sábado, 11 de dezembro de 2010
segunda-feira, 22 de novembro de 2010
domingo, 27 de junho de 2010
segunda-feira, 21 de junho de 2010
CARTA AOS ALUNOS DE INGLÊS
Caro (a) Aluno (a)
A Secretaria da Educação do Estado de São Paulo por meio dos Centros de Estudos de Línguas (CEL) está dando a você a oportunidade de consolidar o que está sendo estudado em suas aulas de Inglês no ensino regular, visando ampliar horizontes para a sua atuação no mercado de trabalho.
Tendo em vista os pré-requisitos indispensáveis para um profissional nos dias de hoje, em relação ao conhecimento de línguas, os cursos oferecidos pelo CEL pretendem dar condições necessárias para a sua formação tanto quanto aluno como cidadão.
Você faz parte de uma sociedade que exige o domínio de competências que permitem a comunicação em diferentes situações do cotidiano, em língua inglesa. Nas aulas do ensino regular você desenvolve as competências leitora e escritora; neste curso, o foco será a comunicação oral.
Este curso inclui materiais que permitem o acesso a diferentes contextos de uso do Inglês como língua internacional, utilizado no meio acadêmico, na mídia, no comércio, no lazer e na internet.
Enjoy it!
quarta-feira, 28 de abril de 2010
MOTHER'S DAY
Different countries celebrate Mothers’ Day on various days of the year because the day has a number of different origins. In Brazil, in the U.S.A. and other countries, Mothers' Day is a holiday celebrated on second Sunday in May. It is a day when children honor their mothers with cards, gifts, and flowers.In the 1600’s, in England there was an annual observance called “Mothering Sunday”. It was celebrated during Lent, on the fourth Sunday. On Mothering Sunday, the servants, who generally lived with their employers, were encouraged to return home and honor their mothers. It was traditional for them to bring a special cake along to celebrate the occasion.In the U.S., in 1908 Anna Jarvis, from Grafton, West Virginia, began a campaign to establish a national Mothers’ Day. Jarvis persuaded her mother's church in Grafton to celebrate Mothers’ Day on the anniversary of her mother’s death. A memorial service was held there on May 10, 1908, and in Philadelphia the following year where Jarvis moved. Jarvis and others began a letter-writing campaign to ministers, businessmen, and politicians in their quest to establish a national Mothers’ Day. They were successful. President Woodrow Wilson, in 1914, made the official announcement proclaiming Mothers’ Day a national observance that was to be held each year on the 2nd Sunday of May.Many other countries of the world celebrate their own Mothers’ Day at different times throughout the year. Denmark, Finland, Italy, Turkey, Australia, and Belgium celebrate Mothers’ Day on the second Sunday in May, as in Brazil and in the U.S.A.People celebrate the date gathering with their mothers and giving them flowers, chocolates, cards and gifts.
· Don’t make that face or it’ll freeze in that position.
· Be careful or you’ll put your eye out.
· What if everyone jumped off a cliff? Would you do it, too?
· You have enough dirt behind those ears to grow potatoes!
· Close that door! Were you born in a barn?
· If you can’t say something nice, don’t say anything at all.
· Don’t put that in your mouth; you don’t know where it’s been!