📰 Newspaper B1 Reading🏠 Everyday Life

🩺 The Fleydo Tribune: Health & Science in Plain English

B1 Adults Health & Science Edition (reading-first design): students open a full edition of The Fleydo Tribune and begin immediately with the reading — a real-looking newspaper page with masthead, datelines, bylines, columns, drop caps, and pull quotes — before any other activity. The four stories cover why good sleep may be the best medicine, the surprising benefit of walking in nature, a link between eating vegetables and a longer life, and how doctors use music to help patients recover, all with target vocabulary highlighted and explained on hover plus a reading tip on careful science words (may, could, suggests, is linked to). After reading, learners discuss four reaction questions, study a 12-item vocabulary table grouped by function (studies & discovery, cause & effect, health & improvement), and explore a six-card phrase toolkit (A new study has found…, There is a link between…, Doctors suggest…, According to researchers…). Six flashcards consolidate the core words, an eight-question gap-fill gives instant feedback with a live score, a five-prompt discussion task encourages use of the phrase toolkit, a guided writing task (90–120 words) invites students to write their own health story using careful language, and an eight-question quiz mixes vocabulary, phrase, and reading-comprehension items with a scored results circle and personalised feedback.

🎒 Teens (11–16) 🧑‍💼 Adults (17+) schedule 50 min signal_cellular_alt Medium
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view_agenda Lesson Plan

  • The lesson opens with the reading: a full newspaper page with 4 health and science articles (~110–270 words) — a lead story on sleep, a science story on walking in nature, and two 'in brief' columns on vegetables and music in hospitals
  • Target vocabulary highlighted with hover-definitions
  • A 'Reading Tip of the Day' box on careful science language

translate Key Vocabulary

researchdiscoverprovelinkcauseaffectrisksuffertreatimprovereducebenefit

auto_fix_high Grammar Points

  • The language of reporting research (A new study has found…, research suggests…)
  • Hedging and careful language (may, could, suggests, is linked to)
  • Cause and effect (cause, affect, as a result, lead to)
  • Words that work as both verb and noun (cause, link, benefit, risk)

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