Beginner English as a second language Quizzes, Interactive Mind Map based on
2,000+ ESL/EFL
Conversations on Different Topics, Practice "Speaking" English with an
Online Robot.
ESL (English as a second language), ESOL (English for speakers of other
languages), and EFL (English as a foreign language) all refer to the use or
study of English by speakers with a different native language.
The many acronyms used in the field of English teaching and learning may be
confusing. English is a language with great reach and influence; it is taught
all over the world under many different circumstances. In English-speaking
countries, English language teaching has essentially evolved in two broad
directions: instruction for people who intend to live in an English-speaking
country and for those who don't. These divisions have grown firmer as the
instructors of these two "industries" have used different terminology, followed
distinct training qualifications, formed separate professional associations, and
so on. Crucially, these two arms have very different funding structures, public
in the former and private in the latter, and to some extent this influences the
way schools are established and classes are held. Source:
Wikipedia English as a foreign or second language
A Library is a collection of sources, resources, and services, and the
structure in which it is housed; it is organized for use and maintained by a
public body, an institution, or a private individual. In the more traditional
sense, a library is a collection of books. It can mean the collection, the
building or room that houses such a collection, or both. The term "library" has
itself acquired a secondary meaning: "a collection of useful material for common
use." This sense is used in fields such as computer science, mathematics,
statistics, electronics and biology. is a financial intermediary that accepts
deposits and channels those deposits into lending activities. Source:
Wikipedia, Library.
Graphic organizers Graphic organizers are visual
representations of knowledge, concepts or ideas.
Mindmap
Instructions:
To see a note, hover over a note button
above.
To scroll the mindmap above, click and drag the map's background and move
it around , or click on background and use the arrow keys.
To
link to another page, click a link button
above.
To Fold/Unfold a node, click the node
or right click a Node and select Fold/Unfold all from Node.
Buttons above:
Search,
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to,
Zoom
in or CTRL '+',
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out or CTRL '-',
Reset
(center), Shadow
On/
Off,