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Listen to Simon again and complete the sentences with suitable words.

Generate ideas on the following issues. | Read the following passage and take notes on the main points of the reading passage. | COMMUNICATION | Expressions with Future Meaning | Modifying Comparisons | Training and development | Choose the word or phrase which does not fit the sentence. | Read the passage about General Certificate of Secondary Education in the United Kingdom and fill in the gaps with missing words. There is an example at the beginning (0). | Learning Styles (free) Intro.mov | LANGUAGE FOCUS |


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  4. A peninsula is a piece of land, which is almost completely surrounded by water, but is joined to a larger mass of land.
  5. A) Before listening, read the definitions of the words and phrases below and understand what they mean.
  6. A) Complete the gaps with the words from the box.
  7. A) Listen to the recording of Text Two and mark the stresses and tunes, b) Repeat the text in the intervals after the model.

1. Learning languages is not only important when you move to a country, it is just ________.

2. Among things that helped learn languages one should mention watching the __________ kinds of programs we see everyday on channels around the world.

3. Types of program like game shows can be helpful at learning languages on account of the fact that they have a ____________or a ______________ that they repeat endlessly when _______________ win or when they are called to compete.

4. The best practice to learn languages is just talking to people in the street, or in shops where you could ____________ in your head what you wanted to say beforehand.

5. When you come to the shop, for example, people are very ____________ and supporting in most cases.

6. Sometimes it is difficult to understand the meaning of the ___________expressions, idioms, that kind of thing, that people use in everyday talk.

7. Usually people are really supporting when they know that you are ________ interested in learning their language.

Evaluate the ways Simon learns languages and say whether you consider them effective or not.

Formulate what difficulties you have in learning foreign languages and cultures. Swap information with your partner.

Suggest recommendation you could give to your in order to master foreign languages.

READING

1 Skim the text and explain why the concept of plurilingualism has grown in importance in the Council of Europe’s approach to language learning in recent years?

What is ‘Plurilingualism’?

 

http://www.eiuc.org/about-us/partners/council-of-europe.html

In recent years, the concept of plurilingualism has grown in importance in the Council of Europe’s approach to language learning. Plurilingualism differs from multilingualism, which is the knowledge of a number of languages, or the co-existence of different languages in a given society. Multilingualism may be attained by simply diversifying the languages on offer in a particular school or educational system, or by encouraging pupils to learn more than one foreign language, or reducing the dominant position of English in international communication. Beyond this, the plurilingual approach emphasises the fact that as an individual person’s experience of language in its cultural contexts expands, from the language of the home to that of society at large and then to the languages of other peoples (whether learnt at school or college, or by direct experience), he or she does not keep these languages and cultures in strictly separated mental compartments, but rather builds up a communicative competence to which all knowledge and experience of language contributes and in which languages interrelate and interact. In different situations, a person can call flexibly upon different parts of this competence to achieve effective communication with a particular interlocutor. For instance, partners may switch from one language or dialect to another, exploiting the ability of each to express themselves in one language and to understand the other; or a person may call upon the knowledge of a number of languages to make sense of a text, written or even spoken, in a previously ‘unknown’ language, recognising words from a common international store in a new guise.

From this perspective, the aim of language education is profoundly modified. It is no longer seen as simply to achieve ‘mastery’ of one or two, or even three languages, each taken in isolation, with the ‘ideal native speaker’ as the ultimate model. Instead, the aim is to develop a linguistic repertory, in which all linguistic abilities have a place. This implies, of course, that the languages offered in educational institutions should be diversified and students given the opportunity to develop a plurilingual competence.

The full implications of such a paradigm shift have yet to be worked out and translated into action. The recent developments in the Council of Europe’s language programme have been designed to produce tools for use by all members of the language teaching profession in the promotion of plurilingualism. In particular, The European Language Portfolio (ELP) provides a format in which language learning and intercultural experiences of the most diverse kinds can be recorded and formally recognised. For this purpose, Common European Framework (CEF) not only provides a scaling of overall language proficiency in a given language, but also a breakdown of language use and language competences which will make it easier for practitioners to specify objectives and describe achievements of the most diverse kinds in accordance with the varying needs, characteristics and resources of learners.

‘Common European Framework of Reference for Languages:

Learning, Teaching, Assessment. (2004). Cambridge: CUP’, pp.4-5.

2 Decide if the statements are True or False:


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CONCEPT STUDY| Scan the text again and give the suitable words and phrases to match the following definitions.

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