|
English Matura 2003 |
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| The
Spoken Matura
|
May 2003
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| The spoken English matura
consists of three parts.
- There's a text students must read and be
prepared to discuss. Topics include smoking,
living in the city, my dream holiday
nothing too taxing, in other words. Usually
the exam begins here, with the examiners
asking one or two questions about the
details of the text and then inviting
the victim to "share his/her thoughts"
about the topic. Free talking, in other
words. This is where the truly good students
show they're truly good, and the less-than-great
students struggle.
- There are eight grammar questions. They
cover everything from tenses to specific
grammatical constructions.
- There five situations. The situations themselves
are described in Polish, but of course
students are required to respond in English.
Students are given the situations and text beforehand;
the grammar they see for the first time when
they sit down for the exam, though they know
possible topics. |
Grammar |
| 'Samuel didn't come here last night'. She said __________. |
|
Reported speech gossiping, in
other words. The key is in changing tenses and selected
words. The correct answer: She said that Samuel
hadn't come/gone there the night before. |
| If I were the President of the country, I __________
. |
|
Conditional, namely the second conditional.
Impossible condition (If + past simple), imaginary
result (would + verb). If I were president of
the country, I would give all teachers a substantial
raise. |
| They enjoy (go) __________ on exotic holiday, but
they wouldn't like (live) __________ outside the
USA. |
|
Verb patters or when to use "to"
and when to use "-ing." It's basically
a question of memorization. They enjoy going
on holiday, but wouldn't like to live outside the
USA. |
| Robert (read) __________ a book about English grammar
when David (leave) __________ last night. |
|
Verb tenses. Since Polish has three
verb tenses and English, twelve, it makes senses
that students have a bit of trouble keeping all
of them straight. Robert was reading a book about
English grammar when David left last night. |
Situations |
| Buy a one-way train ticket from Warsaw to Pairs.
How would you ask about a return ticket? |
|
The situations
are fairly straightforward, and even a little boring.
Usually one of them is fairly involved, requiring
interaction with one of the examiners, but the rest
are often a matter of one or two sentences. |
| You returned very late from a friend's house. Apologize
to your parents and explain that the bus driver
had to repair the bus. |
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