... and its advantages in language classroom…………….………… 10II.2. Reading comprehension …………………………………………………….………… 11II.2.1. Reading comprehension and its roles in language learning………….……………11II.2.2. ... teaching ……………………………………….…………… 6II.1.4.1. Why use literature in language classroom. ………………………….…………… 6II.1.4.2 Literature in the ESL classroom……………………….……………….…………… 9II.1. 4.2.1.Poetry in the ... Reader and the text…………………………… ………………………………………11II.2.3. Students difficulties with reading………………………….…………………………12II.3. Literature and Reading…………………………… …………………………………….13 ...
... reading skills such as skimming, scanning, reading for main ideas or for specific information, etc. The reading materials mostly are taken from course books like: Think First Certificate, Reading ... reader in efferent reading is supposed to carry the information away, he, in aesthetic reading often makes judgments about the 13 • Creating another ending for the story• Role-playing or acting ... make a new path way in language teaching in general and in reading comprehension teaching in particular.The students under investigation were in their second term of the second year. They are between...
... examples) Thanks a lot for yours great assistance!Questionnaire No2 e. Interpreting characters in the short story or figurative meanings in the poem.□ I think understanding the content is enough.□ ... AppendixSurvey questionnaires forstudents at HPUQuestionnaire No1Questionnaires on the students attitude toward literary texts1. Rank the following genres of literature according to your preference ... content is enough.□ This activity is interesting, we can look at different features of the event.□ It is helpful, we can think in our own ways, we can be independent from the text.□ Others………………………………………………………………f....
... 11Integrating short stories and Integrating short stories and poems in developing the poems in developing the reading skills for 2reading skills for 2ndnd yearyear students in Haiphong ... 8Results and Findings Results:Pointed out that integrating short stories and poems in reading class makes the lesson more enjoyable and helps enhance students reading skills.Most students ... stories and poems in teaching and learning readingMethod of collecting data:At the end of term, 2 weeks before the final exam. 1313Thank you for Thank you for your attention!your...
... and learning and (3) advantages of using computers in reading ESP teaching and learning.I.2.3.1.1.Model of teaching ESP reading with computersSome models of using computers in teaching FL can ... of computers for teaching and learning (in general) and teaching and learning FL (in particular). As far as this study is concerned, certain applications of computers in teaching and learning ... following main methods to do the research: Consulting books, journals and newspapers on applying IT in teaching and learning foreign languages or ESP; Searching information on the Internet...
... exploring the problems that students encounter in studying and applying critical reading; (3) offering suitable teaching strategies in developing critical reading skills for first year students. 3. ... a textInterpreting text by going outside itRecognizing indicators in discourseTranscoding information into other types of display Table 5 - Types of reading tasks in general reading skills ... following reading skills for the students including getting the gist of a topic, drawing key concepts out of a reading, practicing reading strategies, learning how to use some clues for understanding....
... the beginning or the end of the lesson, an exciting learning environment is recreated, students, therefore, regain their interest in learning and then do the listening skill better. In addition ... the students interest in learning English. In short, speaking like Finocchiaro (1973:174) by using songs “language learning can be combined with recreation or aesthetic appreciation for ... listening is special because listening comprehension is a process in which our mind has to complete instantly the process of receiving, processing, and interacting with the relevant linguistic...
... room [110, 89], when shown a single image or viewing a scene from a single viewpoint. The ambiguity in interpretation arises because information is lost in the projection from the three~dimensional ... Substituting the matching constraint of (2.3~,) into the time derivative of (2.10) we obtain: rt = (At + p.U)p. (2.38) Differentiating (2.38) with respect to time and substituting this into (2.37) ... determine the distance along the ray of the object feature which generated it. A general model for the imaging device is therefore to consider it as determining the direction of an incoming...
... rather dreary)proof of this formula by plugging in our earlier formula for binomial coefficients into all threeterms and verifying that we get an equality. A guiding principle of discrete mathematics ... 1.1byplugging in the formula for nk.4. Find the followinga. (x +1)5b. (x + y)5c. (x +2)5d. (x − 1)55. Carefully explain the proof of the binomial theorem for (x + y)4. That is, explain ... mention integers, and doing so would make it clear that mentioningthem adds nothing to the proof. When we use mathematical induction in this way, using smallerstructures in place of smaller integers,...
... points. 232 7.2 Example of supporting line for two convex hulls. 233 7.3 Partitioning a set of points using four extreme points. 235 7.4 Angles among points and the 236 7.5 Points in ... through two simple algorithms for (a) finding the sum of N numbers and (b) finding the OR of N bits. Illustration 1: Adding N Numbers. For let processor initially hold input The object is to compute ... information to disjoint sets of processors. In the setting of models with reconfigurable buses, the term broadcasting is more common, conveying the idea of sending the same information to all...
... ofsubstitution when applied to strings.Now we are in position of introducing families of 2D languages, but since we aremainly presenting languages based on tiling we remind some notions on Wang tiles.3 ... languages for pictures. Namely, like in the 1D case, REClanguages can be equivalently characterized by several formalisms. We shortly remindsome of them, and we mainly refer to [31] for more information.First, ... [41] enforces the above result showing that every picture language in REC isdefinable by an EMSO formula of the form ∃Xφ(X) where φ is a first order formula. Cycle-Free Finite Automata in Partial...
... Techniques, Innovations in Mechanical Engineering, Electrical Engineering and Applications and Advances in Applied Modeling.The fi rst section Applied Computing Techniques presents new fi ndings in technical ... application - for example interface for creating, reading, updating and deleting objects in database (CRUD operations). Further, this approach leads to generative programming domain, which includes ... breakthrough when solving both problems mentioned in the previous Advances inComputerScience and Engineering 28 input string, which is linked with the smallest sum of weight of deformation rules....