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Family Life: Then & Now

Related Section of pack: Geography and History


Aim:

to find out about family life and different types of houses in Scotland now
and 50 years ago.
Language Points: adverbs of frequency, present tense sentences (e.g.
married couples rarely divorce.)

Materials:

Types of housing sheet, housing reading worksheet, family life in


1950/2006 cards, adverb cards.

ESOL level:

Access 2 - 3

SCQF level:

2-3

Time:

60 minutes

Preparation:

Photocopy worksheets, cut up cards.

In Class:
1) Introduce idea of housing and have students match types of accommodation to the
name.
2) Discuss housing and elicit where students live and who with.
3) Introduce idea of family life by eliciting who lives where, i.e. how many people
live together.
4) Elicit students ideas on 50 years ago and if families were the same then.
5) Reading text with True and False questions.
6) Students match ideas about families to the year, 1950 or 2006 (do one example).
Pre-teach vocabulary if necessary.
7) Focus on use of frequency adverbs. Have students order adverbs according to
frequency.
8) Students write own sentences about family life in their countries without
including a name. Put the texts on the wall, number them and have the students
identify whose text is whose by talking to as many people as possible.

Variation:

More emphasis could be put on writing by having Ss create their own


true-false quiz in groups.
If students are comfortable with writing, they could make posters about
family life then and now in their country. This could be a group activity.
If language abilities are high enough, students could list the advantages
and disadvantages of life then and now.

Assessment: Thetaskhelpspreparelearnersforthefollowingsummativeassessments:
Access2Beginners EnglishOutcomes1&2(DA9M08)
Access3Personal and Social EnglishOutcomes1&2(DA9K09)

Family Life: Then & Now

Match the pictures of the


houses to the names.

Match the pictures of houses to the names:


E.g. Terraced house

__3___

Block of flats

______

Semi-detached

______

Bungalow

______

Detached house

______

Tenement

______

House name
A house which is not joined to any other.

____________

A house which is joined to another on one side.

____________

A tall building which has many flats on each floor.

____________

A house which is joined to other houses on both sides.

____________

An old four-storey building with 8 or more flats.

____________

A house on one level.

____________

1950 or 2006?

________

__________

My name is Jack. I live in a Glasgow tenement. There are 6 people in my family,


my mother and father, my two sisters and my younger brother and me. In our flat
there are two rooms, the kitchen/living room and the bedroom. It is a small flat so
we dont have much space. We share an outside toilet with the neighbours.
In the morning we usually get up early and I always play football with my friends.
Sometimes my sisters play too. Occasionally my mother shouts at us from the
window. In the evening we sometimes have a bath in the living room.
My name is Sarah. I live in a Glasgow tenement. I live alone. In my flat there
are four rooms, the kitchen, the living room, the bedroom and the bathroom. Its
a nice flat and always warm. I share the garden with my neighbours.
In the morning I always get up early and go to work. I sometimes come home
late from work. Usually at the weekend I visit my friends or go shopping. I rarely
have a bath but I always have a shower in the morning.
True or false?
e.g. Sarah lives by herself.

True

False

1. Sarah never has a bath.

True

False

2. Jack always plays football with his friends.

True

False

3. Sarah shares the toilet.

True

False

4. Jack sometimes has a shower.

True

False

5. Sarahs flat has four rooms.

True

False

6. Jacks flat isnt big.

True

False

2006

1950

Married couples usually live


by themselves.

Married couples often live


with parents.

Married couples sometimes


divorce.

Married couples rarely


divorce.

Couples sometimes have


children before marriage.

Couples rarely have


children before marriage.

Men and women often live


together before marriage.

Men and women rarely live


together before marriage.

Women often have children


in their 30s.

Women usually have


children in their teens or
20s.

Families sometimes have


only one parent.

Families rarely have only


one parent.

Women sometimes stay


home to look after children.

Women almost always stay


at home to look after
children.

Always
Usually
Often
Sometimes
Occasionally
Rarely
Never

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