Additional Announcements

ADDITIONAL ANNOUNCEMENTS:

1. Click the link to see the Smart Commute Schedule for the Don Mills Corporate Shuttle.

2. Chris Searles, the student-teacher from Seneca College who did his practicum with us in February 2012, has kindly indicated his availability for private English lessons. Please contact him by email at 2012chrislsearles@gmail.com (delete "2012").

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

What's Common: Soldier, Teacher, Teller, and Seven Other Jobs?

Well, in the United States at least, they represent "10 industries where the jobs aren't coming back"!
Construction

  1. What about Canada--how similar or how different is our employment situation?
  2. What opportunities do you see for yourself?
  3. How about becoming a boss in these industries?

Think about it, and blog away!

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Login to the Number One Country in the World

We have always had the longest coastline. We make the most apologies per minute. We ruled the hockey world at the most recent Olympics. Now what?

There aren't many theories as to why exactly, but Canadians rank among the most enthusiastic users of the web and all its various offshoots.


How about camping out the longest on the Internet?

Check out this article and list the number of ways we're Number One in the online world!

So, how Canadian are you in this regard?

Monday, December 20, 2010

Christmas and Its Impact on Canada


There are many myths about Christmas. There's Rudolph, the red-nosed reindeer. There's Santa Claus, the obese, bearded guy in red who jumps down chimneys. There's yule logs and chestnuts roasting on the open fire. There's even a manger scene, the creche, where shepherds and farm animals stand around a man and woman and their little baby. But all this makes no sense--it's like dropping in on a telephone conversation already in progress. What are they talking about? So we need to start at the very beginning.
The story of Christmas begins with the story of the world. Actually, it goes way before that. It starts before the beginning of time itself! You may wonder: Who is that babe in the manger? Was he an ordinary child? A prophet, perhaps? A king? Or something more? Why did he come? Why so suddenly?
The answers lie in history and the documents of the ancient world:
  1. The baby was long expected. It was sudden, but people knew he was coming. God, through prophets living hundreds of years before Jesus' birth, had told them who exactly would be born, where exactly he would be born, and how exactly he would be born. But God did not say when.
  2. He existed before he was born. He existed 1,000 years before he was born. He existed 2,500 years before he was born. He made everything. He was not created--He has always existed!
  3. He came for a reason. Because God made human beings to praise Him, and human beings turned away from Him instead, we deserve the punishment of being separated from Him forever. Yet God chose to save some and sent Jesus, the Son, to come as a human being, a little baby, to save His people--anyone who believes and receives Jesus as their Master and Saviour. What happened next was witnessed by many and recorded for us as well: Jesus' life, works, death, burial, and resurrection. And so are the prophecies of his Second Coming.
There are many stories about Christmas, but now you know the original one. Canada, like some other countries of Western Civilization such as Australia, Britain, New Zealand, and USA, was founded on these facts. Together, these facts are known as the Good News, or the Gospel. The story of Christ-mas--which is about Christ--affects the laws and the culture of these places. Love and sacrifice, repentance and forgiveness (see Ontarian and former refugee Kim Phuc's amazing story), obedience and submission, freedom and industry, faith and hope--all these are based in response to what God did for human beings through Christ. To some degree, these principles still characterize countries like Canada. Not everybody likes to hear the original story nowadays, and some strongly oppose it and prefer to substitute it with one that honours human beings rather than Christ. Things are changing, indeed. But that's how it happened in earlier Canadian history, what all Canadians knew a few generations ago, and why Canada is the way it is.
Welcome to Canada!

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Thinking of Climate Change in the Deep Freeze

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True or false? Human activities are the main cause of climate change (formerly called global warming). Or is it vice versa? You've heard the David Suzukis and the Al Gores making their grave predictions. You've seen the temperature graphs comparing temperatures on earth with the amount of CO2 in the air. Everyone, every government, every scientist, and every prophet seems to be singing the same tune.

Now check out this 1 hour 16 minute-long documentary that my son first watched in middle school, taking a different tack on the scientific data. It's called The Great Global Warming Swindle:




Feel free to comment or blog your feelings after watching the video. Then have a look at how freedoms in the free world are not as free as you think in this movie entitled Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed:

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Ready for Friday's Concert?


Following are the lyrics to our chosen carol, voted in by the class last week:
O COME, ALL YE FAITHFUL
1. O come, all ye faithful, joyful and triumphant,
O come ye, O come ye, to Bethlehem.
Come and behold Him, born the King of angels;

Refrain
O come, let us adore Him,
O come, let us adore Him,
O come, let us adore Him,
Christ the Lord.

2. True God of true God, Light from Light Eternal,
Lo, He shuns not the Virgin’s womb;
Son of the Father, begotten, not created;

3. Sing, choirs of angels, sing in exultation;
O sing, all ye citizens of heaven above!
Glory to God, all glory in the highest;

4. Yea, Lord, we greet Thee, born this happy morning;
Jesus, to Thee be glory given;
Word of the Father, now in flesh appearing.
We have just two days to get our act together--so please don't be absent but "O Come" and practise our singing before the concert! After the concert in the Child Minding Room on the ground floor, there is a potluck reception back on our fourth floor. Remember to bring a big dish to share!

For those who wish to know the documents (in various translations) behind each of the stanzas above, simply click on the links provided.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Love Thy Neighborrower

Sign up to lend and borrow things at the FREE MicroSkills LINC Neighborrow Site. Some of the things you can list for exchange include:


See what others say about Neighborrow, e.g. this Time.com article titled "Borrow, Don't Buy."

Listen to this Grist interview with Neighborrow founder Adam Berk

In an email, Adam welcomes our participation for free:
It would be my pleasure. Your feedback will be better than money anyway. I'll get the group set up right now, what do you wish to call it. 



Other sites to compare:
  • Trading Goods
  • Renting Goods
  •  Borrowing Goods
  • Taking Goods

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Field Trip on Tuesday, December 14, to Roy Thomson Hall for Another FREE Concert

Directions: Let's meet on the Southbound Platform of Sheppard-Yonge Subway Station and depart from there at 10 a.m.

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Once again, MicroSkills Language Centre introduces its LINC participants to Roy Thomson Hall’s 14th Annual Free Noon Hour Choir & Organ Concerts with the
Elmer Iseler Singers
Tuesday, December 14, 2010 – 12 Noon
A Seasonal Celebration
Lydia Adams, conductor
Shawn Grenke, organ
Here's the map of Roy Thomson Hall, showing St. Andrew Subway Station, which is connected to the hall via the PATH underground walkway, and other buildings in the vicinity:



If you go there by yourself, be sure to ask the ushers for the MicroSkills Section so that you can sit with the rest of us. As usual, wear warm clothing and footwear and bring along your stuff (a camera's okay, although photography is not allowed in the hall).

Pronunciation Challenges for Farsi Speakers

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While Farsi native speakers are relatively fluent in spoken English, they do face a couple of adjustmentsin pronunciation. These are listed in a masters degree dissertation from Australia.

In terms of syllables, Farsi speakers sometimes add the syllable /E/ before words starting with the letter s, such as spell and skate. Or, for consonant clusters (groups) beginning with letters other than s (as in clap, club), they may split up the grouping of sounds:

Although Farsi speakers generally do well with consonants, they're actually missing a few English sounds in their native language (shown in the squares below):


So, similar to some Mandarin native speakers, they should be careful about pronouncing thin as sin, and these as zees. Helpful resources include paired sounds like th/s, Th/z, v/w from this site.

The "ng" sound at the end of words like "sing" seems to be a problem, too. It should not end with a hard /g/ sound (such as in finger), especially in the middle of words like singing. It's a soft nasal sound at the back of the mouth rather than like a hard /g/, as in "sin-Ger." Apparently, the researcher herself, a native Farsi speaker, does not seem able to distance herself from saying the hard /g/, as seen in her description of "singing":



The problem with vowels is that of (not) contrasting long and short (or, tense and lax) English vowels:


So they may need to make an extra effort to distinguish this and these, ship and sheep. Useful vowel exercises include: i/I from this page.

Of course, there's also the problem of intonation (the musicality of the language), which afflicts all ESL learners, but let's save that for another day. For now, our Iranian friends can have fun trying out these different sounds in the English language!

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Your Book Can Borrow Me Or Not?

Is the title correct? Check out the answer by watching the video:



Also, take a look at the other videos, on grammar, pronunciation, etc.
 
Or did you get all distracted with the sights and sounds of Singapore?

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Discover Canada and Its New Cit Test! But Can You Pass?

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The new citizenship test is based on Discover Canada, a new book by the Conservative government to replace the previous one by the Liberal government. Besides updated information, it features a higher passing mark, 15 out of 20. The Toronto Star conducted an informal test with questions such as the following:
1. What are the three responsibilities of citizenship?
a) Being loyal to Canada, voting in elections, serving in the navy, army or air force.
b) Obeying the law, taking responsibility for oneself and one’s family, serving on a jury.
c). Learning both official languages, voting in elections, belonging to a union.
d) Buying Canadian products, owning your own business, using less water. 
 For the other questions and the answers and all the results, click on the links on this line.

 Feel free to do the test and then post your results under Comments. All the best!

Latest Class Photos

Thank you for saying a unanimous yes before saying a unanimous cheese to these pictures for our LINC school calendar. In all likelihood, it will be the top picture that will be included. Hope you like it!