时间:2019-01-25 作者:英语课 分类:词汇大师(Wordmaster)


英语课

Broadcast on "Coast to Coast": April 3, 2003


AA: I'm Avi Arditti and this week on Wordmaster -- it's time for our monthly visit with English teacher Lida Baker 1. She writes textbooks and she teaches in the American Language Center at the University of California at Los Angeles. Today Lida offers some advice for English teachers who are looking for ways to use the war in Iraq as a teaching opportunity.


LIDA BAKER: "Now, in a reading class, of course you could have students reading the news each night or do it in class. The articles could be used for the purpose of learning vocabulary, summarizing. Actually, stories about disasters and wars -- news events that carry on for a period of days or in this case weeks and hopefully not months -- are wonderful for learning vocabulary because in order to learn new words, we have to repeat them a lot, we have to see them in a variety of contexts. So reading the news about the war would be an excellent way for students to improve their vocabulary."


AA: Lida Baker says there's also a variety of activities that students could do in a writing class.


LIDA BAKER: "If students are doing journals, they could write in their journals their feelings and their responses to what they're hearing in the news. By the way, this is an excellent way of channeling students' feelings into something that enhances their language learning. Have them write down these strong feelings that they're having about what they're seeing on television and reading about in the newspaper. So students can do journals about the war, they can write essays where they're presenting their point of view and supporting their point of view with facts and examples and other kinds of evidence.


"In a speaking class, you have the opportunity to set up debates where students are presenting both sides, both points of view -- for the war and against the war.


AA: "And in which case the teacher would serve sort of as what -- "


BAKER: "As a moderator."


AA: "A neutral person, without a position?"


BAKER: "Absolutely. I really do not think it is appropriate for a teacher to present her point of view about the war -- especially not at the beginning of a lesson. It's OK, I think, to do it at the very, very end, after students have written or said whatever they want about the topic. But for a teacher -- especially in an English as a second language situation, where students generally come from cultures where it's unthinkable for a student to disagree with a teacher or contradict a teacher -- it wouldn't be right for a teacher to present her point of view up front. Because then students would feel intimidated 2 about saying how they feel. So it would be, I think, a wrong way for a teacher to use her power or her authority to do that.


" I suppose I would not hesitate at the very end of the activity to politely say how I feel, but I wouldn't do it at the beginning. I wouldn't want to impinge on students鈥?freedom of expression in the classroom, or for them to think that because I'm their teacher that they're obligated to agree with me."


AA: Lida Baker says formal debates are just one of the options if teachers or students want to bring up the war in class. Students could also form small discussion groups in the classroom. Lida Baker says in a situation like that, she would walk around to serve not just as a moderator but also as a language consultant 3.


LIDA BAKER: "If students are sitting in small groups, talking about their views, and they need a word or they don't know how to say something, then I'm right there to help them form their thoughts, express their feelings, find the words that they need in order to continue their discussion."


AA: Author and English teacher Lida Baker from the American Language Center at the University of California at Los Angeles. And that's Wordmaster for this week. Our postal 4 address is VOA Wordmaster, Washington DC 20237 USA. Our e-mail address is word@voanews.com. And our programs are on the Internet at voanews.com/wordmaster.


Rosanne Skirble is back with me next week. I'm Avi Arditti.



n.面包师
  • The baker bakes his bread in the bakery.面包师在面包房内烤面包。
  • The baker frosted the cake with a mixture of sugar and whites of eggs.面包师在蛋糕上撒了一层白糖和蛋清的混合料。
v.恐吓;威胁adj.害怕的;受到威胁的
  • We try to make sure children don't feel intimidated on their first day at school. 我们努力确保孩子们在上学的第一天不胆怯。
  • The thief intimidated the boy into not telling the police. 这个贼恫吓那男孩使他不敢向警察报告。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.顾问;会诊医师,专科医生
  • He is a consultant on law affairs to the mayor.他是市长的一个法律顾问。
  • Originally,Gar had agreed to come up as a consultant.原来,加尔只答应来充当我们的顾问。
adj.邮政的,邮局的
  • A postal network now covers the whole country.邮路遍及全国。
  • Remember to use postal code.勿忘使用邮政编码。
学英语单词
A'ana-i-Sisifo Dist.
administered channel systems
aftemoon
analytically unramified
au jus
Baker,Josephine
be put away
bodement
breakdown law
brezova pod bradlom
C.L.C.
call one's shots
chondroitin-6-sulfaturia
chrystie
circuit noise
cleaning cock
column reflux
commercial treaties
compulsive
concentration work
concrete bucket
Congo red
coq
cotton manufacturing
cozey
Crozier
cruising formation and disposition
cytoplasmic male sterilty
deion
device reserve
dried-air drier
edrophonium
engage in all kinds of foreign exchange operations
engineer's alarm system
exact endomorphism
external upset tubing thread
field-testing
fluorescent paint
gamma chain marker allotype
get buck
high-permeability
homing type rotary switch
houffalize
hound's tongue
indirect offer
inlet time
job assessment
Kerkonkoski
Kiruruma
Koorawatha
laser transmitter
lateral line canal
Leahy screen
load cable
lyric theater
material tower
micrometer with dial indicator
multiphase pcm
non-sine
oleum amygdalae amarae
Onosma hookeri
Order of Canada
over-head driving
parallel middlebody volume
patriate
pemudas
penzler
photoelectron device
pietsch
play-theory
postponement survey
proeusternum
rasyn
reagent desorption
reamer-bolt
remote sensing data
resistance unit
reticulate sphere
ricardian economy
Roddick
special weave
sportsome
St-Amand
steel stiffener
storm tide gate
strain-hardening strength
surface heating
swordman
syndrome of deficiency of liver yang
system of crystallization
tactical message switching
TCPD
tension dryer
testosterones
tissue storage by refrigeration
unelecting
unramified prime ideal
valence nucleon
VdB
veis
weatherlurch
welding time