Friday, April 30, 2021

Q: Skills for Success: Listening and Speaking 5: Unit 7 Listening 1 The Reindeer People p.175-179

(Supplementary Materials for Specific Textbooks--Q: Skills for Success: Listening and Speaking 5)

Google Drive HERE
90 Second Listening Worksheets: docs, pub
Role Play Cards: docs, pub

1. All human beings were once what?



2. Why are herders constantly on the move?



3. Why does Mongolia’s environment force people to become nomads?



4. What two worlds are the nomadic reindeer herders caught between?



5. How many reindeer is Sanjeem herding at the moment?



6. Who decides where the herders will go next? Why?



7. What is Sanjeem’s role within the group?



8. How many people are in the group?



9. How many families are in the group?  



10. What is the Taiga?  Where is the Taiga?



11. When did Mongolia change from a communist government to a democracy?



12. What did Sanjeem lose when Mongolia became a democracy?


1. (00:03--00:06)_______________________________________________________________


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2. (00:07--00:09)_____________________________________________________________


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3. (00:10--00:12)_____________________________________________________________


___________________________________________________________________________



4. (00:13--00:14)_____________________________________________________________


___________________________________________________________________________



5. (00:15--00:17)_____________________________________________________________


___________________________________________________________________________


______________________________________________________________


1. We were all once nomads (00:03--00:06)

2. but in the central Asian nation of Mongolia (00:07-00:09)

3. many of the people still are (00:10-00:12)

4. Herders are constantly on the move,  (00:13-00:14)

5. finding fresh grasses for their animals. (00:15-00:17)

Narrator: We were all once nomads; but in the central Asian nation of Mongolia, many of the people still are. Herders are constantly on the move, finding fresh grasses for their animals. Mongolia’s geography, a boundless wilderness with soil that can’t sustain agriculture, forces people to embrace the nomadic life. Sanjeem is a nomadic reindeer herder. He and his people are caught between two worlds. Theirs, and one in which Mongolia’s urban elite calls on nomads to settle. 

Sanjeem sits, mounted on one reindeer, and drives about 50 others with coats of white and mottled charcoal up a rock-strewn grassy slope. 


Sanjeem (via interpreter): Our ancestors have herded reindeer here in mountains of Mongolia for generations. We keep our animals here, and we actually follow our reindeer where they want to go because the environment and the climate are perfectly suited to our reindeer. This is the basis of our culture. 


Narrator: Sanjeem’s an elder within a group of 207 people, 44 families. Every few weeks he moves camp in the Taiga, a vast expanse of mountains, forest, and ice straddling Mongolia’s border with Siberia. Today, though, Sanjeem is worried. When Mongolia’s communist government was toppled by a democratic revolution in the 1990s, his state salary was withdrawn. 

once: in the past, but not now:

This house once belonged to my grandfather.


nomad: a member of a group of people who move from one place to another instead of living in the same place all the time


herder: a person who takes care of a large group of animals of the same type:

nomadic African herders


constantly: all the time

He's constantly changing his mind.


be on the move: to be going somewhere; to be travelling:

We're going to be on the move all next week, but we'll call you when we get home.


fresh: new and in good condition

Your coffee is cold - let me make you a fresh cup.


grass: a low, green plant that grows naturally over a lot of the earth's surface, having groups of very thin leaves that grow close together in large numbers:


geography: an area of the earth, and all the things that are inside it (e.g. lakes, mountains, etc).


boundless: having no limit:

He has boundless energy.


wilderness: a place that is in a completely natural state without houses, industry, roads, etc:

a beautiful mountain wilderness


soil: the top layer of earth that plants grow in:

sandy soil


sustain: to support something so that they can exist:

The money he received was hardly enough to sustain a wife and five children.


agriculture: the work and methods of growing crops that are then used for food


force: to make someone do something that they do not want to do:

The hijacker forced the pilot to fly to New York.


embrace: to accept new ideas, beliefs, methods, etc in an enthusiastic way:

We are always eager to embrace the latest technology.


nomadic--adjective of “nomad”--Nomadic people move from place to place.


reindeer--a type of deer with large horns that lives in northern parts of Europe, Asia, and America


to be caught between two worlds--an idiom used to refer to people who are unsure of which culture they belong to


urban--belonging or relating to a town or city:

urban areas


elite--the richest, most powerful, or best educated group in a society:

a member of the elite


urban elites--a common collocation.  It is most often used to refer to the political, economic, or cultural leaders who usually live in the cities.


call on--to officially ask a person or organization to do something.  The collocation is “call on person to V1

The human rights group has called on the US to end the death penalty.


settle--to start living in a place where you are going to live for a long time:

He travelled around Europe for years before finally settling in Vienna.


be mounted on--to be seated on a horse or other animal


drive: to force someone or something to go somewhere or do something:

They used dogs to drive the sheep into a pen.


coat: the fur that covers an animal's body


mottled: A mottled pattern has a mixture of dark and light areas:

mottled skin


charcoal: a hard, black substance similar to coal that can be used as fuel or, in the form of sticks, as something to draw with. Or, the color which comes from these sticks, which is a dark grey color.







once

nomad


herder

constantly


be on the move

fresh


grass

geography


boundless

wilderness


soil

sustain


agriculture

force


embrace

nomadic


reindeer


to be caught between two worlds

urban

elite


urban elites

call on


settle

be mounted on


drive


coat

mottled


charcoal



drive


coat

mottled


charcoal


drive


coat

mottled


charcoal


drive


coat

mottled


charcoal



Nomadic Reindeer Herder

Your traditional way of life has been dying out ever since the government stopped providing subsidies for the nomadic reindeer herders.  It’s important for you to keep your traditions alive, but you need the government to start giving you a subsidy again in order to survive.  Talk with your group, and come up with at least 5 reasons why the government should give you a subsidy.


 

  •  


  •  


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Ulaanbaatar Office Worker

Your family abandoned traditional life years ago in order to come to Ulaanbaatar city and become office workers.  You believe that people need to adapt to changing times--if a certain lifestyle is not self-sustainable, then people need to find a new job.  You work hard every day in the office for your money, and you don’t understand why you should pay more taxes to support the  nomadic reindeer herders.  If they don’t have enough money to live on, then they should come to the city and get an office job like you. Talk with your group, and come up with at least 5 reasons why the government shouldn’t tax you more in order to pay the nomadic reindeer herders a subsidy.


 

  •  


  •  


  •  





Mongolian Government Official

You work for the Mongolian Government, and you need to decide whether or not to re-start the subsidy that was once given to the nomadic reindeer herders.  If you give them a subsidy, then you need to increase taxes on the people living in the city in order to pay for the subsidy.  (There is no other way to get the money.)  Talk to the people in your group.  What are the pros and cons of re-starting the government subsidy for the nomadic reindeer herders.

Pros


 

  •  


  •  


  •  



Cons


 

  •  


  •  


  •  




Thursday, April 29, 2021

Homeland: Review of the first half of Season 1: (Television Addiction)



This is part of my "Television Addiction Series" which I explained about HERE.  The Television Addiction series is part of my so-called "Scripted Review Series", which I explained about HERE.  For the original 2013 post on which this is based, see: Television Addiction Part 2: Oh the TV Shows I’ve Seen!


Homeland (Half a Season only)
          Everyone at my work loves this show, but I just didn't have the patience for it.  After about 5 episodes, I decided I was pretty sure they were going to reveal he was a terrorist  at the end of the season. (That was the only way they could have written it.  Otherwise the whole show  would have just been one long red herring.)  And I couldn't be bothered to sit through the rest of the season so I could find out what I already knew.

Doraemon PowerPoint Game Modals of Speculation Past and Present

(TESOL Materials--Modals, Modals of Deduction)
Google: drive, slides, pub
[In my lesson I used this to supplement Time Zones 4 page 69, and several of the prompts come from that page.  Other prompts come from English Grammar in Use by Raymond Murphy.  The Doraemon PowerPoint template was created by Kyle Ludeke.]

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Pillars of the Earth: Review (Television Addiction)



This is part of my "Television Addiction Series" which I explained about HERE.  The Television Addiction series is part of my so-called "Scripted Review Series", which I explained about HERE.  For the original 2013 post on which this is based, see: Television Addiction Part 2: Oh the TV Shows I’ve Seen!


Pillars of the Earth Miniseries
          The same friend also introduced me to Pillars of the Earth, and I found this in the Cambodian DVD store also.
            I was very disappointed with this one. It was really cheesy, overly sappy, melodramatic…and a historical drama that wasn’t at all historically accurate. 
            And yet I watched the whole thing anyway.

Why Our Brains Resist Change

(Youtube Videos Authentic Listening)



Google Folder HERE
Worksheet: docs, pub (follow up--change: docs, pub)

Why Our Brains Resist Change https://youtu.be/zFhR_KY7KrE

1. Do our brains like change?



2. What percent of our body mass is our brain?  


How much energy does our brain consume?



3. What are our brains designed to do?



4. Our brain wants to identify patterns, and then turn them into what?



5. What does change create?


Tuesday, April 27, 2021

Parks and Recreation: TV Show Review (Television Addiction)



This is part of my "Television Addiction Series" which I explained about HERE.  The Television Addiction series is part of my so-called "Scripted Review Series", which I explained about HERE.  For the original 2013 post on which this is based, see: Television Addiction Part 2: Oh the TV Shows I’ve Seen!

The original 2013 post reads:

Parks and Recreation (Seasons 1-4)
          Again, people at work were talking about this. 
            Like Arrested Development, I found it all too addictive, and blitzed through all 4 seasons way too quickly.  Again, I probably spoiled the viewing experience for myself, but it was a funny show.

Started: The Courts of Chaos by Roger Zelazny


Video HERE

The Hand of Oberon by Roger Zelazny (The Chronicles of Amber #4)

(Book Review)

Started: March 27, 2021
Finished: April 21, 2021

This is the 4th book in the Chronicles of Amber series.  For my reviews of the previous 3 books, see: Nine Princes in Amber, The Guns of Avalon and Sign of the Unicorn.

I'm 4 books into the series now, so I'm going to dispense with general comments about the character or tone of these books.  The tone and style of this series remains consistent, so it would be a repeat of things I already said in my - previous - reviews.  

The only thing left to do is to just comment on the plot developments in this particular novel.  So ***SPOILER ALERT***.  Also, this might not might coherent sense to someone who's not read the book.  You've been warned.

The Review

Plot Twists
This is the penultimate book in the series (*1), so this is the point in the series in which the plot twists start coming in.  And there are a lot of plot twists in this book.  Pretty much all of which caught me by surprise. (*2 Although after I finished the book, I went back and read the first few pages again, and upon re-reading, there is indeed plenty of foreshadowing the big twist at the end--that is, there is plenty of evidence that there is more to Ganelon than meets the eye.

Also, credit to Roger Zelazny for hiding a lot of the key plot points in throwaway lines early in the series.  In the first book, when it was mentioned in an off-handed way that Random had a son in Rebma, I had no idea that it would turn into such a major plot point later in the series. 

That being said, I'm not sure all of the plot twists entirely make sense.  In this book, we now find out that Fiona is the one trying to protect Amber, and Brand is the one trying to destroy it--which was the opposite of the way things looked at the end of the previous book.  But it also raises the question of why Fiona didn't tell Corwin everything at the time.  Why didn't Fiona tell all of the family about Brand before they tried to rescue him? Who was she trying to hide the information from?  Brand was the only one she was worried about, right? Why did she play coy and try blame the stabbing on Julian.  
In the second book, the creatures refer to Corwin as "the opener", indicating that Corwin was responsible for the black circle.  Now we find out that Brand is responsible.  (To be fair, there is some sort of attempt to explain this away in the text--Corwin surmises that his curse was a secondary cause of the black road.  But this revised explanation struck me as seeming like a retcon instead of something that was planned out from the beginning.) 
I don't know... I'll have to wait to see how everything resolves itself in the last book before I make a final judgement.

Strange New Lands
The Chronicles of Amber series has always been a mix of Game-of-Thrones style scheming, backstabbing, and politicking, combined with journeys to really strange and trippy fantasy lands.  
The really strange fantasy lands are a big appeal of the book, and yet, I often find Roger Zelazny's descriptions hard to absorb (a complaint I've been making throughout this whole series).  This book was heavy on plot and relatively light on the strange new worlds.  (Again, I think because it's the penultimate book, and there's a lot of plot reveals to get through.) 
The only new land we see is The Courts of Chaos.  It is, like all of the strange lands in this series, wonderfully imaginative.  And yet, when the action shifted there, I was initially slightly frustrated, because it meant I had to slow down the pace at which I was reading, and really concentrate on Zelazny's descriptions in order to visualize the place. (*3)
(During the plot heavy sections of the book, I had been making a pretty good pace, but I find during the travelling-to-strange-lands sections, I really have to adjust my level of concentration, and focus a lot more in on deciphering the exact meaning of the sentences. I realize I'm describing my personal limitations as a reader, but nevertheless it's an adjustment I have to make as I read which does interfere with using these books purely as relaxation.)

There was also at the beginning of Chapter 10 a 3-page description of Corwin travelling through shadow.
The travelling-through-shadow sections are a standard part of this series.  The characters are able to gradually shift elements of the reality around them as a way of travelling through parallel universes.  It's all done in Zelazny's rather vague and minimalist prose, which I find hard to concentrate on for much more than a paragraph at a time--3 pages is pushing it.  To quote from a small section of these 3 pages:

Downward. ... The land drops away at either hand....Darkness below. ... Moving along the top an infinitely high, curved, wall, the way itself bright with moonlight.... The trail buckles, folds, grows transparent.... Soon it drifts, gauzy, filamentous, stars beneath as well as above.... Stars below on either side.... There is no land.... There is only the night, night and the thin translucent trail I had to try to ride, to learn how it felt, against some future use.... (From the beginning of Chapter X, pages 592-593 in my edition, ellipses in the original)

These "travelling-through-shadow" sections are a staple of the series (at least one or two of these sections has popped up in every book so far).  So on the one hand, it didn't at all surprise me to see it again in book four.
But on the other hand, part of me feels that by book 4 it's already been established what travelling through shadow is like.  Couldn't we start skipping these descriptions now?

The Catch-Up
The beginning of chapter 2 (pages 506-513) was just the main character summarizing all the important plot developments that had happened in the story so far, presumably to catch the reader up on all the important information they need to remember.
I was a bit surprised to see this here, because the previous books have never worried to much about catching the reader up.  But maybe by book 4, Zelazny (or his publishers) thought the reader could use a refresher.

Spoilers On the Cover Art
For my started post, I spent some time searching Google Images to try to find the most visually interesting representation of this book.  (In the 40 years since it's been published, it's apparently been through numerous editions, because there are a lot of different cover art choices on Google.)

Eventually I decided on this image , which is the cover art for the audiobook CD--(A): 


I initially didn't even notice the small text in the picture, but once I did notice it, I realized it was a major spoiler:

Brand, renegade prince of Amber, now controls the Jewel of Judgement, and must be stopped before he can reshape the universe to his whim.
At the end of the previous book, Brand appeared to be one of the good guys.  Going in to this book, I had no idea that Brand would become the antagonist.  Or that he would get the Jewel of Judgement. Or that he wanted to reshape the universe. 
I know, I know, it's my own fault for searching around on the Internet for media related to this book.  If you want to avoid spoilers, best to stay off the Internet completely. 
But still... this is the cover art for the audiobook. You don't expect to see major spoilers on the cover, do you?  I mean, if someone buys the audiobook, this is the first thing they see before they even start listening to the story. 
In fact, the plot twist that Brand was going to be the antagonist didn't happen until after the halfway point.  And the revelation that he had the Jewel of Judgement didn't come till near the end of the book.  So it's spoiling some major reveals that are supposed to be kept in suspense until the end.
Fortunately, this is only one of many plot twists in this book, so there were still plenty of other plot developments to keep me on my toes even with this part spoiled.

On to Book 5
I can't wait to see how this all concludes.  On to the fifth and final book next!

Footnotes (docs, pub)
(*1) the penultimate book in the series: by "series" here I mean the first story in the Chronicles of Amber--the Corwin Cycle.  I'm not counting the sequel series here.

(*2) on the plot twists catching me by surprise: Although plot twists usually catch me by surprise, partly because I'm a passive reader who rarely tries to guess where the plot is going.  I had a friend in high school who was always hyper-analytical of all the movies he watched or stories he read, and who was great at not only spotting plot holes, but also spotting plot twists before they happened.  That was never me though.  I usually just let the story carry me along without thinking too much about it, and then I'm always surprised when the plot twists come.

(*3) On having trouble focusing on the strange new lands: I suppose I should quote an excerpt to give a flavor.

Where? The senses are such uncertain things, and now mine were  strained beyond their limits. The rock on which I stood... If I attempted to fix my gaze upon it, it took on the aspect of a pavement on a hot afternoon. It seemed to shift and waver, though my footing was undisturbed. And it was undecided as to the portion of the spectrum it might call home. It pulsated and flashed like the skin of an iguana. Looking upward, I beheld a sky such as I had never before set eyes upon. At the moment, it was split down the middle-half of it of deepest night-black, and the stars danced within it. When I say danced, I do not mean twinkled; they cavorted and they shifted magnitudes; they darted and they circled; they flared to nova brilliance, then faded to nothing. It was a frightening spectacle to behold, and my stomach tightened within me as I experienced a profound acrophobia. Yet, shifting my gaze did little to improve the situation. The other half of the sky was like a bottle of colored sands, continuously shaken; belts of orange, yellow, red, blue, brown, and purple turned and twisted; patches of green, mauve, gray,
and dead white came and went, sometimes snaking into belthood, replacing or joining the other writhing entities. And these, too, shimmered and wavered, creating impossible sensations of distance and nearness. At times, some or all seemed literally sky-high, and then again they came to fill the air before me, gauzy, transparent mists, translucent swaths or solid tentacles of color. It was not until later that I realized that the line which separated the black from the color was advancing slowly from my right while retreating to my left. It was as if the entire celestial mandala were rotating about a point directly overhead. As to the light source of the brighter half, it simply could not be determined. Standing there, I looked down upon what at first seemed a valley filled with countless explosions of color; but when the advancing darkness faced this display away the stars danced and burned within its depths as well as above, giving them the impression of a bottomless chasm.

From the beginning of chapter 6, page 551 in my edition.

Weekly Reading Vlogs:
March 28, 2021 The Hand of Oberon p.512-536 
April 4, 2021 The Hand of Oberon p.536-540
April 11, 2021 The Hand of Oberon p.540-580
April 18, 2021 The Hand of Oberon  p.580-614
April 25, 2021 The Hand of Oberon  p.614-640 (finished) started second reading 

Video Review (Playlist HERE)
Video Review HERE and embedded below.
...yet another video in which I ramble on too long and get abruptly cut off  by the automatic 30 minute time limit on my camera.  Sorry about the abrupt ending.

Link of the Day
Noam Chomsky - One Human Language