The UCA organized conference on the dignity of human life
The UCA organized conference on the dignity of human life
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Monday, March 28, 2011
Goldfish, Lump, Above Mouth
"DREAMS OF TEACHERS '
Today I made a small dynamic with my undergraduate students in Elementary Education. I proposed to dream with maetro / a want to be. This is what has gone and how I liked what I share with all my friends. DECALOGUE
"DREAMS OF TEACHERS '
- COLLABORATION. @ I want to be a teacher working in collaboration with other teachers @ s.
- SCHOOL AND SOCIETY. Facilitate the integration dream school and society and family, and want it to be possible.
- ADAPTATION AND TRAINING. I be able to adapt to the times, to the contexts and people.
- creative and motivating. I need to be creative and motivating for my students to learn creatively and make it so motivated.
- LEADER FOR MY STUDENTS. I want my students to trust me. I want to be your mentor and model.
- MAESTRO TOTAL. I want to build learning mediate values, feelings and knowledge.
- CONSIDER FOR FAMILIES. I want to involve families in school.
- CUSTOM OF EDUCATION. I worry about all that matters to my students "one by one."
- POWER CAPACITY. I castrate be able to see the potential gives each of my students and my students develop to the maximum extent possible.
- SECURITIES AND HUMANITY. I want to develop their values \u200b\u200band make education a profession to be in humanity.
Today I made a small dynamic with my undergraduate students in Elementary Education. I proposed to dream with maetro / a want to be. This is what has gone and how I liked what I share with all my friends. DECALOGUE
"DREAMS OF TEACHERS '
- COLLABORATION. @ I want to be a teacher working in collaboration with other teachers @ s.
- SCHOOL AND SOCIETY. Facilitate the integration dream school and society and family, and want it to be possible.
- ADAPTATION AND TRAINING. I be able to adapt to the times, to the contexts and people.
- creative and motivating. I need to be creative and motivating for my students to learn creatively and make it so motivated.
- LEADER FOR MY STUDENTS. I want my students to trust me. I want to be your mentor and model.
- MAESTRO TOTAL. I want to build learning mediate values, feelings and knowledge.
- CONSIDER FOR FAMILIES. I want to involve families in school.
- CUSTOM OF EDUCATION. I worry about all that matters to my students "one by one."
- POWER CAPACITY. I castrate be able to see the potential gives each of my students and my students develop to the maximum extent possible.
- SECURITIES AND HUMANITY. I want to develop their values \u200b\u200band make education a profession to be in humanity.
This Decalogue is synthesized in two: be happy to help my students and work together to make a better world.
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Are Shaved Truffles Safe To Eat In Pregnancy
Teach yourself interactive whiteboard (PDI)
the hand of the Marquis professor at the Autonomous University of Barcelona participated the research experience on "digital whiteboard in the classroom." This manual offers some clues for a proper exploitation of this powerful educational technology tool that every day is more present in our classrooms.
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Mini Nfl Plastic Football Helmets
Interculturalism and education.
Some students have asked me to speak in class about the conceptual definition of "multiculturalism" and its differences with multiculturalism, multiculturalism, etc., And the implications for the phenomena and related terms: assimilation, ethnocentrism, xenophobia, symmetrical relations, miscegenation, .. etc.etc.
As there is content of my course, I've sent you to read my 'brief comment through this blog, which, of course, I get out of the conceptual approach and I intend to give a more practical.
educational level, multiculturalism is a process. Intercultural development is carried out every day, every educational activity. This idea puts the focus on "intercultural curriculum."
intercultural development must be intentional. This requires implement all the mechanisms pedagogical and curricular our reach:
- A work jurisdiction, where social competence has an important role.
- explicit targets aimed at knowledge of others.
- Some content where relevant are treated with equal cultural and historical characteristics of all participants in the classroom.
- A presentation of information with a variety of cultural models.
- Some activities which aim to observe the similarities and an explanation of the differences.
- A prime methodology where dialogue, joint reflection, constructive criticism and collaborative work cooperatively cutting.
- contemplate an assessment where all cultural events number (language, cultural facts, views, history, ...)
In conclusion, a model of teaching and learning where multiculturalism is intentional and obvious in the school curriculum.
Monday, March 21, 2011
Lots Of Phlegm But No Cold
discover how the egg attracts the sperm - Avanza
discover how the egg attracts the sperm - lanacion.com
discover how the egg attracts the sperm - lanacion.com
Saturday, March 19, 2011
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Jcpenney Salon Color Costs
Spanish first baby born without a genetic mutation that predisposes breast cancer - Terra Argentina
English first baby born without genetic mutation predisposes breast cancer - Terra Argentina
English first baby born without genetic mutation predisposes breast cancer - Terra Argentina
How Do You Store Champagne
Harvard University gives reason to the pope on AIDS
Harvard University gives reason to the pope on AIDS
Harvard University gives reason to the pope on AIDS
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Iron Levels In Leukemia
The UBA, two dental clinics serving high-risk patients - lanacion.com
In the UBA, two dental clinics serving high-risk patients - lanacion.com
In the UBA, two dental clinics serving high-risk patients - lanacion.com
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Friday, March 11, 2011
Pinnacle Tv Center Pro X64
reviews the latest advances in stem cells - lanacion.com
reviews the latest advances in stem cells - lanacion.com
reviews the latest advances in stem cells - lanacion.com
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
2000 Yamaha Grizzly Carb
EXPERTS SET FORTH IN CHILEAN CONGRESS ON ABORTION AND MATERNAL MORTALITY
ELARD KOCH, MIGUEL BRAVO , Andres Carreño
Family Health Department Faculty Medicine University of Chile
Buenos Aires, March 2011 .- Doctors and researchers visit Argentina and Chile will present on Wednesday, March 2, 2011 at 11am. in the Chamber of Deputies (Annex Building) results and key findings from their research on the number of abortions performed in Chile and Argentina each year and on the linkage between abortion and maternal mortality.
The prohibition of abortion to protect unborn human life combined with a strategy that increases maternal antenatal care and skilled care delivery, reduce both maternal mortality and the magnitude the problem of illegally induced abortion in time.
An eventual legalization of abortion in Argentina substantially increase the magnitude of abortions on demand (2.3 times the next 10 years and 5.1 times after 50 years of legalization or decriminalization) estimated that by 2020 induced abortions will increase from 47,636 to 113,586.
The number of clandestine abortions reported for Argentina recently, is overestimated.
The increase in health costs and diversion of resources to meet the demand for abortions on demand thus bring a reduction in resources for increased prenatal and obstetric care specialist with a deleterious impact on maternal and neonatal health.
According to a current report of the World Health Organization (WHO), 60% of maternal deaths in Latin America occurs in hypertension, haemorrhage and obstruction of labor and delivery, while abortion is the fourth of the causes, accounting for only 12% of the total. However, abortion has received disproportionate attention on the grounds that it was banned in developing countries would be the main determinant of the high mortality Aterno, taking recently been evaluated in Chile, whose results contradict this paradigm.
In Argentina, abortion is illegal to protect human life from birth, permitted only under strict conditions and restricted. This has caused criticism from various national and international NGOs, urging the Argentine government to legalize abortion in order to reduce the high number of illegal abortions, which by some estimates reach the 466,998 abortions. Have porpuesto different models or statistical methods to estimate the magnitude of abortion, some scientific sustetno lacking.
HYPOTHESIS:
- illegal abortion figures reported in Argentina are overstated by at least 50% of its magnitude.
- the decriminalization or legalization of induced abortion increases its magnitude as a function of time.
METHODOLOGY:
Based on official vital statistics, the author traces and analyzes a series of maternal mortality ratio (MMR) between 1980 and 2009. The number of induced abortions was estimated using two models by Koch et al. First, we use the model of expected pregnancies (EPM). Based on the biological likely a viable conception published by Wilcox et al. in the New England Journal of Medicine, and from objective data as the total fertility rate (TFR) and the female population of childbearing age, one can estimate the number of pregnancies that occur each year in a country. In light of this new knowledge, not available when other methods of estimating illegal abortions were proposed, one can know the total number of pregnancies expected, the proportion of pregnancies that are interrupted very early spontaneous, as seamlessly as a loss evidenced clinically. The remaining viable pregnancies are divided into 3 groups: those ending in live naciods that each country is in their vital statistics, stillbirths, of which there are reliable records and the group for induced abortions calculated as the remaining missing. The second method less accurate than the EPM, corresponds to an equation linearly related to TGF with a goodness of fit of 95%. Finally, the model uses a quadratic function of time based on data from 18 European countries with legal abortion to project the trend in the number of abortions over time if hypothetically decriminalized in 2011.
RESULTS:
Between 1951 and 2007, abortion mortality in Chile fell from 69.51 to 1.65 per 100,000 live naciods, representing a reduction of 97.6%. After the complete banning of therapeutic abortion, maternal mortality from this cause fell 87.9% (ie from 13.72 to 1.65 per 100,000 live births). Currently the risk to die of abortion in Chile is less than 1 in two million women of childbearing age. Applying the EPM, in Chile currently estimated 19,390 induced abortions illegal, while in 1957 the figure was estimated close to 200,000 abortions. This confirms a parallel reduction in maternal mortality from abortion and the problem of illegally induced abortion in Chile.
DEIS Official figures from Argentina, during the study period, the highest MMR was observed in 1980, 70 per 100,000 live births, and lowest in 2000, 35 per 100,000 live naciods. By 2009, the MMR declined 21.4% on a cumulative basis. While the MMR has been declining in recent 29 years, the data indicate that Argentina requires a reduction additional 40% to achieve the goal of public health operating plan (ie achieve a MMR of 33 per 100,000 live births by the year 2011), proposed by the Ministry of Health of the Nation to reduce maternal mortality in general and abortion.
This goal is potentially achievable if you increase the coverage of antenatal care, emergency obstetric care and professional care during childbirth, the latter achieved 83.7% coverage of live births in 2009, while still leaving a significant percentage of patients at high risk obstetrics without access to specialist care in hospitals, in contrast with 99.9% coverage of current observed Chile.
In 2009, there were 410 maternal deaths in Argentina. According to the ICD-10, the direct and indirect obstetric causes, excluding codes 000 to 007 (including the different types of abortion) were the main causes, reaching 78.7%. Of the 87 pregnancies ended in abortion, official reports to which we had access not indicate the share of induced abortions compared to other types of abortions, especially ectopic pregnancy, a major cause of obstetric emergency. Applying the EMP
similar to the Chilean case, the number of clandestine abortions in Argentina in 2007 was estimated at 47,636, ie 9.8 times fewer abortions than the figure reported by the agency Human Rights Watch, who relied on a study of Mario and Pantelides. This overestimation in the magnitude of induced abortions was also observed when using the same methodology in Mexico, amplifying 10 times the number of illegal induced abortions.
Using a predictive model based on a linear equation related to the TGF, induced abortions are estimated at more than 68,978 illegally induced abortions in Argentina. In considering this magnitude, is crude incidence rate of 7.12 abortions per 1000 women of childbearing age is lower than the overall rate observed in most European countries with legalized or decriminalized abortion.
The ratio for live birth abortion, a measure that allows comparison between countries is 0.098 (ie 1 abortion for every 10.1) for Argentina, which is very close to the value of 0.092 estimated for Chile (ie 1 abortion for every 10 , 8 live births). Using estimates of Mario and Pantelides for 700,792 live births reported for Argentina in 2007, this ratio would be of 0.66 abortions per live birth or expressed conversely, that Argentina would happen one abortion for every 1.5 live births; if this figure were valid, would be the highest ratio in the world (over Romania), somewhat unlikely, if we think in European Union countries with legalized abortion, this ratio varies from 1 abortion for every 1.68 (Romania) to 1 in 6.79 (Greece) born in the present.
If hypothetically induced abortion was decriminalized in Argentina in 2011, we project the stage for the next 10 years, adjusting for the observed rate of induced abortion in Spain for the period 1998-2008 in the female population of childbearing age (15 to 44 years), considering that the year 2020 induced abortions will increase from 47,636 to 113,586 after legalization (ie an increase of 138% from current illegal abortions). The trend in the number of abortions for the next 50 years according to the average of 18 European countries with abortion legal, the year 2060 is expected in Argentina and 245,371 legal induced abortions (ie legal induced abortions will increase 415%), while in Chile, if the decriminalization of abortion, would rise from 19,390 currently to 81.788 illegal abortions induced abortions for 2060.
It concludes that the legalization of ABORTION IS NOT AN EFFECTIVE STRATEGY TO REDUCE MATERNAL MORTALITY CONTROL PROBLEM AND INDUCED ABORTION, AND COULD EVEN BRING deleterious consequences FOR MATERNAL AND NEONATAL, especially in countries with high mortality REMAINING MATERNAL.
Media contacts: Karen Vizental
grupa.pr
Virginia Ma kvizental@grupapr.com.ar Greek
vgriego@grupapr.com.ar
Tel: 54 11 4814.5001
ELARD KOCH, MIGUEL BRAVO , Andres Carreño
Family Health Department Faculty Medicine University of Chile
Buenos Aires, March 2011 .- Doctors and researchers visit Argentina and Chile will present on Wednesday, March 2, 2011 at 11am. in the Chamber of Deputies (Annex Building) results and key findings from their research on the number of abortions performed in Chile and Argentina each year and on the linkage between abortion and maternal mortality.
The prohibition of abortion to protect unborn human life combined with a strategy that increases maternal antenatal care and skilled care delivery, reduce both maternal mortality and the magnitude the problem of illegally induced abortion in time.
An eventual legalization of abortion in Argentina substantially increase the magnitude of abortions on demand (2.3 times the next 10 years and 5.1 times after 50 years of legalization or decriminalization) estimated that by 2020 induced abortions will increase from 47,636 to 113,586.
The number of clandestine abortions reported for Argentina recently, is overestimated.
The increase in health costs and diversion of resources to meet the demand for abortions on demand thus bring a reduction in resources for increased prenatal and obstetric care specialist with a deleterious impact on maternal and neonatal health.
According to a current report of the World Health Organization (WHO), 60% of maternal deaths in Latin America occurs in hypertension, haemorrhage and obstruction of labor and delivery, while abortion is the fourth of the causes, accounting for only 12% of the total. However, abortion has received disproportionate attention on the grounds that it was banned in developing countries would be the main determinant of the high mortality Aterno, taking recently been evaluated in Chile, whose results contradict this paradigm.
In Argentina, abortion is illegal to protect human life from birth, permitted only under strict conditions and restricted. This has caused criticism from various national and international NGOs, urging the Argentine government to legalize abortion in order to reduce the high number of illegal abortions, which by some estimates reach the 466,998 abortions. Have porpuesto different models or statistical methods to estimate the magnitude of abortion, some scientific sustetno lacking.
HYPOTHESIS:
- illegal abortion figures reported in Argentina are overstated by at least 50% of its magnitude.
- the decriminalization or legalization of induced abortion increases its magnitude as a function of time.
METHODOLOGY:
Based on official vital statistics, the author traces and analyzes a series of maternal mortality ratio (MMR) between 1980 and 2009. The number of induced abortions was estimated using two models by Koch et al. First, we use the model of expected pregnancies (EPM). Based on the biological likely a viable conception published by Wilcox et al. in the New England Journal of Medicine, and from objective data as the total fertility rate (TFR) and the female population of childbearing age, one can estimate the number of pregnancies that occur each year in a country. In light of this new knowledge, not available when other methods of estimating illegal abortions were proposed, one can know the total number of pregnancies expected, the proportion of pregnancies that are interrupted very early spontaneous, as seamlessly as a loss evidenced clinically. The remaining viable pregnancies are divided into 3 groups: those ending in live naciods that each country is in their vital statistics, stillbirths, of which there are reliable records and the group for induced abortions calculated as the remaining missing. The second method less accurate than the EPM, corresponds to an equation linearly related to TGF with a goodness of fit of 95%. Finally, the model uses a quadratic function of time based on data from 18 European countries with legal abortion to project the trend in the number of abortions over time if hypothetically decriminalized in 2011.
RESULTS:
Between 1951 and 2007, abortion mortality in Chile fell from 69.51 to 1.65 per 100,000 live naciods, representing a reduction of 97.6%. After the complete banning of therapeutic abortion, maternal mortality from this cause fell 87.9% (ie from 13.72 to 1.65 per 100,000 live births). Currently the risk to die of abortion in Chile is less than 1 in two million women of childbearing age. Applying the EPM, in Chile currently estimated 19,390 induced abortions illegal, while in 1957 the figure was estimated close to 200,000 abortions. This confirms a parallel reduction in maternal mortality from abortion and the problem of illegally induced abortion in Chile.
DEIS Official figures from Argentina, during the study period, the highest MMR was observed in 1980, 70 per 100,000 live births, and lowest in 2000, 35 per 100,000 live naciods. By 2009, the MMR declined 21.4% on a cumulative basis. While the MMR has been declining in recent 29 years, the data indicate that Argentina requires a reduction additional 40% to achieve the goal of public health operating plan (ie achieve a MMR of 33 per 100,000 live births by the year 2011), proposed by the Ministry of Health of the Nation to reduce maternal mortality in general and abortion.
This goal is potentially achievable if you increase the coverage of antenatal care, emergency obstetric care and professional care during childbirth, the latter achieved 83.7% coverage of live births in 2009, while still leaving a significant percentage of patients at high risk obstetrics without access to specialist care in hospitals, in contrast with 99.9% coverage of current observed Chile.
In 2009, there were 410 maternal deaths in Argentina. According to the ICD-10, the direct and indirect obstetric causes, excluding codes 000 to 007 (including the different types of abortion) were the main causes, reaching 78.7%. Of the 87 pregnancies ended in abortion, official reports to which we had access not indicate the share of induced abortions compared to other types of abortions, especially ectopic pregnancy, a major cause of obstetric emergency. Applying the EMP
similar to the Chilean case, the number of clandestine abortions in Argentina in 2007 was estimated at 47,636, ie 9.8 times fewer abortions than the figure reported by the agency Human Rights Watch, who relied on a study of Mario and Pantelides. This overestimation in the magnitude of induced abortions was also observed when using the same methodology in Mexico, amplifying 10 times the number of illegal induced abortions.
Using a predictive model based on a linear equation related to the TGF, induced abortions are estimated at more than 68,978 illegally induced abortions in Argentina. In considering this magnitude, is crude incidence rate of 7.12 abortions per 1000 women of childbearing age is lower than the overall rate observed in most European countries with legalized or decriminalized abortion.
The ratio for live birth abortion, a measure that allows comparison between countries is 0.098 (ie 1 abortion for every 10.1) for Argentina, which is very close to the value of 0.092 estimated for Chile (ie 1 abortion for every 10 , 8 live births). Using estimates of Mario and Pantelides for 700,792 live births reported for Argentina in 2007, this ratio would be of 0.66 abortions per live birth or expressed conversely, that Argentina would happen one abortion for every 1.5 live births; if this figure were valid, would be the highest ratio in the world (over Romania), somewhat unlikely, if we think in European Union countries with legalized abortion, this ratio varies from 1 abortion for every 1.68 (Romania) to 1 in 6.79 (Greece) born in the present.
If hypothetically induced abortion was decriminalized in Argentina in 2011, we project the stage for the next 10 years, adjusting for the observed rate of induced abortion in Spain for the period 1998-2008 in the female population of childbearing age (15 to 44 years), considering that the year 2020 induced abortions will increase from 47,636 to 113,586 after legalization (ie an increase of 138% from current illegal abortions). The trend in the number of abortions for the next 50 years according to the average of 18 European countries with abortion legal, the year 2060 is expected in Argentina and 245,371 legal induced abortions (ie legal induced abortions will increase 415%), while in Chile, if the decriminalization of abortion, would rise from 19,390 currently to 81.788 illegal abortions induced abortions for 2060.
It concludes that the legalization of ABORTION IS NOT AN EFFECTIVE STRATEGY TO REDUCE MATERNAL MORTALITY CONTROL PROBLEM AND INDUCED ABORTION, AND COULD EVEN BRING deleterious consequences FOR MATERNAL AND NEONATAL, especially in countries with high mortality REMAINING MATERNAL.
Media contacts: Karen Vizental
grupa.pr
Virginia Ma kvizental@grupapr.com.ar Greek
vgriego@grupapr.com.ar
Tel: 54 11 4814.5001
How Long Can I Take To Pay Restitution
The abortion causes one in four deaths Pregnant women
The abortion causes one of every four deaths among pregnant women
The abortion causes one of every four deaths among pregnant women
Monday, March 7, 2011
Sunday, March 6, 2011
Lia Sophia Jewlery Game
rehearse new criteria for kidney donation - lanacion.com
Benedict XVI: yes to the donation of umbilical cord - lanacion.com Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Jose Cuervo Premixed Margarita And Ice
pregnant child allowance, a non-abortion
19:41 longing for a child has become a very special moment for the family. But what happens when Mother Nature does not touch us with wand? Luckily, and thanks to the advancement of science, medicine has made great strides and, in many cases, offset the inability to bear children.
suffered by a thousand couples around the world, infertility comes with a long illness in tow. "I'm going to be a mother ... nevertheless "is the book that Marisa Brel has the painful and long search for Paloma, an" unwanted baby, you know the effort we made to give life ", he says. 19:41 longing for a child has become a very special moment for the family. But what happens when Mother Nature does not touch us with wand? Luckily, and thanks to the advancement of science, medicine has made great strides and, in many cases, offset the inability to bear children.
EL1 In an interview with the journalist has his eyes and defines text as "friends of paper, to refer to when you have questions and need answers."
How was the process of searching for your daughter? Very deep and painful. Is not something you expect in life, hard to accept that suffer infertility. I looked thinking that I blew and got pregnant. After two years, in 1999, I got pregnant, but I blew a fallopian tube and, hence, the term began to appear in vitro. I had a great doctor and a lot of psychological support. This has to do with the emotional, because when you put the body, I played and it hurts, you make millions of studies and results is a string of not, is a heartbreaking situation. And the whole process of starting over is an important strength. That is what my book, not giving up, despite being mother to all and any diagnosis. Because, if you wish to heart, all worth it. And when you decided to write the book?
a year ago. A close friend was in the process of searching through science and came from a frustration of a negative. I held back for weeks and one day he called me crying. We talked for 40 minutes and ended by saying: "Brel, would write a book! I use what I say. " So I thought and I found that I spent all this time telling people who called or wrote me from different places. Everything came naturally, although I had to return to areas that did not want. It was very impressive, but healing. Take me off was a big backpack.
Do you consider it a benchmark?
Unintentionally, I became a reference in the subject because, during the search for Paloma, never hid anything. Or when I wanted, and when I lost a pregnancy, or when they told me I had to do in vitro, or when he was excited by the treatments and I said "Negative." Thus, people began to write, for me, calling me, to me for advice, wondering what it was, if it hurt, how much it cost. So for ten years. Then one day, blew my head and said: "I think my words can help curb the pain of many couples and women who have to address this."
And the issue also came to Congress. Yes, I was approached Rep. Raul Perez, who had submitted, in the province of Buenos Aires, the Law on Assisted Fertilization free, and I joined the cause. Last year, I worked a lot with Governor Daniel Scioli and the last days of December I left the law overflowing with excitement! Thus, no only I have the opportunity to be a mother, but also all the women of Buenos Aires. There are a million and a half they need to do these treatments and now are free, without having a social. We have enough to know that we can not be mothers naturally to add the inability to do anything for lack of money. Do you think take it to the TV?
I have wanted to do a talk show, with testimonials. Also, I have the possibility of a Hollywood producer to short in my book. But for now, I'm writing the second part with Dr. Pasqualini, who looked after me. This is a universe of information that ordinary people, people fertile, have no idea that it exists. I want it as a guide for advice.
What's it like being a mother yet?
Pure Love. Within that, of all things, transcendence, the feeling that life makes more sense when you bring a being into this world, be a vehicle for a soul we choose to fulfill its mission as a mother or the heart. You feel like you can become a better person by giving his all for a little boy be able to open their wings and fly.
Release Date: 21/02/2011
Source: EL1
Available at: http://www.periodicouno.com.ar/index.php?idPage=20&idArticulo=21184
Goldwell Color Chart Online
Benedict XVI: yes to the donation of umbilical cord - IN VITRO FERTILIZATION
Source: AICA
died
Dr. Nathanson, "King of abortion" a leading pro
Source: AICA
died
Dr. Nathanson, "King of abortion" a leading pro
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
What Is The Sensation Of Hot Spots
Tasks for the learning of Spanish as a second language
I just created a page on this blog where you can get examples of tasks designed for teaching and learning of English as a second language.
These tasks participants are planned to coordinate on Course Curriculum and Methodology for Teaching English as a Foreign Language.
I just created a page on this blog where you can get examples of tasks designed for teaching and learning of English as a second language.
These tasks participants are planned to coordinate on Course Curriculum and Methodology for Teaching English as a Foreign Language.
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