【话匣子英语】跨文化交流(在线收听) |
米兰妮从小转学过几次,在跨文化交流里,她是否适应这样的生活呢。 Melanie: Well, I was born and raised in Lindsay, Ontario a few hours north of Toronto. Maura: So how did you end up in Montreal then? Melanie: Well after finishing high school in Lindsay, I moved out west to Kelowna, British Columbia where I did a college diploma in aviation and I taught flying around British Columbia for a few years before heading back to Ontario to Ottawa to do a degree in language, French and English literature. That took me to France on an exchange with the University of Ottawa, where I met my partner Christophe. Living in France was an excellent experience, a great way learn about the culture and practice the language but tough to get visas sometimes so I had to come back to Canada. Christophe and I decided to both come to Montreal where we can both work and live in our first languages. Maura: OK, cool. So what were you doing in France? Melanie: I went originally on an exchange with the university. So I took classes at one of the universities in Lyon, France. There I studied with native speakers in the literature classes there and I also at the same time taught English in a high school. Maura: Oh, that’s pretty cool. So how did you learn French? Just at university? Melanie: No, in Lindsay, where I’m from. It’s funny, it’s a small town, no native French speakers, and yet there’s a French immersion program. It started the year before I went into school, luckily, so when I started kindergarten at the age of 5, I started in French immersion, where I spoke only French from the first day of school. So we were all native English speakers but learning French together. Maura: That’s pretty cool. I’m always jealous of people who have that experience because for me growing up, I was surrounding by people speaking English and I went to English school and I took some French classes because no matter, really, where you are in English-speaking Canada you have to take French classes but it’s not an immersion program so I didn’t really learn as much. Melanie: Yeah, it was a really great program. We learned French from native French speakers that came to the town to teach. We learned a lot about the language and the French culture as well, which is really great ‘cause the small town wasn’t very diverse. We spoke only French from kindergarten all the way up until grade 4, was the first time we learned English. We had about 45 minutes a day in English and then it progressed. Every year we added a little bit more English until high school we had about 3 classes in French, 3 classes in English. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/hxzyy/392158.html |