19.11.08

Sá de Miranda

As you already know, your school is about to make a two-day stop in classes to comemorate the 450 years over the death of the great portuguese poet Sá de Miranda.
Your teachers, along with their classes have been preparing a series of interesting activities for this solemn occasion and they are counting on your full support for the success of this event.
We are hoping you will all enjoy it.
Have a nice time!

Sá de Miranda: memorial

Francisco de Sá de Miranda - (1481? – 1558), a Renaissance poet.
His life
He spent his early years in Coimbra and he made his first studies in Greek, Latin and philosophy in the Monastery of Santa Cruz.

In 1505, he went to the University of Lisbon to study Law where he began, at the same time, attending the Portuguese court and writing poems in the mediaeval style, still dominant in Portugal.


He travelled to Italy in 1521, where he was in touch with many writers and artists of the Renaissance, including Vittorio Collona, Pietro Bembo, Sannazzaro and Ariosto.

On his way home, in 1526, he visited Spain, meeting classical writers such as Juan Boscan and Garcilaso de La Vega.

Back in Portugal in 1526 or 1527, he was again welcomed in Court, where he became friends with King John III and other nobles. Four years after his return he decided to move to Minho, a province in the North of the country, where he purchased land.

Around 1530 he married Briolanja de Azevedo, a lady of noble origins.
In 1552 he moved to Quinta da Tapada, near Amares, where he died around 1558.

His work
As many Portuguese writers of his time, Sá de Miranda often wrote in Spanish, rather than in Portuguese. His early work is all in the form of the typical 15th century Portuguese poetry (the vilancete, the cantiga, the esparsa and the trova). Influenced by his travelling around Italy and Spain, Sá de Miranda introduced a new aesthetics in Portugal. He introduced the sonnet, the elegy, the eclogue and other classical poetic forms, adapting the Portuguese language to the decasillable verse.

Apart from poems, Sá de Miranda wrote two theatrical comedies, following classical forms: Estrangeiros (staged in Coimbra in 1528 and published in 1559) and Vilhalpandos (written around 1530 and published in 1560). His tragedy Cleópatra has only survived in fragments.

He also left several letters in verse, addressed to people like King John III and to his brother Mem de Sá.

In wikipedia.org/

It was a hit!!!


















29.10.08

Halloween and its traditions!




As your teachers have already told you, Halloween traditions go far back in the centuries, to old Ireland, when the Celts officially ended their Summer, and the New Year began.




The word itself, "Halloween", actually has its origins in the Catholic Church. It comes from a contracted corruption of All Hallows Eve, refering to All Saints Day, celebrated on November 1.



The stories evolving around Halloween say that on October 31 the disembodied spirits of all those who had died that previous year would come back, searching for living bodies to possess for the next year. It was believed to be their only hope for the afterlife...






Naturally, living people did not want to be possessed!! ...


So on that particular night of October, villagers would extinguish the fires in their homes, to make them cold and undesirable. They would then dress up in dark rags and all sorts of horrible clothes, they would use dirt to paint their faces and then they would go around the neighborhood making a lot of noise, to frighten off the evil spirits.






Bearing these traditions in mind - as they are so relevant in the Anglo-American cultural calendar - your English teachers have designed and prepared a series of both class and school activities for you.






These activities range from painting and drawing classes to film screenings and, eventually, a Halloween Party on the Eve of Friday October 31!!




It's Halloween!!





You are all invited to participate


next friday evening


at the school's Halloween Party!




It starts at 8.30 pm


and


you can bring a ghostly partner with you!




Come on in


and


enjoy yourself...


if you can...



27.9.08


26.9.08

English school term activities

All the extracurricular activities will be posted here, shortly!
Be sure to stand to the occasion and fully participate in them...
your teachers are counting on you!
Log in to check them out!!

Hey there... again!

We're back for a new school year!

Hope all goes well for you ... and your teachers, of course!
We're back exactly today as we comemorate the
European Day of Languages
- hopefully, you will all understand the major relevance
of speaking a foreign language!

And, in this area, we cannot
- ever! -
underestimate the significance of English
as the primary language
for universal communication!!

Nevertheless ... to all of you out there....


7.4.08

World Health Day!


... today! ... everyday!

It's show time!

Yes, they came, we saw and everybody had fun!!
We all had a great time watching both plays performed by the British Council Theatre Company!
"She's The One" was a super funny view on how you may fall in love for the wrong boy/girl, while looking for the perfect date!!
In the second play - "Not Romeo and Juliet" - the students were able to actively participate in the rehearsal of the famous Shakespeare classic!
Yes!
Wasn't it great to be the chosen Romeo and the lovely Juliet????
And you did it very nicely, indeed!!
Congratulations to all!

18.3.08

Your teachers wish you all...


Confronting In-Class Cheating!!


  • If you suspect cheating is occurring, try to resist the temptation to take the exam from the student, tear it up, and send him or her out of the room. Rather, let them complete the exam, or give them another copy and let them continue on the new one, noting where you exchanged tests.

  • If you notice “wandering eyes,” remind the students that all work must be individual and to keep their eyes on their own paper and/or visit with the student(s) whom you suspect and quietly remind them specifically.

  • If students appear to be exchanging information by talking or copying, quietly record their names, where they are on the exam, and have them just as quietly, change seats.
  • When you see a student using notes or having notes visible, immediately, but discreetly, confiscate the material. DO NOT destroy the notes as they will be evidence in disciplinary proceedings to follow. Make a note where the student is on the exam, but let them complete the test.
  • The same applies to having a phone or pager visible; text-messaging is a quiet way to share information.

  • If you hear talking, whispering, or murmuring, in any language, either remind the class in general that no talking is permitted or quietly confront the students who are doing the talking. Note where they are on the exam and have them quietly change seats.


  • Sometimes students will have come into the classroom before the exam and written information on the desk top. If you suspect this has happened, have the student change seats, note where they are on the exam, and allow no one else to sit there, if possible.


4.3.08

The Theatre is back!






The British Council Theatre Company is coming to our school next April 7th!


They will be performing their play - "She's The One" - in two different schedules:

the first session will begin at 9.00 am sharp, and the second one at 11.30 am.


An audience of 200 students in each performance is expected...

... and your English teachers are expecting you to enjoy it all you can!!




24.1.08

Liverpool: Europe United!


While I’m writing this article, The Beatles are working their magic in my speakers. I was already a fan, but with this visit to the 2008 European Capital of Culture, I’m a Fan-Confirmed!!

There, in
Liverpool, The Beatles are everywhere!
They are more important than everything else in Liverpool, all the museums, all the galleries, all the buses, and, why not, all the important monuments have something to do with The Beatles! It’s a reasonable fact, if we consider that Liverpool was the starting point for the most famous and best Pop Music group of the 60’s! …
and for many the best group ever!



What is so important about a bunch of guys with a strange haircut?
That must be your question, but it has an easy answer: They were not a band; they were an entire culture for that decade (and still remembered today). They are so important, that they have their own museum in Liverpool: “The Beatles History” (and other important sites, such as The Beatles Store, “The Cavern Square” - “The Cavern” was the club where they played more often while they were in Liverpool - and so many others I can’t even remember!



But Liverpool is not only about the Beatles!

There is a lot more history behind this wonderful city, and the “Liverpool Maritime Museum” is a good proof of that - a Museum that reminds us of things like The Titanic started its journey “here”. Far from ending there, it also teaches us about the origins of this city, as a cultural melting pot, where everyone from everywhere came in. as a result of that cultural mix, today you can see all kinds of people, from punks to guys in a pirate costume, to people with body painting on… and nobody is pointing their fingers! It’s normal stuff in Liverpool!



Again, the music and the stories are not the only “artistic point” in Liverpool, there is also TATE Gallery, where you can relax before the works of such artists as Picasso, and the “Kiss” – that famous sculpture by Rodin!



About the city itself, it is beautiful, even with half of it under construction (that’s why the opening ceremony of the Liverpool'08 European Capital of Culture had workmen as guitar men, dancers, etc), but the “virgin” parts of the city, such as the Albert Docks are incredibly beautiful – you can take a walk at any time of the day there and it will be unforgettable, no doubt of that!



Talking to the locals was one of my favourite experiences.

I’d never felt that, having to speak English everywhere, and they were all so nice to us (which really made easy the speaking thing).

Even better if we mentioned where are we from! They automatically shouted “Cristiano Ronaldo! José Mourinho!” It was very funny.



I can only draw to a close with a Ringo Starr catch-phrase: “

We didn't have much, but we had enough”.


But thinking about it … how can you have enough of this wonderful city?



Domingos da Silva (12ºano)

17.1.08

ESA went to Liverpool!!

Yes,
a group of ESA students
have gone on a 5-day trip to Liverpool
and they loved it!
We'll be posting their comments and views on the trip very shortly...
see you then!

16.1.08

future perfect??


Hello again!

Your English teachers hope you all had nice holidays!
It's time to get back to work again. for some of you will be very hard work, as all school terms play decisive roles when it comes down to getting the best marks one can get.
This term we also have some interesting news for you!
If you already checked out the school webpage, you already know that there's been an interesting project going on which is going to bring a group of European teachers (from Belgium, Finland and Germany) to our school for 4 whole days!
They will be visiting your lessons, talking to you - in English, of course! - and they will also tour around the region!
Let's hope we can ALL contribute to make their stay as pleasant and successful as can be!