Cambridge Checkpoint English 7 by Cambridge
Cambridge Checkpoint English 7 by Cambridge
Cambridge Checkpoint English 7 by Cambridge
Text 4B
In this extract from Cider with Rosie, Laurie Lee gives a snapshot of his
first day at a village school.
The morning came when my sisters surrounded me, wrapped
me in scarves, tied up my bootlaces, thrust a cap on my head, and
stuffed a baked potato in my pocket.
‘What’s this?’ I said.
‘You’re starting school today.’
‘I ain’t. I’m stopping ’ome.’
‘You are.’
‘Boo-hoo.’
I arrived at the school just three
feet tall and fatly wrapped in my
scarves. The playground roared
like a rodeo and the potato burned
through my thigh. Old boots, ragged
stockings, torn trousers and skirts,
went sailing and skidding around
me. The rabble closed in; I was
encircled; grit flew in my face like
shrapnel. Tall girls with frizzled hair, and huge boys with sharp
elbows, began to prod me with hideous interest. They plucked at
my scarves, spun me round like a top, screwed my nose and stole
my potato.
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Similarities Differences
Situation
Narrator
Setting
Atmosphere
Language
b Look at the similes in Text 4B, which are in bold. Copy and
complete each one using an image of your own.
i The playground roared like . . .
ii Grit flew in my face like . . .
iii They spun me round like . . .
c Collect all your ideas together. Decide with the class which are the
best substitute similes, and why. Now compare them with the ones in
the text and discuss which are better, and why.
Get out your Sorry Miss, but something
homework please! happened to it.
6 Draw this comic strip in your notebook. What
could go in the empty frames? Complete the
last four frames by drawing simple stick figures
and giving them speech in bubbles, as in the
first two.
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Key point
Speaker position in direct speech
• The speaker can be given first, before the speech, to introduce it:
She explained, ‘I will do it later, when I’ve finished my work.’
• Alternatively, the speaker can be given after the speech: ‘I will do it
later, when I’ve finished my work,’ she explained.
• Direct speech can also be split, with the speaker given in the
middle of the speech: ‘I will do it later,’ she explained, ‘when I’ve
finished my work.’
Text 4C
What is a teacher?
To a mind of flint, the teacher must be iron, and strike sparks. To
the empty pitcher, the teacher becomes a well. To the fallow mind,
a planter of seeds. To the cluttered mind, a gardener to weed,
shape, and clear a space for growing.
To the lens, the teacher is light, and to the mind of light, a lens.
To the sleeper, the teacher is the wake-up call of birds at sunrise.
To clay, the teacher is potter, sculptor, and trainer in self-shaping.
To the wanderer, the teacher is a knowing guide. To the developed
mind, the teacher is colleague, listener, friend.
To all, the teacher is a mirror that shows not only the self but the
path and its choices, the task and its demands – the difficulties, the
joys. To all and from all, the teacher is a learner, a person – and a
prism through which the ordinary continuously reveals itself to be
miraculous.
Gerald Grow
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Text 4D
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Key point
Apostrophe of omission
Texts 4B and 4D both contain contractions. It is common in
informal dialogue between people who know each other well for
contracted verb forms to be used, to reflect the way we speak
rather than the way we write, especially if it is a child speaking.
It is usually the verbs is and has which are contracted (e.g. he’s,
she’s), or other parts of the verb be or have (e.g. I’m, we’ve).
The negative marker not is regularly reduced to n’t (e.g. it isn’t,
you hadn’t). The one or more letters which have been removed
in a contracted form are indicated by an apostrophe. Sometimes
missing letters and an apostrophe show dialect or regional forms of
pronunciation, as in the case of ’ome in Text 4B, which shows that
Laurie pronounces home without the ‘h’ sound.
Text 4E
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10 a Read Text 4E and summarise in one sentence why Roald Dahl did
not like being at his boarding school.
b In pairs, discuss and make notes on how contrast is used to create
the setting and atmosphere of school in this passage.
c List the details which are effective in making the school seem
unpleasant.
11 Imagine that you are Roald Dahl at his boarding school. Write a
letter home to an adult in your family, of about one page, saying
how much you are looking forward to going home for the holidays.
Look at the tip about writing a semi-formal letter before you start.
In your letter:
• expand on the ideas in Text 4E, developing them with further
details of your own
• include references to teachers and other students
• say what you are looking forward to enjoying when you get home.
For Activity 11
Semi-formal letter writing
Although you are writing to someone in your family, you will not
speak to them in the way you would to a friend your own age.
Try not to be too complaining or emotional, as you do not wish
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Text 4F
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12 a Read Text 4F. What do you notice about the kind of sentences used
in diary entries? Why do you think long and complex sentences are
not normally used?
b Imagine that you have just been told that you can’t go home from
school today. The school has been put into a week’s quarantine
(isolated to prevent the spread of disease) because a student has
been diagnosed with an infectious illness. Make some notes of your
immediate thoughts and feelings.
c Write a diary entry, of about a page, to reflect how you feel about
this situation.
i Give your reflections about not being able to go home.
ii Predict what you think is going to happen during the coming week.
iii Describe some fellow students and teachers, and how they
are reacting.
Key point
Writing a diary
Diary style consists of either simple sentences (sentences containing
one verb) or compound sentences (ones which use and, but, so and
or to connect verbs). This makes the writing seem simple and even
childlike, but as you usually write a diary for yourself, there is no need
to use complex grammar; the aim is simply to record what happened
and what you thought and how you felt about it. Diary entries:
• include a mixture of narrative, description and reflection
• are written from the viewpoint of the first person, using the
pronoun I
• refer to events that have happened recently
• refer to the people in the diary writer’s life, and what they have
said and done
• reveal the writer’s secrets, hopes and fears
• contain direct speech to record dramatic or important utterances.
13 a Think about all the texts you have read in this unit and decide on
an idea for a story about school. It could be a ‘first day’ memory,
or a story about any event which happened in or around school.
Decide whether it will be a sad or an amusing story.
b Plan your story. Use the tip about planning to help you.
c Now draft your piece of writing. It should be about two pages. Look
at the key point on narrative writing on the next page to help you.
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Key point
Narrative writing
Many stories are based on a real incident which the writer has turned
into an amusing or emotional experience. Bear the following points in
mind when writing your own stories.
• You can build your story around something which did actually
happen to you, or to someone you know. Alternatively, you could
choose something you have read about as the basis of your story.
In either case, exaggerate the incident to make it more amusing
or dramatic.
• It is not a good idea to try to include a lot of characters or events
in a story of a few pages. Select and focus on two or three of each,
with one main one.
• Strong emotion will engage the reader, so consider using fear
or confusion as the feeling in the story. To create the right
atmosphere, choose appropriate vocabulary to match the feeling. It
is better not to try to mix comic with serious.
• Consider the viewpoint. You can use first person (I ) or third person
(he or she), but you need to think what difference your choice will
make. The emotion can be more powerful when I is used, as this
gives the impression it is a true account and makes the reader
sympathetic (as you saw in Text 4A). On the other hand, the writer
can tell us more about what is going on in the heads of all the other
characters if the third person is used, as in ‘The teacher thought he
looked lost and lonely, and felt sorry for him’.
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Activities
1
Flying
Air
Weather
a Make a spider diagram for the word ‘Air’, collecting all the things
you can think of which depend on or take place up in the air, and
all the things you associate with it.
b Now organise your spider diagram into a mind map of related
ideas, and give each group a subheading, such as ‘Weather’ and
‘Flying’.
c Make a list of all the different types of weather and sky effects, for
example hurricanes, rainbow, sunset.
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Text 5A
Kites
Kites were used approximately 2800
years ago in China, where materials
ideal for kite building were readily
available: silk fabric for the sail
material; fine, strong silk for the flying
line; and resilient bamboo for the
lightweight framework. Ancient and
medieval Chinese sources list the use of
kites for measuring distances, testing
the wind, lifting men, signalling, and The period from 1860 to about
communication for military operations. 1910 was the golden age of kiting. Kites
The earliest known Chinese kites were started to be used for scientific purposes,
flat (not bowed) and often rectangular. especially those to do with weather
Later, tail-less kites were developed. forecasting and photography; reliable
Kites were decorated with mythological manned kites were developed, as well
motifs and legendary figures; some were as power kites. Then the invention of
fitted with strings and whistles to make the powered aeroplane diminished the
musical sounds while flying. interest in kites, and since then they have
After its introduction into India, been used mainly for recreation. You
the kite further evolved into the fighter can see them being flown every evening
kite known as the patang in India, and in Tiananmen Square in Beijing, nearly
annual kite running competitions are three thousand years after they were
held every year on the day of Makar first invented, in all shapes and forms,
Sankaranti. In Afghanistan, kite including eagles.
running is an ancient tradition, and it However, children nowadays do not
is regarded as an art as well as a sport; fly kites as much as in previous times.
the aim of the kite runners is to cut the The rival attractions of computer games
string of the kites belonging to their have reduced the appeal of all outdoor
opponents with the string of their own. activities, and there are fewer large spaces
It is exciting and fun, but can also be where kite flying can safely be done,
dangerous, as kite runners can fall or thanks to the increase in the number of
run into things while they are involved tall buildings and overhead power cables
in mid-air duels with rivals. in so many countries.
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2 a Think of four short subheadings which you could add to Text 5A,
one before each of the four paragraphs, to summarise its content.
Write the subheadings in your notebook.
b Look at the ten words in bold in the passage. Which words of
similar meaning could you replace them with? You may need to
use a thesaurus for this task. Write your replacement words in your
notebook.
c Explain in your own words the meaning of the following phrases
from Text 5A:
• duels with rivals
• the golden age
• thanks to the increase
3 For this activity, you need to find ideas in Text 5A to answer three
specific questions. Select the points you would use in a summary about
the following topics and list the points as brief notes.
a the building of kites
b the use of kites
c the history of kites
Key point
Selecting summary points
• Identify and underline the essential information needed to answer
the question; do not include anything irrelevant, and ignore minor
details, repetitions and examples.
• When you transfer the points to your own list or plan, change the
phrases into your own words where possible, and try to reduce the
number of words being used.
• Always paraphrase figurative language, such as ‘the golden age of
kiting’ in Text 5A, to show that you have understood it.
• You may need to use the material in more than one part of the
question, if it is relevant.
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Text 5B
4 a Select the key points contained in the news report in Text 5B. Then
reorganise the information into just one sentence in your notebook.
b On a copy of the text, circle the commas used in Text 5B. Working
in pairs, discuss and list the different purposes for which they are
being used.
c Read the key point about commas and then copy the following
text into your notebook, adding the commas where necessary.
Although some wind is needed to fly hot air balloons they can’t fly if there is too much wind.
Balloons need cool stable calm winds to operate most effectively so early morning as the
sun rises and when the winds are at their calmest is the best time. Also a lower temperature
means it is easier to get the balloon off the ground without using so much gas and this
means the balloon can be flown for longer.
Key point
Commas
Commas are needed within sentences to separate the items in a list
or the different grammatical parts. You can choose whether to put a
comma before a clause beginning with and, but, so and or (simple
connectives), but usually we do put one if the sentence is already
long, or if the new clause (a group of words containing a verb) is long,
or if it contains a new idea.
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