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ECA2+ Tests Unit 8 Key 2018
ECA2+ Tests Unit 8 Key 2018
Vocabulary Check 8
Group A
Group B
Exercise 1
Exercise 1
Can talk about people and their jobs.
Can talk about people and their jobs.
1B
1H
2D
2J
3I
3A
4F
4D
5A
5I
6J
6F
7E
7B
Exercise 2
Exercise 2
Can talk about people and their jobs.
Can talk about people and their jobs.
1 pilot
1 cook
2 builder
2 farmer
3 soldier
3 artist
4 lawyer
4 tour guide
5 politician
5 accountant
6 architect
6 journalist
7 secretary
7 receptionist
Exercise 3
Exercise 3
Can talk about people and their jobs.
Can talk about people and their jobs.
1 outdoors
1 happy
2 good money
2 indoors
3 in a team
3 good money
4 on time
4 at the weekend
5 from nine to five
5 a uniform
6 a uniform
6 in a team
Grammar Check 8
Exercise 1 Exercise 1
Can use will to talk about future predictions. Can use will to talk about future predictions.
1 Will 1 Will
2 won’t 2 will
3 will 3 will
4 will 4 will
5 Will 5 will
6 will 6 won’t
7 will 7 Will
Exercise 2 Exercise 2
Can use will to talk about future predictions. Can use will to talk about future predictions.
1 probably won’t
VOCABULARY 2 will definitely
Exercise 2 3 might
Can talk about jobs and schools. 4 definitely won’t
5 may
1 artist
2 look
3 pupils READING
4 full-time Exercise 7
5 tour guide Can understand a text about famous people and the
jobs they had.
Exercise 3
Can talk about jobs and schools. 1T
2F
1 part-time job 3T
2 unemployed 4F
3 primary school 5T
4 cloakroom
5 playground
ENGLISH IN USE
Exercise 8
GRAMMAR Can use adjectives with prepositions to talk about
Exercise 4 people’s skills.
Can use will to talk about future predictions.
1 afraid
1 She will fail her driving test. 2 learning
2 Todd will probably pass all his exams. 3 of
3 The teacher will be angry with us today. 4 crazy
4 My brother won’t get a full-time job this month. 5 on
5 Most students will study in other countries by
2025./By 2025 most students will study in other
countries. WRITING
Exercise 9
Can write a text about future predictions, using will
and the First Conditional.
Language Test 8
SPEAKING
Exercise 6
Group B Can talk about probability.
LISTENING 1 will probably
Exercise 1 2 probably won’t
Can understand a radio programme about a school. 3 might
4 will probably
1A 5 will definitely
2A
3B
4C READING
5C Exercise 7
Can understand a text about famous people and the
VOCABULARY jobs they had.
Exercise 2
Can talk about jobs and schools. 1T
2F
1 outside 3T
2 don’t have 4T
3 library 5F
4 part-time
5 form tutor
ENGLISH IN USE
Exercise 3 Exercise 8
Can talk about jobs and schools. Can use adjectives with prepositions to talk about
people’s skills.
1 bike courier
2 secondary school 1 hopeless
3 summer job 2 on
4 staff room 3 about
5 university 4 fond
5 happy
GRAMMAR
Exercise 4 WRITING
Can use will to talk about future predictions. Exercise 9
Can write a text about future predictions, using will
1 Students won’t wear a school uniform. and the First Conditional.
2 Learning English won’t be so popular in fifty
years./In fifty years learning English won’t be so Student’s own answers
popular.
3 Our basketball team will win the championship in
two years’ time./ In two years’ time our basketball
team will win the championship.
4 More people will go to university in the future./In
the future I think more people will go to university.
5 Students will contact their teachers through the
internet by 2030.
Exercise 5
Can use the First Conditional to talk about
probability.
1 will stay
2 will have
3 is
4 will watch
5 doesn’t want
Audio 8
The City Montessori School, or CMS, is a very popular school. Started by husband and wife Dr Bharti
Gandhi and Dr Jagdish Gandhi back in 1959, it began with only five pupils in a single small building in
Lucknow, a big city in the north of India. At the beginning, it was very small indeed and the Gandhis
didn’t have any money so they had to borrow about £3 to start the school. But over the years it slowly
grew. The CMS is now the world's biggest school. Now, it has an amazing 47,000 students who need
an incredible 3,800 full-time staff to look after them. That’s almost enough people to fill a really big
football stadium.
Today, the school has 20 sites around the city. If you want all of the students to meet in an assembly,
you would cause a huge traffic jam because you would need about 1000 buses to transport all the
pupils. And if you get lost in the school, don’t worry because you won’t be the first. After all, there are
over one thousand classrooms and there are also 3,700 computers at the school. Class sizes range
from 25 pupils all the way up to 50 in a single room, with the average being about 40. Each pupil also
has a form tutor who looks after them, which makes sure no one feels forgotten. Students say that the
hardest thing about being at the school is getting into a school sports team, with so many pupils trying
to do the same thing.
The school doesn’t receive any money from the government. Instead, parents have to pay 1,000
rupees (that’s about £12) a month in fees for younger pupils, rising to 2,500 rupees (about £30)
a month for seniors.