Skip to main content

Home/ Lo mejor de la Blogosfera Educativa/ Group items tagged languages

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Luciano Ferrer

The Tree of Languages Illustrated in a Big, Beautiful Infographic | Open Culture - 0 views

  •  
    "Call it counterintuitive clickbait if you must, but Forbes' Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry made an intriguing argument when he granted the title of "Language of the Future" to French, of all tongues. "French isn't mostly spoken by French people and hasn't been for a long time now," he admits," but "the language is growing fast, and growing in the fastest-growing areas of the world, particularly sub-Saharan Africa. The latest projection is that French will be spoken by 750 million people by 2050. One study "even suggests that by that time, French could be the most-spoken language in the world, ahead of English and even Mandarin." I don't know about you, but I can never believe in any wave of the future without a traceable past. But the French language has one, of course, and a long and storied one at that. You see it visualized in the information graphic above (also available in suitable-for-framing prints!) created by Minna Sundberg, author of the webcomic Stand Still. Stay Silent. "When linguists talk about the historical relationship between languages, they use a tree metaphor," writes Mental Floss' Arika Okrent. "An ancient source (say, Indo-European) has various branches (e.g., Romance, Germanic), which themselves have branches (West Germanic, North Germanic), which feed into specific languages (Swedish, Danish, Norwegian)." Sundberg takes this tree metaphor to a delightfully lavish extreme, tracing, say, how Indo-European linguistic roots sprouted a variety of modern-day living languages including Hindi, Portuguese, Russian, Italian - and, of course, our Language of the Future. The size of the branches and bunches of leaves represent the number of speakers of each language at different times: the likes of English and Spanish have sprouted into mighty vegetative clusters, while others, like, Swedish, Dutch, and Punjabi, assert a more local dominance over their own, separately grown regional branches. Will French's now-modest leaves one day cast a shadow over the w
  •  
    "Call it counterintuitive clickbait if you must, but Forbes' Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry made an intriguing argument when he granted the title of "Language of the Future" to French, of all tongues. "French isn't mostly spoken by French people and hasn't been for a long time now," he admits," but "the language is growing fast, and growing in the fastest-growing areas of the world, particularly sub-Saharan Africa. The latest projection is that French will be spoken by 750 million people by 2050. One study "even suggests that by that time, French could be the most-spoken language in the world, ahead of English and even Mandarin." I don't know about you, but I can never believe in any wave of the future without a traceable past. But the French language has one, of course, and a long and storied one at that. You see it visualized in the information graphic above (also available in suitable-for-framing prints!) created by Minna Sundberg, author of the webcomic Stand Still. Stay Silent. "When linguists talk about the historical relationship between languages, they use a tree metaphor," writes Mental Floss' Arika Okrent. "An ancient source (say, Indo-European) has various branches (e.g., Romance, Germanic), which themselves have branches (West Germanic, North Germanic), which feed into specific languages (Swedish, Danish, Norwegian)." Sundberg takes this tree metaphor to a delightfully lavish extreme, tracing, say, how Indo-European linguistic roots sprouted a variety of modern-day living languages including Hindi, Portuguese, Russian, Italian - and, of course, our Language of the Future. The size of the branches and bunches of leaves represent the number of speakers of each language at different times: the likes of English and Spanish have sprouted into mighty vegetative clusters, while others, like, Swedish, Dutch, and Punjabi, assert a more local dominance over their own, separately grown regional branches. Will French's now-modest leaves one day cast a shadow over the w
Luciano Ferrer

Close Reading and Argument Writing - Authentically Across the Curriculum - Gu... - 0 views

  •  
    "Close Reading and Argument Writing - Authentically Across the Curriculum 7/16/2015 0 Comments Close reading of informational texts and non-fiction articles is not - and should not be - reserved for language arts classes. Every content area would be immensely enhanced if science teachers, social studies teachers, physical education teachers, welding teachers, woodworking teachers (in other words, "all technical subjects," as Common Core states) would not push aside the textbook, but instead embrace it, along with content area and trade articles. Students would then simultaneously learn how to dissect the readings while gaining knowledge in these content areas. What often happens is that teachers feel that students can't handle the text books or can't read the articles independently - and often that is true. However, when teachers instead go into a survival mode, of sorts, and read aloud the whole chapter or article or summarize it with a slideshow, it ends up doing a disservice to students - students are not learning HOW to read these complex texts. They are not learning how to acquire the information on their own. They are not being given the skills to read the sometimes intricate information within a particular content area or even within their possible future trade. They are not being given the opportunity to read, understand, articulate, and discuss or even debate topics within their area of study. Teachers sometimes feel that they can't do these things with students because they are not language arts teachers, or because they don't have time, or simply because they don't know how. Alternatively, a simple solution is to let go of the control and let students do…..with the guidance called close reading. Close reading is a guided reading approach. It is guided because 1) the close reading strategy is reserved for complex texts that are often too high for students to be left with independently and 2) students don't use close reading strateg
Luciano Ferrer

phpList - How to include a custom subscribe form - 1 views

  •  
    " New Page 2 <!-- newsletter subscribe below here --> Email:
    Name: <!-- newsletter subscribe ends here --> "
M Jesús García San Martín

Stop and Learn English: Languages in the world - 3 views

  •  
    B2 ESL learner's viewpoints on languages in the world.
Francisco Gascón Moya

Pronunciator - Learn to Speak 60 Languages - 100% Free - 9 views

  •  
    A brilliant site with simple audio/visual flash animations for learning 60 of the world's major languages.
Luciano Ferrer

Free Online OCR - convert scanned PDF and images to Word, JPEG to Word - 0 views

  •  
    "Use Optical Character Recognition software online. Service supports 46 languages including Chinese, Japanese and Korean Extract text from PDF and images (JPG, BMP, TIFF, GIF) and convert into editable Word, Excel and Text output formats"
  •  
    "Use Optical Character Recognition software online. Service supports 46 languages including Chinese, Japanese and Korean Extract text from PDF and images (JPG, BMP, TIFF, GIF) and convert into editable Word, Excel and Text output formats"
Luciano Ferrer

What's Wrong With Latin American Early Education - 0 views

  •  
    "Back in the 1980s, a group of social workers in Jamaica visited low-income homes one hour a week for two years, bearing age-appropriate toys for the kids and advice on child rearing for the parents. Researchers tracked the outcomes, and a generation later, the results are in. The children whose homes were visited by social workers became adults who earn wages that are 25 percent higher than those earned by peers who had not been visited. Their I.Q.s are an average seven points higher, and they are less likely to resort to crime or suffer from depression. Other studies, including several recent ones in the United States, have shown similar results, contributing to a consensus on the importance of early childhood development that has led governments around the world to increase spending on the first five years of life. In Latin America and the Caribbean, a region of longstanding social and economic inequality, several countries have been especially ambitious. Brazil and Chile doubled the coverage of day care services over the past decade, while in Ecuador they grew sixfold. These investments build on historic gains in child nutrition and health. But while Latin American children are now healthier and more likely to attend preschool, they still lag far behind in learning, particularly in the areas of language and cognition, when compared with their counterparts in wealthy countries. What are we doing wrong? ..."
  •  
    "Back in the 1980s, a group of social workers in Jamaica visited low-income homes one hour a week for two years, bearing age-appropriate toys for the kids and advice on child rearing for the parents. Researchers tracked the outcomes, and a generation later, the results are in. The children whose homes were visited by social workers became adults who earn wages that are 25 percent higher than those earned by peers who had not been visited. Their I.Q.s are an average seven points higher, and they are less likely to resort to crime or suffer from depression. Other studies, including several recent ones in the United States, have shown similar results, contributing to a consensus on the importance of early childhood development that has led governments around the world to increase spending on the first five years of life. In Latin America and the Caribbean, a region of longstanding social and economic inequality, several countries have been especially ambitious. Brazil and Chile doubled the coverage of day care services over the past decade, while in Ecuador they grew sixfold. These investments build on historic gains in child nutrition and health. But while Latin American children are now healthier and more likely to attend preschool, they still lag far behind in learning, particularly in the areas of language and cognition, when compared with their counterparts in wealthy countries. What are we doing wrong? ..."
Francisco Gascón Moya

UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in danger - 5 views

  •  
    El Atlas UNESCO de las lenguas del mundo en peligro tiene por finalidad sensibilizar a los encargados de la elaboración de políticas, las comunidades de hablantes y el público en general, al problema de las lenguas en peligro de desaparición y a la necesidad de salvaguardar la diversidad lingüística del mundo. También pretende ser un instrumento para efectuar el seguimiento de las lenguas amenazadas y de las tendencias que se observan en la diversidad lingüística a nivel mundial.
Gloria Quiñónez Simisterra

Powerful Tools for Learning a Language - NYTimes.com - 4 views

  •  
    aplicaciones para aprender en movimiento
Francisco Gascón Moya

Reading, not drowning - 2 views

  •  
    In this blog post I would like to think about how you can get children aged about 9 and above to read successfully in a foreign language.
Luciano Ferrer

UNESCO | Open Access Publications - 1 views

  •  
    "In order to help reduce the gap between industrialized countries and those in the emerging economy, UNESCO has decided to adopt an Open Access Policy for its publications by making use of a new dimension of knowledge sharing - Open Access. Open Access means free access to scientific information and unrestricted use of electronic data for everyone. With Open Access, expensive prices and copyrights will no longer be obstacles to the dissemination of knowledge. Everyone is free to add information, modify contents, translate texts into other languages, and disseminate an entire electronic publication."
Luciano Ferrer

John Hunter y el Juego de la Paz Mundial - 1 views

  •  
    "John Hunter pone todos los problemas mundiales en una plancha de contrachapado de 1,20 m por 1,5 m y deja que sus alumnos de nueve años los resuelvan. En TED2011, nos explica cómo se involucran los alumnos en su Juego de la Paz Mundial y por qué las lecciones que éste enseña (siempre de manera sorprendente y espontánea) van más allá de adonde llegan las clases convencionales. "
Luciano Ferrer

Diccionarios en línea: una «nube» de palabras, vía @educarportal - 0 views

  •  
    "¿Quién no consultó, alguna vez, un diccionario? Ya sea que refieran a una o a varias lenguas, sean técnicos o enciclopédicos, los hay de distintos tipos y funciones. Algunos ejemplos, disponibles en la web, que pueden ser útiles para la tarea educativa integrando las TIC."
  •  
    "¿Quién no consultó, alguna vez, un diccionario? Ya sea que refieran a una o a varias lenguas, sean técnicos o enciclopédicos, los hay de distintos tipos y funciones. Algunos ejemplos, disponibles en la web, que pueden ser útiles para la tarea educativa integrando las TIC."
Luciano Ferrer

LibreOffice en guaraní - 0 views

  •  
    "#LibreOffice sería la primera suite ofimática en ser traducida al guaraní, una lengua originaria de Sudamérica hablada por más de 6 millones de habitantes en el subcontinente."
Luciano Ferrer

Si no leemos, no sabemos escribir, y si no sabemos escribir, no sabemos pensar - 0 views

  •  
    "... Hay una frase contundente, que si no mal recuerdo es de Juan José Arreola, "Si no lees, no sabes escribir. Si no sabes escribir no sabes pensar". Una sencillez aforística que debe ser el fruto de la labor intelectual de un buen lector. Edmund Husserl escribe en su Lógica formal y Lógica trascendental: "El pensamiento siempre se hace en el lenguaje y está totalmente ligado a la palabra. Pensar, de forma distinta a otras modalidades de la conciencia, es siempre lingüístico, siempre un uso del lenguaje". Así que si no tenemos palabras, si no tenemos lecturas en nuestra memoria que enriquezcan nuestro lenguaje, nuestro pensamiento será muy pobre. Las personas toleran no ser buenos lectores, pero si se les dice que no saben pensar, esto lastima su orgullo y, sin embargo, una condiciona a la otra. Así, la lectura es una herramienta de desarrollo fundamental. Y donde mejor se desenvuelve esta herramienta es en los libros, no en los pequeños artículos que dominan la circulación de la Web; el encuentro con el lenguaje merece un espacio de concentración -el medio es también el mensaje-, un encuentro a fondo con la mente de un autor que puede haber muerto hace cientos de años pero que vive, al menos meméticamente, en el texto que se trasvasa a nuestra mente. ..."
Luciano Ferrer

Descargá cuatro e-books de Escuelas de Innovación con orientaciones didáctica... - 1 views

  •  
    "El plan de capacitación docente de Conectar Igualdad- ANSES, Escuelas de Innovación, publicó cuatro e-books orientados a integrar las TIC en la enseñanza de distintas áreas curriculares: Lengua y Literatura, Matemática, Ciencias Sociales y Ciencias Naturales. Lo que se busca es alentar, a través de propuestas concretas, el uso de las TIC y así fortalecer la enseñanza y el aprendizaje."
1 - 20 of 61 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page