#37, Book of the week: Internet English: Www-Based Communication Activities
By Tarun Patel
Internet English: Www-Based Communication Activities
by Christina Gitsaki & Richard P. Taylor
Book Description
“Internet English” helps students develop the skills to surf the Internet, while providing a structured framework to practise their conversation skills through communicative tasks. It can be used in traditional or computer-equipped classrooms.
ELTWeekly Issue#32, Book Review: ‘globish – The World Over’
By Tarun Patel
‘globish – The World Over’ by Jean-Paul Nerriere and David Hon
reviewed by Tarun Patel
‘Globish – The World Over’ is a 168-page ebook written by Jean-Paul Nerriere and David Hon. This ebook is divided into two parts – ‘The Problem with Learning English’ and ‘Elements of Globish’. It featuers 23 chapters. The ISBN of ‘Globish’ is 978-2-212-86542-4. The price of the book is $9.95.
‘Globish’ observes how a billion people are in need of a consistent language to do business across the globe, describes how the problem is being solved by many non-native English speakers, and discusses the specific outlines of the Globish approach that is being noted as perhaps the only possibility for true Global talk.

David and Jean have written this book to aid those who use English as a tool for their communication. To form their viewpoint at the very beginning of the book, David and Jean say, “The English language seems to be the most important communication tool for the international world. But now it must be a kind of English which can be learned quickly and used very easily – not like Standard English. The people who know a little are already using what they know. It works for them – a little. But… they often have families and jobs. They cannot spend enough time or enough money to learn all of English. And English speakers think these people will “never be good enough” in English. It is a problem. We think Globish is a solution.”
In the initial chapters of this ebook Jean and David have talked about the demographics that the English language dominates as a most widely used language.
To describe this dominance they have put the following image, which is an self-explanatory example of wide spectrum of English language.
Image from page# 19
According to David and Jean, ‘Globish’ is a language that enables people to satisfy all their communication needs in 1500 words. They say:
“Globish is correct English”
“Globish spelling is English spelling”
“Globish sounds like English”
“Globish uses the same letters, markings and numbers as English”
“Globish uses the basic grammar of English, with fewer Tenses, Voices, and Moods.”
Globish has 1500 words, expandable in four ways:
- different use of same word,
- combinations of words,
- short additions to words,
- and Phrasal Verbs.
They have also talked about the limitations of Globish and enlisted all 1500 words which form Globish.
In the later chapters of the book the authors have focused on other aspects of Globish which are very interesting for everyone who uses English.
They have made this book easy to read by explaining all the technical words appropriately.
IT would be worth spending $9.95to read this book which has come with a new concept and could make a BIG story in terms of communication.
You can buy this ebook from Jean’s website: http://www.globish.com
Author Biographies
Jean-Paul Nerrière
As a vice-president of IBM Europe Middle East & Africa, Jean-Paul Nerrière was noted worldwide for his foresight in urging IBM to sell services instead of “selling iron”. With IBM USA as a Vice President in charge of International Marketing, he was also using and observing English – daily – in its many variations. Nerrière’s personal experience the world over enlightened him to a not-so-obvious solution to the global communication problem – Globish. Recently this has resulted in his best-selling books on Globish in French, Korean, Spanish and Italian, and the word Globish being known everywhere.
Nerrière has also been knighted with the Légion d’honneur, the highest award France can give.
David Hon
As a young man, David Hon jumped off helicopters in Vietnam and taught English in South America. He had an MA in English and thought that someday he would write about English as an international communication tool.
However, a different direction, into the computer age, led Hon to develop the world’s first realistic medical simulators. He won international awards and created a successful company, Ixion, to produce those computerized simulators.
A short time back, he came upon Nerrière’s Globish ideas, and Hon knew that this book in Globish was the one he had intended to write long ago.
ELTWeekly Issue#31, Book of the Week: The First Days of School: How to Be an Effective Teacher
By Tarun Patel
The First Days of School: How to Be an Effective Teacher
by Harry K. Wong
Book Description

The best-selling book ever on classroom management and teaching for student achievement with over 3.3 million copies sold. The book walks a teacher, either novice or veteran, through structuring and organizing a classroom for success that can be applied at any time of the year at any grade level, pre-K through college.
The book is used in thousands of school districts, in over 100 countries, and in over 2,000 college classrooms. It’s practical, yet inspiring. But most important, it works!
The new 4th edition includes updated research, photos, and more examples of “how-to” along with an implementation DVD, “Using THE FIRST DAYS OF SCHOOL” featuring Chelonnda Seroyer.
This is the most requested book for what works in the classroom for teacher and student success.
More Details
- Paperback: 352 pages
- Publisher: Harry K. Wong Publications; 4 edition (January 1, 2009)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0976423316
- ISBN-13: 978-0976423317
- Price: $20.98
About the Author
Harry K. Wong and Rosemary T. Wong are award-winning teachers and new teacher advocates. Harry is a native of San Francisco and is arguably the most sought-after motivational speaker in education today having given some 3000 presentations to over a million people. He has been called “Mr. Practicality” for his common sense, user-friendly, no-cost approach to managing a classroom for high-level student success. The March 2006 issue of Instructor magazine named him one of the 20 most admired people in education along with Maya Angelou, Howard Gardner, and Oprah Winfrey. He has received numerous other teaching honors.
Rosemary is from New Orleans, Louisiana. Her classroom success led to her selection as one of the first Mentor teachers in California. She has received many Silicon Valley business honors and the Southeastern Louisiana University Distinguished Alumni Award.
Profits from the sale of their book fund “The First Days of School Foundation.” That foundation has built and funds the 250 student “Wong Mean Reth Learning Academy” in the jungles of Cambodia.
Customer Reviews
I recently received a copy of the newly revised version of The First Days of School, and I love it! I’m enjoying it so much that I don’t want to rush through it. I read it a little at a time, savoring it like a wonderful piece of chocolate. Everything is clearly written, and much of what is written is quite profound in its simplicity. I love the sidebars with extra information and inspirational stories, as well as the internet links to additional resources. The page layout is attractive and easy to read. Many people are familiar with this book as a “must have” for beginning teachers, but as a 27-year veteran, I can say that this book is just as powerful today as it was when I first read it years ago. There is much wisdom tucked inside its pages!
Last night I sat down and started reading this book from the beginning and somewhat past midnight I had to force myself to put it down to go to sleep.
Why is this? It’s not that it’s such a sweeping, romantic epic — my
other bedtime reading just now is War and Peace. (Also quite good!)
Partly because I’m just very interested in teaching and everything to do
with it. But there’s something also about how it exactly models the
behaviors and attitudes the authors are trying to cultivate. It’s extremely well organized and well-paced — in a nutshell, well-managed. It’s also very inviting and warm. To make advice about posting assignments somehow draw you further into the text is quite an achievement.Erica Schoenberger
Professor
Dept of Geography and Environmental Engineering
The Johns Hopkins University
I am a high school science teacher. My principal gave my a copy of this book when I started teaching 13 years ago. Since then, I have read it every August before I start the school year.
I enjoy reviewing the components of good teaching (positive expectations, classroom management, and lesson mastery). However, my favorite part is the section called, The Teacher as a Professional. It helps me maintain a positive and professional attitude during the school year which is not always easy to do. Thank you Harry and Rosemary Wong for inspiring me to be a teacher-leader, not a worker!
ELTWeekly Issue#27, Book of the Week: The Secret Life of Words: How English Became English
By Tarun Patel
The Secret Life of Words: How English Became English
By Henry Hitchings
Editorial Reviews
From The New Yorker
This historical tour of the English lexicon considers words as etymological fossils of past dreams and traumas, revealing the preoccupations of the ages that produced them. The nineteenth century’s cult of fine feelings gave currency to sensibility and physiognomy; popery and libertine sprang from the religious skepticism of the sixteen-hundreds. Many such relics began as imports: centuries of Anglophone empire-building have occasioned borrowings from some three hundred and fifty languages, including Arabic (sash) and Sanskrit (pundit). The chapters are loosely focussed on different themes, but trade is a constant thread: tycoon comes from taikun, a Japanese honorific picked up on Commodore Matthew Perry’s eighteen-fifties mission to open the ports of Japan. Hitchings offers a rich array of anecdotes and extracts, but the absence of a strong over-all argument deprives his account of momentum.
Copyright ©2008 Click here to subscribe to The New Yorker –This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
From Booklist
What Hitchings shows us is that the history of our vocabulary is the history of who we really are. Playing up the “acquisitiveness of English,” which has proved hospitable to words from more than 350 other languages, his book has a wide sweep, from pre-Roman Britain to online communities. Each chapter tends to address a particular influx of words, whether rooted in invasion and conquest or in the innovative use of the language by gifted writers. A chapter called “Angst” not only covers the twentieth century’s contribution to the vocabulary via the military, advertising, technology, and the business world, it also incorporates, in digressive but entertaining fashion, the history of coffee, a caustic evisceration of “management speak,” and an explanation of why purists are so resistant to new words. Ever ready with an apt quote, Hitchings makes a delightful and knowledgeable guide, privy to many fascinating facts about the language—those averse to the increasing power of technophiles are given a handful of pithy put-downs, including dot snots and entrepenerds. A well-researched, fluidly written book that wears its scholarship lightly. –Joanne Wilkinson –This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
Book Details
- Paperback: 448 pages
- Publisher: Picador (September 29, 2009)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0312428561
- ISBN-13: 978-0312428563
- Shipping Information: View shipping rates and policies
- Amazon.com Sales Rank: #254,208 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)
- Price: $11.56
ELTWeekly Issue#26, Book Review: ‘The Universal Course in FRENCH’ by Pawan Kumar
By Tarun Patel
‘The Universal Course in FRENCH’ by Pawan Kumar
Reviewed by Prof (Dr) Shefali Bakshi
Mr Pawan Kumar, who is a teacher of French in Amity University, Lucknow Campus, since last three years, has written a student friendly book in which elementary or zero level learners can be well-versed with day-to-day French and its pronunciation. The book begins with a chapter on “Salutations” along with their English forms so as to make the learner involved in speaking the language right away. The second chapter concentrates on the French alphabets in their symbol form with the meaning in the Indian script. This chapter forms the base of the learner and so it is very important for the learner to completely understand and acquire the sounds correctly. The third chapter is on colloquial dialogues in a conversation form so that communicative activities like Role Play, Drilling Activity by repeating structures can be conducted in the classrooms. These, however, have Hindi translations for better pronunciation and usage. The author has constructed small chapters of lots of variety, thus motivating the learner to become fluent in the language. The best part is the last chapter, which is based on Lord Ram’s story in French which evolves an integration of the Indian Culture in the French language. This inspires the learners to create their own short writings in French. At the grammar level, the author discusses ‘Tenses’ briefly and does a comparative study between the different tenses, which helps in story building.
The Author has taken examples from daily life so that a learner can grasp the basic knowledge in a simple way. The wonderful part of this book is that the pronunciation is given in the Hindi script; therefore any beginner can acquire the French language. Mr Pawan Kumar has written this book keeping in mind the growth of Engineering, Management, and other Institutes in smaller pockets of India. He has shown that it is not necessary to be proficient in English in order to acquire any other language. It is a boon to students who are studying in districts, towns and villages. So far, there was not a single book of such a kind for the vernacular medium.
Therefore the book has become very popular among the local learners of not only college but also school. This book can be subscribed in schools as today schools are also offering one foreign language to their students. The book is also being used in Amity University, Lucknow, Jaipur and Noida campuses, Lucknow University, and many other technical and management institutions where French has become an optional subject to be opted by the beginners. The author Mr.Pawan Kumar has made the languages very simple for first time for the Indian students
Prof (Dr) Shefali Bakshi is the Deputy Director at Amity School of Languages. She has done a Project on “A Study of Verbal Interaction in Waiting for Godot” for the M.A. degree and has ompleted her PhD thesis on “A Study of Verbal Interaction in the plays of Samuel Beckett” for the Degree of Ph.D. at University of Lucknow, India. She has conducted over 75 workshops on ELT in various parts of India for school teachers and principals.
* ELTWeekly would likt to thank Prof (Dr) Shefali Bakshi for sontributing this review.
ELTWeekly Issue#25, Book of the week: English Language Teaching in its Social Context: A Reader
By Tarun Patel
English Language Teaching in its Social Context: A Reader
By C. Candlin
Book Description
English Language Teaching in its Social Context presents four major principles of English language teaching:
* focusing on the roles played by teachers and learners
* recognizing the individuality of language learners
* supporting teachers in the provision of active guidance for students’ learning
* examining both positive and negative patterns of interaction between learners and teachers.
About the Author
Christopher N. Candlin is Chair Professor of Applied Linguistics at the City University of Hong Kong.
Neil Mercer is professor of Language and Communications at the Open University, UK.
More Details
- Hardcover: 368 pages
- Publisher: Routledge; 1 edition (January 22, 2001)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0415241219
- ISBN-13: 978-0415241212
- Price: $160.00
- Second Language Acquisition (Oxford Introductions to Language Study) by Rod Ellis on 6 pages
- The Natural Approach: Language Acquisition in the Classroom (Language Teaching Methodology) by Stephen D. Krashen on 6 pages
- Input in Second Language (Issues in second language research) by Susan Gass on 4 pages
- An Introduction to Functional Grammar by M. A. K. Halliday on page 199, page 207, and page 268
- Learning Lessons: Social Organization in the Classroom by Hugh Mehan on page 106, and page 240
- and more.



October 9th, 2009

