Welcome to our blog!!


A new blog has been born for you students!!

This blog pretends to be a useful tool outside the classroom. We want you to improve your English and back your learning in different ways. We hope you can take advantage of it!!

The English Department at IES GALLICUM.

martes, 24 de abril de 2012

WORLD BOOK DAY

Hi again, students!

As you know, we celebrated St George's Day yesterday in Aragon and other regions in Spain and other countries. In addition, it was World Book Day. One of the reasons why we celebrate this festivity on this day is the coincidence of Miguel de Cervantes and William Shakespeare's date of death.

Today I suggest you doing the folllowing activity. It is a Webquest. First you should read Shakespeare's timeline and then answer the quizz. Just click on the following link.

Webquest

I hope you like the webquest,

Sara.

Good writings!!

Hi students!!

Thank you for such good writings these days!! I hope you learnt from other students how to write better.

Bye for now,

Sara

miércoles, 18 de abril de 2012

Intouchables




"Intouchables"  delivers one of the funniest, most honest and touching films I have ever seen.

Sy is a failed robber, going through the motions and playing the stereotypical jobless inmigrant. Cluzet is a romantic and melancholy mind trapped in a useless body. The circumstances that bring them together are too funny to spoil here, but they meet , and a strange relationship quickly blossoms as they bring out the best in each other.

The film's simplicity is delightfully misleading: the script is a masterpiece of comedy writing, and however good the rest of the cast is, the central duo is magical. Sy's comic timing will have you in stitches, but it is his honesty and vulnerability that make you fall in love with the character. Cluzet isn't your typical sad-sack, instead, much of the finest pleasures in the film consist in watching him use his keen mind to mess with the world around him (a subplot about an abstract painting really takes the biscuit, you'll know it when you see it).

This is one of the most unique, beautiful and honest friendships ever committed to film. It will make you laugh, it will make you cry... a delightful celebration of everything in life that makes it worthwhile.

                                                                                  V-DM Review

domingo, 11 de marzo de 2012

St. Patrick's Day

St. Patrick's Day                                

On 17th March, Irish people celebrate St. Patrick's Day. It is a well-known celebration around the world, not only in Ireland.

Some parades take place in the USA such as in New York City. You can watch a video and see this parade.


Even in some European countries, Irish communities celebrate this festivity. For instance, you can see some Irish typical clothes in Irish pubs in Europe.



Who was St. Patrick? 

St. Patrick was the first bishop to arrive to Ireland in order to christianize it in the fourth century A.D.

When he was about 16, he was captured from Wales by Irish raiders and taken as a slave to Ireland, where he lived for six years before escaping and returning to his family.
After entering the Church, he returned to Ireland as an ordained bishop in the north and west of the island, but little is known about the places where he worked.

By the seventh century, he had come to be revered as the patron saint of Ireland.

You can watch the following video to learn more about his history :

Origins


How do they celebrate St. Patrick's?

You can visit the following website

St Patrick's Day 2012


Other traditions include greening some rivers such as Chicago's river. You can see an example in the following website.

Green Chicago River


 


 Some other icons related to Ireland are :











Let's finish with some Irish blessings on St Patrick's Day:



 

miércoles, 29 de febrero de 2012

Pancake Day

What is Pancake Day?
Pancake Day is the last day before Lent and is also known as Shrove Tuesday. Pancakes are traditionally eaten on this day to use up the eggs and fat which were not eaten during the fasting period.

Why are pancakes eaten on Pancake Day?
Lent is a time of abstinence, of giving thins up. So Shrove Tuesday is the last time to use up the foods that aren’t allowed in Lent. Pancakes are eaten on this day because they contain fat, butter and eggs which were forbidden during Lent.

 When is Shrove Tuesday (Pancake Day)?
Shrove Tuesday is celebrated the day before Ash Wednesday and is therefore the final day before the beginning of Lent, a Christian festival leading up to Easter Sunday. Shrove Tuesday always falls 47 days before Easter Sunday, so the date varies from year to year and falls between 3 February and 9 March.
 In 2012 Pancake Day was 21 February
 In 2013 Pancake Day will be 12 February 


 Why do Christians call the day “Shrove Tuesday”?
The name Shrove comes from the old word “shrive” which means to confess. On Shrove Tuesday, in the Middle Ages, people used to confess their sins so that they were forgiven before the season of Lent began.

 What happens on Pancake Day in England?


On that day it is traditional to eat pancakes, toss pancakes and take part in pancake races. A Great Pancake Race takes place on Pancake day each year in London on Tower Hill Terrace, in front of the church of All Hallows by the Tower. This is a great fun event and is mirrored in thousands of smaller pancake races around the globe.




Watch this video!!!!!!




lunes, 20 de febrero de 2012

quote

Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new.
Albert Einstein