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Aaron学英语(03年男生)

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171#
 楼主| 发表于 2012-3-2 23:59:38 | 只看该作者
2012年3月2日 星期五 阴

今天是周五,Aaron照例下午最后两节是英语的分级阅读课,五点才放学。我去接他的时候,他从楼上飞奔到操场上来,经过他们的领队老师前面的时候,大声跟老师打了一个招呼,然后奔向我。跑到我面前后,Aaron得意的告诉我,“Mum,I have a secret admirer.” 我楞了一下,问道:“Who?” Aaron答道,“It's Ms. Zhang.”原来今天Aaron班级下来排队的老师是他们的音乐张老师,是一个年轻的女孩子,每周五下午兼他们的英语分级阅读课。我问道,“为什么你说她是你的secret admirer呢?”“因为今天上阅读课的时候,张老师悄悄地在我的书上盖了一朵小红花,还说:我就是喜欢你。”小子得意的回答道。呵呵,终于真相大白了。
        原来有一次跟Aaron一起学BrainPOP的一个故事,机器人Moby收到一封信,信封上有一个大大的红心,Annie调侃道,“Moby, you have a secret admirer.” 我跟Aaron解释说,secret admirer就是偷偷喜欢自己的人,没想到被Aaron用在了张老师身上,呵呵。
        My Weird School继续听#2 Chapter5,因为今天是周五,Aaron的放松发呆日,其他没有学。
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172#
 楼主| 发表于 2012-3-3 23:22:38 | 只看该作者
2012年3月3日 星期六 阴

今天孩子忙了一天作业,英语作业还做了一个手工作品,是为庆祝圣帕特里克节做的。这个节日我和孩子以前都没有听说过,今天趁着这个机会上网查了一下:节日英文名叫St.Patrick's Day,是为了纪念爱尔兰守护神圣帕特里克而设立的。在美国,圣帕特里克节这一天,人们通常要举行游行、教堂礼拜和聚餐等活动。

忙完了作业,学了BrainPOP的一个传记,讲的是一个乔尼.苹果种子(Johnny AppleSeed)的人的故事。他是一个流浪汉,主张过简朴的生活,在周游美国的时候,在许多州都开办了苹果苗圃,把苹果的种子撒到美国很多地方。






[ 本帖最后由 Aron妈妈 于 2012-3-3 23:23 编辑 ]
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173#
 楼主| 发表于 2012-3-4 23:33:04 | 只看该作者
2012年3月4日 星期日 雨

       今天早上儿子上数学思维课,下了课后去参加了一个俱乐部的筹备碰头会,来回都是坐的地铁,儿子终于如愿以偿地坐了一回地铁7号线。后来还把他坐地铁的感受总结给我听:原来7号线上的报站录音跟6号线一样,车厢的风格呢,跟9号线一样。天,我的地铁迷儿子!
       下午回到家看了一集动画片《丁丁历险记》,本来想买英文版的,没想到给小摊贩的老板骗了,买回了中文版的,儿子这下得意了,回家看得好不高兴。晚上复习了昨天学的Johnny Appleseed,做easy quiz的时候,儿子5个题错了3个,这下给他的打击大了,哭了好一会儿,还说再也不做这个quiz了。在我的鼓励下,勉强弄完了hard quzi,结果还不错,5对5!My weird school#今天学了Chaper 6。

[ 本帖最后由 Aron妈妈 于 2012-3-5 13:21 编辑 ]
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174#
 楼主| 发表于 2012-3-5 23:34:52 | 只看该作者
2012年3月5日 星期一 雨

             听:My Weird School#2 Chapter6。
             读:BrainPOP, Susan B. Anthony
         
             这几天Aaron特别喜欢吼叫,说是释放压力,压力真的有这么大吗


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175#
 楼主| 发表于 2012-3-6 21:39:45 | 只看该作者
2012年3月6日 星期二 晴

    今天所有作业做完已经九点了,晚上的英语学习暂停一天。早上在车上听了My weird school#2 Chapter 7。
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176#
 楼主| 发表于 2012-3-7 10:13:03 | 只看该作者
在网上看到一篇前哈佛大学招生面谈官写给所有8年级学生的忠告,感觉受益匪浅。贴在下面方便时常回顾学习:

Dear Eighth Grader: So You Want to Apply to Harvard? Some Words of Advice...

Dear Eighth Grader:

College interview season is drawing to a close. Hundreds of thousands of high school seniors would like to believe that they have secured admission to prestigious colleges by impressing alumni like me with their sterling credentials and conversational aptitude.

Our meeting will not take place for four years. I hope you don't think it too presumptuous of me to give you some things to think about now, at this early juncture -- to help you prepare.

I have three kids of my own, including an eighth grader like you. My house will still be pretty noisy in 2016 -- so, let's meet at Einstein's, the bagel place. I'll be the one doing the crossword puzzle.

I've been conducting Harvard interviews for many years. Even though I graduated from Harvard, I feel somewhat like a poser. I know to a moral certainty that, if I were to apply to the college today, the chances of my getting in would be less than zero. Admission standards have grown more rigorous over the last quarter century. Sometimes, it's good to be older.

I interview applicants because it's fun. I like hearing about what's going on in your youthful world, one that is now largely foreign to me. And, unlike my own kids, when I ask questions, applicants have to answer. I like that, too.

A friend recently asked me whether I interview because I like to wield power -- like Commodus in Gladiator, whose "thumbs up" gesture in the Coliseum meant life or death.

But my powers are hardly imperial. I am not a gatekeeper. A lot of kids about whom I write enthusiastic recommendations do not get in to Harvard. Some people say that the whole interview process is just an elaborate ruse intended to increase alumni donations. Still, my reports must count for something, because, when they are late, I receive testy emails admonishing me.

The first thing you should know is that great test scores and grade point averages do not, standing alone, excite me. If I had one candy-coated chocolate for every kid I've interviewed with an ACT score of 34, I could fill an industrial-size bag of M&Ms that Costco sells for $8.99. High grades? These days, in this era of hyper grade inflation, who doesn't get a four point gazillion GPA?

You can leave at home the curriculum vitae printed on bond paper. I know you'll be well rounded. You'll play midfield on the varsity soccer team, clarinet in the symphony band and Benny Southstreet in Guys and Dolls. The exhortations of guidance counselors, over-invested parents and the authors of College Admissions for Dummies will guarantee that.

Given that so many candidates have outstanding credentials, you may think that it will be impossible for you to stand out. Not true. The special kid announces herself boldly, unmistakably; she can't be missed -- like a flare streaking across a starless nighttime sky.

What do I look for? Qualities that are hard to spot on admissions applications, but ones that scream out during probing conversation: passion, intellect, curiosity and mettle.

So, when I ask you to explain why you say you dislike the president, it'd be best for you to do more than mimic the political prejudices of your parents. Please show that you've given issues like that some independent thought.

And, if the conversation happens to turn toward your belief in God, I would love to hear the basis for that belief, that you've wrestled with questions of faith and that you've developed an intellectual construct that takes into account doubt and opposing points of view.

I'll want to learn whether an exciting idea has ever overtaken you, whether you've ever had an epiphany, a "eureka" moment.

How did the universe begin? What are your most troubling personal weaknesses? Does your high school have a caste system, and, if so, how do you fit into, and feel about, it? Where does morality come from? What's more important, reason or passion? What's the last book you read outside of school that changed the way you think about something important? What did you do to motivate yourself to make the varsity tennis team?

Do you have answers to these questions? Have you even thought about them?

In his recent book, The Social Animal, David Brooks describes how a high school student might transform himself into a prodigious thinker, a generator of original ideas, a traveler on the road to wisdom. The journey is one that will be defined by struggle, by reading and re-reading books that may be hard to understand, by challenging assumptions, by trying to harness and unify stray and random thoughts, by cultivating expertise.

When you and I meet, will you have set out on this intellectual voyage? Will you be energized or enervated by your odyssey? Or will you have forsaken the journey altogether, seduced by Facebook, the Disney Channel and other opiates?

And, by the way, you won't have to be an extra-curricular "superstar" to impress me. It'll be okay if you're not elected class president or named to the all-state lacrosse team.

But I will investigate whether you are disciplined, whether you are a dilettante, whether you know how to energetically commit yourself to something about which you say you care. Alternatively, I will ask myself whether your words are your own and whether your activities are cynically calculated to win admissions to an Ivy League school.

I recently interviewed a girl who easily won me over (she got into Harvard), not because her accomplishments were spectacular, but because her opinions were well-formed but humbly-stated, because her passion for cross-country compelled her to run at least five miles almost every day since ninth grade and because she waxed sentimental about polka dancing, an activity that does not appear prominently on the radar screens of most college admissions officials.

There aren't too many kids out there like that. So, if you're one of them, you'll have a leg up, at least in my eyes.

I am writing to you now, years before our meeting, because I think you'll need time to work on some of these things. Intellectual ambition, drive and zest for discovery can't be turned on and off like a light switch.

We only cultivate these characteristics slowly, and we do so only by conquering apathy and peer pressure, by shunning minimalism and materialism and by appreciating the positive correlation between effort and reward. As Aristotle observed, "We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit."

Frankly, it's not really that important whether you go to Harvard. There are a lot of Harvard graduates who do not lead productive lives. And, of course, Harvard and other comparable schools have not cornered the market on success.

But, irrespective of where you go to college, I think this is true: If you prepare for our interview in the manner I have suggested, your adult life is far more likely to be intellectually rich, rewarding and happy. The world will be a more exciting place for you.

So, future Harvard applicant, I'm looking forward to having a great discussion with you four years from now. In the meantime, log out of Facebook, for goodness sake.

Warm regards,
Andy Doctoroff '85

[ 本帖最后由 Aron妈妈 于 2012-3-7 11:40 编辑 ]

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参与人数 1威望 +1 金币 +1 收起 理由
ccpeter + 1 + 1 谢谢你了

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177#
发表于 2012-3-7 11:26:52 | 只看该作者
原帖由 Aron妈妈 于 2012-3-5 23:34 发表
2012年3月5日 星期一 雨

             听:My Weird School#2 Chapter6。
             读:BrainPOP, Susan B. Anthony。
         
             这几天Aaron特别喜欢吼叫,说是释放压力,压力真的有这 ...



这压力是什么?如果不属于隐私的,我们大家取经学习一下?

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参与人数 1威望 +2 金币 +2 收起 理由
Aron妈妈 + 2 + 2 是指课堂学习的压力啦~

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178#
 楼主| 发表于 2012-3-7 11:39:19 | 只看该作者
原帖由 ccpeter 于 2012-3-7 11:26 发表



这压力是什么?如果不属于隐私的,我们大家取经学习一下?


是指学习上的压力,儿子特别不喜欢上语文课。因为语文老师总是让孩子们背诵啊、抄生词啊,甚至背诵自己写的作文什么的。而恰恰这孩子写汉字又特别费劲儿,弄完老师布置的语文作业后总是精疲力尽的。昨天被老师留了下来,因为老师要求小朋友们背诵自己写的作文,不背诵好不让回家,儿子对这种形式的教学方法特别的反感,经常吵着向我要自由,可是这自由我没法给他,他只好发泄一下,自己释放释放压力

说实话,孩子挺可怜的。他特别喜欢的科学书籍,我现在也不能保证有时间给他看。唉!昨天我还在我们当地的育儿论坛上发了个帖子,“愤青”了一把

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参与人数 3威望 +6 金币 +6 收起 理由
我爱飞飞 + 3 + 3 同情,同情!太同情了!我们当初也差不 ...
ccpeter + 1 + 1 超大纲的,不学
skyhe + 2 + 2 教育的问题也并不全是教育体育的问题。 ...

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179#
 楼主| 发表于 2012-3-7 22:08:17 | 只看该作者
2012年3月7日 星期三 雨
Aaron明天语文月考,今晚作业很多。做完快9点了。晚饭后休息的时间咱们娘俩一起把My weird school#2 chapter7过了一遍。晚上夜宵时间又把BrainPOP的一篇传记Johnny Appleseed看了几遍。今天就这些了。
      

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180#
发表于 2012-3-7 22:29:42 | 只看该作者
原帖由 Aron妈妈 于 2012-3-7 11:39 发表


是指学习上的压力,儿子特别不喜欢上语文课。因为语文老师总是让孩子们背诵啊、抄生词啊,甚至背诵自己写的作文什么的。而恰恰这孩子写汉字又特别费劲儿,弄完老师布置的语文作业后总是精疲力尽的。昨天被老 ...


向这种老师,超教学大纲学习,直接给主管教委打电话举报。英语学习全在小学阶段出成绩,抢不出时间精力,不好办。我孩子一首古诗古文不背,老师问,直接说:父母不让背,老师也没办法。

[ 本帖最后由 ccpeter 于 2012-3-7 22:35 编辑 ]

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参与人数 1威望 +2 金币 +2 收起 理由
Aron妈妈 + 2 + 2 你厉害的,赞!我也准备这样做了,申请 ...

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