TRENDING NEWS

POPULAR NEWS

English Teachers What Subjects Are Taught In English That Are Important To Know

No other subject taught in school is as important as moral science.?

This is not a question. It is a statement. Please tell us the school level. I doubt that any public school can be allowed to teach such a subject. Such a subject seems to be religous.

Do you think the school subject English is important?

Of course it is. It helps you to speak correctly and not sound like an idiot. If you write a letter with a lot of errors and you are hoping to land a job, you can kiss it good-bye. If you learn the whys in English, you can get a better understanding of it. Do I think it is the only important subject? No. You need them all to be a well-rounded human being.

Why is math and English important in school?

Those 2 subjects are more important now than ever, given where our technological landscape is and will go to.English:English never got the proper due it deserves, but writing and content creating in the way we communicate is important to understand.After a period of decline in the world of books and writing, it has made a strong comeback with content being available everywhere as a lot of blogs, content is available now. Especially even more propelled by Amazon (company) ‘s domination in the content space.It is important to have great communication skills and even if our phones have taken away some of our in person conversational skills, with the rise of tech, comes the rise of words, content, grammar, style and flow. In our work lives, we communicate now more with words and emails than anything else.This is why English now is very very important.Math:Again, given the rise and the era we are living in and in the age of how technology and artificial intelligence will be more prominent.Math, data, statistics and analytics are important to making decisions and analysis not only in your regular job, but especially more so as we are entering what SUCCESS Magazine ‘s dubbed the YOU Economy. An economy that is based on side gigs to maximize more profits and earning potential by taking charge of your financial future in being a side freelancer. Freelance (gig economy) will be the future of our work as companies have proven themselves to be getting more stingier in how their employees are paid and benefits being slashed.How can one best benefit without having a solid foundation in math, data and analytics? You need to be able to understand how you are doing and especially so, if you are entering business for yourself.Thus, you need to Know your Numbers to measure your growth and how your business is doing.

What are the most important subjects taught in high school?

High School: By the time you get into high school you must complete at least 4 years of English, 4 years of Math, two years of Science, Social Studies which also includes, U.S. History or Civics. Some high schools now have a career center where you can choose your college choice subject. You do need most of the subjects they teach in school like math, science, language. arts, etc. but you don't need everything they teach you in those classes.  For example in math, when in real life you will probably only be adding, subtracting, multiplying, or dividing. You will probably never see slope-intersect form ever again (unless you were to become a mathematician when you grow older). For science the only thing you will really need to know is the different types of illnesses and how to cure them. I guarantee in your life time you wont need to know how electricity works or the basic parts of a cell (unless you were to become a scientist or a doctor).  And as for language arts, English, ,literature, whatever you like to call it, the only thing you will have to know about this subject is really how to read and write. I guarantee in life you will not have to separate a sentence with verbs and subjects. Of course an exception would be made if you were to become a writer or an English teacher. For other classes like computers, orchestra, foreign language , etc, it all depends where you want to go for your career.  For example you might look into a pre-law course if they have one at your school if you want to become a lawyer one day. Or you would go into calculus and geometry honors if you want to be a mathematician. But overall in primary school you mostly learn basic things that you will have to know in life whether your flipping patties at Burger King or the person that discovers a cure for AIDS or the common cold. I would like to say that my answer is math because you need more skills out of everything taught in that subject. You need to know how to work with numbers, read a graph, etc.

Only for those good in English Subject?

it's S-TV-DO. it's kind of a trick question because in S-LV-C, 'LV' refers to a linking verb. and 'was' is a linking verb. but because there is the verb 'called', 'was called' is considered as one verb that is now a transitive verb (TV).

also, to make sure it has an S-TV-Do pattern, try to ask, a 'what' question. and the direct object must answer. for example, 'what was he called?' and the answer is fat.

so it's pattern is S-TV-DO, :)

Dont english teachers in general suck?

Maybe I just had bad expirence with them,but I hate them. They always overreact to the stupids things and they always lecture you randomly. I had one good english teacher,my summer school teacher and thats it. Dont you think English teachers suck?

Which do you think is more important when teaching a child (where english is their second language)?

I've been thinking about this a lot.

Do you think it is more important to teach the child the concept (even if it required an interpreter) and not focus on the language barrier (that being saved for another time of the day, for example)... or do you think that it is more important for the child to have the language learned before the concept is taught?

Is it important to speak english use a good grammar?

Most Americans are in a sense bilingual: we speak one way with our families and peers and another, more refined way, in professional situations: talking to our boss, talking to customers, giving speeches and oral reports in classes.

The standard for proper American speech is called American broadcast English. This is what most national news announcers use, and is basically the variety of English used in the upper Midwest: Omaha, for example. Black people, Southerners, People from Brooklyn, Queens, Boston, and the children of immigrants will need more practice at mastering Broadcast English than middle-class Midwesterners.

Learning a language involves two basic elements:vocabulary, or knowing the words and grammar, or knowing how to use the words.

English grammar is not thoroughly taught in American schools. Most of what we study in K-12 is remedial grammar: not to say "ain't", avoidiong run-on sentences, how to put sentences together in a logical way, how to write a paragraph. The actual structure of the English language is quite complex, and is normally taught in grad school under a title like "Transformational Grammar" .

Your university almost certainly has a program for helping you build your vocabulary as well as learning how to write effectively.
You can improve your vocabulary by using one or more of many vocabulary building books available in any public library.

Your remedial English center will have computer programs to help you master the structure of the English language.

And of course, you should read as much as possible. Watch public TV rather than sitcoms, read the New Yorker, Harpers, the Atlantic Monthly rather than the Weekly World News or People or US.

Use your public library. Read book reviews in the NY Times Review of books. All these magazines can be found there.

If there is some person whose manner of speaking you admire, read their biography and try doing what they did.

Why do so many Russians speak English? Is it taught there?

Baloney! I am married to a Russian, have spent months there, and am there currently. Here is the scoop:1. Almost no one speaks English,. Maybe one of 10 people know 2 dozen words. 1 in 5 would like to speak English but have no viable way to learn it And no one to practice with. 2. Yes it is taught in schools by non-native speakers who use Russian vowel sounds making words unintelligible.3. Government actively preserved Russian culture. 4. Many travel workers actively are unhelpful to English speakers. Oddly I’ve found security personnel most helpful. 5. Store clerks will try to figure out what you need. Most are motivated. 6. 4 of 5 cab drivers are unhelpful. 7. Russians generally are friendly to Americans. We have a lot in common and respect for each other. 8. Russians are skeptical of change, having been twice burned. 9. Russian is not difficult. But most Russians have no concept of trying to figure out what you are saying without perfect speaking. They have no important minorities speaking other languages. 10. They have no idea of forming a concept from smaller words. They have a word for everything, e. g. no word for “go.” It depends on the method of going. Pick from the following: ходить (walk, play, lead) идти (walk, move, follow) ехать (go by vehicle)11. English as a second language courses are a joke. I looked over my wife’s courses. Most of the fault lies with theoretical methods favored by American teachers that seem elegant to them but are nonsense to foreigners.

How is English taught in other countries?

I live in Québec and while I did not experience this personally, I have loads of friends who did and my husband's cousin is currently in high school experiencing it.Currently, the public schools teach predominately by reading a text, learning certain vocabulary, then taking a quiz. With my cousin's particular teacher, you are not allowed to speak French in the English classroom, and doing so (by even one word) will result in an entire page of extra English homework.While they do work on grammar in more advanced courses, it seems to me that in her class the course is not very comprehensive. I have looked over the homework numerous times and found it to be incorrect, or just strange. The errors are minor and will not affect their ability to be understood, but they are still errors. Honestly, I couldn't believe it when I saw an incorrect verb tense. I had an excellent language course in my high school. I took Spanish through a Florida-based curriculum and my professor was fluent. I should have appreciated it instead of, you know, passing my tests and then promptly forgetting all of it..Anyway, my cousin has told me that the teacher is not fluent, and she has a good enough knowledge of English to know when the professor is incorrect. She isn't perfect, but she can understand and be understood. She has traveled to the States quite a bit, and we often talk on the phone together in English.I think it's a shame that she's getting a lame English eduaction when she wants to know more, but I help her where I can. My husband flippantly told me that all high school English teachers are like that, native French-speakers and not fluent by a long shot. Obviously he's fluent, but that was from months of immersion in the States every year.On the other hand, in the more advanced courses (another friend who is almost more fluent than my husband) they're teaching kids “how to sound English" which results in me saying, “Please never say that you dig amything. Nobody saying diggin' anymore, and nobody should. Just say you like it, or you're into it. Not dig. Please.”So from what I have heard, the education can be lacking or out of date. Like every education, though, it depends greatly upon the professor. So whichever the case is, they are at least being taught. I guess that's the bright side.Sidenote: I say high school, but in Québec it is called secondary school (école secondaire), which begins at grade 7 and ends at grade 11.

TRENDING NEWS