Posts Tagged ‘education’

A Community Helps Burmese Refugees Learn English

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2012

This is the VOA Special English Education Report , from voaspecialenglish.com | http About eighteen thousand refugees from Burma have come to the United States each year since two thousand seven. Some have settled in Howard County, Maryland, between Baltimore and Washington. A local school began teaching English to the children of the refugees. But while the children learned the language, their parents did not. Currently almost fifty Burmese youngsters attend Bollman Bridge Elementary School. Laurel Conran teaches English to speakers of other languages. One of her students is Tha Neih Ciang. Another student is Tha Neih’s mother, Tin Iang. The teacher practices English with the mother at the mother’s workplace. Many Burmese refugees work at Coastal Sunbelt Produce. The company supplies fruits and vegetables to restaurants and other businesses. Laurel Conran started English classes there to help refugees from the country also known as Myanmar. The program is a six-week session held every Wednesday from twelve to one o’clock. Each week Ms. Conran goes to Coastal Sunbelt. As the Burmese workers eat lunch, they also practice their new language skills. They sit with an English-speaking volunteer in small groups.Lisa Chertok is a manager at the company and also has a child at Bollman Bridge. She helped Ms. Conran develop the lessons: “When the Burmese employees got here, they were very, very shy. Now I find that they are more responsive as employees. They’re more communicative

Study English – Series 3, Episode 7: The Speaking Test

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2012

In this episode we’ll look at the IELTS Speaking Test and watch how some candidates answer the questions. For more information to help you prepare for the IELTS test, download transcripts, study notes and activities for each episode: australianetwork.com To view captions (subtitles) for this video, click on the ‘CC’ button on the player control bar to turn captions on. You can also view in multiple languages by selecting ‘translate captions’.

English Lesson: to be

Sunday, February 19th, 2012

Learn about the verb “to be” in Holmwood’s Online Learning grammar series. More English lessons can be found on our channel: HolmwoodsELT and also at Holmwoods.eu where we also have exercises and a complete online learning environment.

ENGLISH LESSON uses of KIND OF

Wednesday, February 15th, 2012

isaacsenglish.blogspot.com http Video a peticion de samurai50062 acerca de los usos de KIND OF del idioma Inglés. Video request on the uses of KIND OF. A group of individuals or instances sharing common traits; a category or sort: different kinds of furniture; a new kind of politics. A doubtful or borderline member of a given category: fashioned a kind of shelter; a kind of bluish color. Underlying character as a determinant of the class to which a thing belongs; nature or essence. The natural order or course of things; nature. Manner or fashion. Idioms: all kinds of Informal Plenty of; ample: We have all kinds of time to finish the job. in kind With produce or commodities rather than with money: pay in kind. In the same manner or with an equivalent: returned the slight in kind. kind of Informal Rather; somewhat: I’m kind of hungry. of a kind Of the same kind; alike: My father and my uncle are two of a kind. 自由英国教训, 自由英國教訓, vrije Engelse les, leçon anglaise libre, freie englische Lektion, ελεύθερο αγγλικό μάθημα, lezione inglese libera, 英国のレッスンを解放しなさい, 영국 학습을 해방하십시오, lição inglesa livre, свободный английский урок англи́йский inglês angielski engleză anglicky αγγλικά anglais inglese Englisch إنجليزي Inggris Angol free 英语词汇的发音영어 단어 발음英語の語彙の発音अंग्रेजी शब्दावली उच्चारण Tiếng Anh vốn từ vựng phát âm ingles bokabularyo pagbigkas Prononciation vocabulaire anglais pronúncia, vocabulário Inglês

English Grammar Lesson: To be – to have – to do

Monday, February 13th, 2012

Phoibe teaches you about three important verbs: to be, to have and to do. This simple grammar lesson is ideal for students studying English

In the Garden: Growing Your Own Lettuce

Monday, February 13th, 2012

This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report from voaspecialenglish.com | http Many people have lettuce in a salad at the beginning of a meal. The ancient Egyptians and Romans had it at the end. Either way, gardening experts say lettuce is one of the easiest vegetables to grow in a garden.There are hundreds of kinds of head and leaf lettuces besides the most popular choices, like iceberg, Boston, bibb and romaine. The best time to plant the seeds is during cool weather. Gardening advisers at the University of Illinois Extension say the best planting temperature is fifteen degrees Celsius. You can use a seed tray to start the seeds indoors. The container should be deep enough to hold at least three centimeters of soil. Leave about one centimeter of space between the soil and the top of the container. The container should have holes in the bottom so extra water can flow out. Cover the seeds lightly with soil. If the soil is not already a little wet, give it some water, but not too much. Too much water could drown the seeds. Next, cover the seed tray with paper. Remove the paper when the seedlings are tall enough to touch it. You can transplant the seedlings into the garden when they are about two to three centimeters tall. Do this when the weather is not too hot and not too cold. Take out as much of the soil as you can with the seedlings. Plant them in the ground in a hole that is bigger than the lettuce roots. Keep the plants watered, but not too heavily. Planting

Learning English Language

Friday, February 10th, 2012

www.sbcrevitalized.com English grammar tutorial taught by power teacher whole brain mentor Sunday Heppner. She introduces children or adults to adjectives describing pumpkins.

AIDS Study Called 2011 ‘Breakthrough’

Friday, February 10th, 2012

This is the VOA Special English Health Report, from voaspecialenglish.com | http The journal Science chose an AIDS study as the twenty-eleven “Breakthrough of the Year.” The study found that antiretroviral drugs can greatly lower the risk of spreading HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. It showed that infected people with early treatment were ninety-six percent less likely to infect their partners.The study was a clinical trial known as HPTN 052. Myron Cohen led an international team that began the study in two thousand seven. But Dr. Cohen says the work really began twenty years ago: “We had a strong suspicion based on all the biological studies we had done that when we treat people and lower the concentration of HIV in the blood and secretions, we were rendering them less contagious. But we didn’t understand the magnitude of the benefit.”Dr. Cohen heads the Institute for Global Health and Infectious Diseases at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases paid for the study.It involved heterosexual couples in nine countries in Africa, Asia and the Americas. The results have already had an effect on government policies. Those changes include treating HIV-infected people when their immune systems are still relatively healthy. Dr. Cohen says the study “has generated policy changes at the level of the United States and the World Health Organization and UNAIDS. And it’s inspired new community-based clinical trials

ENGLISH.

Thursday, February 9th, 2012

LINKS to LEARN more: My video with Todd: www.youtube.com Todd’s Channel: www.youtube.com @tweetsauce www.facebook.com Exellenct wrap-up of English language histroy: en.wikipedia.org “Uncleft Beholding”: groups.google.com How did early colonists speak: www.nicholasjohnpatrick.com American dialects: pandora.cii.wwu.edu Extinct Bo Language: news.bbc.co.uk Great book on English history (linked to part about british/american accents): books.google.com Westinghouse Time Capsule VIDEO: www.youtube.com Really cool video of “fake” English (makes no sense, but ‘sounds’ right): www.youtube.com

VV 27 – Legal English Vocabulary: Contract Law 2

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

Download this episode from VideoVocab.tv This is the second of our two-part lesson on English legal vocabulary related to contract law. In our last lesson (http we looked at some of the basic principles of contracts. Today, we’ll focus on specific terms and language found in contracts.