必修二课件:Module2 No Drugs Listening课件(共24张PPT)

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名称 必修二课件:Module2 No Drugs Listening课件(共24张PPT)
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资源类型 教案
版本资源 外研版
科目 英语
更新时间 2018-11-21 16:40:18

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课件24张PPT。外研版
高一年级 (必修2)
Module 2Listening and vocabularySome tips to improve your listening!Be relaxed but concentrated.
Learn to forecast the topic according to the questions.
Widen your background knowledge of English to grasp the meaning of the listening texts.
Get a clear mind of different expressions used in different occasions.1. Which word refers to somewhere that you can buy things?
2. Which one means that something is against the law?
3. Which word describes someone who breaks the law?shopping centreillegal criminal4. Which one is the crime of stealing from a shop?
5. Which one is the crime of stealing from a house?shopliftingburglaryNow, listen to tape for the first time and answer the questions.1. Is the woman in the studio a police officer?
No, she is a professor.
2. Is she sure about the number of people who steal to pay for drugs?
No, she isn’t.3. Do drug users only steal from shops?
No, they don’t.
4. Do all drug users attend treatment centers?
No, they don’t.
5. Are most drug users young men?
Yes, they are.1. It’s possible that a hundred thousand people steal in order to ________________________.
2. Some of them behave so badly that members of the public ____________.Listen again and complete these sentences.pay for their drug addictioncall the police3. Some people feel so nervous when they see drug users that they ________________________.
4. There are such a lot of people that there isn’t time _____________.
5. Drug users are more likely to ______________________.call the police anywayto help them allget into trouble at schoolMufasa: Look, Simba, everything the light ______ is our ________.
Simba: Wow!
Mufasa: A king’s time as ruler ____ and ____ like the sun. one day, Simba, the sun will set on my time here and rise with you as the new king. toucheskingdomrisesfalls(Mufasa, the lion king is telling Simba, his son, an important rule of life.)Simba: And this all be mine?
Mufasa: __________!
Simba: Everything the light touches! What about that _______ place?
Mufasa: That’s ______ our borders, you must _____ go there, Simba.Everything shadowybeyondneverSimba: But I thought a king can do ________ he wants.
Mufasa: Oh, there’s more to being a king
than getting your way all the
time.
Simba: There’s more?whateverMufasa: Simba, everything you see _____ together in a delicate ______. As a king, you need to understand that balance and ______ all the creatures from the crawling(爬行的) ant to the _______ antelope(羚羊).existsbalancerespectleapingInterviewer: Good evening, and welcome to the show. With me in the studio is Professor Marion Smith, who is an expert on the connection between crime and drug addiction. Good evening, Professor Smith.Listening materialProfessor: Good evening.
Interviewer: First of all, how many people use illegal drugs in Britain?
Professor: Possibly four million people.
Interviewer: Really? Four million?
Professor: Yes.Interviewer: How many of them break the law in order to pay for their drugs?
Professor: It’s possible that a hundred thousand people steal in order to pay for their drug addiction.
Interviewer: A hundred thousand? ! That’s incredible! And what kind of crimes do they commit?Professor: Mainly shoplifting – in other words, stealing from shops – and burglary, stealing from houses.
Interviewer: I see.
Professor: And there’s another problem. Drug users get into trouble with the police for other reasons as well.
Interviewer: What kind of reasons?Professor: Well, you often see drug users in public places – shopping centers, railway stations, for example – and some of them behave so badly that members of the public call the police. Some people feel so nervous when they see drug users that they call the police anyway.Interviewer: This is a really bad problem, isn’t it?
Professor: Absolutely, but the good news is that drug users who go to treatment centers usually stop their criminal activities.
Interviewer: How many addicts go to treatment centers?Professor: Last year, about 30,000 people went to drug treatment centers.
Interviewer: Thirty thousand? That’s amazing.
Professor: Yes, there are such a lot of people that there isn’t time to help them all. Interviewer: What kind of people are they?
Professor: Well, the majority are young people in their twenties. And about 75 percent of the young people are men.
Interviewer: And do all these people live in cities? Professor: Oh no. The ratio of drug users in society is the same in cities and in the countryside. But they all have something in common.
Interviewer: What’s that?Professor: Drug users are more likely to get into trouble at school.
Interviewer: Professor Marion Smith, thank you very much.
Professor: Thank you.Thank you