Our Club!

Tuesday, 25 September 2012

European Day of Languages

Did you know that...
01 There are between 6000 and 7000 languages in the world - spoken by six billion people divided into 189 independent states.
02 There are about 225 indigenous languages in Europe - roughly 3% of the world’s total.
03 Most of the world’s languages are spoken in Asia and Africa.
04 At least half of the world’s population are bilingual or plurilingual, i.e. they speak two or more languages.
05 In their daily lives Europeans increasingly come across foreign languages. There is a need to generate a greater interest in languages among European citizens.
06 Many languages have 50,000 words or more, but individual speakers normally know and use only a fraction of the total vocabulary: in everyday conversation people use the same few hundred words.
07 Languages are constantly in contact with each other and affect each other in many ways: English borrowed words and expressions from many other languages in the past, European languages are now borrowing many words from English.
08 In its first year a baby utters a wide range of vocal sounds; at around one year the first understandable words are uttered; at around three years complex sentences are formed; at five years a child possesses several thousand words.
09 The mother tongue is usually the language one knows best and uses most. But there can be “perfect bilinguals” who speak two languages equally well. Normally, however, bilinguals display no perfect balance between their two languages.
10 Bilingualism brings with it many benefits: it makes the learning of additional languages easier, enhances the thinking process and fosters contacts with other people and their cultures.
11 Bilingualism and plurilingualism entail economic advantages, too: jobs are more easily available to those who speak several languages, and multilingual companies have a better competitive edge than monolingual ones.
12 Languages are related to each other like the members of a family. Most European languages belong to the large Indo-European family.
13 Most European languages belong to three broad groups: Germanic, Romance and Slavic.
14 The Germanic family of languages includes Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Icelandic, German, Dutch, English and Yiddish, among others.
15 The Romance languages include Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Romanian, among others.
16 The Slavic languages include Russian, Ukrainian, Belarusian, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Slovenian, Serbian, Croatian, Macedonian, Bulgarian and others.
17 Most European languages use the Latin alphabet. Some Slavic languages use the Cyrillic alphabet. Greek, Armenian, Georgian and Yiddish have their own alphabet.
18 Most countries in Europe have a number of regional or minority languages – some of these have obtained official status.
19 The non-European languages most widely used on European territory are Arabic, Chinese and Hindi, each with its own writing system.
20 Russia (148 million inhabitants) has by far the highest number of languages spoken on its territory: from 130 to 200 depending on the criteria.
21 Due to the influx of migrants and refugees, Europe has become largely multilingual. In London alone some 300 languages are spoken (Arabic, Turkish, Kurdish, Berber, Hindi, Punjabi, etc.).

If you want to listen to HELLO in different languages go to the following site:
http://edl.ecml.at/LanguageFun/Hello/tabid/1876/language/en-GB/Default.aspx

Sunday, 9 September 2012

Welcome back to school!

Are you ready to start?
The English Club will be here to entertain you, inform you...and make this new year the best of all!

Sunday, 3 June 2012

2nd edition of the Karaoke contest - final

For the second time the English Club organised a karaoke contest. In the first edition Mariana Domingues was the winner. Now she is one of the ten finalists of the Portuguese contest - Ídolos de Portugal 2012!!!  
We wish her a brilliant career as a singer! She really deserves that.
Below you can see the results and the videos of the  performances of this year's contest.
The English Club staff is very pleased with the event and congratulates ALL THE CONTESTANTS for their excellent performances. 


1st place

2nd place

3rd place








And now you can watch Mariana's first performance on stage in the 2012 contest - Ídolos de Portugal. Congratulations and all the best, Mariana! We are all very proud of you! You deserve to be the 2012 Idol of Portugal!


Friday, 18 May 2012

PICTURES OF THE GERMAN WORKSHOP!

It was a success! Lots of students showed up to have a first contact with the German language and they liked it! 
Below you can get a glimpse of the general atmosphere of the two sessions. Tschüss! Bis bald!














GERMAN WORKSHOP

Due to the importance that learning foreign languages has in today's globalised world, the English Club teachers are going to organise a German workshop today.
More than 50 students have enrolled on this project.
The teachers  hope that this workshop may be an excellent opportunity for the students to discover a new language and that they may have some enjoyable time too.
"Lern' und hab' Spass!" (learn and have fun!)

Friday, 4 May 2012

The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore

What a beautiful film! Don't miss it!

Sunday, 22 April 2012

The second term of this school year is over, but much was accomplished  which deserves being reminded. So, below you can see some photos and videos about the activities which took place in February and March, such as the school day of languages, St. Patrick's Day and, last but not least,  the second karaoke contest. Have a look at them!

2nd Karaoke contest ( 23rd March)


 
 






St. Patrick's Day 2012

Irish symbols everywhere!

A joyful atmosphere

 The English Club Staff


Singing Irish songs
                                                                     
 Dancing


 Students' work
                                        
                                                Trying one's luck and solving puzzles


                                                         Reading Irish blessings

Creative writing competition

SCHOOL DAY OF LANGUAGES (17th February)

This was a really full day at our school! Spelling contests, loud reading contests in different languages, roleplays, traditional foods of different countries, dancing, exhibitions, and much more. 
Watch the videos below and you'll get a glimpse of what this day was like at Maia Secondary School!



Roleplays by 12th form students:

Applying for a job - top model!


The English language -

Thursday, 19 April 2012

Earth Day

Earth Day is a global holiday celebrated as a day to bring awareness and appreciation for the Earth and its environment. It is celebrated internationally on April 22nd or in the Spring equinox. It doesn't matter which day you celebrate (or celebrate both!) because it is the focus on saving the Earth's environment that should be celebrated every day of the year!

Saturday, 24 March 2012

Friday, 23 March 2012

HAPPY EASTER...


... EVERYBODY!!!

Sunday, 18 March 2012

2nd KARAOKE CONTEST

Wednesday, 14 March 2012

Saint Patrick's Day is coming to school



Prepare yourself for the greenest day in ESMAIA!
Saint Patrick's Day is coming on the 16th March to bring you fortune.
Don't forget to dress something green!

Tuesday, 14 February 2012

HAPPY ST. VALENTINE'S DAY!!!

Enjoy the day and practise the language of LOVE!

Tuesday, 7 February 2012


A couple of years ago, I played Charles Dickens in an episode of the British sci-fi series “Doctor Who.” As the doctor takes his leave of Earth, Dickens asks whether his books will still be read in the future. Yes, the doctor replies. For how long, Dickens wants to know. Forever, says the doctor, disappearing into cyberspace.
He would appear to have been right: Dickens is everywhere on the eve of his 200th birthday in February. Dickens’s characters and their destinies are in wide circulation on film and television. Major biographies follow one another in majestic procession, offering often brilliant insights into the paradoxical complexities at the heart of the author of the single greatest oeuvre, after the plays of William Shakespeare, in English literature.
Surprisingly, considering that Dickens is that unusual thing, a writer whose life was as riveting as his work, there has been no film biography. If there were one, a large part of it would surely center on his early years, and especially on one year of shame, humiliation and degradation, the memory of which was so painful to him that he hid it from view completely, allowing it to be revealed only after his death. Victorian England was profoundly shocked to discover that Dickens’s compassion for the poor and the disadvantaged sprang, not simply from Christian kindness, but from the bitter personal experience of toiling 10 hours a day, for 6 shillings a week, in a rat-infested shoe polish warehouse off the Strand from the ages of 12 to 13. It is of course this experience that placed children at the center of so much of his work.
The simplest and most straightforwardly presented is “A Boy Called Dickens.” It concentrates entirely on the novelist’s time at Warren’s, the blacking factory, where 12-year-old Dickens went to work making shoe polish to support his family. The book follows his daily routines and traversal of the city, quite credibly proposing that during this time he was dreaming the stories which became his novels: “There are lawyers, clerks, convicts and keepers of old curiosity shops. . . . All these characters and their stories swirl about the boy like the fog.” It is a portrait of the artist as a boy, very touching and believable, and it carries the story through to Dickens’s reprieve from Warren’s, his return to schooling and his ultimate success as a writer.
by Simon Callow
in New York Times, Sunday Book Review( adapted)
Charles Dickens was born on Feb. 7, 1812, and died June 9, 1870.
At his death Dickens was regarded by the great mass of his contemporaries not simply as a great writer but also as a great and good man, a champion of the poor and downtrodden, who had striven hard throughout his whole career for greater social justice and a better, kinder world.

in The New York Times, Times Topics (adapted)

Tuesday, 31 January 2012

1st Karaoke casting 2011-2012

Here are the loooooong due videos of the performances of the winners as well as some photos of all the contestants who participated in the first Karaoke casting, year 2011-12.
Congratulations to all of them!