lunes, 6 de marzo de 2017

B10 - CLASS 03/18 - 2017 MARCH


====================================================

Friday, March 6th, 2017.
B10 Class 03 / 18
Mr. Christian Jaramillo

TODAY’S OBJECTIVE

  • to interpret statistical figures / charts
  • to talk about lifestyle trends
  • to disagree and disagree strongly

s1: What do you think the most typical person looks like?
s2: I can see that there is 10% of Americans receiving a college degree and 33% of Americans receiving a college degree.
s1: So what does it mean?
s2: I think there is a 23% increase of Americans receiving a college degree.

s2: What do these pie charts tell us about student life in the US?
s1: In 1970, the percentage of Americans receiving a college degree is the same as the percentage of college graduates moving back home.
s2: What does it mean?
s1: I think that the number of Americans getting a college degree is the same number of college graduates moving back home.


s2: What do these pie charts tell us about student life in the US?
s1: In 1970, the percentage of college graduates moving back home is 10%. Today, the percentage is 55%.
s2: What does it mean? = So what is the interpretation?
s1: We can clearly see that there is a 45% increase of college graduates moving back home.

s1: Which trends are positive and negative?
s2: The first trend is positive, but the second one is negative.
s1: Is it the same or different in Lima?
s2: The 1st trend is the same as in Lima because now there are more universities at different prices.
The 2nd trend is different from Lima because college students never leave home.

to infer information = to make a conclusion
Example:
Mr Jaramillo: I am from Rio. What language do I speak?
Students: Oh, Mr . You speak Portuguese!!!

What do you think boomerang kid means?
I think a boomerang kid is a __college graduate_ that _moves back_ home because of the economical recession in the US. Rents are very high and the salary of a newly graduate is not as high.

In my opinion, this term is used when a college graduate returns to live to his/her parents’ home.


Before
Now
In the future
Living situation
lived in an apartment
at home
going to find a roommate
Rent
more than $1,000 a month
it is free
going to share 50 and 50.
Money
didn’t have a lot of money
saves ⅔ (two thirds) of his salary

Work
couldn’t find a job
works part time
wants to find a full time job

  • easy
  • young
  • found
  • jobs
  • harder


s1: Do you think it’s harder for college graduates now? Why or why not?
s2: Yes, I think it is harder for college graduates now because now companies want higher studies, for example, having a master's degree (an MD) or a doctor in philosophy degree (a PhD). There are a lot of graduates.
s1: When do children typically move out of their parents’ homes?
s2: Never , Mr.
   When I graduate from college or when u have a good job.

Speaking
  1. What are they fighting about?
    1. Carlas and her father are fighting over a concert. She wants to go to a concert on a weekday. She has to study.
  2. Who do you agree with?
    1. I agree with her father because the next day she has to study.

What’s up?  (=what is going on?)  <> What’s app?

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario