close
每個人都有自已想要做的事情英文字母遊戲學習單
目前學習是英文很重要英文字母遊戲學習單
在台灣學習英文不難英文字母遊戲學習單
推薦一個輕鬆學習英語方法(免費諮詢看看):
還在找尋英文字母遊戲學習單
在學校的教育推廣中心,我和我的家教學生,科林,歪著頭分享一本數學課本,應用題題目是「某餐廳的晚餐菜單,前菜有湯、水果、沙拉三種選擇。主餐有牛排、烤雞、煎魚、義大利麵四種,而甜點有巧克力蛋糕及冰淇淋。請問,這套菜單共提供了幾種餐點的可能性?」
我的腦海迅速跑過「是考排列還是考組合?」「再看一次,題目有陷阱嗎?」「這應用題有必要這麼貼近生活,寫得這麼詳細嗎?」幾個想英文字母遊戲學習單法,瞥見科林也若有所思的在盯著課本,然後他抬起頭,用他覆蓋在金色睫毛下藍色大眼看著我,說:「我要點湯,牛排跟冰淇淋,你要點什麼?」我愣了一下,然後忍不住大笑起來。
科林住在大學裡以開派對著名的兄弟會,他們這些兄弟會男孩大多就像美國搞笑電影裡描述的身材健美,樂天好動,每天都開開心心的在策劃開派對和期待著兄弟會的廚師今天晚餐要煮什麼。
相對之下,我就像是電影裡…...
你以為我要說「戴著大眼鏡,髮型失控,手上總是拿著厚重課本的書呆子女生」嗎?怎麼可能,我又不是要準備麻雀變主角的角色。
我是電影裡面那個蒼白瘦小,英文講不溜,被問到要選左邊還是右邊,居然回答「好,謝謝」的國際學生。
等一下,校園電影裡面有這種角色嗎?根本沒有,那英文字母遊戲學習單你就知道我的社交生活圈跟兄弟會男孩差距多麼遙英文字母遊戲學習單遠了,遠到根本不在同一部戲裡面。
總之,科林大概就是太樂天導致基礎數學都被當,所以要到教育推廣中心求助,申請一個輔導數學的家教。
而我則是在學校餐廳打工,邊炸薯條的時候聽見有同事在分享,她到教育推廣中心申請了一個中文家教,追問之下才知道有這種工讀職缺(當然還有追問為什麼要學中文不早點告訴我)。然後隔天下了課,什麼也沒準備的就跑去推廣中心的櫃台詢問,要怎麼樣才能當中文家教?
他們給了我一張申請表,裡面有各式各樣可以選填的科目,我看看,除了中文,基礎數學我應該也可以選填當個備案吧,上學期拿課的時候才發現第一章是數與數線,這不是國中數學嗎?沒有多想就把表格交回去。
等我興記得電影《大英雄天團》裡人見人愛的療癒系機器人杯麵(Baymax)嗎?現在擁有一個超萌機器人當麻吉已經不再是夢想了!機器人 Musio 不僅能獨立思考、擁有學習能力,擔任工作和生活裡最細心的貼身助理、最有耐性的聰明英文字母遊戲學習單家教,還會像死黨一樣開玩笑,甚至沒禮貌地打嗝放屁!
n1jatmhb6wehyyupnpwp
▲ Musio 尺寸為 168 x 85 x 220 mm,大約是一般孩童玩偶的大小,重量只有 322公克,容易搬動;右為與 Musio 配合的觸控筆 Sophy,可以用來餵食 Musio。
由科技研發公司 AKA 推出的 Musio 是一款具有人工智慧的小型機器人,造型設定為可愛的外星生物,星星是它的食物。就像所有的通知系統, Musio 會準時提醒你今日的行程和收到的電子郵件,但它並不是死板板的電腦, Musio 能像真人一樣和用戶說話,它的英文字母遊戲學習單眼睛是一個 LED 小螢幕,能展現喜怒哀樂,還有饑餓!此外, Musio 整合家中其他的電器和裝置,能夠開關電燈、電視或播放音樂,並內建 Arduino 面板,可以自行撰寫程式控制。
b7hlq8n0kc7kgvhup4tr
▲ Musio 使用 Android 系統發展他的「大腦」,產品總共分為「簡易」、「聰明」、「天才」三種智慧版本,售價預計為 199 到 799 元美金不等,造型上還有特殊的服裝可以選購。
music
不同於時常答非所問的虛擬語音助理 Siri , AKA 聲稱 Musio 是真的能聽見你的需求和提問,並動腦解決問題、予以回應,藉由人工智慧的技術,它能夠累積與人類互動的經驗,記住用戶的喜好和習慣,就像電影《雲端情人》裡的人工智慧助理 Samantha 一樣, Musio 會關心你的心情、提出疑問、聊天,和人類一樣懂得思考、有感情。
11012800_1623681047915659_35454139859840028_n
▲ Musio 另外一個亮點是與兒童教育結合,可以搭配智慧點圖筆的書籍做學習,而且 Musio 不會翻臉生氣!
從早期的科技電影《A.I.人工智慧》或《機械公敵》中不難看出,人類對於「機器人」與「人工智慧」一直有相當多的想像和恐懼,一方面是渴望科技能改善生活,另一方面又害怕被科技反撲,但近幾年像《雲端情人》和《大英雄天團》這類的科技電影,可以感受到人們逐漸在轉變對於科技的態度,正如 AKA 打造出 Musio ,以非常友善的方式拉近人類與科技的距離,也證明人們漸漸發現正面能量的可貴。科技是人類在地球上打造出來的外星人,它的身上終究留著人類的血液,只要我們懂得調整溫度、尊重彼此的存在,人類必定能與科技好好和平共存。高采烈的收到配對通知,才發現,排了五個數學學生,怎麼沒有人要學中文?我有好多關於中文字和發音的構思想要跟老外分享;而且我的高中數學是每學期補考才過的,這樣真的行嗎?
結果一整個學期過去,再加上後面幾個學期,我從來都沒有被排到過要學中文的學生,反倒是因為數學而認識了不少各式各樣文化背景的朋友,也在這時候開始大量的學到並且練習生活化的英語(slang),而非只是課本上學過的標準用法。
也因為這些朋友,讓我對美國的多元文化有更深刻的了解,在畢業以前,有家教的學生邀請我到她父母家吃感恩節火雞,也有來自南美洲的學生邀請我加入他們的學生組織。
從來不會有人因為我的英文沒有他們流利而覺得我低人一等,因為在基礎數學的範圍內,我根本像是魔術師一樣的以各種神奇的解題技巧讓他們目瞪口呆(類似分子跟分母的上下消除法,或是分數的除法可以上下顛倒相乘,這麼簡單而已)Top Asian News at 8:30 p.m. GMT
-A
+A
Associated PressAssociated Press – 2015年9月9日 上午4:32
NARAHA, Japan (AP) — A few signs of life are returning to this rural town made desolate by the Fukushima nuclear disaster four-and-a-half years ago: Carpenters bang on houses, an occasional delivery truck drives by and a noodle shop has opened to serve employees who have returned to Naraha's small town hall. But weeds cover the now rusty train tracks, there are no sounds of children and wild boars still roam around at night. On the outskirts of town, thousands of black industrial storage bags containing radiation-contaminated soil and debris stretch out across barren fields.
SINGAPORE (AP) — As the day turns into night, they gather in the green field in the eastern corner of this island nation just above the equator. Some have come with foldable stools, some with picnic mats while others settle down on bare grass waving blue flags and yellow inflatable hammers. Soon the crowd swells to about 30,000, waiting to hear the star of the night's show -- opposition leader Sylvia Lim. A policewoman-turned law teacher-turned-politician, Lim is the face of Singapore's resurgent opposition that just three elections ago in 2001 had hit a political nadir. Its leader, the late J.B. Jeyaretnam who attained folklore stature in the country's politics, had been bankrupted after contesting a series of lawsuits unleashed by the ruling People's Action Party. The Workers' Party and another opposition group had only one seat each in the 84-member Parliament.
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North and South Korea agreed Tuesday to hold reunions next month of families separated by the Korean War in the early 1950s, a small but important bit of progress for rivals that just last month were threatening each other with war. One hundred mostly elderly people from each country will be reunited with their relatives Oct. 20-26 at the Diamond Mountain resort in North Korea, according to Seoul's Unification Ministry and North Korean state media.
BEIJING (AP) — Schoolchildren waved flags and paramilitary troops marched in full battle dress at a mass spectacle China staged Tuesday to mark 50 years since establishing Tibet as an ethnic autonomous region firmly under Beijing's control. The event lauded Tibet's economic successes under Communist Party rule, even as activists criticized its record on human rights.
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Homegrown militants loyal to the Islamic State group are making inroads into Afghanistan, controlling territory in some parts of the country and ruling with the harsh hand the group is notorious for in Iraq and Syria, according to officials, military leaders and analysts. IS expansion into Afghanistan has been a concern for both Afghan and international authorities for months, with officials warning that the militant group was actively recruiting members from other Islamic militant groups, including the rival Taliban.
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — The U.S. military says it will investigate an airstrike carried out in southern Afghanistan after local officials said 11 police and counter-narcotics agents were killed. Brig. Gen. Wilson Shoffner says in a statement issued Tuesday that "based on information we received today, we feel it is prudent to investigate the airstrike our forces conducted in Kandahar" on Sunday.
YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Just five years ago, when Aung San Suu Kyi was still under house arrest, she commented that one day she hoped to get a Twitter account and chat with the outside world. On Tuesday, the opposition leader kicked off campaigning for Myanmar's historic Nov. 8 general election with a Facebook post — one of many signs of how far the country and its most recognizable politician have come in a few years.
YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Campaigning kicked off Tuesday for Myanmar's Nov. 8 general election, which is expected to be the Southeast Asian country's most credible vote in more than a half-century. A long-ruling junta made way for a civilian government more than four years ago, but the military still retains a powerful role, and political and economic reforms have been stymied by persistent ethnic strife and natural disasters. Associated Press writers based across Asia who have covered Myanmar for many years outline the key issues at stake: ___
ISLAMABAD (AP) — A senior Pakistani official is expressing optimism that recent tensions with neighboring India over the bitterly disputed Kashmir region can be defused. Sartaj Aziz, national security and foreign affairs adviser to the Pakistani prime minister, said Tuesday that the commander of Pakistan's border forces will travel to New Delhi Wednesday to meet his Indian counterpart.
In this photo by Tsering Topgyal, people cover their faces and run in smoke as a municipal worker fumigates a residential area to prevent mosquitoes from breeding in New Delhi. Civic authorities are taking action to prevent dengue fever after a sharp rise in the mosquito-borne disease. Press Trust of India says this year's total of nearly 1,260 cases in New Delhi is the highest in five years. Dengue can cause fever, severe joint pain and headaches. There is no treatment.
TOKYO (AP) — Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe won a new term as president of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party on Tuesday after facing no opposition for the job. He told reporters afterward that he would push his ongoing economic revival plan, saying "Abenomics is still partway through."
MANILA, Philippines (AP) — A U.N. agency is mounting a worldwide campaign for equal pay for women, who get 24 percent less than men on global average and around 30 percent less for those in Asia. Recent estimates by the International Labor Organization shows gender inequality in employment across Asia alone is costing $45 billion a year, with 45 percent of working-age women outside the labor force compared to 19 percent for men, the leader of the U.N. Women agency, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, told a forum at the Asian Development Bank headquarters.
CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — A multi-million dollar deal to resettle refugees from an Australia-run detention camp on the Pacific nation of Nauru to Cambodia has been irreparably damaged by a Rohingya refugee's decision to go home to Myanmar, the opposition and refugee advocates said on Tuesday. Only four refugees — two Iranian men, an Iranian woman and the Rohingya man — took up the offer of cash, free health insurance and accommodation to resettle from Nauru to a gated coFAIRFAX, Va. (AP) — Fairfax County Commonwealth's Attorney RayRIVERDALE PARK, Md. (AP) — Police say a man apparently on PCP withstood several rounds of shocks from a stun gun and pepper spray before officers could take him into custody.
Riverdale Park Police Chief David Morris commended officers for their restraint during the confrontation Friday at a McDonald's, where they responded to a call about a man throwing chairs who appeared to be hallucinating.
Morris says that the man had minor injuries and that officers arguably saved his life.
The chief says the man, 41-year-old Marcus Moycherilli of Washington, was charged by criminal summons with assault, disorderly conduct and resisting arrest.
___
This story has been corrected to show the last name of the suspect is Moycherilli, not Moycherielli. Morrogh says he will not bring criminal charges against jail deputies who used a stun gun on a restrained inmate who later died.
Morrogh released a report Tuesday calling the death of 37-year-old Natasha McKenna a "tragic accident." He had been evaluating whether to bring charges for the past two months.
McKenna, who was African-American, died in February, days after a team of deputies used a hood and a stun gun on McKenna while she was in restraints during a cell transfer. McKenna had a history of mental illness and had previously attacked a deputy.
A medical examiner had previously ruled her death accidental.
Her death remains the subject of a federal civil rights investigationmmunity in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh in early June.
BEIJING (AP) — A Chinese court publicly apologized to 19 people it wrongfully convicted of financial crimes in a rare show of contrition by the country's authoritarian and highly opaque legal system. The apology from the People's High Court for the eastern province of Anhui appeared in a local newspaper on Monday. The court said it wished to help restore the reputations of the individuals, all of whom were imprisoned in 2012 on charges of illegal fundraising, or fraud.
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — A large fire engulfed a popular nightclub in the Cambodian capital, killing at least five women who were trapped in one of the rooms, an official said Tuesday. Two men were critically injured. The fire apparently started in the sound mixing room about two hours before the Key Club nightclub was to open at 10 p.m. Monday evening, said Col. Neth Vantha, chief of the Phnom Penh fire department.Top Asian News at 8:30 p.m. GMT
-A
+A
Associated PressAssociated Press – 2015年9月9日 上午4:32
NARAHA, Japan (AP) — A few signs of life are returning to this rural town made desolate by the Fukushima nuclear disaster four-and-a-half years ago: Carpenters bang on houses, an occasional delivery truck drives by and a noodle shop has opened to serve employees who have returned to Naraha's small town hall. But weeds cover the now rusty train tracks, there are no sounds of children and wild boars still roam around at night. On the outskirts of town, thousands of black industrial storage bags containing radiation-contaminated soil and debris stretch out across barren fields.
SINGAPORE (AP) — As the day turns into night, they gather in the green field in the eastern corner of this island nation just above the equator. Some have come with foldable stools, some with picnic mats while others settle down on bare grass waving blue flags and yellow inflatable hammers. Soon the crowd swells to about 30,000, waiting to hear the star of the night's show -- opposition leader Sylvia Lim. A policewoman-turned law teacher-turned-politician, Lim is the face of Singapore's resurgent opposition that just three elections ago in 2001 had hit a political nadir. Its leader, the late J.B. Jeyaretnam who attained folklore stature in the country's politics, had been bankrupted after contesting a series of lawsuits unleashed by the ruling People's Action Party. The Workers' Party and another opposition group had only one seat each in the 84-member Parliament.
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North and South Korea agreed Tuesday to hold reunions next month of families separated by the Korean War in the early 1950s, a small but important bit of progress for rivals that just last month were threatening each other with war. One hundred mostly elderly people from each country will be reunited with their relatives Oct. 20-26 at the Diamond Mountain resort in North Korea, according to Seoul's Unification Ministry and North Korean state media.
BEIJING (AP) — Schoolchildren waved flags and paramilitary troops marched in full battle dress at a mass spectacle China staged Tuesday to mark 50 years since establishing Tibet as an ethnic autonomous region firmly under Beijing's control. The event lauded Tibet's economic successes under Communist Party rule, even as activists criticized its record on human rights.
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Homegrown militants loyal to the Islamic State group are making inroads into Afghanistan, controlling territory in some parts of the country and ruling with the harsh hand the group is notorious for in Iraq and Syria, according to officials, military leaders and analysts. IS expansion into Afghanistan has been a concern for both Afghan and international authorities for months, with officials warning that the militant group was actively recruiting members from other Islamic militant groups, including the rival Taliban.
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — The U.S. military says it will investigate an airstrike carried out in southern Afghanistan after local officials said 11 police and counter-narcotics agents were killed. Brig. Gen. Wilson Shoffner says in a statement issued Tuesday that "based on information we received today, we feel it is prudent to investigate the airstrike our forces conducted in Kandahar" on Sunday.
YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Just five years ago, when Aung San Suu Kyi was still under house arrest, she commented that one day she hoped to get a Twitter account and chat with the outside world. On Tuesday, the opposition leader kicked off campaigning for Myanmar's historic Nov. 8 general election with a Facebook post — one of many signs of how far the country and its most recognizable politician have come in a few years.
YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Campaigning kicked off Tuesday for Myanmar's Nov. 8 general election, which is expected to be the Southeast Asian country's most credible vote in more than a half-century. A long-ruling junta made way for a civilian government more than four years ago, but the military still retains a powerful role, and political and economic reforms have been stymied by persistent ethnic strife and natural disasters. Associated Press writers based across Asia who have covered Myanmar for many years outline the key issues at stake: ___
ISLAMABAD (AP) — A senior Pakistani official is expressing optimism that recent tensions with neighboring India over the bitterly disputed Kashmir region can be defused. Sartaj Aziz, national security and foreign affairs adviser to the Pakistani prime minister, said Tuesday that the commander of Pakistan's border forces will travel to New Delhi Wednesday to meet his Indian counterpart.
In this photo by Tsering Topgyal, people cover their faces and run in smoke as a municipal worker fumigates a residential area to prevent mosquitoes from breeding in New Delhi. Civic authorities are taking action to prevent dengue fever after a sharp rise in the mosquito-borne disease. Press Trust of India says this year's total of nearly 1,260 cases in New Delhi is the highest in five years. Dengue can cause fever, severe joint pain and headaches. There is no treatment.
TOKYO (AP) — Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe won a new term as president of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party on Tuesday after facing no opposition for the job. He told reporters afterward that he would push his ongoing economic revival plan, saying "Abenomics is still partway through."
MANILA, Philippines (AP) — A U.N. agency is mounting a worldwide campaign for equal pay for women, who get 24 percent less than men on global average and around 30 percent less for those in Asia. Recent estimates by the International Labor Organization shows gender inequality in employment across Asia alone is costing $45 billion a year, with 45 percent of working-age women outside the labor force compared to 19 percent for men, the leader of the U.N. Women agency, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, told a forum at the Asian Development Bank headquarters.
CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — A multi-million dollar deal to resettle refugees from an Australia-run detention camp on the Pacific nation of Nauru to Cambodia has been irreparably damaged by a Rohingya refugee's decision to go home to Myanmar, the opposition and refugee advocates said on Tuesday. Only four refugees — two Iranian men, an Iranian woman and the Rohingya man — took up the offer of cash, free health insurance and accommodation to resettle from Nauru to a gated coFAIRFAX, Va. (AP) — Fairfax County Commonwealth's Attorney RayRIVERDALE PARK, Md. (AP) — Police say a man apparently on PCP withstood several rounds of shocks from a stun gun and pepper spray before officers could take him into custody.
Riverdale Park Police Chief David Morris commended officers for their restraint during the confrontation Friday at a McDonald's, where they responded to a call about a man throwing chairs who appeared to be hallucinating.
Morris says that the man had minor injuries and that officers arguably saved his life.
The chief says the man, 41-year-old Marcus Moycherilli of Washington, was charged by criminal summons with assault, disorderly conduct and resisting arrest.
___
This story has been corrected to show the last name of the suspect is Moycherilli, not Moycherielli. Morrogh says he will not bring criminal charges against jail deputies who used a stun gun on a restrained inmate who later died.
Morrogh released a report Tuesday calling the death of 37-year-old Natasha McKenna a "tragic accident." He had been evaluating whether to bring charges for the past two months.
McKenna, who was African-American, died in February, days after a team of deputies used a hood and a stun gun on McKenna while she was in restraints during a cell transfer. McKenna had a history of mental illness and had previously attacked a deputy.
A medical examiner had previously ruled her death accidental.
Her death remains the subject of a federal civil rights investigationmmunity in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh in early June.
BEIJING (AP) — A Chinese court publicly apologized to 19 people it wrongfully convicted of financial crimes in a rare show of contrition by the country's authoritarian and highly opaque legal system. The apology from the People's High Court for the eastern province of Anhui appeared in a local newspaper on Monday. The court said it wished to help restore the reputations of the individuals, all of whom were imprisoned in 2012 on charges of illegal fundraising, or fraud.
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — A large fire engulfed a popular nightclub in the Cambodian capital, killing at least five women who were trapped in one of the rooms, an official said Tuesday. Two men were critically injured. The fire apparently started in the sound mixing room about two hours before the Key Club nightclub was to open at 10 p.m. Monday evening, said Col. Neth Vantha, chief of the Phnom Penh fire department.
文章標籤
全站熱搜
留言列表