This is the VOA Special English Education Report, from voaspecialenglish.com | http Last time, we talked about Massive Open Online Courses, also called MOOCs. Tens of thousands or even more people can take these classes all at once. You can be anywhere in the world to take a MOOC. All you need is a computer and a network connection. MOOCs add to a tradition of what is known as distance learning. For years, many colleges have offered classes that are taught partly or mostly online. MOOCs are available in subjects like computer science, engineering or mechanics. Can MOOCs in subjects like arts or the humanities be as effective? Scott Anderson teaches philosophy at the University of British Columbia in Canada. He sees both good and bad sides to online courses. Mr. Anderson believes that some parts are fine. For example, when a teacher gives a presentation to the class, there is no special reason why students need to be physically present to hear it. And, he says there is no reason why they need to be physically present to do readings. Mr. Anderson says increased numbers of people taking MOOCs can mean less communication between students and teachers. He says two ways to deal with this are by adding more teachers and graders, and setting up online discussion groups. Lisa Jadwin teaches English and American literature and writing at St. John Fisher College in New York. She says online education has some weaknesses for her subjects. She says the teaching of literature requires …
Posts Tagged ‘Learning’
Another Look at Massive Online Open Courses
Tuesday, May 1st, 2012Learning English – Lesson Seventy Two – English Tense
Saturday, April 28th, 2012In this lesson we will take a look at tense in English. What we did and what we are doing and what we will do. What happened, what is happening and what will happen. All of these sentences involve tense. Thank you to those who pointed out that drank was used incorrectly. Of course informally we often use the word drank to express having drunk something. Often there is a big gap between formal and informal English. A point I make at the end. Those who are native speakers often use informal English.
Collins English for Business range – The English you need to succeed
Wednesday, April 25th, 2012The Collins English for Business range consists of high-quality self-study materials giving students what they need to improve their business English at work. Catherine Whitaker, Language Learning Publishing Director at Collins, talks about how Collins English for Business helps learners of English to become confident communicators in business. For more information, go to www.collinselt.com.
English Phrasal Verbs – Pets & Animals
Tuesday, April 24th, 2012www.englishwithjo.com English Phrasal Verbs – learn phrasal verbs that you can use when speaking about the subject of pets and animals. This is a lesson for intermediate to advanced English language learners In this video, I teach four English phrasal verbs about animals – run away, let out, muck out, look out for. You can use these phrasal verbs in other contexts too, but in this video clip, I explain specifcally how you can use them when discussing animals and pets.
Blabbinit: English lesson – Pronunciation 2
Sunday, April 22nd, 2012Pronunciation 2: stuff – staff, hair – her, cut – caught. How to pronounce words with difficult and similiar vowel sounds. www.blabbinit.com Music by Jaime Portal Luchini www.jaimeportalluchini.com
Microcredit Is Expanding to New Products for the Poor
Saturday, April 21st, 2012This is the VOA Special English Economics Report from voaspecialenglish.com | http Modern microfinance started with economist Muhammad Yunus. In the nineteen seventies, he started what became the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh. He and the bank shared the Nobel Peace Prize in two thousand six for the idea of offering small loans to the poor to fight poverty. In twenty ten, reports of harmful micro lending methods and corruption shook the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. Mr. Yunus recently said in the New York Times that things got out of control. He noted that Andhra Pradesh had intensive lending activity at the time. We spoke to Ghiyath Nakshbendi about changes in the world of microfinance. He is an expert in international business and teaches microfinance as a business model at the Kogod School of Business at American University. He says the government of India in certain states has started taking steps to “guarantee that these institutions are operating under a strict system.”Some experts have raised questions about whether micro lending lifts women or poor families out of poverty. David Roodman is with the Center for Global Development, a research group in Washington. He says microloans do not do a good job fighting poverty. He says over three billion dollars went into microcredit in twenty-ten. But many lenders failed because of bad supervision or failure to repay loans.In one model, governments or nongovernmental organizations give money to microcredit operations …
NoteFull ESL Lesson 4 of 24: Better English Now with Count and Noncount Nouns, plus “a” and “the”
Friday, April 20th, 2012www.notefull.com Visit our class and use the skills that we learned today. It’s free. Record your voice, write a paragraph, and try our activities. In 2-4 days, I will send you an e-mail with advice about your writing and speaking. พูด ภาษาอังกฤษ การสนทนา 发言 英语 谈话 hablar Inglés comversation 말하다 영어 대화 nói tiếng Anh cuộc trò chuyện 話す 英語 会話 parler Anglais conversation बोलना अंग्रेजी बातचीत التحدث باللغة الإنجليزية المحادثة الإنجليزية говорить Английский разговор falar Inglês conversa mówić Angielski rozmowa
In ‘Sober Houses,’ Heroin Addicts Learn to Help Themselves
Sunday, April 15th, 2012This is the VOA Special English Health Report, from voaspecialenglish.com | http Tourists come to Zanzibar for its white sand beaches and historic buildings in Stone Town. But something else also makes its way to the Tanzanian island: heroin trafficked across the Indian Ocean from Asia. Most of the heroin shipped through East Africa is headed for Europe and North America. But Reychad Abdool of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime says a lot of it stays on the continent. “We know for a fact that heroin is being used in at least thirty countries in Africa. And we also know for a fact that the number of countries reporting injecting drug use, especially of heroin, is also increasing in Africa.” The problem in Zanzibar has led to some creative local solutions. Suleiman Mauly stopped using heroin six years ago. Now he operates a network of so-called sober houses. These are run by addicts themselves to help one another recover. There are nine sober houses — eight for men and one for women. Mr. Mauly himself went through a drug treatment program in Kenya. But it cost around two thousand dollars, he says. Staying in a sober house costs about one hundred dollars a month. Most of the people are supported by their families. Treatment is based on the idea that drug addiction is more of a public health problem than a crime. Mr. Mauly says this is still a new idea to many people. “Because addiction, it’s a disease, and addicts need treatment. But people, they hear that addicts …
Shaping the Way We Teach English: Introduction
Sunday, April 15th, 2012Welcome to the teacher training series “Shaping the Way We Teach English, Successful Practices Around the World.” These introductory materials are designed for English as a Foreign Language educators who share the following two goals: 1. Building an academic or “pedagogical” foundation; and, 2. Improving classroom practices. If you have these same goals, then these materials are for you! An innovative offering from the Office of English Language Programs, Shaping the Way We Teach English, is a 14-module teacher training video series developed and produced in cooperation with the University of Oregon.