martes, 31 de mayo de 2011

N I y N II de Secundaria - Grammar y ejercicios con correcciones para trabajo autónomo del alumno

Os pongo aquí una página que puede ser útil para practicar en lo que no se os de bien todavía:

Para gramática, pincha aquí.
Para ejercicios de vocabulario y de gramática, pincha aquí.
Para mirar en un diccionario bilingüe, pincha aquí.

Mucho ánimo a todos. Estamos en el 'Sprint final'. Ya no queda nada para el merecido descanso.

lunes, 30 de mayo de 2011

NOTE: Aviso - Inglés II - Enseñanzas para el desarrollo personal y la participación.

This is NOT for 'Secundaria'. It is for my students in 'Inglés II - Enseñanzas para el desarrollo personal y la participación' (Torrelaguna group):

We had lesson on May the 27th (Friday) in Torrelaguna, but only one student appeared (Mª Teresa). Since we have no many days left to end the course, we need to select a day for our 3rd Term Exam.

We decided to place the exam on June the 3rd (Friday).
 -El examen de la 3ª evaluación será pues, el 3 de Junio (Viernes).

Thank you for checking this site and see you on Friday.

Rubén.

lunes, 16 de mayo de 2011

For the lovers of pets: 'Dogs are smarter than cats'

This is from an article appeared in The Times India May 14th , 2011, 12.00am IST (Oritinal site)

A new study by scientists at Oxford University has shown that dogs are cleverer than cats because their friendly character has helped them develop bigger brains.

The researchers have claimed that the intelligence of "a man's best friend" has evolved at a greater rate than the less social cat over millions of years.

It was often believed that the feline pet was smarter than its canine counterpart because it needed less attention but researchers have discovered that cat's brains are smaller because they are less social.

For the first time, scientists have charted the evolutionary history of the brain across different groups of mammals over 60 million years and identified huge variations in how their brains have changed.

They discovered that there was a link between the size of an animal's brain in relation to the rest of its body and how socially active it was.

The study analysed available data on the brain and body size of over 500 species of living and fossilised mammals. The brains of monkeys grew the most over time followed by horses, dolphins, camels and dogs.

It showed that groups of mammals with relatively bigger brains tended to live in stable social groups. The brains of more solitary mammals such as cats, deer and rhino, grew much more slowly during the same period.

"Dogs have always been regarded as the more social animals while cats like to get on with their own thing alone. But it appears that interaction is good for the brain and extends to other species, like ourselves," the Telegraph quoted Dr Susanne Shultz, who led the research, as saying.

"We are even more social than monkeys and apes and it is this ability to get on with each other that has helped us dominate the planet.

This study overturns the long-held belief that brain size has increased across all mammals. Instead, groups of highly social species have undergone much more rapid increases than more solitary species.

"This suggests the co-operation and co-ordination needed for group living can be challenging and over time some mammals have evolved larger brains to be able to cope with the demands of socialising.

All dogs are quite good at solving problems, which gives credence to the traditional image of the cunning fox which is a member of the same family. Dogs descended from wolves which appear to have the biggest brains as they live in large family groups," Shultz added.

The study has been published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences .