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English Reading March 2007 Yi-jiun Jou. 1Introduction 2How do you say it -1 3How do you say it -2 4Famous quotation 5Prefixes, suffixes, root words 6Guessing.

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Presentation on theme: "English Reading March 2007 Yi-jiun Jou. 1Introduction 2How do you say it -1 3How do you say it -2 4Famous quotation 5Prefixes, suffixes, root words 6Guessing."— Presentation transcript:

1 English Reading March 2007 Yi-jiun Jou

2 1Introduction 2How do you say it -1 3How do you say it -2 4Famous quotation 5Prefixes, suffixes, root words 6Guessing Vocabulary 7Behind the English words 8Midterm exam Syllabus Syllabus

3 9Homograph - 1 10Homograph - 2 11Jokes, puns and riddles 12Learning from movies 13Wise words 14Conjunction 15Group Presentation 16Final exam Syllabus

4 Class Requirement: 1. Be in the class and on time! Check the online information every week. They will be part of your final scores. 2. The class will be divided into groups, and each member will be responsible to do certain projects during the semester. 3. For grading policy, there are quizzes, midterm, and final exams. Besides that, students are supposed to do your learning portfolio, and give a presentation in the end of the semester.

5 Grading Policy Attendance 10% Quiz 30% Portfolio 10% Midterm exam 25% Final exam 25%

6 The Butterfly Effect Our world may seem orderly and predictable, but in reality it is anything but that. Everything that happens is the result of a series of interconnected events. It is a little like the telephone game children play at school. At one end of the chain, someone whispers something to the next person. As the information moves down the chain, a letter gets lost, or a word is pronounced incorrectly.

7 The Butterfly Effect By the time it reaches the other end, the original sentence sounds quite different. That is chaos at play. One small change leads to another change, and so on. Scientists call this phenomenon “the butterfly effect.” English Digest, August 2006

8 Butterflies in Bombay bats its wing — atmosphere — interact — tornado — Weather in Taiwan Now, imagine what two butterflies in Bombay could do to the weather in Taipei! English Digest, August 2006

9 What you do in this moment is deeply related to your future!!!!

10 The Long Tail (The Long Tail Effect) was first coined by Chris Anderson in an October 2004 Wired magazine article to describe certain business and economic models such as Amazon.com or Netflix. Jason Foster: The Long Tail is "the realization that the sum of many small markets is worth as much, if not more, than a few large markets."

11 The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business is Selling Less of More (2006). Anderson argued that products that are in low demand or have low sales volume can collectively make up a market share that rivals or exceeds the relatively few current bestsellers and blockbusters, if the store or distribution channel is large enough. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_tail

12 Don’t let it go ??? Let it be???


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