May 30, 2009

Raiders of the Lost Ark opening action sequence

Here's the video that goes with this lesson: Raiders of the Lost Ark passive voice

They cut out the first few minutes and you miss the donkey being tied up and Indy whipping the gun out of the guy's hand. But if you haven't got the movie itself...

Posted by James Trotta at 3:24 AM | Comments (0)

May 24, 2009

Slowmo shopping in Home Depot

Slow motion shopping in Home Depot (in Manhattan). Kind of funny but I want to show my students what these big DIY stores look like because they don't exist in Korea:

Just a little extra just in case... Tony beats up Mikey, uses a stapler, and wipes the prints.


Posted by James Trotta at 1:01 PM | Comments (0)

May 23, 2009

Link to Friends video for discourse activity

This is the middle 7 minutes from the season 3 episode, "The One Where No One's Ready". I use the phone conversation that starts at around 5:00 to about 6:50.

There's nothing wrong with playing from the beginning to give students more context. The whole episode is on Youtube divided into 3 parts. However much of the stuff won't actually help build context so you could just set the scene verbally.

Anyway the conversation is Monica talking to Michelle (after Monica calls Michelle and hangs up on her to check if Richard was seeing someone else - Monica had heard a message from a woman after beeping into Richard's answering machine and wanted to make sure it was his daughter Michelle rather than a new girlfriend. Then when she talks to Michelle, Michelle seems to be threatening to tell her father, Richard, Monica's ex, that Monica beeped into Richard's answering machine and listened to his messages.

Anyway, filling in the missing conversation bits is extremely tough, especially in the middle where Monica wanders off and students have to fill in both speakers' lines.

This is for advanced speakers.

Posted by James Trotta at 4:50 AM | Comments (0)

May 21, 2009

Very tough questions on racism in America

In this article the author complains that the "Empowerment Experiment" - in which black Americans give all their business to other blacks - is being applauded while if whites decided to go only to white businesses they would be branded as racist.

The counter argument is that black Americans don't have the power to be racist in American society: "By definition, racism is the capacity/power to translate prejudice/bigotry into custom, policy or law. Black people have not had the predisposition or the power to oppress White people in this country. Hence the notion of "Black racism" is a contradiction in terms."

Possible discussion questions:

Is it acceptable for black Americans, white Americans, Korean Americans, or any other group to support "their kind"?

When minorities support minorities does this in some way "level the playing field"?

What would you call it if whites decided to "buy white" (give their business to other whites)?

Is black racism a contradiction?

Posted by James Trotta at 3:26 AM | Comments (0)

May 19, 2009

How far behind are US schools?

There are some interesting points in this article. The author argues that the US is not as far behind as we have been led to believe and points out several ways the public has been misled.

However, the author also provides at least some misleading information when comparing the US and South Korea: "South Koreans do have a longer school year, measured in days. But Americans actually spend more time in school. The average U.S. eighth-grader has 1,146 instructional hours a year, compared with 923 hours a year in South Korea."

Before accepting this you might want to know that many Korean high school kids spend a ridiculous amount of time in school - an unhealthy amount of time in school. After the regular school day has ended they go to private institutes or stay in school and study. I often hear stories about students who wake up at 6:00 AM and get home at midnight. I also see high school kids fooling around so it's not all work and no play for everybody...

But my point is that this writer can not be counting the time spent studying after school, either in the school itself or in private institutions or with tutors at home.

Posted by James Trotta at 9:09 AM | Comments (0)

May 17, 2009

More Youtube videos students can practice describing

The Sopranos scenes made for an interesting class. The scenes themselves were pretty surprising. Once I made it clear that I wanted students to be as detailed as possible in their descriptions and that the point was to stretch their vocbularies and use language like 'what do you call it when..." the language production was pretty good. I modeled descriptions of course.

Anyway here are a few more (not from the Sopranos though). The first is a wedding reception garter removal thing which doesn't happen in Korea and probably some other countries so it may interest your students.

The second is a drinking game, which will probably entertain college students. I always called it beer pong and never knew it had another name:

Just for fun, here's a Sopranos one:


Posted by James Trotta at 6:17 AM | Comments (0)

May 11, 2009

Sopranos clips for ESL conversation / discussuion classes

It's tough to find Sopranos scenes for classroom use. But it's fun looking for them and I want to use scenes from the best TV show ever...

This one has no cursing and students can work on telling the story / describing what's going on here:

This one has Bobby buying a train set and getting murdered. I don't think I'll use it but it's not impossible:

This is another murder scene - more graphic than Bobby's - that ends with sh*t. Lots of great stuff for students to describe: Phil talking to his grandkids, Phil getting shot (makes sense to use passive here), The car moving with the babies still inside, the car running over Phil's head, the guy puking...

This is a pretty good one. I didn't hear any curses. There's some action to describe, It should be funny rather than disturbing. If you want to teach "bloody nose" it's perfect...

Here's another funny fight scene from acting class:

Posted by James Trotta at 1:49 PM | Comments (0)

May 10, 2009

Special events in US culture

Wedding photos:

Wake:

Burials:

The first one is not like my experience where people throw in flowers endlessly. The second is longer, has the military flag ceremony, and has everybody holding a single flower which they will, I assume, next place on the casket.

Posted by James Trotta at 11:37 PM | Comments (0)

May 5, 2009

ETS, the Evil Testing Satans, strike again

I hate ETS. I scheduled a GRE for July 2009 and now have to reschedule. So I try to reschedule for July 2010 - which they have in their drop down menu. But choose July or any month in 2010 and they say there are no test dates available. Try another test center and get the same message.

Now it's annoying enough that I have to pay $50 to reschedule. But now it looks like I have to cancel (which means you pay half the test price or $70) and then book a date in 2010 later - whenever their computers let me in (and who knows when that will be?). So the $140 test, which would be $190 if I could reschedule, will end up costing me $210.

All because ETS has a monopoly - and their test isn't even that great!

Posted by James Trotta at 10:31 AM | Comments (0)

May 3, 2009

North American humor

Some jokes to share with students. I think I managed to pick relatively clean clips but with so many dirty jokes out there you never know. Actually the one with a collection of jokes about McCain / Palin definitely gets a bit dirty.


Posted by James Trotta at 3:44 PM | Comments (0)
Finished reading? Get resume writing help or visit these free ESL classes from ESL go.com. Translation services information.

http://www.esl-blog.com/ad_network_236.php