Totally True 3, Unit 16 “Animal Artists”
These are an introductory and an extension activity for TT 3 unit 16. You should copy the PDFs to your Z drive or to a USB flash memory.
Introductory activity:
1. Tell the students to keep their books closed. Put the painting slide on the “Unit 16 animal artist” PDF on the screen. In groups, ask students to look at the painting and speculate on the character of the artist. They can use their dictionaries and should write three adjectives.
2. Elicit some of their answers, then show the picture of Congo, the chimpanzee artist on the next page.
3. Teach the lesson in the way you prefer.
4. Put the “Three artists quiz” on the screen. Read the descriptions of the three different artists. They are:
¨ Jackson Pollack, an American artist whose paintings have sold for up to US $140,000,000.
¨ Ian Ford, an American pre-school child.
¨ Kamala, an elephant who lives in Calgary Zoo. Kamala’s paintings have sold for up to $2000.
5. Tell the students that each artist created two of the paintings. Students talk to partners* and guess who created each painting.
*Unless your students are very disciplined, this activity may not produce a lot of English discussion! You may be able to increase the English by writing some sentence patterns on the whiteboard, eg. “I think number 1 is by Kamala because…”
6. After the students write their guesses, show them the second slide, on the third page of the PDF, which shows the answers
Unit-16-Animal Artist
Unit 16 Painter-Quiz
Totally True 1, Unit 16: “Man Leaves Wife in the Atlantic”
Here are two exercises that worked well with this unit. The first is a worksheet to
pre-teach some of the vocabulary and the second is a pantomime activity to
reinforce the vocabulary and the details of the story.
1. Before starting the unit, give each student a copy of the worksheet. They can
do it individually, or in pairs. They may need dictionaries to check the spelling of
the words. Check the answers together.
2. Teach the unit in the way you prefer.
3. After the story has been read and understood, make groups of four and give
each a set of cut-up pantomime cards. They should be shuffled and put face
down in a stack on the table. They should have their textbooks open to the unit
16 story (p. 70) at this point. The teacher demonstrates by picking up a card and
pantomiming the sentence. I usually do “They were in a race with 35 other
rowboats.” The students look at the story and guess which sentence I’m
pantomiming.
4. In their groups, the students take turns picking up a paper and pantomiming
the action. Others look at their story and say the sentence they think is being
pantomimed. The correct guesser receives the card. At the end, the one with
the most cards, the “best guesser”, is the winner.
5. Do a second round, but this time have the students all close their books.
Have fun!
TT1-u16-instructions
TT1-u16-pantomime-cards
TT1-l16-vocab-pre-teach