scholarly journals On English Adverbials: An English Teacher’s View

2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yaohuan Lu

For Grade two students in Senior High School, what is of vital importance is that students establish clear grammar networks at least after the second term to prepare themselves well for the first-round review of the third year and the following College Entrance Examination. With the scattered language points such as “with complex structure”, “participles used as adverbials”, or “absolute structure” learned by students in a gradual style, it is essential for them to clear out a main thinking path or thinking framework to make connections between knowledge points. The author finds in her years of teaching duration the relations between English adverbials, making it easier for students to know the know-how of learning English in a much scientific and reasonable way. Here are the findings.

2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Guanghua Wan

With the introduction of the new college entrance examination evaluation system, great changes have taken place in the function, purpose and significance of the college entrance examination. In addition to evaluating students' learning achievements, it also undertakes the important function of educating people and morality, which also urges high school teachers to take educating people as the main teaching direction. As far as the ideological and political education in senior high school is concerned, there are many disadvantages in the traditional teaching mode, which leads to the students' low learning enthusiasm, and the inability to deeply understand the connotation of Ideological and political education, so that the discipline which should have the most educational function can not fully play its due role. Therefore, the ideological and political education in senior high school should make bold innovation, so as to quickly adapt to the new evaluation system. This paper makes an in-depth study on how to innovate the ideological and political education in Senior High School under the background of one core, four layers and four wings, and provides some specific measures.


PMLA ◽  
1963 ◽  
Vol 78 (4-Part2) ◽  
pp. 9-25
Author(s):  
John C. Gerber

Of the many enterprises undertaken during the last few years to upgrade the teaching of English, the 1962 Summer Institute Program sponsored by the Commission on English of the College Entrance Examination Board has been the most dramatic and, in many ways, the most promising. Already it is clear that the effects of this program are being felt in many high-school classes, and that the formula devised by the Commission on English is being copied widely and successfully. The potential usefulness of such Institutes for the advanced training of high-school English teachers, therefore, has already been demonstrated. What makes these Institutes of especial significance to MLA members, however, is that the program required twenty of the most influential Departments of English in the country to involve themselves directly in this advanced training of high-school teachers. These were not institutes conducted by professors of Education with the casual blessing of Departments of English; these were institutes administered and largely taught by professors of English. The difference is a very great one indeed. Whether we like it or not, the CEEB Institutes have, in effect, forced those of us in Departments of English to acknowledge a substantial responsibility for improving the quality of English teaching in the high schools. Because of them—and of such subsequent activities as the Allerton Conference and the Curriculum Centers—a new appraisal of our proper professional functions has been quietly taking place on one campus after another. Even now it is no exaggeration to say, I believe, that a Department of English may no longer claim to be of the top rank unless it includes among its programs one or more designed to aid the high-school English teacher, both the tenderfoot and the old-timer.


1998 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. 767-770
Author(s):  
Ruth E. Knudson

115 high school juniors were required to write a composition after reading an essay or just to write one without reading. Students were instructed in writing a summary, a synthesis, and an argument to prepare them to write a composition for the task which required reading an essay. Writing samples were collected before the study started and after instructions for each kind of writing, i.e., a summary, a synthesis, and an argument. When the first writing sample's scores were the covariate, the pretest mean was higher for writing in response to a topic without reading an essay than on the pretest for writing after reading an essay. Scores significantly improved following instruction in writing a summary for the task which required writing in response to reading an essay; however, scores declined significantly in response to instruction in writing a synthesis when the task required no essay reading.


1925 ◽  
Vol 18 (6) ◽  
pp. 333-340
Author(s):  
David Eugene Smith

The National Committe on Mathematical Requirements served, through its report, to stimulate inquiry on the part of those who know something about the problem of mathematics in the secondary school. The commission appointed by the College Entrance Examination Hoard, through its report, confirmed the important findings of the National Committee, and did much to eliminate the obsolete material in the high-school curriculum and to substitute therefor a more modern type of algebra, geometry, and trigonometry. It will take some time for schools and teachers to adjust the courses in mathematics to meet the recommendations of these bodies, to eliminate the over-drill, to cast out the useless part of the work in the elementary operations, and to realize that trigonometry is a part of algebra and that it can be made much simpler and more interesting than much of the drudgery (as the subject was commonly taught) that it replaces, but the leaven is working and the outcome will be on the right side. It takes time to develop the idea that we should seek quality instead of mere quantity, but our younger generation of teachers is coming rapidly to realize the significance of this idea in a subject, for example, like algebra. The reform would proceed more rapidly if it were not that nearly all of our current tests include a considerable amount of material that has been recommended for elimination by all who have given the subject serious thought. As Professor Upton has recently remarked in the Mathematics Teacher, schools often feel compelled to teach subjects that are obsolete, and possibly even to recognize forms that are incorrect, because of the carelessness shown in preparing many of these tests.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 1101
Author(s):  
Li Luo

Recently, with the reform of the college entrance examination English system, the requirements for teachers' professional development and teaching abilities are increasing. Thus, the burden and pressure of teachers are becoming more and more serious. Meanwhile, Teachers' teaching reform conflict and job burnout are becoming more serious than before. Questionnaires and interviews will be used in this paper to investigate the teaching reform of senior high school English teachers. The present situation of conflict and job burnout and its influence on curriculum implementation are analyzed. Effective information will be provided for education departments and educational institutions, so that they can take appropriate measures for this reform and job burnout to ensure the quality of the implementation of the curriculum.


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