English Video Lessons
Hey everybody.
I'm posting hear an amazing website of english video lessons made by native teachers for free.
Hope you enjoy them and could be useful now that summer is comming.
Regards,
Ana
Showing posts with label resources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label resources. Show all posts
Monday, June 11, 2012
Sunday, March 4, 2012
Learning English through multimedia
Hello englishbreakfast team,
I recommend you this website to learn English through videos, featured games.
http://lingual.net/
Enjoy it!
I recommend you this website to learn English through videos, featured games.
http://lingual.net/
Enjoy it!
Friday, March 2, 2012
Adventure Tales of America
Here's a website containg tales about American history which can be worked online or printed to use them in class. I hope you find them useful!
http://www.adventuretales.com/history.html
http://www.adventuretales.com/history.html
Friday, February 24, 2012
The English Blog
I recommend this blog http://www.englishblog.com/
CLIL: Content and Language Integrated Learning
Hello English Breakfast bloggers!
This is my first time in a blog, so I hope to do it well.
Here is an interesting webpage link about CLIL and teaching resources:
http://www.educa2.madrid.org/web/aicole/secundaria
I've found it very useful.
Regards.
Laura
This is my first time in a blog, so I hope to do it well.
Here is an interesting webpage link about CLIL and teaching resources:
http://www.educa2.madrid.org/web/aicole/secundaria
I've found it very useful.
Regards.
Laura
Sunday, February 19, 2012
Recommended Links
Language Resources
Word Reference (wordreference.com) is my favorite bilingual dictionary.
For monolingual dictionaries, The Oxford English Dictionary (oed.com) is the most respected authority on the English language (from the British and historical perspective), but requires a subscription. Merriam Webster (m-w.com) is a good option for American English, and does not require a subscription.
News
The New York Times (nytimes.com) is my favorite newspaper, although it has a 20 article limit a month. The Sunday Review and Sunday Magazine sections are particularly interesting.
The Daily Beast (thedailybeast.com) is a news aggregator that has a "Cheat Sheet" of the top stories every day, with links to other publications--this is great for having a general sense of what's going on in an abridged format.
NPR (npr.org), the National Public Radio of the U.S., always has great programs--Monica's favorite is "On Point" (http://onpoint.wbur.org/)
Other
Radiolab (radiolab.org) is a fantastic series of thought-provoking podcasts; they recently won a MacArthur Genius Grant for their work.
The Daily Show (thedailyshow.com) is a satirical news program run by Jon Stewart--it's been on the air for years and has a huge following. You can watch it for free online by clicking on "Full Episode" or any of the individual clips. It might be a little hard to follow at first if you're not familiar with current events or popular culture in the U.S., but it's very funny and actually pretty informative--lots of young people in the States get their news by watching it. Stewart is super intelligent and is known for being very critical of the news media. I really recommend it!
The Daily Show (thedailyshow.com) is a satirical news program run by Jon Stewart--it's been on the air for years and has a huge following. You can watch it for free online by clicking on "Full Episode" or any of the individual clips. It might be a little hard to follow at first if you're not familiar with current events or popular culture in the U.S., but it's very funny and actually pretty informative--lots of young people in the States get their news by watching it. Stewart is super intelligent and is known for being very critical of the news media. I really recommend it!
(originally sent by email on 23/11/11)
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