25/06/2020
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3d39Ho9n1tu0HrBfBlD4Rw
Easy English Learning
You will fine here videos on how to improve your English communication, prepare for your school and university exams. Enjoy and pass the word :)
24/06/2020
Good News š
We have launched a Youtube channel recenlty. Please find us there and subscribe for more lessons š
Easy English Learning
You will fine here videos on how to improve your English communication, prepare for your school and university exams. Enjoy and pass the word :)
07/10/2019
The more.... The more.....
Complete with your own ideas š
22/07/2019
Reading š as a window on the worldā¤ļø
I met, at a bookstore, a woman who told me that she had fallen sadly out of touch with her beloved grandson. She lived in Florida. He and his parents lived elsewhere. She would call him and ask him about school or about his day. He would respond in one-word answers: Fine. Nothing. Nope.
And then one day, she asked him what he was reading. He had just started āThe Hunger Games,ā a series of dystopian young-adult novels by Suzanne Collins. The grandmother decided to read the first volume so that she could talk about it with her grandson the next time they chatted on the phone. She didnāt know what to expect, but she found herself hooked from the first pages, in which Katniss Everdeen volunteers to take her younger sisterās place in the annual battle-to-the-death among a select group of teens.
The book helped this grandmother cut through the superficialities of phone chat and engage her grandson on the most important questions that humans face about survival and destruction and loyalty and betrayal and good and evil, and about politics as well. Now her grandson couldnāt wait to talk to her when she calledāto tell her where he was, to find out where she was and to speculate about what would happen next.
Other than belonging to the same family, they had never had much in common. Now they did. The conduit was reading.
We need to read and to be readers now more than ever.
By Will Shwalbe