CPE Use of English Paper Part 1

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 4
At a glance
Powered by AI
The passage discusses Jon Wynne-Tyson's 1975 book 'Food for a Future' which put forward an argument for a more responsible approach to the world's food resources based on the economics and ecology of meat production.

The slow revelation of the main thesis that a move away from an animal-based diet to one based on plant sources is inevitable in the long term.

The author argues that there is no sound justification for using seven tonnes of cereal to produce one tonne of meat.

CPE Use of English Paper Part 1 – Teacher’s notes

Description

In this activity students complete the gaps in a short paragraph. They analyse the type of
words they have used to complete the gaps so that they become aware of the test focus of
Use of English, Part 1. They then complete the rest of the text following a suggested
strategy.
Time required: 15-20 Minutes
Materials ƒ student’s worksheet
required:
Aims: ƒ to make sure students know what type of words are commonly
tested in Part 1
ƒ to encourage students to think about a strategy which could help
them successfully complete an open cloze task

Procedure
1. Elict from the class what they have to do in Part 1 – Open Cloze task.
• Part 1 consists of a text in which there are 15 gaps (plus one gap as an example).
• Candidates have to think of a word which will fill the gap correctly.
• The focus of the gapped words is either grammar, or vocabulary.
• The answer will always be a single word. In some cases, there may be more than
one possible answer and this is allowed for in the mark scheme.
• The absence or misuse of punctuation is ignored, although spelling, as in all parts
of the Use of English paper, must be correct.
Remind students that answers can be written on the question paper but that they
have to be transferred to Answer Sheet 1. Answers have to be written in pencil, in
capital letters on the Answer Sheet. Each correct answer receives one mark.
2. Give out the worksheet and ask students to answer Exercise 1 questions 1–3. They
can work in pairs. Check the answers with the whole class (see key below).
3. Questions 4 and 5 draw students’ attention to the types of words commonly tested in
part 1. Make sure that students know what is being tested in Part 1.
• The focus of the gapped words is either grammatical, such as articles,
auxiliaries, prepositions, pronouns, verb tenses and forms;
• or lexical, such as phrasal verbs, linkers and words within fixed phrases.
• If your students are not familiar with the grammatical terms, you may prefer
not to go into details about grammar e.g. talking about articles, relative
pronouns etc.
• Candidates will not be expected to know grammatical terminology in the
exam.
© UCLES 2008. This material may be photocopied (without alteration) and distributed for classroom use provided no charge is made. It may not
otherwise be altered, photocopied, reproduced, distributed, published, recorded, made available on another website, or otherwise transmitted by
any means without the prior written permission of University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations.

CPE Use of English Paper Part 1 – Student’s Worksheet www.cambridgeesol.org/teach


Page 1 of 4
4. Now refer students to Exercise 2, questions 6 and 7. Students should discuss in pairs
their suggestions for question 6 and the suggested strategy in pairs. When they have
finished they could compare their answers with another pair.
5. Elicit the suggested strategy for doing an open cloze task from the students (see key
below). You could write up the points on the board.

Suggested follow-up idea


1. You could give groups students a text and ask them to find 15 grammatical and
vocabulary words; verbs, prepositions, conjunctions and determiners; phrasal verbs,
parts of fixed phrases, etc. and to blank these words out. The students could then
give their text to another group who should complete the text with suitable words.

© UCLES 2008. This material may be photocopied (without alteration) and distributed for classroom use provided no charge is made. It may not
otherwise be altered, photocopied, reproduced, distributed, published, recorded, made available on another website, or otherwise transmitted by
any means without the prior written permission of University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations.

CPE Use of English Paper Part 1 – Student’s Worksheet www.cambridgeesol.org/teach


Page 2 of 4
Use of English Paper Part 1 answer keys

Key to Student’s Worksheet Exercise 1


The paragraph is about a book about food.
1 put vocabulary part of phrasal verb, put forward
2 what grammar relative pronoun
3 become grammar past participle used in past perfect tense
4 make vocabulary collocation make, sense
5 there grammar + impersonal there
vocabulary
Key to Student’s Worksheet Exercise 2
6. Suggested strategy
1. Read the whole text first and ask yourself what it is about.
2. Think about what sort of word fits the gap: a verb etc.
3. Check for vocabulary – look at the text before and after the gap to make sure that
your word fits: is it a collocation, part of a fixed phrase, etc?
4. Check for grammar:
ƒ Does the verb agree with the subject (singular or plural needed)?
ƒ Does the tense fit the other tenses in the text or the development of the
narrative?
ƒ Do you need a word which suggests a negative?
ƒ Do you need a relative pronoun to link two parts of a sentence?
5. Fill in some more gaps.
6. Keep re-reading the text to make sure the words you have chosen fit.
7. Make sure that you have completed every gap.
7.
6 Although / Though / While / Whilst vocabulary linker
7 up vocabulary part of phrasal verb, back up
8 those grammar determiner
9 on grammar preposition
10 as vocabulary linker
11 one grammar pronoun
12 view vocabulary part of fixed phrase
13 Irrespective/Regardless vocabulary linker
14 such grammar determiner
15 a grammar indefinite article

© UCLES 2008. This material may be photocopied (without alteration) and distributed for classroom use provided no charge is made. It may not
otherwise be altered, photocopied, reproduced, distributed, published, recorded, made available on another website, or otherwise transmitted by
any means without the prior written permission of University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations.

CPE Use of English Paper Part 1 – Student’s Worksheet www.cambridgeesol.org/teach


Page 3 of 4
CPE Use of English Paper Part 1 – Student’s Worksheet
Exercise 1
1. Read the paragraph below. What is it about? Do not complete any of the gaps
yet.
2. Complete the gaps with one word that you think best fits each gap.
3. Check your answers with your teacher.
4. What sort of words are the answers; are they testing your grammar or
vocabulary?
5. Do you know which grammatical structure, e.g. articles, auxiliaries,
prepositions, pronouns, verb tenses and forms, or aspect of vocabulary, e.g.
phrasal verbs, linkers and fixed phrases is being tested in each gap?

Food for a future

Jon Wynne-Tyson was an original thinker (0) …….best-known book ‘Food for a Future’
was published in 1975. In this classic work, a case was (1) …. forward for (2) ….. can
only be described as a more responsible and humane attitude towards the world’s food
resources. It had gradually (3) …. clear to Wynne-Tyson that the economics and ecology
of meat production did not (4) …. sense. What justification was (5) ….., he argued, for
using seven tonnes of cereal to produce one tonne of meat?

Exercise 2
6. Discuss in pairs what you think is a good strategy for doing this task. What
should you do first, second and so on?
7. Now, using your strategy, complete the rest of the text

Even today, the book’s succinct style makes it compulsively readable. (6) ….. his approach
is basically an emotional one, Wynne Tyson goes to great lengths to back (7) ….. every
statement with considerable supporting evidence and statistical data. Thus, even (8) ….. of
us who are widely read (9) ….. the subject of vegetarianism will gain fresh insights from this
book. It is generally agreed that his most successful achievement is the slow revelation of
his main thesis (10) ….. the arguments unfold. The book concludes that a move away from
an animal based diet to (11) ….. which is based on plant sources is inevitable in the long
term, in (12) ….. of the fact that there is no sound nutritional, medical or social justification
for meat eating. (13) ….. of whether you agree with (14) a conclusion or not, the book
certainly makes (15) ….. fascinating read.

© UCLES 2008. This material may be photocopied (without alteration) and distributed for classroom use provided no charge is made. It may not
otherwise be altered, photocopied, reproduced, distributed, published, recorded, made available on another website, or otherwise transmitted by
any means without the prior written permission of University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations.

CPE Use of English Paper Part 1 – Student’s Worksheet www.cambridgeesol.org/teach


Page 4 of 4

You might also like