We checked over the answers to the homework from session #5 (May 15th) – Unit 2 Part 1
Movie reports
14 students gave a short, oral report about an Australian movie they watched.
Each report was 1-2 minutes long.
At the end of each report, the student said whether this movie was useful for learning about Australia or not.
After all the reports, each student wrote 2 comments on looseleaf paper, and gave the paper to the instructor:
a comment about all the movie reports in general
a comment (反省)about her own movie report
Those who did not give a movie report today can do it next week (June 5th)
Attention: there are many Australian movies, but not all of them are useful for learning about Australian culture, history or society. E.g. parts of “The Matrix” were filmed in Australia, but we cannot learn anything about Australia from watching “The Matrix”. Please choose your movies carefully.
I recommend these movies (other movies may be ok, e.g. “Australia”, but I have not seen them):
Visit the class blog (here) and leave a comment about this website and the Research in English class. When you leave a comment, use either your given name or your family name ONLY (not both), in order to protect your privacy. (You can comment in either Japanese or English, or both).
“Show and Tell”. Bring something Australian (or a picture of it) to show the class, and tell us about it. (1 minute)
Think about what topic you would like to do for your poster project (session #10, June 19th):
A3 paper
poster must include both written text (30-40%) and image/graphic/illustration/maps/tables, etc.
Explaining your poster should take about 2-3 minutes.
You can do the poster project ALONE or with a PARTNER.
I will ask you for your project topic next class (session #8, June 5th).
You can also email me your project title: marc.sheffnerアットマークgmail.com. INCLUDE YOUR NAME in your email.
To think about: at the end of the passage “Tasmanian Aborigines” (page 15), it is written, “We can learn much from the Aborigines. Imagine a life where everything is shared, everybody belongs to a family, has a job, and respects the environment.”
Aborigines have lived in Australia for thousands of years, yet their society never progressed beyond a nomadic lifestyle. Is it possible in today’s modern society to have such values as these and still keep our modern way of life (our economy, our material goods, our standard of living)?