Term Test 2
Term Test 2
Term Test 2
Name ………………………………………………………..………………
Listening
I.Listen to five people talking about family life. Choose from the list (A–G) what each speaker (1–5)
says. Use the letters only once. There are two extra letters.
II. Read the texts about young people and work. For questions 1–5, choose the correct answer, A,
B, C or D.
Text 1
Text 2
4 Which of these is not true?
A Schools can refuse to offer work experience to their students if they wish.
B Political parties disagree about the importance of work experience for school students.
C Companies are often unwilling to take on young people who lack work experience.
D Academic achievement is the most important factor in determining whether a school is performing
well.
Text 1
WORKING IN GRANGETON
Grangeton in Derbyshire isn’t actually a real town but it has most things that you might expect to find
in one. When a new head teacher took over at the Grange Primary School, he found that both
students and staff had become demotivated and disinterested. He knew that the school needed
something special and Grangeton certainly is. Grangeton has businesses and services like any other
town but these are all run by and for the school’s students, five days a week, every week of the
school year. There is a town council and a mayor, who is elected each year from the Year 6 students.
The council makes all the important decisions on how the town is run, just asin any normal town.
So, what can you find in Grangeton? There is a newspaper, a museum and two shops. A café opens
on two mornings a week but it is a Parisian café and French is the only language that customers can
use when ordering food there. There is another reason for Grangeton, apart from motivating the
students. Although they are only primary students, with a maximum age of eleven, the school
believes that they are the right age to gain some early work experience. Normally, students have to
wait until they are fourteen before getting any work-related experience, and, even then, it depends
on the school. The students of Grange School are too young to go to companies to work but, with
their own businesses to run, they don’t have to leave the school premises. The school also invites
guests to talk to the students and help them. The BBC helped them to set up a TV and radio station
and local politicians talked to them about democracy and decision making.
The school is able to find the time to do all this because the work the students are doing is closely
related to the school’s education curriculum. As well as practising a foreign language in the café, the
students use Maths when running their businesses, English when writing their newspaper and even
History in special projects such as when the council voted that the shops should sell food from
different past times.
Grangeton is now considered a great success and a model of how to use children’s creativity to
involve them in the learning process. Even people who you may expect to be critical of such non-
traditional education methods are unable to find fault with what the students do.
Text 2
A WORRYING LACK OF BASIC SKILLS
A recent survey of 3,000 companies has found that employers have a major concern. They say that
more and more young people do not have the basic skills necessary to get on as employees. These
skills include such things as being able to communicate effectively and work as part of a team.
Because of this, many employers think it is risky to offer work to inexperienced young people,
preferring to hire staff who have already had experience of a working environment somewhere else.
In order to help to prepare young people for work, business leaders and employers are asking the
government to include work experience as part of the curriculum in all secondary schools. Some
schools do offer work experience to their older students but they don’t have to. As it can cause
problems with timetabling and because schools are judged on exam results rather than how well
their students do once they leave education, work experience is not seen as a priority by many head
teachers. Politicians of all parties have come out in support of these proposals and schools are
encouraged to invite business people to talk to their students and to offer more careers advice but,
so far, no laws have been changed. Not surprisingly, opposition party politicians have promised
bigger changes if they are voted back into power in the next election.
Whoever is in charge, it is clear that businesses are no longer willing to spend time and money
teaching young people how to communicate and cooperate with their colleagues. Youngsters need
help before they apply for their first job and schools and the government should be doing all they can
to provide this assistance.
Vocabulary
IV. Complete the sentences with the words in the box. There are two words you don’t need.
breadwinner counselling dual homemaker neglect privacy run
1 Anna earns more than her husband, so she’s the primary __________ .
2 Parents who __________ their children can be sent to prison.
3 Most women find it difficult to work and __________ a home at the same time.
4 He grew up in a __________-income family.
5 They asked the press to leave them alone and give them some __________.
Grammar
V. Complete the reported speech. Use no more than four words.
1 'I will be there on time!' Greg told me.
Greg told me that he __________________________ on time.
2 'Will you be staying with us one more night?' he asked me.
He asked me if __________________________ with them one more night.
3 'Sue hasn’t applied for any other jobs,' Mark told me.
Mark said __________________________ for any other jobs.
4 ‘Why are you laughing?’ she asked me. She asked me __________________________ laughing.
5 ‘I could give you a lift,’ she said to us. She said that __________________________ a lift.
6 ‘Where do you live?’ she asked me. She asked me __________________________.
Speaker 1 D 2 A 3 F 4 B 5 A
Reading 1C 2C 3A 4B 5B
V. 1.would/’d be there: 2 I would/’d be staying: 3 that Sue hadn’t applied:. 4 why I was: 5 she could
give us: 6 where I lived
VI. 1 leaving: 2 on getting: 3 that she was: 4 to give: 5 that he should look