영어로 책 쓰기에 도전해봅시다.


Let's try to write your own books.



Callan Method는 영국에서 만들어진 학습법이며, 보통의 학습법보다 4배 정도 빠르게 영어를 습득하게 한다고합니다. 문법을 별도로 학습하지 않고 바로 듣기-말하기부터 시작합니다. 그리고 빠른 속도로 진행하기 때문에 집중도를 높이고 지루할 틈이 없습니다. "Listen and Answer" 방식으로 진행됩니다.


Callan Method, one way of 4-phases English training, has been used in the UK and has been known to make people learn English 4 times faster than traditional approaches. Without any grammar lesson, it starts the classes from listening and speaking, and introduces new words and grammar very unnotably during classes. Because of the speedy pace of the lessons, no time to be bored. Callan method enforces "Listen and Answer" capability.


Reference: Callan Method English Lessons 소개


WHAT IS CALLAN METHOD AND HOW IT WORKS?

Callan Method is one of the most effective methods of learning English. It is especially effective in the early stages of the learning process.

The aim of The Callan Method is to enable students to be proactive in the learning process by answering the wide range of questions put to them during the lessons. In this way, grammar is painlessly absorbed, and vocabulary broadened, step by easy step. There is no time to be bored by complex, dry, conventional methodology; The Callan Method has been proven to increase learning speed by up to four times.

The method is widely used in many countries to teach English to non-native speakers. The aim of the method is to get students actively involved in the learning process by asking a range of questions that students should give an answer to. Students grasp the knowledge of grammar and build their vocabulary step by step and do not get distracted by too many complexities. The practice has shown that as a result of such an effective method students make progress up to four times faster. The method is unique for being not only effective but enjoyable as well. Students enjoy the classes as they are not bored and actively participate during the class.


Reference: Examples of Answers to Employee Self Evaluation


  A performance appraisal offers a manager the opportunity to evaluate an employee, but it can also offer an employee the opportunity to evaluate himself. Self-appraisal can encourage employees to become mindful of areas where they need to improve and it can reveal attitudes and biases a manager might never guess from observation. Some examples of employee responses can prepare you for the results you may get from employee self-evaluations.


Productivity Answers

  When asked to evaluate their productivity, most employees think they are very productive. Comments such as, "Of course, everyone has an off day once in awhile," or "Despite a lot of personal problems, I did pretty good" can be cues to examine whether you are really getting a full effort from the employee. Anyone who blames the business for a lack of productivity with answers such as, "I want to be more productive, but management keeps wasting my time with busy-work." This kind of self-evaluation turned into a management evaluation may indicate someone who does not take responsibility for their own actions.


Quality of Work Answers

  If you ask employees to write down an appraisal of the quality of their work, ignore the general pats on the back and look at details. If someone says, "I make some errors, but I always try to correct them and learn from them," you probably have a good employee. If you see responses like, "There's not always time to do my best work," or "Nobody's perfect," you may have an excuse-maker for an employee.


Skills Evaluations

  You can ask employees to analyze what skills they needed to complete their tasks in the past year. Watch for answers such as, "I found that my organizational skills really helped me do my job," and "My interpersonal skills contributed a lot to getting things done," and you will know you have a self-aware employee who is trying to make the workplace as productive as possible. If you hear, "I can't wait until I get a promotion so I can really use my best skills," or "A lot of my skills go to waste because people don't always appreciate what I can do," you probably have an employee who is not fully invested in their current position.


Answers About Problem-Solving Abilities

  A business owner needs employees who can solve problems. If you ask employees to evaluate their problem-solving talents, you may hear, "I jump right in and try to fix whatever is wrong," or "Several times last year I headed off problems before they got too big." This is the kind of employee who can be a real asset. What you don't want to hear: "Every time I try to solve a problem, I'm afraid I'll get in trouble if it doesn't work," or "I feel like managers are here to solve problems. I just do my job." This type of employee can be someone who just wants to show up for a set number of hours and get paid for doing as little as possible.


Edith befriends a nursing home runaway, but Archie is not too happy having a reminder of his own advancing years hanging around the house.




Household name

collect call landline old man = old husband, my hubby,

My Babe, My Bae

Pjs Pajamas

You can lead them to water, but you can't make them pick up the phone when they aren't home You can take a donkey to the water, but you can't make them drink. Old folk's home Senior or retired center, nursing home

Dementia, Alzheimer's disease

mellow pretentiousness 20 questions shoot = go ahead broke out = escaped good for nothing What are you good for? You are good for nothing.


free country

It's a free country.


He's sharp for his age.

He is still ticking.


Half of the day is gone.


800-xxxx toll-free numbers

900-xxxx adult service numbers

100-xxxx information numbers


He hollered at me. Give me a holler.


He conned me. He deceived me.

I was conned by him.

ex-con. ex-cheater.

Con-artist. professional deceiver.


Don't get me wrong. Don't misunderstand.


freeloader somebody who lives together but pays nothing.

I'm going to pay every penny with interests.


He can barely make ends meet.

They can barely make ends meet.



Golden years the time of life after retirement from active work

Public Librarry List



This is a good sample test for the beautiful girls taking a speaking test. ^^





Reference: https://www.rd.com/culture/benefits-of-reading/



Here's a simple question - answer it honestly, because your response could boost the amount of pleasure in your daily life, delay dementia, and even help you live longer: How many hours did you spend reading books last week?


dementia


This question has arrived in thousands of U.S. homes every other year since 1992 as part of the University of Michigan's Health and Retirement Study(HRS). A minor item on a massive survey of more than 20,000 retirees, it had long gone ignored in the analysis of elder brain health. But in 2016, when researchers at the Yale School of Public Health dug into 12 years of HRS data about the reading habits and health of more than 36,000 men and women over the age of 50, a hopeful pattern emerged: People who read books-fiction or nonfiction, poetry or prose-for as little as 30 minutes a day over several years were living an average of two years longer than people who don't read anything at all. Odder still, book readers who reported more than three hours of reading a week were 23 percent less likely to die between 2001 and 2012 than their peers who read only newspapers or magazines.


every other year

retiree

dig into ~

emerge

prose


If you're reading this, it's safe to assume you don't need to be sold on the merits of written words. You may already be familiar with recent findings that suggest children as young as six months who read books with their parents several times a week show stronger literacy skills four years later, score higher on intelligence tests, and land better jobs than nonreaders. But recent research argues that reading may be just as important in adulthood. When practiced over a lifetime, reading and language-acquisition skills can support healthy brain functioning in big ways. Simply put: Word power increases brain power.


on its [a person's] (own) merits

You may be familiar with recent findings that ~

literacy

score higher on intelligent tests

land better job

just as ~ = at the same time as

adulthood

over a lifetime

in a way / in big was

simply put


To understand why and what each of us can do to get the most out of the words, start by asking the same question the Yale team did: What is it about reading books in particular that boosts our brain power whereas reading newspapers or magazines doesn't? For one, the researchers posit, chapter books encourage "deep reading." Unlike, say, skimming a page of headlines, reading a book(of any genre) forces your brain to think critically and make connections from one chapter to another, and to the outside world. When you make connections, so does your brain, literally forging new pathways between regions of all four lobes and both hemispheres. Over time, these neural networks promote quicker thinking and may provide a greater defense against the worst effects of cognitive decay.


Use "each of us" instead of "we" to stress each person.

in particular

Use "whereas" instead of "but".

posit

encourage

skimming a page of headlines

genre

literally

forge

pathway

lobe

over time

promote

defense against

cognitive decay


Second, reading books, especially fiction, has shown to increase empathy and emotional intelligence. One 2013 study found that participants who just read the first part or chapter of a story showed a noticeable increase in empathy one week later, while newspaper readers showed a decrease. These findings may sound trivial, but they're not; developing social tools such as empathy and emotional intelligence can lead to more (and more positive) human interaction, which in turn can lower stress levels - both of which are proved to help you live longer and healthier.


empathy

emotional intelligence

in turn


That's not to say that magazines, newspapers, and Web articles are without merit. Reading anything that fills your mind and exposes you to new words, phrases and facts seems to carry mental benefits. New research indicates that a large vocabulary may lead to a more resilient mind by fueling what scientists call cognitive reserve. One way to think about this reserve is as your brain's ability to adapt to damage. Just as your blood cells will clot to cover a cut on your knee, cognitive reserve helps your brain cells find new mental pathways around areas damaged by stroke, dementia and other forms of decay. This could explain why, after death, many seemingly healthy elders turn out to harbor advanced signs of Alzheimer's diseases in their brain, despite showing few signs in life. It's their cognitive reserve, researchers suspect, that may allow some seniors to seamlessly compensate for hidden brain damage.


without merit

resilient

clot

Alzheimer's disease


So how does one build up a cognitive reserve? That's more good news for word lovers. Vocabulary is notoriously resistant to aging and having a rich one, according to researchers from Spain's University of Santiago de Compostela, can significantly delay the manifestation of mental decline. When the team analyzed vocabulary test scores of more than 300 volunteers ages 50 or older, they found that participants with the lowest scores were between three and four times more at risk of cognitive decay than participants with the highest scores.


resistant

manifestation sign symptom indication

volunteer


Learning foreign words also offers important cognitive nutrients. In fact, research shows that learning something new, such as how to play an instrument or speak a second language, is one of the best things you can do for your brain at any age. Remember that powerful network of brain connections we get from reading? Successfully learning a second language grows that network even more. As a result, polyglots have been shown to be stronger at multitasking,  superior at memorizing and better at focusing on important information than monolingual speakers. A 2013 study in Neurology discovered that patients who spoke two or more languages developed dementia an average 4.5 years later than monolingual patients. And while a brain that learns a second language earlier in life, will likely see more cognitive advantages than a late-life learner, it is never too late to open the phrase book. You don't need to end up a fluent speaker, either. "Just having the basics of those linguistic connections can delay dementia," Dr. Thomas Back of the Universiy of Edinburgh told the Atlantic. 


nutrient

neurology

discover

develope

dementia

an average 

either


Of course, learning a new language is no quick feat.

Luckily, the payoff of a single lesson can provide instant gratification. Researchers from Germany and Span had 36 participants read two sentences containing the same foreign word: "Every Sunday, the grandmother went to the jedin" and "The man was buried in the jedin." When asked what jedin means, the folks who correctly guessed "graveyard" showed reactions in the same pleasure-sensing parts of the brain you'd expect from food, sex, gambling and other satisfying stimuli. Though when it comes to words, over-indulgence is encouraged. 


feat

instant gratification

the folks

pleasure-sensing

when it comes to ~ 

over-indulgence

encourage


It's in that spirit of brain-building that we bring you a special Genius Issue devoted to all things philological. You'll find a story about the people who write dictionaries, the narrative tricks that "super memorizers" use to recall massive amounts of information, an essay that wonders if our fiction tastes are becoming simpler. There are heartwarming stories, too, such as the tale of how a young girl learned a few words of English from an American soldier during World War II, and a "Drama in Real Life" about a man who lost all ability to communicate - and almost died because of it. Wherever you land, we hope you'll be inspired to turn the page. Because, as science reminds us, it pays to increase your word power-today, tomorrow, and to the rest of your life.


devote

philological

narrative

recall 

heartwarming

soldier


Why don't do you try one of these words, Eh?


Canuck

Toque

2-4 = 24 beers

Mickey = 375 mL

A "40" = 40 oz

A "60" = 60 oz

Poutine

Double-Double

A dart

Weed

Eh!

Newfie


Reference: Speak like a Canadian on YouTube.



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다음 팟플레이어와 게임패드를 이용하여 편리한 영어학습기를 만들었습니다.

미드나 오디오 파일을 시청하면서 필요한 부분을 반복 재생하려면 까다로운 키보드를 눌러야 합거나 원하는 곳으로 정확하게 이동하기가 쉽지 않습니다. 조그마한 게임 패드를 이용하면, 훌륭한 영어 학습기를 만들 수 있습니다. 게다가 각각의 버튼 기능을 원하는 대로 설정해서 쓸 수 있습니다.


제가 가지고 있는 게임패드로 아래 그림과 같은 기능을 설정하여 사용하고 있습니다.

기본적인 기능은 다음과 같습니다.

    • 이전 자막/이후 자막
    • 자막 부분 반복
    • 5초 이전/5초이후
    • 볼륨 업/다운
    • 재생 속도 업/다운
    • 재생 정지
    • 자막 온/오프



Daum Potplayer에서는 설정창에서 HotKey를 설정하거나 XInput 버튼 설정을 해주시면 됩니다.



다음에는 VLC Media Player를 연결해 보도록 하겠습니다.

다양한 기기와 호환이 되면서도, 편리한 기능을 탑재한 미디어플레이어를 소개합니다.  아래 프로그램들을 이용하시면 영화, 음악, 인터넷 방송 등을 편리하게 시청하실 수 있으며, 언어 학습용으로도 적극 추천드립니다. 


Hello, I'm introducing two media players to watch movies or listen to songs. It is also a perfect tool to practice a new language. Take a look one of the following software. Each has pros and cons, I like Potplayer personally. It is easy to use and so many hotkeys, above all, it has an interface function to Xbox gamepad or compatible devices.




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