International Journal of Engineering Research and Applications (IJERA) aims to cover the latest outstanding developments in the field of all Engineering Technologies & science.
International Journal of Engineering Research and Applications (IJERA) is a team of researchers not publication services or private publications running the journals for monetary benefits, we are association of scientists and academia who focus only on supporting authors who want to publish their work. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online, all the articles will be archived for real time access.
Our journal system primarily aims to bring out the research talent and the works done by sciaentists, academia, engineers, practitioners, scholars, post graduate students of engineering and science. This journal aims to cover the scientific research in a broader sense and not publishing a niche area of research facilitating researchers from various verticals to publish their papers. It is also aimed to provide a platform for the researchers to publish in a shorter of time, enabling them to continue further All articles published are freely available to scientific researchers in the Government agencies,educators and the general public. We are taking serious efforts to promote our journal across the globe in various ways, we are sure that our journal will act as a scientific platform for all researchers to publish their works online.
Este documento es un informativo semanal para los apoderados de los estudiantes de tercero básico en el Colegio Camilo Henríquez. Proporciona detalles sobre los requerimientos y evaluaciones para la semana del 8 al 12 de junio, incluyendo libros, materiales, horarios de clases y contenidos académicos. También incluye información sobre próximos eventos como el Día del Padre y una obra de teatro.
The document discusses designing teams and processes to adapt to changing needs. It recommends structuring teams so members can work within their competencies and across projects fluidly with clear roles and expectations. The design process should support the team and their work, and be flexible enough to change with team, organization, and project needs. An effective team culture builds an environment where members feel free to be themselves, voice opinions, and feel supported.
UX, ethnography and possibilities: for Libraries, Museums and ArchivesNed Potter
1) The document discusses how the University of York Library has used various user experience (UX) techniques like ethnographic observation and interviews to better understand user needs and behaviors.
2) Some changes implemented based on UX findings include installing hot water taps, changing hours, and adding blankets - aimed at improving the small details of user experience.
3) The presentation encourages other libraries, archives and museums to try incorporating UX techniques like behavioral mapping and cognitive interviews to inform design changes that enhance services for users.
An immersive workshop at General Assembly, SF. I typically teach this workshop at General Assembly, San Francisco. To see a list of my upcoming classes, visit https://generalassemb.ly/instructors/seth-familian/4813
I also teach this workshop as a private lunch-and-learn or half-day immersive session for corporate clients. To learn more about pricing and availability, please contact me at http://familian1.com
3 Things Every Sales Team Needs to Be Thinking About in 2017Drift
Thinking about your sales team's goals for 2017? Drift's VP of Sales shares 3 things you can do to improve conversion rates and drive more revenue.
Read the full story on the Drift blog here: http://blog.drift.com/sales-team-tips
How to Become a Thought Leader in Your NicheLeslie Samuel
Are bloggers thought leaders? Here are some tips on how you can become one. Provide great value, put awesome content out there on a regular basis, and help others.
Pronunciation the implications of segmental and suprasegmental phonology us...dannicklevy
This document discusses various aspects of teaching pronunciation to English language learners. It covers the teacher's role in helping students hear and produce sounds correctly, providing feedback, and assessing progress. It also addresses why pronunciation is important for communication, challenges of teaching it, and how to plan integrated, remedial, and practice lessons focusing on segmental and suprasegmental phonology. The document provides examples of coursebook materials and discusses techniques like drills, use of phonetic symbols, and the importance of teaching pronunciation in context rather than in isolation.
International Journal of Engineering Research and Applications (IJERA) aims to cover the latest outstanding developments in the field of all Engineering Technologies & science.
International Journal of Engineering Research and Applications (IJERA) is a team of researchers not publication services or private publications running the journals for monetary benefits, we are association of scientists and academia who focus only on supporting authors who want to publish their work. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online, all the articles will be archived for real time access.
Our journal system primarily aims to bring out the research talent and the works done by sciaentists, academia, engineers, practitioners, scholars, post graduate students of engineering and science. This journal aims to cover the scientific research in a broader sense and not publishing a niche area of research facilitating researchers from various verticals to publish their papers. It is also aimed to provide a platform for the researchers to publish in a shorter of time, enabling them to continue further All articles published are freely available to scientific researchers in the Government agencies,educators and the general public. We are taking serious efforts to promote our journal across the globe in various ways, we are sure that our journal will act as a scientific platform for all researchers to publish their works online.
Este documento es un informativo semanal para los apoderados de los estudiantes de tercero básico en el Colegio Camilo Henríquez. Proporciona detalles sobre los requerimientos y evaluaciones para la semana del 8 al 12 de junio, incluyendo libros, materiales, horarios de clases y contenidos académicos. También incluye información sobre próximos eventos como el Día del Padre y una obra de teatro.
The document discusses designing teams and processes to adapt to changing needs. It recommends structuring teams so members can work within their competencies and across projects fluidly with clear roles and expectations. The design process should support the team and their work, and be flexible enough to change with team, organization, and project needs. An effective team culture builds an environment where members feel free to be themselves, voice opinions, and feel supported.
UX, ethnography and possibilities: for Libraries, Museums and ArchivesNed Potter
1) The document discusses how the University of York Library has used various user experience (UX) techniques like ethnographic observation and interviews to better understand user needs and behaviors.
2) Some changes implemented based on UX findings include installing hot water taps, changing hours, and adding blankets - aimed at improving the small details of user experience.
3) The presentation encourages other libraries, archives and museums to try incorporating UX techniques like behavioral mapping and cognitive interviews to inform design changes that enhance services for users.
An immersive workshop at General Assembly, SF. I typically teach this workshop at General Assembly, San Francisco. To see a list of my upcoming classes, visit https://generalassemb.ly/instructors/seth-familian/4813
I also teach this workshop as a private lunch-and-learn or half-day immersive session for corporate clients. To learn more about pricing and availability, please contact me at http://familian1.com
3 Things Every Sales Team Needs to Be Thinking About in 2017Drift
Thinking about your sales team's goals for 2017? Drift's VP of Sales shares 3 things you can do to improve conversion rates and drive more revenue.
Read the full story on the Drift blog here: http://blog.drift.com/sales-team-tips
How to Become a Thought Leader in Your NicheLeslie Samuel
Are bloggers thought leaders? Here are some tips on how you can become one. Provide great value, put awesome content out there on a regular basis, and help others.
Pronunciation the implications of segmental and suprasegmental phonology us...dannicklevy
This document discusses various aspects of teaching pronunciation to English language learners. It covers the teacher's role in helping students hear and produce sounds correctly, providing feedback, and assessing progress. It also addresses why pronunciation is important for communication, challenges of teaching it, and how to plan integrated, remedial, and practice lessons focusing on segmental and suprasegmental phonology. The document provides examples of coursebook materials and discusses techniques like drills, use of phonetic symbols, and the importance of teaching pronunciation in context rather than in isolation.
The document provides guidance for teachers on motivating students and responding to mistakes. It suggests that students are motivated by personal achievement and being part of a learning group. Teachers should show honest appreciation rather than exaggerated praise, and respond to mistakes by explaining their perspective instead of criticizing. The goal is to encourage students to take risks without fear of judgment. A teacher also needs to be fair and not show preference for any one student. While some factors are outside a teacher's control, like family issues interfering with concentration, the best approach is to give students opportunities to contribute without forcing them.
This document lists suffixes that can be added to verbs to form nouns, including -ion, -ment, -ence, and -ice. It also provides examples of verbs that can be used as nouns by adding these suffixes, such as achieve/achievement, appreciate/appreciation, and pretend/pretense. The list demonstrates how to form nouns from verbs for purposes like expanding one's vocabulary.
The document is a partial English language test asking students to complete sentences with noun forms of verbs. It contains 8 sentences with blanks to be filled in with words like "appreciation", "impressions", "advice", "interference", and "preference" based on verbs provided in a box. The sentences ask about showing appreciation, first impressions, best gifts received, measuring customer satisfaction, reactions to news, past encouragement, radio interference, and color preference.
Students in a class survey are asked how well they are adjusting to life in Britain based on factors like the weather, food, host family, school, time difference, public transport, currency, and understanding native speakers. For each factor, students write the name and arrival date of classmates who are used to it, still getting used to it, not used to it yet, can't get used to it, or will never get used to it.
This document discusses ways to talk about how accustomed or accustomed one is to a new situation. It provides examples of phrases to use when a situation is new and unfamiliar, becoming more familiar over time, difficult to adapt to, or something one doesn't believe they can ever adapt to or get used to. Phrases include "I'm used to it now", "I'm getting used to it", "I can't get used to it", and "I'll never get used to it".
The document appears to be a progress meter showing the completion percentage of a task. It indicates no progress has been made so far, with the meter at 0% and a label of "No progress".
Helena is an 18-year-old Slovakian student who has never traveled abroad or met an English native speaker. She finds everything about being in England challenging from the fast talking people and constant rain to the long bus rides and expensive costs. In contrast, Alex is a 20-year-old Austrian student who has been studying at the same school for two weeks previously and has visited England before. While she still dislikes the weather, Alex is getting used to understanding native English speakers and tolerates the bus rides, and is starting to enjoy some of the local food.
The document describes a variety of events that could happen to someone, including both positive events like having a baby or winning the lottery, and negative events like failing an exam, getting a computer virus, or waking up feeling unwell after drinking too much. The list touches on personal, financial, academic, technological, extraterrestrial, and national topics in a generally lighthearted tone by juxtaposing very good and very bad hypothetical scenarios.
Student A asks Student B why they weren't at a party, but Student B insists they were at the party. When Student A asks if Student B said they were at a barbecue instead of the party, Student B reiterates they were at the party. Again when asked about someone else being at the party, Student B simply states they were at the party.
This document is an adapted reading about the city of Brighton in England. It contains questions and answers about Brighton that have been divided into sections for three students - Student A, B, and C. The questions cover topics like what people can be seen doing on the promenade, how many language schools there are, where the schools organize visits, festivals that happen in May, places to go shopping, the names of the two piers, and more. The students are asked to find answers to targeted questions by asking the other students, without showing their own text.
This document provides role-playing scenarios for a job seeker calling a newspaper about an open office administrator position. It includes sample questions the job seeker could ask to learn more about the position and company, as well as language the hiring manager could use to provide information and schedule an interview if the candidate seems qualified. The goal is to practice effective communication skills for initial phone inquiries about employment opportunities.
This document appears to be a worksheet from a teacher's resource CD for a pre-intermediate global English textbook. The worksheet involves having students guess various sports based on clues. It includes a grid with 12 boxes that are likely meant for students to write their guesses.
The observed lesson was a general English class focused on communication skills. The teacher used a video to introduce the topic of sports and students wrote questions to get to know each other. Students then participated in a timed activity where they asked and answered each other's questions. The teacher monitored without interrupting to allow students to practice speaking fluency. Students were later put into groups of three to do an information gap activity about sports adapted from an activity designed for more students. The teacher monitored and helped with language. The lesson provided opportunities for students to speak and engaged them with personalized discussions about their interests and experiences with different sports.
The document provides background information on the teacher, Dan Levy, and the context of the lesson. It will take place at the British Study Centres in Hove, where Dan teaches general English courses. The aims of the lesson are to teach students the present perfect tense using time words like "just, yet, and already." The lesson plan includes a video introduction, presentation, drilling exercises, listening practice, and a role play activity for students to practice the target grammar. The document also outlines contingencies and anticipated challenges, such as the multilingual class and varying student levels.
The document provides guidance for teachers on motivating students and responding to mistakes. It suggests that students are motivated by personal achievement and being part of a learning group. Teachers should show honest appreciation rather than exaggerated praise, and respond to mistakes by explaining their perspective instead of criticizing. The goal is to encourage students to take risks without fear of judgment. A teacher also needs to be fair and not show preference for any one student. While some factors are outside a teacher's control, like family issues interfering with concentration, the best approach is to give students opportunities to contribute without forcing them.
This document lists suffixes that can be added to verbs to form nouns, including -ion, -ment, -ence, and -ice. It also provides examples of verbs that can be used as nouns by adding these suffixes, such as achieve/achievement, appreciate/appreciation, and pretend/pretense. The list demonstrates how to form nouns from verbs for purposes like expanding one's vocabulary.
The document is a partial English language test asking students to complete sentences with noun forms of verbs. It contains 8 sentences with blanks to be filled in with words like "appreciation", "impressions", "advice", "interference", and "preference" based on verbs provided in a box. The sentences ask about showing appreciation, first impressions, best gifts received, measuring customer satisfaction, reactions to news, past encouragement, radio interference, and color preference.
Students in a class survey are asked how well they are adjusting to life in Britain based on factors like the weather, food, host family, school, time difference, public transport, currency, and understanding native speakers. For each factor, students write the name and arrival date of classmates who are used to it, still getting used to it, not used to it yet, can't get used to it, or will never get used to it.
This document discusses ways to talk about how accustomed or accustomed one is to a new situation. It provides examples of phrases to use when a situation is new and unfamiliar, becoming more familiar over time, difficult to adapt to, or something one doesn't believe they can ever adapt to or get used to. Phrases include "I'm used to it now", "I'm getting used to it", "I can't get used to it", and "I'll never get used to it".
The document appears to be a progress meter showing the completion percentage of a task. It indicates no progress has been made so far, with the meter at 0% and a label of "No progress".
Helena is an 18-year-old Slovakian student who has never traveled abroad or met an English native speaker. She finds everything about being in England challenging from the fast talking people and constant rain to the long bus rides and expensive costs. In contrast, Alex is a 20-year-old Austrian student who has been studying at the same school for two weeks previously and has visited England before. While she still dislikes the weather, Alex is getting used to understanding native English speakers and tolerates the bus rides, and is starting to enjoy some of the local food.
The document describes a variety of events that could happen to someone, including both positive events like having a baby or winning the lottery, and negative events like failing an exam, getting a computer virus, or waking up feeling unwell after drinking too much. The list touches on personal, financial, academic, technological, extraterrestrial, and national topics in a generally lighthearted tone by juxtaposing very good and very bad hypothetical scenarios.
Student A asks Student B why they weren't at a party, but Student B insists they were at the party. When Student A asks if Student B said they were at a barbecue instead of the party, Student B reiterates they were at the party. Again when asked about someone else being at the party, Student B simply states they were at the party.
This document is an adapted reading about the city of Brighton in England. It contains questions and answers about Brighton that have been divided into sections for three students - Student A, B, and C. The questions cover topics like what people can be seen doing on the promenade, how many language schools there are, where the schools organize visits, festivals that happen in May, places to go shopping, the names of the two piers, and more. The students are asked to find answers to targeted questions by asking the other students, without showing their own text.
This document provides role-playing scenarios for a job seeker calling a newspaper about an open office administrator position. It includes sample questions the job seeker could ask to learn more about the position and company, as well as language the hiring manager could use to provide information and schedule an interview if the candidate seems qualified. The goal is to practice effective communication skills for initial phone inquiries about employment opportunities.
This document appears to be a worksheet from a teacher's resource CD for a pre-intermediate global English textbook. The worksheet involves having students guess various sports based on clues. It includes a grid with 12 boxes that are likely meant for students to write their guesses.
The observed lesson was a general English class focused on communication skills. The teacher used a video to introduce the topic of sports and students wrote questions to get to know each other. Students then participated in a timed activity where they asked and answered each other's questions. The teacher monitored without interrupting to allow students to practice speaking fluency. Students were later put into groups of three to do an information gap activity about sports adapted from an activity designed for more students. The teacher monitored and helped with language. The lesson provided opportunities for students to speak and engaged them with personalized discussions about their interests and experiences with different sports.
The document provides background information on the teacher, Dan Levy, and the context of the lesson. It will take place at the British Study Centres in Hove, where Dan teaches general English courses. The aims of the lesson are to teach students the present perfect tense using time words like "just, yet, and already." The lesson plan includes a video introduction, presentation, drilling exercises, listening practice, and a role play activity for students to practice the target grammar. The document also outlines contingencies and anticipated challenges, such as the multilingual class and varying student levels.