B2 - Lesson 14
Part 1 : Video Lesson & Transcript
Part : Listening & Reading comprehension
Part 3 : Use of English
Part 4 : Grammar lesson
Part 5 : Writing an essay & corrections
Part 6 : Speaking, interaction, & explanations.
INSTRUCTIONS
Please make sure you unfold each content for each part of the lesson. Merci de déplier chaque contenu pour chaque partie de cette leçon.
LINKS TO GRAMMAR BOOKS :
PART 1 : VIDEO BASED LESSON & TRANSCRIPT
See instructions beneath the video.
VIDEO : CLICK ON THE PICTURE
Could a tattoo help you stay healthy?
Can we make tattoos both beautiful and functional? Nanotechnologist Carson Bruns shares his work creating high-tech tattoos that react to their environment -- like color-changing ink that can tell you when you're getting a sunburn -- and shows exciting ways they can deliver real-time information about our health.
VIDEO : EXERCISE
INSTRUCTIONS TO WORK ON THE VIDEO :
1) Listen to the video without reading the text / transcript
2) Then Listen to the video again reading the transcript as you listen.
3) Then listen to the video again without reading the transcript.
VIDEO TRANSCRIPT
00:04
I'd like to introduce you to an interesting person named Ötzi. He lives in Italy at the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology because he's a mummy. This is an artist's rendition of what he might have looked like when he was alive 5,300 years ago. You want to see what he looks like today?
00:23
(Laughter)
00:25
OK, brace yourselves, gross mummy pic coming at you.
00:29
So, he's not as handsome as he used to be, but he's actually in great shape for a mummy because he was discovered frozen in ice. Ötzi is the oldest mummy that's been discovered with preserved skin. 5,300 years is super old, older than the Egyptian pyramids, and Ötzi's skin is covered in 61 black tattoos, all lines and crosses on parts of his body where he might have experienced pain. So scientists think that they might have been used to mark sites for some kind of therapy, like acupuncture.
01:06
So clearly, if the oldest skin we've seen is all tattooed up, tattooing is a very ancient practice. But fast-forward to today and tattoos are everywhere. Almost one in four Americans has a tattoo, it's a multibillion-dollar industry, and whether you love tattoos or hate them, this talk will change the way you think about them.
01:30
So, why are tattoos so popular? Unlike Ötzi, most of us today use tattoos for some kind of self-expression. Personally, I love tattoos because I love art and there is something so wonderful to me, almost romantic, about the way a tattoo as an art form cannot be commodified. Right? Your tattoo lives and dies with you. It can't be bought or sold or traded, so its only value is really personal to you, and I love that.
02:00
Now, I tend to gravitate towards really colorful tattoos because I'm obsessed with color. I teach a whole course on it at my university. But my very first tattoo was an all-black tattoo like Ötzi's. Yep, I did that clichéd thing that young people do sometimes and I got a tattoo in a language I can't even read.
02:19
(Laughter)
02:21
OK, but I was 19 years old, I had just returned from my first trip overseas, I was in Japan in the mountains meditating in Buddhist monasteries, and it was a really meaningful experience to me, so I wanted to commemorate it with this Japanese and Chinese character for "mountain."
02:40
Now, here's what blows my mind. My 14-year-old tattoo and Ötzi's 5,300-year-old tattoos are made of the same exact stuff: soot, that black powdery carbon dust that gets left behind in the fireplace when you burn stuff. And if you zoom way, way in on either my tattoo or Ötzi's tattoos, you'll find that they all look something like this. A tattoo is nothing more than a bunch of tiny pigment particles, soot in this case, that get trapped in the dermis, which is the layer of tissue right underneath the surface of the skin. So in over five thousand years, we've done very little to update tattoo technology, apart from getting access to more colors and slightly more efficient methods of installation.
03:31
While I'm an artist, I'm also a scientist, and I direct a laboratory that researches nanotechnology, which is the science of building things with ultratiny building blocks, thousands of times smaller even than the width of a human hair. And I began to ask myself, how could nanotechnology serve tattooing? If tattoos are just a bunch of particles in the skin, could we swap those particles out for ones that do something more interesting?
04:00
Here's my big idea: I believe that tattoos can give you superpowers.
04:04
(Laughter)
04:06
Now, I don't mean they're going to make us fly, but I do think that we can have superpowers in the sense that tattoos can give us new abilities that we don't currently possess. By upgrading the particles, we can engineer tattooing so that it will change not only the appearance of our skin, but also the function of our skin. Let me show you. This is a diagram of a microcapsule. It's a tiny hollow particle with a protective outer shell, about the size of a tattoo pigment, and you can fill the inside with practically whatever you want. So what if we put interesting materials inside of these microcapsules and made tattoo inks with them? What sorts of things could we make a tattoo do? What problems could we solve? What human limitations could we overcome?
04:57
Well, here's one idea: one of our weaknesses as humans is that we can't see ultraviolet, or UV, light. That's the high-energy part of sunlight that causes sunburn and increases our risk of skin cancer. Many animals and insects can actually see UV light, but we can't. If we could, we'd be able to see sunscreen when it was applied on our skin. Unfortunately, most of us don't wear sunscreen, and those of us who do can't really tell when it wears off, because it's invisible. It's the main reason we treat over five million cases of preventable skin cancer every year in the US alone, costing our economy over five billion dollars annually. So how could we overcome this human weakness with a tattoo? Well, if the problem is that we can't see UV rays, maybe we can make a tattoo detect them for us. So I thought, why don't we take some microcapsules, load it up with a UV-sensitive, color-changing dye, and make a tattoo ink out of that?
06:02
Now, one of the troubles of being a tattoo technologist is finding willing test subjects.
06:09
(Laughter)
06:10
And when it came time to test this tattoo ink, I thought it best not to torture my poor graduate students. So I decided to tattoo a couple of spots on my own arm instead. And It actually worked. Check it out! I call these tattoos solar freckles because they're powered by sunshine. And right now, they're invisible, but as soon as I expose them to a UV light, acting as the Sun -- there they are, blue spots. Now, I'm not wearing sunscreen in this video, but if I was, those blue spots would not appear, and then when my sunscreen wore off later, the solar freckles would reappear in UV light and I would know that it was time to reapply sunscreen. So these tattoos act as a real-time, naked-eye indicator of your skin's UV exposure. And of course, I think there are lots of really cool, artistic things you could do with a color-changing tattoo like this, but I hope that it will also help us solve a big problem in skin protection.
07:15
(Applause)
07:24
Let me give you another example. Normal human body temperature is about 97 to 99 degrees Fahrenheit, and if you fall outside of that range, you need to seek medical attention right away. Now, the problem is that humans can't detect our own body temperature without a thermometer. Sure, you could try the old hand-on-the-forehead trick, but there's zero scientific evidence to back that up.
07:47
(Laughter)
07:49
So what if we could create a tattooable thermometer that you could access anytime?
07:54
Well, remember how the solar freckles used a UV-sensitive dye inside of the microcapsules of the tattoo ink? Well, you could also put heat-sensitive dyes inside of microcapsules and you could make different tattoo inks that change color at different temperatures. Suppose it was 96, 98, and a hundred degrees Fahrenheit. If you place those inks side by side, now you have a temperature scale tuned to the human body. In this video, you can see the different patches of tattoos disappearing sequentially as the pigskin we tested them on is heated up. So if you were to place a tattoo like this in a location that was stable to external temperature fluctuations -- maybe inside of the mouth, perhaps on the back of the lip? -- then you'd be able to read your body temperature anytime by just glancing at your tattoo in the mirror. Amazing, right?
08:53
(Applause)
08:54
Thank you.
08:55
(Applause)
08:59
Another limitation that we have as humans is that our skin doesn't conduct electricity, and that can be a good thing, but not necessarily --
09:08
(Laughter)
09:09
if you have an electronic biomedical implant, like a pacemaker for example. Right now, if you have a pacemaker, you need surgery every five or 10 years to replace the battery when it dies. And wouldn't it be nice if, instead, we could simply recharge the battery through a patch of conducting skin? Well, if you were to try to tackle that problem with a tattoo, the first step would be to make a tattoo that conducts electricity. So we've been working on a conducting tattoo ink in my lab. And right now, we're able to increase the conductivity of skin over 300-fold with our conducting tattoo ink. Now, we have a long way to go before we reach the conductivity of something like a copper wire, but we're making progress and I'm really excited about this because I think that it could open up a whole new world of possibility for tattoos. I envision a future where tattoos enable us -- tattooable wires and tattooable electronics enable us to merge our technologies with our bodies so that they feel more like extensions of ourselves rather than external devices.
10:20
So these are a few examples of the new abilities that we can gain by using nanotechnology to upgrade our tattoos, but this really is only the beginning. I believe the sky is the limit for what we can do with high-tech tattoos. In the future, tattoos will not only be beautiful, they'll be functional too.
10:43
Thank you.
10:44
(Applause)
PART 2 : COMPREHENSION
- Listen to the video and answer all questions below without reading the transcript /text of the video.
- Then read the transcript of the video and check your answers, before looking at the corrections.
LISTENING & READING COMPREHENSION
Comprehension Questions
Questions: According to the video, are the following statements true or false? Explain why and give details.
- Otzi’s skin was preserved because he was found in a marsh.
- The speaker finds tattoos beautiful because of the way they cannot be used for profit.
- The speaker has multiple careers.
- The speaker prefers black and white tattoos.
- A microcapsule is a type of medicine that you can swallow.
- The speaker believes that tattoos can help detect skin cancer.
- It is scientifically proven can you can measure your temperature when you place your hand on your forehead.
- The speaker explained that he tattooed the inside of his lip.
- He is currently working on a tattoo ink that can conduct electricity.
- Tattoo ink that conducts electricity can help the machines within our bodies to operate.
ANSWERS
Comprehension Answers
- False. Otzi was well-preserved because he was discovered frozen in ice.
- True. He states that a tattoo as an art form cannot be commodified.
- True. He is an artist, a teacher, and he also leads a nanotechnology laboratory.
- False. He gravitates towards coloured tattoos because he’s obsessed with colours.
- False. A microcapsule is a tiny hollow particle with an outer shell, about the size of a tattoo pigment, and you can fill the inside with practically whatever you want.
- False. A tattoo can detect when you are being exposed to UV rays.
- False. There is zero scientific evidence to back that up.
- False. He tattooed some dots on his arm.
- True. They’ve managed to increase the conductivity of skin 300-fold.
- True. He talks about conductive ink being able to power pacemakers.
PART 3 : USE OF ENGLISH
USE OF ENGLISH
OK, brace yourselves, gross mummy pic coming at you.
brace yourself is an idiom meaning : get ready for something unpleasant.
Do you know the meaning of these idioms?
- The ball is in your court
- Spill the beans
- Break a leg
- Once in a blue moon
- Go down in flames
look at correction for the answer and more
CORRECTIONS
TRADUCTION
Traduire les phrases suivantes en anglais, issues du texte, puis retrouver ces phrases du texte en anglais:
1. Attention! Vous allez voir de degoutantes images de mommies.
2. Et oui j'ai fait comme tous ces jeunes qui se tatooent quelque chose qu'ils ne peuvent pas lire
PART 4 : GRAMMAR
LESSON
Unit 67 - See somebody do and see somebody doing (pages 134-135)
EXERCISES
Unit 67 - See somebody do and see somebody doing (pages 134-135)
CORRECTIONS
-
67.1
2 arrive
3 take it I do it
4 it ring
5 him play or him playing
6 you lock it I you do it
7 her fall
67.2
2 We saw Dav id and Helen playing tennis.
3 We saw Clare eating in a restaurant. I... having a meal in a restaurant.
4 We heard Bill playing his guitar.
5 We could smell the dinner burning.
6 We saw Linda jogging/running.
67.3
3 tell
4 crying
5 riding
6 say
7 run … climb
8 explode
9 crawling
10 slam
11 sleeping
PART 5 : WRITING
VOCABULARY
(please note that this definitions are according to the context)
rendition : a particular way of performing a song, poem, piece of music etc
gravitate:to be interested in something and want to do or have it
swap: exchange
overcome : succeed with dealing with or controlling a problem
tuned : specificlly set
copper : brown metal used priamrily for electric cable
WRITING
according to this speaker 1in 4 American has a tatoo.
Do you have a tatoo ? if yes why
if no would you want one ? why / why not?
CORRECTION
You can book a one to one class with a teacher who will correct your writing exercise. One to one classes can be online, with a video call, anytime of the day.
This gives you full flexibility for your timetable.
Please send us an email at afterschool at afterschoollyon.com.
PART 6 : SPEAKING
SPEAKING
You can book a one to one class with a teacher for the speaking. One to one classes can be online, with a video call, anytime of the day.
This gives you full flexibility for your timetable.
Please send us an email at afterschool at afterschoollyon.com.
Our online classes range from A1 to C2 levels, including specific class contents and online video classes. They are designed to improve communication of spoken and written English with learner-centred lessons which help build students’ confidence, accuracy and fluency.
Our online learning classes offer an extensive level of flexibility for individual students, with comprehensive syllabus and content.