Monday, November 17, 2008

'MODERN TIMES'


Modern Times is the first Chaplin movie I have seen. This silent movie was filmed in 1936 during the Big Economical Depression.
I was really surprised when I watched this film, because I wasn't so enthusiastic with the idea to watch an old movie, that's why I found this film so interesting in the way that it showed us comedy; romance and tragedy all in it. The most interesting thing in this movie is that we can see how the main character of the movie Charles Chaplin, turns against modern society.
From my personal point of view I have to say that the whole movie has lots of hilarious scenes without too much of a plot, but its entertainment value is what really matters in this silent and critical movie.


In Modern Times, Chaplin represents a factory worker who attempt to live in an industrial society. In the film we can see the dehumanization process of modern industries.
In the middle of the movie, Chaplin's character met a young orphan woman who helped him to find a work. I really like these two main characters, because the film also allowed us to see the American dream of those times in the way that Chaplin and his love dream about living in a beautiful home with the typical idea of the perfect American family, the worker husband and the stay at home wife.



What is really interesting in this movie is that it portrayed the situation that was happening in the beginning of the 20th century times. "Modern Times", as I said before is set in the Great Depression, but its themes are not outdated. Through the film we can also see that Chaplin is always looking for a sense of identity within his mechanich mind. Despite that situation, for viewers it's very easy to forget that we are watching a fims with such complex social problems , because Chaplin has the great ability of make us laugh out loud the whole movie, even though the fact that sometimes he was facing some problems, like the time whn he was at jail.

I really appreciate the image of Chaplin being run through the situations that he had to face, due to as I said before, he consider the dehumanization of technology and modern times to represent in a critical way what was happening. From that point I think that in today's world there is a return to the importance of human connections.


In my opinion, the two most important moments in the film are the scene in a department store involving a blindfold, and the funniest moment in the film to the mad Chaplin inside of an out of control machine. I think that these two moments of the film are just a handful of moments that make Modern Times the great masterpiece that it is.

From my personal point of view, the aspect of the film that made me have a critical and strongest thinking was the idealistic thoughts that we have about what is modernity. In our hearts, many of us are always looking for exuberance and good life, but in the movie we can see an absence of need for materialism and modern stuffs.


To conclude, I completely love the end of this film where Chaplin and his young woman were walking on the way to the future with a smile on their faces, even though all the bad things that they had to face, such as living in poverty situations in a world that didn't have so much opportunities for them. For that reason, I honestly recommend you this film, because it give us the chance to think that even though all the things that are not working in this world we can make little changes and also, because it reminded us that we can’t forget the idea to live suffering because of that. This movie encourages to try to keep going with our own pursuit of happiness.




THE END...



Friday, November 14, 2008

THE IMPORTANCE THAT CULTURE HAS FOR STUDENTS IN ACQUIRING A SECOND LANGUAGE.

Why it is so important that we learn a foreign language? The process of learning a foreign language opens up a whole new dimension for all of us and it contributes in a significantly way to the development of everybody intelligence. By learning it we obtain new ways of see our world, but at the same time we fortify our own identity, and therefore also our self-confidence, due to, language also contributes to have a stronger personality to the ones that are learning it.

As we already know, the world is entering in the era of globalization, that's why acquiring a foreign language is so important, because it involves the idea that all of us can also learn to be more tolerants with others in order to become capable of accepting the right of others to think differently, appreciate the culture of one's own land and the lands of other people.


The main purposes of this essay are the relationship between language, culture and civilization, and also see why the teaching of culture should be an integral part of the English as a second language curriculum. To begin with, language is a social institution in which it plays an important role, obviously if we see language as the most important way of communication in this world. Thus we see that language is, or supposedly be, understood as cultural practice, because language involves a social practice, and both cannot exist separately, in fact they create a kind of ‘mixture’, because in the practice language and culture are inseparable. Language also helps to determine how people encode messages, the meanings for the messages, and how in that way people can organize their ideas and thoughts in this society in order to be part of a civilization.


First of all, it is important to mention that in any kind of society language is the principal means whereby we conduct our social lives. As Claire Kramsch (1998) says in her book ‘The relationship of language and culture’, language expresses and symbolizes cultural reality, because we create experience through it.

Members of a community or a social group do not only express experiences; as a part of a community we also create experience through language. We give meaning to the things that are part of this world through the medium we choose to communicate with one another, that's why 'language embodies cultural reality' (Claire Kramsch 1998). Because of that reason, in today's world is so important to learn the mother tongue language, and also another language, because doing that we are being able to express ourselves through our use of language. In that way we as a society are capable to understand and also be part of different cultures.


Foreign Language Education encourages society to develop communicative skills, that is the first educatinal goal, to develop learner's abilities in order to help students to assimilate their moral values that society impose in order to live in conformity with the accepted principles, standards and moral values to finally develop tolerance to understand others and ourselves society.



From my personal point of view, I think that the aim in teach culture in a foreign language class should be the development of student's personality by means of foreign-language culture, due to learning another language is not only a country study approach to foreign language teaching, but also a sociocultural education of each individuality and thus the whole society. However, education is practically more than that, foreign language education is also the transmission of another culture. Understanding that idea, we as future teachers of Foreign language can be able to think that culture also plays a very important role in the process of learning a foreign language so, culture in that way is part of general spiritual culture that students acquire by means of communicative language teaching in its cultural, educational, social and psychological aspects.



The process of understanding the country's culture while children are learning and acquiring the second language is not the final goal but is a tool of deeper understanding of the native culture. What we can do as future teachers is to learn how students can learn about a new country and culture. Because we have to be prepare to relate language and culture in our future places of job, classrooms in order to be clear at the moment to express and transmit to our students the idea that they have to compare their previous knowldege of their own language with the target language (the language that they are learning) in order to be meaningful the idea to learn the recently acquired language. Probably, if we do that every lesson, such cross-cultural comparison, we will be promoting a positive attitude inside the classroom, because we are going to let them be part of the process of their learning and understanding the other culture, its people and traditions. This meaningful process of learning also helps students to have a strong life position, share their points of view, thus stimulating students to learn more about their own and other cultures through critical thinking.
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References:
- Claire Kramsch. 1998. 'The relationship between Language and Culture'.
- The Importance Of Teaching Culture In The Foreign Language Classroom.
-Culture in Second Language Teaching. E. Peterson & B. Coltrane, 2003.
-Brown, Douglas, Principles of Language learning and teaching. New York, USA. Pearson Education Company. Fourth edition. 2000.