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Talking about PE

Welcome to This Week from Premier Skills English, a weekly review of football action for learners of English from across the globe. In This Week, Jack talks about stories from this week in the Premier League and there are lots of football English words and phrases for you to learn.

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If the listening was difficult, you can listen and read the transcript at the same time.

Read the transcript and listen at the same time.

Talking about PE

Children in a PE class on the apparatus

Children in a PE class on the apparatus

When you listen, think about the following questions:

  • What did Bob and Clare and Jack like about PE?
  • What did they not like about PE?
  • What benefits of PE did they discuss?

Jack: I was driving past school the other day and do you know who I saw?

Bob: Who?

Jack: Mr Lewis.

Clare: Mr Lewis? Is he still there?

Jack: He was on the pitch with some kids ... er ... young ones, maybe year eight.

Clare: I can’t believe he hasn’t retired yet. He must really like teaching PE.

Jack: He wasn’t a good teacher. Did you have him?

Bob: No, I had Miss Robertson.

Clare: I had Mr Lewis. In the first year and again in third year.

Jack: I bet you were his favourite.

Clare: No, I wasn’t.

Jack: Come on! Of course you were. He loved kids like you because you were good at everything.

Clare: Ha ha.

Bob: PE was brilliant. I really miss it.

Jack: Really?

Bob: Yeah.

Jack: I remember too many cold wet winter mornings

Clare: I hated cross country

Jack: But you were really good at it

Clare: Yeah ... I liked running, but not cross country

Bob: I just remember getting very muddy and very cold.

Clare: My hands used to get so cold that I couldn’t undo my laces when we got back.

Jack: I used to play in goal all the time

Bob: You were a pretty good keeper.

Jack: I was never very nimble. I was better in defence or in goal.

Clare: You were just a bit lazy, weren’t you?

Jack: No! But when it was really cold, getting slapped on the thigh by the ball. Ah - that used to sting.

Bob: Oooh - yeah. I remember that.

Clare: Do you still miss it?

Bob: Yeah ... I mean, even on a cold wet day, the chance to get out of a stuffy classroom and just do something physical. I’d choose football in the rain over maths anyday.

Jack: Do you remember the apparatus?

Clare: You mean that climbing frame that was in the gym? The one that was on hinges?

Bob: Yeah - the apparatus. With the climbing ropes.

Jack: I was good at climbing the ropes. And anytime the teacher brought out the crash mats.

Bob: I had forgotten all about that. I loved PE in primary school as well.

Clare: I’m not sure I can remember PE at primary.

Bob: My teacher would always set up obstacle courses with benches and mats and the horse.

Jack: You had a horse in your primary PE lessons?

Bob: Not a real horse. You know, it was a sort of tall box with a padded leather cover on the top that you could climb over or sort of leapfrog.

Clare: I know what you mean. I didn’t know that was called a horse.

Bob: It was in my school.

Jack: I didn’t like gymnastics at primary school. I just wanted to play games.

Clare: Rounders, netball.

Jack: I did actually play netball a few times.

Bob: But that was for the girls.

Clare: Yeah, that wasn’t good. I never liked how boys and girls were treated differently for PE. You got to play football and rugby and cricket.

Jack: You got to play netball!

Clare: Hmmm. The boys always looked like they were having more fun.

Jack: My favourite at primary school was dodgeball. Did you ever play that?

Bob: I never got to play that.

Clare: Yeah, that was really fun.

Bob: It was good though. That’s what I miss. We played loads of different sports ... or at least got to try out lots of different sports.

Clare: We mostly played tennis and netball and hockey in the summer and basketball and badminton in the winter.

Jack: It was mostly just football for me.

Bob: No, you also did trampolining and we all went to that outward bounds place ... what was it called?

Clare: The place near Edenbridge with the climbing rocks?

Jack: That was cool. It was just one term.

Bob: Mr Murray took us.

Jack: He used to be in the army.

Bob: Yeah and he loved teaching rock climbing and abseiling.

Clare: I didn’t really like that. I’m not good with heights

Jack: I loved it. I got ropeburns abseiling. Mr Murray was impressed with my abseiling so I pretended that I was fine but it really hurt.

Bob: See. It was brilliant.

Clare: Yeah - it was good to try out lots of different sports. Hockey was my favourite. I played it right through university as well.

Jack: I loved playing football with all my mates, but I didn’t get on with Mr Lewis.

Clare: Why not? He was lovely.

Jack: Yeah, he loved you because you were good at everything. He just shouted at me and made rude jokes.

Clare: It was all just a laugh, though.

Jack: I don’t know.

Bob: Miss Robertson was great. She really helped me. It didn’t matter if you weren’t very good. As long as you tried, she was really supportive.

Jack: That’s easy for you to say. I bet you were always good at sports.

Bob: No. I really wasn’t. She really helped me and I got a lot better.

Clare: And you love sport now.

Bob: Yes. I’ve always enjoyed sport and it’s helped me stay fit.

Jack: Me too. Perhaps Mr Lewis wasn’t so bad.

What sports and activities are being described?

Children playing hockey

Children playing hockey

Activity 1: This is a type of running activity, but instead of running on a running track, you run on a course that goes across fields and along paths and through the ... across natural terrain. When I did this at school, we had to follow a track that went round the school and through some woods along a very muddy path.

Activity 2: This is a game that has a very long history in the UK. The rules of the game were first written down in 1845 at a school that has the same name as this activity. This game is very physical and professional players are often very big and strong. The ball is not round or spherical. It’s oval.

Activity 3: This is a team game. Each team lines up along the sides of a hall and takes turns throwing a ball at the opposing team. If the ball hits you then you are out and have to go and sit down. So the object of the game is to avoid getting hit.

Activity 4: This activity was invented in the United States in 1891. It is now one of the most popular sports in the world and is played on a court with two target hoops that are suspended about 2.5m off the ground. Players have to bounce the ball when they move around the court, this is called dribbling. The really good ones can jump and put the ball in the hoop; they can dunk the ball.

Activity 5: This activity is also known as rappelling. To do this, you use a rope to sort of walk or jump down a rockface. It’s not normally carried out as an activity on its own, but is done by people when they are mountaineering and caving. It’s also common in films for people in the military to do this to get out of helicopters.

Activity 6: This activity is played using rackets and a special projectile called a shuttlecock. You have to hit the shuttlecock over a net that’s raised off the ground. This can be played one-on-one in singles matches or two against two in doubles matches.

Activity 7: I’m not sure why I’m quizzing you on this. This activity is the best sport in the world. It’s the most popular sport in the world and ... yes. It’s the best.

Activity 8: This activity was another that is not normally something that people do as part of PE, but I did get the chance to try it out. In this activity, one person tries to .., go up a rock face, like a cliff or a part of a mountain with a rope attached to them in case they fall off.

Activity 9: This is a team game that is played on a pitch. Each team tries to get the ball into their opponent’s goal, using a stick, which is a long wooden bar with a bent bit on the end that you use to control and hit the ball.

Activity 10: This sport involves performing exercises that are difficult because you need really good balance and flexibility and you also need a lot of strength. The exercises use different apparatuses such as the balance beam, uneven bars, and mats on the floor.

Activity 11: This activity is one of the most popular sports in the world. It’s a racket sport and it’s played on a court. You can play it on a grass court or a clay court and the objective is to hit a ball over a net so that it bounces inside the court and that your opponent can’t hit back.

Activity 12: This activity is another incredibly popular sport, though it’s only popular in some countries. It’s quite a hard sport to understand because each team takes turns attacking or defending so you never know who’s winning till the end of the match. The match is played on a grass pitch which is a long thin strip of very short grass in the middle of a large field with a rope at the edge to mark the boundary. At each end of the pitch, there is a wicket which is made of three stumps that are like short posts stuck into the ground with little bars called barrels that rest across the stumps.

Activity 13: This is a bit like basketball, but you have to pass the ball by throwing it to one another rather than by dribbling or bouncing the ball. Each of the players has a defined role on the court and has to stay in designated areas. In the UK, this is traditionally a sport played by girls.

Activity 14: This is one of my favourites on this list. It involves a big apparatus which is a kind of frame with a jumping mat that is suspended by lots of springs so you can bounce on it and jump really high. In the sport, people do special tricks like somersaults and things.

Language challenge

Now it’s time for this week’s language challenge. I have used AI to come up with 10 sentences about the sports I’ve described and I have removed the sports so I want you to fill in the gaps with the correct sports. Now, some of these sentences are a bit tricky. I’m only quizzing you on 10 of the sports and you can only use each sport once. So you might have to use your logical powers as well as your English skills to work out the correct answers.

Question 1: The ________ team practised their passing drills to improve their throwing and catching.

Question 2: Emily won a gold medal in _________ for her flawless routine on the balance beam.

Question 3: The captain scored the winning goal leading his _________ team to win the championship after a thrilling final match.

Question 4: The ________ match lasted for five days and ended in a thrilling draw.

Question 5: The ________ team practised their stickhandling and passing drills.

Question 6: Wimbledon is one of the most prestigious ________ tournaments in the world.

Question 7: She bought a new _________ racket to improve her game.

Question 8: They went ___________ in the mountains during their holiday.

Question 9: She practised her flips, twists and somersaults during her __________ session.

Question 10: She participated in a ___________ race through the forest.

Leave your answers to this language challenge in the comments section at the bottom of the page

Football phrase

Now it’s time for this week's football phrases.

I’ve been reading stories about the summer transfers and so both of these phrases are about transfers.

The football phrase is the verb to ****. In the story I read, it said that the European Champions have strengthened their side. They have ****** Kylian Mbappé on a free transfer.

The fiendish football phrase is much harder. It’s a phrase we use to describe a young player who is impressing everyone and who is quickly becoming more and more popular. Tottenham have already secured such a player, they have brought in Swedish ****** **** Lucas Bergvall.

If you know the answer, be sure to leave it in a comment at the bottom of this page.

Task

The last things I want you to think about today are three discussion questions. These are the same questions I asked you earlier about the roleplay, but I want you to answer them based on your own experiences of PE.

Question 1: What did you like about PE?

Question 2: What didn’t you like about PE?

Question 3: What benefits did you get from PE? Perhaps you got to try out lots of sports or perhaps you developed a lifelong love of sports and exercise. Or did you learn teamwork? Or resilience?

Share your ideas in the comments section at the bottom of the page.

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