fredag 10. juni 2011

International English this year

This year in international English we have learned a lot. Some of the topics we have looked into are global challenges and the media world. This has been very interesting and instructive. Among other things, we have watched movies and read books. The kite runner is one example. In this book we meet themes like relationships, war, betrayal and forgiveness. This is a very emotional book, and we have gotten a lot of impressions and thoughts around these themes. All of the films that we have seen fit the requirements of the curriculum goals, especially global challenges.Through the whole year, each of us wrote one personal blog in English. Here, we wrote our own thoughts around what we had done in class, and other things about international English. We also had conversations with students in other countries via skype. This was very fun and interesting!

- Tuva, Susanna og Rikke

mandag 28. mars 2011

Varieties of English


As most of people know the English language is not only being spoken in the Anglo-American core area, but also in several other places and countries in the world. English is the most widely spoken language on our planet, but this includes those who have English as their first, second and third language. English is today the most international language in the world, and we can see numerous reasons for that. I think one of the main reasons for this is that England had a great colonization period which started in the late 15th century, and they established many colonies all over the world.

For example the English colonized in many sugar-rich Caribbean islands. Today this has resulted in that people here speak English, but of course there is a great deal of variation in the way it is spoken. We can take Jamaica as an example. Here it has developed in two types of English; Jamaican English and Jamaican Creole. These two kinds of English is used differently in dissimilar situations. The Creole language is used as a “day-to-day” language for the Jamaican population. We can see examples for this in different kinds of music. Reggae is a mentionable example here. The Jamaican English is the language which is used in the newspapers and the language spoken in school etc.

One of the old colonies of the British Empire is India, and today English is one of the official languages in the country with at least 90 million speakers. There are a lot of varieties and dialects of the English in India, it is a huge country with about a billion inhabitants. But despite some of the varieties there are still some features we can call typical Indian English. For example their use of “ing- form” and their rhythm while speaking the language is very unlike the rhythm used in US and UK English. This can make Indian English very difficult to understand for foreigners.

There are also some countries in Africa which have English as their official language, Kenya, South Africa and Nigeria are examples. But if we take South Africa as an example, we can see that this country has eleven different official languages! A reason for this is the country’s diversity in cultures and languages. I thought before reading about it, that everyone in South Africa spoke English, but after doing some research I found out that in 2001 only 8.2 percent of the population in South Africa speak English.

We don’t know the correct number of how many people in the world who speak English, but we know that there are plenty of them. I think the number of people speaking English will increase even more the next years, because I think this language I a great part of our future. The world’s future, working together to achieve our common goals.

- Rikke

torsdag 24. mars 2011

"There is a way to be good again"


Today we saw the movie "Gran Torino". It's directed by Clint Eastwood, and was recognized by American Film Institute as one of the Ten Best Films of 2008. Eastwood himself is not only the director of the movie but also the main character Walt Kowalski.

Walt Kowalski lives in a so called ”ghetto neighborhood”, formerly populated by the white working class families, his neighborhood is now filled up mostly with poor Asian families. He is a retired Ford factory worker and also a Korean War veteran. We can easily see that he struggles with a lot pain, from losing his wife, maybe guilt from killing in the war? He is a man a lot of people find scary and cold, even his two sons don’t appear to like him much.


Walt’s Hmong neighbor Thao one day tries to steal his Gran Torino after being pressured by his cousin and his gang. Walt catches the Hmong boy, and gets really mad at him. To make up for Thao’s behavior, the Hmong family next door forces their son Thao to be at Walt’s service for the next two weeks. This becomes the start of an unexpected friendship, which changes both of their lives. Walt Kowalski, the rude, bitter and recently widowed man and the Hmong Asian boy Thao, who didn’t fit in anywhere, because he didn’t wanted to be a gangster like rest of the boys in his village.


We can see different conflicts in this movie. An example is the conflict between the two gangs in the village, the Asian and the white, another one is the conflict between Thao and his cousin and his friends. But maybe the main conflict in the movie is the one Walt Kowalski has with himself and his thoughts and point-of-views that changes dramatically throughout the movie.


I think this is an exceptionally movie, I would love to recommend to everyone. It’s very intense and dramatically, but also very loving and emotional.

- Rikke

TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD


About a month ago we were presented to an assignment in English class to read a book. Our teacher, Ann, had found three different books we could choose from, and “To kill a mockingbird” is the one I chose to read. The author’s name is Harper Lee and it was published in 1960. To kill a mockingbird is based on Lee’s own experiences growing up in Alabama in the town of Monroeville. She has with a loose knot based some of the characters on people from her neighborhood and family from her childhood. One of the issues we can see in the book is racism, which Harper Lee experienced a lot of herself. “To kill a mockingbird” have had a lot of positive feedback and is by many called a classic. It has also won the Pulitzer Prize which is considered as a very prestigious prize to win.

We see the perspective in the book through a ten year old little girl called Scout. She lives with her older brother Jem and their widowed father. Scout and her brother one summer become friends with a boy called Dill during his visit at his aunt. The three of them are very interested in their neighbor Boo Radley, which is a man very few in Maycomb (the town they live in) talk about him, and people barely never see him. Radley seems like a man the children are very terrified by, but also very fascinated by.

I’ve actually never heard about the book before it was presented to me in the class, and therefore I haven’t been really interested in it. Probably I’ve been very slow getting started on the book, but when I first have got the time to read it I’ve become very fascinated. I’m looking forward continue reading it!


- Rikke



fredag 4. februar 2011

Megacities


Megacities is a term we use for a metropolitan area with a population of 10 million or more. Today we have 21 megacities in the entire world, but if we look into the worlds history we see that it hasn't always been like this. In 2006, we saw for the first time in history that there were more people living in the cities than in rural areas.

If we look back about 200 years there were only 2% of the population who lived in the cities. After 150 years this percentage rose with 28 %, which is a lot compared to the previous years before 1980. This has probably much to do with the Industrial Revolution which began in the 1700s. At this time the world developed in many ways. New inventions made it a lot harder to get a job in the rural areas, and at the same time the factory industry occurred, which made it possible for people to work there. Hoping for a better future, a great part of the population moved into the cities. With the new infrastructure it also made it easier for people to move around.

In 2000 the percentage ascended with another 17 %, and in only 50 years this is a rapid increase. Its estimated that it'll be another 5% living in the cities in 2015, and when we reach 2030 the percentage will be at 60%. This comes with a lot of global challenges. With people moving to cities, there will always be a lot of the people ending up in slum areas. Have we got enough recourses to all of the people who are going to live in this world in 20 years?

The next statistics I'm going to take a look at is the one about the population in regions of the world. The first thing we see which is eye-catching, is that the three first continents has a descending population, these continents are North America, South America and Europe. Following we have the two poorest continents, and both of them has a increasing population. Especially Asia which already has the largest population comparing to the other continents, will have problems with the population growth.

According to an article published by City Mayors' website, the world's urban population will grow from 2.86 billion in 2000 to 4.98 billion in 2030. what this article also says is that the high-income countries only will consist of 28 million out of the 4.98. This is a very small part of the increase, and the continents that has a rose in the population will have problems, especially since a lot of people already are suffering from poverty etc.

Megacities: 2006 - 2011

2006:


  1. Tokyo (Japan) 33.4 million
  2. New York (USA) 24.1 million
  3. Mexico City (Mexico) 21.7 million
  4. Seoul (South Korea) 20.2 million
  5. Sao Paulo (Brazil) 19.2 million
  6. Los Angeles (USA) 18.3 million
  7. Jakarta (Indonesia) 18.2 million
  8. Osaka-Kyoto-Kobe (Japan) 17.7 million
  9. Delhi (India) 17.4 million
  10. Mumbai (India) 17.4 million

2011:

  1. Tokyo (Japan) 34.2 million
  2. Guangzhou (China) 24.900 million
  3. Seoul (South Korea) 24.5 million
  4. Delhi (India) 23.9 million
  5. Mumbai (India) 23.3 million
  6. Mexico City (Mexico) 22.8 million
  7. New York City (USA) 22.2 million
  8. Sao Paulo (Brazil) 20.8 million
  9. Manila (Philippines) 20.1 million
  10. Shanghai (China) 18.8 million

we can see that it has been a great change for many cities. A lot of cities has been changed with new ones only after 5 years, so we can see that there is a great development some places.



Rikke