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You can’t choose your family – Teacher’s notesLead-inWrite the expression “you can’t choose your family” on the board. What does it mean? Does it exist in your language?Peer TeachingPut students in pairs and assign them As and Bs. Cut up the hand out and give them out. Tell students that they are going to teach each other some expressions related to family. Have two strong students do an example at the front of the class. A reads the first question of the first set to B:“Are you named after another member of your family?”If B doesn’t understand they say “Sorry I don’t understand” and A reads them the second question, which contains the definition of the expression in bold:“Were you given your name because an older member of the family has/had the same name?”So named after means your name was inspired by the name of another member of the family or by another person whose name your parents liked.In pairs students ask and answer the questions, taking it in turns to ask and teach each other an expression. When they have finished they must test each other, first by asking for a definition of an expression, for example “what does like two peas in a pod mean?” and then by eliciting the expression “what’s the expression that means that two people are very similar?”Then test them in open class, As should know all of B’s expressions.Definition matchStudents match the expressions with the definitions.kefiblgjhcdaPersonaliseStudents complete the sentences about themselves and then compare with their partners. ................
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