Thứ Năm, 30 tháng 12, 2010

English Tour (updating). Please click the pictures to view actual size

Let's enjoy breakfast!
Eagles: What should we decorate our flag?
Pig Family
Monkey Dance
Let's row the boat!
Why are they prone?
We are making our mermaid.
1, 2, 3 Bottom up!
One, Two, Three, Cheese!!!
 1, 2, 3, Yomost!!!
Teacher looks like a monk preaching
All together

Thứ Tư, 29 tháng 12, 2010

SEMINAR


Các bạn thân mến

Tiếng Anh là một ngôn ngữ cực kỳ hấp dẫn đề khám phá. Tuy nhiên nếu chúng ta không hiểu được những quy tắc của nó thì chúng ta sẽ gặp rất nhiều khó khăn.

Dấu nhấn (stress) trong tiếng Anh cực kỳ quan trong khi chúng ta phát âm một từ nào đó. Tuy nhiên rất nhiều người học tiếng Anh nhấn trọng âm sai, nên khi nói chuyện với người nước ngoài, người ta không hiểu, hoặc khi nghe một từ được phát âm đúng – dù rất dễ - nhưng chúng ta lại không nhận ra.

Để giúp các bạn có một nguyên tắc nhấn trọng âm chính xác (không cần sự trợ giúp của tự điển) SPEAK UP sẽ tổ chức buổi chuyên đề

RULES OF THE STRESS IN ENGLISH

English stress is dependant on origin of words and the rhythmic factors (heavy-light syllables). Words borrowed from Latin and other donor languages are stressed differently.

What are the ways in Determining the main stress in English?

The SEMINAR will show you all. After the seminar, you do not need the help of the dictionary, but you can have the right stress in any English word.

Time: Saturday, Jan 1st & Sunday, January 2nd, 2011

- The First Seminar:             7.00 pm – 8.30 pm (Saturday)

- The Second Seminar:       4.30 pm - 6.00 pm (Sunday)

- The Third Seminar:            7.00 pm – 8.30 pm (Sunday)
Venue: Speak Up Café – 92 Dien Bien Phu, Dakao Ward, Dist. 1

Chủ Nhật, 19 tháng 12, 2010

CHRISTMAS

CHRISTMAS GREETINGS 

Wish you a Merry Christmas and may this festival bring abundant joy and happiness in your life!
 
May this Christmas be so special that you never ever feel lonely again and be surrounded by loved ones throughout!
 
You are special, you are unique; may your Christmas be also as special and unique as you are! Merry Christmas!
 
Here's wishing you all the joys of the season. Wish you and your family a Merry Christmas!
 
May joy and happiness snow on you, may the bells jingle for you and may Santa be extra good to you! Merry Christmas!
 
May this Christmas be bright and cheerful and may the New Year begin on a prosperous note!

Love, Peace and Joy came down on earth on Christmas day to make you happy and cheerful. May Christmas spread cheer in your lives!

Sending the warmest Christmas wishes to you and your family. May God shower his choicest blessings on you and your family this Christmas.

May all your days be merry and bright and may your Christmas be white! Merry Christmas!

It is that time of the year again, when you are thankful for everything merry and bright. May this Christmas be a delight! Wishing you a Merry Christmas!

CHRISTMAS MESSAGES

Christmas waves a magic wand over this world, making everything softer than snowflakes and all the more beautiful. Wish you a Magical Christmas.

Jingle Bells are ringing the wishes of Christmas. Sending the warmest Christmas wishes on soft snowflakes just for you!

Faith makes all things possible; Hope makes all things work and Love makes all things beautiful. May you have all the three for this Christmas. Merry Christmas!

On this Christmas, remember, the joy that you give to others, is the joy that comes back to you. So be joyful and make others joyful too! Merry Christmas!

Joy resonates in the hearts of those who believe in the spirit of Christmas! Wishing you all the peace, joy, and love of the Christmas season!

Christmas is a state of mind when you cherish peace and goodwill. The real spirit of Christmas is to have mercy, love and faith

At the stroke of midnight on Christmas, if a fat man dressed in a red suit jumps through your window, grabs you and puts you in a sack, don't panic. I told Santa I wanted YOU for Christmas!

May this Christmas end the present year on a cheerful note and make way for a fresh and bright new year. Here's wishing you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year

Jingle the bells and play the music loud, for Santa Claus is coming to town! Merry Christmas!

CHRISTMAS

THE HISTORY OF CHRISTMAS



Since the times of early Mesopotamia celebrations, there were grand celebrations with bonfires, yule log, sharing of gifts, carnivals and parades during the time that is now known as Christmas season in the honor of their chief god, Marduk. It was believed that every year the God had to wage a war with monsters of chaos in the winter season and the Mesopotamian king had to swear his faithfulness to the god and return with Marduk to battle at his side. This called for sacrifice of the king, which was indeed not a practical thing to do and hence a criminal condemned to death was crowned as the 'mock king' and dressed in royal dress and given all the privileges and respect of the king and then was sacrificed like the King himself. Ancient Greeks had a similar festival where their God Kronos fought against the tyrant God Zeus and his Titans.




Persians and Babylonians celebrated the festival of Sacaea to spread the message of universal love. 25th December has been sacred to the pagans of Romans and the Persians following Mithraism as their religion and on this day, the slaves swapped positions with their masters and could treat the masters as their slaves. Early superstitious Europeans performed special rituals during the Winter Solstice to persuade the sun to come back as they believed that winter was the season for evil spirits, witches, ghosts and trolls. Scandinavians even sent scouts to look for sun on the mountaintops who would rush back to the village as soon as they saw the first rays of the sun to deliver the good news. The good news was enough cause for them to celebrate Yuletide, when a great feast was held around the bonfires made of Yule logs. Some of the people would tie apples on the branches of the coniferous trees in the hope of approaching Spring and Summer.




Romans celebrated Saturnalia from mid-December to 1st of January in the honor of their pagan god Saturn that featured shouts of 'Jo Saturnalia!', masquerades, grand feasts and exchange of Strenae or lucky fruits as gifts. Christmas, in its early days, was observed as the solemn and religious holiday as the birth of Christ that merged later on with the joyous activity of Saturnalia with the increasing number of converts until at last church approved of these celebrations within certain limits. It is believed that Christmas celebrations are being held since 98 AD though, it was 39 years later that the Bishop of Rome ordered a solemn feast to be held every year to the Christmas eve. It took more than another two centuries for the Bishop of Rome, Julius I, to chose December 25th as the day of observance of Christmas.

CHRISTMAS

THE HISTORY OF THE SANTA CLAUS

The American version of the Santa Claus figure received its inspiration and its name from the Dutch legend of Sinter Klaas, brought by settlers to New York in the 17th century.

As early as 1773 the name appeared in the American press as "St. A Claus," but it was the popular author Washington Irving who gave Americans their first detailed information about the Dutch version of Saint Nicholas. In his History of New York, published in 1809 under the pseudonym Diedrich Knickerbocker, Irving described the arrival of the saint on horseback (unaccompanied by Black Peter) each Eve of Saint Nicholas.



This Dutch-American Saint Nick achieved his fully Americanized form in 1823 in the poem A Visit From Saint Nicholas more commonly known as The Night Before Christmas by writer Clement Clarke Moore. Moore included such details as the names of the reindeer; Santa Claus's laughs, winks, and nods; and the method by which Saint Nicholas, referred to as an elf, returns up the chimney. (Moore's phrase "lays his finger aside of his nose" was drawn directly from Irving's 1809 description.)


The American image of Santa Claus was further elaborated by illustrator Thomas Nast, who depicted a rotund Santa for Christmas issues of Harper's magazine from the 1860s to the 1880s. Nast added such details as Santa's workshop at the North Pole and Santa's list of the good and bad children of the world. A human-sized version of Santa Claus, rather than the elf of Moore's poem, was depicted in a series of illustrations for Coca-Cola advertisements introduced in 1931. In modern versions of the Santa Claus legend, only his toy-shop workers are elves. Rudolph, the ninth reindeer, with a red and shiny nose, was invented in 1939 by an advertising writer for the Montgomery Ward Company. 


In looking for the historical roots of Santa Claus, one must go very deep in the past. One discovers that Santa Claus as we know him is a combination of many different legends and mythical creatures.

The basis for the Christian-era Santa Claus is Bishop Nicholas of Smyrna (Izmir), in what is now Turkey. Nicholas lived in the 4th century A.D. He was very rich, generous, and loving toward children. Often he gave joy to poor children by throwing gifts in through their windows.

The Orthodox Church later raised St. Nicholas, miracle worker, to a position of great esteem. It was in his honor that Russia's oldest church, for example, was built. For its part, the Roman Catholic Church honored Nicholas as one who helped children and the poor. St. Nicholas became the patron saint of children and seafarers. His name day is December 6th.

In the Protestant areas of central and northern Germany, St. Nicholas later became known as der Weinachtsmann. In England he came to be called Father Christmas. St. Nicholas made his way to the United States with Dutch immigrants, and began to be referred to as Santa Claus.


In North American poetry and illustrations, Santa Claus, in his white beard, red jacket and pompom-topped cap, would sally forth on the night before Christmas in his sleigh, pulled by eight reindeer, and climb down chimneys to leave his gifts in stockings children set out on the fireplace's mantelpiece.

Children naturally wanted to know where Santa Claus actually came from. Where did he live when he wasn't delivering presents? Those questions gave rise to the legend that Santa Claus lived at the North Pole, where his Christmas-gift workshop was also located.

In 1925, since grazing reindeer would not be possible at the North Pole, newspapers revealed that Santa Claus in fact lived in Finnish Lapland. "Uncle Markus", Markus Rautio, who compared the popular "Children's hour" on Finnish public radio, revealed the great secret for the first time in 1927: Santa Claus lives on Lapland's Korvatunturi - "Ear Fell"

The fell, which is situated directly on Finland's eastern frontier, somewhat resembles a hare's ears - which are in fact Santa Claus's ears, with which he listens to hear if the world's children are being nice. Santa has the assistance of a busy group of elves, who have quite their own history in Scandinanvian legend.

Over the centuries, customs from different parts of the Northern Hemisphere thus came together and created the whole world's Santa Claus - the ageless, timeless, deathless white-bearded man who gives out gifts on Christmas and always returns to Korvatunturi in Finnish Lapland.

Since the 1950s, Santa has happily sojourned at Napapiiri, near Rovaniemi, at times other than Christmas, to meet children and the young at heart. By 1985 his visits to Napapiiri had become so regular that he established his own Santa Claus Office there. He comes there every day of the year to hear what children want for Christmas and to talk with children who have arrived from around the world. Santa Claus Village is also the location of Santa's main Post Office, which receives children's letters from the four corners of the world.

CHRISTMAS

CHRISTMAS TREE HISTORY


Did a celebration around a Christmas tree on a bitter cold Christmas Eve at Trenton, New Jersey, turn the tide for Colonial forces in 1776? According to legend, Hessian mercenaries were so reminded of home by a candlelit evergreen tree that they abandoned their guardposts to eat, drink and be merry. Washington attached that night and defeated them.



The Christmas tree has gone through a long process of development rich in many legends, says David Robson, Extension Educator, Horticulture, with the Springfield Extension Center.

Some historians trace the lighted Christmas tree to Martin Luther. He attached lighted candles to a small evergreen tree, trying to simulate the reflections of the starlit heaven -- the heaven that looked down over Bethlehem on the first Christmas Eve.



Until about 1700, the use of Christmas trees appears to have been confined to the Rhine River District. From 1700 on, when lights were accepted as part of the decorations, the Christmas tree was well on its way to becoming a tradition in Germany. Then the tradition crossed the Atlantic with the Hessian soldiers.


Some people trace the origin of the Christmas tree to an earlier period. Even before the Christian era, trees and boughs were used for ceremonials. Egyptians, in celebrating the winter solstice -- the shortest day of the year -- brought green date palms into their homes as a symbol of "life triumphant over death". When the Romans observed the feast of saturn, part of the ceremony was the raising of an evergreen bough. The early Scandinavians were said to have paid homage to the fir tree.

To the Druids, sprigs of evergreen holly in the house meant eternal life; while to the Norsemen, they symbolized the revival of the sun god Balder. To those inclined toward superstition, branches of evergreens placed over the door kept out witches, ghosts, evil spirits and the like.


This use does not mean that our Christmas tree custom evolved solely from paganism, any more than did some of the present-day use of sighed in various religious rituals.

Trees and branches can be made purposeful as well as symbolic. The Christmas tree is a symbol of a living Christmas spirit and brings into our lives a pleasant aroma of the forest. The fact that balsam fir twigs, more than any other evergreen twigs, resemble crosses may have had much to do with the early popularity of balsam fir used as Christmas trees.

Thứ Năm, 16 tháng 12, 2010

SEMINAR

RHYTHM IN SPOKEN ENGLISH

  1. Content
  • show you what is rhythm is spoken English
  • share some video clips
  • help you practice rhythm
  •  listen to and sing famous songs
  • and others

  1. Time
From: 4.30 pm on Sunday, December 19th 2010
          7.00 pm on Sunday, December 19th 2010

Let's improve our English by funny ways!

Thứ Hai, 6 tháng 12, 2010

SEMINAR

INTONATION IN SPEAKING
  1. Content
  • show you what is intonation in speaking English
  • share some video clips
  • help you practice intonation
  •  listen to and sing famous songs
  • and others

  1. Time
From: 4.30 pm on Sunday, December 12th 2010
          7.00 pm on Sunday, December 12th 2010

Let's improve our English by funny ways!

Thứ Bảy, 4 tháng 12, 2010

SEMINAR

HOW TO SPEAK ENGLISH WELL
  1. Content
  • show you how to speak English like a native speaker
  • share your own experience of speaking
  •  listen to and sing famous songs
  • and others

  1. Time

From: 4.30 pm on Sunday, December 5th 2010
          7.00 pm on Sunday, December 5th 2010

Let's improve our English by funny ways!

Thứ Bảy, 27 tháng 11, 2010

SEMINAR

HOW TO IMPROVE LISTENING SKILLS

  1. Content
  • show you how to improve listening skills
  • share your own experience of listening
  •  listen to and sing famous songs
  • and others

  1. Time

From: 7.00 pm on Sunday, November 28th 2010

Let's improve our English by funny ways!

JOB INTERVIEW

WORKING EXPERIENCE


QUESTIONS

1.     Could you tell me where your last job was?
2.     How did you like it?
3.     Why did you leave that job?
4.     What could you get there?     

JOB INTERVIEW

JOB INTERVIEW

You walk into the interview room, shake hands with your interviewer and sit down with your best interviewing smile on. Guess what their first question is?

QUESTIONS

1.     Tell me about yourself
2.     How do you describe your personality? (How do you describe yourself?)

ANSWERS


l       I would like to introduce myself. My name is ……, and my full name is………..
l       I have just graduated from …………….university.
l       I'm an experienced accountant with good knowledge of accounting. I can do accounting, auditing, tax, and consulting work. Moreover, I can keep track of the money spent and made by the company. 
l       I am always eager to learn new methods and procedures, and have continuous improvement in my past position.
l       I like working with people and enjoy group projects, but am also a self-starter who doesn't mind working on my own. I'm also a volunteer in community events. 

Thứ Hai, 22 tháng 11, 2010

THÔNG BÁO TUYỂN TÌNH NGUYỆN VIÊN CHO SPEAK UP

Thời gian:

  • Sáng 9h - 11h, mỗi ngày (đặc biệt thứ bảy và chủ nhật)
  • Chiều 3h - 5h, mỗi ngày (đặc biệt thứ bảy và chủ nhật)

Các lợi ích:
  • Được đào tạo về kỹ năng mềm và tiếng Anh
  • Có cơ hội sử dụng tiếng Anh thường xuyên
  • Môi trường làm việc thoải mái
  • Được hưởng ưu đãi về giá nước
Điều kiện:
  • Đến quán phỏng vấn trực tiếp

Thứ Tư, 17 tháng 11, 2010

JOB INTERVIEW

JOB INTERVIEW

Questions about Education

SEMINAR

PRONUNCIATION

  1. Content

-          show you how to pronounce every phonetics symbol
-          share some video clips of native speakers talking about pronunciation
-          hold many games about pronunciation
-          and others


  1. Time

From: 4:30 pm on Sunday, November 21st 2010
          7.00 pm on Sunday, November 21st 2010


Let's improve our English by funny ways!

Chủ Nhật, 14 tháng 11, 2010

WRITING A COVER LETTER

Before you write a Cover Letter:

  • research the company,
  • know the industry, the products, services, people, and position you want


Structure your Cover Letter into four parts:
  •  Get their attention.
  •  State the reason you are writing and what  you want.
  •  State how you can add value to the company.
  •  Tell the reader you will be following up soon (increase your chance of getting an interview). 


COVER LETTER FORMAT


         Your Contact Information
Name
Address
City
(Province)

Phone Number
Email Address

Date

         Employer Contact Information (if you have it)

Name
Title
Company
Address

         Salutation (greeting)
Dear Mr./Ms. Last Name / Mrs & Ms, (:)
(leave out if you don't have a contact)

         Body of Cover Letter
         what position you are applying for,
         why the employer should select you for an interview,
         and how you will follow-up.

         First Paragraph
The first paragraph of your letter should include information on why you are writing. Mention the position you are applying for and where you found the job listing. Include the name of a mutual contact, if you have one.

         Middle Paragraph (s)
The next section of your cover letter should describe what you have to offer the employer. Mention specifically how your qualifications match the job you are applying for. Remember, you are interpreting your resume, not repeating it.

         Final Paragraph
Conclude your cover letter by thanking the employer for considering you for the position. Include information on how you will follow-up.

         Complimentary Close
           
         Signature


SAMPLE

 FirstName LastName
Address
City
, State,
Phone Number
Cell Phone Number
Email

Date

         Name
Title
Company
Address
City
,

         Dear Hiring Manager,

         I am interested in the part-time position at SPEAK UP advertised in The TUOI TRE Newspaper. I have good experience in product promotion for over two years. Not only have I shown and ridden horses, but I have also had extensive experience assisting in a barn. Through working with horses, I have acquired a thorough knowledge of horses, tack, and equine apparel for both horse and rider.

         While I have equine experience, I also have excellent communication skills and an aptitude for customer service. My past experience as a volunteer at Kentucky made it necessary for me to focus on providing quality customer service, and also enabled me to work with all types of people. I believe that my communication skills, partnered with my good knowledge, would make me an asset to your company.

         Thank you for your consideration. I can be reached at 0908 652 265. I look forward to hearing from you soon.

         Sincerely,

         Your Signature