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The objective of this paper is to introduce Hypertext as an alternative paradigm in developing a full-scale Intelligent Tutoring System to the traditional Expert Systems paradigm that has dominated for years Intelligent Tutoring Systems development. This paradigm has been employed in the development of PEDRO, an Intelligent Tutoring System for foreign language learning. PEDRO - The Spanish Tutor is an Intelligent Tutoring System designed to assist intermediate level students with their learning of Spanish grammar, by testing their knowledge of regular and irregular verbs. This paper describes PEDRO'S architecture, functionality and pedagogical strategy. PEDRO has been developed using HyperCard II.<br><br><br>Non credit classes offering instruction on speaking and practical application of a variety of world languages are being offered at Lehigh Carbon Community College (LCCC) in the Spring 2013 semester. Available language classes are Arabic I, Chinese I, French for Travelers, Irish (Gaelic), Italian I, Italian for Travelers, Japanese I, Sign Language, Beginning Spanish A, Beginning Spanish B, Spanish for Healthcare Professionals, Spanish Society and Think Spanish/Speak Spanish. Any additional lab fees may be paid to the instructor on the first night of class. Textbooks will be made available in the school bookstore. A Spanish Open House will be held from 7-8 p.m. Jan. 14 at LCCC's Donley Center in Allentown. Registration is required and the event is free and open to the public. Fees, class times and start dates will vary for each class. Since class size is limited, registration is on a first come first served basis.<br><br><br>If you are in the medical field and treat Spanish patients all day long, you may want to think about how to learn medical Spanish. With the number of Latin Americans on the rise, especially in the United States, the need for medical personnel to speak and understand Spanish is important. Anyone in the medical profession such as hospital workers, doctors, nurses, even veterinarians should know how to communicate effectively in Spanish. There are thousands of reasons why people in the medical profession should learn medical Spanish, and the reasons could easily be listed. However, it's the one reason the would not be listed that would be the most important one. Beside becoming a valuable commodity on the job, and increasing job performance, the ability to communicate in Spanish is more importantly helping people that need medical attention.<br><br><br>It's vital since they cannot understand or speak English to effectively communicate with someone who speaks their language, so they can explain what their medical problem is. There are interactive Spanish courses that anyone can take from the privacy of their own home. These courses are available online and offer a variety of conveniences. No matter what way is chosen to take a Spanish language course, it is important for people in the medical field to learn medical Spanish. Spanish is also important to learn to effectively communicate with Latin and Hispanic co workers. Speaking the language of people you work with puts them more at ease, and makes them feel comfortable that someone understands them.<br><br><br>Many people are afraid from learning a new language because it would be too much time consuming and difficult. This is not always true. Let us take the Spanish language (or any Latin based language). Here you already have a great advantage right at the start, i.e. you know the alphabet and most likely you would be able to read the words. You would also be able to find words that are similar to English both in meaning and pronunciation/ spelling. There are many ways you could learn Spanish fast and have a lot of fun at the same time. 1. Use bi-lingual books - for a person who loves reading this is one excellent tool to learn Spanish easy.<br><br><br>2. Use online Spanish lessons - why online? Because such course would have tutors who would be willing to discuss with you in Spanish boosting your knowledge both with vocabulary and pronunciation of the words/ sentences/ expressions. At the same time you could choose your time and pace so you could cover as much ground as you are comfortable with. Learning at your own pace can help you a lot because it does not stress you out as standard language classes would (since these are time-bound and have your progress compared to other students in the class). 3. Use a personal tutor - though expensive this is a great way to learn Spanish easy.<br><br><br>In the same manner as the online courses (which would definitely be less costly) the personal Spanish tutor would be able to converse with you and guide you at your own pace without any external pressure. This would help you understand and grasp the language much faster than you would do in a regular language class. Besides, when you have a tutor, he or she would be able to clear your doubts and correct your language as you converse with him/ her. 4. Read, read and read - the grasp on any language, not only Spanish is directly proportional to the vocabulary you have built in that language. The best way to build a great vocabulary is through reading. Initially you could use the bi-lingual books so you could have the translation ready to guide you. As you progress through the language you would need more advanced - only Spanish - books whereby you could expand our vocabulary. Have a dictionary handy and plough through books of your interest. You will find that in no time you are a master. Learning Spanish easy is within your grasp. Where there is a will, there is a way!<br><br><br>There are many providers of online accounting classes. Some specialized accounting fields include: tax accounting, corporate accounting and forensic accounting. Studying for these types of accounting position requires extra classes in college. What are some online schools for accounting? Here in the Philippines, it is Entrepreneurs Accounting Academy. Which colleges offer forex education as online classes? Forex refers to foreign exchange, which is how currency is regulated. It should be covered in some part by any sort of business or accounting curriculum. Can you take online classes to become a nurse? At the undergrad level, you can take some of your classes online and some on campus, but not all of your classes can fully be taken online.<br><br><br>At the masters level, you can also take majority of your classes online. If your going for an even higher degree, full accelerated online programs are available. Where can one study online to get a Bachelor of Education degree? Bachelor of Education degree can now be studied online from a variety of learning providers. Some examples of these providers are WorldWidelearn and eLearners. What are some providers of 24 hour online computer support? There are many providers of 24-hour online computer support. Companies such as Online Computer Repair, 247techies, and Geek Squad provide online computer support 24 hours a day. What are some High school classes you would take to become a lawyer?<br><br><br>No one (or almost no one) offers formal free sign language classes in LA. Deaf get-togethers The Greater Los Angeles Agency on Deafness (GLAD) offers a 10-week non-credit course in American Sign Language at various times throughout the year. There's also a large number of community colleges in the Los Angeles area which offer classes (at a fee) for American Sign Language, such as the College of the Canyons and Los Angeles Pierce College. What parenting classes are available in Columbus Ohio? The Elizabeth Blackwell Center at Riverside offers a variety of parenting classes. Catholic Social Services also offers free and low cost parenting classes.<br><br><br>What is the official language on the website Ocean Free? The official language on the Ocean Free website is English. Ocean Free offers sailing tours to explore the Great Barrier Reef and the nearby Green Island. Where can one find a free Italian language course online? Busuu offers a free Italian language course which you might find suitable for private use. This is an easy and effective option for learning how to speak another language. Where can you find cheap or free welding classes in the Los Angeles area? You can talk to the county vocational rehabilitation program. They will offer or know who is offering welding classes in the L.A.<br><br><br>What is the definition of language according to authors? Language according to authors is a free online dictionary. It offers for free definitions, spell check, word origins, example sentences, audio pronunciations and the word of the day. How many AAA locations are there in Los Angeles? AAA is an organization that offers its clients free roadside assistance, amongst a variety of other broad services. There are a total of 8 AAA locations in Los Angeles. Where do you get a copy of pimsluer? Virtual dance classes for free? Where in Seattle Washington can you find kickboxing classes for women? Which online dating site offers instant messaging for free? Soulful Match is the name of an online dating site that offers instant messaging for free. SomeoneNew also offers free instant messaging.<br><br><br>The videos seems to be free for viewing. In my opinion they do not deserve to be paid for either. Setting the language choice on 'French' on any DVD movie will help you more. Yes they are free. You play the game Skullastic Survival and you do a bunch of different classes on that. Where can one find a free DVD decoder for Windows XP? There is a website that offers a free DVD decoder for the Windows XP operating system and it is called Kioskea. You will need to download the pack that corresponds with your native language. How do you get free Uberstrike Credits? You complete free offers.<br><br><br>What website offers the game sudoko? Sudoko for free to be played online, the website also offers 100s of other great free games. Where Can you Find Free Snowmobile Repair Manuals? Where can you take spanish classes online? How can you get a free zwinky z-card? On Zwinky they have Zcard offers. Click on that. They have free offers-Downloads, Serveys, ect- and they have bought offers-Credit cards-. When was Los Angeles Free Press created? Who learned to read and write in both the upper and the lower class in Rome? Every one in the upper classes learned to read and write and many of the lower classes also. However education was not free and because of the cost, many of the lower classes had an abbreviated education. What is the site name which may provide online free classes of C plus plus?<br><br><br>Classes has two meanings here. If you mean classes as in education, then I know of no free online classes. There are plenty of sites that will give tutorials free of charge, but it is best if you buy a comprehensive book on the subject and learn the basics of the generic language first. Then use the sites to gain a better understanding of the platform-specific features available in your IDE. Where are some free money offers for online poker games? Where do you find free casac classes online for certification? Are there websites offering language translation? Yes there are many websites which offer language translation. There are basic ones which are free such as google translator.<br><br><br>Another answer The problem with the free ones may be that they are not very accurate and there will be mistakes. Websites that offer a stronger language translation are the ones that are human translated. These usually cost money though. I represent, or own, a company called Prestige Network. Where can you find the signs that are used in American Sign Language? Handspeak offers an amazing free online sign language dictionary with thousands of signs. Each entry is a short video clip. Are there free parenting classes in NYC? Yes, free parenting classes are available in New York City. Many hospitals offer classes to new mothers, which offer infant care, including CPR. Free parenting classes are also offered through the court system.<br><br><br>How do you make credits on imvu? There are several ways to get IMVU Credits by: Buying them Completing surveys Purchasing offers Completing free offers Completing mobile offers And if you complete 10 free offers off this link, you get 1 million IMVU credits! What company is offering free shipping on their website? 25. Or if you have Amazon Prime, there are a few free shipping offers all the time. Cheap DNA tests can be done where in California? How do you use the premium weapons in sas zombie assault for free? You can't get them for free. However, you can complete the Mochi Coin Offers to get free coins. I recommend the GameVance and PlaySushi offers they seem to work.<br><br><br>What is a good spy ware program that is free? What tools does the freecreditreport gov website provide? Free Credit Report offers the public a way to access their credit report for free. It is one of the only websites that actually offers this service for free. What website offers a free iPad with no offers? There are actually none. They are all big fat scams! Where can one find online a free Latin to English dictionary? There are a wide range of sites that offer language translation but few options for a Latin to English dictionary. There is a free Latin to English dictionary available on the 'freedict' website. The AbleMedia website also offers a free dictionary for Latin to English.
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The national pastime has been a truly international game in recent years, with a wave of Latin Americans coming to the U.S. — many scrambling to pick up English along the way. Now their American-born teammates and coaches are returning the favor by learning Spanish. Miami Marlins CEO Derek Jeter made news last year with the announcement his club would require its minor league coaches and players to start learning Spanish. Not every team goes that far, but at least half the league’s 30 clubs now offer some level of Spanish lessons for English speakers, says MLB Vice President Paul Mifsud.<br><br><br>"The Marlins’ industry leadership on this is extremely helpful," Mifsud told the Associated Press. Marlins manager Don Mattingly, who like Jeter spent his entire playing career with the New York Yankees, told The Washington Times recently that if learning Spanish helps communication on and off the field, he’s all for it. "I’d heard Derek (Jeter) say once that it never seemed fair that the Spanish kids gotta learn English but the English guys don’t have to learn Spanish," Mattingly said. At the major league level, a confluence of cultures and languages is a standard feature of the clubhouse — but it can also be a hindrance to coaching, Mattingly said.<br><br><br>"Even if they kind of understand it, (a word) may not mean the same thing to them," he said. "We always have interpreters back and forth. So, like a growing number of other American coaches and players, Mattingly puts the onus on himself to pick up more Spanish. He uses the language-learning app Duolingo. Others download Rosetta Stone. That’s how Michael A. Taylor became known around the Washington Nationals clubhouse for his Spanish proficiency. When the Nationals outfielder was in the minor leagues, Taylor would spend hours-long bus rides using the software program to learn Spanish. Spurred on by "not being able to talk to half my team," Taylor learned the language in four months. "I definitely think it helps, especially the younger guys as they kind of learn English," Taylor said.<br><br><br>Still, in a league with 750 players on active rosters and several thousand more in the minors, Taylor is more the exception than the standard. That’s why the Marlins include year-round language lessons as part of the mandatory player development program for all rookie ballplayers. It’s not unlike a high school class — two or three times a week, 30 to 45 minutes at a time in a classroom setting with full-time teachers, interaction with classmates and even homework. Luis Dorante Jr, the Marlins’ translator this season, helped coordinate Spanish lessons in Jupiter, Florida, last year while serving as a player development intern. "Globalization is taking over, shrinking the distance of the world," said Mr. Dorante, who was born and raised in Venezuela and came to the U.S.<br><br><br>The language barrier was creating problems. MLB set a new rule in 2016 requiring each team to have a translator so the sport’s Latin stars could speak more easily with the media. The translators often fill multiple roles: Mr. Dorante also works in player relations and as a Spanish media liaison. Washington’s translator, Octavio Martinez, is the team’s bullpen catcher. The Washington Nationals’ Juan Soto, 20, and Victor Robles, 22, are generally seen as the team’s most exciting and promising young players. Both hail from the Dominican Republic. But when it comes to learning English, they are at very different steps on the journey. Robles, who hasn’t spent as much time at the major league level, needs a translator to speak with most American journalists.<br><br><br>But Soto told USA Today he prided himself on learning English while coming up through the system. Martinez stands by during Soto’s interviews, but the outfielder hardly ever needs his help. Taylor isn’t the only National who can speak to Soto and Robles in Spanish. Adam Eaton said he’s learned a few phrases and spare words in Spanish in order to better connect with his teammates. "If (a teammate is) talking about a famous pianist in Spain, I would never, ever be able to, but in baseball, I can kind of follow along," Eaton said. Eaton tried Rosetta Stone for a few weeks several years ago, but let it fall by the wayside. Now, he says, he wished he learned Spanish in the minors while he had more spare time. "It can only further your career and better your career if you take full advantage of it," Eaton said. "Not everybody has the resources to learn and do it with this much help and as much … experience, so to speak, of learning it. Copyright © 2019 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.<br><br><br>It’s an alternative to expensive private schools, tutors, and camps, thereby addressing a much larger market. Parents increasingly want more than schools can reasonably offer, thanks to a focus on tests and deep budget cuts. Teachers could use extra income to supplement meager salaries, and also an outlet to channel passions that standardized testing have tried to kill. "Too much of K-12 is focused on the end result and we are losing sight of the base purpose," Nathoo says. Megan Hardy was a stay-at-home mom and found Outschool when she was looking for a way to get her son interested in history.<br><br><br>She found the five-dollar course "Big Picture History: American History in One Lesson." Her son loved it. He took a few more classes. When her husband lost his job a year later, Hardy thought about creating a class to teach critical thinking and problem solving through Dungeons and Dragons (which she and her kids play all the time). She applied to Outschool and was interviewed, provided a lesson summary overview, and got approved within three weeks. After clearing a background check and going through on-boarding to learn the Zoom videoconferencing technology, she started teaching, in spite of never having taught before.<br><br><br>Hardy now teaches 40 to 50 hours a week. "It turns out, a lot of kids want to learn this," she says, laughing at the sound of it. 7,000 a month—Outschool takes 30% of teachers’ earnings for marketing, admin, and handling all the billing. Hardy’s classes run for six weeks and are 80 to 90 minutes each. She’s capped each class at six kids, so she can better manage the group. The average class at Outschool is three to eight kids; 18 is the maximum. 10-15 a class. Nathoo estimates that about 80% of kids use it for fun and 20% for core learning. Benjamin Corey, who taught middle- and high-school biology for eight years in Atlanta and San Francisco, says he loves the freedom he has to build interesting classes.<br><br><br>He teaches five to six hours a day, and offers 40 classes. Eleven are core classes, each four sessions long, which make up the equivalent of freshman biology. He also teaches 29 one-off classes, including a series on endangered species that address environmental topics via specific animals (orangutans and deforestation; orcas and biomagnification of pollutants). He misses the interaction of a classroom—shared physical space and body language are key to teaching, he says—but has worked on making the online experience as rich as possible. He caps his classes at nine students and does a lot of diagraming, calls on everyone a lot, and never has a segment go more than 10 minutes.<br><br><br>"I don’t see myself going back to the classroom any time soon, because it would be a pay cut and a lot more stress," he says. Nathoo founded Outschool in 2016, with the idea that social connection was key to learning. "So much of ed-tech today is automated, putting tools or AI in the classroom," he says. It was the social aspect of Outschool that drew Jennifer Carolan, a former public school teacher and founder of Reach Capital, to invest in it. The big failing of MOOCs, where completion rates hover between 5-15%, is to ignore that humans are, at heart, social learners.<br><br><br>"We learn from each other and teachers can be very impactful," she says. Outschool matches curious learners to teachers who teach. "There’s a teacher who is passionate about the subject matter, and a small group of learners, and the tech that can enable social interactions between kids," she says. The biggest challenge was how to get started: parents won’t sign up without classes and teachers won’t teach classes without students. The company’s first iteration was in-person learning: Nathoo organized field trips in San Francisco for kids to go to museums with teachers and some learning goals in mind. Parents joined their kids and saw how they got more out of a visit when a teacher was there.<br><br><br>Carolan loved the idea, but didn’t think it could scale. When Nathoo pivoted to online, with small, live classes, she jumped in. As due diligence, she signed her daughter up for a class, watched, and was impressed. She vetted the team who vets the teachers, and ultimately invested two weeks later. The challenge now is to attract teachers and students beyond the home-schooling community, aiming for kids who log on after school, in the summer, and during holidays. It might not be easy to gain traction beyond this community, namely for those parents uncomfortable with their kids taking classes from non-certified teachers.

Latest revision as of 11:52, 16 July 2019

The national pastime has been a truly international game in recent years, with a wave of Latin Americans coming to the U.S. — many scrambling to pick up English along the way. Now their American-born teammates and coaches are returning the favor by learning Spanish. Miami Marlins CEO Derek Jeter made news last year with the announcement his club would require its minor league coaches and players to start learning Spanish. Not every team goes that far, but at least half the league’s 30 clubs now offer some level of Spanish lessons for English speakers, says MLB Vice President Paul Mifsud.


"The Marlins’ industry leadership on this is extremely helpful," Mifsud told the Associated Press. Marlins manager Don Mattingly, who like Jeter spent his entire playing career with the New York Yankees, told The Washington Times recently that if learning Spanish helps communication on and off the field, he’s all for it. "I’d heard Derek (Jeter) say once that it never seemed fair that the Spanish kids gotta learn English but the English guys don’t have to learn Spanish," Mattingly said. At the major league level, a confluence of cultures and languages is a standard feature of the clubhouse — but it can also be a hindrance to coaching, Mattingly said.


"Even if they kind of understand it, (a word) may not mean the same thing to them," he said. "We always have interpreters back and forth. So, like a growing number of other American coaches and players, Mattingly puts the onus on himself to pick up more Spanish. He uses the language-learning app Duolingo. Others download Rosetta Stone. That’s how Michael A. Taylor became known around the Washington Nationals clubhouse for his Spanish proficiency. When the Nationals outfielder was in the minor leagues, Taylor would spend hours-long bus rides using the software program to learn Spanish. Spurred on by "not being able to talk to half my team," Taylor learned the language in four months. "I definitely think it helps, especially the younger guys as they kind of learn English," Taylor said.


Still, in a league with 750 players on active rosters and several thousand more in the minors, Taylor is more the exception than the standard. That’s why the Marlins include year-round language lessons as part of the mandatory player development program for all rookie ballplayers. It’s not unlike a high school class — two or three times a week, 30 to 45 minutes at a time in a classroom setting with full-time teachers, interaction with classmates and even homework. Luis Dorante Jr, the Marlins’ translator this season, helped coordinate Spanish lessons in Jupiter, Florida, last year while serving as a player development intern. "Globalization is taking over, shrinking the distance of the world," said Mr. Dorante, who was born and raised in Venezuela and came to the U.S.


The language barrier was creating problems. MLB set a new rule in 2016 requiring each team to have a translator so the sport’s Latin stars could speak more easily with the media. The translators often fill multiple roles: Mr. Dorante also works in player relations and as a Spanish media liaison. Washington’s translator, Octavio Martinez, is the team’s bullpen catcher. The Washington Nationals’ Juan Soto, 20, and Victor Robles, 22, are generally seen as the team’s most exciting and promising young players. Both hail from the Dominican Republic. But when it comes to learning English, they are at very different steps on the journey. Robles, who hasn’t spent as much time at the major league level, needs a translator to speak with most American journalists.


But Soto told USA Today he prided himself on learning English while coming up through the system. Martinez stands by during Soto’s interviews, but the outfielder hardly ever needs his help. Taylor isn’t the only National who can speak to Soto and Robles in Spanish. Adam Eaton said he’s learned a few phrases and spare words in Spanish in order to better connect with his teammates. "If (a teammate is) talking about a famous pianist in Spain, I would never, ever be able to, but in baseball, I can kind of follow along," Eaton said. Eaton tried Rosetta Stone for a few weeks several years ago, but let it fall by the wayside. Now, he says, he wished he learned Spanish in the minors while he had more spare time. "It can only further your career and better your career if you take full advantage of it," Eaton said. "Not everybody has the resources to learn and do it with this much help and as much … experience, so to speak, of learning it. Copyright © 2019 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.


It’s an alternative to expensive private schools, tutors, and camps, thereby addressing a much larger market. Parents increasingly want more than schools can reasonably offer, thanks to a focus on tests and deep budget cuts. Teachers could use extra income to supplement meager salaries, and also an outlet to channel passions that standardized testing have tried to kill. "Too much of K-12 is focused on the end result and we are losing sight of the base purpose," Nathoo says. Megan Hardy was a stay-at-home mom and found Outschool when she was looking for a way to get her son interested in history.


She found the five-dollar course "Big Picture History: American History in One Lesson." Her son loved it. He took a few more classes. When her husband lost his job a year later, Hardy thought about creating a class to teach critical thinking and problem solving through Dungeons and Dragons (which she and her kids play all the time). She applied to Outschool and was interviewed, provided a lesson summary overview, and got approved within three weeks. After clearing a background check and going through on-boarding to learn the Zoom videoconferencing technology, she started teaching, in spite of never having taught before.


Hardy now teaches 40 to 50 hours a week. "It turns out, a lot of kids want to learn this," she says, laughing at the sound of it. 7,000 a month—Outschool takes 30% of teachers’ earnings for marketing, admin, and handling all the billing. Hardy’s classes run for six weeks and are 80 to 90 minutes each. She’s capped each class at six kids, so she can better manage the group. The average class at Outschool is three to eight kids; 18 is the maximum. 10-15 a class. Nathoo estimates that about 80% of kids use it for fun and 20% for core learning. Benjamin Corey, who taught middle- and high-school biology for eight years in Atlanta and San Francisco, says he loves the freedom he has to build interesting classes.


He teaches five to six hours a day, and offers 40 classes. Eleven are core classes, each four sessions long, which make up the equivalent of freshman biology. He also teaches 29 one-off classes, including a series on endangered species that address environmental topics via specific animals (orangutans and deforestation; orcas and biomagnification of pollutants). He misses the interaction of a classroom—shared physical space and body language are key to teaching, he says—but has worked on making the online experience as rich as possible. He caps his classes at nine students and does a lot of diagraming, calls on everyone a lot, and never has a segment go more than 10 minutes.


"I don’t see myself going back to the classroom any time soon, because it would be a pay cut and a lot more stress," he says. Nathoo founded Outschool in 2016, with the idea that social connection was key to learning. "So much of ed-tech today is automated, putting tools or AI in the classroom," he says. It was the social aspect of Outschool that drew Jennifer Carolan, a former public school teacher and founder of Reach Capital, to invest in it. The big failing of MOOCs, where completion rates hover between 5-15%, is to ignore that humans are, at heart, social learners.


"We learn from each other and teachers can be very impactful," she says. Outschool matches curious learners to teachers who teach. "There’s a teacher who is passionate about the subject matter, and a small group of learners, and the tech that can enable social interactions between kids," she says. The biggest challenge was how to get started: parents won’t sign up without classes and teachers won’t teach classes without students. The company’s first iteration was in-person learning: Nathoo organized field trips in San Francisco for kids to go to museums with teachers and some learning goals in mind. Parents joined their kids and saw how they got more out of a visit when a teacher was there.


Carolan loved the idea, but didn’t think it could scale. When Nathoo pivoted to online, with small, live classes, she jumped in. As due diligence, she signed her daughter up for a class, watched, and was impressed. She vetted the team who vets the teachers, and ultimately invested two weeks later. The challenge now is to attract teachers and students beyond the home-schooling community, aiming for kids who log on after school, in the summer, and during holidays. It might not be easy to gain traction beyond this community, namely for those parents uncomfortable with their kids taking classes from non-certified teachers.