HW5e Upper Int SEN Texts
HW5e Upper Int SEN Texts
HW5e Upper Int SEN Texts
We’re finally
on Galapagos!
Hi Mum! Hi Dad!
Nancy XXX
(Kiri sends love, too.)
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 1, p.10 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Tyler’s Tweets
Tuesday, September 4, 1:42 p.m.
Still sitting in the airport in NYC. Been waiting three hours,
but seems like FOREVER!
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 1, p.11 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Lost and Found
Lost Indian boy finds his
mother after 25 years – using
Google Earth
Saroo Brierley was only five years old when he got lost.
He was working with his older brother as a sweeper on India’s
trains. Together, they travelled hundreds of miles up and
down the vast network.
“It was late at night. We got off the train, and I was so tired
that I just sat down at the train station, and I ended up
falling asleep.”
“It was a very scary place to be. I do not think any mother
or father would like to have their five-year-old wandering
alone in the slums and train stations of Calcutta. I was scared.
I didn’t know where I was.”
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 1, pp.14–15 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
“I accepted that I was lost and that I could not
find my way back home, so I thought it was great that I was
going to Australia.”
She had been young, in her 30s, the last time he saw her. She
looked so much older now. But behind the weathered face,
there was something unmistakable, unforgettable, his mother,
Fatima.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 1, pp.14–15 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
“The last time I saw her she was 34 years old and a pretty
lady. I had forgotten that age would get the better of her.
But then I recognised her and I said, ‘Yes, you are my mother.’
She grabbed my hand and took me into her house. She could
not say anything to me. She had a bit of trouble grasping
that her son, after 25 years, had returned. She had long
feared I was dead.”
Fatima had searched the train stations for her missing son,
but she had never ventured as far as Calcutta. She couldn’t
imagine he had gone so far. However, she had never lost
hope – a fortune teller had told her that one day she would
see her son again.
His mother had never known whether foul play was involved
or whether the boy had simply slipped and fallen under a
train.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 1, pp.14–15 © Oxford University Press 2019 3
Informal writing –
Correcting mistakes
From: Fernando <fernando367@fsnet.com>
To: James <jsnelling@jonmail.com>
Dear James,
T Gr T
Thank you your email. I receive it the last week. Sorry I no
reply you before, but I’ve been very busy. It’s Christmas soon,
and everyone are very exciting!
Fernando
A
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 1 – Writing, p.130 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
TripAdvisor – the
traveller’s friend
Student A
Steve Kaufer
TripAdvisor was founded in a small office above
a pizza shop in Massachusetts, US.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 2, p.23 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
TripAdvisor Trivia
• Have you noticed that the TripAdvisor owl logo has
different colour eyes? One eye is green, for ‘GO!’,
and the other is red, for ‘DONT GO!’.
• Steve Kaufer still runs the company from a modest
office block in Massachusetts, where his own office
doesn’t even have a window.
• The most TripAdvisor reviews have been written by
an American expat, Brad Reynolds. He’s been writing
reviews since 2010 and has posted nearly 6,000,
with 68,000 photos.
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 2, p.23 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
A planet poisoned by
plastic
‘From Hawaiian beaches to the coast of Britain, we’re
paying a lethal price for our throw-away society,’
says TV adventurer, Simon Reeve.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 2, pp.24–25 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Yet the big shock came when Sam told me to dig in the
sand. Plastic doesn’t biodegrade. Instead it breaks down into
even smaller pieces. Among the grains of sand were billions
of tiny plastic flecks, which the pounding of the sea was
reducing in size. As I dug through the plastic, I realized the
sandy beach was being transformed into a plastic beach.
A chill went down my spine.
Nine million tons of plastic enter our seas every year, which
means that by 2025, there will be around 150 million tons
of it sloshing around. And even more unbelievably, by 2050
the oceans will contain more plastic by weight than fish.
The scale of the problem is extraordinary. The beaches in
Hawaii are being swamped by rubbish from the ‘Great
Pacific Garbage Patch’, a vast accumulation of the world’s
plastic debris floating in the Pacific Ocean. Twice the size
of France, the Garbage Patch is like a plastic soup in the
sea and is doubling in size each decade.
And this is not the only such ‘patch’. Scientists believe that
sea currents have created five vast swirling garbage patches
in our oceans, including a huge one in the North Atlantic
with up to 520,000 bits of rubbish per square mile. This is an
international scandal and a global problem, for which we
are all responsible.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 2, pp.24–25 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
‘Factories produced more plastic in the first decade of
this 21st century than in the entire 20th century.’
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 2, pp.24–25 © Oxford University Press 2019 3
TripAdvisor – the
traveller’s friend
Student B
Steve Kaufer
TripAdvisor was founded in a small office above
a pizza shop in Massachusetts, US.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 2, p.164 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
A formal email –
An email of complaint
Date: Sat, March 3 07:50:28 -0700 (PDT)
From: “Benjamin Potts” <bjam.potts@ymail.com>
To: customers@QFlyair.com
Subject: Services complaint
Our family group of six were due to return from the holiday of a lifetime,
departing Antigua for London, Gatwick, on flight QF 5612 at 19.40 on February
26th. Our son, Tom (14), was feeling a little unwell, having spent too long in
the sun. None of the adults present were overly concerned. We boarded the
aircraft and a member of the crew asked if our son was all right. We explained
the situation and took our seats. The same crew member returned with
a thermometer and took my son’s temperature. She said that it was 100.2°
(the normal range is between 97° and 100°) and she left. A few minutes later,
she returned to say that she had contacted paramedics and as the temperature
was above normal, we would have to leave the aircraft. We were shocked to
hear this, pointing out that our son now felt fine. However, we were told it was
too late, and the aircraft would not depart until we disembarked. This news
caused great distress to my entire family, especially my son, and his ten-year-old
sister. However, we were assured that we would have guaranteed seats on the
flight the following evening. In the end we disembarked, leaving our distraught
daughter with her grandparents.
We were taken to a hospital, where we spent four hours and $550 dollars to
get a letter saying that my son was safe to fly. We were dismayed to hear the
doctor’s disbelief that our son had been asked to leave the flight.
The next day, we were appalled to learn that there were no available seats.
Fortunately, Delta Airlines came to our rescue, offering us flights to London,
Heathrow that day via New York, JFK. Flights that cost US$3300.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 2 – Writing, p.131 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
In conclusion, I ask for an explanation of your airline’s actions, and that you not
only refund the expenses incurred, but also pay us compensation for the distress
caused. I enclose a detailed breakdown of all our expenses with receipts. I look
forward to your swift reply.
Yours faithfully,
Benjamin Potts
Mob: 07947 433445
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 2 – Writing, p.131 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
Bees, Cheese and
Refugees!
Dr Ryad Alsous knows a lot about bees. Back home
in his country, Syria, he worked in the Agriculture
Department at the University of Damascus, where he was
known as the ‘Professor of Bees’. He had 500 beehives
and had been researching bees for many years when civil
war broke out and all his hives were destroyed.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 3, pp.30–31 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
The Clinging Woman
Part 1
The girl was hanging by her hands from the railings of
a balcony. The balcony was on the twelfth floor of the
high-rise block next to his. His flat was on the sixth floor
and he had to look up to see her. It was half-past six in
the morning. He had been awakened by the sound of an
aircraft flying dangerously low overhead, and he had got
out of bed to look. His sleepy gaze, descending from the
blue sky which was empty of clouds, empty of anything but
the bright vanishing arrow of the aircraft, alighted – at first
with disbelief – on the hanging figure.
Part 2
He really thought he must be dreaming, for this sunrise
time was the hour for dreams. Then, when he knew he
wasn’t, he decided it must be a stunt. This was to be
a scene in a film. There were cameramen down there,
a whole film unit, and all the correct safety precautions
had been taken. Probably the girl wasn’t even a real girl,
but a dummy. He opened the window and looked down.
The car park, paved courts, grass spaces between the blocks,
all were deserted. On the balcony rail one of the dummy’s
hands moved, clutching its anchorage more tightly, more
desperately. He had to believe then what was obviously
happening – unbelievable only because melodrama, though
a frequent constituent of real life, always is. The girl was
trying to kill herself. She had lost her nerve and now was
trying to stay alive. All these thoughts and conclusions of his
occupied about thirty seconds. Then he acted. He picked up
the phone and dialled the emergency number for the police.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 3, pp.34–35 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
The arrival of the police cars and the rescue of the girl
became the focus of gossip and speculation for the tenants
of the two blocks. Someone found out that it was he who
had alerted the police and he became an unwilling hero.
He was a modest, quiet young man, and, disliking this
limelight, was relieved when the talk began to die away,
when the novelty of it wore off, and he was able to enter
and leave his flat without being pointed at as a kind of
St. George and sometimes even congratulated.
She said, ‘I’m Lydia Simpson. You saved my life. I’ve come to
thank you.’
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 3, pp.34–35 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
The Clinging Woman
A man (whose name we never learn) wakes up early one
morning, to see a woman hanging from her balcony.
He calls the police, who come to rescue her. His neighbours
treat him as a hero. He thinks he did nothing that was brave
and wants to forget the whole episode. Two weeks later
the woman comes to his door to thank him. She introduces
herself as Lydia Simpson.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 3, p.165 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
His company is opening an office in Australia, and
he is offered the opportunity of going there for three
months. He is worried because this will take him away from
home. He tries to put off telling Lydia, but eventually she
finds out. She reacts very badly, but helps him prepare for
the trip. He knows that she will probably try to kill herself
again. He also thinks about suicide as a way out of this
suffocating relationship.
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 3, p.165 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
Narrative writing (1) –
Using adverbs in
narratives
Texting to the rescue
On a mid-September day, British climbers Rachel Kelsey and Jeremy Colenso were several years ago
climbing in the Swiss Alps. high / with great confidence
They were both experienced climbers. They left their base and the weather was good. relatively
They reached the summit, but as they started the climb down, an electric storm struck the easily
mountain. Snow began to fall, making it difficult to see where they could put their hands suddenly / heavily / extremely
and feet on the rock. After several frightening minutes, they found a narrow ledge and safely
climbed onto it, hoping the snow would stop and they could continue their descent. gratefully / desperately
The snow did not stop and the temperature dropped to –10°C. ‘We had to stay awake,’ however / dangerously
said Rachel, ‘because it was so cold that we would have died. So we told stories, and afterwards / undoubtedly
rubbed our fingers and toes to keep them warm.’ continuously
They decided that they had to get help. But what could they do? Rachel had brought eventually / possibly / fortunately
her mobile phone with her, but the only number contacts she had were in London. She unfortunately
sent a text message at 1.30 a.m. to get help. She sent the same text to five friends in the in fact
UK. It read: ‘Need heli rescue off north ridge of Piz Badile, Switz’. They were all asleep, so urgently
nothing happened. At 5.00 a.m., one friend, Avery Cunliffe, got the message. He jumped for hours / then
into action, called the rescue services in Switzerland, and called Rachel to tell her that immediately / then
help was coming.
The weather was too bad for the helicopters to operate, but for the next 24 hours
Avery kept sending text messages to the climbers. At about finally
10.00 p.m. they were lifted off the mountain. ‘We owe our safely
Need heli rescue lives to Avery,’ they said when they were back at base. exhaustedly
off north ridge of
Piz Badile, Switz
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 3 – Writing, p.132 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Fake news
In 2017, ‘fake news’ was Collins Dictionary’s Word of the
Year. The previous year Oxford Dictionaries’ chose
‘post-truth’ as theirs. Jeff Broadbent gives us the facts on
the increasing unreliability of our news media (or at least
we think he does).
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 4, pp.44–45 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Spreading lies
The big difference nowadays is that most people don’t
go to news outlets for their news stories – the stories
come to them, via social media sites such as Facebook.
Articles appear in people’s newsfeed, or are shared
and forwarded by friends. And this is why millions now
read stories that may appear to be from credible news
sources, but are in fact not merely biased, but total
fabrication.
Facebook shares/comments/reactions
for top 20 US election stories
15 million
12 million Mainstream
news
9 million
6 million
Fake news
3 million
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 4, pp.44–45 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
Choosing what to believe
President Trump was also one of the first politicians to take
advantage of the fake news phenomenon. When reporters
confronted him with negative news stories, his answer was
simple: ‘Fake news … next question’. Other world leaders
have done the same, and their supporters are quick to
believe them. Many people are happy to view all facts as
doubtful – it makes it easy for them to choose what to
believe and stick to their prejudices.
Bogus is business
Now there are whole fake news sites out there, producing
bogus stories that people share unthinkingly. It’s big
business, because the most sensational stories get thousands
of clicks, and advertisers will pay huge sums to make use of
this traffic. And so we end up with a very worrying question
in a democracy – how do we know who or what to vote for
if we can’t be sure what’s true? But then I’ll leave you with
an even bigger question: how many of us really want to
know the truth, if it challenges our deeply-held beliefs and
lifestyles?
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 4, pp.44–45 © Oxford University Press 2019 3
Spot the fake!
Group A
1 Irma – first Category 6 Hurricane on record!
A Facebook live video of passengers trapped in an
overturned bus on Saint Martin has shown the havoc
Hurricane Irma is causing in the Caribbean. Many news
reports predicted Irma could become the first Category 6
storm on record, and a Tweet from website journalist Alex
Jones has confirmed this. Another Tweet included a photo
of the flooding in Texas, showing a shark swimming along
a flooded highway!
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 4, p.46 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Spot the fake!
Group B
4 Man fined after implanting travel
card chip under skin
An Australian man says the law needs to catch up with
technology, after being fined A$220 for failing to produce
his travel card on a train in Sydney. 34-year-old Mr Meow-
Meow (full name Meow-Ludo Disco Gamma Meow-Meow),
had had the chip from his travel card inserted into his hand
by a piercing expert, so he could pass his hand over the card
scanner. He had done this before boarding the train, but
was convicted of travelling without a valid ticket.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 4, p.46 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Spot the fake!
1 Fake. When Hurricane Irma hit America in 2017, the news
that it was the strongest ever hurricane, a Category 6,
was posted on Facebook by Alex Jones, and was shared
more than 2 million times. It was fake news because
there is no such thing as a Category 6 hurricane – the
categories only go up to 5. The ‘live’ Facebook video
of the bus drama was in fact a recording of an earlier
hurricane incident, replaying on a loop. And while it’s
true that there was a lot of flooding in Texas, the photo
of the shark swimming along the flooded highway was a
photoshopped image.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 4, pp.166 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
4 True. Even the 34-year-old man’s name is true, as he has
had it changed and officially registered, as Meow-Ludo
Disco Gamma Meow-Meow. Mr Meow-Meow had the
chip from his travel card coated in bio-compatible plastic
before having it inserted into his hand. He said he was
very disappointed to receive the fine, as it simply showed
that he was ‘ahead of the law’. He complains that society
is behind in applying the potential benefits of new
technology, and ran as a candidate for the Science Party
in Australian elections in 2017.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 4, pp.166 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
Linking ideas –
Conjunctions
Marilyn Monroe
The death of a star
It is over 40 years (1) since/after Marilyn Monroe died,
(2) however/but theories concerning her death still fascinate
the world. (3) Whenever/While her name is mentioned,
people recall the mystery of her final hours and
(4) although/despite the official verdict was suicide, many
believe that she was murdered by the Mafia or the FBI.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 4 – Writing, p.133 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Marilyn’s ex-husband Joe DiMaggio was convinced the
Kennedys had her killed. He never spoke about it
(15) while/during he was alive (16) in case/unless he also
met an untimely death, but he did in his memoirs, which
were published (17) as soon as/since he died.
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 4 – Writing, p.133 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
This is your captain
speaking …
“Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen. Welcome aboard
this Virgin Atlantic flight to Boston. In a short time, we
(1) (take off). Our flight time today (2) (be)
approximately six and a half hours and we (3) (fly)
at 37,000 feet, at a cruising speed of 575 miles per hour.
We (4) (come in) over the coast of Newfoundland
before heading down to Boston. We (5) (arrive) in
Boston at 20.45 US time. The cabin crew (6) (serve)
an evening meal during the flight. If you need any
assistance, just press the call button and a flight attendant
(7) (come) to help you. In case of turbulence,
(8) you please (keep) your seatbelt
fastened when in your seat?”
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 5, p.52 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Meet the
‘Boomerang’ Kids
and their parents
Who are they? They’re the children who just CAN’T or
WON’T leave home. Or, to put it another way, they are
‘kidults’, in their 20s or 30s, who ‘boomerang’ back home,
having previously fled the nest. In the UK, more than
3 million 20-somethings still live in the family home. It is a
trend echoed throughout the world.
A
Julian Hanlon, (25)
back living with parents, Alan and Barbara.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 5, pp.54–55 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Alan Hanlon, (61)
“In some ways it’s nice having the boys back. Family is
important to us and we’re happy to help Julian while he’s
training, and, of course, we’re sorry for poor Tim. But we
had got over the ‘empty nest’ syndrome, or at least I had.
We’ll both be retiring soon, and I was looking forward to
having the freedom that brings. Now it’s like we’ve gone back
in time – the mess and the noise. But Barbara seems to love
it! I think she does far too much for them and I take issue
with that. The boys seem to take it for granted that they live
rent free, and their mum will cook and clean for them.
B
Amy Butcher, (22)
left home at 18 but now back with mum, Faye.
I love when it’s just mum and me and we stretch out on the
sofa and watch a film together. We’ll be doing that tonight.
I’m saving like mad – but the store is going to close. I don’t
know what I’ll do then. I think I’ll look for work in a beauty
parlour.”
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 5, pp.54–55 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
Faye Butcher, (57)
“I missed Amy a lot when she moved out. You see, I’ve
been a single mum since Amy’s dad left when she was ten,
so we’re very close and I love having her around again.
She helps me with my make-up and keeps me in touch with
the world of music, films and phone apps. But it’s not all fun.
Amy’s as untidy today as she was as a teenager. The house
is littered with her stuff. It’s my house and I like it tidy –
I’m always putting her things away. I’m going to make her
a list of house rules. I know she’ll take offence and say I’m
treating her like a kid. She’s right.
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 5, pp.54–55 © Oxford University Press 2019 3
Elon Musk
“I would like to die on Mars. Just not on impact.”
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 6, pp.60–61 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Musk’s car company, Tesla, makes electric cars that every
car fanatic would desire – the Roadster sports model can
accelerate from 0 to 60mph in 3.7 seconds. His company
SpaceX successfully launched its Falcon 9 rocket in 2012.
There are plenty of private rocket enthusiasts (Amazon’s
Jeff Bezos is another famous one), but Musk’s rockets
were the first to dock with the International Space Station.
In 2018, a bigger rocket, the Falcon Heavy, took a Tesla
Roadster into space! Both types of Falcon rocket are
reuseable – each rocket booster can land and be used
again.
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 6, pp.60–61 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
The Story of LEGO
Success in stats
There are more LEGO figures on Earth than people, and
86 Lego bricks for every person alive. LEGO is actually the
world’s biggest tyre manufacturer – they make 400 million
a year!
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 6, pp.64–65 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
LEGO’s enormous success is due to its quality, and the
endless creativity it allows children. A mathematician
recently calculated that six LEGO bricks could be combined
in 915,103,765 ways! And it’s not just children who love it;
AFOLs – Adult Fans Of LEGO – include David Beckham and
Ed Sheeran, and are a valuable market. Less enthusiastic
adults are those who spend hours on Christmas morning
assembling complicated LEGO sets for their children (and
also discover that standing on a LEGO brick in bare feet can
be very painful)!
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 6, pp.64–65 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
The Story of IKEA
Success in stats
IKEA has over 300 stores in 41 countries. On some Sundays
in Britain, almost twice as many people visit an IKEA
branch as attend church.
Fast furniture
Ingvar’s main competitor sold furniture, and it gave him
an idea. At the time, stylish furniture was a luxury few
could afford, and only after saving up for years. What if
he could make it affordable for all, sooner? He did it by
buying and selling in bulk as cheaply as possible – his motto
was: It’s better to sell 600 chairs at a lower price than
sell 60 chairs at a high price. He bought an old factory
and manufactured even cheaper furniture himself, keeping
quality high.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 6, pp.64–65 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Flatpack fans?
He opened his first big showroom in 1958, with the familiar
IKEA sign (but in red and white – the yellow and blue of
the Swedish flag came later). As more Swedes bought
cars, Kamprad cut rental costs by opening stores out of
town. The real lightbulb moment came when a colleague
couldn’t get an IKEA table into his car, and unscrewed the
legs and taped them underneath the table to make it go in.
Introducing flatpack furniture, which customers took home
and assembled themselves, brought huge savings in storage
and delivery costs.
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 6, pp.64–65 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
Report writing –
A survey
The Organic Burger Company
FAO: Managing Director, Organic Burger Company
Title: Survey into Potential Market Share Increase
Research
Participants (4) to statements 1–5:
SA = Strongly Agree A = Agree DK = Don’t know
D = Disagree SD = Strongly Disagree
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 6 – Writing, p.136 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Findings
(5) agreeing or strongly agreeing with each
question were:
1 46% 2 47% 3 77% 4 39% 5 22%
Action
(10) further research is carried out on a larger
scale in other localities around the UK. This should be
completed (11) .
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 6 – Writing, p.136 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
“I cycled from India
to Europe for love!”
It was December 1975, and in New Delhi, India, a street
artist, known as PK, met a Swedish tourist. They fell
in love. It was love at first sight. But she had to return
home. He refused to give up. Months later, he set off on
a 7,000 km bike trip to join her.
In January, 1976, just a few days after they met, the couple
made the journey to PK’s home village in Orissa, in the
east of India, to meet his family and get married. PK’s
father gave them his blessing, but their married bliss was
short-lived. Lotta had to get back to Sweden to continue her
studies, but she made PK promise that he would follow her.
So, with her companions in the camper van, she began the
long trek back, overland through Asia and Europe.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 7, pp.74–75 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
An impossible journey made
possible
For some young lovers, this might have marked the end.
Not so for PK and Lotta. Letters flew between the two.
Still sketching tourists, PK started planning the seemingly
impossible – an overland journey of 7,000 km to rejoin
Lotta in Sweden.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 7, pp.74–75 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
PK’s journey was accelerated when Linnea – the German
girl he had helped – sent him a train ticket to Vienna, and
again when a gallery owner in the city, impressed with both
his story and talent as an artist, handed over the means
to the final leg of his journey – tickets to Copenhagen and
Gothenburg.
Together again
About 16 months after their parting as newlyweds, PK
and Lotta got together again. It was a moment of intense
emotion. PK, overcome with excitement and tiredness,
started to cry. Lotta took him for a walk in the local park,
where they sat among the flowers, drinking coffee.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 7, pp.74–75 © Oxford University Press 2019 3
Arguing your case –
For and against
Subject: Email – has it really
improved our lives?
Email is an important means of communication.
However, in my opinion, like most things it has both
advantages and disadvantages.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 7 – Writing, p.137 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 7 – Writing, p.137 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 8, pp.80–81 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
From sprinting to ‘Skeleton’!
In 2008, he finally got his Dutch passport and trained for
the 2012 London Olympics, but injury ended his sprinting
ambitions. He changed sport, and trained in bobsled,
an event (5) , but after failing to get
into the 2014 Winter Olympic team, he decided to give up
competitive sport altogether. However, his wife, Erica, told
him she didn’t want him forever moaning about his lost
Olympic dreams, so Akwasi changed sport again – this
time to Skeleton racing. He loved it, and set his heart on
competing in the 2018 Olympics in South Korea, but not for
The Netherlands … for his birth country, Ghana.
Back to Africa
Aged 31, for the first time in 23 years, Akwasi returned to
Ghana, (6) Bobsled and Skeleton
Federation Ghana. In a country with no snow or ice,
he introduced fellow Ghanains to winter sports
(7) ! Back in The Netherlands, he trained
for the Olympics with money (8)
door-to-door, and just managed to qualify for South Korea,
entering the top 60 in the world.
Success of a sort
In a Hollywood movie, Akwasi would have won Olympic
gold, but of course he had no chance against his
competitors, (9) . He came last. ‘That is
OK,’ he said. ‘For me, being at the Winter Olympics is about
breaking barriers … to show black people from warm
countries can do this as well.’ But he now hopes to win
the first Olympic gold medal for Ghana in the 2022 Winter
Games, (10) .
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 8, pp.80–81 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
Tarzan of Central
Park
Anyone visiting New York for the first time should try to
get a room high up in one of the hotels at the southern
end of Central Park. The view is extraordinary. The park
extends northwards until it is lost from sight in a sea of
treetops, with enormous cliffs of stone and cement on
each side.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 8, pp.84–85 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
A five-room split-level home
His final house was the grandest of them all. Constructed
at the top of a huge beech tree, it was what an estate
agent would describe as a ‘five-room, split-level home,
commanding spectacular views of the city skyline and
Central Park’. It included ladders and rope bridges leading
to an adjacent tree, as well as wooden benches and tables.
Who can imagine what the rent might be for such a house?
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 8, pp.84–85 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
He climbed down and was met by Frank Serpe, Park Director,
and ten officers of the Parks Enforcement Patrol. Mr Serpe
had been hunting Redman for years. But he was generous in
his praise for the houses. ‘We marvelled at the spectacular
workmanship,’ he said. ‘The floors were strong enough to
hold a truck, and not one nail was driven into the tree.’
And when Bob offered to help dismantle the tree house,
‘Well, he walked up the tree’ an officer said. ‘It was amazing!’
Postscript
When a New York writer called Shira Boss needed her tiny
Japanese maple tree pruning, someone suggested a man
called … Bob Redman. They are now married, with two sons,
and Shira has written a children’s book telling Bob’s story,
Up In The Leaves, which was published in 2018.
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 8, pp.84–85 © Oxford University Press 2019 3
Describing places –
My favourite part of
town
I’m a Greenwich Villager and
proud of it!
I live in Greenwich Village, New York, which is in the
‘downtown’ (southern) part of Manhattan and includes
Washington Square Park, New York University, and a maze
of picturesque little streets. It’s my favourite part of town.
So why do I like it so much? It’s an artistic and intellectual
neighbourhood with people playing chess in the park,
artists selling paintings on the sidewalk, and students
discussing life in coffee shops. Life in ‘the Village’ is never
dull. There’s a surprise around every corner – maybe a
brand-new restaurant that wasn’t there last week, a snoring
down-and-out sleeping in the doorway, or a celebrity
being pursued by paparazzi and fans. A sense of history
pervades Greenwich Village. It was first inhabited by Native
Americans, then Dutch settlers, and then the British, who
in 1713 named it ‘Greenwich’ after a town in England.
The Village really was a small, rural village until the
1800s, when people escaping outbreaks of disease began
moving there. Ever since, the Village has been a haven
for artists, writers, poets, and musicians. Many famous
people have lived in Greenwich Village, including the writer
Jack Kerouac, the singer Bob Dylan, and the actress Uma
Thurman. The popular sitcom Friends was set here, and
busloads of tourists looking for places mentioned in the
show come here every weekend. The heart of the Village
is an area of pretty, twisting streets west of Sixth Avenue,
where there are endless theatres, used bookstores, coffee
shops, trendy boutiques, and of course, restaurants.
A large part of the Village experience has to do with food.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 8 – Writing, p.138 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
The Village is packed with food shops and restaurants
from every region of the world. Mouth-watering aromas
are everywhere from first thing in the morning until late
at night. The Village is a genuine 24/7 part of the town.
Washington Square Park is like a magnet for young people.
They flock from every corner of the world to sit on the
benches or beside the fountain, talking, playing musical
instruments, and celebrating the freedom of friendship and
youth. My mother, who grew up in New York City, used to
say that Times Square is for tourists, but the Village is the
real New York.
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 8 – Writing, p.138 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
Friends forever!
To: anastasia.peabody@smalltalk.co.uk
Subject: Memories of Ash House School
Hi Tazy! (Anastasia!)
It’s great to be in touch again. The wonder of social media
– sometimes! How could anybody forget a name like yours?
Crazy Tazy Jones! And now you’re a ‘Peabody’!
Love,
Nicky
A
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 9, p.90 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
The 21st century man
who lives in Victorian
times
Peter Saunders is a council worker from Nottingham.
He’s just 35 years old, but he is a huge fan of all things
Victorian. He has spent £1,000s turning his house into
a late 1800s haven.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 9, pp.94–95 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Peter uses all the original cooking features in his kitchen,
but admits to having a microwave oven. He also has
a television, central heating and a fridge freezer, but he
says: ‘All my mod cons are cleverly hidden around the house
in cupboards or behind curtains. And I have running water,
as most Victorians had, but they didn’t have hot water like
I do.’
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 9, pp.94–95 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
The 21st century
woman who lives in
the 1950s
Joanne Massey, 40, lives in a re-creation of a 1950s
home in Stafford with her husband Kevin, 47, who is
a graphic designer.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 9, pp.94–95 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Her obsession began as a teenager. She loved old movies
because they seemed to represent a halcyon time, when
women were more feminine and men more protective. She
could have gone to university, but chose to work in a bank.
She says: ‘I was marking time until I met the right man.
Kevin and I met at a Fifties Convention, and we had an
old-fashioned courtship before he proposed. I was ecstatic,
because I had found someone with the same passion. Some
women I meet ask me if I feel patronized by spending all my
time caring for Kevin, but I never would.’
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 9, pp.94–95 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
Children’s jokes
1 Why will you never starve in the desert?
… Because of the sand which is there.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 9, p.97 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Writing for talking –
An early memory
An early memory of school
Some of my clearest and earliest memories are of my
first school. So I’d like to share a memory about that.
A memory that still upsets me after all these years.
I was five years old and had just started school. It was
quite a long way from my house and there were no school
buses, so I had to walk. My sister, who’s 11 years older than
me, went to the ‘big’ school, which was next to mine, so my
mum sometimes asked her to take me to school. She was not
keen to do this. She had no time for a small, irritating sister
dragging along behind her. She liked to meet up with her
‘cool’ friends. What’s more, because her school day started
later than mine she was happy to dawdle and chat. She
refused to hurry to get me there on time. I was always an
anxious child and I would tug at her sleeve and fret about
being late. She’d just shake me off.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 9 – Writing, p.139 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
I’d planned to do a beautiful portrait of my black-and-
white cat. Miss Marks called across the room, ‘Elizabeth, late
again!’ I hung my head. ‘You’ll just have to sit in the corner
and do a jigsaw.’ So, I did, silently weeping and cursing my
sister. I never did make that mosaic picture of my cat.
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 9 – Writing, p.139 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
One of the greatest
mysteries of English
history
Richard III
The Princes in the Tower
Richard III was born in 1452. He became king in 1483 after
the death of his elder brother, Edward IV, having seized
the throne from Edward’s two young sons. He imprisoned
the boys in the Tower of London, where he allegedly had
them murdered. The scandal of ‘The Princes in the Tower’
caused Henry Tudor to challenge him for the throne. Richard
amassed an army of 12,000 men near the town of Leicester.
Henry marched towards him with his army of 5,000. They
met and fought in the Battle of Bosworth Field. The year
was 1485, the last time any English King actually fought in
battle with his men. Richard, aged just 32, was killed, and
Henry Tudor took the throne as Henry VII. He was the father
of Henry VIII and grandfather of Elizabeth I.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 10 , pp.101–102 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Richard’s first burial
According to historical records, Richard’s body was taken to
Leicester and buried without a coffin in a friary graveyard.
This was subsequently destroyed in the 16th century.
It wasn’t until 500 years after his death that a team from
Leicester University set out to find the site of Richard’s burial.
In August 2012 they began excavating in a car park in the
city centre, and soon discovered a skeleton, which was found
in good condition but with its feet missing. It also had a
badly curved spine and ten battle-related injuries. It was
subjected to months of DNA tests which linked it not only
to the English actor, Benedict Cumberbatch, but also to
descendants in Canada, who are genealogically linked to
Richard’s sister, Anne of York. This was final confirmation
that the body was Richard III. A facial reconstruction of the
skull was made, which looks remarkably like portraits of
the King.
Shakespeare’s Richard
Richard III was portrayed by Shakespeare as a hunchbacked
tyrant with a withered arm, who murdered two innocent
princes. However, modern historians argue that Richard was
the victim of Henry VII’s propaganda because archaeologists
found no evidence of a withered arm.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 10 , pp.101–102 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
The Vikings
Raiders, traders and intrepid
explorers
“From the Fury of the Northmen, O Lord, Deliver Us!”
The year is 793 AD and this was the petrified cry of the
ancient Anglo-Saxons pleading with God to save them
from the Vikings (or Norsemen). For nearly 300 years, from
the 8th to the 11th century AD, this warrior race set out
from Scandinavia on raids and voyages of discovery and
colonization across the northern world. They struck fear in
the hearts of the peoples of Europe, but the archaeology
of their settlements and the literature of their sagas reveal
a complex and fascinating culture. They were not only
violent raiders and pillagers, they were a lot else besides.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 10 , pp.104–105 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
4 However, in the late 8th century, trading was replaced by
raiding. Having the fastest ships of the day they sprang
surprise attacks on European monasteries, thereafter
extorting protection money, as a price of peace. This
was known as Danegeld. This reign of terror began in
793, with a ferocious attack on England’s Lindisfarne
monastery.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 10 , pp.104–105 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
“You Are Old, Father
William!”
by Lewis Carroll
“You are old, Father William,” the young man
said,
“And your hair has become very white;
And yet you incessantly stand on your
(1) . (1) head/hands/bed
Do you think, at your age, it is (2) ?” (2) smart/right/good
“You are old,” said the youth, “as I (5) (5) stated/mentioned/said
before,
And have grown most (6) fat, (6) hugely/uncommonly/
Yet you turned a back somersault in at the door, awfully
Pray what is the reason of that?”
“You are old,” said the youth, “and your jaws are
too weak
For anything tougher than (9) ; (9) cake/suet/jelly
Yet you finished the goose, with the bones and
the (10) . (10) body/feathers/beak
Pray, how did you manage to do it?”
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 10 , pp.106–107 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
“In my youth,” said his father, “I took to the law,
And argued each (11) with my wife; (11) case/day/night
And the muscular strength which it gave to my
(12) , (12) tongue/jaw/chin
Has lasted the rest of my life.”
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 10 , pp.106–107 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
The end of the Viking
Age
The Vikings reigned supreme in Europe for over 300 years.
Indeed, fear of the Vikings played a pivotal role in reshaping
that continent, but by 1100 AD, Viking power began to
weaken. Back in their Scandinavian homeland, the Vikings’
descendants had divided into separate kingdoms led by
rival kings, which ultimately became Norway, Sweden, and
Denmark. Not only in Scandinavia, but throughout Europe,
the people had begun to form themselves into powerful
kingdoms, and the Norse raiders ran out of easy victims.
In England, the victory in 1066 of William the Conqueror,
a descendant of Norsemen from Normandy, marked the end
of Viking terror.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 10 , p.167 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Adding emphasis –
People of influence
Michelangelo
Text A Text B
1 Michelangelo had a great influence 1 Michelangelo, sculptor, architect,
on the world of art. He was painter and poet, had a tremendous
a sculptor, an architect, a painter influence on the world of art.
and a poet. 2 Although he was born near Arezzo,
2 He was born near Arezzo, but it was Florence that he considered
he considered Florence to be his to be his home town. What he loved
home town. He loved the city’s art, above all about the city was its art,
architecture and culture. architecture and culture.
3 He concentrated on sculpture 3 Initially, he concentrated on
initially. He began to carve a figure sculpture. In 1501, he began to carve
of David from a huge block of a figure of David from a huge block
marble in 1501. He finished it in of marble. This he finished in 1504,
1504, when he was 29. when he was 29.
4 Pope Julius II asked him to paint 4 Later, he was asked by Pope Julius
the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel II to paint the ceiling of the Sistine
later. He worked at this every day Chapel. To do this, every day for
for four years from 1508 till 1512. four years, from 1508 till 1512, he
He lay on his back at the top of high worked lying on his back at the top
scaffolding. of high scaffolding.
5 He designed many buildings. 5 He designed many buildings, but it
His greatest achievement as an was his work at St Peter’s Basilica
architect was his work at St Peter’s that was his greatest achievement
Basilica. Its revolutionary design is as an architect. What is difficult
difficult to appreciate nowadays. to appreciate nowadays is its
6 Michelangelo belongs to a small revolutionary design.
group of artists such as Shakespeare 6 There is a small group of artists
and Beethoven, who have been such as Shakespeare and
able to express humanity’s deepest Beethoven, who, through their
experiences through their work. work, have been able to express the
deepest experiences of humanity.
Michelangelo belongs to this group.
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 10 – Writing, p.140 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
Australian boy
grounded after
1,800-mile flight
to Bali
12-year-old *Drew from Sydney, Australia decided to run
away from home after an argument with his mother.
Running away is not that unusual for young children,
however, Drew ran away in spectacular fashion. He found
his parents’ credit cards and booked himself a 1,800-mile
flight from Sydney to the Indonesian island of Bali, where he
spent four days in a hotel!
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 11, p.112 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
‘It was great, because I wanted to go on an adventure’,
Drew said. ‘He doesn’t like the word no’, said his mother.
Drew is now grounded until further notice, and the airline
Drew flew with have since changed their policy on children
flying unattended.
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 11, p.112 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
Have you ever
wondered … ?
Answers to some of the
puzzling questions in life
1 Why is it so difficult to swat a fly?
That buzzing fly is really getting on your nerves. So, you
get your fly swatter and watch silently until the fly is resting.
You get as close as you can, tense your muscles, and then …
thwack! But the fly is happily buzzing around on the other
side of the room. And yet you moved so fast – how could it
have got away?
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 11, pp.114–115 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
2 Why are buttons on different sides on
men’s and women’s clothing?
Have you ever borrowed a boyfriend’s or girlfriend’s
coat and found that doing up the buttons feels weird?
(2)
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 11, pp.114–115 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
Another life form that keeps us company is the common
parasite, for example, the follicle mite. It’s found on every
individual in huge numbers, and it’s a good thing, too, as
they spend their days harmlessly munching dead skin cells,
acting as invisible refuse recyclers. A less welcome guest is
the human itch mite, which lays its eggs on or under our
skin, causing the intensely itchy condition known as scabies.
4 Why do we dream?
Some scientists think dreaming is just a random by-product
of the fact that the brain can’t switch off completely during
sleep. Others think it may be the brain tidying up its filing
system during the night, processing memories and their
associations.
But is there any danger we’ll get out of bed and jump out
of the window? Well in 1951, physiologist Eugene Aserinsky
connected his 8-year-old son to an early brainwave machine,
and watched the results through the night. They showed
that every 90 minutes we enter a different state in order
to dream, called REM (because we display Rapid Eye
Movement). However, most of our muscles switch off during
this period, meaning that the flying and running away from
monsters only happens in our heads.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 11, pp.114–115 © Oxford University Press 2019 3
5 What is the origin of the @ symbol?
History suggests that the @ in email addresses, commonly
referred to as the ‘at sign’, stemmed from the tired hands
of medieval monks. During the Middle Ages, before the
invention of the printing press, every letter of a word had
to be painstakingly transcribed by hand for each copy of
a book. The monks who performed these tedious copying
duties, usually in Latin, looked for ways to reduce the
number of individual strokes for common words. Although
the word for ‘at’ in Latin, ‘ad’, is also short, it was so
common that the monks wished it were even shorter.
(5) making it much quicker to write.
These include:
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 11, pp.114–115 © Oxford University Press 2019 4
Narrative writing (2) –
Linking words and
expressions
Larry follows his dream
1 Larry Walters was a truck driver, but his lifetime dream
was to fly aeroplanes. (1) , he would watch the
fighter jets criss-crossing the skies above his back garden
and dream about the magic of flying. (2) , he
had an idea. He drove to the nearest hardware shop and
bought 20 large balloons and five tanks of helium.
(3) , they were not normal brightly-coloured
party balloons, but heavy one-metre weather balloons
used by meteorologists.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 11 – Writing, p.141 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
4 (11) , night was falling and things were
getting serious. Winds were blowing Larry out to sea.
(12) an amazed British Airways pilot spotted
him and radioed the airport saying he’d just seen a man
with a gun, sitting on a garden chair at 3,500 metres.
(13) a helicopter was sent to rescue him, but
it wasn’t easy (14) the wind from their rotor
blades kept pushing the home-made airship further away.
(15) , they managed to drop a line down from
above, and pulled him to safety.
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 11 – Writing, p.141 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
How well do you use
your time?
1 How would you describe your pace of life?
a I’m easy-going. I just take life as it comes.
b Quite fast, but I leave enough time for relaxation.
c At times frantic, at times relaxed.
d Non-stop the whole time, but I like it that way.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 12, pp.120–121 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
4 When do you switch off your mobile
phone?
a Unlike most people these days, my problem is
forgetting to switch it on!
b In some public places and when I need some peace
and quiet.
c Not as often as I should.
d Only if I have to.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 12, pp.120–121 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
8 Which of these is closest to your philosophy
on life?
a Whatever will be will be.
b Life is not a dress rehearsal.
c There is a reason for everything.
d Grasp every moment.
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 12, pp.120–121 © Oxford University Press 2019 3
The body clock
It’s long been known that like much of the natural world,
human biological processes follow regular patterns
throughout the day. We may follow clock time in modern
life, but these *circadian rhythms have always acted as our
inner body clocks, telling us when to eat and sleep, whether
we know the time of day or not. As more research is carried
out into our body clocks, it’s now becoming apparent how
much we could benefit from taking their workings into
account more. For example, scientists have discovered that
the flu vaccine is four times more effective taken between
9–11 a.m. than between 3–5 p.m.! Heart surgery, on
the other hand, is much safer in the afternoon.
So what does a typical day look like from the point of view
of our body clocks?
6.00–8.00 a.m. Up and at it
For most people it’s time to rise and shine with the sun – but
some body clocks disagree! From puberty until around 20,
the body clock shifts forward, so most adolescents aren’t
ready to sleep until late at night, despite needing more sleep
than adults. That’s why groggy-eyed teenagers emerge
from the bedroom at lunchtime at weekends. On school
days, getting up for school at 7.00 feels like getting up at
4.00 for an older person, and students and teachers suffer
as a result. Studies show that when schools start lessons
at 10.00, 11.00, or even 12.00, students perform better and
achieve higher grades.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 12, pp.124–125 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
8.00–10.00 a.m. Getting going
Many of us find it difficult to get going in the morning, so is
vigorous exercise a good kick-start? It can be, but it’s not the
ideal time for it. Our blood thickens as our blood pressure
drops during sleep, and a sudden increase of activity can
send it soaring, making this the most likely time to suffer
a stroke or heart attack. Gently moving into the day is what
the doctor orders.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 12, pp.124–125 © Oxford University Press 2019 2
6.00–8.00 p.m. Light refreshment
Our body temperature is still high, so things are running
smoothly and, if you fancy a drink, alcohol won’t cloud
your mind as much now. Our minds also turn to food, but
as evening advances, your liver needs a rest from breaking
down fatty foods. It means we’ll put on more weight if
we eat too much food after 7.00, and run a higher risk of
developing diabetes. Big meals are best taken at lunchtime.
8.00–10.00 p.m. Sleepytime
We feel sleepy as bedtime approaches, but it’s not only
teenagers who may not feel tired – older people can
become night owls, too. To bring sleepiness on earlier, the
trick is to avoid too much light later in the day, as the more
light you get then, the longer your body will stay awake.
Wearing sunglasses in the late afternoon and evening make
getting to sleep easier for old people.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 12, pp.124–125 © Oxford University Press 2019 3
2.00–6.00 a.m. Out of it and into it
As body temperature and blood pressure drop, our energy
goes into lighter biological activity, such as skin repair.
4.00 a.m. is the absolute low point, and another bad time
to drive – it’s about as dangerous at this time as when we
are over the alcohol limit. A new day is about to dawn, and
so the cycle begins again – or for the first time for some.
Because the body is so relaxed, the most common time for
babies to be born naturally is between 3.00 and 5.00 a.m.!
D000903
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 12, pp.124–125 © Oxford University Press 2019 4
Improving style and
cohesion – A famous
female architect
Zaha Hadid (1950–2016)
Trailblazing architect of our
time
A B
a Zaha Hadid was a very important a Zaha Hadid, a hugely important
modern architect. She was the figure in the world of modern
first woman architect to win architecture, was the first woman
the important Pritzker Prize for to win the prestigious Pritzker
Architecture. Prize.
b Hadid was born in Baghdad, Iraq, b Born in Baghdad, Iraq, in
in 1950. She lived in London for 1950, Hadid came to London
many years. She came to London as a student in 1972. The city
as a student in 1972. She had became her home, and where she
a design practice in London. established her design practice.
c She studied mathematics at c Having first graduated in
the University of Beirut. She mathematics from the University
graduated and she moved to of Beirut, she moved to London
London. She studied architecture. to study architecture. Completing
She graduated in 1977. Then she her degree in 1977, she worked
worked in Rotterdam and London. in architectural practices in
d Hadid became successful in 1994. Rotterdam and London.
She won a competition to design d However, it wasn’t until 1994 that
Cardiff Bay Opera House. The her career really took off. She won
people said that the building was a competition to design Cardiff
too modern. The building was Bay Opera House, but her design
never built. was considered too modern and
daring for the town. It was never
built.
Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 12 – Writing, p.142–3 © Oxford University Press 2019 1
e In 2003, Hadid designed the e Her first major achievement was
Centre for Contemporary Art the Centre for Contemporary Art
in Cincinnati. It was her first in Cincinnati in 2003. She went on
big achievement. She designed to design buildings all over the
buildings all over the world. world, including an Opera House
She designed an Opera House in Dubai and the Aquatics Centre
in Dubai. She also designed the for the 2012 Olympics in London.
Aquatics Centre for the 2012
f Zaha Hadid designed many
Olympics in London.
exciting and extraordinary
f Zaha Hadid designed a lot of buildings. However, in 2016, at
nice buildings and she was very the height of her fame, while
famous, but she died suddenly working on the One Thousand
in 2016. She died in Miami, USA. Museum in Miami, USA, she died
She did not complete a lot of suddenly of a heart attack. She
buildings. She did not complete was 65. The Museum was finally
the One Thousand Museum completed in 2018. Sadly, another
in Miami. They completed the incomplete project was the
museum in 2018. She did not Central Bank of Iraq, the first for
complete her first building in her native country, commissioned
Iraq. It was the Central Bank of by the Iraqi government in 2010.
Iraq. The Iraqi government had Zaha Hadid will be remembered
commissioned the building in as one of the most influential
2010. She was a good modern modern architects.
architect.
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Headway 5th edition Upper Intermediate • Student’s Book • Unit 12 – Writing, p.142–3 © Oxford University Press 2019 2