Taking the Tube, doing the Jack the Ripper walk, listening to a famous
architect, looking into a 1940s house and who are Jeeves, the Hammers and the
Eagles?
Introductory quiz
Find out some facts about the UK. Look at the website and answer the
following questions. You will have to browse the site to find the information.
- What is the nation's current favourite food?
- Where is the ‘home’ of the sport golf?
- What is the artist Chris Ofili famous for?
- What song is sung on New Year’s Eve in the UK?
Group planning
The second exercise involves orientation. You have arrived at Heathrow
Airport and want to travel to London Bridge. Look at the London Tube website
and answer the following questions:
- What line(s) do you take to travel from Heathrow to
London Bridge?
- Where do you change trains?
Reading comprehension
Now let’s go and explore one of London’s famous legends. Go to the Jack the
Ripper walk website, and then follow the link to read the full history of the
Jack the Ripper murders. Look at the text and try to put the following events
in the correct order (in real time).
a) The killer was never found
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b) Elizabeth Stride was killed
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c) Mary Nicholl’s body was found
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d) Louis Deimschutz disturbed the ripper
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e) Catherine Edowes was attacked
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f) Mary Nicholl’s throat was cut
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g) Angry mobs attacked suspects
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Reading and history
Visit this 1940s house that has been recreated by the Imperial War Museum
and have a look around. Compare the house to the house you live in. What
differences and similarities are there? Take some notes. Is the furniture very
different? Is there anything you can see or read that indicates that life in 1940
was very different from now? Discuss with a partner.
Reading and culture
Visit the sites in order to find the authors of a number of London books
written between 1850 and 1950. Now use the following links to answer the
following questions. You may have to search a little.
Charles Dickens lived at _____________ when he wrote the __________ Papers.
He moved there in ______ and lived there for ______ years.
Which writer from the Bloomsbury group wrote a book called Where Angels
Fear to Tread?
The writer P.G. Wodehouse was famous in particular for two characters. What were those characters’ names?
- What jobs did the characters do?
- What kind of characters were they?
Listening
You are going to listen to Richard Rogers, the architect
who designed London’s Lloyds Building and the Millennium Dome. What does he say about the planning and the construction of Lloyds Building?
Time out
Work in small groups (three to five). You are going to spend 24 hours in
London. Where will you go? What will you do? Plan out your 24 hours. Be careful
that you know how to get to each place (use the Transport Map from task two).
London web quiz
Answer the questions. Below there is a list of all websites used to get the
information.
1. At what gate in which famous tower was the ghost of Sir Thomas Becket
seen striking a wall with a crucifix?
2. What are the nicknames of the following London football teams: Crystal Palace and West Ham?
3. Which two tube stations beginning with a ‘w’ are best for going to the London Eye?
4. Name the dinosaur that lived in England in the Middle Jurassic period, which was carnivorous and could measure up to nine metres long.
5. What is the name of the pub in the London soap opera Eastenders?
6. What is ‘Kew Gardens’ and where can you find it?
2. What are the nicknames of the following London football teams: Crystal Palace and West Ham?
3. Which two tube stations beginning with a ‘w’ are best for going to the London Eye?
4. Name the dinosaur that lived in England in the Middle Jurassic period, which was carnivorous and could measure up to nine metres long.
5. What is the name of the pub in the London soap opera Eastenders?
6. What is ‘Kew Gardens’ and where can you find it?
BBC: http://www.bbc.co.uk
The Tower of London: http://www.camelotintl.com/tower_site/index.html
Crystal Palace: http://www.c-palace.org/cp_home.htm
West Ham: http://www.whufc.com/page/Home
London Eye: http://www.londoneye.com/
The Natural History Museum: http://www.nhm.ac.uk/jdsml/nature-online/dino-directory/
Kew Gardens: http://www.kew.org/
The Tower of London: http://www.camelotintl.com/tower_site/index.html
Crystal Palace: http://www.c-palace.org/cp_home.htm
West Ham: http://www.whufc.com/page/Home
London Eye: http://www.londoneye.com/
The Natural History Museum: http://www.nhm.ac.uk/jdsml/nature-online/dino-directory/
Kew Gardens: http://www.kew.org/