Thursday, March 17, 2011

MT-2 Exams Coming Soon


Gentlemen,

Your MT-2 Exams will run from Sunday April 3rd to Thursday April 14th. Be sure to focus over these two weeks before exam time and ready yourself for the last stretch of the academic year. Don't forget that teachers are available to help you with extra study time every Saturday here on our Campus. CLICK HERE to download your schedule.

LC Project

Students of 11:02, 11:05, 11:08, 11:11 and 11:14

Please remember to make your video profile for the LC 3 Project during the weekend.

Good Luck!

Ms Ida

LC3 PROJECT UPDATES-ONLINE CV

Good morning gentlemen,

Kindly check your edmodo accounts for updates on your LC3 PROJECT.
These sections in grade 11 have to join a group called "LC3 PROJECT" on EDMODO.
11-01,11-03,11-04,1107,11-06,11-09,11-10,11-12,11-13,11-15.

In that group you will find:
- LC3 PROJECT ACTION PLAN
- LC3 PROJECT TUTORIAL LINKS
- LC3 PROJECT ASSIGNMENT SUBMISSION POST & DEADLINE
- LC3 PROJECT DOCUMENT DOWNLOAD

Please remember that you have to also have your LC2 CV while woRking on the current online CV.
All the best in this project.It ain't difficult at ALL.

Your teachers,
Rehab Ragab
Jinan Basma

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Building a Professional and Attractive CV on innovatecv.com



Innovate CV is a fantastic CV-building website that will help you create an attractive and professional-looking CV. With options to add multimedia items into your CV, it will look modern and it will definitely reflect the amount of effort you have exerted to create it.

In addition to the helpful introductory tutorial that we have watched in class by Ms. Jayasri Pisharody, please watch the following tutorials before our next class in order to prepare for creating you CV.

Don't forget to be an active listener! Take as many notes as you can while watching the tutorials and make a list of questions to discuss in class.


I look forward to receiving your CV on Wednesday March 23, 2011.

Ms. Rehab Ragab

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Triq's CV

TARIQ ABDULLA GHARIB JUMA from section 11-04 shares some tips about his CV in this short ScreenCast.

Unable to display content. Adobe Flash is required.

Thank you for sharing, Tariq :)

Regards,
Ms. Ragab

Monday, March 14, 2011

Resume Feedback


Reviewing your classmates' work and providing them with your opinion is a great way for both of you to improve the quality of your work.

As we start our LC3 project, I would like you to share some feedback on the CVs that you created in LC2. In order to do that, you will be paired up and exchange your CVs then complete an online checklist.

Please click here to go to the checklist page.


Ms. Ragab

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Writing Submissions

Good morning gentlemen,

This is just to remind you to upload your weekly writing submissions for this week.


Keep on the diligent work.

Have a great weekend,

Your teacher,
Jinan Basma

Monday, March 7, 2011

IELTS Task 2

IELTS ACADEMIC WRITING - TASK 2

Grade 11 students
As you are aware that this week you are learning to write Task 2 essay. The following guidelines will help you in better understanding the essay.

In this task, you need to write an academic style essay on the single topic given. You have no choices here – you must write only about the one topic – so prepare yourself with strategies to write a well-organized essay on a variety of subject areas. You may need to offer a solution to a problem, express an opinion or comment on ideas or arguments presented.

Your essay should be about four or five paragraphs in length, with an introduction, body and conclusion. It should not be a list of bullet points, but a properly organized essay, written in full sentences. You need to state your thesis, provide evidence or reasons to support your argument and write a strong conclusion. Use topic sentences to clearly identify the main theme in each paragraph.

Ms Ida

Understanding the task in IELTS essays-Adapted from Dominic Cole's IELTS blog


Perhaps the number 1 rule in IELTS writing is to answer the question. This may sound obvious, but it is surprising how many candidates fail to get it right. Even though their English may be high quality, they won’t get the grade they need if their IELTS essay doesn’t address the question.

Topics and questions

The starting point is to recognise that there is in fact a question to be answered and that this is not the same as writing about a general topic. To understand this, read this IELTS essay question:

The first cars appeared on the British roads in 1888. By the year 2000 there may be as many as 29 million vehicles on British roads.

To what extent do you agree or disagree?

Alternative forms of transport should be encouraged and international laws introduced to control car ownership and use.

Now, the topic is clearly transport and more particularly road congestion or perhaps pollution. But, and I cannot emphasise this enough, that topic is not the question and it is not sufficient to write about that topic in general.
Reading the question
Remember to identify what the exact task is. Do not confuse this with the general topic of the essay and background information given in the essay question

To get this right, it is important to read and think about the question very carefully – time spent focussing on the question is never wasted. Helpfully, the essay questions are almost always structured in the same way. Often they come in 3 parts: background information, problem and task

1. Background information

Very often, they are introduced with some background information, here:

The first car appeared on British roads in 1888. By the year 2000 there may be as many as 29 million vehicles on British roads.

This is background information only. Not to be ignored, as it can be a vital source of both ideas and vocabulary.

2. The problem

Next comes an opinion based statement which introduces the question and poses a specific problem. In our example:

Alternative forms of transport should be encouraged and international laws introduced to control car use and ownership.

This is the part to note. The topic may be transport in general; but reading carefully it is more precisely:

alternative forms of transport

international legislation of transport

the relationship between the state and the individual

the concept of car use and ownership (not necessarily the same thing)

3. The task

The final part of the question is the task itself. It tells you how to write your essay: whether you should be commenting. comparing or arguing. This can help you structure your essay.

To what extent do you agree or disagree?

Reading the question in this way, you should now see how precise they tend to be. The examiner is looking for an equally precise answer: not the repetition of the essay you wrote a few weeks back on a similar looking topic.

Moral: read the question – the whole question

Your teacher,
Jinan Basma

Reading and Watching Help you Write.


Since we started talking about IELTS writing task 2, which requires writing opinion essays, I have noticed that many of you face some difficulties brainstorming ideas to discuss in your writing. Having ideas for writing comes mainly from having general background knowledge on various topics and the only way to gain that is through reading and watching videos.

Here are simple steps/tips for you:

  1. Choose anytime during the week to read some newspapers and magazine articles in English. You don't have to buy these, you can just read online. Bulleted List
  2. Watch documentary TV channels for 15-30 minutes a week.
  3. Look for websites that focus on important topics. Most of these websites provide videos and useful information.
  4. Talk to your teachers and classmates about what you have learnt. Sharing interesting articles with the class and your teacher will be fantastic. Just send them the link with a few words to explain why you are sharing it and why you think it's useful.
  5. Choose topics that interest you, but also focus on global issues such as global warming, saving wild animals, the economic crisis, helping the poor nations, energy resources...etc.
  6. Take notes of two or three words that you have learned and keep them in your vocabulary log. make sure you know how to spell the words and know what they mean.
You can even create a blog or a Google site where you post your favorite articles and ask your classmates to post comments!
You can't have an opinion on what you don't know and only you can build this background knowledge.