The speaking component of Interaction 2 provides learners with opportunities to practice their speaking skills through role-plays and conversations. Learners work in pairs or small groups to complete speaking tasks.
It started on a Tuesday. Marina was preparing her intermediate-level class for the dreaded Unit 4 listening test—a chaotic simulation of a university registration phone call, complete with static, a grumpy registrar, and a student who kept dropping her ID card. The official teacher’s edition of the textbook came with a flimsy, stapled answer key. Marina had locked hers in her desk drawer the previous Friday. interaction 2 listening and speaking answer key
The Interaction 2 answer key is most powerful when you use it to your listening breakdowns. Did you miss a vocabulary word? A contraction (“wouldn’t” vs. “would”)? A shift in tone? The speaking component of Interaction 2 provides learners
Activities such as making travel plans or giving presentations to the class. Where to Find Answer Keys Official answer keys are primarily found in the Teacher's Manual Marina was preparing her intermediate-level class for the
For Question 4: “The registrar says, ‘I’m afraid that won’t be possible.’ The correct answer is (c) ‘She cannot change the student’s schedule.’ But note: the speaker’s tone rises 15% on ‘possible.’ This indicates false politeness. Listen for the micro-sigh before the response.”