Today I worked with Anibal on his speaking skills. Anibal is a post-grad student who wishes to take the TOEFL in order to apply for graduate school in the US. I would categorize him in the advanced level in speaking and listening. He has been in the US for about a year but has studied English as a foreign language in his home country. For speaking practice, I found some sample TOEFL questions online and asked Anibal the questions in the TOEFL format: I asked the question, gave him 15 seconds to think about the question, then gave him 45 seconds to answer the question. I thought it would be productive for Anibal and I to both listen to his responses so he could try to find his errors. We played back his recording and we both wrote down grammar, pronunciation, and structural errors we found. Surprisingly enough, I had Anibal describe to me the errors he found first, and he had written down all of the errors I had. With the exception of a few, he had noticed all of his mistakes. This showed me that English is definitely in his learned system, it is just not always monitoring his acquired system to make corrections immediately.
My third conversation partner meeting was with Josue, my conversation partner from Paris, France. He suggested that we go to a restaurant for this meeting, and recommended the Colombian restaurant on Tennessee St. called "Super Perros". I had never been to this restaurant before, so it was interesting to not only converse with someone from outside of my culture but also at a cultural restaurant with an atmosphere and menu different than what I am used to. Most of the menu was in Spanish, so we were able to bond over trying to figure out what the menu was saying, and ended up sharing a lot of laughs over it. During our meeting, we caught up on how he was doing at CIES, what he's involved in in Tallahasee, and discussed deeper topics such as the current political affairs going on in France. This led to a grander discussion about American politics, and it turned out we had similar views. It was interesting to connect our ideas across border lines, realizing we all want the ...
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