Saturday, January 31, 2009

Week 5 task: Heroes




Welcome to our Week 5 task,
which I've decided to call
'Heroes'.

We'll do it in different stages over several days.

The aims of this task are:

1. To practice reading and listening to authentic English-language texts.
2. To write a description of a personal 'hero'.
3. To read classmates' descriptions and comment on them.

When you're reading my blog and you see a word highlighted like this, it's a word that I think might be new or unfamiliar to you. Look these words up in the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary Online
(which you'll find here: http://www.oup.com/elt/catalogue/teachersites/oald7/?cc=global) and write them down in your notebook or on a vocabulary card.

DAY ONE
Activity 1: What is a 'hero'?
  • Work in pairs.
  • Go to the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary Online and search for 'hero'.
  • Does the definition sound a bit sexist? What's the feminine equivalent of 'hero'?
  • How many different definitions are given? Aim #2 above says that you're going to write a description of a personal hero, so which definition is most appropriate for this task?
Activity 2: Who are your heroes?
  • Work in pairs.
  • Think of a person you admire because of a particular quality or skill that they have. For this task, because you're going to research them on the internet, choose a public figure, not a family member or friend. Think of the following:
  1. Who are they?
  2. What biographical information do you know about them?
  3. Why do you admire them?
  • Tell your partner about the person you've chosen, thinking about the answers to questions 1-3 above.
Activity 3: Read about one of my heroes, Neil Young
  • Work in pairs.
  • Below is a description of one of my heroes, Neil Young. I'd like you to read it and then discuss these two questions with your partner:
  1. What do I admire about Neil Young?
  2. What is the significance of the sub-title, "Burning, but not burning out"?
  • Add a comment at the end of this blog post telling me the answers to the questions.
  • Check the words highlighted like this using the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary Online (see link above).
NEIL YOUNG:
Burning,
but not burning out

Neil Young is a legendary musician from Canada who sings, writes songs and plays a number of instruments (acoustic and electric guitar, harmonica, organ and piano). I've been listening to his music for most of my life; I can't remember when I first heard his name or his music. My parents used to play his music in the house as I was growing up, particularly one of his albums, Comes A Time, that was released in 1978, the year I was born. I guess that's where the connection really started.

I really started to pay attention to Neil Young in 1993, when I saw him performing live on MTV with Pearl Jam, my favourite band at that time (you can watch the performance of Neil's song 'Rockin' in the Free World' here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OF1kCpCl9a4; and read the lyrics to the song here: http://www.thrasherswheat.org/fot/lyrics_ritfw.htm). Pearl Jam revealed that they were heavily influenced by Neil Young and his music, and this intrigued me: what was it about him that my younger musical idols found so inspiring?

Since then, I've been slowly collecting his albums (I now own about 18 of them) and I've seen him perform live twice (in 2003 and on January 21st this year - one of the best concerts I've ever been to). Recently, I've been reading an excellent biography of him and been listening to his music more than ever (actually, my wife Chrissie, who loves his music as well, is fed up with me playing his music around the house all the time at the moment!).

Musically, his long career (his first album was released in 1966!) is an inspiration. Even at the age of 63, he attacks his instrument with an energy and passion that surpasses most musicians a third of his age and, over the last 40 or so years, he has lost none of his skill or intensity. Even in 2009, he's still making some of the loudest, angriest and rawest music of his career. If you look at him onstage with Pearl Jam in that YouTube clip from 1993 - the members of Pearl Jam just stand back and watch him in awe!

In 1979, at the age of 34, he sang, "It's better to burn out than to fade away." Ever since Kurt Cobain quoted it famously in his 1994 suicide note, it has undoubtedly been not only his most well-known lyric, but also his most misunderstood. In my opinion, it means that you should live your entire life with passion and energy, rather than slowly lose that passion and energy as you get older and die unsatisfied and unfulfilled. I think there's a lot of truth in that statement.

His passion and energy is not limited to his music. His other major obsessions are vintage cars and model trains! In fact, he has used his talent for engineering and electronics to design, among other things, an electronic model train control system for use by disabled people. This was inspired by his son Ben, who was born with cerebral palsy and cannot speak.

Neil Young actually has two sons with cerebral palsy, though his elder son Zeke's condition is not as severe as Ben's. When Ben was born in 1980, Young's life and musical career was thrown into turmoil. Throughout the previous decade, he had experienced massive success, but now he had to balance his musical ambitions with his total determination to help his son. As a result, his career and reputation fell into a major decline that lasted most of the 1980s. Many of his fans and his record company became disillusioned with him and many abandoned him completely. Out of love and respect for his son, though, he never discussed the cause of this decline with anyone else.

In addition to his commitment to do the best for his sons, Young and his wife Pegi have done a lot of valuable work for a various charities, much of which they have shunned recognition or publicity for.

What all this adds up to, then, is a man who has spent the last 40-plus years refusing to fade away and, in 2009, is still as energetic and impassioned as ever. Long may he run.


Activity 4: Grammar in context
  • Work in pairs.
  • Look again at the text above and, with your partner's help, identify all the examples of Present Perfect Simple and Present Perfect Continuous verb forms. Write them down in your notebook.
  • Discuss with your partner these questions:
Why did I use that tense?
Why didn't I use other tenses?

For example, in the first paragraph, I used Present Perfect Continuous in this sentence: "I've been listening to his music for most of my life." Why didn't I use Present Perfect Simple ("I've listened..."), Past Simple ("I listened..."), Past Perfect Simple ("I'd listened), Past Perfect Continuous ("I'd been listening...) or Present Continuous ("I''m listening...")?


WHEN YOU HAVE FINISHED THIS ACTIVITY, WE'LL RETURN TO CLASS AND DISCUSS THESE ACTIVITIES TOGETHER.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Welcome to the world of blog!

Good morning Higher Intermediate students and
welcome to my blog, the Unity of Opposites!

This morning, I'd like you to start your own blog. If you've done this before, it will be pretty easy. If you haven't done it before, it shouldn't be too hard to learn. I've written a blog before but I've never asked students to start in class, so this might be a bit of an experiment for all of us! :-)

There are several purposes to this activity:

1. For you to practice reading, listening and writing (well, typing really!) in English.

2. To practice listening to and following instructions in English.

3. To encourage you to communicate regularly in English.

4. For you to interact with classmates in English in a new way.

5. For you to express yourselves in a more 'free' way than might be possible in class.

6. To provide some variety to your English studies.

I hope you enjoy doing it and get something out of it personally. It'd also be great to see you continue your blog after today. If, however, it's not really your cup of tea and you're not very keen on it, that's fine; just focus on purpose #1 above (to practice reading, listening and writing in English).

There's just one simple rule that I'd like you to follow:

Don't include anything that might offend others (e.g., swearing, negative personal comments) - remember that other people in the class will read your blog.


What to do

1. First, have a look at another blog. This is an interesting one: http://thetravelphotographer.blogspot.com/

1. The next thing to do is to start creating your own, so put the headphones on, and have a look at this short instructional video: http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=BnploFsS_tY

2. Then, following the instructions in the video, create your own blog.

3. When you are ready to start writing your blog, open Microsoft Word and begin writing your response to the following tasks in a Word document:

Imagine you had more time each week to do the things you enjoy. Write about how you would spend that time (e.g., If I had more time, first of all I think I would have some piano lessons.)

Think about major decisions you have made in the past. Imagine if you had made a different choice. Explain to another student what you think you might have done. (e.g., If I hadn't come to Australia, I would have stayed in my country and I'd probably be still working.)

4. Use Word to improve your grammar, punctuation and spelling (if something is underlined in red, the spelling is wrong; if something is underlined in green, the grammar or punctuation is wrong). Ask me for help if necessary.

5. Copy your text from Word into the 'Edit post' area of Blogger and when you're happy with it, click the 'Publish Post' button.

6. When you've finished your blog, it's time to share it with me and your classmates. Come back to my blog and click on the 'Follow this blog' link in the top right hand corner, under the 'Unity of Opposites' title. Choose to 'Follow publicly' and click 'Follow'.

7. Click on the other people who are 'following' my blog so you can read their blogs. Comment on the blogs you read.

And that's it! I hope you've had fun

and I look forward to reading your blogs :-)