AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on Wordmaster, English teacher Lida Baker answers some of your questions.
RS: Starting with this from "Sunny," He Hong
Feng, who asks: "May I say I am an English teacher or should I say I am a
teacher of English, as I am a Chinese."
Listening online or download
Listening online or download
BAKER: "If he says
that he is an ENGLISH teacher, with the stress on the word English, it
means that he is a teacher of the English language. So he is an ENGLISH
teacher. Now, on the other hand, if you say 'I am an ENGLISH TEACHER,'
notice that both of the words there are stressed equally, an ENGLISH
TEACHER. That means that you are a teacher whose nationality is
English. Now I just want to throw out a parallel case, quite a
well-known one, which is: Where does the president of the United States
live?"
AA: "The White House."
BAKER: "The White
House. And you stressed the first word, WHITE House. Now, one the
other hand, if you stressed both words equally and you say WHITE HOUSE,
how would you use that?"
AA: "I live in the white house."
RS: "As opposed to the blue house or the green house."
BAKER: "Correct."
AA: "Moving on, Rick Ming is a junior majoring in English in China,
and he would like to know how to get his classmates more interested in
current affairs. He says: 'Unfortunately, not all my classmates care
about current affairs. So the point is, how I am able to motivate them
to express the views on news freely in class?'"
BAKER:
"People are interested in something or they're not. Most people are
interested in things that are of some kind of relevance to their lives.
So I would say if you want to discuss current events with your
classmates, try to select topics or issues that affect their lives in
one way or another.
"But I suspect that a larger problem
is, it's not that they're not interested in current events, but rather
it may be that his classmates just feel that they don't have enough
English to be able to do this competently. So some ideas that come to
my mind are, instead of talking about, for example, Voice of America
news headlines, to select the feature stories, which have the scripts,
posted on the Internet.
And before having the discussion
with his classmates, each person could read the scripts and that would
give them the opportunity to spend some time learning the vocabulary and
thinking about the background of the topic involved. So that's one
thought that I had.
"Another one that I had was to give
some thought to the linguistic skills that are necessary in order to
sustain a conversation or a discussion in English. If you're talking
about current events with somebody, you would need to know how to
express an opinion. You would need to know how to agree with somebody
or to disagree with somebody. You would need to know how to ask
questions. You would need to know how to ask somebody to repeat what
they have just said, or to explain what they have just said.
"Now all of those how-to's that I've just mentioned are called language
functions. And it might be useful for this student to approach his
English teacher and ask the teacher to help him and his classmates learn
some of these functions."
RS: "It might also be a good idea for him to start a separate study group."
BAKER: "I thought of that."
RS: "A group that perhaps looks at an English language newspaper or looks at the VOA Web site, or -- "
BAKER: "Or a club."
RS: "Or a club, exactly, where interested people come together for this particular purpose."
BAKER: "Sure. One other idea that I had is to make use of the
Internet. There is a Web site, for example, called Dave's ESL Cafe.
And there are all kinds of discussion forums. But if you went to a
search engine and you typed in something like 'ESL discussion groups' I
suspect you would find others as well. So I think it's very worthwhile
to make use of the Internet, you know, via an online discussion group."
RS: "And make new friends."
BAKER: "That's right."
AA: Lida Baker teaches in the American Language Center at the
University of California at Los Angeles -- that is, when she's not
writing books for English learners. Lida can't answer questions
personally, but send them to Rosanne and me.
RS: Write us at
VOA Wordmaster, Washington, DC 20237 USA or word@voanews.com. And our
Web site is voanews.com/wordmaster. With Avi Arditti, I'm Rosanne
Skirble.
(Source: VOA/WORDMASTER)
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