Gale Workman
TP#12
Sept. 18, 2014, 11:50 a.m.
Hecht House
Midterms took their toll on students this week. Jiwanwei and
Wiwik arrived promptly for our brown bag tutoring session, but stress and
fatigue was in their faces and body postures. We chatted casually about the
stress awhile as we tucked into our lunch kits.
Also, as usual, we discussed what we brought for lunch and
how the food was prepared. Each session, these students ask questions about
food and cooking vocabulary. New food at the table this week was “eggplant.” Everybody
eats, so food is high-frequency vocabulary.
Wiwik told us she had just given a “how-to” presentation
about math in a CIES class. Wiwik hopes to enroll in a master’s program in math
education. I asked her to tell us about how she uses 10 fingers to teach
children how to multiply. She demonstrated and I was amazed. Nobody ever taught
me this simple trick!
I’m not sure how it started, but a lesson about dependent
clauses took up the remainder of the session. Jianwei and Wiwik are in the same
Composition class, so I think they must have recently reviewed dependent
clauses in class. They both struggled with how to use them in a sentence.
At one point, we wandered into the
who-whom/nominative-objective case rules. This seemed to be new territory for
both students, and the stress and fatigue returned to their faces, so we
decided to save who-whom for another day.
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