الإنجليزية
Aperçu des semaines
- Généralités
Généralités
“All Our Lives” by Tochukwu Emmanuel Okafor is programmed for this week. I am going to post an audio, and we can discuss the themes and main ideas for two hours Thursday, April 22nd at 3 pm on Edmodo.
Stay Safe
- Going to the Supermarket
- For Master 2
- How to Make Homework Less Work
How to Make Homework Less Work
Please watch the video;
Questions and discussion will take place on Edmodo Wednesday at 3 pm.
- Health
Health
Read the text and check the audio version on Edmodo; comprehension questions and discussion is going to take place at 3pm, Wednesday April 22.
Stay safe
Health
People need to be active to be healthy. Our modern lifestyle and all the conveniences we've become used to have made us sedentary - and that's dangerous for our health. Sitting around in front of the TV or the computer, riding in the car for even a short trip to the store and using elevators instead of stairs or ramps all contribute to our inactivity. Physical inactivity is as dangerous to our health as smoking! Add up your activities during the day in periods of at least 10 minutes each. Start slowly ... and build up. If you're already doing some light activities move up to more moderate ones. A little is good, but more is better if you want to achieve health benefits. Scientists say accumulate 60 minutes of physical activity every day to stay healthy or improve your health. Time needed depends on effort – as you progress to moderate activities, you can cut down to thirty minutes, four days a week. Physical activity doesn't have to be very hard to improve your health. This goal can be reached by building physical activities into your daily routine. Just add up in periods of at least ten minutes each throughout the day. After three months of regular physical activity, you will notice a difference - people often say getting started is the hardest part.
Physiology, Ottawa, Ontario, 1998
- Read the text
Read the text
Read the text and then choose a title; discussion is going to take place at 2pm, Wednesday May 6th .
Stay safe
Why should we learn a foreign language? After all, the whole world speaks English! Ladies and Gentlemen, there's some truth in this argument - but only some! Allow me to give an example from the area which I can perhaps judge well: diplomacy. British diplomats generally have an excellent reputation as extremely professional and efficient. And that specifically includes language skills. Before they're posted to a new country, British diplomats are trained in its language, sometimes for up to a year. Why do they do that? When you come to a new post, you can only really make full use of your professionalism and efficiency in your host country's language. You can't just rely on English. So having a foreign language in addition to English is vital - as indeed it is in so many other professions. Learning a foreign language at the earliest possible age - that is, at nursery and primary school - opens up a whole new dimension for children: it greatly benefits their reading and writing in their own language; there's evidence that, like musical education, it contributes significantly to the development of individual intelligence; and concretely it improves overall results at school. A new language opens up a whole new culture. A foreign language gives us access to another culture, and our lives take on a new dimension. The great German poet, Johan Wolfgang von Goethe, said in 1827: "Whoever is not acquainted with foreign languages knows nothing of his own." Seen like that, learning a language is almost comparable to a journey of discovery. Conversely, to lose a language is to lose a whole culture. This realization has led to determined efforts to preserve minority languages, including, for example, in Britain, with the renaissance of the Welsh and Gaelic languages. There are similar widespread efforts in Britain to promote community languages, for example by providing application forms in Urdu or other languages. It is a fundamental truth that cultures define themselves through languages.
Adapted from :
http://www.kwintessential.co.uk/cultural-services/articles/learn-language.html
Réseaux sociaux