1. Tuyển Mod quản lý diễn đàn. Các thành viên xem chi tiết tại đây

Bây giờ hoặc không bao giờ. Đừng do dự nữa nếu bạn muốn nói tiếng Anh tự nhiên như hơi thở.

Chủ đề trong 'Anh (English Club)' bởi superfootballboyhanoi, 31/08/2006.

Trạng thái chủ đề:
Đã khóa
  1. 0 người đang xem box này (Thành viên: 0, Khách: 0)
  1. thangnghe

    thangnghe Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    23/05/2003
    Bài viết:
    63
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Hi everybody: I have some ideas
    The first:
    @ HeroTran: Thanh you very much for to share your document with everybody. (Seach and Print a document).
    @ everybody: So I suggest to cancel a Fee of him. Right?
    The second:
    If everybody donõ?Tt oppose. The Topic next week:
    õ?oStudy in a foreign country.õ?
    (When and where? Scholarship and selfư-sufficient,
    Advantage and disadvantage with different language and culture õ?Ư)
    Cheer!
    Thangnghe.
  2. Kimtaehan

    Kimtaehan Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    13/10/2006
    Bài viết:
    841
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Lại một buổi off thành công nữa...
    Các thành viên rất tích cực nói tiếng Anh và rất cố gắng bảo vệ ý kiến của mình, thậm chí là không khoan nhượng ngay cả đối với những người trong cùng nhóm
    Hôm nay CLB của chúng ta tiếp tục chào đón thêm những thành viên mới... hi vọng các bạn cảm thấy thoải mái khi tham gia CLB
    Sau 1 hồi tranh cãi rất quyết liệt, tất cả mọi người đều đi đến thống nhất là chủ đề của buổi off vào tối thứ 5 tới sẽ discuss:" cell phone''s culture"
    Chúc mọi người 1 ngày tốt lành
  3. cafe_del_mar

    cafe_del_mar Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    27/10/2006
    Bài viết:
    2
    Đã được thích:
    0
    cho to tham gia voi nhe YH : crytalhanghang@yahô.com............
  4. lazy_pinky

    lazy_pinky Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    04/08/2006
    Bài viết:
    245
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Nhân tiện đây xin post 1 bài đọc liên quan đến Phone:
    Forum examines ''Cell Phone Culture''
    Cell phones have transformed the micro-culture of classrooms and may shape the macro-culture of global youth, according to two experts in mobile communications and cultural change who gave talks at an MIT Communications Forum, "Cell Phone Culture," held on Thursday, Nov. 17, in Bartos Theater.
    The "Cell Phone" panelists were James Katz, professor of communications at Rutgers University and director of the Center for Mobile Communications Studies, and Jing Wang, S. C. Fang Professor of Chinese Languages and Culture at MIT.
    Katz focused on how cell phone use has altered social norms in classroom micro-climates and in public spaces within the United States.
    MIT students in the "Cell Phone Culture" audience seemed especially alert when Katz described research on "teledensity" and the contested "micro-culture" of classrooms at Rutgers.
    Due to "teledensity," i.e. number of cell phones owned and used by students, the classroom microclimate has new rules of engagement, Katz said.
    According to Katz, only 4 percent of Rutgers students surveyed said it was "OK to talk on a phone in class" -- good news for professors, it seemed. Now for the dark side: 41 percent found checking messages OK during class; 45 percent found exchanging text messages permissible and 33 percent of students found it within norms to play games on a cell phone during class.
    Katz described newly acceptable behaviors -- known as "territoriality and choreography" -- that people perform to find space or separate from a group to accommodate a cell phone conversation, and said those behaviors are all ways of "privileging the distant other over co-present friends."
    Some interior public spaces, especially restaurants, are still "contested terrains," Katz noted, with certain spaces, notably Amtrak''s "quiet car" and New York''s Metropolitan Museum of Art, demarcated as cell-phone-free.
    Wang portrayed a different cultural landscape in China, where cell phones are widely used in place of standard telephones and where transnational businesses are working to create a profitable youth music market.
    Wang described "linglei" -- "cool" and alternative -- youth in Beijing as very different from Western youth in their experiences of popular music and mobile music technology, particularly iPods.
    "Since only people who have U.S. or European cre*** cards can purchase music from iTunes, Chinese iPod owners use the gadget to convert music from their CD collections, which are made of cheap pirated CDs. The Apple vision -- ''iPods and iTunes were born together'' -- is irrelevant in China," she said.
    In her discussion of potential cultural changes arising from cell phone use, Wang noted an "irony: while transnational mobile phone makers are trying to create a youth market for mobile music -- for example, Motorola aspires to make music phones that will become an alternative iPod -- the notion of mobile music as understood in the West still remains an abstract concept even in urban China, even among the most trendy young generation," she said.
    Wang also noted that the impact of the Cultural Revolution gave Chinese audiences only 10 years to digest 50 years of Western music.
    "As a result, Chinese ''linglei'' youth are extremely hungry for a fusion of musical styles. So jazz, electronic music, rock and roll and hip-hop have all become popular in China, and youth owe no allegiance to a single musical genre," she said.
  5. lazy_pinky

    lazy_pinky Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    04/08/2006
    Bài viết:
    245
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Đây là 1 bài đọc khác, các bạn chọn ra 1 bài để làm bài đọc hôm tới nhé:
    Cell phone Culture ​

    The incredible growth of cell phone (keitai) use in the past decade and the rapid advance in the functional capabilities of the units themselves have created a whole new medium for popular culture in Japan. The number of cell phone service contracts went from less than 2 million in 1992 to more than 80 million in 2003, a level that far surpassed the number of fixed-line telephone contracts (approximately 50 million).
    For many people, from school age children to middle-aged adults, the cell phone has become an integral part of their way of life. In the pre-keitai era, subway and commuter-train passengers in major cities were likely to be seen reading newspapers, books, and manga. Today, however, they are more likely to be using their cell phones, not to talk?"since long cell phone conversations are discouraged on public transportation?"but to send email, access the Internet (usually sites specially formatted for small cell phone screens), and play video games. Students and young adults, most often women, sometimes carry on continuous, day-long "conversations" with one or more friends via cell phone email.
    Other cell phone capabilities that are popular include global positioning system (GPS) functions that show you where you are and how to get where you''re going and digital camera functions. Today at any special event or tourist attraction, people of all ages can be seen holding up cell phones to take photographs to immediately transmit to friends or to save for later viewing. With the latest cell phone models, users are also able to watch television broadcasts and record and send video images.




  6. b_I_m

    b_I_m Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    30/10/2006
    Bài viết:
    10
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Chào mọi người mình là Việt ,thành viên mới của E.Club online nhưng là thành viên lâu đời của E.Club offline (hì hì hì ) hân hạnh là thành viên mới .Xin chỉ giáo .
  7. conanc3

    conanc3 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    18/10/2006
    Bài viết:
    32
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Tiếc quá chiều chủ nhật mình ngủ quên nên không tham dự được. Tối thứ 5 mình quyết tâm phải đến mới được. Sau đây mình đưa vài câu hỏi cho chủ đề về "cell phone":
    1)what do u use cell phone for?
    2)Does telephone bring u any troubles?
    3)Mobile phone has become more and more popular because of its outstanding functions.What do u think of it?
    4)The way we talk on the phone an show our attitude towards other. And it can help us "tell lie".Your opinion about this?
    5)situations:
    - One day. You get a telephone call and heard a piece of music. After that "I love u" what would u do?
    - Some one dial weong number. How do u react?
  8. silentbeauty

    silentbeauty Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    09/01/2006
    Bài viết:
    129
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Hic,em là mem mới muốn nói tiếng A tự nhiên như tiếng mẹ đẻ,nhưng chưa hiểu cách thức improve của topic nhà mình lắm,có ai rảnh đi qua dừng laị cho em hỏi là muốn tham gia thì fải thế nào ạ. Đến đâu,có fải đăng kí gì,mang theo fee gì bao nhiu kô ạ.
    Thông tin của em là:
    YM: conangthamlang87@yahoo.com
    Cell Phone:095 522 5426
  9. dentist_hmu

    dentist_hmu Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    31/10/2006
    Bài viết:
    40
    Đã được thích:
    0
  10. dentist_hmu

    dentist_hmu Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    31/10/2006
    Bài viết:
    40
    Đã được thích:
    0
    toi chi la thanh vien moi , toi cung muon tham gia 1 dien dan de noi E,rat mong duoc su ung ho cua moi nguoi, the cho toi hoi la tinh hinh bay gio ntn roi? y minh hoi la hoat dong ra sao roi?
    minh la Tuan
    email: tuanta1983@yahoo.com.vn
    mobile: 0989196183
Trạng thái chủ đề:
Đã khóa

Chia sẻ trang này