This posting is 'sick'!

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Posted on 16th September 2009 by Shaun Wilden in Teaching

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If you have been following my blog then you know I have been using an episode Stephen Fry’s BBC program on English called ‘So wrong it’s right’.  As part of that we have been looking at ‘unusual’ pieces of English.

It started with this, which I heard while watching sport this summer, a marvellous utterance where most people would understand every word but not understand the sentence.

“He may be a number 9 but he is no bunny”

Shall leave you to decode it (the context of cricket helps :-) .  My students were obviously clueless but we got there eventually.  Next came this taken from a BBC radio one music programme:

“ This is the sickest festival in the world”

The sickest festival, is that good or bad? If you are a student hearing that what do you think? A quick look in an online dictionary lists five definitions of sick all of them negative. (I used the OALD online). And what about when compared to this sentence from the news this morning:

“Doctors want some of the sickest swine flu patients to get special treatment.”

Do they have the same meaning? No, in one case ‘sick’ means ill and another it means great, fabulous, fantastic.  If you knew then a ‘big up’ to you, you ‘smacked it’.  If you didn’t you’ve been ‘owned’.  Lost? Then maybe you need to go and read the ‘Pimp my vocabulary handbook‘ which appeared in yesterday’s Guardian, along with this quiz, which kept a lot of us distracted from doing work.

Teens  (and for that matter adults) have their own language but do we need to teach it to our students? I ask as this was a conversation was having with some twitterers (is that the word?) yesterday after posting the quiz  (in which nobody really excelled themselves btw :-) ).  My students (adults) would enjoy it (well most of them) but it’s hardly language they would use – I can’t really see then high fiving and going ‘cool beans’.  But then again what if they had listened to the same radio program as I did when the sick meant great they’d need to know. Teen students might enjoy it and indeed might use it, at the risk of stereotyping, they would also have more access to it say through music but at the end of the such language is ephemeral; what’s ‘in’ today is ‘out’ tomorrow, as this chart shows (chart from The fast company)

A Timeline of the Word Cool

Language is  heavily influenced by the here and now  – take the word ‘bovvered’ used all over the UK a few years ago as it appeared in a comedy show and subsequently used by Tony Blair (so much so that Oxford chose it as there word of the year for 2006) but how much is it used now?

This post is not trying to suggest what English we should or shouldn’t teach (because that’s too controversial and I would have the ELFers up in arms so am side stepping :-) ) but highlight  a) what a wonderful language English is and b) show the difficulties of teaching English – afterall none of this language would appear in a coursebook.

I think my class would like looking at this language especially as many of them work and / or teach teens so am going to use the material my next post will look at how.

Have a good day

Shaun

footnote: Since I made the posting this morning,  I’ve learnt that ‘ill’ can also mean ‘sick’ in the great, fab meaning, thanks for that and the link, Shiv

Class emails

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Posted on 19th August 2009 by Shaun Wilden in Teaching

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Over the summer break I have been sending my class (yes I only have one, lucky me) emails with links to articles etc in. Since some other people have asked me for the links, I am going to post one or two of them on my new blog site i.e. here

This is the first one sent in July:

Hi Folks,

Since I am off to work in Germany for a week from tomorrow, I thought I’d send you an email before I go.  I hope everyone’s summer got off to a good start and the somewhat tropical storms aren’t putting a damper on things (note the pun on ‘damper’ – what a wit eh). The rain certainly made biking a little difficult see photo below  -  the path should be on the left!

So for some things English for you to peruse….

This week’s news stories that interested me - this one called “I’m a pedant and proud“  - the title attracted me as I am definitely a pedant. It’s very vocabulary rich so I think a good text for you word people :-) .

Being the gadget lover and I big ipod fan this was an interesting story and much easier to read.

For a bit of brain fun then I found these free brain games by chance – the first one is a vocab game that I found a bit addictive  - if you play it don’t panic some of the letter combinations really had me stumped as well.

Two weeks ago we looked at inversion in English – this website has a list of references for further study and some links to online practice, so you can go and test yourselves :-)

Finally let’s go to you tube, following on from last week’s lesson, comments about styles of English (no I won’t forget it Olga!!!) and the two ronnies clip…..here’s a clip from an awful  movie but this scene is very funny ‘English pronunciation’ which reminded me of a scene from a czech movie

If you haven’t worked it out yet, I have made links in the email so click on the blue bits and they’ll take you to the relevant websites.

Hope you enjoy  the things I have chosen and of course email if you need any help with understanding, words or just want to say hi.

Yours

Shaun

What happened to the cycle path?

What happened to the cycle path?