"Give them the gift of words"

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Chad Manis Speaks to Educators at www.DailyTeachingTools.com




If you think about the teachers who have inspired you in the past, you’ll soon realize that they had at least one thing in common: a love of teaching. People who bring enthusiasm and energy to the job of education will communicate that positive energy to their students, and foster a love of learning. But even the most inspired teachers need some help and reinforcement sometimes, especially with today’s overcrowded classrooms and “teach the test” curricula. At www.DailyTeachingTools.com, educator Chad Manis creates and collects the resources that busy teachers need.

UV: One of the sections of your website is about motivating students, helping them to get focused and work together for both individual and class goals. With all the pressure and time constraints they face, what are some ways that teachers can stay motivated themselves?

CM: I don’t think any educator anywhere would disagree that kids work best when they are properly motivated. And yes, Daily Teaching Tools has an entire section devoted to exactly that. My thinking is so geared to driving student achievement that I’m having to force myself to focus on your question–how do teachers stay motivated themselves?

When it comes to teaching, and I suspect when it comes to doing pretty much anything else, too often praise is the absence of criticism. We know that we’re doing a good job because no one is jumping down our throats every time we turn around.

But, let’s face it. Our students are not the only ones who need positive reinforcement. We teachers do too. And how do we get that positive reinforcement? I would suggest that we start by looking within our own classrooms—you know where I’m going here.

That light of recognition that flashes wondrously in the eye of the kid who finally gets it. Those eager hands thrust exuberantly into the classroom air in hopeful anticipation. The student who stays uninvited after class to ask one final question. Who amongst us can fail to be motivated by epic moments like these?

Self-satisfaction for a job well done, of course, only goes so far. But let’s get real. Monetary compensation for going above and beyond the call of duty is scarce and meager. I think you’ll agree with me that this scenario is not likely to change in the foreseeable future. So what else can we do?

Support each other. Celebrate the fact that we are teachers engaged in a noble endeavor, performing optimally in difficult conditions—persevering and even excelling in spite of it all. Acknowledge the efforts and creativity of our colleagues and rally around each other as well as we can.

If we don’t do it, no one else will. We teachers didn’t pick the wrong profession; everyone else just chose the wrong heroes.

UV: Reading and writing are essential skills that underlie nearly all other aspects of study and learning, and your website devotes a lot of sections to resources that teachers can use in this area. We especially like the one on “context clues” where you provide lessons on learning to figure out a word’s meaning from the sentence and paragraph it’s used in. Do you recommend that teachers and students also spend time on vocabulary development?

CM: The short answer is, unquestionably.

For students, it’s a must, and not just because it’s stressed in the Common Core State Standards. It’s all part of becoming a more sophisticated reader. With a more expansive vocabulary comes a more extensive understanding and a greater capacity for empathy, tolerance, and humanitarianism.

It’s our destiny as people to become all that we can be, and as educators, it is incumbent upon us to facilitate that process. For example, the context clues lessons that you liked offer a practical set of strategies that can be employed for vocabulary acquisition.

However, students must know that life has surprises in store for them. They will find, as we teachers have found, that most new endeavors involve unfamiliar vocabulary. I guess what I’m trying to say is simply this. Life is a process of learning. When we stop learning, we are merely passing time. And time is something that none of us can afford to waste.

UV: One of the best ways to learn more vocabulary is to read more books, and helping kids get a love of reading is one of the best things a teacher can do. You’ve got links to good reading recommendations, but are there also ways that teachers can use classroom time to promote reading skills?

CM: I constantly use a significant portion of classroom time to promote reading. But, like anything else, when it comes to justifying the purpose of an initiative and how it impacts the lives of students, I try to demonstrate why reading is so important and how pervasive it is in our lives. I have found one particular activity, discussed in detail on the motivation page of Daily Teaching Tools, to be effective in doing just that.

I divide the class into small groups of three or four students each. I give each group a portion of the alphabet. Group number one’s task is to brainstorm all of the things that we read that begin with the letters A, B, or C. Group two has D, E, F, and so forth. I have a free graphic organizer that I use for this activity available on the site.

Nothing we read is too small to include on the list of things that we read, I remind students. The manufacturer’s label on the inside of a T-shirt, for example, is something that we, in fact, can read.
Although some people can read palms, there are no actual words in the palms of hands. Tattoos are okay. Some tattoos contain words. You get the idea.

The brainstorming continues until we compile the results at the end of the activity. Then, students see for themselves, as a result of their own observations, just how pervasive reading is in their lives.

Of course, that’s just one activity. Whenever I display text to the class on the classroom projector screen, I make it a point to celebrate the explosive nature of language–how it reverberates with power and beauty simultaneously. That’s really why I became a language arts teacher in the first place. I love the English language and I wallow in its multiplicity and potential.

Kids pick up on that, believe me. If you love reading, they’ll be more inclined to follow your lead. There’s much more I could say regarding this topic, and I cordially invite your readers to come by the site for exploration.

UV: More and more students are using computers to write their essays and papers, and less and less time is spent on developing good handwriting. What’s your opinion on typing vs. longhand skills?

CM: When I was a freshman in high school, back when dinosaurs roamed the earth, I took a one semester class for beginning typists. We used standard, upright, nonelectric, Remington typewriters with blank keys and long, one-armed, carriage returns.

I didn’t know it at the time, but that one elective class would be the most useful class I ever took in all of my years of schooling. At the dawn of the Age of Information, I was unwittingly prepared to tackle the keyboards undaunted and fearless.

Flashback a little further, if you will, to a young fifth-grader who had just won the class cursive handwriting prize from his favorite teacher. I was so proud. My parents were delighted. Given these two circumstances, you can imagine my ambivalence regarding this question.

To tell you the truth, I don’t even know whether cursive handwriting is still being taught in the schools. Regardless of that, I do know that students will have to fill out job applications, credit card applications, and a plethora of other stuff that doesn’t leap immediately to mind.

Even before we evolve from Google Glass to Google Cerebellum, banks, lawyers, car dealerships, and pretty much anybody else that will demand a signature, will take anything that they can get.

No. Longhand cursive writing skills belong to another age altogether. I’m not celebrating its demise; I’m simply suggesting that we get over it and move on to something that is more worthy of our attention and focus—reading leaps to mind.

UV: You mention that you’re hoping to get back into active teaching to continue to share your love of learning with more students. Will you still continue to expand and update the website even after you return to the classroom?

CM: In all truthfulness, as corny as it might sound, I dearly love teaching. I miss making crucial connections with kids, touching their lives, and being a part of what they are to become. For those reasons and more, I am actively pursuing ways to get back into teaching—not on a full time basis, however. I’ve spent 33 years in the classroom, and as they say, been there, done that.

I’ve also said on many occasions that the longer a person is out of the classroom, the less connected they become with the real everyday struggles and challenges that make the classroom unlike any other experience in life. I want to reestablish that connection.

I would be delighted to serve in a limited capacity of one type or another–perhaps as a part-time tutor, teacher’s assistant, or maybe even a substitute teacher. Except for the latter, as you can imagine, opportunities are extremely limited for positions such as those. Still, I keep my eye open.

In with this mix, of course, is Daily Teaching Tools, as you correctly noted. For just a little over three years now, I’ve been working on this site every day of every week 7 to 9 hours a day–sometimes more. I have no intention, regardless of my circumstances, of abandoning ship. I’m in this for the long haul.

Fortunately, I have been blessed with good health, and I’m robust and actively committed to making Tools one of the best teachers’ resource sites available anywhere. As long as I have anything to do with it, this site will continue to flourish and grow–thanks to all of you who may have stumbled upon it and those of you who may come by to visit, for allowing me to become a small part of your professional lives.

Best wishes always to you and your kids.

Building On What You Know




Adding new words to your vocabulary will be easier than you think, if you just take a minute to think about all the words that are already in your vocabulary. Most of the thousands of words that you already know have clues that will help you learn new words, building on the knowledge of vocabulary that you have learned and memorized to date. One of the ways to do this is to use your knowledge of root words to quickly and easily understand the meanings of unfamiliar words. The term “root words” refers to Latin or Greek words, or parts of words, that show up in today’s vocabulary. (Note: English has borrowed words from many languages over time, so there’s a chance that the root may come from another language, but it’s not common.) Since each is a “root” you can imagine that the words derived from that root have grown up and evolved like branches of a tree. You can always trace the final word – the “leaf” at the end – back down the branch back to the root.

For example, the Latin words vivax (“lively”) and vitalis (“related to life”) give us the roots viv and vita. You’ll see these in words like vivacious (“full of life”), vital (“essential to life”), and survive (“to remain alive”). The Latin verb secare (“to cut”) remains in English as the root sec, which is seen in words like sector (“a piece of a larger area”) and bisect (“to cut in two”). With the knowledge you’ve just learned about these root words, can you figure out what the word vivisection means?

Another way to build on the words you know is to use suffixes and prefixes. Suffixes are syllables added to the end of a word, and prefixes are added to the beginning. You’re already very familiar with them both, even if you don’t realize it.

Common suffixes: -able, -ness, -ly, -tion, -ment
Common prefixes: pre-, un-, dis-, inter-, bi-

To illustrate, look at this word that was recently added to the official list of English words by the editors of the Oxford English Dictionary: unloveableness. You’ve got to love the way the word “love” has been changed by adding two suffixes and a prefix!

UN – LOVE – ABLE – NESS
un = “not”
able = “capacity to be”
ness = “the quality of”

While this word’s fairly easy to figure out, it’s a good way to show you how knowing the meanings of suffixes and prefixes can help you decipher the meaning of a new word. In this case, the meaning “the quality of not having the capability of being loved” might be intuitively obvious, but taking the time to really look at all parts of a word will give you the information you need to use that intuition deliberately in your vocabulary study.

Answer: “Vivisection” means cutting things up, or dissecting them, while they are still alive.

Get Your Super Teaching Tools From Tim Weibel’s Websites




If you’re a teacher in a public school who’s looking for some new resource material, then you’ll be glad to know of a place where you can find worksheets on topics like spelling, grammar, multiplication, handwriting, geography, and astronomy. ESL instructors and homeschooling parents can also benefit from these handy lesson materials, and anyone who spends time teaching any subject can get inspiration by sharing information with other people in the teaching profession. For all of these reasons and more, Tim Weibel and his team have set up a series of websites that provide quality material and practical information for teachers at home, in schools, and around the world.

US: At your SuperTeacherIdeas.com website, you’ve got an ever-growing collection of tips provided by people who are experienced in providing education. Do you have a place for people to ask questions as well, if they’re looking for specific information?

TW: Yes, Super Teacher Ideas has thousands of lesson ideas and classroom activities, submitted by real teachers. Most of the ideas on the site are geared towards elementary school educators. There are math lessons, spelling games, science experiments, writing projects, and even craft ideas.

There is a contact button where teachers can submit their own teaching ideas. We do screen them, and the best ones are added to the website. Many times teachers do contact us with special requests. We do what we can to include the specific types of lessons that teachers want.

US: There are links on that site to a lot of spelling games, but they’re not the online spelling games that many sites offer. Instead, they’re classroom games that teachers can use to teach spelling to a group of children. Are you seeing a trend towards more computer-based games being used in classrooms?

TW: Nowadays classrooms have access to desktop computers, laptops, SMART Boards, and iPads. Of course there is a growing demand for on-line spelling games. Computers are changing the way we teach kids for the better. Online tools and software (like Ultimate Spelling) are amazing tools that just weren’t available twenty years ago.

At the elementary level, teachers will continue to use non-tech classroom lessons as well. Super Teacher Ideas was designed to be a resource for teachers looking for new, fun ways to help students learn using hands-on exploration, classroom games, and interactive activities.

US: Although most of the worksheets you provide on your SuperTeacherWorksheets.com website are only available to members, there are some free ones that can be downloaded. The site explains that schools can sign up at a group rate to receive full membership benefits – can a group of homeschooling parents sign up as a group, as well?

TW: Yes! Super Teacher Worksheets is our largest site, and it’s the only one of our sites that has any type of subscription fee. Super Teacher Worksheets has thousands of printable worksheets and lessons that were created by experienced writers and teachers. We only charge 20 bucks for a full-year individual membership, which is a pretty good deal for homeschooling families, parents, tutors, and school teachers who are on a budget.

We estimate that about 10% of our members are homeschooling families. We have reduced rates, which are priced similar to school site licenses, for large homeschooling co-ops.

Even those who don’t have a membership can use the website because nearly every page has free worksheets on it. You don’t need to sign up; you don’t need to enter your email; you don’t need to do anything to access the free resources.

US: According to the description on the website, these worksheets are designed for younger students, up to grade 5 (approximately 11-13 years old). What made you decide to stop with this age/grade group?

TW: My background is in elementary education. I was a teacher in elementary schools for over 10 years. When I launched the site in 2007, I was a full-time teacher who wanted to share worksheets that I’d made. Since that time the sites have grown a great deal, but our focus on the elementary grades has remained.

All three of our sites (Super Teacher Worksheets, Super Teacher Ideas, and Modern Chalkboard) offer exclusively elementary resources. However, we have received many requests to expand our collection to include middle school and high school content. It’s something we’re looking into. We’re a very small, family-run company, so it would be a big change for us.

US: Technology is changing classrooms, and you’ve set up the ModernChalkboard.com website to help people learn how to use the “interactive whiteboard” that’s becoming more common in schools and businesses. Can you explain to our readers what a SMART board is?

TW: When I was a kid, back in the caveman days, teachers wrote on a dusty chalkboard in the front of the room. The chalkboard was a teaching tool that allowed the teacher to write notes or demonstrate difficult concepts to the class.

The interactive Whiteboards (or SMART Board) is the 21st century chalkboard. It’s a large touch-screen monitor that’s five or six feet wide. Teachers and students write on it with a digital pen. It can display graphics from the web during lessons. Teachers can even design interactive lessons that are displayed on the screen while they teach. It’s still has all of the features of an old-fashioned chalkboard but, because it’s connected to a computer, it can do so much more.

The vast majority of classrooms in America now have interactive whiteboards in them now. As a teaching tool, interactive whiteboards are incredible, but it takes a great deal of time to develop a lesson with a professional presentation. Most teachers are busy people and they don’t have the time to design the lessons themselves. Our Modern Chalkboard site offers teachers free, downloadable lessons that are specifically designed to be used on SMART Boards.

Our goal for all three sites is to make teachers’ jobs easier by providing tools and resources that they can use in the classroom.

Cross-posted at the Ultimate Spelling blog.

A Harvest of New Words in the Oxford English Dictionary




It’s time to go out into the fields and gather in all of the new words that have been added to the English language recently – or at least a few of them. There are so many words that get created, and so many others that change in meaning, that it’s hard to keep up sometimes. However, the editors at the Oxford English Dictionary are up to the challenge, continuing a century-long tradition of keeping one main resource and reference for English vocabulary words. In the September update, they added new meanings for words like fudge and barnstorm, along with a list of dozens of words that have come into being to communicate terms and concepts that describe ways of working, of living, of speaking, and of viewing the world around us. Here are few of the words that were incorporated into the OED in September:

aquafarm / aquafarming noun / verb
With the increasing need to find ways to feed people around the world, how to get a harvest from the world’s oceans is a topic of conversation in local communities and global government organizations. Aquafarming may be the answer in some places. Also called aquaculture, this can mean several things, including (1) the practice of raising fish or mollusks in cages in the ocean; (2) using ponds or other enclosed areas to raise fish; or (3) combining traditional agriculture with fish farming, such as systems that take the waste from the fish and use it to fertilize crops, which in turn are used to feed the fish. Various forms of aquafarming have been providing food for people since at least 2500 BCE.

buzzworthy adjective
Any time something new is discovered – or something old is rediscovered – it creates “buzz.” The level of buzz is even higher these days due to Twitter, YouTube, and other social media, and anything that deserves its level of exposure and comment is described as buzzworthy.

fleishig adjective
A word based on the traditional Jewish food restrictions concerning meat and dairy, this Yiddish word has now been added to the dictionary (with its alternate spelling of fleischig) and the meaning of “containing meat.” The word milshig (milschig) was also added, with the meaning “containing dairy.” Both words are commonly used to describe what foods are and are not kosher.

ohmigosh interjection
We’ve talked about text speak before, and how abbreviations and acronyms are becoming standard English. You’ve probably seen (and used) OMG in your online conversations, but probably haven’t used it when you’re talking face to face with someone. This new word isn’t really new; the spelling omigosh is also fairly current, and both are a condensed form of the phrase “oh, my gosh!” that we’re sure you’ve said at some point!

Quick and Easy Vocabulary Training From Rene Kondratzky at www.Vokabel.com




There are several ways to learn vocabulary in a new language. You can immerse yourself in the language by moving to an environment where only that language is spoken, and pick up the words around you as they are being used. You can also use focused, intense study sessions to learn and memorize new vocabulary words. Ideally, you’d be able to do both! However, it’s not always possible to move to a new country just to learn its language, so the focused study sessions are a practical alternative. Even if you can’t get to the US or the UK, to France, to Spain or Mexico, or to Germany, with an internet connection you can get to the world of Spanish, English, French, and German words that Rene Kondratzky provides at www.Vokabel.com. We talked to Rene about the resources provided on the site.

UV: You mention that you started this site as a way to help you keep current in your vocabulary, but the website offers help in four different languages. Do you speak German, French, Spanish, and English?

RK: In mid-life, I took two years off from my career to focus on language study by taking formal university level courses in French, Spanish, and German toward a post graduate diploma in French literature (a love of my life). Sprinkle in chats with internet buddies, soirees with bilingual French and Spanish friends, and a job that gives me the opportunity to communicate daily in German at work and I have many reasons to keep my vocab current. I also worked in France for a few years in the early part of the century. I am an avid reader and, to a lesser extent than speaking, vocabulary training makes it more enjoyable to read the works of authors such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Teresa of Avila untranslated.

UV: The website has different categories of vocabulary words, such as “Food” and “Professions.” However, you also offer another important language category: verbs and verb tenses. Why did you decide to expand this category to provide the conjugations of verbs, rather than just the basic form of the word?

RK: I think it’s only natural to include verb conjugations in one’s training plan when approaching what it takes to maintain competency in a foreign language. Speaking using the incorrect verb tenses can be painful (often moreso to the speaker than the native that one is communicating with). Every student also knows that an improperly conjugated verb is the number one culprit for all of the red ink on their test/essay.

UV: You’ve chosen to use the “flash card” test model for vocabulary practice, rather than the “games” model that some other websites use. Why do you find this model more useful?

RK: I like the flash card model particularly when one takes the time to type the response and struggles pulling the word out of deep memory. The purpose of the tests for me is to bring those words from deep memory (i.e. I understand them when I read/hear them) into near memory where I can retrieve them quickly when in conversation. Having said that, any tool that forces you to use your brain actively instead of passively is valuable in any learning endeavor.

UV: We like the fact that your tests can be done online on a computer, offline, or through an app for iPhone or Android. When you use your site for your personal vocabulary practice, how do you access the tests?

RK: I am putting the entire site into an app so lately most of my spare time is taken taking all of the tests on my iphone app for testing purposes. I always put new tests on the website first because that’s where my main word database is so the tests will always go out to the website first.

UV: What do you find more useful, quick five-minute reviews of a word (or several words), or a longer study session focused on an entire word list?

RK: A longer study is always best. I’ve spent many hours entranced on my computer zipping through the tests using the keyboard-only, do not retest correct words, ignore extended characters features. Having said that, which language student could pass up the opportunity to brush up on their vocab for a few minutes on their PDA when waiting for/sitting in a bus, traveling, sitting alone in a restaurant or park, waiting in their car?

Word of the Day: Magnanimous




Learning new words expands your vocabulary, but it also broadens your horizons and prompts you to think about things in new ways. As a form of self-improvement, vocabulary study will help you get ahead in school and at work. If you find words that describe characteristics you’d like to develop, a new vocabulary word can also help you work on cultivating new habits and getting rid of old ones. Sometimes simply having the word for something will inspire you to experience it for yourself. Today’s word is a good example of that.

The word magnanimous (mag-NAH-nih-muss) is a combination of two Latin words, magnus (“great”) and animus (“soul”). It’s obvious, then, what the word means: someone who is magnanimous has a great soul. There are several specific ways this meaning is interpreted, as illustrated by the word’s synonyms.

If I can acquire money and also keep myself modest and faithful and magnanimous, point out the way, and I will acquire it. – Greek philosopher Epicetus (55-135CE)

A person who is magnanimous is generous and giving. They’re quick to help out with charitable donations, and not inclined to hoard all their money for themselves. In this case, the word is most often used to described someone who is wealthy, but who does not hesitate to share that wealth.

Observe good faith and justice towards all Nations; cultivate peace and harmony with all … It will be worthy of a free, enlightened, and, at no distant period, a great Nation, to give to mankind the magnanimous and too novel example of a people always guided by an exalted justice and benevolence. – American President George Washington (1732-1799CE)

A magnanimous person is also quick to understand, and is generally forgiving. They are kind-hearted and chivalrous and even though they are strong, they don’t pick on the weak, but instead help them.

But nevertheless, even in these misfortunes, nobility of the soul is conspicuous, when a man bears and digests many and great misfortunes, not from insensibility, but because he is high spirited and magnanimous. – attributed to Greek philosopher Aristotle (384-322BCE)

When someone is magnanimous, they’re also generous towards themselves. Because they’re not always thinking about themselves, they’re altruistic, but because they know to treat themselves as kindly as they do others, they are also lenient and quick to forgive. They work hard on self-improvement, knowing that when they are confident and strong, they will have the strength to help people around them.

Strengthen your vocabulary, and you’ll see how easy it is to share that wealth of words with others!

Real Life Vocabulary Skills From Michael Marzio And www.Real-English.com




What you learn in theory doesn’t always help in practice. You can study dozens of books on how to fly an airplane, but once you’re sitting in the cockpit getting ready to take to the air, you’ll probably find that the books didn’t completely prepare you to be a pilot. The process of learning a new language is a lot like that – words on a page just don’t match how people really use them in conversation. What’s more, even audiovisual learning tools often don’t give a good idea of how a language sounds in real life. When Michael Marzio saw the difference between “learned” language and “real life” language, he started focusing on bridging the gap between learning English and using English by incorporating videos into his lessons that feature people speaking English naturally, at the speed of normal conversation. Now his Real English videos are helping people around the world get the skills they need to speak English easily and fluently.

UV: To start off, would you tell us a little bit about the Marzio School?

MM: I was a tourist in France in 1973 and a friend who was helping to organize courses for a language school in Paris asked me if I wanted to stay for a year to teach English to business people, technicians and such. I said yes. 2 years later I was still teaching when I created a language school for a large French company in Lyon. Finally, I moved to Provence and started my own school for corporate clients, far from my previous boss to avoid conflicts of interest. There were 30 full-time teachers in 2007, before the financial crisis. Now we’re a small group of 9.

UV: Your approach differs from that taken by many other language videos, in that you don’t use actors reading scripts. Why did you decide to make videos of interviews with people in the middle of their daily lives?

MM: Our students would come back from their business or technical meetings in the UK and the US, and we always heard the same refrain. They would say, “I can understand all my teachers here, but it was very hard to understand our clients (partners, suppliers) in London (or New York, etc.). They speak so fast.” We also found out that they had very few problems when communicating about work and technical matters related to the job. The difficulties came when it was time to “talk about the weather” around the lunch or dinner table.

To make a long story short, we began filming people in the streets of the UK and the US, initially for our own students at my school only. We asked questions to elicit the same structures and functions that were used in the textbooks we were using from the Big Publishers, in order to use Real English as supplementary material.

Filming and editing was, and still is, hard work. One must film many people to get usable footage. Even today, less than 10% of our raw film gets included in the final edits for a wide variety of reasons too complex to get into here. The important point is that we figured out how to do it.

UV: Videos like these are helpful to get the sense of how spoken English sounds, but how can students use them to practice speaking English themselves?

MM: A video does not stand alone as a teaching tool. Either a teacher exploits the video intelligently according to his lesson plan in such a way that the students want to listen over and over again, or it is exploited in interactive exercises which lead to the same result. As you probably know, insisting on listening comprehension is the most important key in learning any language. Normal speech, which seems fast to all of our learners, becomes comprehensible, while we avoid speaking artificially slow “classroom English”.

UV: How do these videos help people learn English vocabulary?

MM: Vocabulary is illustrated by pictures in the videos, and by more pictures with audio files, whether in the classroom or on our interactive sites (Real English® and Real English® Mobile). A simplified dictionary type definition is always included for the vocabulary, but it is certainly secondary in importance.

UV: Can someone learn to speak English just by watching all of the videos, or are they designed to be used as part of a more formal English language class?

MM: As you have gathered from my replies to your other questions, the videos are always accompanied by elaborate interactive lessons which give meaning to practically every word spoken in Real English®. It’s quite a coincidence that you ask me these questions at this point in time, since I just finished explaining the answers to these questions in more detail on my blog this morning. Last month, I wrote about the new Real English® mobile site. Thanks a lot for this opportunity to speak to you briefly about my favorite project.

The Words We Want To Know




Want to know the meaning of a word? Your first impulse is probably to reach for a dictionary. Or, if you’re like many people today, to type the word into the search window of an online reference using your computer or your smartphone. We’re lucky to have so many good online resources for word information these days, and one of the most popular is the Merriam-Webster site.

Back at the beginning of the 19th century, Noah Webster decided to put together a dictionary that would compile all of the words in English, with a focus on American English (for example, changing from the British spelling colour to color). By 1830 the dictionary was being widely used, and the publishing company owned by brothers George and Charles Merriam took over the project and broadened its scope, creating an “international” dictionary with even more words. Today, the Merriam-Webster company provides a variety of language resources, including an online dictionary.

If you want to know what other people want to know, the website provides lists of top search terms. They’ve also got a “word of the day” feature, interesting Top 10 lists on a range of topics, and of course complete information for thousands of words, including pronunciation guides, synonyms, and examples. Here are some of the words that people have been searching for this past week:

furlough (FUR-low) noun
A leave of absence (generally unpaid).

onomatopoeia (ah-nuh-mah-tuh-PEE-ah) noun
A use of a word whose pronunciation sounds like what the word means.

hegemony (heh-JEH-muh-nee) noun
Power, control, and/or authority over a group of people.

What words were you curious about this week?

Dimitar Parlapanski Brings English Skills To Bulgarians At www.EFLclass.com




Like many other successful English-speaking business people, Dimitar Parlapanski decided to share his skills and promote the English language in his native country. At the European Language Centre (www.eflclass.com) in Sofia, Bulgaria, students can learn conversational English by talking about real-world situations and stories, or focus on honing their vocabulary and grammar by studying to pass the International English Language Testing System (IELTS), a required exam for anyone who wants to work overseas or with a multinational business organization.

UV: When you started your school back in 2000, the internet was already playing a major role in connecting people and businesses, and English a required skill. How have things changed for you and your school since then?

DP: Yes, back in 2000 the internet was a major channel of communication and information. Of course the internet is a very dynamic system which has undergone a lot of changes since then. It is enough to mention the appearance of social networks, blogs, the growing opportunities for expressing your personal view and making comments. From a professional point of view, I would distinguish the English language educational websites. Their number has grown up tremendously since the year 2000, as well as the variety of aspects they cover. In our school we encourage our students to use them in their work at home and we can see how this elaborates their skills and knowledge. And also, we feel that this brings an enjoyment to them.

UV: You offer sample IELTS online exams to help students prepare for those tests. Are you planning on adding more online and self-paced study materials to the site?

DP: Yes, it is our intention to widen the scope of our online lessons beyond currently existing IELTS and job interview resources. We are planning to develop and include examples of day to day situations, similar to those we use in our conversational English course in class. In this way the site will be more helpful to our users.

UV: Your General English classes are designed for people who are just starting out learning English as well as those who learned the language in school but have forgotten their studies over time. Do you have different courses for young students, as well as classes for adults?

DP: In fact, the emphasis in our current strategy is on adults. But hopefully in the future we would increase the number of our staff members and start offering courses for children and younger learners as well.

UV: Professionals will find that your Specialized English courses are very helpful in providing them with the scientific, medical, and academic vocabulary for the fields they work in. You also offer something unique: a course designed to teach English terminology for homeopathic medicines and treatments. Why did you decide to offer this particular course?

DP: The reasons to include a course in homeopathic English in our portfolio are two. Firstly, we have looked for an educational niche. Besides that, I myself have accomplished a two year course in homeopathy. Therefore, I realize quite well how peculiar and difficult homeopathic lexis can be, especially for persons who lack a proper training. And while the number of homeopathy practitioners in Bulgaria is growing, as well as the institutions offering homeopathic courses, to our best knowledge here still there is no other English language school or another institution that offers classes in homeopathic English.

UV: Your website is in Bulgarian (although easily translated using Google tools) and your classes are taught in Sofia. Is the school only open to residents of Bulgaria, or do you welcome students from other countries, too?

DP: Occasionally we have taught foreign nationality students. However, at present, our education is limited to Bulgarian residents with sound Bulgarian language skills. But today Bulgaria is an EU member and we expect this would increase the interest in opportunities for education in Bulgaria among the people from nonmember countries. So, in the future, we might develop programs for foreign citizens and adopt students from other countries too.

Top Tips For Perfect Pronunciation




Learning how to pronounce a word is key if you want to remember it and use it correctly. Even your skills as a writer will be improved when you study a word’s pronunciation, because of the way pronunciation and spelling are linked. The correct pronunciation means that your listeners won’t be confused by what you’re saying – unless, of course, their vocabulary isn’t as good and they don’t even know the meaning of the words you’re using! (Note: Remember that simply choosing “big words” to impress your audience isn’t usually a good strategy. Focus on choosing the right words instead.)

Although English is now widely considered to be the global language for communication, there are differences in pronunciation of certain words and even in the meaning of those words and how they’re used. When it comes to pronunciation, the main difference is between the “UK” and “US” version. In general, anyone who grows up in Great Britain or in any of the countries that were formerly colonized by the British (such as India) will follow the UK pronunciation – except for the United States, which was also a former colony, but now has a distinctly different way of speaking English. For example, in the UK you’ll generally hear the word laboratory pronounced “luh-BOR-ah-tree” while in the US it’s pronounced “LAH-bor-ah-tor-ee.”

If you want to learn the correct way to pronounce a word, you need to:

1. Listen to it. Most online dictionaries have audio links so you can hear a word pronounced.
2. Repeat it. Listen to the word and repeat it out loud until you’re sure you have it right.
3. Use it. Test your confidence in pronunciation and context by using the word in conversation.

There are a lot of resources available, online and in print, that will help you perfect your pronunciation. To get a good look at some of the words that people most often mispronounce, we recommend The Big Book Of Beastly Mispronunciations: The Complete Opinionated Guide For The Careful Speaker by Charles Harrington Elster. Although it’s focused more on US pronunciation, it’s a valuable guide to some of the words that tend to make people trip over their tongues.

Practice your pronunciation skills, and you won’t have any trouble communicating with people, no matter where they live!