Jan 31, 2013

Ideas for Speaking: Books and Money

Answer these questions, or use them as inspiration, related to the topics we've seen in class.

BOOKS
1  What’s the best book you’ve ever read?
2  What kind of books do teenagers read these days? 
3  What kind of books interest you the most?
4  If you wrote a book, what kind of book would it be?

MONEY
1   What would you most like to be able to buy
2   How do most people get their knowledge of wealthy people?
3   Do you consider yourself good with money?
4   Do you think that women are better at managing money than men?
5   Do you think that having more money would make you happier?


Now talk about one of these statements, saying if you agree or disagree. Give reasons.

1   ‘In modern life, it is very hard to get to know new people.’
2   ‘It is best to read reviews of a book before buying it.’
3   ‘Today, people are encouraged to be too materialistic.’
4   ‘Modern technology involves a lot of annoying sounds.’
5  ‘Books are the best way of learning about people and life.’
6   ‘There is nothing wrong with wanting to be wealthy.’


Homework for 4th February

Dear students,

Just in case you didn't see it... Here's some homework for next Monday (4th Feb).

Vocabulary Bank: History and Warfare (p. 163)
Unit 4A. Exercise 1b) (page 52)

NEXT MONDAY:

- We'll start the class with the homework from last week (Revise & Check p. 51 and the Grammar worksheet).
- Then we'll begin File 4A

To finish, I would like to have a debate about a topic that appeared in the news this week. Please read and listen to the news and prepare the vocabulary and your point of view for the debate.

U.S. allows women to fight in wars (26th January, 2013)

Read and watch the report on BBC News or The Washington Post.

See you next Monday and have a nice weekend!

Jan 28, 2013

Viajes de Estudios

La EOI ha organizado dos VIAJES DE ESTUDIOS para los días 16-19 MARZO.

LONDRES 440€ 
 
EDIMBURGO 498€

· INCLUYEN: VUELOS + HOTEL (ALOJAMIENTO Y DESAYUNO) + TRASLADOS.
· ACOMPAÑAMIENTO DE UN PROFESOR
· PRECIO BASADO EN UN MÁXIMO DE 30 PERSONAS Y SUJETO A DISPONIBILIDAD.
· NO INCLUYE SEGURO OPCIONAL (18€)
· PARA MÁS INFORMACIÓN: conchita@eoilorca.org


¡PLAZAS LIMITADAS!
Reserva tu plaza antes del 4 de febrero

Jan 27, 2013

Quotes about Language and Communication


Say … 
… what each quote means. 
… whether you agree or disagree. Give reasons. 
Which is your favourite quote? Give reasons.

“Any problem, big or small, within a family, always seems to start with bad communication. Someone isn't listening.” Emma Thompson (actress)

“We have two ears and one mouth so that we can listen twice as much as we speak.” Epictetus (Greek philosopher)

“He who knows, does not speak. He who speaks, does not know.” Lao Tzu (Chinese philosopher)

“England and America are two countries divided by a common language.” George Bernard Shaw (Irish writer)

“When all other means of communication fail, try words” Anonymous

Exam of Files 1-3

Dear students,
Next Wednesday 30th January at 19:00 
there will be
an EXAM 
of what we've seen so far in the course, i.e. Files 1-3.

It will consist on the following sections: 
GRAMMAR (10')
VOCABULARY (10')
PRONUNCIATION (5')
READING (20')
LISTENING (20')
WRITING (30')

GOOD LUCK!

Jan 23, 2013

Speaking: Language and Communication

Ideas for the Monologue task





1. What do you find easiest/most difficult about learning English?
2. Which are the least/most effective forms of learning a language? Give reasons.
3. Which is the most enjoyable form of learning a language? Give reasons.
4. Which languages should be taught at schools in your region? Give reasons.
5. What advice would you give to somebody who wants to learn a language quickly?

Jan 21, 2013

Film: Cinema Paradiso

This week you will have the opportunity to watch an Italian movie in the School...


Wednesday 23rd at 16:00
Thursday 24th at 18:30
in
Room 1.12

Nuovo Cinema Paradiso (Italian pronunciation: [ˈnwɔːvo ˈtʃiːnema paraˈdiːzo] New Paradise Cinema), internationally released as Cinema Paradiso, is a 1988 Italian drama film written and directed by Giuseppe Tornatore. The film stars Jacques PerrinPhilippe NoiretLeopoldo TriesteMarco LeonardiAgnese Nano and Salvatore Cascio, and was produced by Franco Cristaldi and Giovanna Romagnoli, while the music score was composed by Ennio Morricone along with his son, Andrea.

PLOT
In Rome during the 1980s, famous Italian film director Salvatore Di Vita, returns home late one evening, where his girlfriend sleepily tells him that his mother called to say that someone named Alfredo has died. Salvatore obviously shies away from committed relationships, and he has not been back to his home village of Giancaldo, Sicily in 30 years. As she asks him who Alfredo is, Salvatore flashes back to his childhood.

RECEPTION
Cinema Paradiso was a critical and box-office success and is regarded by many as a classic. It is particularly renowned for the 'kissing scenes' montage near the end of the film. Winning the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film in 1989, the film is often credited with reviving Italy's film industry which later produced Mediterraneo and Life Is Beautiful.

Books to read before you die



Here is a list of the 100 best novels of all time according TIME MAGAZINE. Critics Lev Grossman’s and Richard Lacayo’s picks of the 100 best English-language novels from 1923 to the present.

Also 100 best novels from the editorial board of Modern Library with links to their New York Times reviews.

From the UK the Top 200 - BBC’s Big Read as nominated by 750k readers (in a survey carried out in 2003).

The international (all languages) Top 100 books of all time by the Guardian - determined from the vote by 100 noted writers from 54 countries.

And finally, the 10 Best Books of 2012 according to the New York Times.

How many have you read? Any surprises? Any novel you suddenly want to read?

Armstrong's confession

Here you have the famous interview and shocking confession of Lance Armstrong...


More videos, the highlights, the comments and reactions HERE.

Jan 15, 2013

About "The Descendants"

 The result of her wise disposition of her property, 
you young people all know too well. 
It is yours - you who live it each day of your lives.
Without it, where would many of you be today?
Mrs. Pierre Jones
On the Use of Hawaiian Land
Owned by Princess Bernice Pauahi Paki

The wealthy Princess had to make a decision about her property.  The last surviving descendant of Kamehameha I - a warrior chief who united all the Hawaiian Islands in 1810 - Bernice Pauahi Paki owned about 375,500 acres of gorgeous Hawaiian land. 

She could have done anything she wanted with her treasure.  Inheriting about nine percent of the entire Kingdom of Hawaii, Pauahi Paki wasn’t just land-rich.  Her status as a Princess meant that she was highly respected by all Hawaiians. 

Yet ... she was bothered by her wealth.  What had she done to deserve it?  What if she had been born into a poor family instead of a rich one?  What if she were a descendant of land workers instead of land owners?

Feeling "responsible and accountable" for the inheritance she'd received from her ancestors, Pauahi Paki made a profound decision.  She would place all of her land in trust for the benefit of Hawaiian children.

It is against this backdrop that we meet Matt King and his dying wife, Joanie (called "Elizabeth" in the film based on Kaui Hart Hemmings’s book, The Descendants).

ISSUES and QUESTIONS to PONDER:  Pauahi Paki was a Princess of the Hawaiian royal family.  As a descendant of King Kamehameha I, she was wealthy, just like the rest of her relatives.  Do wealthy people have a responsibility to help others?  If riches are inherited, does that make a person more (or less) likely to share?


Learn more about "The Descendants" with this:
1. Interviews on the set
2. Visual glossary
3. Radio broadcast on the story behind the movie

Jan 13, 2013

Film: The Descendants

Next week you will have the opportunity to watch a movie in the School...

Wednesday 16th at 16:30
Thursday 17th at 18:30
in
Room 1.12


Plot

Matt King (George Clooney) is a Honolulu-based lawyer and the sole trustee of a family trust that controls 25,000 acres of pristine land on the island of Kaua'i. Though he has been able to manage his money, most of Matt's cousins are broke from squandering their share of the inheritance. The trust will expire in seven years because of the rule against perpetuities, so the King family has decided to sell the land to Kaua'i native Don Holitzer for development. Just before family members are ready to formally endorse the deal, a boating accident near Waikīkī renders Matt's wife, Elizabeth, comatose.

You can watch the trailer here.

Famous last words

Taken from TODAY, a BBB Radio 4 programme...
 
FAMOUS LAST WORDS
The opening lines of great novels have achieved a literary status all of their own.
Whether 'It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen' (1984) or 'Call me Ishmael.' (Moby Dick), their resonances have seduced readers down the years.
But what of the last lines of great works of literature? Writer and broadcaster Tom Sutcliffe recently argued that first lines can make an impression without the reader having had read the whole novel - whereas the impression of last lines rests on the preceding pages.
The first line has to arrest the reader, seduce them so they continue with the book - but by the final line the author already has them.

Today has asked our erudite listeners for their thoughts on the best endings from novels. Here is just a sample of your thoughts. Tell us your favourite last words using the form at the bottom of the page. 
 

Has to be the brilliant Great Expectations: "I took her hand in mine, and we went out of the ruined place; and, as the morning mists had risen long ago when I first left the forge, so, the evening mists were rising now, and in all the broad expanse of tranquil light they showed to me, I saw no shadow of another parting from her." David Stanley, Twickenham 
 
I nominate F Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby - "So we beat on, boats against the current, drawn back ceaselessly into the past." Mick Chandler, Kenilworth, UK

For me, the greatest finale, although maybe you have to have read the book to quite appreciate its significance, is the ending of Aldous Huxley's Brave New World:
"Just under the crown of the arch dangled a pair of feet.
'Mr Savage'
Slowly, very slowly, like two unhurried compass needles, the feet turned towards the right; north, north-east, east, south-east, south, south-west; the paused, and after a few seconds, turned as unhurriedly back towards the left. South-south-west, south, south-east, east ..." Simon Hunter, London

"and yes I said yes I will Yes" James Joyce's Ulysses Florence Minnis, York, UK

"He drew a deep breath. 'Well, I'm back' he said"... so Sam Gamgee ends Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. In understated relief, quintessentially English! Debby Plummer, Manchester UK

... more endings here.

Finally, after reading, listen to the podcast of the radio programme about last lines in a novel.
How are they important?
What do you learn about first and last lines?
Why do people remember them?

Ideas for Speaking (Various topics)

On Personal Identification, Daily life, Relationships, Technology...

Answer, on your own or with a partner, the following questions:

CHILDHOOD MEMORIES
1. What’s your favourite memory of your childhood?
2. What can you remember about the teachers you had when you were a child?
3. What games did you like playing when you were a child? 
4. What did you dislike doing when you were a child?

TIME AND TECHNOLOGY
1. Which modern gadget is the most useful one for you?
2. What piece of technology has most improved your life?
3. If you could, what piece of technology would you disinvent?
4. Which modern gadget do you think wastes people’s time?
5. What gadget or piece of technology do you waste most time with?
6. What kind of multitasking do you do?


LOVE AND RELATIONSHIPS
1. How do you communicate most with friends and family? 
2. What causes teenagers’ relationships to break up?
3. When have you taken revenge on someone? 


In your 3-minute presentation you can also talk about one of these statements, saying if you agree or disagree. Give reasons.
  
1. ‘Childhood is the most important part of everyone’s life.’
2. ‘Children today have too much freedom.’

3. ‘Technology has had a bad effect on communication between people.’
4. ‘It is better to be very busy than not busy at all.’ 
5. ‘Revenge is never a good thing.’

6. ‘There is never a good way of ending a relationship.’