Posts Tagged ‘Cross cultural learning’

Dear Cosmo students and parents,

Friday, November 20th, 2009

 

IMG 6652 300x200 Dear Cosmo students and parents,Once again the school parties have come to an end, and the teachers and I wish to thank each one of you for a couple of very nice evenings. It is always a pleasure to meet under more informal circumstances, where we have a chance to talk with each other in a less structured manner.

It is impossible to avoid that a huge project like our school parties with between 800 and 1000 guests each evening will cause some disturbances in our everyday life and daily routines, but I do believe that everything has gone without problems, and that it has been an eventful week for us all to remember.IMG 6842 300x200 Dear Cosmo students and parents,

 

 

So thank you very much for your participation and your good spirits.

On behalf of the teachers,

Simon Mosekjær

Bring the World Home – Host an Up with People Cast Member

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

UWP header 1 Bring the World Home – Host an Up with People Cast MemberFor More Information Contact: Cheryssa Jensen, Promotions Representative

Office: 88 20 21 10, Mobile: 27 99 75 84, E-mail: cjensen@upwithpeople.org

Families in the Kolding area will have the unique opportunity to bring a bit of the world into their own homes between November 8th and November 14th when an international cast of Up with People arrives in Kolding as a stop on their 2009 world tour.

Host families are being sought to keep one or more students from the 85-member Up with People cast which represents 20 countries and more than 25 states.  “It is a great opportunity to experience other cultures while sharing your own,” explained Cheryssa Jensen. 

The opportunity to stay with local families during their stay in each community is a centerpiece of Up with People’s 22-week program.  The giving goes both ways…while families share their traditions and local attractions; the cast members share their experiences and cultures. 

Local host families are asked to provide a bed, local transportation at the beginning and end of each day, as well as breakfast and most dinners.  During most evenings, cast members will be home with the family to participate in their activities and interests.

In addition to many wonderful experiences with their new “son” or “daughter,” each host family will be invited to a special Up with People Show on Friday, November 13th.

Host an Up with People Cast Member

“I can honestly say that the dozens of families who have opened their homes to me during my time with Up with People is one of the most meaningful and memorable experiences I have had,” said Cheryssa Jensen. “I still stay in contact with many of them and I believe they will become lifelong friends,” she added.

“Those with smaller children or young teens in their home often find that the Up with People cast members are wonderful role models and provide a glimpse into other countries, cultures and traditions they might not often experience in Kolding,” Jensen added.

Local families in the Kolding area are being sought to host the cast members between November 8th and November 14th. Those interested in hosting are encouraged to contact Cheryssa Jensen on the Kolding Advance Team at cjensen@upwithpeople.org or by calling 27 99 75 84.

Up with People’s visit to Kolding is sponsored by Aperian Global, Business Kolding, Kolding Realskole, and The Cosmo – International School of Southern Denmark.

AG Logo Medium JPGCosmo 300x114 Bring the World Home – Host an Up with People Cast Member

 

 

 UWP Horizontal Logo 300x86 Bring the World Home – Host an Up with People Cast Member

 

 

 

Up with People is an independent nonprofit, [501(c)(3)] organization without any religious or political affiliations.  It provides young adults an international and intercultural experience that teaches service leadership and uses the performing arts to deliver messages of hope and goodwill throughout the world.  Up with People exists today to spark people to action in meeting the needs of their communities, countries and the world while building bridges of understanding as a foundation for world peace. For more information visit www.upwithpeople.org.

Improve Your English 2

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

More than 400 million people around the world speak English and the rest, it sometimes seem, try to. It would be charitable to say that the results are sometimes mixed.

To be fair, English is full of booby traps for the unwary foreigner. Any language where the unassuming word fly signifies a buzzing insect, which at times can be rather annoying; a comfortable means of travel, unless you accidently have chosen one of the low budget companies, which will try to rob you blind with extra charges and fees for this and that; and a critical part of a gentleman’s apparel, hiding his most private parts from sight, is clearly asked to be mangled.

As non-native speakers we have to learn that in English one tells a lie but the truth, that an American who says “I could care less” means the same thing as someone who says “I couldn’t care less”, and that a sign in a shop saying ALL ITEMS NOT ON SALE, doesn’t mean literally what it says – that every item is not on sale – but rather that only some of the items are on sale.

Most writers of the messages below, which we hope that you will enjoy just as much as we have, were not about to let a little ignorance of English stand in the way of communicating. In fact, it would appear that one of the beauties of the English language is that with even the most tenuous grasp of the English language you can speak volumes if you show enough enthusiasm – a willingness to make do. And the authors of these signs, which were all produced for the Olympic Games in Beijing, China, surely had a willingness to make do. 

 

And if you are dead, please go to the hospital!

 

Just so you know

Well, it is free...

Falling should be planned…

I’ll keep a look out…

I wouldn’t dare…

New in this section Bowling with Bilbo

Other children are OK...

Yeah, cheated out of breathing...

Ouch!

Press it because you want to....

Start with the big toe...

What can I say?

That would explain the beer cubs outside...

A difficult meal...

The pool man is gonna freak

Improve Your English

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

A good offer for English speaking students at Kolding Realskole

Improve Your EnglishIf you have children attending classes at Kolding Realskole and you would like them to improve and/or maintain their English standards, we are able to offer them lessons every afternoon at The Cosmo.

We already have students that join our lessons every day – mostly from 13 pm until 13.45 pm – Wednesdays to 15.15 pm.

Here they have the possibility of speaking, reading, writing and hearing English. All the lessons are of course taught in English by qualified teachers.

The students will be provided with extra teaching material other than what they use at Kolding Realskole, and they might have homework.

Please visit our website or blog for further information or contact Head of Department Simon Mosekjaer at +45 2052 0549 for additional information and prices.

There might be many reason of why one should improve and maintain a certain degree of eloquence when speaking English, but no one explains it better that this commercial. Enjoy the video!

Out With The Teacher’s Desk…

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

Proximity, flexibility and manoeuvring room are the key words for classroom management

What is really important and decisive for whether a student participates in the classroom teaching, talks to the student with whom he or she shares a desk or is lost in reverie?

The answer to that question is the distance to the teacher. And that is why it is utterly important how a classroom is organized and furnished.

Classroom Management

Classroom Management

The better the organization and furnishing of the classroom, the higher the quality of the teaching and the students’ participation. Professor Fred Jones, who is one of United States’ leading experts in classroom management, which is the art of controlling a class of students while teaching, says that “To place the students’ desks in a good way from the very beginning is the cheapest form of classroom management ever invented.”

The distance between the individual student and the teacher is of great importance, if the teacher is to be as close to the students as possible, when he or she needs to write on the blackboard or show something on a whiteboard. If the teacher has a desk, it should never be placed between the students and the blackboard or the whiteboard – whether board might be in usage in the classroom in question – but it should be placed at one of the sides of the classroom or even amongst the students’ desk, so that the distance between the students and the board is as minimal as humanly possible. At the same time the classroom should according to Fred Jones be organized in such a way that the teacher can move around freely between the students and with only a few paces can reach any of his or hers students.

Move the desks

Professor Fred Jones

Professor Fred Jones

 “The best teachers are those who move around amongst their students, not only when the students work individually, but just as much when it is the teacher, who is teaching or explaining a given matter”, Professor Fred Jones emphasizes.

But it is not always that easy

The ability to move freely around the classroom, while one speaks, engages and motivates the students, is an ability which needs to be trained. And it is imperative that each separate teacher is conscious about the typical pitfalls. The American Patrick W. Miller has written several books about the teacher’s body language and unconscious behaviour, and his studies show that teachers unconsciously station themselves closest to the students, they like the best. For that very reason it is important to be aware of how the teacher moves about in the classroom and to make sure that he or she moves as much as possible and is familiar with the shortest route from one end of the classroom to the other. That secures the highest degree of flexibility and attention from all students to the teacher and vice versa.

But one thing is classroom teaching, another is group work. When the students are engaged in group work it is obviously an advantage to place the students’ desks in smaller groups reflecting the work groups. When the group work is over and done with, it is crucial that the desks are returned to their previous stetting. This rarely happens according to Niels Egelund, who is Professor and Leader of Denmark’s Pedagogical University. He thinks that the organization of desks and chairs in rows just like we know it from churches and the like is the best one, when the students’ attention is to be directed at the teacher.

Classroom management 001

Classroom Management

“I observe so much teaching that I have stopped counting, and I do believe that the students in around half the classrooms, which I visit, are constantly sitting in group work formations. If each school and each teacher was sufficiently aware of and attentive to how much the students disrupt each other with both verbal and non-verbal communication, when they are sitting in group work formations all the time, they would never allow it. It is rather problematic that this group work formation of students’ desks is used as a common standard”, Niels Egelund adds.

Due to the fact that classroom organisation and management should depend entirely on the subjects and contents of the teaching at hand, the possibility for quick and flexible rearrangement of the desks and chairs is important, when classrooms are being organized. And we need to take the organization of the classroom into account for each single lesson, even if it means reorganizing the desks and chairs several times a day, and even if we need to use the first five minutes of every lesson to do so!.

“It is without doubt worth the effort”, Niels Egelund confirms.

Read more about Professor Fred Jones’ methods at http://www.fredjones.com and/or watch this video.

In the introduction to Classroom Management by Fred Jones, the students call themselves Mrs. Garcia’s Freedom Writers thereby refer to the book and film by the same name.

Erin Gruwell

Erin Gruwell

Assigned the thankless task of teaching English at a gang-infested high school at Long Beach, a 23-year-old teacher Erin Gruwell, played by Hilary Swank, resorts to unconventional means of breaking through to her hardened students in the best-seller film The Freedom Writer’s Diaries: How a Teacher and 150 Teens Used Writing to Change Themselves and the World Around Them. The film is based on the novel The Freedom Writer’s Diaries by Erin Gruwell.

The students at Long Beach High School that the young, idealistic teacher tried to move had been written off, and her chances of succeeding scoffed at, but Erin Gruwell wasn’t about to go down without a fight. Long Beach is a place where a new war is waged with each passing day, and when the hardened students who walk those dangerous hallways sense an outsider attempting to understand their plight, their cynical resentment threatens to keep a deadly cycle in motion.

freedom writers0001 Out With The Teachers Desk…

Some of the "Freedom Writters" from the Film

Despite the initially hostile reaction she receives in the classroom, Gruwell uses the writings of Anne Frank and Zlata’s Diary: A Child’s Life in Sarajevo to teach her students not only the basis of the English language, but compassion and tolerance as well. Later, when the time comes to tell their own tales in a project specially designed to explore the daily violence that the majority of students have grown numb to, the barriers that had once stood so strong gradually begin to crumble. When the only chance for survival is to befriend the person who was once your mortal enemy, the world is opened to a whole new realm of possibilities.

International Public Speaking Competition winners’ reports

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

Creating Global Understanding through English

In this month’s newsletter from English Speaking Union of Denmark (ESU) there are two reports from the two young winners of the Danish Public Speaking Competition, Philip Chartell and Sofie Strunch, on their exciting week in London where they competed in the ESU international competition.

esu International Public Speaking Competition winners’ reports

The main objectives of the English Speaking Union are to:

 

Provide a forum for international friendship and understanding through our support of the worldwide network of ESUs and the provision of secretariat facilities for the International Council at our headquarters at Dartmouth House, London

 

Facilitate and assist the establishment and recognition of ESUs worldwide

 

Focus on key current affairs issues through regular international conferences, seminars and meetings

 

Promote English in international public speaking and debate for the support of worldwide communication and dialogue

 

Encourage the enjoyment and constructive use of English through educational programmes

 

Initiate and administer international youth exchange and work experience schemes

 

Provide and create cultural activities

 

Ensure the coordination and coherence of our activities through the skill and dedication of our staff and voluntary helpers

 

Work in close and innovative partnership with our corporate members and sponsors

 

Read more about the English Speaking Union at http://www.esu.org/branches/international/branch.asp?b=471 and http://www.esu.org/branches/international/branch.asp?b=471

 

school debate training International Public Speaking Competition winners’ reports

 

Report from Philip Chartell-Høyer

 

In May of 2009 I had the honor of representing Denmark at the ESU International Public Speaking Competition in London after advancing from the national finals in Copenhagen. I did not imagine when writing my first speech about hate speech that I would have the opportunity to speak in front an acclaimed audience at the ESU’s international headquarters.

 

The first day we had an informal gathering during which the basics of the program were explained to us. We were given name tags and programs which we eagerly looked through to see what we lay in store. At this event I was struck by the fact that the organizer, Annette Fisher, was a young woman just out of university. Everyone seemed very friendly, including the organizers, and we were all pleased that the atmosphere was relaxed and hospitable. Naturally all the participants were a little uptight and nervous among so many unfamiliar people, so many decided to go out that evening to get to know each other a little better and see a bit of London.

 

On the Tuesday we were introduced to the debate we would have the following day. We were put into groups who had to lobby for or against the construction of a second airport on a make believe island. During this process we had to form alliances with other groups and lobbies in order to stand stronger as a united front for or against the construction. The actual debate was performed in old-fashioned House of Commons style which involves putting one’s left hand on one’s head and extending one’s right arm to present a point of information. Everyone got very into the debate and despite some attacks from both sides the tone remained friendly – everyone from the Penguin Protection Agency to the Local Business Organization had a good laugh. In the end my side, the opposition, won the debate.

 

Tuesday afternoon we had the opportunity to visit the House of Commons to watch a live debate. The debate was quite heated because of discussions at the time of the extreme expenditure of certain ministers in England. It was interesting to see how they have maintained certain old customs of debating and traditions such as the use of wigs still persists to some extent for their nostalgic value. In the evening we went to watch the play Woman in Black. Before the play we had a talk with the director who explained the approach he had to the play and what he tried to achieve. I was amazed by how scared we were during the play – many of the scenes made me shriek. I think it was the simplicity of the plot and set, furthered by the fact that there are only 3 character, one of whom you aren’t certain whether is really there, was what made the play so effective. The play definitely made me look at plays differently, making me realize that plays don’t need to be pompous presentations of 300 year old plays.

 

Everything, however, came down to the Thursday when we presented our speeches. Both the other Danish competitor Sofie and I were assigned to the native English speaker heat because of our high level of English. This obviously posed more of a challenge but I felt that the level in our heat was one of the highest which meant that all the speakers held extremely interesting speeches. I spoke about how the English language is asserting its dominance as a world language which some are afraid will cause other languages to become obsolete. Unfortunately I did not make it to the finals but I received compliments from many of the ESU patrons including a Social Anthropologist which I am considering as a career path.

 

Overall I had an amazing trip and I would like to express my greatest gratitude to HE Alexandra Christina personally and the Joachim and Alexandra Fund for their sponsorship.

 

 

Report from Sofie Strunch

 

After having won the English Speaking Union’s Public speaking competition with my speech entitled “The facebook generation”, I went on to represent Denmark with the other winner Phillip, at the ESU public speaking world finals in London, where I changed my title to “let’s get physical, as well as some of the focus points of my speech.

 

Before going to London, I was honestly a bit nervous about meeting so many people from all over the world who shared the same goal as me: Winning the ESU finals. Luckily, everyone shared my nervousness and excitement, and this experience fully lived up to my expectations, and was by far, one of the most thrilling experiences that I have ever had.

 

The trip was not centred around the actual speaking competition alone, but on encouraging us to forge international relationships, and over the next days we had a very busy schedule in front of us.

 

Monday: All of the competitors were lodged at the President Hotel in central London. Due to an exam, I arrived too late to make it to the introductory meeting, but thanks to Phillip, I got all of the information I needed. We had to share a room with one or two of the other competitors, and as I got my room key, and headed for my floor, I had no idea what to expect. I quickly found out that I only had one roommate, and she was Hungarian. Luckily she and I really bonded and had a great time together.

 

Tuesday:  We had introductory meeting, workshops, and lunch at Dartmouth House (ESU world headquarters), which was situated only a few stops from our hotel, by the London underground.

The following afternoon we had a tour of the House of Commons, where we were lucky enough to witness a debate. The evening concluded with a visit to the Fortune Theatre to meet with the director of the play “The Woman in Black”, and later on we got to see the actual play. This was like nothing I had ever seen, a play consisting of only two actors. Even though I had my doubts at first, it turned out to be one of the best plays I have ever seen – and a very frightening one indeed.

 

Wednesday, we had a very cultural day as well. All of the participants met in Trafalgar Square, where we were divided into three large groups. In these groups we had to see the National Gallery, and do a quiz. The following afternoon, we went to the Dartmouth House, to prepare for our public speaking workshop, based on the preparation from the day before. In this workshop we were all divided into political parties and had to put together a political program and afterwards discuss it. Even though there was lack of structure in the debate, this was a very fun event, because everyone really opened up, and was really into it.

 

Thursday: The days quickly flew by and the day we had all been waiting for had finally arrived: The Semi-final. At first when I arrived in London, I thought of nothing else but winning, but after the last couple of days, I considered a lot of the other participants, my friends, and was therefore just as exited for their performance, as well as for my own.

 

All of the participants were dressed in their best suits and dresses, and all ready for battle. The heats were held at the Dartmouth House, and only two from each heat was selected to go to the finals.school international final 2007 in the house of lords International Public Speaking Competition winners’ reports

Sadly, neither Phillip ore I were placed in the top two of our heat. However, I know I did my best, and was not that disappointed, because for one, I was very impressed by the other speakers, and second, I never expected that I would ever get this far and therefore remembered, that we were all winners of our own country.

 

After the 8 finalists were selected, we were escorted by bus, to the grand final, which was held at the HSBC (the official sponsor of the ESU competition). This was an amazing building, and could not be more suitable for this event.

 

Over all, this experience has really given me something I can use not only now, but also later on in life. It has given me confidence and self-esteem, and most importantly friends from all over the world. Even though none of the Danes won, I am so glad I made the choice to attend this competition, and it is something that I will never forget.

 

 The photos used are borrowed from the ESU website. 

A good offer for English speaking students at Kolding Realskole

Friday, August 28th, 2009

If you have children attending classes at Kolding Realskole and you would like them to improve or maintain their English standards, we are able to offer them lessons every afternoon at The Cosmo.

College fundWe already have students that join our lessons every day – mostly from 13 pm until 13.45 pm. Here they speak English and are taught in English. The students will be provided with extra teaching material other than what they use at Kolding Realskole, and they might have homework.

Please contact The Head of Department Simon Mosekjaer at 20 52 05 49 for additional information and prices.

 

A Good Offer

Souaad moves, if The Cosmo closes

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

 NB. This article is a direct translation from a Danish article and it is by no means an expression of the school’s or the school board’s position

High priority: Souaad Rochdi and her family moved from Morocco to Denmark, because her husband got a job in Esbjerg. They chose to live in Kolding so that the children could attend the international school – The Cosmo.

In the corridor, where the international Primary and Lower Secondary of The Cosmo are situated and occupy two classrooms at Kolding Realskole the air is thick with such stories in both English and Danish.

The corridors on Kolding Realskole hum with voices of students who are eager to talk about the events of the summer holiday with their friends, before the teachers arrive.

This school year the school starts with 16 students aged 5-16. Souaad Rochdi is one of the parents, who has chosen to place her children at the international school.

 

More homework

 

 

Souaad Rochdi has two children in the age of 12 and 14 years at The Cosmo. It is the fifth school that they attend, as Souaad’s German husband travels a lot in his job. And there is no doubt in their minds that the children should attend an international school in Denmark. Yesterday they started at their second year at The Cosmo.

 

The children have mostly gone to a German school the places, where we have lived. But we have heard from friends in Denmark that the German schools here in the country have too low academic standards, so that the students almost never have any homework for example. Therefore we chose the international school.

Focus on each student

 

 

Souaad is happy for the fact that the Cosmo is so small, because it means more focus on each individual student.

  

As a parent I am happy that the teachers are more in touch with the students’ academic skills. And I am also very satisfied with the level of the teaching, she adds.

 

Worry that the school might close

 

 

The small number of students, makes she worry whether the school will exist long enough for her children to graduate and finished their Lower Secondary education.

 

Just the other day I spoke to my husband about what we would do it the school has to close. He said that we would find a solution. But if it really closes, we would listen to the children’s wishes. If their wish is to go to an international school, we would move to make that wish come through, she says.

International school has challenges getting more students

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

NB. This article is a direct translation from a Danish article and it is by no means an expression of the school’s or the school board’s position

 

 

The international school of Kolding – The Cosmo – still has less than 20 students at the beginning of the second school year. The financial crisis is one of the reasons, says the school.

 

 

 

16 students started last Monday at The Cosmo – the International School of Southern Denmark, which is a department of Kolding Realskole.

 

The school has only managed to get a few students more than last year, which was the first year the school existed.

 

And the school is far from the targets, which its management announced at the beginning of last school year. Back then the headmaster of Kolding Realskole talked about 40 students the first year.

 

During the first school year the school has already used about 400,000 Danish crowns of the three yearly deficit guarantees, which two local companies have given The Cosmo.

 

But the head of department at The Cosmo, Simon Mosekjær, acknowledges that the school’s management was, perhaps, a bit too optimistic when the school opened.

 

0908 cosmo ps1 300x194 International school has challenges getting more studentsA bit too optimistic

The school needs time to grow, and we were perhaps a bit too optimistic. It requires more work than we thought to get students to the school, and our wish is that we get 30-35 students next year. But before the next school year the school board will probably begin to estimate if it is realistic that The Cosmo can continue without deficits after the first three years, where we have deficit guarantees says Simon Mosekjær.

 

He thinks that the financial crisis has a large part of the blame for the fact that it is more difficult than expected to get students for The Cosmo.

 

Companies lack funds

We have to face the fact that a part of the companies which said that they would support the school do not have the financial means to do so.

 

Some of the larger companies have phoned and asked what a student costs on a yearly basis at the school, but even so they have not been willing to use money for it. But we continue, because we have deficit guarantees for at least the first three years, says Simon Mosekjær.

 

It is AH industries and Bjarne Nielsen, who owns Galerie Nielsen and the shipping agency H. Daugaard A/S who each of them supports The Cosmo with a deficit guarantee of one million Danish crowns.

 

It has not been possible to get a comment from the chairman of the school board of Kolding Realskole, Henning Larsen.

 

Facts

The Cosmo – International School of Southern Denmark – is a department of Kolding Realskole. The school collaborates with Business Kolding.

 

All lessons are taught in English, and German and French are taught at all levels.

 

There are students from Germany, Vietnam, Spain, Iraq, Greece, England and Morocco at the school. The school has 16 students in the age from 5 to 16, who are divided in two classes – Primary and Lower Secondary. Due to the small number of students and the large spread in ages the school works with individual students’ plans, which are adapted to the age of every single student.

 

The price is between 2,000 and 2,600 Danish crows a month to have a student at The Cosmo.

 

 

This feature is a direct translation of a newspaper arctile from Jydske Vestkysten, Wednesday the 19th of August.

 

 

 

NB. This article is a direct translation from a Danish article and it is by no means an expression of the school’s or the school board’s position

 

 

A trip to Saint Omer

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Dear parents

 

Kolding Realskole / The Cosmo has a twin school in the town of Saint Omer in the North of France. Again this year three teachers and a group of students aged 15-16 years will visit Kolding in week 43. They arrive Sunday October 18 and leave again Friday October 23. During the week different activitites are planned for the students and their hosts. We would like to know, if it is possible for you to house one of the French student?

 

270px st omer cathedrale 032005 A trip to Saint Omer 300px st omer A trip to Saint Omer  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

Pictures from Saint Omer – Notre Dame and the town hall in Saint Omer

 

At the same time there is a possibility for the students of Kolding Realskole / The Cosmo to visit Saint Omer and stay with one of the French families in week 42 – Monday October 12 to Sunday October 18. We make sure the students are on the train here in Kolding and the French teacher, Jean-François Debouscher, will pick them up and take care of accommodations and so on.

 

When the French students and teacher drive to Denmark Sunday October 18, our students will drive with them in the bus. The only thing our students has to pay for is the train ticket and pocket money; the rest is paid for.

 

Please fill out the slip below and return it, so that we can plan the trip to France in week 42 and the visit in week 43 as soon as possible. Furthermore we are planning a trip to Saint Omer in the spring for all the students, who have French. Further information will follow, so soon as we receive the notes from you.

 

Best regards,

 

Fabienne Bramsen and Simon Mosekjær

 

 

Concerning trip to and visit from Saint Omer weeks 42 and 43

 

Student’s name: _______________________

 

We can house a student in week 43: ____   We cannot house a student in week 43: ____

 

I would like to visit Saint Omer in week 42: ____