OpenF2F Class Notes 14th February (Celeste)***

Homework

Listen to the recording of the edited writing below. Match the sounds as best as possible. In your next class, be prepared to read it out loud.

Writing exercise

This week is being crazy. I restarted to work as a Spanish teacher after the Chinese new year that means to be always driving around the city, I joined to an Spanish crossfit team and I also want to learn english. I have time to do all these things but I need to make a daily timetable in order to accomplish my schedule correctly. Lucky me because my Chinese lessons haven’t started yet, but when this happens I won’t have one minute during all the day for a break until I arrive at home at night.

Edited

This week has started out crazy / This week will be crazy. I restarted work / I restarted to work as a Spanish teacher after Chinese new year which means I  will  always be driving around the city. I joined a Spanish crossfit team and I also want to improve my English. I have time to do all these things but I need to make a daily timetable to accomplish all my tasks/plans/items/things to do in a timely manner. Lucky me because my Chinese lessons haven’t started yet, but when these begin I will not/won’t   have one minute during the day for a break until I arrive at home at night/until I get home late in the evening.

I will be driving.  / I will always be driving.

Writing to be edited during next class


New numbers tell us that 500,000 people attended the Women’s March on Washingtoni on January 21st. There has been debate about how much people and why all these people attended this march.

However, high-tech analysis from the company Digital Design and Imaging Service provides a “solid estimate” of there being 440,000 marchers, with a possibility of half a million. It was the biggest demonstration in the USA since the Vietnam War protests in the 1960s. The New York Times reported that the Women’s March was three times the size of President Donald Trump’s inauguration, which they said had 160,000 attendees. Five million people participated in women’s marches around the world.