Interactive, fun and effective,I Love English Junior ticks all the boxes for English Foreign Language programmes, (Common European Framework of Reference for Languages) all the while offering a moment of recreation for both students and teachers.
This method has been tested and approved by school teachers and teaching advisors. It focuses on listening and speaking. AUDIO ADDED by aleli_a
Do you already have the ideal mindset, a solid foundation to accomplish all of your hopes and dreams? Some people do. Check the questions below that could have a "yes" for an answer. If you've answered "yes" to less than 5 questions, then you are close to the ideal mindset. If 5 or more questions were answered with a "yes," you will absolutely find benefit in the Ideal Mindset Personal Learning Course, because you have more to accomplish.
Added by: Maria | Karma: 3098.81 | Multimedia » Audio | 5 January 2009
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Bertrand Russell -- agnostic, pacifist, great humanitarian, and Nobel Prize laureate -- reviews in this volume the conflict between science and traditional religion during the last four centuries, and attempts to estimate the influence of present-day science upon present-day theology.
Added by: Romadzha | Karma: 827.99 | Audio, Other | 5 January 2009
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Kim Basinger shares her thoughts about what it is like to be an actress and a mother at the same time. She tells about the experience of filming in L.A. Confidential.
Bill Bryson's concise biography of Shakespeare is brilliantly written, humorously insightful, and entirely delightful. The prose is a well-crafted and playful presentation of the dozen odd facts known about Shakespeare and many of the suppositions, inferences, and wild speculations about the man and his work. This Shakespeare primer can be easily understood by any high-school level reader and no prior knowledge about Shakespeare is required--Bryson even helpfully informs the reader that "William Shakespeare of Stratford was unquestionably" (p. 196) the author of Shakespeare's plays and poetry, a fact that is apparently not self-evident.
Bryson has written several books including the prize-winning A Short History of Nearly Everything. The book under review is provided as a volume in the "Eminent Lives" series of concise biographies by varying authors and as such conforms to an imposed restriction on length. With a candid honesty that permeates his offering, Bryson notes that the world didn't really need another Shakespeare biography but that the "Eminent Lives" series did. Bryson is straightforward in admitting that no groundbreaking research is presented, but rather the biography gathers the known facts, the supposed facts, and much pithy innuendo into a single engaging and accessible overview. Bryson's strength, then, lies not so much in his Shakespearean expertise but rather in his obvious ability to turn a phrase. Dedicated to our Poet Otherwordly I hope your sense of humour will be satisfied! - stovokor