2008
Jan 31

The IELTS Listening test comes first, and many candidates find it a hard, sometime even discouraging, way to get started. The IELTS Listening task tests a diverse range of skills, and many people find it challenging.

There are many ways to prepare for this portion of the IELTS exam. There are, for example, many practice tapes and CD sets on the commercial market. While all of them are helpful to some degree, the one thing you can be sure is that none of them will be the IELTS Listening test you take.

The good news is that the best forms of IELTS Listening practice are available free, or at least readily and at low cost. They’re also more fun. They are radio, TV, and movies!

If you have access to an English-language radio or TV station, listen to it as often as possible. The benefits are many.

- You become familiar with a wide variety of accents and individual ways of speaking

- You get the rhythms of spoken English sentences in your ear

- You become more familiar with the way native speakers pronounce English words

- You start to hear word patterns and notice the way English sentences are put together

- You begin to learn new vocabulary by hearing it in context

- You simply become accustomed to the sound of spoken English, which may be the single most important thing of all

English radio and TV talk shows give you good exposure to the way native speakers - not English teacher - actually use the language. They familiarize you with slang and other colloquialisms.

English radio and TV news programmes give you great background for the multiple-voice, nonacademic setting section of the IELTS Listening test, which often uses a mock radio broadcast. Hearing up to four different individuals talk about the same incident from different personal perspectives, in different acoustical situations, and in a variety of accents (including those of second-language speakers) is exactly the kind of training you need to perform well on this portion of the test, which some candidates find the hardest.

Watching English, Australian, American, and other movies in English - in any format - is also highly useful in giving you exposure to the way “real people” speak English. As with all languages, it’s not the same as classroom English.

If you see such movies in the theatre, try to look at the subtitles as little as possible. If you watch them on DVD, watch them once with subtitles, so you learn the situations and dialogue - and then switch the subtitles off and watch them again and again, until you can understand what is being said without “translating.” Many local cable-TV providers show movies many times over the same time period. If you have access a movie channel on such a service, get the schedule, watch the movies you want once with the subtitles - and then, on repeat viewings, tape over the bottom of your TV screen so you cannot use the subtitles.

What’s important is that you expose yourself to the sound of spoken English as much as possible between now and the time you take IELTS. Use time that you otherwise might waste. When you’re getting dressed or eating breakfast in the morning, have the radio or TV on, set to an English station. If you are doing tasks that don’t require your full attention, like cooking or cleaning your room, have the radio or TV on in the background. If you spend a lot of time stuck in traffic, turn the car radio onto an English news or talk station.

Of course, you will benefit more the more you concentrate on what you hear. But even if you don’t focus on what you hear only, trying to understand what is being said, simply letting the sounds into your ears will help. Educators are now convinced that there is such a thing as “passive listening.” That means that you’re often learning even when you’re not trying to. If you have English on - even “in the background” - your brain is trying to figure out what is being said even if you’re not concentrating on it.

Most important of all, the day you actually tale the IELTS exam, make sure that the first time you hear English that day is not when the tape for the Listening test starts. That may be too late, and you could miss a question or too while your ears “adjust” to the sound of English. Even if you’re nervous and feel like you can’t concentrate on it, have the radio or TV on while you’re getting dressed, eating breakfast, or getting to the IELTS exam. You’ll be glad you did!

Svend Nelson is a university lecturer and internet entrepreneur. He is director of UniRoute Limited, a Hong Kong based company with offices in Bangkok and London providing IELTS Online Preparation and a free online application service to study abroad at UK universities. Svend lived and worked in various countries across Latin America, Europe and Asia before settling in Thailand. He also just started a blog sharing his experience about an independent lifestyle and how to make money online.

Tags: IELTS, , , , , , , IELTS test, IELTS tips, IELTS tricks, study abroad, study in UK, UK universities

Free Magic Tricks

Posted by admin on Jan 30th, 2008
2008
Jan 30

Magic tricks need not be grandiose performances like those of David Copperfield, which obviously take a lot of time and money. Quite recently, the phenomenon of ’street magic’ has gained popularity; street magic is more up close and personal. Street magic involves doing magic for a small group of people, in your house, in a bar, or even at your office. A real atmosphere of wonder is created because of the magician’s proximity to the audience.

How to Get Started

The Internet is a huge resource for getting information about free and easy-to-learn magic tricks. Just type in the keywords ‘free magic tricks’ in your local search engine and the results will be endless. The age-old library is also a good source for free magic tricks, especially if you want to concentrate on tricks using one material only. Any magic trick can be easily researched, since magic often takes the form of simple science, borne out of imagination and entertainment.

Different Kinds of Magic Tricks

The most common magic tricks involve either cards or coins. These are the two basic ‘tools’ of any magician. Cards and coins can be used for sleight-of-hand tricks or even mind-reading tricks, which become more effortless with continued practice.

Becoming a Successful Magician

Knowing how to do the magic trick is only thirty percent of the job. Thirty-five percent goes to practice, while the remaining thirty-five percent has to do with acting. Good magicians strive to perfect their craft for fear of their secrets being revealed if anything goes wrong. If you want to avoid unwittingly showing your audience the trick behind your trick, practice to gain more confidence. Acting, or knowing how to mislead your audience with appropriate facial expressions and body language, helps create an air of mystery in any performance.

Magic Tricks provides detailed information on Magic Tricks, Free Magic Tricks, Magic Card Tricks, Free Magic Tricks Online and more. Magic Tricks is affiliated with Black Magic.

Tag: Free Magic Tricks

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