CAE BCR - PROJECT

Cambridge CAE BCR is a group of adults studying with ARCI at “Bolsa de Comercio de Rosario”.


This year we have done some project work on the use of new media like mobile phones, the Internet and social networks. To carry out the work, we made use of the tools that the new technologies provide. We worked collaboratively both in class and at home through the Internet using several online tools like Google docs and forms to create a survey and write reports on the survey results, as well as some essays regarding the use of the new media for everyday communication.


To collect ideas for the project, I provided my students with some relevant input that would trigger discussion among them. Hover over the following image and then on the icons to access the videos, articles and discussion forums they were presented with:




First of all, my students conducted a survey on the use of the new media in the workplace and at home. Here is the survey they created collaboratively by using Google docs for the first draft and Google forms for the final version.




The students worked in groups to present and analyse the results of the survey in reports. Finally, they dicussed and compared the information they collected and the ideas presented in the input materials, and they worked collaboratively to write three different types of essays. All this collaborative work was done online on Google docs partly in class and partly at home and required a lot of hard work including feedback analysis and editing. 

Here’s the result of this process and my students’ time and effort:


Report 1


Report 2 




For and Against Essay



Opinion Essay



Essay suggesting solutions to a problem 1




Essay suggesting solutions to a problem 2



Both my students and I enjoyed doing this project work because the topic was appealing and very up-to-date, the tools we used were different from those used in traditional classes, the activities were meaningful and the work was collaborative, which means we shared the effort, as well as the sense of achievement and satisfaction of having accomplished the task by using English and the new media tools.




Teacher:  Gabriela Cuscione

Class: CAE BCR


Inside Cultura's Library


What feelings does a library evoke? Read on and find out 

what one of our Post First Certificate students has to say 

about it...






INSIDE   CULTURA'S   LIBRARY

In the evening of April 22 when  quiet shadows fall all  over the library, some weird whispers can be heard among the shelves:

Alice in Wonderland (by Lewis Carroll):   What a dark hole this is! What silence! Aren´t there any kids?  Nobody playing?  Nobody laughing?  Nobody reading? Where is the Rabbit?  Where is the Queen?  Poor librarian so lonely!

The Piano: It seems I am untouchable! Nobody plays  me…? (starts sobbing)  Is this my karma?

Mrs. Dalloway (by Virginia Woolf):   Don't cry P., or what should I do?  Not  so many people have understood me, have they?  To commit suicide was one of my choices, ha!  ha! … but, haven´t I given the most charming flowers to everybody and the coolest parties in London?

The Myth of Sisyphus (by Albert Camus):  You´re  right, “The only  real issue treated by Philosophy is suicide!”.      
                                                        
A Woman of No Importance  (by Oscar Wilde): (feeling bored)  I told you long ago: “Talk to every woman as if you loved her and to every man as if he bored you and at the end of your first season you will have  the reputation of possessing the most perfect social tact”.

The Great Gatsby (by F. S. Fitzgerald):  Women?  Yes, excellent to betray you. With them everything turns out to be sad in the end… Swill  two double bourbons and carry on!  And enjoy Paris,  which will  keep you happy and gay.

Breakfast at Tiffany's (by Truman Capote): (interrupting):  I'm sorry, but  two dry Martinis are much better! 

September (by  Rosamund Pilcher) and The Touch (by Colleen McCullough): (in unison)  What are you saying?!!  You will  suffer, we know, but LOVE always wins in the end. There is no money, no power that could defeat it: LOVE, LOVE, LOVE…(they start singing):

Love is in the air
everywhere  I look around
Love is in the air
every sight and every sound
and I don´t know if I´m being foolish
don´t know if I´m being wise
but it´s something that I must believe in
and it´s there when I look in your eyes
Love is in the air
in the whisper of the trees
Love is in the air
in the thunder of the sea
and I don´t know if I´m dreaming
don´t know if I feel safe
but is something that I must believe in
and it´s  there when you call out my name
Love is in the air, Love is in the air
Oh Oh Ooh…

(Most of the books dance with joy, a very enthusiastic one  is:)

A Christmas Caroll (by Charles Dickens):  Right! That is what I meant! They´ve misunderstood my advice: I don´t long for expensive lavish luxurious Christmas as they are used to  in the XXI Century, Good Heavens! My humble goal  “was people opening their shut-up hearts freely, and to think of people below them as if they really were fellow passengers to the grave, and not another race of creatures bound on other journeys”.

Alice in Wonderland:  What can we do now? How can we strive to  keep liveliness here? (thinking)…Maybe some words from Old Georgie…

The Other, Myself (by Jorge Luis Borges):  I don´t know, forgive my ignorance…but I remember that

It is said that Ulises, sick of portents
cried with love  on seeing his Ithaca
green and humble.  Art is that Ithaca
of green eternity, not of portents.

                                                    THE END

 These books among others, for better or for worse, have shaped me.

By Raul Antonio Coll
Post First Certificate


Come and visit our library, borrow a book, dicover new

 worlds...


















Teacher: Alicia Zuliani
Class: Post First Certificate "A"



Book Walk

In today’s globalised individualistic world, sharing is a form of solidarity that can make us experience a feeling of globalised empathy and belonging. And at ARCI we did start enjoying the experience last Wednesday, April 23rd, on World Book Day! 
We celebrated it with a BookWalk. A Book what? A BookWalk! Based on the worldwide movement known as Bookcrossing, we coined the motto: 
bring, read and release a book. 
Students, teachers, and other staff members were invited to bring a book- either in Spanish or English- for about a week before April 23rd. Then, on the Big Day over 70 books were displayed on ARCI’s premises: on the main staircases, tables, chairs, windowsills, for everybody to hunt the one they liked, take it home to read, and later release it in our institute for somebody else to be able to enjoy it, again.

The BookWalk has only just started!

Let’s make books WALK


 
from classroom to classroom,

                       from teacher to teacher,


                                           from student to teacher!!!







Teacher: Claudia Saldaño









Feeding the mind, the heart….and the soul


This project was the follow-up of “Feeding the Mind”, a unit in the coursebook, “Objective Advanced”. As the students had shown interest in a painting by Gainsborough, I thought they might enjoy interpreting one of their choice. I asked them to choose a painting they liked and then brainstorm 4 or 5 words. After that, I told them to write a short poem including those words. Finally, I invited them to think of a song that matched the spirit of the painting and the poem.

Upshot: when they presented their work, I was speechless. I was amazed at the quality of their work.

I wondered, “How come they were able to do this with such little input?”

Answer: the so much neglected role emotion plays in classroom motivation!

Historically, the psychological components of cognition, motivation and emotion have tended to be considered separately. However, Meyer and Turner (2002) suggest that, in real life situations, the three concepts operate synergistically.

Conclusion: the role of emotions should not be underestimated in language teaching. 

 Heaven by Natalia Erquicia

Liberty Leading the People by Sofía Rossit

Serenade by Valentina Ecalle

Shiny Stars by Micaela Vidoz

Starry Night by Luciana Lemos

Sur le mer, la nuit by Florencia Moreno

The Entombment of Atala by Milena Moroni

The Kiss by Patricia Paterno

Teacher: Mariana De Biassi
 
Class: CAE B

Cultural Readers Competition








We would like to show you our beautiful country and to do so we have created a fantasy character called Maria Paz. She will be in charge of showing the different corners of our country and telling you about our customs.

We believe that a good sense of humour helps understanding among people, which is surely Macmillan's aim with the Cultural Readers devoted to different countries in the world.

We have decided that our tourist guide should be Mafalda's daughter, Maria Paz (our own creation). Mafalda is a comic strip character from Argentina, probably the best-known Argentinian cartoon character abroad. This comic strip was written and drawn by Quino (an Argentinian cartoonist) and it appeared in newspapers and magazines between 1964 and 1973. It's been translated into many languages.

Mafalda is a six-year-old girl who cannot understand many things that are happening in the world or things that adults do. Mafalda is truly worried about world peace and the future of humanity, which is why we have chosen María Paz (Peace in English) as her daughter's name. She thinks adults are doing things wrongly. She is a very curious girl whose 'naive' questions are really thought-provoking.


 

Teacher: Alicia Zuliani
Class: Post- First Certificate