Apr 29, 2004

April 29, 2004 - Meet the English Teachers

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Broadcast on COAST TO COAST: April 29, 2004

AA: I'm Avi Arditti, and this week on Wordmaster -- meet some of the teachers I met at the annual convention of TESOL. That's short for the group, Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages.


(MUSIC)

The convention was in Long Beach, California -- complete with Mexican mariachi music -- and I was there to promote Special English, the VOA service for English learners. But I was sharing a booth with the Fulbright Teacher and Administrator Exchange Program. It's one of the various Fulbright programs that send Americans abroad and bring people to spend time in the United States. So it was a good spot to meet a mix of Fulbright and non-Fulbright alumni. People like ...

VVEDENSKA: "My name is Tetyana VVedenska. I'm from Ukraine, the city of Dnipropetrovsk, and I'm affiliated with Dnipropetrovsk National University where I work as an associate professor at the Department of Educational Psychology and English."

AA: "And if you had any tips for people who are starting out as English teachers, or have already been teaching for a number of years -- if you had any advice, what would that be?"


VVDENSKA: "Advice? [laughs] Stay there, in spite of the fact that sometimes it will seem like hell to you. Because, you know, for me it means a lot, because my Fulbright experience changed my personal and professional life completely. It was in nineteen-ninety-eight, and I came here for a half-a-year research program, when I was affiliated with SUNY [State University of New York] university in Albany, New York. And I've got so many amazing friends and colleagues, so that heightened my self-esteem. They charged me with energy for the rest of my life, I think!"

BALLARD: "I'm Beverly Ballard and last year I taught in Bulgaria through the Fulbright program. I was in a small town on the Danube River and I taught every week two-hundred-twenty-five students. Well I'd never been in Eastern Europe before, so there were a lot of things that were a shock to me. One of the things is that they can boycott classes. And so if you give a test, sometimes they don't show up. This was a surprising thing. And, of course, that can't happen very much, at least not in California. If they boycott a class, there are certain repercussions for that."

PARK: "I'm Shin-young Park. I go to NYU."

AA: "So New York University. And where are you from?"

PARK: "I'm from Korea. I'm going to graduate this summer, in July. I want to work in E.S.L. school here in U.S. just for one year, as an internship."

AA: "You're here studying English as a second language, but you've also had to learn American idioms and culture along with it, for yourself, to survive. What's been the hardest part of that?"

PARK: "Um ... like every E.F.L. student or E.S.L. student, as a second language learner, there are so many things, especially when you watch a sitcom -- "

AA: "A situation comedy on television."

PARK: "I know the meanings, but sometimes I don't get it why that expression is so funny. So, you know, everybody's laughing, but ... "

GARLOW: "My name is Todd Garlow, I'm a high school E.S.L. teacher in Maryland. I worked in Turkey from [nineteen-] ninety-nine to two-thousand in a private Turkish school, teaching seventh and eighth grade students. I was there the year of the two big earthquakes. I actually left here the day the first big earthquake happened.

"As the day went on even, I flew through New York in the airport, hearing that the death toll was rising and the extent of the devastation was increasing. And then in the days following, when I first arrived there, looking back on it now, it reminds me very much of the days following 9/11. People were in complete shock, disbelief, just glued to their TV, wanting information, wanting to know what was going on."

AA: "And while your students learned English from you, what did you learn about Turkey?"

GARLOW: "In many ways, Turkey is regarded as the model Muslim country. People are Muslim but they have a secular government. They're in a unique position in terms of fostering democracy but still struggling with it. But they're also very proud of their own history and accomplishments, and there are many modern aspects."

AA: "Do you keep in touch with any of your students?"

GARLOW: "I do keep in touch with some of my students via e-mail about what's going on, which is a very nice connection."

AA: Todd Garlow and some of the other teachers at this year's TESOL convention, held this month in California. And that's Wordmaster for this week. Our e-mail address is word@voanews.com and our Web site is voanews.com/wordmaster. I'm Avi Arditti.

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April 29, 2004 - Meet the English Teachers

mp3





Broadcast on COAST TO COAST: April 29, 2004

AA: I'm Avi Arditti, and this week on Wordmaster -- meet some of the teachers I met at the annual convention of TESOL. That's short for the group, Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages.


(MUSIC)

The convention was in Long Beach, California -- complete with Mexican mariachi music -- and I was there to promote Special English, the VOA service for English learners. But I was sharing a booth with the Fulbright Teacher and Administrator Exchange Program. It's one of the various Fulbright programs that send Americans abroad and bring people to spend time in the United States. So it was a good spot to meet a mix of Fulbright and non-Fulbright alumni. People like ...

VVEDENSKA: "My name is Tetyana VVedenska. I'm from Ukraine, the city of Dnipropetrovsk, and I'm affiliated with Dnipropetrovsk National University where I work as an associate professor at the Department of Educational Psychology and English."

AA: "And if you had any tips for people who are starting out as English teachers, or have already been teaching for a number of years -- if you had any advice, what would that be?"


VVDENSKA: "Advice? [laughs] Stay there, in spite of the fact that sometimes it will seem like hell to you. Because, you know, for me it means a lot, because my Fulbright experience changed my personal and professional life completely. It was in nineteen-ninety-eight, and I came here for a half-a-year research program, when I was affiliated with SUNY [State University of New York] university in Albany, New York. And I've got so many amazing friends and colleagues, so that heightened my self-esteem. They charged me with energy for the rest of my life, I think!"

BALLARD: "I'm Beverly Ballard and last year I taught in Bulgaria through the Fulbright program. I was in a small town on the Danube River and I taught every week two-hundred-twenty-five students. Well I'd never been in Eastern Europe before, so there were a lot of things that were a shock to me. One of the things is that they can boycott classes. And so if you give a test, sometimes they don't show up. This was a surprising thing. And, of course, that can't happen very much, at least not in California. If they boycott a class, there are certain repercussions for that."

PARK: "I'm Shin-young Park. I go to NYU."

AA: "So New York University. And where are you from?"

PARK: "I'm from Korea. I'm going to graduate this summer, in July. I want to work in E.S.L. school here in U.S. just for one year, as an internship."

AA: "You're here studying English as a second language, but you've also had to learn American idioms and culture along with it, for yourself, to survive. What's been the hardest part of that?"

PARK: "Um ... like every E.F.L. student or E.S.L. student, as a second language learner, there are so many things, especially when you watch a sitcom -- "

AA: "A situation comedy on television."

PARK: "I know the meanings, but sometimes I don't get it why that expression is so funny. So, you know, everybody's laughing, but ... "

GARLOW: "My name is Todd Garlow, I'm a high school E.S.L. teacher in Maryland. I worked in Turkey from [nineteen-] ninety-nine to two-thousand in a private Turkish school, teaching seventh and eighth grade students. I was there the year of the two big earthquakes. I actually left here the day the first big earthquake happened.

"As the day went on even, I flew through New York in the airport, hearing that the death toll was rising and the extent of the devastation was increasing. And then in the days following, when I first arrived there, looking back on it now, it reminds me very much of the days following 9/11. People were in complete shock, disbelief, just glued to their TV, wanting information, wanting to know what was going on."

AA: "And while your students learned English from you, what did you learn about Turkey?"

GARLOW: "In many ways, Turkey is regarded as the model Muslim country. People are Muslim but they have a secular government. They're in a unique position in terms of fostering democracy but still struggling with it. But they're also very proud of their own history and accomplishments, and there are many modern aspects."

AA: "Do you keep in touch with any of your students?"

GARLOW: "I do keep in touch with some of my students via e-mail about what's going on, which is a very nice connection."

AA: Todd Garlow and some of the other teachers at this year's TESOL convention, held this month in California. And that's Wordmaster for this week. Our e-mail address is word@voanews.com and our Web site is voanews.com/wordmaster. I'm Avi Arditti.

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Apr 22, 2004

April 22, 2004 - 'Logic Made Easy' by Deborah Bennett

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Broadcast on COAST TO COAST: April 22, 2004

AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on Wordmaster -- we talk to Deborah Bennett, a mathematician and author. It seemed only logical for her to combine her interests in a new book. It's called "Logic Made Easy: How to Know When Language Deceives You."

BENNETT: "Most of us do not like to be considered inconsistent or contradictory, and those things that you do or say that appear contradictory violate the, quote, 'laws of logic.' I guess another thing that bothered me was all these talking heads [analysts and commentators] on TV that appear to give a logical argument. People need to understand what is and is not logical so that they can weed out the arguments that are not valid, that do not follow."

RS: "Are there some red flags that go up when you're listening to those talking heads, for example? Can you give us some practical idea of how we would identify ... "

AA: "There are laws to this, right? As a mathematician, you must see violations left and right of the traditional laws of logic."

BENNETT: "Right. OK, if I say 'all mothers are women,' it's not necessarily true that all women are mothers. But people will reverse that all the time. For example, maybe just in office conversation or something, you know, maybe somebody will make the claim 'all women are pacifists.' And a man says 'well, I'm a pacifist and I'm not a woman.' But that's the error of the converse. You can do the same thing with an 'if-then' statement."

RS: "Give us an example."

AA: "Because in your book, you call if-then -- [you say] it's been referred to as the 'heart of logic.'"

BENNETT: "Right, right. OK, I just did my taxes. OK, so there's one stipulation that says if you make more than -- I'll probably get the numbers wrong -- ten-thousand dollars in dividend income ... if you make that, then you must fill out Schedule B. It's not the case that if you're filling out Schedule B, it's necessarily because you have more than [ten-thousand dollars in dividend income]. So that would be one example."

RS: "Which is very much like a mathematical equation."

BENNETT: "Yes, any time you're having to agree or disagree to a statement or vote on something in voting referendums, they do this all the time. A statement that's worded in the negative, you'll have to be really careful what voting 'yes' means. So the flags for that are, you know, 'do you want the repeal of the term limits [on elected officials]?'"

RS: "Yes or no."

BENNETT: "So if you vote yes, then you are against term limits. 'Are you in favor of the ban on smoking?' So again it's a negative -- the repeal, the ban. The one I like is, 'do you favor the repeal of the ban on assault weapons?'"

RS: "How should that statement be written?"

AA: "Or was it written a certain way to try perhaps to ... "

BENNETT: "Some people think they are written in such a way so that people will be confused. How should that [be written]? I'm not a lawmaker, I'm not sure I could. But if you wanted to know, I guess, the will of the people, you know, 'do you favor ownership, under certain conditions, of assault weapons?'"

RS: "You're a mathematician. What did you learn about language by writing this book?"

BENNETT: "Well, I learned that language doesn't necessarily follow the same -- the way we use language, the definitions are not exactly the logical definitions. So it's no wonder, really, that people don't always understand."

AA: "What do you mean by that?"

BENNETT: "OK, like you can take an easy word like 'or.' In logic, 'or' means either/or or both. You can say, you know, 'I bet you're an aunt or a mother,' all right? Well, you could be both. But we use the word 'or' all the time -- 'are you coming or going?' So sometimes we use it in what's called the exclusive sense, where [it means] take one or the other, but it can't be both. And yet if you interpret 'or' that way in, say, a logic test or on one of these national tests to get into college or law school or whatever, then you'd be wrong."

AA: Deborah Bennett teaches mathematics at New Jersey City University in Jersey City. Her newest book is called "Logic Made Easy: How to Know When Language Deceives You."

And that's Wordmaster for this week. If you have a question about American English, then here's the logical place to send it: word@voanews.com. Or visit our Web site: voanews.com/wordmaster. With Rosanne Skirble, I'm Avi Arditti.

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Apr 15, 2004

April 15, 2004 - Lida Baker: Stress in American English

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Broadcast on COAST TO COAST: April 15, 2004

AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on WORDMASTER -- we take some of the stress out of learning which words to stress in American English.

RS: We turn to Lida Baker. She's an instructor at the American Language Center at the University of California at Los Angeles. She says the basic rule when speaking is to put emphasis on what she calls "content words" like nouns and verbs -- the words that convey information.

BAKER: "Words that are part of the grammatical structure of the language tend to be unstressed. So words like articles and prepositions and pronouns. So let me give you an example, if I say something like 'I have to go to the store,' the most prominent word in that sentence is the word 'store.' It's a noun. It's also stressed because it is the last content word of the sentence.

"One of the normal patterns of American English is that you stress the last content word, the last information-conveying word, of the sentence. Now in contrast to that, let's look at the words that are not stressed. The very first word is a pronoun. 'I' tends to be unstressed. The next two words, 'have to,' if we were to write those words out, we would write 'have to.' In conversation we run them together and we pronounce them very quickly, and we say 'hafta.'"

AA: "Like h-a-f-t-a."

BAKER: "Exactly."

AA: "And that's perfectly acceptable."

BAKER: "It's more than acceptable, it's required. This is what native speakers of English do. And by the way, a lot of people all over the world learn English by reading. They memorize lists of vocabulary and they're tested on their reading skills and so on. Well, when I get them in my classroom and they're in an English-speaking country for the first time in their lives, and they're hearing the language all around them, they don't understand a word. And one of the reasons they can't understand the spoken language is that they're not familiar with this alternating stress and unstressed pattern."

RS: As Lida Baker explained, the word you choose to stress also lets you change the focus of a sentence in order to convey a specific meaning.

BAKER: "Let's take a simple sentence like this: 'I put my red hat away.' Now what was the focus word in that phrase?"

AA: "Hat."

BAKER: "Right, because 'hat' is the last content word of the sentence. So if you were to ask me, 'what did you put away?' I would answer you, 'I put my red hat away.' But what if I say it like this, 'I put my red hat AWAY.' What question is that answering?"

ARDITT: "What did you do with your red hat?"

BAKER: "Or 'where did you put your red hat,' right? Now what if I say it like this, 'EYE put my red hat away.' What question is that answering?"

AA: "Who put your red hat away."

BAKER: "That's right. Let's move the focus one more time and say it like this, 'I put MY red hat away' ... 'I put MY red hat away.'"

AA: "As opposed to someone else's."

BAKER: "Right, so we can voluntarily focus on any word in the sentence that we want to in order to convey a specific meaning."

AA: "And, in fact, if you're not familiar with the sort of natural patterns and you stress the wrong words, you might end up confusing the listener."

BAKER: "That's exactly the point. As a matter of fact, people who are learning English have a tendency, for example, to stress pronouns. For them the normal stress pattern that they employ would be 'EYE put my red hat away.' And to a native speaker of English, as you say, that would be very confusing, because they would be wondering 'well, why are you stressing the pronoun there?'"

AA: One way Lida Baker helps her students learn normal speech patterns is by listening to music and singing along. She says music also helps people remember things. She says the basic rule when speaking is to put emphasis on "content words" like nouns and verbs -- the words that convey information.

RS: She plays classic songs, like one that Julie Andrews made famous in the movie soundtrack to "My Fair Lady."

BAKER: "'The Rain in Spain Falls Mainly in the Plain' is a great example of a normal speech pattern. It's divided into two thought groups, 'the rain in Spain,' 'falls mainly in the plain.' Each thought group has a focus word -- in fact it has two focus words, rain/Spain, mainly/plain. And the function words -- the prepositions and the articles and so on -- are not stressed, and so they're what we call reduced. They're pronounced at a lower pitch, they're pronounced quickly ...

MUSIC: "The Rain in Spain"

RS: If you have a question for Lida Baker at UCLA's American Language Center, send it to us -- she might be able to answer it on the air.

AA: Our e-mail address is word@voanews.com or write to VOA Wordmaster, Washington, DC 20237 USA. With Rosanne Skirble, I'm Avi Arditti.

[Originally on VOA December 12, 2001]

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