segunda-feira, 1 de novembro de 2010

FUTUROLOGY, MYSPACE GENERATION

Language level: intermediate
Standard: British accent
Source: SPEAK UP, Issue, 249



My Space Generation
  
What’s all the excitement about?

When the internet began, innovators promised an interactive platform linking users around the world. As big corporations caught on, this seemed empty hype: the internet was a great information source, but creating content was left to big companies, limiting individuals interaction to email, chat and shopping online.

Today, however, you no longer have to be a programming boffin to make your own website. Our compulsion to communicate has made networking and file sharing sites a phenomenal success.

How do I set up a MySpace?

The premise is gloriously simple. You just need an email address and half an hour to spare. At MySpace.com, click on “Sign Up.” Enter your details. Post an interesting photo. Add your likes and dislikes, heroes, favorite music, books and films: anything you like. This creates your user profile

Now we add friends. Search for people you know, or click from page to page, inviting people with similar interests to be MySpace friends. Their pictures appear below your profile. Soon you’ll receive friend-request from across the world. If this seems alarming, set your profile to private, so only real friends can view it.

How does it work?

Programming developments –sometimes called web 2.0 –separate content from style. Templates like MySpace allow anyone to create sophisticated-looking pages filled with photos, videos and personalized stuff. If you can program, you can personalize your page further.

How does MySpace profit from this?

By advertising.  Rupert Murdoch saw so much potential in it that his News Corporation bought it for $580 million ($ 432 million Euros).

Brits and Americans already use the internet more than they watch TV, challenging established approaches to news and entertainment. No wonder Google paid 1.65 billion ($ 1.23 billion) for YouTube.

Why bother?

It’s like a party without the fear of getting cornered by a bore (you can block unwanted message). Research suggests that teenagers get emotional support from on-line friends, many of whom they never meet.

But writer Elizabeth Crane warns how easily this buzz of unexpected encounters becomes a paranoid obsession. “I wake up, make coffee, log in to see if I have any new friends, click on 16 different profiles, and notice that I’ve been online 1:22:28, which is 1:02:28 too much. Wait, how does Bryan have 300 friends?”

But I have real friends! Who else is there?

Many famous people run their own pagers; others are run by fans. At school, I thought I was the only fan of “80s band the Smiths. Today I can become Morrissey’s friend and contact 100.000 Smith fans worldwide. MySpace also host historical and fictional characters: it’s instructive to exchange messages with Sherlock Holmes, Nietzsche and Garibaldi.

Bands can post four songs on MySpace. Stars from Madonna to Bjork have MySpace, and it’s a great way to discover new music. Lily Allen’s sardonic blog boosted her fame, while the Arctic Monkeys’ album shot to Number 1. Rock chick Sandi Thom broadcast live from Scotland to a worldwide audience. Besides songwriters and authors, you’ll find US presidential candidates, aiming at younger voters. New celebrities emerge, too. Tila Tequila has 2 million MySpace friends while Scottish bartender Mairi Duncan found can found TV fame when her hilarious fall through a trapdoor was YouTube hit.








Calgary, Alberta-Canada

Calgary, Alberta - Canada
Author: Linda from Canada
www.englishexercises.org
    
 
 
1. Is Calgary the capital city of Alberta? 
 
2. When was Calgary founded?
a) 1775      b) 1875     c) 1805 
 
3. What's the name of the park to the North of the city?
 
4. What year was the Palliser Fairmont Hotel built? 
 
5. Where is the Glenbow Museum located? 
 
6. Which exhibition is the most impressive? 
 
7. What is special about Stephen Avenue?
You can walk along the street because there are no cars. 
There isn't anything special about it. 
You can find unique shops there. 
 
8. How much do cowboy hats start off at? 
 
9. How much is the most you can pay for a hand made hat?  
 
9B. What type of leather is it made from?
Goat     Lizard    Beaver    Seal 
 
10. What type of specialty leathers can you get cowboy boots made of?
Lizard      Alligator       Beaver       Snake     Stingray     Shark   
 
11. How long does the Calgary Stampede last? 
 
11A. What does the Calgary Stampede celebrate? 
 
12. What is the name of one of the famous Calgary Western bars that visitors like that go to?
 
13. What's the name of the city's most famous attraction?
The Hour      The Tower     The Fort  
 
13 A. How high is this structure? 
 
13 B. Can you see The Rockies from here? 
 
 
 
 
 

domingo, 31 de outubro de 2010

JOB MARKET, MAGANEWS

Job Market
The challenge of the first job

Job offers are few and far between [1]  and candidates innumerable. But there are ways to help young people get into the job market [2]

Getting a job is more and more difficult, mainly for young people aged between 16 and 24. Besides [3]  the economic crisis, the few available vacancies [4] in companies are fought over [5] by an ever bigger number of candidates. For the young person who has never worked before, the challenge is tougher [6] because many companies demand [7] some experience. But even with these obstacles, the chances of getting a first job increase if young people follow some important steps. See below some tips [8] which could make it easier for young people to get into the job market.

Take studying seriously
The first step is to have a good educational base. Whether studying in a public or private school, the most important thing is for teenagers to take studying seriously, in junior school and in high school[9] . Better still if the teenager has some knowledge of information technology [10] and learns English or some other language.

The tough choice of profession

Making the right choice of profession is fundamental to success in a professional career. To make the right choice, the student should not think only about money, but if he likes that profession and if he has the talent to do it competently. Before taking the university entrance examination [11], it would be good for him to do some research into the professions which interest him most and also to check out what the job market in those areas is like. 

The Internet could help
The more companies get your résumé [12] (which must be well put together [13] and free of errors in Portuguese), the greater your chances will be. That is why it is good to check out the job offers published in newspapers and also released through employment agencies [14] (many of them have sites on the Internet). Besides releasing job opportunities, the agencies offer another interesting service for those registering [15] with them: they advise you when a vacancy appears that is appropriate for your specialty. But you can also use the Internet to send your résumé straight to companies, as many of them have places on their own sites to get candidates’ résumés.

What type of professional
are the companies looking for [16]?
The best jobs generally are taken by university graduates, who have done post-graduation courses and are fluent in English or another language. However, a recent study shows that companies do not just want young people with a good professional base. They also value young people’s behavior in the workplace. In other words, companies want young, mature, creative, daring [17], and honest people who are always willing [18] to learn new things and who know how to get on well [19] with colleagues.

How to prepare well for an interview
It is important to be well prepared for a job interview and practice the best answers to possible questions an interviewer could ask. It is common for the interviewer to ask why you are unemployed, why you want to work in that company, what you know about the company and what salary you are looking for.    Some interviewers can ask questions about current affairs in Brazil and the world (so it is always good to be well informed).
Even questions about your personal life (dating, personal tastes etc.) could be asked during an interview.  Answering these questions nicely, confidently and sincerely increases your  chances of being hired [20].


 Ilustrações - Calberto

Vocabulary
1 few and far between -  raros / poucos
2 job market – mercado de trabalho
3 besides – além de (da)
4 vacancy – vaga
5 to fight over – disputar
6 tough – duro (tougher = mais duro / difícil)
7 to demand – exigir
8 tip – dica
9 junior/high  school  (ensino fundamental e médio)
10 information technology – conhecimentos de informática
11 university entrance examination – vestibular
12 résumé – currículo
13 to be well put together - estar bem produzido (redigido)
14 employment agency – agência de emprego
15 to register – cadastrar
16 to look for – procurar por
17 daring – ousado
18 willing – disposto a
19 to get on well – se dar bem (com)
20 to hire – contratar

sábado, 30 de outubro de 2010

Edgar Allan Poe, 1809-1849: His Poems and Stories Are Strange and Frightening.

Source: VOA SPECIAL ENGLISH I recommend this website for Students, in particular for pre-intermediate and beginners.


The Edgar Allan Poe Museum offers thousands of artifacts of Poe's life and legacy.
Photo: poemuseum.org
The Edgar Allan Poe Museum offers thousands of artifacts of Poe's life and legacy.

 
Or download MP3 (Right-click or option-click and save link) 

STEVE EMBER: I’m Steve Ember.
FAITH LAPIDUS: And I’m Faith Lapidus with PEOPLE IN AMERICA from VOA Special English.  Today, we tell about Edgar Allan Poe, a nineteenth-century American writer.  His stories and poems were some of the most frightening and strange ever written.
(MUSIC)
STEVE EMBER: Americans celebrate Halloween on October thirty-first.  It is mostly a holiday for children who like to be frightened.  Yet many grown people observe Halloween, too.  Those who love the writings of Edgar Allan Poe think Halloween is the best time of year to celebrate them.  Poe is most famous for his stories and poems of strangeness, mystery and terror.
He wrote about people buried while still alive.  About insanity and death.  About dreams that become real...or reality that seems like a dream.
FAITH LAPIDUS: Edgar Allan Poe died in the city of Baltimore, Maryland in eighteen forty-nine. Now, in that city, an unusual party takes place every Halloween. In the dark of night, visitors go to the grounds of Westminster Presbyterian Church where Poe is buried.  Everything is quiet.  Then a voice calls out.  It is Poe!  No, it is just an actor, reading Poe's work.
(MUSIC)
Poe is most famous for his stories and poems of strangeness, mystery and terror.
loc.gov

Poe is most famous for his stories and poems of strangeness, mystery and terror.
STEVE EMBER: Reading stories was one of the most important forms of enjoyment in Edgar Allan Poe's time.  Poe created many of these "short stories.”  They appeared in different publications.
Horror stories already were popular when Poe began writing. Critics say he wrote the perfect horror story. Poe also wrote detective stories.  These were mysteries about crimes, such as murder. An investigator called a detective solves the mysteries.  The detective is able to find important, hidden meanings in facts. The horror and detective stories Poe created remain popular in books and movies.
FAITH LAPIDUS: Edgar Allan Poe's work is not easy to read.  His language is difficult to understand today.  And most of his writing describes very unpleasant situations and events.  His story "The Pit and the Pendulum," for example, is about the mental torture of a prisoner.  Each time the prisoner saves himself from death, a new and more horrible form of death threatens him.
Another story is "The Masque of the Red Death."  In it, a terrible disease -- the Red Death -- has killed half the population of a country. The ruler of the country shuts his castle against the disease. He and his wealthy friends are inside.  They pass the time by having parties.  They believe the Red Death will not find them. But it does.
(MUSIC)
STEVE EMBER: Edgar Poe was born in eighteen-oh-nine in Boston, Massachusetts.  His parents were actors.  At that time, actors were not accepted by the best society.  Edgar was a baby when his father left the family.  He was two years old when his mother died.  He was taken into the home of a wealthy businessman, John Allan.  He then received his new name -- Edgar Allan Poe. John Allan never officially made Edgar his son.  In fact, he came to dislike him strongly.
Edgar attended schools in England and in Richmond, Virginia. As a young man, he attended the University of Virginia in Charlottesville.  He was a good student. He was a member of the Jefferson Literary Society. But he liked to drink alcohol and play card games for money.  Edgar was not a good player.  He lost money he did not have.
John Allan refused to pay Edgar's gambling losses.  He also refused to let Edgar continue at the university.  So, Edgar went to Boston and began working as a writer and editor for monthly magazines. He also served in the army for two years.
FAITH LAPIDUS: Edgar Allan Poe worked hard.  He became a successful editor.  He published three books of poetry.  He also began writing stories.  Five of his stories were printed in a publication in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in eighteen thirty-two. Yet he was not well paid.  His life was difficult.  He was poor, and he was troubled by sicknesses of the body and mind. Poe suffered from depression.  He feared he was insane.  He drank alcohol to escape his fears.  The alcohol had a very bad effect on him.
Edmund Quinn's Bust of Poe is on display at The Poe Museum in Richmond, VA.
poemuseum.org

Edmund Quinn's Bust of Poe is on display at The Poe Museum in Richmond, VA.
STEVE EMBER: In eighteen thirty-five, Poe began editing the Southern Literary Messenger in Richmond, Virginia.  The following year, at the age of twenty-seven, he married Virginia Clemm.  She was the daughter of his father's sister.  She was only thirteen years old.
Poe and his wife moved often as he found work at magazines and newspapers in Philadelphia and New York.
For a time, it seemed that Poe would find some happiness. But his wife was sick for most of their marriage.  She died in eighteen forty-seven. After his wife’s death, Poe’s problems with alcohol increased. He died two years later, at the age of forty.  He was found dead in Baltimore after days of heavy drinking.
(MUSIC )
FAITH LAPIDUS: Through all his crises, Edgar Allan Poe produced many stories, poems, and works of criticism.  Some of his stories won prizes.  Yet he did not become famous until eighteen forty-five.  That was when his poem "The Raven" was published.
There is no question that Poe suffered from emotional problems.  One critic said Poe's spirit was torn.  He said Poe's stories were often about his own divided nature.  Each person in his stories showed a different side of the writer. There is a question, however, about Poe's importance.  Some critics said he was one of America's best writers.  Others disagreed.
STEVE EMBER: One critic said Poe discovered a new artistic universe -- a universe of dreams.  It was a place where the line between reality and unreality is extremely thin.
Even those who praised Poe agreed that there are many difficulties in his work.  These difficulties place Poe's writing outside the main body of American literature.  Most American writing is realistic.  Poe's interests and way of writing were not realistic at all. Poe's work has been praised most in France.  He had a great influence on many French writers.
FAITH LAPIDUS: Poe's best-known poem is "The Raven."  Some people love it. They say it is like music.  Others hate it.  They say it sounds forced and unnatural -- like bad music.
"The Raven" is about a man whose great love, Lenore, has died. She is gone forever.  But the man cannot accept that all happiness is gone.  He sits alone among his books late at night. He hears a noise at the window.  Here is the beginning of the poem:
Litho­graph of Edgar Allan Poe's Mem­orial Grave in Balt­imore, Mary­land.
eapoe.org

Litho graph of Edgar Allan Poe's Mem orial Grave in Balt imore, Mary land.
READER:
Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary,
Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore --
While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,
As of some one gently rapping -- rapping at my chamber door.
"’Tis some visitor,” I muttered, "tapping at my chamber door --
Only this and nothing more."
FAITH LAPIDUS: The man looks out the window and sees only blackness.
READER:
Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there wondering, fearing,
Doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before;
But the silence was unbroken, and the stillness gave no token,
And the only word there spoken was the whispered word, "Lenore!"
This I whispered, and an echo murmured back the word, "Lenore!"
Merely this and nothing more.
FAITH LAPIDUS: But there is something at the window.  It is a large black bird -- a raven.  It comes into the room like the spirit of death and hopelessness. It sits on a small statue above the door. The raven can speak just one word:  “nevermore” -- meaning “never again”.
READER:
But the Raven, sitting lonely on that placid bust, spoke only
That one word, as if his soul in that one word he did outpour.
Nothing further then he uttered; not a feather then he fluttered --
Till I scarcely more than muttered, "Other friends have flown before –
On the morrow he will leave me, as my Hopes have flown before."
Then the bird said, "Nevermore."
FAITH LAPIDUS: The man becomes frightened. He does not know if the raven is just a bird or an evil spirit.  We know the raven will never leave the man's room.
READER:
And the Raven, never flitting, still is sitting -- still is sitting
On the pallid bust of Pallas just above my chamber door;
And his eyes have all the seeming of a Demon that is dreaming,
And the lamplight o’er him streaming throws his shadow on the floor;
And my soul from out that shadow that lies floating on the floor
Shall be lifted – nevermore!
STEVE EMBER: This program was written by Shelley Gollust.  It was produced by Lawan Davis.  Our poetry reader was Richard Rael.  I'm Steve Ember.
FAITH LAPIDUS:
And I'm Faith Lapidus.  Join us again next week for PEOPLE IN AMERICA from VOA Special English.

Global warming

Global Warming Kills the Animals


Species Disappear
The latest report from the World Conservation Union says that a minimum of 40 percent of the world’s species are being threatened ... and global warming’s one of the main culprits. [Reuters]


Cannibalistic Polar Bears...
As longer seasons without ice keep polar bears away from food, they start eating each other. [AP]

...And Dying Polar Bears
A recent study completed by the U.S. Geological Survey shows that cannibalism—while brutal—may be the least of the bear’s problems. Many are also drowning, unable to swim in the increased spaces between melting sea ice. Two-thirds of them may be gone by 2050. [National Geographic] [Mongo Bay]

More Bear Attacks
Earlier this year, Moscow warned its citizens to beware of brown bear attacks. In Russia, it’s been too hot in the winter for bears to sleep. When bears can’t hibernate, they get very grouchy and become “unusually aggressive.”[Der Spiegel]

Dying Gray Whales 
Save the whales! Global warming is thwarting majestic gray whales’ struggle to recover from their endangered status. In recent years, more gray whales have been washing up on beaches after starving to death. Culprit: Rising ocean temps, which are killing off their food supply. [Washington Post]


Death March of the Penguins
Scientists blame global warming for the declining penguin population, as warmer waters and smaller ice floes force the birds to travel further to find food. “Emperor penguins ... have dropped from 300 breeding pairs to just nine in the western Antarctic Peninsula.”  [National Geographic] [MSNBC]

Farewell to Frogs
An estimated two-thirds of the 110 known species of harlequin frog in Central and South America have vanished since the 1980s due to the outbreak of a deadly frog fungus ... brought on by global warming. Scientist J. Allen Pound: "Disease is the bullet killing frogs, but climate change is pulling the trigger.” [National Geographic]

Farewell to the Arctic Fox
The White Arctic Fox used to rule the colder climes, but as temperatures warm up, its more aggressive cousin, the Red Fox, is moving North and taking over. [Wired]

Farewell to the Walrus
Walrus pups rest on sea ice while their mothers hunt for food. A new study shows more and more abandoned pups are being stranded on floating islands as ice islands melt. Also, sadly, mother walruses are abandoning them to follow the ice further north. [Mongo Bay]

Farewell to Cute Koala Bears
Australia’s Climate Action Network reports that higher temperatures are killing off eucalyptus trees while higher levels of CO2 in the atmosphere are decreasing the nutritional value of the eucalyptus leaves Koala bears eat. They warn that the cute furry creatures could become extinct in the next few decades. [Science]

Jellyfish Attack
Ouch! At least 30,000 people were stung by jellyfish along the Mediterranean coast last year; some areas boasted more than 10 jellyfish per square foot of water. Thank global warming: Jellyfish generally stay out of the way of swimmers, preferring the warmer, saltier water of the open seas. Hotter temperatures erase the natural temperature barrier between the open sea and the shore. The offshore waters also become more saline, causing the stinging blobs of hurt to move in toward the coastlines (and your unsuspecting legs). [BBC]

Podenglish, films 65

TEACHER’S CORNER



Language Level: Basic
Standards: British and American.
Source: Speak Up






A BIT OF ZIP...

Words have a life of their own: the Word “zip” for example, is the sound of an object moving quicly, so we say that a car zips past us on the road. We can also say someone has zip when they are dynamic and full of energy. Let’s not forget the zippers that close our jackets and trousers. This ingenious invention was originally called a “hookless fastner,” then in 1923 shoe manufacture B.F. Goodrich used the fastener in a new line of boots called “Zippers.” The boots are long gone, but the fastener is still know today as a zipper in the USA (though zip is more common in the UK.) A modern innovation is the zip lock on plastic bags for storing food.

MODERN TIMES

In the world of computers we find zip files: these are files compressed by special programs such as winzip. These programs save space and make it faster to send files over the internet.

In the US it’s important to remember your Zip code (or postal code). Which is an acronym for “Zone Improvement Plan”.

Finally, on American streets teenagers gangs shoot each other with zip guns. These are home-made guns made from a metal tube and a primitive firing device, attached to a piece of wood. They’re dangerous for both victim and attacker as they’re inaccurate and can explode.

Glossary

A life of their own: uma vida própria.
Zips past us: nos passa voando.
Zippers: zipper.
Hookless fastener: fechadura sem gancho.
Boots: botas.
Are long gne: há tempos não existem mais.
Zip lock: fecho plástico (sem dentes, geralmente para embalagens).
For storing food: para conservar alimentos.
Zone Improvement (Plan: plano de aprimoramento do correio) com subdivisões em zonas, semelhantes ao CEP- Código de Endereçamento Postal.
Firing device: dispositivo de disparo.