时间:2019-02-16 作者:英语课 分类:词汇大师(Wordmaster)


英语课

Broadcast on COAST TO COAST: March 25, 2004


AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and today on Wordmaster -- it's TESOL time!


RS: Next week is the thirty-eighth annual convention 1 of the group known as TESOL: Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages. TESOL says there are one-point-three billion non-native speakers of English around the world.


AA: TESOL has fourteen-thousand members across the globe. About half are expected to gather at the convention. This year the convention is in Long Beach, California, with more than a thousand lecture and discussion sessions on the program.


TESOL President Amy Schlessman says the convention will give teachers from the United States and more than one-hundred other countries the opportunity to meet and network with each other.


RS: They will also get a sense of the worldwide interest in the study of multiple intelligences. The convention will open with performances of music, dance and other creative arts -- all to make a point.


SCHLESSMAN: "Of course, we focus on how people talk. But our expression of intelligence can be in multiple ways. Like we have the dance, which is a kinesthetic approach, and we have the music which is a musical approach, and then there are other types of things like intrapersonal intelligence, which is knowing yourself, or interpersonal, which is getting along with others -- which is the whole networking opportunity.


"I recently talked to someone in Bahrain and he's doing research in multiple intelligences. In fact, they did a conference over there about critical thinking in English language teaching. I was also recently in Puerto Rico and they've added a fifth skill area. You're probably both familiar with teaching language often identifies listening, speaking, reading and writing and the four skill areas, and they've added a fifth area which is thinking.


"I think it was (Ludwig) Wittgenstein the philosopher (British, born in Austria, 1889-1951) that said 'the limits of my language are the limits of my world.' We're always interested in people learning another language, but we get to that because we think by increasing their use of language, we increase the options that they have to them for thinking."


AA: "And when we're applying, when English teachers apply these sorts of modern notions 2 of multiple intelligences in their classrooms -- "


RS: "How does that practically work?"


AA: "I was going to say: what do they do this with? With music or with stories or with getting kids out of their seats, if you're going to talk about the kinesthetic intelligence?"


AS: "Exactly. And the example that I'm giving in my presentation on creativity is for us to think about taking what we do a step beyond what we're usually competent in. So the example I'm going to use is a deck of cards. If you think about a straight activity, (it) would be sorting the cards, because you wanted to create a pattern.


"Then the creative step would be, could you use the cards for something other than their original context 3. Like you would expect the card sort to be by suit or by number or by the type of face card -- face cards versus 4 number cards. But if you give that as the activity to your class, you would kind of get the 'ahhh!' reaction if suddenly a student responded by making a clock out of the cards -- "


RS: "Or a house."


AS: " -- or use the numbers for a clock."


RS: "Or building a house."


AS: "Exactly. Actually that's one that I'm going to use. What we'd like to do is teach that to people so that they can have it as an option. So that's the kind of thing with teaching creativity, you can do it either multiple ways by encouraging different ways to be creative, but then the next step is to identify the principle that you're using, so that that becomes part of the repertoire 5 that students have."


RS: Professor Amy Schlessman of Northern Arizona University is the outgoing president of TESOL. She'll get to present the TESOL President's Award at the convention next week in California. The award this year honors Howard Gardner at Harvard University for his theories on multiple intelligences.

 



n.惯例,习俗,常规,会议,大会
  • How many delegates have checked in at the convention?大会已有多少代表报到?
  • He sets at naught every convention of society.他轻视所有的社会习俗。
缝纫用的杂货(如针、线等); 概念( notion的名词复数 ); 观念; 突然的念头; 意图
  • a political system based on the notions of equality and liberty 建立在自由平等观念基础上的政治体系
  • Before I started the job, I had no preconceived notions of what it would be like. 开始做这工作之前,我并未预想过它的实际情况。
n.背景,环境,上下文,语境
  • You can always tell the meaning of a word from its context.你常可以从上下文中猜出词义来。
  • This sentence does not seem to connect with the context.这个句子似乎与上下文脱节。
prep.以…为对手,对;与…相比之下
  • The big match tonight is England versus Spain.今晚的大赛是英格兰对西班牙。
  • The most exciting game was Harvard versus Yale.最富紧张刺激的球赛是哈佛队对耶鲁队。
n.(准备好演出的)节目,保留剧目;(计算机的)指令表,指令系统, <美>(某个人的)全部技能;清单,指令表
  • There is an extensive repertoire of music written for the flute.有很多供长笛演奏的曲目。
  • He has added considerably to his piano repertoire.他的钢琴演奏曲目大大增加了。
学英语单词
accelerator pump spray nozzle
aethoballism
aristotelians
autocyclic
available volume
B-axes
beerbongs
black wind
blogtastic
blue-plate specials
blunt file
brenner passes
business process management
butenoates
cardiovascular pharmacology
catch a likeness
Chanas
chartering agreement
chiasma movement index (slizynski 1955)
chrominance-lock receiver
coarsing
Columbiaville
commutative Lie group
convex mirror
cooling period
cousiness
cut to bits
dead cover
deinstalls
deliverancy
double-precision arithmetic
e.164
egf-fgf
El Palo
ethylidene peroxide
expensive
exponential sequences
extraordinary cost
eyewatering
fall upon one's legs
gas thermometer calibration
ghost-white
gunstocking
hexagon spanner
hot red pepper
ilmenite black
inbreak
interconnect function
interconnecting elbow
interstitial region
isobutyl benzyl ketone
john-mcloughlin
kickings
lachrymoses
lips are sealed
lissoir
martensitic transformation
Mecklin
metteur-en-scene
miarolitic
mixed (fruit) jam
nbjective symptom
negative plagiogeotropism
noninert
normal gravity formula
octolasmis nierstraszi
octyl-trimethyl-silicane
oviducal channel
Pasi Ga
patterned rubber belt
Perechyn
polydeoxy-adenylate-ribonucleotide
preventer of double ram type
primary plasticizer
prolixnesses
pseudosiderosis
re-provisioning started
recomforts
red bryonies
rice oil
ringing signalling
RST
self-respects
semi-active missile
Sikonge
smartsystems
spread control
statites
superbias
third fundamental differential form
towknee type linkage
transiences
trematosphaerella oryzae
tumor pedicle
two-channel noise figure
typhoid cell
unfair dismissal
unlearnt
unscaling
who shot John
Wādi'ah
Zmagoslav