High school word study

By Ashley Austrew

Whether you’re a teacher, a parent, or a high school student yourself, you’re probably aware that having a strong vocabulary is important for reading, writing, and speaking. In ninth through twelfth grades, students are not only tackling high-level coursework, but also preparing for their adult lives beyond school. The words they learn now will carry through into their later educational and career endeavors, and that makes it especially important to put in the effort to grow their vocabulary, literacy, and spelling skills.

To help get high schoolers back in the swing of things, we’ve put together 12 word lists with hundreds of essential vocabulary words for every stage of high school, along with flash cards, quizzes, and more. These words will not only help students in English class or while taking the SAT. They’ll also help students studying advanced science, history, art, political science, and more. Keep scrolling to learn them all!

When you’re preparing for the big tests in your life, turn to these word lists and quizzes build right for the SAT, ACT, and more.

Ninth-grade vocabulary words and tips

In ninth grade, students are making the transition into advanced learning that will prepare them for college, careers, and beyond. These students are exploring history, science, writing, and literature, and being able to spell and comprehend a great many multisyllabic words with multiple meanings is an important skill.

Ninth graders aren’t only studying words for their spelling or meaning, though. Rather, they’re studying vocabulary to gain a deeper understanding of language and the ability to analyze the impact of words in context. This is a requirement for much of the higher level learning and analysis done by students in high school. Reading remains important at this stage, as does studying new words to learn and use throughout their school work. Here are 75 vocabulary words ninth graders need to know.

  • Ninth-Grade Vocab Word List 1
    • absorption
    • characteristic
    • executive
    • accomodation
    • reference
    • grateful
    • ascend
    • satisfactory
    • interval
    • civilization … full list
  • Ninth-Grade Vocab Word List 2
    • cocoon
    • remembrance
    • favorable
    • precise
    • interpretation
    • accompaniment
    • sensible
    • ecstasy
    • administration
    • monotony … full list
  • Ninth-Grade Vocab Word List 3
    • adequate
    • fiery
    • adolescent
    • suppress
    • nuisance
    • indispensable
    • opposition
    • lively
    • commissioner
    • hindrance … full list

Now take those ninth grade skills up a notch with this quiz!

Tenth-grade vocabulary words and tips

Students in tenth grade are building on many of the literacy skills they acquired in ninth grade. They’re able to not only decode complex words, but also to understand the figurative, connotative, and technical meanings within a text, analyze word choice, and determine the best words to use to convey their ideas.

Students at this stage are likely also preparing to take practice SAT and ACT tests within the coming year or so, making it all the more important for them to have a rich and robust vocabulary. Reviewing these word lists, practicing with flash cards, and taking advantage of our spelling and definition quizzes will help kids slowly and steadily make progress on this goal. Here are three word lists to help tenth graders feel ahead of the curve.

  • Tenth-Grade Vocab Word List 1
    • circumvent
    • indigenous
    • estrange
    • anarchy
    • dormant
    • derogatory
    • belligerent
    • unilateral
    • stringent
    • connotation … full list
  • Tenth-Grade Vocab Word List 2
    • assiduous
    • obscure
    • vindicate
    • expedite
    • bolster
    • coalition
    • perfunctory
    • nonchalant
    • impetuous
    • disseminate … full list
  • Tenth-Grade Vocab Word List 3
    • dissident
    • subordinate
    • admonish
    • jurisdiction
    • travesty
    • precipitate
    • alternative
    • redeem
    • bureaucratic
    • validate … full list 

Once you’ve reviewed these words, consider testing your expertise of tenth grade vocabulary with a quiz.

Eleventh-grade vocabulary words and tips

By eleventh grade, much of the focus for students is on college and career readiness. By the end of their eleventh-grade year, many students will have taken their ACT or SAT. They’re likely also looking at colleges they’d like to apply to during their senior year, and probably practicing those admissions essays as well. All of this makes a strong vocabulary an especially important thing to have.

Rather than cramming for a specific test or assignment, it will be helpful for eleventh graders to focus on study and enrichment all year long. They can use these three lists to get started by reviewing the words daily with digital flashcards and taking our accompanying word quizzes to see how much they’ve retained. With a little practice each day, these terms will be second nature to eleventh graders in no time.

  • Eleventh-Grade Vocab Word List 1
    • iconoclast
    • aberration
    • brevity
    • affinity
    • indoctrinate
    • coalesce
    • proximity
    • debilitate
    • contradiction
    • effervescent … full list
  • Eleventh-Grade Vocab Word List 2
    • conciliatory
    • scrutinize
    • edifice
    • biased
    • heretic
    • accolade
    • dearth
    • altercation
    • usurp
    • delineate … full list
  • Eleventh-Grade Vocab Word List 3
    • edifice
    • aesthetic
    • tirade
    • caustic
    • rigorous
    • indict
    • ponderance
    • dilettante
    • judicious
    • ameliorate … full list

Think you can pass this eleventh grade vocab quiz? Only one way to find out!

Twelfth-grade vocabulary words and tips

In their final year of high school, students are able to interpret, use, and understand some of the most complex words in the English language. They’ve built up their vocabularies through their regular coursework and by studying for the SAT or ACT, if they’ve taken the tests or plan to. Students at this level are working with the real world in mind, and they need to be able to interpret language in a variety of settings.

So, what’s left to do? Plenty! It’s time to deepen their understanding of language and create a lifelong practice of learning and thinking about the way we use words. For twelfth graders, this may mean reading more complicated books and poetry, being adventurous in their writing, and seeking new opportunities for learning, which is a lifelong skill that will benefit them once they leave the four walls of the school building. They can start by getting familiar with these word lists. These words are ones they may need for test prep, college, their careers, and beyond. Start by reviewing the words, and then dig in to our spelling tests and quizzes to build a functional and seriously impressive vocabulary in no time.

  • Twelfth-Grade Vocab Word List 1
    • anachronism
    • impute
    • abdicate
    • denouement
    • camaraderie
    • incompatible
    • ephemeral
    • prudent
    • expository
    • digression … full list
  • Twelfth-Grade Vocab Word List 2
    • evanescent
    • abbreviate
    • frugal
    • hackneyed
    • adulation
    • longevity
    • florid
    • diligent
    • wary
    • rancorous … full list
  • Twelfth-Grade Vocab Word List 3
    • anecdote
    • intrepid
    • fortuitous
    • ostentatious
    • superfluous
    • demagogue
    • subtle
    • arid
    • transient
    • collaborative … full list

Once you’ve reviewed these words, test yourself with this quiz built straight for twelfth grade vocabulary.


Ashley Austrew is a freelance journalist and writer from Omaha, Nebraska. Her work has been published at CosmopolitanScary MommyScholastic, and other outlets. For more by Ashley, read: “Teacher” vs. “Tutor”: Why Most Kids Need Both | Your Student Can Take Middle School By Storm With The Right Vocabulary | Make Your Writing The Star Of National Grammar Day With These Tips | How To Plan Out And Plan Ahead For Your Final Project

VocabularySpellingCity offers free high school vocabulary word lists. All high school subject area teachers can import ready-made word lists with a variety of content specific vocabulary to assign engaging activities to students. Our activities align with the 9-12 grade level standards to fit any curriculum. Teachers also have the ability to create their own word lists based on their lesson plans and units of study.

High school vocabulary word lists feature vocabulary from Common Core exemplar novels, like Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird; plays, like Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of Macbeth; and epics, like Homer’s The Odyssey. Lists can be paired with word study activities to build vocabulary knowledge necessary to increase reading comprehension.

Science, social studies, math and other content area teachers can use the word lists found on VocabularySpellingCity to provide practice with new vocabulary words and review previously learned terms. This is a great way for high school students to learn differentiated vocabulary based on their abilities. By the time students get to high school, the vocabulary gap is wider, and VocabularySpellingCity is a great way to get high school students working from individual vocabulary lists based on their ability. High school students benefit from interactive games; the engagement helps them build a better understanding of key concepts and vocabulary needed to increase general and content area reading comprehension. Flashcards and Word Study are games that are well suited for high school students to practice their vocabulary.

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High School Vocabulary Word Practice Instruction

High school may be difficult to maneuver for students, as the curriculum becomes increasingly rigorous in order to build college and career readiness. As students enter high school, there is an increase in informational texts that many high schoolers struggle to read because of the gap between their speaking, reading and writing vocabularies. VocabularySpellingCity is a great way to help teachers plan lessons that close these gaps. High school teachers must ensure students are actively engaged in lessons in the classroom as well as developing skills independently at home. VocabularySpellingCity offers independent vocabulary practice to supplement content-specific lessons by pairing teacher-created word lists, student-created word lists, or ready-made content word lists with engaging games that make independent learning fun.

High school students are expected to be self-sufficient thinkers and doers. VocabularySpellingCity offers students the option of independently creating their own word lists. In high school language arts, as students are reading novels, they can select the words they are unsure about, words they are unfamiliar with, or words they find interesting. Then they can edit their lists to select the definition that best matches the way the word is being used in context. Student-created lists can be paired with grade level appropriate activities like Paragraph Writing Practice. The student-created lists feature can be used in all high school subject areas.

In addition, high school students should demonstrate knowledge of content area vocabulary. VocabularySpellingCity has compiled a list of high school science, social studies, and mathematics terms. The varied lists are perfect for all high school subject area teachers. For example, high school algebra teachers can assign an algebra word list to reinforce concepts like polynomials and rational expressions or creating equations. They can assign an activity like FlashCards so students can review and practice key concepts at their own pace.

High school educational standards that are supported by VocabularySpellingCity.

Choose your educational standard. Then choose a grade from 9-12.

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High School Spelling Words

Select a link below to view available high school word lists:

HIGH SCHOOL SPELLING

Import high school spelling word lists.

  • Compound Words

HIGH SCHOOL VOCABULARY

Import high school vocabulary word lists, such as figurative language concepts.

  • Academic Vocabulary

    [sc_include_table id=”4464″]

  • Heteronyms

  • Homonyms

  • Homophones

  • Hyperbole
  • Idioms
  • Informational Text

  • Metaphors
  • Personification
  • Similes
  • Synonyms & Antonyms

HIGH SCHOOL – OTHER SUBJECTS

Import high school content-specific vocabulary lists.

  • Literature

  • Math

  • Science

  • Social Studies

The following games are among the most popular and recommended to practice vocabulary for high school students.

What Exactly is Word Study? | This Reading Mama*This post contains affiliate links. To read more, please see my full disclosure policy.

Welcome to day 1 of Teaching Spelling through Word Study. To see all of the posts in this series, please click HERE or on the image above. If you’ve read many of my posts, you know I love the word study approach. It’s very much a part of the two FREE reading curricula that I write: Reading the Alphabet and Phonics by The Book.  So what exactly is Word Study?  Put on your seat belts and buckle up, because here we go…

Traditional Spelling

First, I wanted to drudge up what you probably already know about spelling.  Maybe it’s how you experienced spelling as a child.  Rote memorization. The equation looks something like this:

SEE Word + WRITE Word = MEMORIZE Word

If we see the word a lot + write (or copy) the word a lot, then the string of letters will stick in our brain.  The typical spelling list will look something like this: made, years, know, please, etc.  The words chosen for these lists are mostly high frequency words that are unrelated to one another in any way.

We also have our lists of rules: “when two vowels go walking, the first one does the talking” or “the silent e makes the vowel say its name”.  But, it doesn’t take much time before we discover that these rules have many, many exceptions.

With traditional spelling, spelling can become rather dull and boring for the student (and teacher). Students are mostly passive learners; simply empty containers to fill.  Students often memorize the words for the test, but forget them after they’ve scored their 100’s.

Rote memorization * Unrelated word lists * Lists of rules * Many exceptions * Dull and boring * Passive * Forgettable

Now, contrast traditional spelling with…

The Word Study Approach

Word Study operates under a different paradigm.  It is “based on the belief that most words do follow spelling generalizations” or patterns. (Johnston) As a matter of fact, studies show 84 percent of English words are mostly predictable!  (Moats) Instead of memorizing lists of unrelated words, students are given word lists that are centered around a specific pattern, like word families. Through studying these patterns, students can begin to “understand how words are built and apply this knowledge” in their reading and spellings.  (www.spellingscholar.com)

Students are given word sorts and asked to be active learners as they compare, contrast, sort/manipulate, and classify the words.  They are also encouraged to use and apply the word generalizations when they read and write. (Templeton & Pikulski)  Peter Johnston says is best in his book Choice Words, “…there are hidden costs in telling people things.  If students can figure something out for themselves, explicitly providing the information preempts the students’ opportunity to build a sense of agency and independence.”

Based on the patterned word lists, students begin to form generalizations that sound something like: “Almost every time I see a and i together, it makes the long a sound.  And I notice that the a-i is either at the beginning or in the middle of the word.”  This generalization can help the student read and spell unknown words that share the same ai pattern.

And a very important difference between traditional spelling and word study: word patterns are chosen specific to the spelling development of the child. This means if the child is ready for long vowel patterns, these are the patterns he studies.

Generalizations * Patterns * Active Learners * Compare * Contrast * Sort * Classify * Apply * Specific for Child

A Little Theory Behind Word Study

Why are Word Patterns Important for Learning to Spell (and Read)?

I love how Pat Cunningham puts it in her book Phonics They Use.  “The brain…is not a rule applier but a pattern decoder.  While we look at single letters, we are looking at them and considering all the letter patterns we know.  Successfully decoding (or encoding) a word occurs when the brain recognizes a familiar spelling pattern…or searches through its store of words with similar patterns.” (pg. 186, 188)

Applied Knowledge of Words

“Word study teaches children to focus on patterns and meaning chunks.  In a word study program, children learn to apply their knowledge to a greater number of words than they could learn by memorizing traditional spelling lists.” (Mattmann & Cowan)

How many more words? Well, let’s say that a child has 20 spelling words a week.  Now multiply that by 36 weeks for 10 years.  Hmmm, 7200 words…that is, if he can memorize them all perfectly.  But, the average vocabulary of a high school student is around 75,000 words!  7200 is only 10%! (Johnston)  Let’s take the word study approach. The study of the a_e pattern alone can help students learn to spell and read over 100 words (off the top of my head)!

Word Study Resources:

I could go on and on and on…really…there are whole entire books written on this one subject. If you’re a ” literacy nerd” like me, you may enjoy these books, websites, and articles.

  • 10 Days of Teaching Spelling Through Word Study {from This Reading Mama}
  • Words Their Way-Bear, Invernizzi, Templeton, & Johnston
  • Choice Words -Peter Johnston
  • Phonics They Use-Pat Cunningham
  • A More Effective Way to Teach Spelling-Mattmann & Cowan
  • Building the Foundations of Literacy-Templeton & Pikulski
  • How Spelling Supports Reading-Moat
  • How Words Cast Their Spell-Joshi, Treiman, Carreker, and Moats
  • Questions Teachers Ask About Spelling-Templeton & Morris (Reading Research Quarterly)
  • Spelling Scholar– FAQ
  • Why Do They Get it on Friday and Misspell it on Monday?– Gill & Scharer (Language Arts)
  • For even more articles, visit here.

And don’t forget to hop around on the hopscotch board and visit the other amazing bloggers at iHomeschool Network and enter the Pin to Win Giveaway!

 

~Becky

Many students find word study to be one of the most enjoyable components of balanced literacy instruction. Teachers find it to be one of the most powerful. That’s because reading ability dramatically improves as students use meaningful games and activities to discover:

  1. Letters and the sounds they make
  2. How to pick out root words, and how suffixes and prefixes can change the meaning
  3. Spelling involves finding patterns
  4. How to get clues to word meaning and pronunciation by examining the parts of a word.

But word study isn’t all fun and games.  It actually involves problem solving in the form of developing hypotheses, searching for patterns, predicting outcomes, and experimenting to find out if they’re right.  Using word study activities, students compare new words to words they already know and look for similarities.

Why is Word Study Important?

In order to become fully literate, students must have the ability to accurately recognize words.  They also have to adequately use written words to convey meaning.  Because word study is based on phonics spelling and vocabulary, it’s a way for students to manipulate and fully examine words.

At once they do, students realize that words are powerful things.  When they learn how words work they’re on their way to becoming fully literate individuals. Learning phonics, sight words, decoding, spelling patterns, and word meanings, means understanding the basics of written words. From there they can communicate and construct meaning.   After all, that’s what language is all about.

Fortunately, educators have come to realize that rote drill and practice isn’t the most efficient way to master a reading or writing skill.  Students need the opportunity to think critically and manipulate words and their concepts.  That way they can generalize words based on spelling or other commonalities.  Grasping spelling, word recognition, and vocabulary goes beyond memorizing a few rules.  The best way to become proficient in words and their features is to have plenty of opportunities to examine them in different contexts.

The Purpose of Word Study

As a component of balanced literacy, word study achieves two goals; first to help students become fluent readers with a strong vocabulary, and secondly, to give students the opportunity to fully explore and manipulate words.

  • Word study isn’t about memorizing spelling words but about understanding spelling patterns.
  • It isn’t about manipulating a random group of words but can compare words that are phonetically similar.
  • It isn’t just another fun activity but is a purposeful look at word analysis.

Word Study Activities

When planning word study lessons, teachers can choose from a variety of activities to improve spelling, word recognition and vocabulary.  Students tend to enjoy working with words and are eager to get word “games.”  Here a just a few of them…

Word Study Activity 1: Word Searches

In word searches students take a group of word categories and “search” for examples of words in those categories by combing through magazines, newspapers, books, or textbooks.  They write down the words they find.

Word Study Activity 2: Pattern Sorting

Pattern sorting is an activity that teaches students to categorize words.  The categories can be based on the way particular sounds are expressed in a word.  Pattern sorting is great for looking at vowel patterns, contractions, and silent letters.

Word Study Activity 3: Proofreading

Proofreading is one of those “must have” skills in order to be optimally successful in school.  Word study lessons involving proofreading help students learn to develop an eye for how a written word should look.  They learn to know if a word “looks right” when spelled out.

Using word study lessons to round out a balanced literacy program promises a much greater chance of retaining word meanings and making sense of spelling rules.

Thank goodness, literacy has moved beyond writing a list of words five times each to learn to spell.  Or decoding words by simply “sounding them out.”  Now word study makes exploring the various aspects of the English language much more meaningful and enjoyable.

Данный список содержит полный список английских слов по теме » Schooling», а также упражнения и тесты для закрепления и активизации лексики.

Содержание:

  1. Kinds of school
  2. School building & Interior
  3. Students & Attendance
  4. School curriculum & School subjects
  5. Studying at school  & School  problems
  6. Out-of-class activities
  7. School. Упражнения и тесты по теме «Школа. Обучение»

Запомните:

compulsory education — обязательное образование

free education — бесплатное образование

private school — частная школа

state school — государственная школа

Schooling. Полный список английских слов (intermediate)

1. Kinds of School  (Типы учебных заведений):

  1. primary school – начальная школа
  2. secondary (high) school – средняя школа
  3. higher school – высшее учебное заведение
  4. comprehensive school – общеобразовательная школа
  5. a school, specializing in — школа, специализирующаяся на
  6. gymnasium — гимназия
  7. lyceum – лицей
  8. technical school — техникум
  9. college — колледж

2. School Building & School Interior (Школьное здание снаружи и внутри):

  1. three-storey building — трехэтажное здание
  2. classroom — кабинет
  3. classroom of Russian (= Russian classroom)
  4. computer classroom – кабинет информатики
  5. be well-equipped with — хорош-оборудованный
  6. on the ground (first) floor — на первом этаже
  7. staff room (teacher’s room)- учительская
  8. sick room (doctor’s office, medical room) — медпункт
  9. school office — канцелярия
  10. canteen – буфет
  11. dining-hall — столовая в школе
  12. recreation — рекреация
  13. cloak-room (changing room) – раздевалка
  14. assembly hall – актовый зал
  15. gym- hall (gymnasium ) – спортивный зал
  16. workshop – мастерская
  17. headmaster’s office — кабинет директора
  18. laboratory – лаборатория
  19. library – библиотека
  20. entrance hall – вестибюль
  21. school museum – школьный музей
  22. aquarium — аквариум
  23. diploma — грамота
  24. palm — пальма
  25. poster — плакат
  26. stand — стенд

3. Staff, Students & Attendance (Персонал, учащиеся и посещаемость):

  1. headmaster (headmistress) — директор
  2. director of studies — завуч
  3. form mistress — классная руководительница
  4. librarian — библиотекарь
  5. nurse — медсестра
  6. security guard — охранник
  7. pupil — ученик начальной школы
  8. student — учащийся (ученик средней школы)
  9. schoolboy — школьник
  10. junior pupils – ученики младших классов
  11. senior students –старшеклассники
  12. attend lessons and classes — посещать уроки и занятия
  13. enter school — поступить в школу
  14. leave (finish) school — закончить школу
  15. pass from …. to….- перейти из….. в….
  16. miss school — пропускать школу
  17. change school — поменять школу

4. School Curriculum & School Subjects ( Учебный план и предметы):

  1. timetable — расписание (on the timetable)
  2. curriculum — учебный план
  3. term – четверть
  4. academic year –  учебный год
  5. at the end of each term… — в конце четверти
  6. obligatory — обязательный
  7. optional – факультативный
  8. lesson of Chemistry = Chemistry lesson — урок химии
  9. learn (study) different subjects — изучать различные предметы
  10. advanced mathematics – углубленный курс математики
  11. Science — точные науки
  12. The Humanities — предметы гуманитарного цикла
  13. study Science/ the Humanities — изучать предметы научного / гуманитарного цикла
  14. attend the optional (elective) class in ….. – необязательный, факультативный

Учебные предметы на английском языке: Maths, Algebra, Geometry, Russian, English, Biology, Geography, History, Literature, Chemistry, Botany, a foreign language, Physics, PE (Physical Education), Design and Technology (технология), Information Technology, Mechanical Drawing, Social Science / Social Studies  (обществоведение), Art, World Culture (МХК), Economics, Handicraft (ТРУД): (Cooking, Needlework,Woodwork, Metal work).


5. Studying at School  & School  Problems (Учеба в школе и школьные проблемы):

  1. do well/ badly — учиться хорошо/ плохо
  2. behave  well / badly- вести себя хорошо/ плохо
  3. solve problems in mathematics, physics — решать задачи по математике, физике
  4. prove theorems — доказывать теоремы
  5. do equations — решать уравнения
  6. do experiments in the lab — делать опыты в лаборатории
  7. swot smth – зубрить
  8. make smth out – понимать, разбираться в чем-то
  9. cheat – списывать, пользоваться шпаргалками
  10. prompt – подсказывать
  11. work by fits and starts — заниматься урывками
  12. studies — занятия
  13. exams — экзамены
  14. extra lessons — дополнительные занятия
  15. private lessons — частные уроки
  16. take lessons — брать уроки
  17. give lessons — давать уроки
  18. take an exam in Maths — сдавать экзамен по математике
  19. fail an exam — провалить экзамен
  20. pass an exam — сдать экзамен
  21. weak point  — слабое место
  22. poor memory — плохая память
  23. can’t remember dates (words, formulas) — не запоминать даты, слова, формулы
  24. fail to retell texts – не получается пересказывать тексты
  25. punish — наказывать
  26. punishment — наказание

6. Out-of-class Activities (Внеклассная деятельность):

  1. school activities – школьная деятельность
  2. take part in school activities — принимать участие в школьных мероприятиях
  3. have school traditions — иметь школьные традиции
  4. choir — хор
  5. club — кружок
  6. Drama Club — театральный кружок
  7. go hiking — ходить в поход
  8. go on excursion to – ездить на экскурсию в…..
  9. performe in school theatre — играть в школьном театре
  10. trip to… – поездка в …

Я надеюсь, что приведенный полный список английских слова по теме «School» поможет вам  подвести итог изучения данной темы, а упражнения и тесты ниже помогут активизировать изученные слова и уверенно использовать их в устной и письменной речи на английском языке. Всем успехов!


School. Упражнения и тесты для активизации словарного запаса

 Test 1.  School 

  1. They ___________ me a lot at school. (taught, studied, learned)
  2. I’m ____________my final exam next month. (passing, taking, making)
  3.  “ Have you ________your homework?” Pat’s mother asked her.  (made, done, wrote)
  4. Children have to carry heavy________.  (sacks, schoolbags, handbags)
  5. They have a very good school ____________. (restaurant, bar, canteen)
  6. _________is my favourite subject. (Historic, History, Story)
  7. I’m not _______________ Geography and Physics. (well with, good with, good at)
  8. These pupils are waiting for their teacher in the _________. (classroom, lesson, class)
  9. Sit ___________your desk and go on with your work. (at, on, near)
  10. No one likes to _____________ an exam. (lose, fail, fall)

Test 2.  School Life

  1. Who is the ________ of your school? (director, headmaster, chief)
  2. Clare was very popular with her ________. (schoolfellows, schoolchildren, schoolmates)
  3. Mathematics is a ______________subject at school.  (forced, compulsory, required)
  4. A___________ is all the different courses that are taught in a school or college.  (curriculum, scheme,  timetable)
  5. A __________ is a state school in which children of all abilities study together. (public school, elementary, comprehensive)
  6. I’m _________English and French classes. (following, attending, visiting)
  7. A nursery school is for ________. (babies, infants, nurses)
  8. Every one of their children___________ well at school. (did, succeeded, managed)
  9. A ________  is a school in Britain for children aged between 11 and 18 who have a high academic ability. (grammar school, state school, special school)
  10. It’s hard to ___________into the university. (enter, get, go)
  11. The function of school is to ______________ children. (bring up, educate, encourage)
  12. We’re building a car at our school ____________ (workshop, laboratory, workplace)

Exercise 1. Translate the text into English

 

Exercise 2. Describe the school where you study using the plan below and the vocabulary.

  1. Introduction (give general description of the place and people, some background and history).
  2. Main body (good/bad points now, your problems, how things will develop in the future).
  3. Ending (Mention some possible changes at your school).

Vocabulary (positive/negative):

  1. Location:

not far from, within walking distance from…, it is about 10 minutes walk from, it takes me 10 minutes to get to school. 

  1. Building/Classrooms/ Equipment:

(+) brightly painted/decorated, spacious, comfortable, modern, new, cozy

(-) depressing, gloomy, old, old-fashioned, tasteless, uncomfortable

  1. Classmates/ Teachers/ Friends:

(+) friendly, funny, helpful, confident, bright, encouraging, motivating, well-organized, experienced, popular with

(-) boring, noisy, disorganized, boring, strict, demanding, discouraging

  1. Lessons/ Subjects:

(+) favourite, important, motivating, well-organized, I am good at

(-) long, boring, difficult, disorganized, I am bad at

  1. Out of school activities:

in-school clubs, excursions, trips, theatre, hiking.


Exercise 3. Describe the school where you would like to study using the plan below and the same vocabulary.

Exercise 4. Answer the questions.

  1. How often do you miss your school?
  2. Do some children behave badly at school?
  3. What do they do?
  4. What kind of punishment do teahers use in your school?
  5. What is the most (least) effective punishment, in your opinion?

Exercise 5. Give a talk on the following topics.

  1. Teenage problems at school.
  2. Your idea of a perfect school.
  3. Your idea of a perfect teacher.
  4. Education at school.
  5. The code of conduct.
  6. Punishments at school.
  7. My best school friend.

Exercise 6. Fill in the gaps.

Exercise 7. Write a letter to your friend. 

… Recently I have moved to a new flat. I like my new school. We can choose subjects to study. I have chosen Maths and Physics. I like them because I am good at solving problems. And what about you? Do you like your school? What subjects are you good at? I hope you’ll write a lot of interesting things.

Best wishes,

John

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