Wednesday, August 22, 2012

An argument




Click here for a script of this Monty Python sketch.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Presentations

Which of the following three presentations from TED.com do you think is best and why? Please leave a comment below.



Thursday, May 31, 2012

Questionnaire Critiquing Task

Clicking on the Word icon below should open up an example of an extremely flawed questionnaire. What problems can you find within it?  What advice can you give me for improving the questionnaire?  Please post your thoughts as comments below.  I'm sure that together we can find at least 10 things to improve.



Meanwhile, two links that you might find useful: Survey Monkey, for creating online questionnaires, and the Academic Phrasebank, for vocabulary that should be useful when writing your project report.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

ESAP at the IA

The purpose of this post is to provide backup for my talk "ESAP at the IA" for the Azeri group of visitors to the International Academy. The following are links to teaching and learning resources:

Monday, October 17, 2011

Vocabulary-related links

Five links to online resources related to vocabulary development are below.  We have looked at all of these together in class:

- The Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary
- The Oxford Collocations Dictionary
- The Academic Word List Highlighter
- Google Fight
- Wordle

Friday, October 14, 2011

Graduate Diploma Week One : Suggested Sources for Reading Diaries


The EconomistFinancial Times, and New Scientist websites are good sources of texts for students to use for reading diaries. Articles you might find interesting from the Economist website right now are:
And from New Scientist (which isn't just for scientists):
You could also visit the BBCGuardianIndependent, or Telegraph websites for current news stories.  The Guardian, for example, has a story about how rents in Britain have become unaffordable for many families and a bizarre tale of a man who somehow managed to use a shark as a surfboard.

Reading lists from the university module directory are also a good indicator of the types of texts students need to deal with in their postgraduate studies.  For more general news from the University,Essex Quarterly is an interesting publication with short articles, primarily about research conducted at the university.

Thursday, September 01, 2011

Error correction : choosing the active or passive voice


The problems in the following examples relate to your choice of either the passive or active voice for your verb phrases.  Can you identify the problems and suggest corrections as comments below?

1. The Olympic Games with its long history has always been attracted by people as an entertaining and social event

2. 44,000 women diagnosed with breast cancer annually in the UK

3. Protein foods are advised to be included in your breakfast since it provides sustained energy and takes longer to digest

4. Skipping breakfast become an issue to be widely discussed

5. missions are always taken place in the most difficult situations.  

6. it is not justified for the government to provide more funding for dementia

Error correction : referencing


Can you see any problems with the following examples from your writing?  Look for examples of ACCORDING TO in an article you are reading for your project and tell me (via comments below) what you think is wrong with these examples.  How would you correct them?

1. According to (Essex Quarterly, 2011) over 44,000 women diagnosed with breast cancer annually in the UK, while 12,500 women die every year from the disease.

2. According to the research published in Essex Quarterly, the study was conducted on more than 4,000 children by looking at key factors contributing to their general health included weight and physical activity.

3.According to “fighting the demon of dementia”, the author states that 820,000 people in the UK suffer from dementia and the number will increase to one million in 2025 and two billion in 2050.

New Month, New Season...same old mistakes?


In class we looked at noun phrases and collocations.  In terms of collocations, we decided identified some good, bad, and funny expressions, but with some correction we arrived at the following beautiful examples:

- provide Halal chicken monthly
- repair a badly broken camera
- desperately need unconditional love
- ask a terrible question
- smell fresh flowers
- found an international organisation
- decorate a Christmas tree
- boycott drive-through McDonalds
- punish a (not particularly) smart thief

We also attempted to correct some collocation errors from your writing.  Can you suggest any better alternatives than the following?  Write your suggestions as comments underneath:
  1. Go through a challenge
  2. Opinionated questions
  3. Manage harder
  4. Wrong habitual eating styles
  5. Very necessary
  6. Before I received my first child
  7. Less quality alternative
  8. Make more research

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

From the sewers of Paris to polished complex sentences

 






TASK ONE:

Nineteen rings and three sets of earrings were dug up from a drain.
The drain was at a house.
The house is in a suburb.
The suburb is called Seine-Saint-Denis.
The suburb is a working-class area.
One of the pairs of earrings has a value of £14m.
All of this information comes from the police.

CREATE A COMPLEX SENTENCE (aim for 31 words)

TASK TWO:
Nine people were charged over the robbery.

The house belonged to a person.
The person was one of the robbers.

CREATE A COMPLEX SENTENCE (aim for 13 words)

TASK THREE:
The Harry Winston boutique is on a street
The street is off the Champs-Elysées Avenue
The Champs-Elysees Avenue is dotted with fashion houses.
The Champs-Elysees Avenue is dotted with cafes.
CREATE A COMPLEX SENTENCE (aim for 20 words)

Post your answers as comments below and I will get back to you...

Friday, August 12, 2011

Complex sentence exploration : relative clauses

All of the following sentences were given to me as examples of relative clauses.  Leave a comment if you think any of them DO NOT contain a relative clause:

  1. The importance of information technology (IT), especially of the World Wide Web, in tourism has increased tremendously over the past years.
  2. The former wanted the convention amended to oblige states to submit nomination lists containing candidates from both sexes.
  3. Each Convention Party nominates three candidates, whom it considers satisfy the criteria for office laid down by Article 21 of the Convention.
  4. What is new is the accelerating speed with which it occurs and the growing outreach of its implications.
  5. The information from the contracting parties disclosed that only three had legislation requiring egalitarian representation of both sexes in their highest courts.
  6. Each Convention Party nominates three candidates, whom it considers satisfy the criteria for office laid down by Article 21 of the Convention.
  7. They are only true about the teachers I have interviewed and the high school classes I have observed.

Complex sentence exploration : miscellaneous

Students found some interesting complex sentences in their reading.  Some were difficult to categorise, and some were just plain difficult.  Read the 5 examples below, and leave a comment telling me a) what types of complex structure you find in each sentence, and b) if you think any of these sentences are particularly difficult to understand.
  1. Nowhere in the convention is it stipulated that one candidate belonging to the sex which is under-represented in the court must feature in the list.
  2. Several protestors, former Conservative voters, declared themselves as having been “pushed to the left” by their experiences.
  3. Others mentioned the issue of live exports as only one of the reasons why they felt they had to be there.
  4. Foreign language educationalists and cultural linguists believe that foreign language learning cannot occur properly unless the socio-cultural aspect of the foreign language is learnt simultaneously because the mere acquisition of linguistic competence is not enough.
  5. This study also hypothesizes that raising high school EFL teachers’ awareness of the autonomous and ideological concepts of communicative competence is likely to help them see their teaching activities lean towards the autonomous model of communicative competence.

Complex sentence exploration : wh- noun clauses

I'm finding it hard to forget Hakan's "it's a mystery; why?", but in class we produced some good examples of wh- noun clauses like "It's a mystery why nobody likes English food" and "Everybody knows who won the women's world cup this year".  Look at the following examples students found in their reading texts, and leave a comment if you think any are NOT good examples of wh- noun clauses:

  1. Most of the problems organizations face today when designing and implementing online strategies stem from trying to fit everything into existing structures and models.
  2. The assembly decides to investigate at national and European level what obstacles currently exist to the nomination of women candidates, what measures could be taken to encourage female applicants, and to consider setting targets for achieving greater gender equality in the composition of the court.
  3. Empirical data on how these camps affect…
  4. The primary issue for the Grand Chamber was whether the questions posed were within its Advisory Opinion jurisdiction
  5. The participants were male and non-native speakers of English, two of whom had a BA degree and one had an MA degree in TEFL.