Cracking English

Learning English now or never...

let's go

I have learn English about 10 years. But until now, I have been communicated with foreigner. I realize that English is best importance language in technology world nowadays. So I want to receive the helps of everybody, I also want to share every thing I learn with newbie in English.

Nothing is impossible

No matter what they say When it comes to love Two hearts are inseparable No matter what they say When it comes to love Nothing is impossible

Money changes everything



Description:
The debate on globalization is over. Globalization has won, and it's working. In Money Changes Everything, Peter Marber offers incontrovertible proof that new prosperity is spreading worldwide and transforming everything it touches: culture, religion, families, politics, education, leisure, and much more. Marber reveals what to expect in your own life, business, and investments--and how to profit from the deepest and most rapid changes in human history.

Table of contents:
Preface.

1. Living Large in the New Millennium.

The Biological Phase. The Material Phase. The Experiential Phase. Going Forward.


2. Wealth and History.

How We're All Doing Better. Progress Begets Progress.


3. Wealth and Economics.

Growing Human Capital and Technology. Comparative Advantage and Free Trade. Accelerated Finance. The Culture of Wealth Creation. Abundance Reinforces Abundance.


4. Wealth and Government.

Democracy and Development. Bottoms Up. Living in the Material World. Trending Toward Experiential Politics. The State in the New World. Political Change and Challenge.


5. Wealth and Religion.

Old-Time Religion. Religion in the Biological World. Slouching Toward Secularization. Religion in Material-to-Experiential Migration. Less Church, More Philosophy? Religious Conflict in the Wealthier World. Revolutions or Evolutions?


6. Wealth and Education.

First Steps. Quantifiable Progress. Beyond the Basics. America at the Educational Crossroads. Knowledge = Money.


7. Wealth and Family.

The Way We Were. Urbanization and Migration. The Female Factor. Wealth and Marriage. The New Family. Children and the Youth Bulge. The Graying Family. The Future of the Family.


8. Wealth and Leisure.

The Democratization of Prosperity. Fueling the Leisure Lifestyle: Greater Purchasing Power. The Global Bazaar. Global Prosperity, Consumption, and Convergence. From Biological to Material. Looking for Meaning: From Material to Experiential Consumption. Why Buy? Beyond the Material World. Westernization or Cross-Fertilization? Clashes or Common Ground?


9. Wealth and the Environment.

The Hangover of Progress? Biological-to-Material Issues. The Greening of the Experiential Trending World. Costs and Conflicts.


10. Wealth and the Future.

Risk #1: Nationalism. Risk # 2: Armed Conflicts. Risk # 3: Environmental Stress. Risk #4: Demographic Imbalances. Forward Wealth and Value Momentum.

English computer software

This programming has written in VB.Net and build on .Net FrameWork 2.0. It has brought to you a strange way in learning English. The icon of program will show in system tray, show as tooltip included a English word and its mean.
Download here

Spelling Problems in English

Spelling words in English is challenging work. As a matter of fact, many native speakers of English have problems with spelling correctly. One of the main reasons for this is that many, many English words are NOT spelled as they are spoken. This difference between pronunciation and spelling causes a lot of confusion. The combination "ough" provides an excellent example:

Tough - pronounced - tuf (the 'u' sounding as in 'cup')
Through - pronounced - throo
Dough - pronounced - doe (long 'o')
Bought - pronounced - bawt
It's enough to make anyone crazy!!

This feature provides a guide to the most common problems when spelling words in English.

Swallowed Syllables - Three Syllables Pronounced as Two Syllables

Aspirin - pronounced - asprin
Different - pronounced - diffrent
Every - pronounced - evry

Swallowed Syllables - Four Syllables Pronounced as Three Syllables

Comfortable - pronounced - comftable
Temperature - pronounced - temprature
Vegetable - pronounced - vegtable

Homophones - Words That Sound the Same

two, to, too - pronounced - too
knew, new - pronounced - niew
through, threw - pronounced - throo
not, knot, naught - pronounced - not
Same Sounds - Different Spellings

'Eh' as in 'Let'

let
bread
said

'Ai' as in 'I'

I
sigh
buy
either
The following letters are silent when pronounced.

D - sandwich, Wednesday
G - sign, foreign
GH - daughter, light, right
H - why, honest, hour
K - know, knight, knob
L - should, walk, half
P - cupboard, psychology
S - island
T - whistle, listen, fasten
U - guess, guitar
W - who, write, wrong

Unusual Letter Combinations

GH = 'F'

cough, laugh, enough, rough

CH = 'K'

chemistry, headache, Christmas, stomach

EA = 'EH'

breakfast, head, bread, instead

EA = 'EI'

steak, break

EA = 'EE'

weak, streak

OU = 'UH' country, double, enough

Reference from http://esl.about.com/od/writingintermediate/a/l_spell.htm

What is good English pronunciation?

There are three levels of English pronunciation:

Level 1: People often don't understand what you want to say. You use the wrong sounds in English words.
Level 2: People understand what you want to say, but it is unpleasant to listen to you.
Level 3: People understand you, and your English is pleasant to listen to.

Level 3 will be called good pronunciation. Notice that good pronunciation is not "perfect American or British accent". You don't have to sound like the Queen of England or the President of the United States of America.

Why not? Because there are many regional kinds of English. In England, people from Newcastle speak English differently from people in London. In America, people from New York City, California, and Texas each have their own pronunciation. So it is no problem if you have your own accent.

But your accent must be close to the standards (American and British English). What does it mean? Turn on your TV and watch channels like CNN International, NBC, EuroNews, BBC, or Sky News. You will hear many different people (news anchors, reporters, etc.) from Germany, France, and other non-English-speaking countries. They all have good accents — easy to understand and pleasant.

The rule is: If you are close to the standard, you can always communicate, and your English will be pleasant. If you are far from the standard, sometimes you won't communicate successfully.

This article is from www.antimoon.com

Listening Skills

You probably spend more time using your listening skills than any other kind of skill. Like other skills, listening takes practice.

What does it mean to really listen?

    Real listening is an active process that has three basic steps.
  1. Hearing. Hearing just means listening enough to catch what the speaker is saying. For example, say you were listening to a report on zebras, and the speaker mentioned that no two are alike. If you can repeat the fact, then you have heard what has been said.
  2. Understanding. The next part of listening happens when you take what you have heard and understand it in your own way. Let's go back to that report on zebras. When you hear that no two are alike, think about what that might mean. You might think, "Maybe this means that the pattern of stripes is different for each zebra."
  3. Judging. After you are sure you understand what the speaker has said, think about whether it makes sense. Do you believe what you have heard? You might think, "How could the stripes to be different for every zebra? But then again, the fingerprints are different for every person. I think this seems believable."

Tips for being a good listener

  1. Give your full attention on the person who is speaking. Don't look out the window or at what else is going on in the room.
  2. Make sure your mind is focused, too. It can be easy to let your mind wander if you think you know what the person is going to say next, but you might be wrong! If you feel your mind wandering, change the position of your body and try to concentrate on the speaker's words.
  3. Let the speaker finish before you begin to talk. Speakers appreciate having the chance to say everything they would like to say without being interrupted. When you interrupt, it looks like you aren't listening, even if you really are.
  4. Let yourself finish listening before you begin to speak! You can't really listen if you are busy thinking about what you want say next.
  5. Listen for main ideas. The main ideas are the most important points the speaker wants to get across. They may be mentioned at the start or end of a talk, and repeated a number of times. Pay special attention to statements that begin with phrases such as "My point is..." or "The thing to remember is..."
  6. Ask questions. If you are not sure you understand what the speaker has said, just ask. It is a good idea to repeat in your own words what the speaker said so that you can be sure your understanding is correct. For example, you might say, "When you said that no two zebras are alike, did you mean that the stripes are different on each one?"
  7. Give feedback. Sit up straight and look directly at the speaker. Now and then, nod to show that you understand. At appropriate points you may also smile, frown, laugh, or be silent. These are all ways to let the speaker know that you are really listening. Remember, you listen with your face as well as your ears!

Thinking fast

    Remember: time is on your side! Thoughts move about four times as fast as speech. With practice, while you are listening you will also be able to think about what you are hearing, really understand it, and give feedback to the speaker.

According to: http://www.infoplease.com/homework/listeningskills1.html

Writing Skills

Before You Write It Down, Know This

Many people are intimidated by writing. Even so, there are times when writing is the best way to communicate, and oftentimes the only way to get your message across.

Write With Necessary Caution...

When writing, be mindful of the fact that once something is in written form, it cannot be taken back. Communicating in this way is more concrete than verbal communications, with less room for error and even less room for mistakes. This presents written communicators with new challenges, including spelling, grammar, punctuation, even writing style and actual wording.

Thankfully, today’s technology makes memo, letter and proposal writing much easier by providing reliable tools that check and even correct misspelled words and incorrect grammar use. Unfortunately, these tools are not fail proof and will require your support, making your knowledge in this area important.

The Importance of "Style"...

Some of the most basic tips to remember when writing include:

  • Avoid the use of slang words
  • Try not to use abbreviations (unless appropriately defined)
  • Steer away from the use of symbols (such as ampersands [&])
  • Clichés should be avoided, or at the very least, used with caution
  • Brackets are used to play down words or phrases
  • Dashes are generally used for emphasis
  • Great care should ALWAYS be taken to spell the names of people and companies correctly
  • Numbers should be expressed as words when the number is less than 10 or is used to start a sentence (example: Ten years ago, my brother and I…). The number 10, or anything greater than 10, should be expressed as a figure (example: My brother has 13 Matchbox cars.)
  • Quotation marks should be placed around any directly quoted speech or text and around titles of publications.
  • Keep sentences short

While the above tips cover the most common mistakes made when writing letters, memos and reports, they in no way cover everything you need to know to ensure your written communications are accurate and understood.

While this takes some practice, there are many sources available to assist with writing style, including “The Elements of Style”, by Strunk and White. One glance in any newsroom or on the desk of even the most accomplished writers and you are sure to find this small, easy-to-read, easy-to-understand, no-nonsense guide to writing. It is clear, concise and perhaps the best book of its kind. If you plan on writing a great deal of letters or even proposals, it is strongly recommended that you pick up this nifty guide, which by the way, will fit in your shirt pocket.

Letter Writing Hints...

When writing letters, it is best to address the letter to an individual. And, when beginning the letter with a personal name, be sure to end it with an appropriate closing, such as ‘Sincerely yours’. If you cannot obtain an individual’s name, consider ending it with a more generic (less personal) closing, such as ‘With kindest regards’.

For normal business letters, your letter should start with an overall summary, showing in the first paragraph why the letter is relevant to the reader. It’s not a good practice to make the reader go past the first paragraph to find out why the letter was sent to them.

The body of the letter needs to explain the reason for the correspondence, including any relevant background and current information. Make sure the information flows logically, ensuring you are making your points effectively.

The closing of the letter is the final impression you leave with the reader. End with an action point, such as ‘I will call you later this week to discuss this further’.

The Importance of Careful Proofing

Perhaps the most important thing to remember when writing a letter is to check it thoroughly when it is completed. Even when you think it is exactly what you want, read it one more time. This “unwritten” rule holds true for everything you write – memos, letters, proposals, and so on.

Use both the grammar and spell check on your computer, paying very, very close attention to every word highlighted. Do not place total faith on your computer here. Instead, you should have both a printed dictionary and thesaurus nearby to double-check everything your computers editing tools highlight, as these tools are certainly not always reliable, for a variety of reasons.

When checking your written communications, make sure the document is clear and concise. Is there anything in the written communication that could be misinterpreted? Does it raise unanswered questions or fail to make the point you need to get across?

Can you cut down on the number of words used? For instance, don’t use 20 words when you can use 10. While you do not want to be curt or abrupt, you do not want to waste the reader’s time with unnecessary words or phrases.

Is your written communication well organized? Does each idea proceed logically to the next? Make sure your written communications are easy to read and contain the necessary information, using facts where needed and avoiding information that is not relevant. Again, outline the course of action you expect, such as a return call or visit.

Close appropriately, making sure to include your contact information. While this may seem obvious, it is sometimes overlooked and can make your written communications look amateurish. This can diminish your chances of meeting your written communication’s goals.

ref: http://www.mindtools.com/CommSkll/WritingSkills.htm

Reading - Identifying Skill Requirement

Teaching reading can be an arduous task as it is often difficult to know how to improve student skills. One of the most obvious, but I have found often unnoticed, points about reading is that there are different types of reading skills.

  • Skimming - reading rapidly for the main points
  • Scanning - reading rapidly to find a specific piece of information
  • Extensive - reading a longer text, often for pleasure with emphasis on overall meaning
  • Intensive reading - reading a short text for detailed information

These different types of skills are used quite naturally when reading in a mother tongue. Unfortunately, when learning a second or foreign language, people tend to employ only "intensive" style reading skills. I have often noticed that students insist on understanding every word and find it difficult to take my advice of reading for the general idea, or only looking for required information. Students studying a foreign language often feel that if they don't understand each and every word they are somehow not completing the exercise.

In order to make students aware of these different types of reading styles, I find it useful to provide an awareness raising lesson to help them identify reading skills they already apply when reading in their native tongues. Thus, when approaching an English text, students first identify what type of reading skill needs to be applied to the specific text at hand. In this way valuable skills, which students already possess, are easily transferred to their English reading.

Aim: Awareness raising about different reading styles

Activity: Discussion and identification of reading styles with follow-up identification activity

Level: Intermediate - upper intermediate

Outline:

  • Ask students about what types of reading they do in their own mother tongue(s).
  • Write different categories of written material on board. i.e. magazines, novels, train schedules, newspapers, advertising, etc.
  • Have students describe how they go about reading each kind of material. You may want to prompt them by asking the following questions:
    • Do you read every word in the tv schedule?
    • Do you understand every word you read when reading a novel?
    • What kind of clues can the presentation of the material give?
    • How much time do you spend reading the newspaper? Do you read every single word?
    • What kind of assumptions do you make when you read the first few lines, or a headline? (i.e. Once upon a time....)
    • How much time do you spend reading the various types of materials?
  • Based on students' answers to such questions, ask them to identify the type of skills they are using in the various reading situations.
  • Divide students into small groups and give them the skills summary and short worksheet.
  • Have students discuss their opinions about the various skills required for the listed materials.
  • Present various "real world" materials (i.e. magazines, books, scientific materials, computer manuals etc.) and ask students to identify the necessary skills required.
Reading Styles

Skimming - Reading rapidly for the main points

Scanning - Reading rapidly through a text to find specific information required

Extensive - Reading longer texts, often for pleasure and for an overall understanding

Intensive - Reading shorter texts for detailed information with an emphasis on precise understanding

Identify the reading skills required in the following reading situations:

Note: There is often not a single correct answer, several choices may be possible according to your reading purpose. If you find that there are different possibilities, state the situation in which you would use the various skills.

  • The TV guide for Friday evening
  • An English grammar book
  • An article in National Geographic magazine about the Roman Empire
  • A good friend's homepage on the Internet
  • The opinion page in your local newspaper
  • The weather report in your local newspaper
  • A novel
  • A poem
  • A bus timetable
  • A fax at the office
  • An advertising email - so called "spam"
  • An email or letter from your best friend
  • A recipe
  • A short story by your favourite author


Source http://esl.about.com/library/lessons/blreadtypes.htm

GMAT

The GMAT (Graduate Management Admission Test) stands for Graduate Management Admission Test. It is administered by Graduate Management Admission Council (or GMAC) and required for admission to most U.S., Canadian, and European business school MBA programs. Also, the GMAT test result can be used for admission to business PhD program, such as Harvard Business School DBA program.

Many test-takers have been working for several years and some are still in colleges. However, the GMAT exam does not test any specific knowledge in business or other subjects. Rather, it tests the "mental intelligence" and the ability to make decision under time pressure. The following table represents GMAT test format:

GMAT Score and MBA Admissions
The GMAT is an essential element in the evaluation of an applicant, and schools attach great importance to the test for two good reasons: it allows the school to compare applicants from different backgrounds according to the same numerical scale; moreover, the average GMAT score is taken into account in the various business school rankings.

At most schools, the GMAT is a deciding element in your application. Along with your undergraduate grades, your score on the GMAT determines your "academic ability". Although everyone refuses to compare it to an IQ test, the GMAT implicitly provides the school with an indication of your ability to follow the MBA courses.

practice communication skill (cont)

AdSense/AdWords/Advertising Programs

Google AdSense is an advertising program that is run by Google. It is a great way to make money with your site, probably one of the best. Unlike affiliate programs, which require people to sign up and pay money to that site for you to get paid, Google AdSense only requires users to click the ads for you to get money. Plus, the ads are relevant to each unique page, so there is a higher chance of people clicking on the ads. The account you get after you sign up for AdSense gives you the AdSense HTML code, as well as detailed reports on your AdSense status. For any new webmaster, it is the premier ad service to put on the website.

Of course, if Google provides an ad service, there has to be someone giving money on the other end of the line. That's where Google AdWords comes in. With Google AdWords, you decide how much you want to pay for each click to your site, and you know each click is valuable because the ads are displayed on relevant pages. Not only do you get your ads displayed on websites, but also on the right hand side of searches through the Google search engine. Google AdWords is a great way to advertise your newborn or already existing site, in order to get some extra, quality traffic.

AdSense is not the only ad program out there. The runner up would probably be Yahoo Publisher Network (YPN), which supposedly pays as much as AdSense per click, and is more lenient with its Terms of Service. YPN is usually the ad network people turn to if they get their AdSense accounts canceled, but it is still best to start out with AdSense.

Other ad networks include BidVertiser, AdBrite, and Clicksor. Those are the second-rate ad services that pay little per click and don't have quality features like AdSense. The only reason someone would have to use those is if AdSense and YPN falls through. Don't trouble yourself with those, unless you want to combine your site with lots of different ad services, but it's best wise to use one, or at most two (unless your site is huge, then you should start using affiliate programs).
Refs http://www.w4t3r.com/AdSenseArticle.php

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Hot Air Balloons

San Francisco Skyline

Oxford Dictionary of English - PC Software




Oxford Dictionary of English - PC Software

The pop-up comprehensive single-volume dictionary

Serious writers don't just consult Webster's when they have questions about spelling or word meaning. They head to the Oxford English Dictionary, the English language's authoritative source.

The New Oxford Dictionary of English is Oxford’s most comprehensive single-volume dictionary. Its dramatically fresh and different approach focuses on English as it is really used today. Containing 350,000 words, phrases and definitions, the dictionary offers unrivalled coverage of current English at the click of a mouse.

New instant lookup from your web browser allows you to move your cursor over a word on your web page and the entry is instantly displayed in a pop-up window. The Dictionary automatically installs on your hard-drive and runs in the background—ready for whenever you need it.

After you have this dictionary at your disposal, you'll wonder how you ever performed your writing and research without it.


Product Features

  • 350,000, words, phrases and definitions
  • Instant lookup in pop-up window
  • Ready whenever you need it
  • The iFinger engine is user-friendly and unobtrusive. It runs seamlessly in the background when you start Windows.
  • When activated, simply point your cursor over a word i your Web browser, and the results from the quick reference will appear instantly in a pop-up window. (You can also double-click or configure a custom hot key.)
  • The pop-up window gives you a summary of the complete listing - hit the down arrow and the rest of the information appears instantly in the article window. You can then copy information from the listing to any Windows application.


System Requirements

  • Pentium 166MHz or higher
  • Windows 95/98/Me/2000/XP
  • 32MB of RAM
  • 20MB free hard disk space
  • 256-color SVGA display
  • CD-ROM drive
  • Internet Explorer 5.0+
  • Printer
  • Keyboard
  • Mouse
  • Internet access to register and download upgrades

Learn to speak english deluxe 9.5



The Complete Language Learning System
Product Information

Designed by language experts, Learn to Speak English 9.5 provides the most complete language curriculum. With 25 interactive lessons, games and crossword puzzles, flexible lesson plans, and more than 100 exercises you will rapidly progress from beginner to intermediate speaker. This complete curriculum will get you speaking quickly while providing the vocabulary and grammar skills you need to master English.
Whether you are learning English for business or pleasure, Learn to Speak English will improve your language skills. If you've studied the language before, the lessons can serve as quick refresher course. Or, you can polish up on your vocabulary and grammar or choose to focus on conversational skills. You will learn to speak, read, and write English with fluency and confidence. It's fast, easy, and fun!

Get instant feedback from each lesson with drills and quizzes then monitor your progress throughout the course. You can pinpoint areas that need more work then return to any portion of the course materials to further hone your language skills.

Don't cry jony

An immortal country song
Presenter: CONWAY TWITTY


Lyric:
Jimmy please say you'll wait for me
I'll grow up some day you'll see
saving all my kisses just for you
signed with love forever true

Joni was the girl who lived next door
I've known her I guess 10 years or more
Joni wrote me a note one day
and this is what she had to say

Jimmy please say you'll wait for me
I'll grow up some day you'll see
saving all my kisses just for you
signed with love forever true

Slowly I read her note once more
then I went over to the house next door
her tear drops fell like rain that day
when I told Joni what I had to say

Joni, Joni please don't cry
you'll forget me by and by
you're just 15, I'm 22
and Joni I just can't wait for you

Soon I left our little home town
got me a job and tried to settle down
but these words kept haunting my memory
the words that Joni said to me

Jimmy please say you'll wait for me
I'll grow up some day you'll see
saving all my kisses just for you
signed with love forever true

I packed my clothes and I caught a plane
I had to see Joni, I had to explain
how my heart was filled with her memory
and asked my Joni if she'd marry me

I ran all the way to the house next door
but things weren't like they were before
my tear drops fell like rain that day
when I heard what Joni had to say

Jimmy, Jimmy please don't cry
you'll forget me by and by
it's been 5 years since you've been gone
Jimmy I married your best friend John.

How to write great essay

Author: Lauren starkey
In your preparations for college, you may find yourself facing a handful of high-stakes
essays. Your college application requires at least one, and the SAT requires another.
Depending upon the high school you attend, or the state you reside in, you may need
to write an exit essay, or take the Regents Exam. This book includes specific strategies to
help you write great essays, no matter which type you write.
In contrast to basic writing guides that contain plenty of information you don’t need,
How to Write Great Essays focuses on the topics most important to you now.You won’t find
a comprehensive guide to mechanics, but instead you will get short but thorough lessons
on the most common errors made in grammar, spelling, usage, and how to prevent and cor-
rect these errors. Every chapter is designed to relate directly to your essay, giving you the
knowledge and the know-how you need to succeed.

Download the rest of article

Why Don’t They Learn English?

By Lucy Tse
New York: Teachers College Press
In Why Don’t They Learn English? Separating Fact from Fallacy in the U.S. Language Debate, Lucy Tse provides an account of the state of English and immigrant home languages in the United States. She challenges the notion that immigrants do not learn English and instead cling to and perpetuate the use of their home, or heritage, language across multiple generations. These perceptions, which Tse says are held by the general public and reflected and perpetuated by the media and policymakers, have influenced current policies on the teaching and learning of English for immigrants. However, citing the most recent research in the fields of second language acquisition and immigrant studies, Tse points out the disparities between these public perceptions and the actual state of English-language learning and use of heritage languages. She debunks existing myths and provides an alternative frame for both policymakers and practitioners in thinking about immigrant language education and policy in the United States today.

In chapter one, Tse outlines how public perceptions of immigrant language use have shaped current language restriction policies. She looks at proposed constitutional amendments that have come before the U.S. Congress in the past twenty years, which would require the elimination of the use of any language other than English in arenas such as governmental business, social services, and education. Tse examines speeches by congressional leaders and newspaper opinion articles to identify the arguments used to support these official English-language constitutional amendments specifically, and the English-only movement in general. These speeches and articles often include claims that immigrants resist learning English once they are in the United States. Further, these documents often include anti–bilingual education rhetoric that characterizes bilingual education programs as ineffective at best at teaching immigrant children English, and more often painting these programs as a means by which immigrants are insulated from having to learn English. In fact, bilingual education programs and services are often perceived by the general public as doing little to teach English and promote the assimilation of immigrants, which many view as vital to national security. Tse writes that “public opinion on how well children are learning English, as indicated by newspaper opinion pages, mirrors policy-maker views that immigrants and their children are not learning English quickly enough or well enough, and the use of languages other than English in school is to blame” (p. 8).

In chapter two, Tse points out that these beliefs are, in fact, based on myths. She cites evidence from research that describes how both immigrant adults and children are learning English — often quickly — despite the multiple challenges they face at both the personal and societal level. Tse begins by looking at trends in immigration, noting that while numbers of immigrants have reached new highs, the actual percentage of immigrants in the total U.S. population has steadily declined since 1990. She points out that during the immigration wave of the early 1900s, despite a higher proportion of non-English-speaking newcomers in the United States, English maintained its status as the language of the nation. Alarmists who currently worry about the status and future of English in the United States would do well to keep this in mind. Tse argues that immigrants today have an even more compelling reason to learn English than did their predecessors of the early twentieth century — today’s service-oriented economy requires higher levels of education and higher English proficiency than did the economy of the early twentieth century.

Immigrants are well aware of their economic situation and, in fact, an overwhelming number of them are learning English, despite public perception to the contrary. Citing U.S. Census data, Tse indicates that immigrant adults report having better English skills the longer they have resided in the United States. She also notes the overwhelming demand for the limited supply of English as a Second Language classes in immigrant communities. Furthermore, Tse speaks specifically to the questions surrounding language learning and academic achievement for immigrant children. She draws on important studies to offer readers a clearer understanding of the state of English-language learning and trends in academic achievement for immigrants and their children. She cites Portes and Hao’s 1988 study that shows not only that children of immigrants are learning English, but also that the overwhelming number of them want to learn English for social and economic reasons. Most children of immigrants feel compelled to learn English so that they can more easily make friends and participate in social events. Tse writes that “among these students . . . English fluency is a badge of prestige, a membership card for entry into the mainstream” (p. 19). They also understand that job and career opportunities are limited for those who cannot speak English. She points to equally important studies such as Portes and Rumbaut’s 1996 study that show that first-generation limited English proficient (LEP) students perform equally well in school as their English-only counterparts. Tse notes that, although there is “variation in performance across ethnic groups and the originating country, immigrant children perform remarkably well overall both in terms of English-language proficiency and in academic achievement and progress” (p. 21). According to Tse, these findings clearly debunk the myth that immigrant students are opposed to or resist English-language learning.

Tse acknowledges, however, that not all children are learning English and performing academically at an equal rate. Research points to factors such as income, literacy skills and background, and quality of previous general educational experiences that greatly influence English-learning and academic outcomes. A closer examination of relevant background variables will further illuminate our understanding of such variation. This is equally true for adult English-language learners, who often must face high levels of poverty, long work weeks, and insufficient English-language programs to gain proficiency in English. Tse points out that, due to variation in circumstances across different immigrant groups and populations, English-language learning occurs at different rates. Yet, despite this variation, and contrary to public perception, immigrants are learning English and do succeed in school. She writes that “these achievements are being made in spite of formidable economic and social obstacles, including a high level of poverty and inadequate publicly supported English language programs” (p. 29).

In chapters three, four, and five, Tse addresses what she sees as a greater problem — the loss of heritage languages among immigrant populations by the third generation. Chapter three describes the typical (and short) life of an immigrant language and explores why the heritage language is often completely replaced by English in the immigrant family’s home. In the United States, the English language has powerful appeal, both economically and socially, and immigrants often internalize societal pressure to give up the home language in order to gain English ability. Even when immigrant families do not explicitly seek to lose their home language, limited exposure to and opportunities to learn the heritage language contribute to heritage-language loss. Parents, community members, and especially peers will greatly influence the maintenance or loss of an immigrant child’s heritage language.

Chapter four explores the benefits of heritage-language development and the consequences of heritage-language loss. Referring to second language acquisition research, Tse points out that for English-language learners, drawing on their primary language can speed the acquisition of English. Education in the heritage language also allows for continued education in core subject matters, so these children do not fall behind in these areas while they acquire English. Tse points out further that “developing heritage languages and fostering bilingualism . . . result in both personal and societal advantages in economic, political, social, and educational sectors” (p. 53).

Tse points out that there is a linguistic blind spot of public perceptions and educational policies in the United States. On the one hand, foreign language programs abound and proliferate, reaching a 30-year high in 1990, in response to governmental reports and political rhetoric lamenting the lack of foreign-language and international experience among Americans. On the other hand, the route to bilingualism through heritage-language maintenance programs is largely being ignored by policymakers and practitioners — and immigrant children lose their heritage language at great personal and societal cost.

What then is the solution? Tse advocates providing exposure to the heritage language and expanding conventional notions of group membership through heritage-language education. Tse points to language acquisition research that identifies strong affiliation with ethnic group membership as being key to the contribution of language development. Heritage-language programs, as envisioned in Tse’s book, go beyond the typical bilingual education programs, whose goals are primarily to move into mainstream English classes rather than to maintain the heritage language while acquiring English. The heritage-language programs for which Tse advocates would provide context-embedded exposure to the heritage language by encouraging such practices as recreational reading in the heritage language while also promoting positive attitudes toward the heritage language through group membership.

Tse ends this book by reiterating that public perceptions of immigrant language learning are based on fallacies that hurt, rather than on truths that might help to create effective language practice and policy solutions for immigrant children and adults. Although not an exhaustive treatment of the subject by any means, Tse’s book offers an accessible and concise summary of the status of English-language learning for immigrant populations for policymakers and practitioners, and provides an important alternative frame through which to view challenges and solutions for English-language learners in the United States.

E.F.
Ref http://www.hepg.org/her/booknote/54

Smart Student


The college professor had just finished explaining an important research project to his class. He emphasized that this paper was an absolute requirement for passing his class, and that there would be only two acceptable excuses for being late.

Those were a medically certifiable illness or a death in the student's immediate family.

A 'smart' student in the back of the classroom waved his hand and spoke up. "But what about extreme sexual exhaustion, professor?"

As you would expect, the class exploded in laughter. When the students had finally settled down, the professor froze the young man with a glaring look.

"Well," he responded, "I guess you'll just have to learn to write with your other hand." :D

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