Friday, June 18, 2010
MAN vs WOMAn
I had a very exciting discussion earlier with my Philippine literature class. We discussed three stories that talked about man and woman. A debate emerged as we tried to compare and identify how these two lived then and now. There was a point stressed about what men and women should choose-love or brain. Its an issue all sexes had been debating about for quiet a time. I have never sided with any of these issues since before, i see the importance of what men can do and what women can. Its just that, its interesting to know that issues like these really matter and can really be of a great way of letting your students express how they feel about themselves.
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Art - General Ideas
Aside from English and Literature, I am currently teaching ARTS and Humanities. I was browsing the net for some ideas how to present topics in a more creative and fun way for me and my students. These are just some of the suggestions i found. You may as well use them in in any of your classes because these are not only for one specific subject area. Have fun using these strategies. ==> click here
Monday, May 10, 2010
Stories For Us
check this website i recently bumped into..its everything about life... Where faith, family and fun collide...click here
Friday, May 7, 2010
Basic English Sentence Structure
Basic English Sentence Structure
Basic word order in English [Subject --- Verb --- Object]
Mary likes Dave.Subject=Mary
Verb = likes
Object = Dave
Word order is very important in English because there is very little "case marking" --- a subject and an object have the same form (except for pronouns).
For example, the sentence "Mary likes Dave." does not have the same meaning as "Dave likes Mary."
The Subject (the person who "likes") comes before the verb.
The Object (the person who receives the action of the verb) comes after the verb.
Some verbs are Transitive, that is they take an object. For example, the verb "to want" always takes an object. It would be incorrect to say "Mary wants." We must complete the sentence with an object: "Mary wants a ball."
The Object of a Transitive Verb may be a prepositional phrase, a noun phrase, or a sentence complement.
Prepositional Phrase as Object: Mary sleeps on the couch.
Noun Phrase as Object: Mary holds a doll.
Sentence Complement as Object: Mary wishes that Jim would come home.
A few Transitive Verbs take two Objects, a Noun Phrase and a Prepositional Phrase.
Noun Phrase and Prepositional Phrase as Object: Mary puts the purse on the table.
Basic word order in a Sentence with a Verb that does not take an Object [Subject --- Verb]
John cried.Subject = John
Verb = cried
An Intransitive Verb does not take an object. For example, the sentence "John cried." does not have an Object. The verb "to cry" is Intransitive. English has very few verbs that are always Intransitive. The main test of intransitivity is whether the verb resists taking a prepositional phrase. Some grammar systems classify Transitive and Intransitive verbs differently than I have done here, ruling out location as a test to prove transitivity.
Many verbs may be Transitive or Intransitive.
He sang. (Intransitive)
He sang a song. (Transitive)
Basic word order with an Indirect Object [Subject --- Verb --- Indirect Object --- Object]
Mary gives John the ball.Subject = Mary
Verb = gives
Indirect Object = John
Direct Object = the ball
Alternate word order with an Indirect Object is [Subject --- Verb --- Object --- Indirect Object]
In this sentence order, the Indirect Object must be part of a prepositional phrase. An example is the sentence "Mary gives the ball to John."Subject = Mary
Verb = gives
Indirect Object = the ball (a Noun Phrase = Determiner "the" + Noun "ball")
Direct Object = to John (a Prepositional Phrase = Preposition "to" + Noun "John")
Word order with an Auxiliary [Subject --- Aux --- Verb --- Indirect Object --- Direct Object]
If a sentence has an Auxiliary (will, have, been, or other auxiliaries), the standard position for the auxiliary is before the verb. Examples are "Mary will give John the ball." and "Mary has given John the ball."Word order with Negation and Auxiliary [Subject --- Aux --- Neg --- Verb --- Indirect Object --- Direct Object]
If a sentence has Negation and an Auxiliary the standard position for the negation is between the Aux and the Verb. Examples are "Mary will not give John the ball." and "Mary has not given John the ball."Word order with Multiple Auxiliaries
If a sentence has more than one Auxiliary, the order of auxiliaries is determined by the verb form. To see a list of the verb tenses, and the future form, click here to go to my short story using the tenses "It's Sleepytime, Nighty Night, Sis"Sentence Transformations
According to a major linguistic theory called "Transformational Grammar", all English sentences can be reduced to a structure called the "deep structure" of the sentence. The deep structure of every English sentence can by traced back to one of the four patterns above (with additions for auxiliaries or negation as necessary). Every sentence has a "deep structure" and a "surface structure." Sometimes, as in the examples above for basic structure, the surface structure of a sentence is the same as the deep structure of the sentence. When the surface structure of a sentence is different from the deep structure, the surface structure has been arrived at by moving parts of the deep structure of the sentence, "transforming" it.A useful textbook explaining this theory is Introducing Transformational Grammar: From Rules to Principles and Parameters by Jamal Ouhalla, published by Edward Arnold: London, 1994 (ISBN 0-340-55630-7)
The clue that a sentence has a different surface structure than deep structure is a comma. (A comma has others uses too, for example, it is the clue that two structures are in parallel coordination.)
Let's look at the surface structure "This problem, I can solve." First, we see by the comma that something has been moved out of deep structure order. The deep structure is "I can solve this problem."
Subject=I
Auxilliary=can
Verb=solve
Object=Noun Phrase=this problem (Determiner=this + Noun=problem)
In the sentence "This problem, I can solve." the Object (this problem) has been pulled to the front of the sentence for the purpose of focus. This is called "fronting."
Usually a "constituent" must be moved as a whole when transforming a sentence from deep structure to surface structure. The following sentence with part of the Noun Phrase constituent moved would be incorrect (shown with the symbol *)
*Problem, I can solve this.
Grammatical errors occur when parts of constituents are separated from each other in movement, or moved to the wrong place in the word order. Sometimes the best way to untangle the sentence is return it to deep structure and re-word it.
http://www.speak-read-write.com/grammar1.html
Monday, April 26, 2010
Dangling Modifiers
Basic Principle: Modifiers are like teenagers: they fall in love with whatever they're next to. Make sure they're next to something they ought to modify!
MISPLACED MODIFIER: Some modifiers, especially simple modifiers — only, just, nearly, barely — have a bad habit of slipping into the wrong place in a sentence. (In the sentence below, what does it mean to "barely kick" something?)
| Confusion | He barely kicked that ball twenty yards. |
| Repair Work | He kicked that ball barely twenty yards. |
DANGLING MODIFIER: When we begin a sentence with a modifying word, phrase, or clause, we must make sure the next thing that comes along can, in fact, be modified by that modifier. When a modifier improperly modifies something, it is called a "dangling modifier." This often happens with beginning participial phrases, making "dangling participles" an all too common phenomenon. In the sentence below, we can't have a car changing its own oil.
| Confusion | Changing the oil every 3,000 miles, the car seemed to run better. |
| Repair Work | Changing the oil every 3,000 miles, Fred found he could get much better gas mileage. |
A participial phrase followed by an Expletive Construction will often be a dangling participle — but the expletive construction is probably not a good idea anyway. This faulty sentence can be remedied by changing the participial phrase into a full-fledged clause with a subject and verb.
| Confusion | Changing the oil every 3,000 miles, there is an easy way to keep your car running smoothly. |
| Repair Work | If we change the oil every 3,000 miles, we can keep our car running smoothly. |
A participial phrase followed by a Passive Verb is also apt to be a dangler because the real actor of the sentence will be disguised.
| Confusion | Changing the oil every 3,000 miles, the car was kept in excellent condition. |
| Repair Work | Changing the oil every 3,000 miles, we kept the car in excellent condition. |
An infinitive phrase can also "dangle." The infinitive phrase below should probably modify the person(s) who set up the exercise program.
| Confusion | To keep the young recruits interested in getting in shape, an exercise program was set up for the summer months. |
| Repair Work | To keep the young recruits interested in getting in shape, the coaching staff set up an exercise program for the summer months. |
SQUINTING MODIFIER: A third problem in modifier placement is described as a "squinting modifier." This is an unfortunate result of an adverb's ability to pop up almost anywhere in a sentence; structurally, the adverb may function fine, but its meaning can be obscure or ambiguous. For instance, in the sentence below, do the students seek advice frequently or can they frequently improve their grades by seeking advice? You can't tell from that sentence because the adverb often is "squinting" (you can't tell which way it's looking). Let's try placing the adverb elsewhere.
| Confusion | Students who seek their instructors' advice often can improve their grades. |
| Repair Work | Student who often seek their instructors' advice can improve their grades. |
| Repair Work | Students who seek their instructors' advice can often improve their grades. |
Saturday, April 24, 2010
mouse trap
A mouse looked through a crack in the wall to see the farmer and his wife opening a package. What food might it contain?
He was aghast to discover that it was a mouse trap. Retreating to the farmyard the mouse proclaimed the warning:
"There is a mouse trap in the house, a mouse trap in the house!"
The chicken clucked and scratched, raised her head and said, "Excuse me, Mr. Mouse, I can tell this is a grave concern to you, but it is of no consequence to me. I cannot be bothered by it."
The mouse turned to the pig and told him, "There is a mouse trap in the house, a mouse trap in the house!"
"I am so very sorry Mr. Mouse," sympathized the pig, "but there is nothing I can do about it but pray. Be assured that you are in my prayers."
The mouse turned to the cow. She said, "You say, Mr. Mouse. A mouse trap? Like I am in grave danger....NOT!"
He was aghast to discover that it was a mouse trap. Retreating to the farmyard the mouse proclaimed the warning:
"There is a mouse trap in the house, a mouse trap in the house!"
The chicken clucked and scratched, raised her head and said, "Excuse me, Mr. Mouse, I can tell this is a grave concern to you, but it is of no consequence to me. I cannot be bothered by it."
The mouse turned to the pig and told him, "There is a mouse trap in the house, a mouse trap in the house!"
"I am so very sorry Mr. Mouse," sympathized the pig, "but there is nothing I can do about it but pray. Be assured that you are in my prayers."
The mouse turned to the cow. She said, "You say, Mr. Mouse. A mouse trap? Like I am in grave danger....NOT!"
So the mouse returned to the house, head down and dejected, to face the farmer's mouse trap alone.
That very night a sound was heard throughout the house, like the sound of a mouse trap catching its prey.
The farmer's wife rushed to see what was caught. In the darkness, she did not see that it was a venomous snake whose tail the trap had caught. The snake bit the farmer's wife..
The farmer rushed her to the hospital. She returned home with a fever.
Now everyone knows you treat a fever with fresh chicken soup, so the farmer took his hatchet to the farmyard for the soup's main ingredient.
His wife's sickness continued so that friends and neighbors came to sit with her around the clock. To feed them, the farmer butchered the pig.
The farmer's wife did not get well and a few days later she passed away.
So many people came for her funeral, that the farmer had the cow slaughtered, to provide meat for all of them to eat.
So the next time you hear that someone is facing a problem and think that it does not concern you, remember that when the least of us is threatened, we all may be at risk.
That very night a sound was heard throughout the house, like the sound of a mouse trap catching its prey.
The farmer's wife rushed to see what was caught. In the darkness, she did not see that it was a venomous snake whose tail the trap had caught. The snake bit the farmer's wife..
The farmer rushed her to the hospital. She returned home with a fever.
Now everyone knows you treat a fever with fresh chicken soup, so the farmer took his hatchet to the farmyard for the soup's main ingredient.
His wife's sickness continued so that friends and neighbors came to sit with her around the clock. To feed them, the farmer butchered the pig.
The farmer's wife did not get well and a few days later she passed away.
So many people came for her funeral, that the farmer had the cow slaughtered, to provide meat for all of them to eat.
So the next time you hear that someone is facing a problem and think that it does not concern you, remember that when the least of us is threatened, we all may be at risk.
Thursday, April 22, 2010
ESL Sites
these are the English sites i recommend. My advocacy is to teach and learn English in its simplest way. Hope this will help
changingminds.org
englishlessons4free.com
changingminds.org
englishlessons4free.com
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Strategies in Reading
Making Connections
Questioning
Visualizing
Inferring
Determining Importance
Synthesizing
Strategy - Making Connections
Students connect their background knowledge to the text they are reading.
Purpose of the strategy:
Readers comprehend better when they actively think about and apply their knowledge of the book's topic, their own experiences, and the world around them. Stephanie Harvey and Anne Goudvis in their book, Strategies that Work (2000, p. 68), state that, "When children understand how to connect the text they read to their lives, they begin to make connections between what they read and the larger world. This nudges them into thinking about bigger, more expansive issues beyond their universe of home, school and neighborhood."
How to help your child use this strategy:
To help your child make connections while they are reading, ask him/her the following questions:
• What does the book remind you of?
• What do you know about the book's topic?
• Does this book remind you of another book?
Strategy - Questioning
Through the use of questioning, students understand the text on a deeper level because questions clarify confusion and stimulate further interest in a topic.
Purpose of the strategy:
Through questioning, students are able to wonder about content and concepts before, during and after reading by:
• constructing meaning
• enhancing meaning
• finding answers
• solving problems
• finding specific information
• acquiring a body of information
• discovering new information
• propelling research efforts
• clarifying confusion
(Strategies that Work, 2000, p.22)
How to help your child use this strategy:
• model questioning in your own rereading
• ask I wonder....questions (open-ended)
• ask your child to come up with questions before reading to see if it's answered in the text
• keep track of questions
....verbally
.....in an informal question log
• stop and predict what will happen next
• discuss what questions you still have after reading
Strategy - Visualizing
Students create mind pictures and visualizations when they read.
Purpose of the strategy:
The reader uses the text material and their own prior knowledge to create their own mind pictures of what is happening in the text. "Visualizing personalizes reading, keeps us engaged and often prevents us from abandoning a book." (Strategies that Work, 2000, p.97).
How to help your child use this strategy:
To help you child visualize while reading, try the following:
• share wordless picture books with your child - have your child tell the story
• make frequent stops while reading aloud to describe the pictures in your minds
• after reading time at home have your child draw what they see in their mind
Strategy - Inferring
Students make inferences about text they are reading to interpret meaning an develop deeper understanding.
Purpose of the strategy:
Readers comprehend better when they make connections and construct their own knowledge (using prior experiences, visualizing, predicting and synthesizing) to interpret the "big idea." It is like a mental dialogue between the author and the student.
How to help your child use this strategy:
Ask them:
• How did you know that?
• Why did you think that would happen?
• Look at the cover and pictures then make predictions
• Discuss the plot and theme.
What do you think this story was about?
•How do you think the character feels?
Does it remind you of anything?
•These ideas are really a discussion to have with you child emphasizing one or two of the above ideas.
Strategy - Determining Importance
When students are reading non-fiction they have to decide and remember what is important from the material they read.
Purpose of the strategy:
To teach students to discriminate the "must know" information from the less important details in a text. "When kids read and understand nonfiction, they build background for the topic and acquire new knowledge. The ability to identify essential ideas and salient information is a prerequisite to developing insight." (Strategies that Work, 2000, p. 119).
How to help your child use this strategy:
To help you child determine importance while they are reading:
• Initiate discussion before reading by asking what your child knows about the topic and what they would like to learn.
• After reading discuss what important information they have learned.
• While reading help your child look for clues in the text to determine importance. Pay attention to:
•first and last lines of a paragraph
•titles
•headings
•captions
•framed text
•fonts
•illustrations
•italics
•bold faced print
Strategy - Synthesizing
Students weave together what they read and their own ideas into new, complete thoughts.
Purpose of the strategy:
Readers comprehend better when they sift through information to make sense of it and act upon it, such as judging or evaluating the authors purpose to form a new idea, opinion, or perspective. This is the highest and most complex forms of comprehension.
How to help your child use this strategy:
• Use questioning strategies such as, "How has your thinking changed from reading that piece?"
• Discuss current event with an emphasis on judgments and opinions.
• Ask questions with no clear answers.
http://www.pleasanton.k12.ca
Questioning
Visualizing
Inferring
Determining Importance
Synthesizing
Strategy - Making Connections
Students connect their background knowledge to the text they are reading.
• What does the book remind you of?
• What do you know about the book's topic?
• Does this book remind you of another book?
Strategy - Questioning
• constructing meaning
• enhancing meaning
• finding answers
• solving problems
• finding specific information
• acquiring a body of information
• discovering new information
• propelling research efforts
• clarifying confusion
(Strategies that Work, 2000, p.22)
• ask I wonder....questions (open-ended)
• ask your child to come up with questions before reading to see if it's answered in the text
• keep track of questions
....verbally
.....in an informal question log
• stop and predict what will happen next
• discuss what questions you still have after reading
Strategy - Visualizing
• share wordless picture books with your child - have your child tell the story
• make frequent stops while reading aloud to describe the pictures in your minds
• after reading time at home have your child draw what they see in their mind
Strategy - Inferring
• How did you know that?
• Why did you think that would happen?
• Look at the cover and pictures then make predictions
• Discuss the plot and theme.
What do you think this story was about?
•How do you think the character feels?
Does it remind you of anything?
•These ideas are really a discussion to have with you child emphasizing one or two of the above ideas.
Strategy - Determining Importance
• Initiate discussion before reading by asking what your child knows about the topic and what they would like to learn.
• After reading discuss what important information they have learned.
• While reading help your child look for clues in the text to determine importance. Pay attention to:
•first and last lines of a paragraph
•titles
•headings
•captions
•framed text
•fonts
•illustrations
•italics
•bold faced print
Strategy - Synthesizing
• Discuss current event with an emphasis on judgments and opinions.
• Ask questions with no clear answers.
http://www.pleasanton.k12.ca
Monday, April 19, 2010
journalism
here's the link i have chosen for your practice test in Journalism
http://www.netc-navy.edu.ph/requirements/requirements1/JO3.pdf
http://www.netc-navy.edu.ph/requirements/requirements1/JO3.pdf
tip that helps
WHAT IS PREDICTING?
Definition: when a reader uses the text to decide what will happen next. Readers can justify, confirm, or deny their predictions by using support from the text. This reading strategy assists in making meaning out of text.
- Readers begin the process of predicting by previewing the text that they are going to read. They activate relevant background knowledge about the topic by looking for:
- – Familiar words, pictures, and topics asking questions may guide student’s predictions about future events, characters, and purpose for the text.
Using Prior Knowledge in Predicting Outcomes While Reading
Predicting outcomes is practiced during the act of reading. Children make logical guesses about what will happen later in a story based upon their understanding of text-based clues and their prior knowledge.
Predicting outcomes is similar to using the strategy of inference. When predicting outcomes and making inferences, children must find stated, text-based clues and integrate them with their prior knowledge. Predicting outcomes may be thought of as "forward inference" because children examine a stated cause and infer an effect that has not yet been stated. When making an inference, on the other hand, children analyze a stated effect and must infer its cause.
Predicting outcomes can be used to monitor reading comprehension. Once children have made their predictions, they continue reading to verify their hypotheses. Based on this information, children make new predictions. This process continues until they reach the end of the selection, at which point they verify and evaluate as many predictions as possible.
WHY USE PREDICTING?
- After a prediction is made the student now has a purpose for reading; to confirm or disprove their prediction. They are actively engaged in the author’s meaning, which gives them motivation to read. Students now can expand their schema on the topic they are reading about by linking their prior knowledge with new knowledge.
- By making predictions, readers are using the following processes:
– Prior knowledge
– thinking on a literal and inferential level
– adding to their knowledge base
– making connections
– monitoring comprehension
– filling the gaps in the author's writing
Before Reading Readers must make logical predictions based on information from the text and their prior knowledge
Fictional text structures:
– Characters
– Setting
– Problem/Resolution
– Theme or lesson
Nonfiction text structures:
– Text headings
– Illustrations
– Maps
– Captions
– Tables
These structures assist students in making logical predictions about their reading. Previewing what they will be reading by discussing text features and using graphic
organizers provides students with visual clues for
predicting.
THE ROAD NOT TAKEN
THE ROAD NOT TAKEN
BY ROBERT FROST
Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;
Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,
And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;
Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,
And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
Saturday, January 16, 2010
chapter 3
getting ready to write my chapter 3. time is running so fast and we were already scheduled for our title proposal on the 27th next month. excited and nervous! my paper is still a mess.
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
Speak Up: First Things First
Hey guys, it's your first time to write and speak up your mind. I want you to write anything about our first day of classes. What you think are those that interests you and what's not.
What about?
Students will be blogging about their experience as language learners and teachers as well will be using these blogs as a means to exchange ideas and opinions. We hope that you can join us!
This blog will be used as a portal to access the students' blogs as well as a means to present the week's blogging topics and showcase interesting student posts.
This blog will be used as a portal to access the students' blogs as well as a means to present the week's blogging topics and showcase interesting student posts.
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