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Spanish lessons in Lima Peru - Hispana
BASIC AND PRE-INTERMEDIATE LEVELS
• Familiarity with commonly used questions and phrases, while immersed in a new culture.
• Study of basic communicative and functional vocabulary.
• Use of games, mimicry
• Use of visual material
• Use of materials such as short newspaper articles, advertisements, literary texts, greeting cards, etc.
INTERMEDIATE LEVELS I AND II
• Use of more authentic material: movies, newspapers and documentaries in Spanish.
• Only Spanish is spoken in the classroom; the students’ native language is only used in emergency situations.
ADVANCED AND SUPERIOR LEVELS
• Use of materials exhibiting different Spanish levels.
• Use of short stories, interviews, etc.
• Special focus is placed on the use of idiomatic expressions.
• Comprehension and use of proverbs and idioms both spoken and written.
• Review of Spanish syntax with particular emphasis on the specific problems of each student.
The Elmwood Playhouse in Nyack NY will be presenting “A Lesson Before Dying“, running March 17th thru April 8th Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm, Sundays at 2pm with an additional performance on Thursday April 6th at 8pm. For tickets visit www.elmwoodplayhouse.com [photo by Scott Nangle]
BAGHDAD- Using a ratchet and a wrench, Pvt. Ali Kitab Sarhan, 11th Iraqi Army, tightens the bracket that holds the rearview mirror in place on their Badger. Sarhan was one of six Iraqi Soldiers who attended a Badger maintenance class, here on Victory Base Complex, Jan. 7. The class was taught by three Soldiers of the 101st Engineer Battalion. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. April Mota, 101st Eng. Bn. UPAR, 16th Eng. Bde., USD-C)
I'll call this finished for now. I am thinking it is too easy to keep "piddling" with this one. This was a great learning experience. I think I actually felt something CLICK while I was painting one day! Thanks, Nel!
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This is no where near what Pam was expecting I'm sure. I love doing teeth. Yes, Supergirl was a childhood hero!
Sailing Lessons at Upper Mill Pond. A great Town of Brewster program.
Brewster, Massachusetts - Cape Cod
Canon 7D
Photo by brucetopher
© Bruce Christopher 2012
All Rights Reserved
Please email for usage info.
the ball in question. this is the shot i was going for when the cats joined me.
lesson one: a study of light and shadow, colour, and shape.
who knew pilates equipment could be so arty?
An A level lesson about electric fields. An early digital projector, showing a computer simulation is on the left while overhead projectors show handwritten notes on the right and a live demonstration at the centre. The demonstration uses small seed grains, suspended in oil, which behave as electric dipoles in a high voltage field, revealing the field patterns.
Overhead projectors have pretty much disappeared now and live demonstrations are becoming a threatened species too (according to visitors), although Monmouth School's science departments remain committed to 'hands on' science.
During my second year of nursing school our professor gave us a quiz. I breezed through the questions until I read the last one: "What is the first name of the woman who cleans the school?" Surely this was a joke. I had seen the cleaning woman several times, but how would I know her name? I handed in my paper, leaving the last question blank. Before the class ended, one student asked if the last question would count toward our grade. "Absolutely," the professor said. "In your careers, you will meet many people. All are significant. They deserve your attention and care, even if all you do is smile and say hello." I've never forgotten that lesson. I also learned her name was Dorothy. ~Joann C. Jones
That's one way to describe Zoe, and "tough as an old boot" is another. Even though she's 12 years old, and even though the vet had to practically stand on her for leverage to get her canine tooth out and bent his instrument in the process, even though she felt like she'd been hit by a bus yesterday and all last night and she and her poor old mum (me) got no sleep as a result, she felt obliged to shake it off this morning, put it all behind her, and drag herself out for a walk with us. There was absolutely no way Abby and I were getting out the door without her, sore jaw and all. After all, there were squirrels that needed telling off, blue jays that needed chasing (at half speed) and bushes that needed sniffing. Zoe decided that yep, that had hurt and it sucked, but she'd whimpered enough, and there were things to do, and people to see. I think I'll take a lesson from that.
But she's still putting on an extra sad face when I walk close to the bag of snausages, hoping for an extra. And it works...every time.