Posts

Gampanin ng “SALLY’S SEASHELLS” (2022) sa Pagkilala ng Kasaysayan sa Tekstong Pampatalastas

Image
  Sally's Seashells (Extended) | Big Game Commercial 2022,   mula sa YouTube channel ng Squarespace Tiyak na nahingian ka na ng halimbawa ng pilipit-dila o tongue twister ng iyong guro sa Ingles o kaya’y nasubukan nang magpadala sa litong naidudulot ng pagbigkas nito bilang paligsahang magkakaklase o magkakakaibigan. Nakadepende sa maling pagbigkas at kung mabubulol ang tagapagsalita upang maging kaaliw-aliw at matagumpay ang paglalaro. Isa sa pinakatanyag na mga pilipit-dila sa wikang Ingles ang “ she sells seashells ” ( Martemianova at Nadiya 2020, 83-84) na tampok noong ika-19 na siglo matapos malimbag noong 1850 bilang ensayong pandiksyon. Nang kalaunan, nahanap ng manunulat-patnugot na si Stephen Winick (2017) ang panibagong bersyon [1] ng pilipit-dila (na naging opisyal na tawag dito noong 1895) na “ Sally sells seashells ”. Tatlong beses na lamang lilitaw ang bersyong gumagamit sa pangalang Sally noong 1948, 1964, at 1965 bago ito magtampok noong 1980. Tatalakayin ko ang

'Barrio Sipsipnget' and Other Good Stuff: Professor JANET TIBALDO on Communicating Empathetically

Image
Reaping the fruits of her maternal, academic, and Christ-like labor, our esteemed speaker gives us an inside scoop on work-life balance as a teacher striving in a global pandemic, in more or less a hundred minutes. You think you have a lot on your plate more than you can masticate? Tibaldo's students sit in awe as they are filled in on her school-wise life updates: finishing her PhD during lockdown meant a virtual graduation that would not exactly live up to the actual march to the stage and an exciting journal article in the editing pipeline, already accepted for publication early November 2020. An alumna herself of Saint Louis University (SLU)'s Mass Communication Program, Janet S. Tibaldo also acquired her MA in Language Education and PhD Language in Baguio's top university. Born in the Martial Law Era and an activist prior to her heydays as a tertiary educator, Tibaldo of the Department of Language and Communication in SLU's School of Teacher Education and Liberal A