prominent thinkers of his day.From 1842 onwards, he lived on a country estate in Kent and pursued his studies among its gardens andBy 1844, he had written the initial draft of his groundbreaking treatise on evolution and natural selection.However, he left this work unpublished for several years, preferring to refine and elaborate its core ideas.In 1858, he read a forthcoming paper by a fellow scientist Alfred Russell Wallace whose thesis closely paralleled Darwin’s own unpublished ideas, an event which pushed Darwin to go public with his own research.Both Wallace’s and Darwin’s papers were presented to the Linnean Society in a famous July, 1858 meeting. Darwin published The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection in 1859, sparking decades of contentious debate which ultimately led to the universal scientific recognition of Darwin’s t hesis.In later years, he developed his ideas further in monographs on different types of plant and animal life.Notes:Shrewsbury: 什鲁斯伯里[英国英格兰西部城市physician: 内科医生(注意区分physicist, 物理学家revolutionary: 创新的HMS: (英国)皇家海军舰船treatises: 论文2.Stephen William Hawking was born on 8 January 1942 (300 years after the death of Galileo) in Oxford, England.His parents’ house was in north London, but during the Second World War Oxford was considered a safer place to have babies.When he was eight, his family moved to StAlbans, a town about 20 miles north of London.At eleven Stephen went to St Albans School, and then on to University College, Oxford, his father’s old college. Stephen wanted to do Mathematics, although his father would have preferred medicine.Mathematics was not available at University College, so he did Physics instead.After three years and not very much work he was awarded a first class honours degree in Natural Science.Stephen then went on to Cambridge to do research in Cosmology, there being no-one working in that area in Oxford at the time.His supervisor was Denis Sciama, although he had hoped to get Fred Hoyle who was working in Cambridge.After gaining his Ph.D.he became first a Research Fellow, and later on a Professorial Fellow at Gonville and Caius College.After leaving the Institute of Astronomy in 1973 Stephen came to the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, and since 1979 has held the post of Lucasian Professor of Mathematics.The chair was founded in 1663 with money left in the will of the Reverend Henry Lucas, who had been the Member of Parliament for the University.It was first held by Isaac Barrow, and then in 1663 by Isaac Newton.Stephen Hawking has worked on the basic laws which govern the universe.With Roger Penrose he showed that Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity implied space and time would have a beginning in the Big Bang and an end in black holes.These results indicated it was necessary to unify General Relativity with Quantum Theory, the other great Scientific development of the first half of the 20th Century.One consequence of such a unification that he discovered was that black holes should not be completely black, but should emit radiation and eventually evaporate and disappear.Another conjecture is that the universe has no edge or boundary in imaginary time.ThisHis many publications include The Large Scale Structure of Spacetime with G F R Ellis, General Relativity: An Einstein Centenary Survey, with W Israel, and 300 Years of Gravity, with W Israel.Stephen Hawking has two popular books published: his best seller A Brief History of Time, and his later book, Black Holes and Baby UniveProfessor Hawking has twelve honorary degrees, was awarded the CBE in 1982, and was made a Companion of Honour in 1989.He is the recipient of many awards, medals and prizes and is a Fellow of The Royal Society and a Member of the USStephen Hawking continues to combine family life (he has three children and one grandchild), and his research into theoretical physics together with an extensive programme of travel and public lectures.3.Humphry Davy, a woo dcarver’s son, was born in Penzance in 1778. After being educated in Truro, Davy was apprenticed to a Penzance surgeon.In 1797 he took up chemistry and was taken on by Thomas Beddoes, as an assistant at his Medical Pneumatic Institution in Bristol.Here he experimented with various new gases and discovered the anesthetic effect of laughing gas (nitrous oxide).Davy published details of his research in his book Researches, Chemical and Philosophical (1799).This led to Davy being appointed as a lecturer at the Royal Institution.He was a talentedIn 1806 Davy published On Some Chemical Agencies of Electricity. The following year he discovered that the alkalis and alkaline earths are compound substances formed by oxygen united with metallic bases.He also used electrolysis to discover new metals such as potassium, sodium,Davy was now considered to be Britain’s leading scientist and in 1812 was knighted by George Ⅲ.With his assistant, Michael Faraday, Davy travelled abroad investigating his theory of volcanicIn 1815 Humphry Davy invented a safety lamp for use in gassy coalmines, allowing deep coal seams to be mined despite the presence of firedamp (methane).This led to some controversy as George Stephenson, working in a colliery near Newcastle, also produced a safety lamp thatOne of Davy’s most important contributions to history was that he encourage manufacturers to take a scientific approach to production.His discoveries in chemistry helped to improve several industries including agriculture, mining and tanning.Sir Humphry Davy died in 1829.4.Leonardo da Vinci(b.1452, Vinci, Republic of Florence [now in Italy]—d.May 2, 1519, Cloux, Fr.), Italian painter, draftsman, sculptor, architect, and engineer whose genius, perhaps more than that of any other figure, epitomized the Renaissance humanist ideal.His Last Suppe (1495-1497) and Mona Lisa (1503-1506) are among the most widely popular and influential paintings of the Renaissance.His notebooks reveal a spirit of scientific inquiry and a mechanical inventiveness that5.Madam Curie is a French professor of physics.She was born in Poland in 1867.In 1891 she went to study in Paris University because at that time women were not admitted to universities in Poland.When she was studying in Paris, she lived a poor life, but she worked very hard.In 1895 she married Pierre Curie, and then they worked together on the research into radioactive matter.They discovered two kinds of radioactive matter—polonium and radium.In 1904 she and her husband were given the Nobel Prize for physics.In 1906 Pierre died, but Marie went on working.She received a second Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1911.So she became the first scientist in the world to win two Nobel Prizes.6.James Watt: British engineer and inventor who made fundamental improvements in the steam engine, resulting in the modern, high-7.Gregor Mendel was an Austrian botanist and founder of the science of genetics.Through years of experiments with plants, chiefly garden peas, he discovered the principle of the inheritance of characteristic8.Archimedes: Greek mathematician, engineer, and physicist.Among the most important intellectual figures of antiquity, he discovered formulas for the area and volume of various geometric figures, applied geometry to hydrostatics and mechanics, devised numerous ingenious mechanisms, such as the Archimedean screw, and discovered the principle of buoyancy.9.Michael Faraday (September 22, 1791—August 25, 1867) was a British scientist(a physicist and chemist) who contributed significantly to the fields of electromagnetism and electrochemistry. He also invented the earliest form of the device that was to become the Bunsen burner, which is used almost universally in science laboratories as a convenient sourceMichael Faraday was one of the great scientists in history.Some historians of science refer to him as the greatest experimentalist in the history of science.It was largely due to his efforts that electricity became a viable technology.The SI unit of capacitance, the farad(symbol F) is named after him.。
Unit 1《Great scientists》教案1(人教版必修5)

Unit 1 Great scientistsPeriod OneTeaching aims:1. Promote the Ss to know sth. about great scientists.2. Learn some new words and expressions.3. To examine a new scientific idea.4. Comprehension.Main points: Warming up and Reading passageDifficult points: ComprehensionTeaching procedures:Step 1. Warming up1. Show the Ss some pictures of great scientists and ask them to talk about them.2. The Ss discuss in groups and walk along to offer them help if needed.3. Work out their answers by themselves.4. Check their answers.Step 2. Pre-reading1. The Ss discuss the stages in examining a new scientific idea in pairs by asking the questions in the pre-reading.2. Ask the Ss to put them in order and get their answers.Step 3. Reading passage1. Let the Ss go over the passage and try to find the hard words, expressions and sentences they have.2. Explain the difficulties.3. Ask the Ss to read the passage more carefully and then try to complete the chart in the comprehending by discussing in groups.4. Choose some Ss to answer the questions in the comprehending.5. Ask the Ss to choose one of the paragraphs to read aloud fluently.Step 4. HomeworkRead the passage again and go over Learning about language.Period TwoTeaching aims and demands:1. Discover the useful words and expressions.2. Learn and improve the use of useful words and expressions.Main points: Learn to use the words and expressions that the Ss discover.Difficult points: Improve the use of the words and expressions.Teaching procedures:Step 1. Learning about language1. Discover the useful words and expressions in this unit in groups of four.2. Ask the Ss to show their results to the class.3. Ask them to study the words and expressions in Ex.1.4. Ss have a discussion and do the exercises.5. Check their answers.6. Change the verbs into nouns and make sentences by using “make a …”Step 2. Using words and expressions1. Make sure the Ss know the words and expressions.2. Let the Ss work in groups to complete the blank in Ex.1.3. Check their answers.4. Do the translations. Ss discuss the sentences and the translate them into English, using the words and phrases in brackets.Step 3. Words learning1. Show the Ss a list of prefixes to talk about them.2. Ask them to work in groups to find some words with the prefixes and study their meanings.3. Let them show their results to the class.4. Walk around the class to give them help if needed.Step 4. Study the use and meanings of suggest1. Study the meaning of suggest by looking the dictionary entry.2. Match the meanings with the sentences on the right in Ex.4.3. Check their answers.Step 5. HomeworkWrite down the translation Ex.2, 4, 6 and 7 in the exercise book.Period ThreeTeaching aims and demands:1. Discover the useful structure.2. Learn to use the grammar of past participle.3. Enable the Ss understand the past participle using as attribute and predicative. Main points: Learn the usage of the past participle using as attribute and predicative. Difficult points: Use the useful structure.Teaching procedures:Step 1. RevisionReview the past participle of some verbs.Step 2.1. Look at the chart and study the phrases.Past participle as the attribute and the predicative(1) terrified people(2) reserved seats(3) polluted water(4) a crowded room(5) a pleased winner(6) children who look astonished(7) a vase that is broken(8) a door that is closed(9) the audience who feel tired(10) an animal that is trapped3. Ask the Ss the following questions:(1) What kind of words before the past participles?(2) What kind of words after the past participles?4. Ask the Ss find the sentences using the past participle in the reading passage.5. Ss have a discussion and complete the chart with the same meaning of the phrases above.6. Ss show their results to the class.7. Complete the sentences in Ex.3.Step 3. Using structure1. Make sure the Ss know the words and the discuss in groups to finish the sentences using past participle.(Ex.1)2. Rewrite the sentences into one sentence using the past participle as the attribute or predicative.3. Check their answers.Step 4. HomeworkWrite down 1, 3, 5, 7 of Ex.2 in the exercise book.Period FourTeaching aims and demands:1. Improve the Ss listening skills.2. Know more about great scientists.Main points: Listening and speakingDifficult points: Get to know the information of listening materials.Teaching procedures:Step 1. Listening and speaking1. Listen to the tape and answer the questions.(1) What did Qian Xuesen study first?(2) What experience did he get in America that was very useful for China?(3) What was Qian Xuesen’s achievement when he returned to China from America?(4) How has he been honoured in China?(5) How did Steve honour him?Step 2. Speaking1. Ss discuss what scientific job they will do in the future in pairs by using the questions and expressions on Page 6.2. Ask some Ss to talk in class.Step 3. Listening and talking1. Play the tape for the Ss to listen and finish the exercises in the workbook, pause from time to time if needed.2. Check their answers.3. Work in pairs. Imagine you are going to meet a specialist about a newly-found flower by using the useful sentences on Page 42.Step 4. Listening task1. Play the tape for the Ss to get the information of the listening task.2. Check their answers.Step 5. HomeworkPrepare the reading task.Period FiveTeaching aims and demands:Improve the Ss reading skills and their talent in getting the information.Main points: Reading and reading taskDifficult points: Finding the Euler path.Teaching procedures:Step 1. RevisionRevise the past participle used as the attribute and predicative.Step 2. Reading1. Ss read the passage as fast as they can and then draw the two theories of the universe in groups.2. Ask the Ss to show their pictures to the class.3. Ss read the passage again and find the problems they have.4. Solve the Ss’ problems.5. Discuss in pairs. If you were Nicolaus Copernicus, would you have hidden your theory for so many years? Why?6. Choose some Ss to share their ideas to the class.Step 3. Reading task1. Ss read the passage and answer the following questions.(1) What is odd point? (2) What is even point? (3) What rule did Euler find?2. Ss discuss in groups and try to find the answers.3. Teacher walks around to offer them help.4. Use the rule to see if you can go over the diagram, not missing any points or going over any line twice.( See figures on Page 46)5. Ss work in groups.Step 4. HomeworkWrite a short passage about Copernicus.Period SixTeaching aims and demands:1. Try to write sth persuasive.2. Learn to write a report about people.Main points:Make a plan in discussion.Difficult points:Write a passage / a report.Teaching procedures:Step 1. Writing1.Ask the Ss to read the passage again and gather some information about Copernicus.2. Plan to write a letter.Step 2. Writing taskWrite a report about your scientist, his/her life, achievements and the key to his/her success.1. Before you begin to write, remember to put your information under three headings: life, achievements and key to success.2. Plan your report like the one on P47.3. Ask them to read their plans.4. Begin to write the report.Step 3. HomeworkComplete the report and write down on the exercise book.。
高中英语人教版必修5教案-Unit_1_Great_scientists_教学设计_教案_1

教学准备1. 教学目标Knowledge AimsLearn something about some famous scientists in the world.Know about the outstanding discoveries, inventions and theories from some well-known scientists.Try to understand and learn the important words and expressions.Ability AimsDevelop the students’ ability of speaking.Encourage the students to give more information about the great scientists.Emotional AimsEncourage the students to learn more about the great scientists and learn from them.Help the students to form the good habit in learning and encourage the students to take part in social practice.Help the students to realize that it is scientific spirit that makes those scientists successful.Encourage the students to develop their love for science.2. 教学重点/难点the first period of this unit.Words and expressions in this unitprevious knowledge of some of the famous scientistsHave the students discuss great scientists.3. 教学用具4. 标签教学过程一、Words Definitions or explanationsA.examine 1.general principles of an art or scienceB.repeat 2.say or do againC.theory 3.at once; without delayD.immediate 4.look at...carefully in order to learn about or from...plete 5.of great value, worth or useF.valuable 6.having all its parts; whole; finishedG.announce 7.make knownH.control e or bring to an endI.positive 9.power to order or directJ.conclude 10.quite certain or sure二、1.“All roads lead to Rome, ”he encouraged me after I failed the entrance examination.2.This sentence doesn’t make any sense.3.Our English teacher is not only strict with us but also friendly to us.4.He is good-looking, apart from his nose.5.It is announced that the spacecraft, Shenzhou Ⅵ, landed on the earth successfully.6.It is not Tom but you who are to blame.7.In 1995, the Chinese government put forward a plan for “rejuvenating the nation by relying on science and education”.And it has helped Chinese scientists make many breakthroughs.8.Have you drawn any conclusion after you read this passage?9.Well done.So much for the learning of the new words and expressions.三、核心词汇练习1.(1)Zhang Yining____________________________ (艰难地战胜了李佳薇)in the 29th Olympics.(2)The problem ______________ (把我难住了)and I can’t solve it.(3)He ________ all his opponents in the election.(4)Mary ________ the first prize for swimming.答案:(1)defeated Li Jiawei with difficulty (2)has defeated me(3)defeated/beat (4)wonattend vt. 出席,照顾,护理,参加2.attend vt. 出席,照顾,护理,参加(1)attend school/class上学/上课attend a meeting参加会议attend a lecture /a concert/a wedding/funeral听演讲/听音乐会/婚礼/葬礼attend (on/upon) sb.伺候某人,照顾某人attend to处理;(2)attendance (n)出席,到场;出席人数attention (n.)注意力attentive 专注的,专心的attentively:carefully 专心地。
人教版高二英语必修五 Unit 1 Great scientists 教案

Unit 1 Great scientistsPeriod OneTeaching aims:1.Promote the Ss to know sth. about great scientists.2. Learn some new words and expressions.3. To examine a new scientific idea.4. Comprehension.Main points:Warming up and Reading passageDifficult points: ComprehensionTeaching procedures:Step 1. Warming up1. Show the Ss some pictures of great scientists and ask them to talk about them.2. The Ss discuss in groups and walk along to offer them help if needed.3. Work out their answers by themselves.4. Check their answers.Step 2. Pre-reading1. The Ss discuss the stages in examining a new scientific idea in pairs by asking the questions in the pre-reading.2. Ask the Ss to put them in order and get their answers.Step 3. Reading passage1. Let the Ss go over the passage and try to find the hard words, expressions and sentences they have.2. Explain the difficulties.3. Ask the Ss to read the passage more carefully and then try to complete the chart in the comprehending by discussing in groups.4. Choose some Ss to answer the questions in the comprehending.5. Ask the Ss to choose one of the paragraphs to read aloud fluently.Step 4. HomeworkRead the passage again and go over Learning about language.Period TwoTeaching aims and demands:1. Discover the useful words and expressions.2. Learn and improve the use of useful words and expressions.Main points:Learn to use the words and expressions that the Ss discover. Difficult points: Improve the use of the words and expressions. Teaching procedures:Step 1. Learning about language1. Discover the useful words and expressions in this unit in groups of four.2. Ask the Ss to show their results to the class.3. Ask them to study the words and expressions in Ex.1.4. Ss have a discussion and do the exercises.5. Check their answers.6. Change the verbs into nouns and make sentences by using “make a …” Step 2. Using words and expressions1. Make sure the Ss know the words and expressions.2. Let the Ss work in groups to complete the blank in Ex.1.3. Check their answers.4. Do the translations. Ss discuss the sentences and the translate them into English, using the words and phrases in brackets.Step 3. Words learning1. Show the Ss a list of prefixes to talk about them.2. Ask them to work in groups to find some words with the prefixes and study their meanings.3. Let them show their results to the class.4. Walk around the class to give them help if needed.Step 4. Study the use and meanings of suggest1. Study the meaning of suggest by looking the dictionary entry.2. Match the meanings with the sentences on the right in Ex.4.3. Check their answers.Step 5. HomeworkWrite down the translation Ex.2, 4, 6 and 7 in the exercise book.Period ThreeTeaching aims and demands:1. Discover the useful structure.2. Learn to use the grammar of past participle.3. Enable the Ss understand the past participle using as attribute and predicative.Main points:Learn the usage of the past participle using as attribute and predicative.Difficult points:Use the useful structure.Teaching procedures:Step 1. RevisionReview the past participle of some verbs.Step 2.1. Look at the chart and study the phrases.Past participle as the attribute and the predicative(1) terrified people(2) reserved seats(3) polluted water(4) a crowded room(5) a pleased winner(6) children who look astonished(7) a vase that is broken(8) a door that is closed(9) the audience who feel tired(10) an animal that is trapped3. Ask the Ss the following questions:(1) What kind of words before the past participles?(2) What kind of words after the past participles?4. Ask the Ss find the sentences using the past participle in the reading passage.5. Ss have a discussion and complete the chart with the same meaning of the phrases above.6. Ss show their results to the class.7. Complete the sentences in Ex.3.Step 3. Using structure1. Make sure the Ss know the words and the discuss in groups to finish the sentences using past participle.(Ex.1)2. Rewrite the sentences into one sentence using the past participle as the attribute or predicative.3. Check their answers.Step 4. HomeworkWrite down 1, 3, 5, 7 of Ex.2 in the exercise book.Period FourTeaching aims and demands:1. Improve the Ss listening skills.2. Know more about great scientists.Main points:Listening and speakingDifficult points:Get to know the information of listening materials. Teaching procedures:Step 1. Listening and speaking1. Listen to the tape and answer the questions.(1) What did Qian Xuesen study first?(2) What experience did he get in America that was very useful for China?(3) What was Qian Xuesen’s achievement when he returned to China from America?(4) How has he been honoured in China?(5) How did Steve honour him?Step 2. Speaking1. Ss discuss what scientific job they will do in the future in pairs by using the questions and expressions on Page 6.2. Ask some Ss to talk in class.Step 3. Listening and talking1. Play the tape for the Ss to listen and finish the exercises in the workbook, pause from time to time if needed.2. Check their answers.3. Work in pairs. Imagine you are going to meet a specialist about a newly-found flower by using the useful sentences on Page 42.Step 4. Listening task1. Play the tape for the Ss to get the information of the listening task.2. Check their answers.Step 5. HomeworkPrepare the reading task.Period FiveTeaching aims and demands:Improve the Ss reading skills and their talent in getting the information. Main points:Reading and reading taskDifficult points:Finding the Euler path.Teaching procedures:Step 1. RevisionRevise the past participle used as the attribute and predicative.Step 2. Reading1. Ss read the passage as fast as they can and then draw the two theories of the universe in groups.2. Ask the Ss to show their pictures to the class.3. Ss read the passage again and find the problems they have.4. Solve the Ss’ problems.5. Discuss in pairs. If you were Nicolaus Copernicus, would you have hidden your theory for so many years? Why?6. Choose some Ss to share their ideas to the class.Step 3. Reading task1. Ss read the passage and answer the following questions.(1) What is odd point? (2) What is even point? (3) What rule did Euler find?2. Ss discuss in groups and try to find the answers.3. Teacher walks around to offer them help.4. Use the rule to see if you can go over the diagram, not missing any points or going over any line twice.( See figures on Page 46)5. Ss work in groups.Step 4. HomeworkWrite a short passage about Copernicus.Period SixTeaching aims and demands:1. Try to write sth persuasive.2. Learn to write a report about people.Main points:Make a plan in discussion.Difficult points:Write a passage / a report.Teaching procedures:Step 1. Writing1.Ask the Ss to read the passage again and gather some information about Copernicus.2. Plan to write a letter.Step 2. Writing taskWrite a report about your scientist, his/her life, achievements and the key to his/her success.1. Before you begin to write, remember to put your information under three headings: life, achievements and key to success.2. Plan your report like the one on P47.3. Ask them to read their plans.4. Begin to write the report.Step 3. HomeworkComplete the report and write down on the exercise book.。
人教高中英语必修五 单元教案Unit 1 Great scientists

Unit 1 Great scientistsThe first period: Warming up and readingImportant points:Let students learn about some great scientists and their contributions.Get students to read the passage and know about John Snow and how he defeated “King Cholera” by using different reading skills.Difficult points:Develop students` reading ability and learn how to organize scientific research.Enable students to talk about great scientists and tell their stories.Step 1 Lead inHave a free talk with students: we have learned about many great people and some famous scientists and now look at the pictures of these great people: Isaac Newton, Albert Einstein, Stephen Hawking, Qian Xuesen, and tell their contributions.Discuss the following question in small groups: what qualities do you think a scientist should have?(persistent, determined, imaginative, careful, creative, clever, strict, patient,…… )Step 2 Warming up1. Ask students to have a discussion in pairs to try this quiz and find out who knows the most.Step 3 Pre-reading1. Do you know how to prove a new idea in scientific research? Discuss in small groups the stages in setting out a newsupporting evidence→Draw a conclusion)2. What do you know about infectious diseases? What do you know about cholera?(Infectious diseases can spread easily. They may do great harm to people. AIDS and SARS are infectious diseases. They are difficult to cure.)(Cholera(霍乱) infects people`s intestines(肠), causing diarrhea(腹泻), vomiting(呕吐) and leg cramps(腿部痉挛). The most common cause of cholera is that people eat or drink water polluted by the bacteria(细菌). A severe case can lead to death without immediate treatment.)Step 4 Reading1. Skimming: ask students to skim the text and try to find the main idea of the passage as they can.(The main idea: How John Snow collected, analyzed the data and found the cause of the disease and solved it.)2. Scanning: ask them to try to get detailed information and then choose the correct answers after reading the passage.1). John Snow became inspired when _______.A. he became a well-known doctor in LondonB. he attended Queen Victorian to ease the birth of her babiesC. he thought about helping ordinary people exposed to choleraD. he found the cause of cholera and defeated “King Cholera”2). The reason why John Snow used the map in his research was that with its help ______. A. he would not lose his wayC. he could find out what caused the outbreak of choleraD. he could find out how many people died3). Why did such houses as 20 and 21 Broad Street and Cambridge Street have no deaths? Because ________.A. people there were given free beer and they had not drunk the water from Broad Street pumpB. people there had known that the water was polluted by the dirty water from LondonC. the disease began to slow down in Broad Street and Cambridge StreetD. people in these families were much stronger than those near the Broad Street pump4). The following measures should be taken to prevent cholera except _______.A. always drinking beerB. instructing the water companies not to expose people to polluted water any moreC. examine all water suppliesD. finding new methods of dealing with polluted water.5). What made John Snow find the cause of cholera?A. Queen Victoria`s orderB. his wife`s deathC. Kindness, carefulness and good observationD. Strong determination, patience and selfishness(The answers: CCAAC)4. Answer the questions:1). John Snow believed Idea 2 was right. How did he finally prove it?(He finally proved his idea because he found an outbreak that was clearly related to the Broad Street outbreak, collected information and was able to tie cases outside the area to polluted water.)2). Do you think John Snow would have solved this problem without the map?(No. The map helped John Snow organize his ideas. He was able to identify those households that had had many deaths and check their water-drinking habits. He identified those houses that had had no deaths and surveyed their drinking habits. The evidence clearly pointed to the polluted water being the cause.)3). Cholera was a 19th century disease. What disease do you think is similar to cholera today? Why?(Three diseases, which are similar today, are SARS, AIDS and bird flu, because they are serious, have unknown causes and need public health care to solve them.)5. Fill in the blanks:How did John Snow finally defeat cholera?As the disease spread quickly, John Snow began to gather information. He marked on a map where all the dead people had lived, analyzed all the evidence and found out the polluted water was the cause. Then he suggested that the source of all drinking water should be examined.根据课文内容填空:1. Encourage students to fill in the stages of a scientific experiment at the top of each paragraph. Ask students to look at each paragraph and its heading in turn. Get them to write down the evidence or approach John Snow used in that stage to fill in2. Begin a class discussion with students by asking them the following questions:What branch of science are you using to illustrate the stage of an experiment?Did these stages fit your branch of science?Is this an approach used in your science class when you do experiments?What differences are there (if any)?Do you think these differences (if there are any) are important?Do you think this approach would work for all scientific subjects?Step 6 Consolidation1. Ask students to complete the following without referring to the textbook, using the words and phrases from the reading passage.John Snow was a famous doctor in London. There was the most deadly disease called “King Cholera” of its day. Every time there was a(n) outbreak, many people died. John Snow wanted to face the challenge and solve this problem. He knew that it would never be controlled until its cause was found. At that time, there were two theories about cholera. The first suggested that cholera multiplied in the air. The second suggested that people absorbed this disease into their bodies with their meals. John Snow suspected the second theory was correct but he needed evidence. So he collected data to test the two theories. He marked on a map where all the dead people had lived and the map gave a valuable clue about the cause of the disease. It seemed that the water was to blame. Next, John Snow looked into the source of the water for these streets. He found two other deaths in another part of London that were linked to the Broad Street outbreak. With enough evidence, he announced with certainty that polluted water carried the virus of cholera.2. let students retell the reading passage in their own words.Step 7 HomeworkLearn the useful words and expressions by heart.Read the reading passage again and try to say or write something about how John Snow defeated “King Cholera”.The second period: Learning about language: Important language pointsImportant points:1. Enable students to grasp the usage of such important new words and expressions as conclude, defeat, attend, cure, challenge, suspect, blame, pollute, handle, announce, put forward, draw a conclusion, expose… to, link….to….2. Get students to master the following sentence patterns:So many thousands of terrified people died every time there was an outbreak.It seemed that the water was to blame.To prevent this from happening again, John Snow suggested the source of all the water supplies be examined.Difficult points:Let students learn the usage of the words: attend and blame.Get students to learn and understand some long and difficult sentences.Knowledge aims:Some new words and expressions: characteristic, radium, painter, scientific, conclude, conclusion, analyze, defeat, expert, attend, physician, expose, cure, challenge, victim, absorb, suspect, enquiry, neighbour, severe, pump, foresee, blame, pollute, handle, link, announce, instruct, construct, construction, contribute, put forward, draw a conclusion, expose.. to, link…to, apart fromLet students learn the following important sentence patterns:But he became inspired when he thought about helping ordinary people exposed to cholera. (The past participle as predicative and attribute)Neither its cause nor its cure was understood. (neither ….nor……; subject-verb agreement)So many thousands of terrified people died every time there was an outbreak. (the past participle as the attribute; the adverbial clause introduced by every time)It seemed that the water was to blame. (It seem / seemed that…..; be to blame)….John Snow suggested that the source of all the water supplies be examined. (….suggest that somebody (should) do ……; ….. suggest that something (should) be done….)Check the workbook exercises.Ask some students to talk something about how John Snow defeated “King Cholera”.Step 2 Reading and finding1. Get students to read through Warming up, Reading and Comprehending to underline all the new words and useful expressions or collocations in these parts.Collocations: know about, find out, lift sth. up by a force, steam engine, physical chararcteristics, be passed from….to…, keep…safe, put forward a theory, black holes, in scientific research, set out, a new scientific idea, draw a conclusion, infectious diseases, a famous doctor, ordinary people, expose…to sth, the deadly disease, neither…nor…, terrified people, every time, solve the problem, become interested in, float around, absorb sth. into, gather information, be determined to do sth., a valuable clue, the water pump, be to blame, look into, the source of water, the astonished people, slow down, link….to…, be liked to, have it delivered, have sth. done, die of, with certainty, polluted water, prevent…from.., be instructed to do sth., be defeated, be similar to, write a short summary ofRead them aloud and copy them down in the exercise book after class. Try to learn them by heart.Step 3 Discussing useful words and expressions1. Turn to page 4. Go through the exercises with students and make sure they know what to do.2. Give them several minutes to finish the exercises and then check the answers with them.Step 4 Studying important language points1. discover: to find or learn about (a place, fact, etc.); find sth. unexpected; come to know or realize sth.I have discovered a supper restaurant near here.Did you ever discover who had been sending you the flowers these days?We have discovered that the young man is a discreet(谨慎的) and economical(节约) fellow.Despite her great age, she was very graceful indeed, but so far, the archaeologists(考古学家) have been unable to discover her identity.Who discovered radium?Who invented the steam engine?In spite of this, many people are confident that the revealer(探测器) may reveal something of value fairly soon.She disclosed that she had been married for a month.2. put forward: to advance; pro; pose or suggest sth. for discussion; to move forward to give the correct timeHe put forward a good plan for this project.Can I put you forward(提名, 推荐) for the golf club secretary?The match has been put forward to 1:30.Put asidePut downPut onPut on weightPut upPut up withPut awayPut offPut on speedPut on a new playPut up a posterPut out3. draw a conclusion:conclusion: the end of something; a belief or an opinion that is the result of reasoningconclude: come to an end; to arrange and settle formally and finallyto conclude a speech: 结束演讲To conclude, I wish you all good health and a long life.The doctor concluded that the patient`s disease was cancer.The judge concluded that the accused was guilty.4. Expert: a person with special knowledge, skill or something in a particular field5. attend: to be present at an event or activity; to look after, care for, serveHe decided to attend the meeting himself.Which doctor is attending you?The work was attended with much difficulty.6. expose: to uncover or make sth. visible; to display; to make known; to revealWhen she smiled, she exposed a set of perfect white teeth.Don`t expose your skin to the sun for too long.They had to be exposed to the enemy`s gunfire.He exposed their plot.The crime of the corrupt officials(贪官污吏) must be exposed without any reserve(保留).Deadly poison / weapons / pale /8: neither…nor…9: control: to have power over; to rule; to directlose control of / be (go) out of controlin control of 控制, 负责under the control ofAll schools are controlled by the Ministry of Education.The driver lost control of his car and it knocked into a tree.The car was out of control and ran into a wall.He was in control of the car.This money is under the control of Mr. Brown.10. absorb: to take in; suck up; hold the attention or interest of sth. fullyA sponge(海绵) absorbs water.Clever children absorb knowledge easily.be absorbed in: 专心于, 全神贯注于The little girl was absorbed in reading a tale.The writer was so absorbed in his writing that he forgot to flick the ashes from his cigar.11. severe: so serious; very harmful or painful; serious or uncomfortablebe severe with: 对…要求严格I think you are too severe on the boy.His severe looks frightened me.He has a severe pain in his leg.He is severe with himself.12. It seems / seemed that …..It seemed that she is lying.It seems that Mary is able to solve the problem.13. be to blame: to be responsible for sth. bad;be + to do sthWho is to blame for the mistake?She was in no way to blame.决不应该责备他.No one is to leave this building without the permission of the police.You are not to drop little in this park. 公园里决不许乱丢垃圾.14. immediately: at once; without delay; the moment that…..; as soon asShe came immediately.I came immediately I heard the news.Immediately I saw her I recognized her.15. link…to…: to connect….with…Fingerprints linked the suspect to the crime.The newspapers have linked his name to / with hers.16. announce: to make sth. known publiclyHe announced his decision.It is/ was announced that……It has been announced that he will resign.17. with certainty:I can`t say with any certainty where I shall be next week.18. suggest:I suggested that he should give up smoking.Mary suggested leaving early for the airport.She suggested a picnic at the weekend.19. instruct: to give orders or directionsAfter having been instructed to wait here until the lecturer arrives.She instructed me in the use of the telephone.The boss gave me so many instructions at one time that I got muddled up(使…糊涂).20. apart from: 除….之外(还有); 除…..之外(没有)besides: 除….之外(还有); in addition to: 包括; 除…之外(还有); except for: 除….之外(主语就完美无缺了), 是对主语的修正.What do you study apart from English?Apart from being large, the trousers don not suit me.Besides milk and cheese, we need vegetables.He had considered everything except the weather.I know nothing about it except what I have read in the papers.Your composition is excellent except for some spelling mistakes.Step 5 ConsolidationDo Exercises 1,2,3 and 4 in Discovering Useful words and expressions.Step 6 Closing down by a quizShow the following exercises to students and let them finish in a very short time.1. _____ writing the article, Mrs. Curie even forgot her dinner.A. Absorbed inB. Absorbing atC. Having absorbed byD. to absorb in2. No one has _____ anything better than the plan now under consideration.A. put upB. come upC. put forwardD. come up to3. The mother didn`t know who _____ for the broken glass as it happened while she was out.A. to be blamedB. to blameC. blamedD. was to blame4. Please give me a call ____ you arrive in New York.A. immediatelyB. immediately whenC. the moment whenD. at the moment5. I care for nothing _____ the one you bought for me yesterday.A. in additionB. as well asC. besidesD. apart from6. He ____ the list of names to see that no one had been left out.A. checkedB. examinedC. testedD. observed7. Kevin looked ____ after a day’s hard work. What he wanted most was a good rest.A. exhaustedB. exhaustingC. exhaustD. being exhausted8. All her fans are ____by Jolin’s performance in the live concert.A. inspireB. inspiringC. inspiredD. being spired9. All the students are instructed to remain ___ until all the test papers are collected.A. seatB. seatingC. to be seatingD. seated10. One of the measures ____ is to organize the students to visit other museums.A. takenB. tookC. takingD. has taken11. ____ the new bridge, almost all workers contributed their spare time to it.A. ConstructB. ConstructedC. To constructD. Having constructed.12. There is nothing ____ to do but wait for the teacher to come here.A. leaveB. leavingC. to leaveD. left13. Only when he approached the man ____ it was the same person he quarreled with the other day.A. he realizedB. he did realizeC. realized heD. did he realize14. Nowadays, the prices of many things _____ through the Internet can be lower than store prices.A. are boughtB. boughtC. been boughtD. buying15. The _____ boy is gradually recovering under the care of the kind nurses.A. injuredB. injuringC. injuresD. to be injures16. Who were the guests ____ to your birthday party last night?A. being invitedB. to be invitedC. to inviteD. invited(Suggested answers: ACDAD AACDA CDDBA D)Step 7 HomeworkLearn the new words and expressions by heart.Finish off the homework exercises. Do exercise 3 on page 42 in the exercises book.The third period: Learning about language: GrammarImportant points:Get students to learn and master the new grammar item: The past participle (1) as the attribute and Predicative. Difficult points:Enable students to learn the use of the past participle as the attributive and predicative correctly to the context. Step 1 revisionCheck the homework exercises.Dictate some new words and expressions.Step 2 Lead-in1. Show students the following sentences to read aloud and understand.She is a beautiful young lady.I was angry with him for keeping me waiting so long.Many terrified people rushed out of the hall.He got worried about losing the money.Sally was so excited at the good news.2. Have students do the following.1). Observe each sentence and pick out the attributive or predicative.2). Classify the words that you identify into groups and explain why you divide them into theses groups. Beautiful young angryWorried excited terrified3). Now use a different past participle or an adjective in each sentence to change the mood of the sentence.Step 3 Discovering useful structures1. Ask students to turn to page 2 and read though the passage John Snow defeats “King Cholera”, pick out the sentences where past participles are used as the attributive or predicative, and underline the past participles in each sentence.2. Let students work in pairs to translate these sentences into Chinese and try to understand the usage of the past participles.1). But he became inspired when he thought about helping ordinary people exposed to cholera.2). Neither its cause nor its cure was understood.3). So many thousands of terrified people died every time there was an outbreak.4). He became interested in two theories.5). ….and soon the affected person died.6). He was determined to find out why.7). He found that it came from the river polluted by the dirty water from London.8). He immediately told the astonished people in Broad Street to remove the handle from the pump.9). He found supporting evidence from two other deaths that were linked to the Broad Street outbreak.10). ….that polluted water carried the virus.11). The water companies were instructed not to expose people to polluted water any more.3. Rewrite the following sentences1). Let`s try the bookstore that was opened last month.2). Nine out of ten women who were interviewed about the product said they liked it.3). Yesterday, the president went to visit the workers who had retired .4). The United States is a country which has developed.5). He told us the great wrong which had been done to him.6). We must keep a secret of the thing which is being discussed at the next meeting.7). Please tell me the subjects which will be discussed here.Step 4 Understanding and summarizing1. Ask students to work in pairs to finish the following exercises on how the past participles are used.(1). He got ____ about losing the money.(2). The painter looked so ____ after working for a whole day.(3). I was ____ with the film I saw last night. I had expected it to be better.(4). Everybody was ____ to hear of the death of the famous film star.(5). Everybody is really _____ about the new Olympic stadiums.(6). His wound became _____ with a new virus.(Suggested answers: blamed / upset; tired; disappointed; shocked / depressed; excited; infected)2. Give necessary explanations and some more examples about the usage of the past participle.过去分词做定语和表语的用法过去分词是非谓语动词的一种形式,表示完成和被动的意义。
人教英语必修五Unit1Greatscientists教案5

必修五 Unit 1 Great ScientistsPeriod 5 GrammarTeaching Aims:1. Get the hang of past participle used as attributive and predicative.2. Know the difference between V-ing form and the past participle used as the attribute and predicative.Teaching Important Points:1. Enable the students to use the Past Participle as the Attribute & Predicative in real situations.Teaching difficult points1.Have the Ss sum up the function of the past participle2.Know the difference between V-ing form and the past participle used as theattribute and predicative.Teaching Methods:1.Inductive , comparison, explanation and exercise method2.cooperative workTeaching ProceduresStep 1 RevisionCheck the homework.Step 2 Grammar LearningPart 1 Competition.Divide the class into four teams. Each team chooses one student as their leader. The leader will choose the amount of money which stands for each question and can choose any one in the team to answer the question. If the answer is correct, the group will get the amount money. If not, they will lose the money.1. What do you know about Dr. John Snow’s being well-known in London?He attended Queen Victoria to ease the birth of her babies.2. From what disease did Londoners suffer in his age and why did he get inspired? They exposed themselves to cholera. He got inspired when he thought about helping ordinary people exposed to cholera.Ordinary people who were exposed to cholera3.Why did so many terrified people die every time there was an outbreak?Neither its cause, nor its cure was understood4. When did Dr. Snow think the disease would be controlled?He knew it would never be controlled until its cause was found.5. What was the second theory explaining how the disease killed people?People absorbed this disease into their bodies with their meals. From the stomach the disease attacked the body quickly and soon the affected person was dead.6. Where did the water of pump from and how did it get polluted?It came from the river, which had been polluted by the dirty water from London7. What did Dr. Snow advised the people in Broad Street do?He told the astonished people in Broad Street to remove the handle from the water pump so it could not be used8.What else did Dr. Snow find in another part of London that were linked to the Broad Street outbreak?In addition, he found 2 other deaths.9. What conclusion did Dr. Snow tell the public?He announced that polluted water carried the disease.10.To prevent the cholera from spreading again, what did John Snow do?He suggested that the source of all water supplies be examined and that new methods of dealing with polluted water be found. The water companies werealso instructed not to expose people to the polluted water anymore.11. Why were these families working in the pub at 7 Cambridge Street not affected ? Because they were given free beer and so had not drunk the water from the Broad Street pump.Now please look at these phrases esp. the words in red. What’s the same characteristic of these words? That’s wha t we will talk about today---the past participlePart 2 The past participle used as the attribute and predicative过去分词的句法功能:1.过去分词作定语(Attribute)1) 在句中的位置单个的过去分词作定语时,位于它所修饰的名词或代词前面;过去分词短语作定语时,位于它所修饰的名词或代词后面。
高中英语人教版必修5《Unit 1 Great scientists》教案

高中英语人教版必修5《Unit 1 Great scientists》教案高中英语人教版必修5《Unit 1 Great scientists》教案在教学过程中应以学生为主体。
整个课堂是学生在开口说而不是老师在干巴巴的讲授。
尤其是教材的最后一部分,阅读部分。
要使同学们在默读的前提下做课本上要求的练习题,也可以确定几个话题,学生用英语进行讨论,锻炼他们用英文思考的能力,运用所学语言的能力。
下面和本文库一起看看有关高中英语人教版必修5《Unit 1 Great scientists》教案。
人教版高中英语必修5《Unit 1 Great scientists》教案1教学准备教学目标1. Target language 目标语言a. 重点词汇和短语attend, control, severe, pub, immediately, handle, instructor,pump, contribute, conclude, steam engine, virus, put forward, makea conclusion, expose tob. 重点句式To prevent this from happening again, John Snow suggested that ... P32. Ability goals 能力目标Enable the students to talk about science and scientists.3. Learning ability goals学能目标Enable the students to learn about some famous scientists and their contributions and how to organize a scientific research.教学重难点Talk about science and scientists.教学工具A computer and a projector.教学过程StepⅠ Lead-inAsk the students to think of some great inventions and inventors in history.T: Welcome back to school, everyone. I guess most of you have enjoyed your holiday. Maybe I should say everyone has enjoyed a scientific life. Why Because you have enjoyed the results of the science and scientists. Now can you tell me the scientists who invented the lights, the gramophone and the computerS1: Edison invented the lights and the gramophone.S2: The first computer was invented by a group of American scientists.StepⅡ Warming upFirst, ask some questions about great scientists. Second, ask all the students to try the quiz and find out who knows the most.T: You know our life is closely related to science and scientists. We benefit a lot from them. Can you name out as many scientists as possible S1: Newton.S2: Watt.S3: Franklin.Sample answers:1. Archimedes, Ancient Greek (287-212 BC), a mathematician.2. Charles Darwin, Britain (1808-1882). The name of the book is Origin of Species.3. Thomas Newcomen, British (1663-1729), an inventor of steam engine.4. Gregor Mendel, Czech, a botanist and geneticist.5. Marie Curie, Polish and French, a chemist and physicist.6. Thomas Edison, American, an inventor.7. Leonardo da Vinci, Italian, an artist.8. Sir Humphry Davy, British, an inventor and chemist.9. Zhang Heng, ancient China, an inventor.10. Stepper Hawking, British, a physicist.Step Ⅲ Pre-readingGet the students to discuss the questions on page 1 with their partners. Then ask the students to report their work. Encourage the students to express their different opinions.T: Now, class, please look at the slide. Discuss these questions with your partners. Then I’ll ask some students to r eport their work. Show the following on the screen.What do you know about infectious diseasesWhat do you know about choleraDo you know how to prove a new idea in scientific researchWhat order would you put the seven in Just guess.Sample answer 1:S1: Let me try. Infectious diseases can be spread easily. They have an unknown cause and may do great harm to people.S2: People could be exposed to infectious diseases, so may animals,such as bird flu.S3: AIDS, SARS are infectious diseases.S4: Infectious diseases are difficult to cure.Sample answer 2:S1: Cholera is caused by a bacterium called Varian cholera.S2: It infects people’s intesti nes, causing diarrhea, vomiting and leg cramps.S3: The most common cause of cholera is people eat food or drink water that has been contaminated by the bacteria.S4: Cholera can be mild or even without symptoms, but a severe case can lead to death without immediate treatment.Sample answer 3:S1: I know sth. about it. First we should find the problem. Then,think of a solution.S2: We should collect as much information as possible.S3: Analyzing results is the most important stage.S4: Before we make a conclusion, it is necessary for us to repeat some stages or processes.Sample answer 4:S1: I think "Find a problem" should be the first stage.S2: "Make up a question" should follow the first stage.S3: "Think of a method","Collect results"and "Analyze results" are after that.S4: Of course, before "Make a conclusion", we should "Repeat if necessary".T: Well done! When we want to solve some problems, first we should find out the problem, do some research on it, prove your findings, and then make a conclusion. This is a scientific and objective way of researching. Now let’s see how doctor John Snow did his research.Step Ⅳ ReadingLet the students skim the whole passage and try to work out the meanings of the new words and structures using context.T: The effect of cholera in the nineteenth century London was devastating. Many people died without knowing the reason. It was doctor John Snow who saved the people. Please look at the screen. Let’s read the whole passage and find answers to the questions.Show the questions on the screen.1. What conditions allowed cholera develop2. Why do you think people believed that cholera multiplied in the air without reason3. What evidence did John Snow gather to convince people that idea2 was rightSample answers:S1: The dirty water made the cholera develop quickly.S2: Because people could not understand its cause and could not get it cured. So people imagined that some poisonous gas in the air caused the deaths.S3: He found that many of the deaths were near the water pump while some areas far away from the water pump had no deaths. So when people were asked not to use the water pump, the disease began to slow down. In this way, John Snow had shown that cholera was spread by germs and not in a cloud of gas.Step Ⅴ Text analyzingAsk the students to analyze the text in groups.T: Please look at the chart on the screen. The chart shows that each paragraph of the text explains John Snow’s stages in his research. Please read the text and find out the general idea of each paragraph and match the stage with each paragraph. Discuss it in groups, and then report your answers.ParagraphsStagesGeneral ideasSample answers:S1: My group’s opinion is this: stage one "Find a problem" is expressed in paragraph one. The general idea is like this: John Snow wanted to find the causes of cholera.S2: Our answer is like this: paragraph two expresses the second stage "Make up a question". The general idea is like this: John Snow wanted to prove which theory was correct.S3: "Think of a method" is the third stage. And it is contained inparagraph three. The general idea is like this: John Snow collected data on those who were ill or died and where they got their water.S4: The fourth stage "Collect results" lies in paragraph four. Its general idea is like this: John Snow plotted information on a map to find out where people died or did not die.S5: Our group believe paragraph five contains the fifth stage of John Snow’s research. The general idea is like this: John Snow analysed the water to see if that was the cause of the illness. So this stage is to "Analyse the results".S6: The sixth stage is "Repeat if necessary". It is contained in the sixth paragraph. The general idea is like this: John Snow tried to find other evidences to confirm his conclusion.S7: The last paragraph is about the seventh stage "Make a conclusion". Its general idea is like this: The polluted dirty source of drinking water was to blame for the cause of the London cholera. Ask some students to put their answers in the chart.ParagraphStagesGeneral ideas1Find a problemThe causes of cholera2Make up a questionThe correct or possible theory3Think of a methodCollect data on where people were ill and died and where they got their water4Collect resultsPlot information on a map to find out where people died or did not die5Analyse the resultsAnalyse the water to see if that is the cause of the illness6Repeat if necessaryFind other evidences to confirm his conclusion7Make a conclusionThe polluted dirty source of drinking water was to blame for the cause of the London choleraT: Now class. Can you tell me what style of the passage belongs to S1: I think it is a report.T: Here are three pieces of writing. They belong to different writing styles. Now read and find out what style each piece belongs to.Show the chart and three pieces of writing on the screen.ReportDescriptionCreative writingFormal language with few adjectivesVivid use of words with similes and metaphorsVivid use of language and more informal styleNo speech exceptquotationsNo speech except to help the descriptionSpeech to show feelings, reactions etc.Not emotionalEmotional to describe atmosphereEmotional to describe feelingsOnly one main characterNo charactersMay have several charactersFactualNot factual but imaginativeImaginative but can be based on factStructural according to experimental methodNot structuredBeginning, middle, endPast tense and passive voicePast tensePast tenseMaking WayOnce Goethe(歌德), the great German poet,was walking in a park. He was thinking about something when he noticed he came to a very, very narrow road. Just at that time, a young man came towards him from the other end of the road. It was too narrow for both of them to pass through at the same time. They stopped and looked at each other for a while. Then the young man said rudely,"I never make way for a fool." But Goethe smiled and said,"I always do." Then he turned back quickly and walked towards the end of the road.Weather ReportHere’s the weather report for the next 24 hours. Beijing will be fine with the temperature from 4 to 13. Tokyo will be fine too and cloudy later in the day. The lowest temperature is l to 8. London will be rainy and windy later in the day. The highest temperature is 8 and the lowest is4. New York will be sunny and cloudy later in the day. The temperature is 13 to 19.HeartbeatingPut your hand to the left side of your chest. Try to feel your heartbeating. The heart takes a little rest after each pump or beat. In boys or girls of your age, heart beats about 90 times a minute. A grown-up’s heart beats about 70 or 80 times a minute. But the heartbeat is different in the same person at different times. For example, the heart beats faster during exercise. It is also faster when a person is angry,scared, or excited. During sleep, the heartbeat slows down.Sample answers:S1: I think the first piece "Making A Way" is in a style of creative writing. The second piece belongs to a description style. The third piece belongs to a report style.T: Very good. Now let’s return to our text. Who can tell me the main idea of this passageS2: I can. Clearly it tells us how John Snow defeated the disease cholera by doing scientific research.StepⅥ Homework1. Get more information about some infectious diseases and modern scientists.2. Finish the Exercises 1, 2, 3 on pages 3 and 4.人教版高中英语必修5《Unit 1 Great scientists》教案2教学准备教学目标1.Students learn some new words and expressions to describe people ,especially famous persons;2.Students are encouraged to give more information about famous persons who they are familiar:3. Students can realize that it is scientific spirit that makes those scientists successful.教学重难点1. Words and expressions in this unit2. Previous knowledge of some of the famous scientists3. Comprehending the text教学过程【导入】Words learning(Students are assigned to learn the new words of this unit and find out the English explainations of the new words )Definitions or explanationsA.examine 1.general principles of an art or scienceB.repeat 2.say or do againC.theory 3.at once; without delayD.immediate 4.look at...carefully in order to learn about or from...plete 5.of great value, worth or useF.valuable 6.having all its parts; whole; finishedG.announce 7.make knownH.control e or bring to an endI.positive 9.power to order or directJ.conclude 10.quite certain or sure【讲授】useful sentences learning(The sentences are picked from the text.)1."All roads lead to Rome,"he encouraged me after I failed the entrance examination.2.This sentence doesn’t make any sense.3.Our English teacher is not only strict with us but also friendly to us.4.He is good-looking, apart from his nose.5.It is announced that the spacecraft,Shenzhou Ⅵ, landed on the earth successfully.6.It is not Tom but you who are to blame.7.In 1995,the Chinese government put forward a plan for"rejuvenating the nation by relying on science and education".And it has helped Chinese scientists make many breakthroughs.8.Have you drawn any conclusion after you read this passage9.Well done.So much for the learning of the new words and expressions.【讲授】Introduction of a classic articleTeacher introduce a famous person --Qian Xuesen and students learn to write an article about the famous scientis using the words and expressions they just learn in class.【活动】Share the outcomeStudents share their article orally and discuss whether they have used some good and advanced expressions.【练习】Consolidation完成句子(1)爱因斯坦被认为是二十世纪最伟大的科学家之一。
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Period 4Reading and WritingThe General Idea of This PeriodIn this period the teaching and learning will center on reading and writing.As usual, the teacher can begin the teaching with reviewing the former knowledge.The following part is the lead-in—talking about some scientists, because this unit talks about great scientists and this passage is about Nicolaus Copernicus and his theory. As to reading training, the teacher should still develop the students’ ability of scanning and skimming.So at the beginning, get the students to prepare some knowledge for reading. For that purpose, the teacher will firstly ask for information about Copernicus according to what the students already know. Then the teacher can have the students listen to the tape and find out whether the statements are true or false.It is designed to train the students’ listening and to check whether the students have previewed the passage ter, the teacher will ask the students to skim it and find out the main idea for each part.The purpose of doing these is to help the students to form the good habit of reading with some strategy.When reading a passage, we had better first read it as a whole, that is, understand the structure of the passage and catch the main idea with the help of the structure and title.The following step is to read the passage for the details.The teacher can design some teaching activities to help the students to know about more and more information by taking part in the reading activities.As a result, the teacher should be careful, cautious and creative when designing the reading activities.The reading activities had better be various, which can catch more students’ attention. At the end of reading, some activities should be designed to check the students’ understanding by saying something about Copernicus and making up a dialogue between Copernicus and his friend.The practicing helps the students improve their speaking and arouse their creativity.The competition is held to make the students take part in the class activities actively.At the same time, let the students consider the writing purpose.Besides reading, the students are also expected to learn and practise their writing skill.By studying the passage, the students should learn to do persuasive writing to change someone else’s decision.The teacher should give the students some advice on how to plan the writing and develop the writing—beginning, body and conclusion.Teaching Important PointsHelp the students know about Copernicus and his theory. Develop the students’ reading ability. Improve the students’ writing ability. Teaching Difficulty Develop the students’ reading ability. Teaching AidsMulti-media classroom and other normal teaching tools. Three Dimensional Teaching AimsKnowledge AimsGet the students to know about Copernicus and his theory. Learn about persuasive writing. Ability AimsMaster the skill of gist reading. Develop the students’ reading ability, such as skimming and scanning. Improve the students’ writing ability. Emotional AimsArouse the students’ interest in science and devotion to science. Teaching ProcedureStep 1 GreetingT: Hello, everyone. Ss: Hello, Miss Wang. Step 2 ReviewingT: Last class we talked about Qian Xuesen and Carl Linnaeus.Can you say something about them?S: Qian Xuesen is a famous Chinese physicist. S: Qian Xuesen once studied in the USA and then returned to China. S: Qian Xuesen made great contributions to space research. S: Carl Linnaeus developed a system to classify plant species according to the male and female organs in the followers. S: Carl Linnaeus earned the title“Father of classification”. Ss: ... Step 3 Pre-readingT: You have done a good job.So we have learned about a lot about great scientists, such as John Snow and Qian Xuesen.Who else would you like to learn about?Why? S1: I’d like to know something about Madame Curie, because she was one of the great women scientists. S2: I’d like to know about Albert Einstein, because he plays an important part in the development of Physics. S3: Stephen Hawking because he has made great achievements although he is disabled. Ss: ... T: I find you are interested in science and scientists.But today we are going to read about Copernicus.Do you know something about him? S1: He was born in Poland. S2: He believed the earth moves around the sun. S3: It was said that he was burned to death because of his theory. Ss: ... T: Do you want to know more about him? Ss: Of course. T: So let’s come to the passage Copernicus’ revolutionary theory. Step 4 ListeningT: First I’d like you to listen to the tape and find out whether the statements are T or play the tape.) F.(Give the students one minute to read the statements and then() 1.When Copernicus found that the earth was not the center of the solar system, he was very excited. () 2.Some astronomers found it strange that some planets appeared brighter at sometimes. () 3.Copernicus worked out the theory by observation and calculation. () 4.Copernicus didn’t publish his ideas until he died in 1543. () 5.According to the Christian idea of gravity, things fell to the ground because the earth is the center of the universe.(A few minutes later.) T: Are you ready?Who’d like to have a try.If the sentence is true, please read it.If it is false, correct it.S1: The first sentence is false.When Copernicus found that the earth was not the center of the solar system, he was frightened. S2: The second statement is true. S3: The third statement is also true. S4: The fourth statement is false.Copernicus didn’t publish his ideas until he lay dying in 1543.S5: The fifth statement is true. Suggested answers:1.F;2.T;3.T;4.F;5.TStep 5 Gist ReadingT: You have done a good job.In think you previewed the passage well.To understand the passage better, I divide the passage into four parts.Read the passage quickly and find out the main idea of each part.(After three minutes.) T: Have you got it?Generally speaking, if we want to introduce something, first, we usually give a brief introduction.What about the main ideas of other parts?(Ask the students to give their opinions and in the end the teacher gives them the answer.) Suggested answers:Para 1 Brief introduction Para 2 The cause of Copernicus’ theory Paras 3-4 The process of Copernicus’ theory Para 5 The significance of Copernicus’ theory Step 6 Detailed readingT: This passage mainly talks about Copernicus’ theory.So let’s compare his theory and the theory before him.Work in pairs.Read the passage again and fill in the following form. Before Copernicus’ theory Copernicus’ theory1.God made the earth.2.The earth was the center of the solar system. 1.The sun is the center of the solar system and theplanets go around it except the moon.2.The earth is spinning as it goes round the sun.(Two minutes later.)T: Have you found out the different theories?Who’d like to have a try? S: Before Copernicus’ theory, they believed God had made the earth, so it was the center of the solar system. T: Very good.What about Copernicus’ theory? S: Copernicus found that the sun is the center of the solar system and the planets go round it except the moon. T: That’s right!Anything else? S: He also found the earth is spinning as it goes round the sun. T: Great!(Show the complete form to the students and let them read it.) Just now, we knew Copernicus didn’t publish his theory immediately he found it.Can you tell me why? S: Because he didn’t want to be attacked by the Christian Church.He published it many years later.T: Yes.At that time, anyone who wanted to challenge the theory of the Christian Church would be punished, even sometimes be sentenced to death.If you were Copernicus, would you have hidden your theory so for many years?Please give a reason.(Two minutes later.) T: I’d like to know about your ideas.Are you ready?Any volunteers? S: If I were Copernicus, I would have done the same, because at that time, people didn’t enjoy the freedom of speech.Whoever challenged the Christian Church would be punished.While there is life, there is hope.There would be more chance for me to make my theory known to the public. T: It sounds reasonable.Thank you.Anyone else? S: If I were Copernicus, I would have published my ideas as soon as I found them.Since I found my ideas were right, I would make them known to more people, regardless of danger. As a scientist, I should be brave to challenge and devote myself to science. Ss: ... T: You have done a very good job.I appreciate your good ideas and opinions. Step 7 PractisingT: Since we have learned the whole passage, I’d like you to do some practice. (Show the following on the screen.) 1.Say something about Copernicus. Copernicus____________________. 2.Make up a dialogue between Copernicus and one of his friends.Copernicus showed his ideas privately to his friend and his friend encouraged him to publish his ideas. T: First please say something about Copernicus.Give as much information as possible about him by making sentences beginning with Copernicus.S1: Copernicus is a Poland astronomer. S2: Copernicus found the earth is not the center of the solar system. S3: Copernicus didn’t publish his theory until 1543. S4: Copernicus made a great contribution to astronomy. Ss: ... T: I’m deeply impressed by your sentences.You are excellent.From the passage we know Copernicus showed his theory to his friends and his friends encouraged him to publish his theory.Please make up a dialogue in pairs based on this situation.We will hold a competition to see which group acts the best. (After a few minutes, the teacher gets several pairs to act it out and decides which group is the best one.) Step 8 WritingT: Just now we learned that Copernicus didn’t publish his ideas as soon as he found his theory.We also talked about what you would have done if you were Copernicus.Now write a short letter asking Copernicus to publish his ideas so everyone can read them.First you need to collect your ideas.There are some suggested information on Page 7.Then you need to arrange theseideas.There is a plan for it. Beginning: Tell Copernicus who you are and why you want him to publish his ideas. Paragraph 2: Reason 1 and evidence. Paragraph 3: Reason 2 and evidence. Summing up: Ask him to think again about publishing his ideas. (Give Ss some time to do it.Ask them to draw an outline first, and it will help them to develop their writing skill.The passage will be clear.If they have finished writing, get them to exchange with their desk mates.Finally ask some to read their writings to the whole class.While doing this, the teacher can design a competition to arouse their excitement.) Step 9 HomeworkT: You did very well in class.There’s the homework for you. 1.Preview the reading passage and underline the phrases you think important and useful.2.Finish the writing if you haven’t finished and improve it if you have. The Design of the Writing on the BlackboardUnit 1Great scientistsPeriod 4Reading and WritingCopernicus’ revolutionary workMain idea of each part: Para 1 Brief introduction Para 2 The cause of Copernicus’ theory Paras 3-4 The process of Copernicus’theory Para 5 The significance of Copernicus’ theory Before Copernicus’ theory Copernicus’ theory1.God made the earth. 2.The earth was the center of the solar system. 1.The sun is the center of the solar system and theplanets go around it except the moon.2.The earth is spinning as it goes round the sun.Research and ActivitiesThe theme of the activity is“a great scientist in our eyes”.Get the students to work in groups and introduce a great scientist in their minds.First, they need to decide which scientist they think is the greatest.Then, collect as much information as possible about the scientist, such as his/her life, achievements, and so on.In the end, each group presents it to the whole class.The activity is designed to arouse the students’ interest in science, cultivate their team spirit and learn something from these great scientists.It also helps them learn to search for information and organize it well.Reference for TeachingNicolaus CopernicusBorn on Feb.19, 1473, in Thorn (Torun), Poland, Nicolaus Copernicus was destined to become, through the publication of his heliocentric theory 70 years later, one of the seminal figures in the history of scientific thought.The son of a prosperous merchant, he was raised after his father’s death by a maternal uncle, who enabled him to enter the University of Krakow, then famous for its mathematics, philosophy, and astronomy curriculum.This experience stimulated the young Copernicus to study further liberal arts at Bologna (1496-1501), medicine at Padua, and law at the University of Ferrara, from which he emerged in 1503 with the doctorate in canon law.Shortly afterward he returned to Poland and eventually settled permanently at the cathedral in Frauenberg (Frombork), less than 100 miles from his birthplace.Through his uncle’s influence he had been elected a canon of the church even before his journey to Italy.Copernicus not only faithfully performed his ecclesiastical duties, but also practiced medicine, wrote a treatise on monetary reform, and turned his attention to a subject in which he had long been interested-astronomy. By May 1514 Copernicus had written De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres, 1543).This classic work challenged the geocentric cosmology that had been accepted since the time of Aristotle.Copernicus proposed that the earth goes round the sun with the other planets. The new theory that Copernicus espoused in De revolutionibus exhibits a peculiar mixture of both radical and conservative elements.In the midst of his radical reordering of the structure of the universe, Copernicus still adhered to the ancient Aristotelian doctrines of solid celestial spheres and perfect circular motion of heavenly bodies, and he held essentially intact the entire Aristotelian physics of motion.Moreover, with significant innovations, he clung to the Ptolemaic representation of planetary motion by means of complicated combinations of circles called epicycles.Although Copernicus realized that his theory implied an enormous increase in the size of the universe, he declined to pronounce it infinite.These aspects of the Copernican treatise do not mitigate the novelty or the impact of the final theory, or the author’s firm conviction that his system was an accurate representation of physical reality.Rather, they indicate the scope of the work that lay ahead and that was effectively addressed in the next century when Kepler determined the ellipticity of planetary orbits, Galileo formulated his new concept of motion, and Newton espoused his theory of universal gravitation.The enunciation of the heliocentric theory by Copernicus marked the beginning of the scientific revolution, and of a new view of a greatly enlarged universe.It was a shift away from the comfortable anthropocentrism of the ancient and medieval world.A scientific theory that reflected so profoundly on humanity was not welcomed by the church, and it was only after the publication (1540) of Narratio prima (A First Account), by an enthusiastic supporter named Rheticus, that the aged Copernicus agreed to commit to print the theory already outlined in 1514.An undocumented, but often repeated, story holds that Copernicus received a printed copy of his treatise on his deathbed.He died on May 24, 1543.ⅥShenzhou touches downBEIJING, Oct.17 (Xinhua/)—The return module of China’s second manned Ⅵ spacecraft Shenzhou has returned to the Earth, and the astronauts are safe.The module and astronauts touched down in the main landing field in Central Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region at 4: 33 A.M.Monday after a five-day flight. Fei Junlong got out of the return module by himself first, followed by Nie Haisheng. The two said they were in good condition when answering questions from journalists. The two People’s Liberation Army colonels received a hero’s welcome.Jubilant residents in Nie’s home town in central Hubei province set off firecrackers and performed traditional lion dances.Fei’s mother wept on learning of his safe return, and his father declared, “The motherland is so great!”State television showed the astronauts emerging from Shenzhou unaided, pausing atop theⅥcharred reentry craft to wave to the recovery team. Chen Bingde, chief of China’s manned space project, declares the mission a complete success.The return moduel landed one kilometer away from the target, and six kilometers from the Shenzhou V’s landing site. The two men are expected to be taken by a helicopter to a local airport to board a flight to Beijing.Both will be in isolation for observation for 14 days after the mission, but family members will be allowed to visit, the Beijing Youth Daily newspaper said Sunday. Fei and Nie blasted off Wednesday on China’s second manned space mission.It came almost exactly two years after China’s first manned space flight. China is only the third country to send humans into orbit on its own, after Russia and the United States.State television showed scores of technicians monitoring the landing at computer screens at a Beijing control center.They showed no reaction when an announcer said the capsule had landed but broke into cheers after word came that the astronauts were safe, the Associated Press reported.Chinese leaders including the top legislator Wu Bangguo were shown on television watching the landing from the control center.The mission had“accomplished the planned experiments and accumulated valuable technicaldata, ”Xinhua said Sunday. “We feel good, our work is going smoothly and our life is happy, ”Fei was quoted as saying Sunday evening before the craft began its re-entry maneuvers.“We will do our utmost to fulfill the mission.” “We’re grateful for the deep love and concern by all Chinese people, the Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan compatriots, ”Nie said. Shenzhou 6 orbited the Earth 76 times and traveled more than 1.9 million miles.The mission was substantially longer and more complex than the 2003 flight, when astronaut Yang Liwei orbited for 21 1/2 hours before his capsule landed by parachute. 。