Sunday 31 July 2022

do languages get simpler over time?

We can have a lot of fun with how languages develop over time:

On Christmas Eve last year, a 22-year-old student called Simon Roper posted a video on YouTube in which he reconstructed the development of the London accent from 1340 to 2006 in a single monologue. In whispered tones, Roper voiced men from 12 generations of the same imaginary family, speaking at 60-year intervals. Their vowels flattened and their monophthongs shifted as they talked of their daily life – of cooking and horses and cold winters – transforming from barely decipherable Chaucerians to cheeky 1930s Cockneys over the course of 16 minutes. His speech was faltering, full of human reality and strangely intense. He wrote the piece in his bedroom during lockdown, and it has been watched two million times.

Simon Roper: the 23-year-old reconstructing the past for millions of online viewers - New Statesman

With load more videos here:

Simon Roper - YouTube

For example:


Do Languages Get Simpler Over Time? - YouTube

Here are some more thoughts:

Simpler grammar, larger vocabulary: a linguistic paradox explained | Cornell Chronicle

Do languages get simpler over time?

Language complexity - Wikipedia

Monday 25 July 2022

education, education, education

the purpose of education:

> USA 1950s video: Jay Doubleyou: the purpose of education: from china to prussia to the united states

> Prussian factory system: to read: Jay Doubleyou: the prussian school system and the factory model of education

> John Taylor Gatto and FW Taylor: Jay Doubleyou: taylorism >>> and education; with video: Taylorism ABC World Report - YouTube

Learning by objectives: Jay Doubleyou: behaviourism >>> and learning objectives >>> and the common european framework

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the case against education: 

> Pinky: The Pinky Show - Scary School Nightmare - YouTube and Jay Doubleyou: deschooling society

> Caplan: Jay Doubleyou: the case against education

> homework: Rockefeller: Jay Doubleyou: is the purpose of education 'social uplift' - or 'social control'?

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the power of negative expectation:

> book and BBC: BBC Radio 4 - The Expectation Effect by David Robson - How your expectations can transform your life and one episode: BBC Radio 4 - The Expectation Effect by David Robson, Limitless Willpower

> Jane Elliot: Jay Doubleyou: jane elliott - brown eyes vs blue eyes; video plus intro: Jane Elliott Brown Eyes vs Blue Eyes 1 - YouTube; video plus subtitles: Jane Elliott “Blue Eyes - Brown Eyes” Experiment Anti-Racism - YouTube; documentary: A Class Divided - Brown Eyes Blue Eyes Experiment - YouTube

> Stanford Experiment: the movie: The Stanford Prison Experiment Official Trailer #1 (2015) Ezra Miller Thriller Movie HD - YouTube; the documentary: The Stanford Prison Experiment - YouTube

> homework: more Expectation Effect: BBC Sounds - The Expectation Effect by David Robson - Available Episodes

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the alternatives for education:

> Homeschooling: Jay Doubleyou: homeschooling and deschooling

> Self-directed learning: Jay Doubleyou: self-directed education

> In India: Sugata Mitra: The child-driven education | TED Talk

> Getting outside and experimenting: Jay Doubleyou: tinkering school

> Socratic method: Jay Doubleyou: questioning and problem-solving

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Tuesday 19 July 2022

britishness

What are the elements which make up 'Britishness'?

Jay Doubleyou: is there such a thing as 'british humour'?

Jay Doubleyou: english literature and english society

Jay Doubleyou: team gb... or uk?

Jay Doubleyou: small island or global britain

Jay Doubleyou: identity in the uk

What towns are 'typically British'?

My local town. Typically British in. every. way. : CasualUK

One element might be about what the British are not:

One reason is that the identity of Britain only began to be seriously investigated (as distinct from being taken for granted) after the Second World War, a time when peace and imperial retreat fostered a highly introverted view of the British past. With their subject reduced to a normally peaceful, increasingly disgruntled, and essentially second-ranking state on the peripheries of Europe, historians of Britain found it easier to understand its past in terms of internal social, political, religious, and cultural divisions, rather than approaching it as a one-time great power influencing and being influenced by every continent in the world...

Britishness and Otherness: An Argument on JSTOR

Colley - 1993 - Britishness and Otherness An Argument.pdf

How has empire influenced the British?

Jay Doubleyou: mle > multicultural london english

Jay Doubleyou: every town and city in britain profited from the slave trade

With an important book out here:

Jay Doubleyou: teaching empire in british schools

Jay Doubleyou: empire 2.0 and the 'imperial nostalgia' driving the british culture war

With more here:

Britain's Imperial Legacy: "It's Absolutely Everywhere" | HistoryExtra

Sathnam Sanghera on Empireland - How Imperialism Shaped Modern Britain - YouTube

Sathnam Sanghera and Samira Ahmed in Conversation, on Empireland | Humanists UK Convention 2021 - YouTube

"What the hell"?!

Empire State of Mind: Episode 1 - All 4

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Monday 18 July 2022

other views: aspect and perspective

Here are some definitions:

  • the form of a verb that shows how the meaning of that verb is considered in relation to time, typically expressing if an action is complete, repeated, or continuous  

ASPECT | meaning in the Cambridge English Dictionary

  • the form of a verb group indicating whether an action, event, or situation is seen as continuing or as complete. In English there are two aspects, the progressive, such as ‘is arriving’ or ‘was arriving’, and the perfective, such as ‘has seen’ and ‘had seen’.  

ASPECT (noun) American English definition and synonyms | Macmillan Dictionary

And another:

  • a particular feature of or way of thinking about something, esp. something complicated 

ASPECT | meaning in the Cambridge English Dictionary

Things can get a bit confusing:

Words Aspect and Perspective have similar meaning

This helps:

With both words, you can be talking in a purely physical manner (about the concrete ‘real’ world) or in a philosophical manner.

  • Your perspective is the context in which, or the position from which, you view something or someone.
    • He looks at crime from the perspective of a police officer.
    • From his perspective, the second building seemed to tower over the first
  • An aspect is a ‘side’, part, nuance, characteristic, or feature, or the directional orientation, of something or someone.
    • He saw an aspect of the situation that had previously escaped his attention.
    • The southern aspect of the house was really charming.

So, depending on your perspective, you might notice different aspects of things or people.

What is the difference between perspective and aspect? - Quora

Taking this further...

What aspects do different Wikipedias show - and what perspectives do they present?

Jay Doubleyou: alternative wikipedias

Same questions for different state media:

Jay Doubleyou: china, the bbc and disinformation

Same questions for you and me:

Jay Doubleyou: othering

For example:

The term orientalism denotes the exaggeration of difference, the presumption of Western superiority, and the application of clichéd analytical models for perceiving the "Oriental world".

Orientalism (book) - Wikipedia

Orientalismo (saggio) - Wikipedia (Italian)

Orientalism - Conservapedia

contrary to the Orient which serves which serves as Europe's polar opposite, Balkan is Europe's "Other within"

Imagining the Balkans - Wikipedia

Balkanizmi (knjiga) – Wikipedija (Croatian)

To build a conceptual framework around a notion of Us-versus-Them is, in effect, to pretend that the principal consideration is epistemological and natural—our civilization is known and accepted, theirs is different and strange—whereas, in fact, the framework separating us from them is belligerent, constructed, and situational.

Other (philosophy) - Wikipedia

Othering – Wikipedia (German)

Us vs. Them: The process of othering | CMHR

What is Othering - YouTube

Finally:

Jay Doubleyou: north, east, south, west - what do they mean?

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Wednesday 13 July 2022

profiles: johnson and putin ... and macron and scholz... and musk and bezos

Can you give a profile of your country's leader?

When the UK prime minister resigned in June, the BBC put together a radio series to try and understand Boris Johnson a little more:

Try from 2:30 where we learn about his name - and his origins:

BBC Radio 4 - Boris, 1. The Early Years

He could be a little confusing:

Coronavirus: Matt Lucas mocks Boris Johnson’s ‘confusing’ lockdown speech | The Independent | The Independent

Boris Johnson speech by Matt Lucas - Little Britain - YouTube

When Russia invaded Ukraine in February, the BBC put together a radio series profiling the Russian leader Vladimir Putin:

BBC Radio 4 - Putin

Here we look at his origins:

Putin - 1. The Moth - BBC Sounds

Here's a talk from a top Russian/French journalist with a different perspective:

Vladimir Pozner: How the United States Created Vladimir Putin - YouTube

For another perspective from Russia Today, here's an interview in English with the president of Syria in October 2020:

Part of President Assad's interview with Rossiya Segodnya News Agency - YouTube

For some 'easier' English, here's a profile or two:

BBC Learning English - 6 Minute English / Queen Elizabeth II: What is the Platinum Jubilee?

BBC Learning English - 6 Minute English / Remembering Desmond Tutu

And:

Twitter - ESL Lesson Plan - Breaking News English Lesson

Elon Musk - ESL Lesson Plan - Breaking News English Lesson

Helping Nature - ESL Lesson Plan - Breaking News English Lesson

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Thursday 7 July 2022

special spiritual places in britain

Britain is full of stone circles from the Bronze Age and before:

Pagan Britain: The UK's Ancient Sacred Sites - Horizon Guides

Why exactly were they built? 

Bronze Age Dartmoor - The Life of Marghwen - YouTube

There are lots of Roman remains too.

Did the Romans invade Britain because they wanted to destroy the Druidic religion, the focus of Celtic religious and cultural resistance? 

The extermination of the druids, as well as the great number of other soothsayers and herbalists, cannot be separated from the larger process of Romanization, in which older facets of Celtic culture were gradually abandoned to integrate the new peoples into the Greco-Roman sphere.

Why did the Romans slaughter the Druids? - Quora

By destroying both the geographic heart of Druidismin Britain, the Romans caputered core system and eventually Keltism.

Why did the Romans suppress Druids? - Quora

They eventually wiped out the Druids on the island of Anglesey:

The Roman attack on the British Druids on Ynys Môn

But they also imposed themselves on other parts of Britain, including in modern-day Devon:

Nemetostatio (Roman Fort & Marching Camps) in North Tawton, United Kingdom (Google Maps)

The Roman fort is believed to have had the name Nemetostatio, meaning "The road-station of the sacred groves", and may have been located on the site of an ancient druidic sanctuary. It covered an area of roughly 600 ft (185m) east-west by 390 ft (120m), and was located adjoining the Roman road between Isca Dumnoniorum (Exeter) and Okehampton.

North Tawton - Wikipedia

Nemetostatio - 'The Outpost of the Sacred Grove(s)'
The place-name seems to be an amalgamation of the Celtic word Nemeton 'sacred grove' and the Latin word Stationis 'road-station, outpost'.
It would appear that the Romans built the Nanstallon fort close-by or perhaps directly upon the site of an ancient druidic sanctuary, and hoped by their presence to suppress the native Celtic religion, together with its reputed practice of human sacrifice.

Jay Doubleyou: Something from the air…

Christian churches were often built on former religious sites:

A Tiny Church Sits On Britain's Oldest Site of Continuous Worship | Smart News| Smithsonian Magazine

One in particular being Old Sarum, just above Salisbury:

History of Old Sarum | English Heritage

Old Sarum: A Layer-Cake of History 

... for many Stonehenge is a cornucopia of earth energy and has a whole network of ley lines running through which connect it to the plethora of ancient wonders that surround it in Wiltshire and beyond. For example, one such ley line connects Stonehenge, Old Sarum, Salisbury Cathedral and Clearbury Ring. Although the churches were not built at the same time, the ley lines suggest, some would say, that intense earth energies were always present in these positions – causing later societies to build their monuments there.

Stonehenge Ley Lines and Earth Energies – Why Does it Attract ‘New Agers’? | Stonehenge Stone Circle News and Information

Old Sarum lies on one of the earliest recognised examples of leylines as determined by Sir N. Lockyer. It is connected to both Salisbury and Stonehenge, both sacred places on the Wiltshire landscape.

Old Sarum, England

Sir Norman Lockyer - (1836-1920) - Lockyer made the first 'professional' observation of geometry in the lay-out of the ancient landscape. He realised that a geometric connection existed between Stonehenge, Grovely (Grove-ley) castle and Old Sarum. The three form an equilateral triangle with sides 6 miles long. (See Above)

Lockyer pioneered the field of archaeo-astronomy, and spent some a time in Egypt, where he investigated the alignments and orientations of many ancient structures. He was able to combine his astronomical knowledge with observations at certain temples, and produce dates that he confirmed through examples of temples with re-aligned axis. His researches led him to conclude dates of 4,000 BC for early dynastic structures (3).

Geometric alignments

Norman Lockyer Observatory

Returning to Dartmoor, there are very special places - perhaps haunted:

BBC - Devon Video Nation - Kitty Jay's Grave - a Dartmoor Legend

Dartmoor Tales: Kitty Jay's Grave - YouTube

Jay's Grave - Wikipedia

Kitty Jay (album) - Wikipedia

Seth Lakeman - Kitty Jay - YouTube

What 'special spiritual places' have you experienced?

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Wednesday 6 July 2022

listening in english

There are lots of ways to listen to stuff to improve your English...

1: You can hear about things going on in non-English-speaking countries - but in English.

Czech:

News from the Czech Republic | Radio Prague International

Czech Radio | Czech Radio

Swiss: 

The Local – Switzerland’s News in English

WRS

Hear Swiss stories for the world on our podcast - SWI swissinfo.ch

2: You can listen to your favourite songs in English...

Lockdown favourites:

Jay Doubleyou: singing songs through lockdown

The Beatles: and phrasal verbs:

Phrasal Verbs with The Beatles - YouTube

With A Little Help From My Friends (Remastered 2009) - YouTube

JOE COCKER With A Little Help From My Friends 1969 Woodstock - YouTube

Strawberry Fields Forever - Restored HD Video - YouTube

Lyrics:

Jay Doubleyou: listening to song lyrics will help your pronunciation

3: You can watch something:

TV:

Jay Doubleyou: which tv programmes should i watch to improve my english?

TED Talks:

Jay Doubleyou: shorter ted talks

Movies:

Jay Doubleyou: learning english from films - an overview

4: You can amuse yourself:

Comedy of manners:

S2E1.Communication Problems - video Dailymotion

Satire:

A Conference Call in Real Life - YouTube

5: You can listen and read:

Audio books:

Jay Doubleyou: english easy readers - audio books

For example:

Learning English through story: White Fang 01/08 - YouTube

6: You can listen and write:

Dictation:

Jay Doubleyou: practical dictation > online texts and audio

Jay Doubleyou: dictation can be fun

For example:

BBC Learning English - News Report / Superbug threat

7: You can listen and speak:

Shadowing:

Jay Doubleyou: the shadowing technique

7: You can try all sorts of audio-rich websites:

Breaking News English:

Jay Doubleyou: breaking news english lessons: different levels and speeds

Story Corps:

Jay Doubleyou: story corps - listening to america

Voice of America:

Jay Doubleyou: learn english with voice of america and esl-bits

ELS-bits:

Jay Doubleyou: authentic listening - fast and slow





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Saturday 2 July 2022

teaching english as a foreign language online

TEFL is growing - and it's happening online:

TEFL – the use of technology may be one of the latest trends for 2022

This has expanded hugely over the last two years:

What's next in the world of ESL online?

Out of necessity and intent, the use of online learning apps surged during the pandemic. For ESL students and educators, that growth will likely continue.

What's next in the world of ESL online? | ZDNet

There is specific demand for online English:

Appeal for volunteer teachers to teach English online to Ukrainians - Irish Tech News

And there is a specific halt to demand for online English:

Online Tutoring in China Was Booming. Then Came a Dramatic Shift in Regulations. | EdSurge News

It's a type of work which doesn't only appeal to the young:

Teaching English is the perfect work opportunity for retired folk

And it's a type of learning which appeals to all generations too:

Lifelong Learning At Your Fingertips Is Only A Click Away | IFLScience

But it is the ultimate 'Work From Home':

How to Teach English Online and Work From Anywhere in the World

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