Posts

Language lab view

 Language lab Survey DELL Software Hello readers... What is Language lab? Language labs allow students to practice the language with a much wider variety of activities and exercises based on the computer. Learning occurs in a structured way, in a real context and visually attractive way that immerses the student in the language learning environment and promotes language use. There are two brands of this laboratory: Computer Assisted Language Laboratory (CALL) and Web Assisted Language Laboratory (WALL). The first one that is CALL uses the computer to teach language. This lab offers enrolled students interactive computer programs and audio/video materials to assist in their English, Foreign Language, and Speech Communication development at no cost. Students work individually to improve grammar, listening/speaking and writing skills. The language laboratory is a very helpful tool for practicing and assessing one's speech in any language. It provides a facility which allows the studen

English language Teaching 2

     Hello  dear friends..            Here I'm going to write my experience about Digital Portofolio. My Digital Portofolio ... Click here  

The African literature

                    Assignment Name: Rupa Bambhaniya Paper No: 14 The African  literature  Enrollment no: 2069108420200002 Class: M.A sem 4 Submitted by: Smt.S.B.Gardhi, Department of English Email I'd: rupabambhniya166@gmail.com Ngugi Wa Thiongo , A Grain of Wheat      “A Grain of Wheat  Is complex, powerful novel exploring the psychology of a hauntedman – haunted by an act of treachery to a hero of Kenya’s freedom movement.” Introduction :  Ngugi wa Thiong'o, currently Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of California, Irvine, was born in Kenya, in 1938 into a large peasant family. He is also Honorary Member of American Academy of Letters. A many-sided intellectual, he is novelist, essayist, playwright, journalist, editor, academic and social activist. The Kenya of his birth and youth was a British settler colony (1895-1963). As an adolescent, he lived through the Mau Mau War of Independence (1952-1962), the central historical epis

The New literature

             Assignment Name: Rupa Bambhaniya Paper No:   13 The New literature Enrollment no: 2069108420200002 Class: M.A sem 4 Submitted by:  Smt.S.B.Gardhi, Department of English Email I'd: rupabambhniya166@gmail.com Charecter Analysis of the White Tiger. Introduction :  Aravind Adiga’s The White Tiger has won the Man-Booker prize. It is the fourth winner by an Indian writer, including Midnight’s Children, by Salman Rushdie, The God of Small Things, by Arundhati Roy, and Inheritance of Loss, by Kiran Desai. The White Tiger is the story of Balram Halwai, the son of a village rickshawwalla, who through wiles and determination becomes the driver to the hated village landlord. The book takes the form of a series of letters from the narrator, now a self-described entrepreneur in the bustling hi-tech city of Bangalore, to the Chinese Premier, Wen Jiabao, describing “the real India” he will not see during his upcoming official visit. We learn early on that Balram has committed murder a

Mass communication

                    Assignment Name: Rupa Bambhaniya Paper No:  15 Mass Media communication Enrollment no: 2069108420200002 Class: M.A sem 4 Submitted by: Smt.S.B.Gardhi, Department of English Email I'd: rupabambhniya166@gmail.com Introduction :  A medium is a ‘channel of communication’ - a means through which people send and receive information. The printed word, for example, is a medium; when we read a newspaper or magazine, something is communicated to us in some way. Similarly, electronic forms of communication television, telephones, film and such like - are media (the plural of medium). Mass, as you probably realise, means ‘many’ and what we are interested in here is how and why different forms of media are used to transmit to – and be received by – large numbers of people (the audience). Mass media, therefore, refer to channels of communication that involve transmitting information in some way, shape or form to large numbers of people (although the question of exactly how m

Things Fall Apart

Thanking Activities:   Things Fall Apart by   Achebe Achebe was born Albert Chinualumogu Achebe in 1930, in the region of southeastern Nigeria known as Igboland. (He dropped his first name, a “tribute to Victorian England,” in college.) Ezenwa-Ohaeto, the author of the first comprehensive biography of Achebe, writes that the young Chinua was raised at a cultural “crossroads”: his parents were converts to Christianity, but other relatives practiced the traditional Igbo faith, in which people worship a panoply of gods, and are believed to have their own personal guiding spirit, called a chi. Achebe was fascinated by the “heathen” religion of his neighbors. Question 1. What is historical context of Things Fall Apart? The historical and cultural context of the publication of Things Fall Apart (1958) by Chinua Achebe. Before the release of this work by Achebe, the vast majority of literary writings on Africa and its inhabitants were produced by Western writers who offered a distorted view