[Updated June 4, 2016]
SpeedDial is a wonderful way to create sets of visual bookmarks. Instead of using browser-supplied bookmarks, you can roll your own SpeedDial entries: vary the size, position and image (use your own screenshots or graphics). You can also create your own groups.
[roll your own = DIY]
These are some of my Language Study bookmarks.
To install SpeedDials on your own computer, you should:
(1) Install a good browser, either Firefox or Pale Moon (a smaller, faster version of Firefox). If you enjoy letting the NSA watch you, you can probably also use Google Chrome or use a Chromebook. I recommend Pale Moon for its speed and stability (but recent updates have been less than ideal: YMMV).
(2) After you have installed either Pale Moon or Firefox, go to Mozilla to install two add-ons: SpeedDial and Eversync. After installing add-ons, you usually need to restart your browser.
(3) After restarting your browser, click on the small triangle to the right of the SpeedDial icon:
(4) From the SpeedDial menu choose Global Options:
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Saturday, June 4, 2016
SpeedDial: How To Install It
Posted by
Mr. Matthews
at
8:40 PM
SpeedDial: How To Install It
2016-06-04T20:40:00+08:00
Mr. Matthews
bookmarks (visual)|Firefox|Pale Moon browser|SpeedDial How-To|
Comments
Friday, June 3, 2016
Paragraph Structure: The Hidden Costs of Cheap Meat 廉價肉類的隱藏代價(作文結構)
The Hidden Costs of Cheap Meat
{1} Meat produced by factory farming seems much cheaper than meat from traditional farms, but in the long run, are we really saving so much money? Let’s look at the hidden costs. {2-5} Factory farm animals are very crowded: artificial hormones make them grow faster and antibiotics are used to keep them healthy. Tons of farm waste pollute the water and the air, thereby sickening farm workers and people living nearby. What’s more, the water from these farms makes germs very strong, so many antibiotics have already stopped working. Incurable diseases are a heavy price to pay for cheap meat. {6-8} To further increase their profits, some farm companies feed parts of dead animals to the live ones. Sooner or later, crowding causes health problems. These bad conditions can lead to strange new kinds of sickness such as mad cow disease, H5N1 and other kinds of bird flu. {9-10} Nowadays, meat is certainly less expensive than it was 100 years ago, but is a high price to pay. Viewed in this light, was meat from traditional farms really so expensive?
Some longer words above can be cut up into short, easy-to-understand parts:
antibiotic
|
ANTI
|
BIO
|
TIC
|
抗生素
|
against
|
life
|
[NOUN]
|
||
artificial
|
ART
|
FIC
|
IAL
|
人工
|
skill
|
make
|
[ADJ]
|
||
incurable
|
IN
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CURE
|
ABLE
|
不可醫治
|
not
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make
sickness OK
|
CAN
|
||
sicken
|
SICK
|
EN
|
使生病
|
|
sick
|
make
|
~ darken, thicken …
|
Florida Chicken House (Public Domain Image) |
Notice how this short persuasive composition begins and ends with questions to make the reader think. Sentence 1, the topic sentence, introduces the idea that "cheap" meat is not really cheap. Sentences 2-8 provide examples of hidden health costs, and the composition finishes by concluding that poor health makes "cheap" meat seem expensive. Perhaps the old ways were better.
Look below to see other ways that the writer makes different parts of this composition fit together:
Posted by
Mr. Matthews
at
6:30 PM
Paragraph Structure: The Hidden Costs of Cheap Meat 廉價肉類的隱藏代價(作文結構)
2016-06-03T18:30:00+08:00
Mr. Matthews
Comments
Thursday, June 2, 2016
Paragraph Structure (Old MacDonald VS Factory Farms)
Write a short paragraph to explain which is better: Traditional farms or Factory farms? This short video (a review of the ideas in The Meatrix) can give you some ideas:
The Old MacDonalds and the Factory Farm from WSPA Canada on Vimeo.
Paragraphs in English usually have three parts:
(1) A topic sentence. This explains what you want to talk about.
(2) Supporting sentences. These sentences give examples or proof. Try to make sure the sentences fit together and help each other.
(3) A closing sentence. This sentence repeats the ideas of the topic sentence, but uses different words.
Here is an example of a paragraph about Canada (adapted from http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Formal_Paragraph_Writing, CC--BY-SA Wikibooks):
Notice how the writer uses a number ("three") and three adverbs/adverbial phrases ("first of all, secondly, finally") to link the topic sentence with each of the supporting sentences. The closing sentence uses the phrase "as a result" to link all three supporting sentences with the topic sentence:
Remember to take notes when you watch The Meatrix and the Old MacDonalds video you see above. At least six problems are mentioned:
Procedure:
Write all three sections BY HAND (don't use a computer). Make at least three drafts of your composition on 26-hole looseleaf notebook paper (standard B5 paper). Number each draft #1, #2 and #3.
(1) The first time, don't worry about vocabulary, grammar or spelling. Write as fast as you can, and don't stop to check a dictionary. When you finish, you will see probably see a mess: draft #1. Don't worry! Even professional writers work like this.
(2) Clean up the mistakes and missing words in your first draft. You now have your draft #2. Show it to a classmate or a friend. Ask that person to comment on the ideas and the organization. Is the main idea of the composition clear? Do the different parts (topic sentence, support, closing) seem to help each other?
(3) Use your friend's suggestions to make a cleaned-up version. This is your draft #3. Keep all three drafts to show your teacher.
(4) Use the PC (http://www.gingersoftware.com/grammarcheck) or Android version of Ginger (http://www.gingersoftware.com/android-keyboard-page) to check your grammar and spelling. Upload the final cleaned-up version section by section to the Composition web form: http://tinyurl.com/CUTe-Composition
Better Farming Methods
Young people can make a difference. Growing food using sustainable methods is personally rewarding and very important for society. Something to think about!
The Old MacDonalds and the Factory Farm from WSPA Canada on Vimeo.
Paragraphs in English usually have three parts:
(1) A topic sentence. This explains what you want to talk about.
(2) Supporting sentences. These sentences give examples or proof. Try to make sure the sentences fit together and help each other.
(3) A closing sentence. This sentence repeats the ideas of the topic sentence, but uses different words.
Here is an example of a paragraph about Canada (adapted from http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Formal_Paragraph_Writing, CC--BY-SA Wikibooks):
There are three reasons why Canada is a
great country. First of all, Canada has an excellent health care system. Every
Canadian can receive quality medical care for a low price. Secondly, Canada is
a good place to earn a living. Jobs are easy to find, and people are paid well
for their work. Finally, Canada has an excellent system of education. Students
are encouraged to learn and continue studying at university. As a result,
Canada is a highly desirable place to live.
A paragraph explaining why Canada is a great country (CC--BY-SA Wikibooks) |
Notice how the writer uses a number ("three") and three adverbs/adverbial phrases ("first of all, secondly, finally") to link the topic sentence with each of the supporting sentences. The closing sentence uses the phrase "as a result" to link all three supporting sentences with the topic sentence:
Remember to take notes when you watch The Meatrix and the Old MacDonalds video you see above. At least six problems are mentioned:
#
|
Problem
|
Description
|
1
|
Animal cruelty
|
The farm companies don’t treat the
animals kindly
|
2
|
Antibiotic resistant germs
|
The water from these farms makes germs
too strong, so some medicines don't work anymore
|
3
|
massive pollution
|
The air and water from these farms makes
the neighbors sick
|
4
|
destroyed communities
|
Rich companies buy off lawmakers and put small
farmers out of business
|
5
|
Artificial hormones
|
These man-made hormones stay in the meat and make
people sick
|
6
|
Mad cow disease
|
To increase their profits, some farm
companies feed dead animals to live animals. This could also make people sick.
|
Procedure:
Write all three sections BY HAND (don't use a computer). Make at least three drafts of your composition on 26-hole looseleaf notebook paper (standard B5 paper). Number each draft #1, #2 and #3.
(1) The first time, don't worry about vocabulary, grammar or spelling. Write as fast as you can, and don't stop to check a dictionary. When you finish, you will see probably see a mess: draft #1. Don't worry! Even professional writers work like this.
(2) Clean up the mistakes and missing words in your first draft. You now have your draft #2. Show it to a classmate or a friend. Ask that person to comment on the ideas and the organization. Is the main idea of the composition clear? Do the different parts (topic sentence, support, closing) seem to help each other?
(3) Use your friend's suggestions to make a cleaned-up version. This is your draft #3. Keep all three drafts to show your teacher.
(4) Use the PC (http://www.gingersoftware.com/grammarcheck) or Android version of Ginger (http://www.gingersoftware.com/android-keyboard-page) to check your grammar and spelling. Upload the final cleaned-up version section by section to the Composition web form: http://tinyurl.com/CUTe-Composition
Better Farming Methods
Young people can make a difference. Growing food using sustainable methods is personally rewarding and very important for society. Something to think about!
Posted by
Mr. Matthews
at
6:25 PM
Paragraph Structure (Old MacDonald VS Factory Farms)
2016-06-02T18:25:00+08:00
Mr. Matthews
Comments
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Cheap Meat, Cheat Meat (The Meatrix) 便宜沒好『肉』(駭肉任務)
The Matrix is a famous science fiction movie (Wikipedia: English & Chinese). Near the beginning of the movie, Neo
meets Morpheus. Morpheus tells him that nothing he sees is real. He
offers to show Leo the Matrix:
The Red Pill, Blue Pill scene has been adapted to make a flash video called The Meatrix. This video shows consumers the reality about the cheap meat that they eat.
In The Meatrix I, Leo meets Moofeus (Cows go "moo,", so "Morpheus" = "Moofeus"). When Leo takes the red pill, he sees where meat, milk and eggs really come from:
A few years later, The Meatrix II came out:
Twelve years after the original Meatrix film, the Matrix Relaunched came out. Click on [CC] to watch this short video with English captions (no Chinese is available yet):
Unfortunately, the people who translated the Chinese subtitles for the Meatrix II (http://www.vegtomato.org/issue25/traditional/veg_special_report25.htm) made some mistakes. Here is a corrected version, with mistakes and key words marked in red:
The Red Pill, Blue Pill scene has been adapted to make a flash video called The Meatrix. This video shows consumers the reality about the cheap meat that they eat.
The Meatrix characters (from left to right): Leo, Moofeus, Chickity and Smith |
In The Meatrix I, Leo meets Moofeus (Cows go "moo,", so "Morpheus" = "Moofeus"). When Leo takes the red pill, he sees where meat, milk and eggs really come from:
A few years later, The Meatrix II came out:
Twelve years after the original Meatrix film, the Matrix Relaunched came out. Click on [CC] to watch this short video with English captions (no Chinese is available yet):
Unfortunately, the people who translated the Chinese subtitles for the Meatrix II (http://www.vegtomato.org/issue25/traditional/veg_special_report25.htm) made some mistakes. Here is a corrected version, with mistakes and key words marked in red:
Posted by
Mr. Matthews
at
6:24 PM
Cheap Meat, Cheat Meat (The Meatrix) 便宜沒好『肉』(駭肉任務)
2016-06-01T18:24:00+08:00
Mr. Matthews
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