New Oxford Modern English Book 4
New Oxford Modern English has established itself as one of the most popular ELT courses among both teachers and students for almost three decades. Taking into account the insightful feedback of its users, the series has been revised regularly to address the evolving needs of the learners. This revised edition includes a host of new features for its users. The series comprises Pre-Primer; Primer A and B with Activity Book; Course books 1–8; Workbooks 1–8, and Teaching Guides. The series has been aligned to Single National Curriculum 2020.
Special Features:
- A wide range of literary genres and themes from around the world to develop rich language skills
- New prose and poetry texts
- New exercises and activities to enhance higher-order thinking skills
- Enhanced and updated glossary and wordlists
- Full coverage of all competencies, skills, and learning areas provided in SNC
- Engaging posters illustrating different literary devices
- Graphic stories
- Includes student-friendly formative assessment activities in the workbooks
- The free of cost teaching guides include a wide range of textbook-linked exercises, answer keys of books and workbooks, lesson plans, formative assessment ideas, and much more.
ISBN | 9780190706883 |
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Weight in kg | 0.375 |
Readership / Level | For Class 4 |
Rights | World |
Binding | Paperback |
Digital Resources for Topics
The following videos explain difficult grammar/vocabulary/comprehension topics in an easy-to-understand and student-friendly manner. Teachers can use these videos to provide further explanation on a topic. These can be shown either in the classroom when the teachers are introducing that topic or assigned to the students as homework activity afterwards.
Each video is linked to a topic present in the book. The exercise reference is given for teachers’ ease.
Video links are also given for certain poems. These can be played aloud in the class so students can recite the poem with correct pronunciation.
Unit |
Topic |
Video Links |
1. The Spirit of Ramadan |
Ex. C: Articles |
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2. Shandur Polo Festival |
Ex. B: Order of adjectives |
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2. A Night in June |
Reading the poem |
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Ex. B: Telling time using a twenty-four-hour clock |
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3. Pip Meets a Convict |
Why should you read Charles Dickens? |
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Ex. B: Anagrams |
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3. The Storyteller |
Fables and Folktales: what’s the difference? |
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Ex. C: Exclamations |
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4. Anansi and Five |
Ex. B: Vocabulary - Professions |
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5. Messages from the Mountain |
Ex. C: Fact and opinion |
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6. Variety Entertainment |
Ex. C: Types of sentences |
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6. From a Railway Carriage |
Reading the poem |
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Ex. C: Adverbs |
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7. The Ambassador’s Disguise |
Ex. C: Subject and predicate |
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8. The Story of Doctor Dolittle |
A story of Dr. John Dolittle |
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Ex. C: Subject-verb agreement |
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9. Haircut |
Ex. C: The past continuous tense |
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9. My Doves |
Reading the poem |
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Ex. B: Gender nouns |
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Ex. D: Bar graphs and Pie charts |
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10. The Wise Villagers |
Ex. C: Past participles |
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11. Against All Odds |
Ex. B: Compounds words |
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11. Limericks |
What are limericks? |
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12. The Thousand-Rupee Note |
Ex. C: Adverbs of place |
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13. The ‘Weeping Princess’ (I) |
Ex. C: Understanding mixed tenses |
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14. 13. The ‘Weeping Princess’ (II) |
Ex. B: Subjective pronouns |
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15. Ruth Pfau |
What are role models? |
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Letter writing |
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Paragraph writing |