VOA标准英语2010-Fulbright Scholar Learns About The Cultur(在线收听) |
Folake Oyedepo attends Fayetteville State University where she is teaching the Yoruba language to American students while learning more about the culture and history in America. Marsha James | Washington, DC 06 April 2010
Folake Oyedepo is from Nigeria and she is very focus on what she will be doing while she is here in America. "I'm an English graduate from Nigeria so coming to America has helped me to share my language and culture with diverse people and to improve my English because I hear English from the native speakers. I was a teacher in Nigeria and that is my career; I want to become a teacher in a college, a professor," she says. "So I came to America under the Fulbright scholarship and this award has given me an opportunity to get a global exposure about teaching and learning. It also awards me the opportunity to learn the American culture first hand apart from what I've read in books, what I've seen in movies and what I've heard in the media. I am in America to learn the American culture first hand." Folake Oyedepo has plenty to keep her busy at Fayetteville State University. One of her assignments is teaching. "I teach Yoruba language at Fayetteville State University. Yoruba language is one of the languages spoken in Nigeria, Benin Republic, Togo and traces of it are found among communities in Brazil, Sierra Leone, Northern Ghana and Cuba. Now I teach the Amerian students this language and I also teach the culture and history of Yoruba language with it." While teaching American students, Folake is also enrolled as a graduate student and one of the courses she takes is American History. "I've also learned so many things as a student. As I teach, I am also enrolled in Graduate school as part of my Fulbright scholarship award. I'm doing two classes because we have to enroll in two classes per semester. So the first class I am taking is Issues in composition and the second one is American history. Both courses have really helped me in many ways. Now I know a bit more of American history. I find what I learn more interesting than what I've learned when I was back home in Nigeria because I'm hearing it from the Americans themselves which makes it more interesting," she says. "In Nigeria, we teach and learn English, but not American English. So I can appreciate the differences in the way the British speak and the way the Americans speak; there is a great difference. So, I am learning things and I am also teaching people." Folake graduates in May. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2010/4/98139.html |