martes, 23 de junio de 2009

Post in this blog was an interesting job, because we could improve our English skills by ourselves. I did not enjoy this experience, this was not the dream of my life, but I think that it was very useful to practice English writing.

When I started this class I thought that write was easier than speak, so I said to myself “Work in this blog is going to be a piece of cake”, and in part this it was real, but it was not that easy as I thought it would be. The difficult of this it was not the work itself but my own weaknesses in language, and by writing posts I was able to identify and correct those weakness (at less in part). So if you ask me Did the blogging experience help you improve your English? I must answer: “Yes”. But the merit is not only of the blog, because you can find the reason of this improvement in all the activities that we did in this class, even the assistantship activities, were very useful to work on speaking, writing and listening skills.

In my opinion the blogging experience have more advantages than disadvantages. By example, when we speak in Spanish is like if we are vomiting words, in some occasions we don’t take time to think before speak, so when we want speak in English is hard, because we can not say words without think on their sense before, and we take two hours to give structure to just one sentence. But by writing we can improve that, because we can give us time to think before.

Other advantage is that we can read the work of our classmates, and compare our work whit them in order to correct among us.

And finally, with this experience, we exploit and use the technologic resources that we have here, in the school.

1 comentario:

  1. Speaking Spanish is like vomiting, eh? Colorful analogy!

    Here's some corrections:

    Try using dashes when you want a sentence structure like this:
    I did not enjoy this experience--this was not the dream of my life--but I think that it was very useful to practice English writing.

    I thought that *writing* was easier than *speaking*,

    ResponderEliminar