Summative assessment for the unit «Organic and non-organic worlds»
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VII
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Speaking - and Listening
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Writing: For –and –against essay
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Summative control work for the 2nd term
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VIII
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Culture corner
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Curricular: Citizenship
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Progress check
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3d term 30 hours
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I
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Unit 5:
Reading for pleasure
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Types of literature
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10.1.2 - use speaking and listening skills to provide sensitive feedback to peers10.C3 respect differing points of view;
10.1.4 - evaluate and respond constructively to feedback from others;
10.1.6 - organize and present information clearly to others;
10.2.7 - understand speaker viewpoints and extent of explicit agreement between speakers on a range of general and curricular topics;
10.2.8 - recognize inconsistencies in argument in extended talk on a range of general and curricular subjects;
10.3.1 - use formal and informal language registers in talk on a wide range of general and curricular topics;
10.3.4 - evaluate and comment on the views of others in a growing variety of talk contexts on a growing range of general and curricular topics;
10.4.4 - read a wide range of extended fiction and non-fiction texts on familiar and unfamiliar general and curricular topics;
10.4.9 - recognize inconsistencies in argument in extended texts on a wide range of general and curricular topics;
10.5.2 - use a growing range of vocabulary, which is appropriate to topic and genre, and which is spelt accurately;
10.5.4 - use style and register to achieve appropriate degree of formality in a growing variety of written genres on a range of general and curricular topics;
10.6.5 - use a wide variety of question types on a wide range of familiar general and curricular topics;
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The war of the worlds
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Character analysis
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II
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Elements of fiction
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Listeners Panic During
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The Myth of the War
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III
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Unit 6:
Capabilities of Human Brain
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Capabilities of Human Brain
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10.1.1 - use speaking and listening skills to solve problems creatively and cooperatively in groups;
10.1.8 - develop intercultural awareness through reading and discussion;
10.1.10 - use talk or writing as a means of reflecting on and exploring a range of perspectives on the world;
10.2.2 - understand specific information in unsupported extended talk on a wide range of general and curricular topics, including talk on a limited range of unfamiliar topics;
10.2.3 - understand the detail of an argument in unsupported extended talk on a wide range of general and curricular topics, including talk on a limited range of unfamiliar topics;
10.2.7 - understand speaker viewpoints and extent of explicit agreement between speakers on a range of general and curricular topics;
10.3.2 - ask and respond to complex questions to get information about a wide range of general and curricular topics;
10.4.2 - understand specific information and detail in extended texts on a range of familiar general and curricular topics, and some unfamiliar topics;
10.4.8 - use a wide range of familiar and unfamiliar paper and digital reference resources to check meaning and extend understanding;
10.5.8 - communicate and respond to news and feelings in correspondence through a variety of functions on a range of general and curricular topics;
10.6.5 - use a wide variety of question types on a wide range of familiar general and curricular topics
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Physical structure of the human brain
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Grammar: Question types
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IV
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Intelligences
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Grammar: Relative clause
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10.1.2 - use speaking and listening skills to provide sensitive feedback to peers;
10.1.4 - evaluate and respond constructively to feedback from others;
10.1.6 - organize and present information clearly to others;
10.1.10 - use talk or writing as a means of reflecting on and exploring a range of perspectives on the world;
10.2.6 - deduce meaning from context in unsupported extended talk on a wide range of general and curricular topics, including talk on a limited range of unfamiliar topics;
10.3.2 - ask and respond to complex questions to get information about a wide range of general and curricular topics;
10.3.7 - use appropriate subject-specific vocabulary and syntax to talk about a range of general and curricular topics;
10.4.4 - read a wide range of extended fiction and non-fiction texts on familiar and unfamiliar general and curricular topics;
10.4.7 - recognize patterns of development in lengthy texts [inter-paragraph level] on a range of general and curricular topics;
10.5.1- plan, write, edit and proofread work at text level independently on a range of general and curricular topics;
10.5.5 - develop with support coherent arguments supported when necessary by examples and reasons for a wide range of written genres in familiar general and curricular topics;
10.6.5 - use a wide variety of question types on a wide range of familiar general and curricular topics;
10.6.17 - use if / if only in third conditional structures use a variety of relative clauses including with which [whole previous clause reference] on a wide range of familiar general and curricular topics
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Stress is bad for you
Grammar: The Passive
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V
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Writing: An email giving advice
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10.1.5 - use feedback to set personal learning objectives;
10.2.2 - understand specific information in unsupported extended talk on a wide range of general and curricular topics, including talk on a limited range of unfamiliar topics;
10.2.3 - understand the detail of an argument in unsupported extended talk on a wide range of general and curricular topics, including talk on a limited range of unfamiliar topics;
10.2.5 - recognize the attitude or opinion of the speaker(s) in unsupported extended talk on a wide range of general and curricular topics, including talk on a limited range of unfamiliar topics;
10.3.3 - explain and justify own and others’ point of view on a wide range of general and curricular topics;
10.3.4 - evaluate and comment on the views of others in a growing variety of talk contexts on a growing range of general and curricular topics;
10.3.5 - interact with peers to make hypotheses about a wide range of general and curricular topics;
10.3.7 - use appropriate subject-specific vocabulary and syntax to talk about a range of general and curricular topics;
10.4.1 - understand main points in extended texts on a wide range of familiar and some unfamiliar general and curricular topics;
10.4.2 - understand specific information and detail in extended texts on a range of familiar general and curricular topics, and some unfamiliar topics;
10.4.5 - deduce meaning from context in extended texts on a wide range of familiar general and curricular topics, and some unfamiliar topics;
10.5.1 - plan, write, edit and proofread work at text level independently on a range of general and curricular topics;
10.5.2 - use a growing range of vocabulary, which is appropriate to topic and genre, and which is spelt accurately;
10.5.3 - write with grammatical accuracy on a range of familiar general and curricular topics;
10.6.2 - use a variety of quantifiers for countable and uncountable nouns and a variety of noun phrases on a wide range of familiar general and curricular topics;
10.6.4 - use a wide variety of determiners and pre-determiner structures on a wide range of familiar general and curricular topics;
10.6.9 - use appropriately a wide variety of active and passive simple present and past forms and past perfect simple forms in narrative and reported speech on a wide range of familiar general and curricular topics;
10.6.15 - use infinitive forms after an increased number of verbs and adjectives use gerund forms after a variety of verbs and prepositions use a variety of prepositional and phrasal verb on a wide range of familiar general and curricular topics;
10.6.16 - use a wide variety of conjunctions on a wide range of familiar general and curricular topics
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Writing Tip
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Culture corner
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VI
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Curricular: PSHE
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