| Select
a day
Home
Day 1
Day 2
Day 3
Day 4
Day 5
Day 6
Day 7
Day 8
Day 9
Day 10
Day 11
Day 12
Day
13
Day 14 |
Keep
Up the Good Work
Fáilte
go ISIS Travelogue!
|
Dia
duit! (Hello!) ...If I’m lucky, one may reply:
Dia’s Muire duit!
Dorina is ainm dom (“My name is Dorina”).
Is as Iodáil (“I come from Italy”).
These are
some of the first Gaelic words I learned in this wonderful adventure
on Achill, along with Marlén, Ana (Spain), Piet and Peter
(Belgium), Irina (Germany) and Maria from Sweden. The ‘Europe
meets Gaelic’ workshop visited the local primary school
on Achill to learn about the teaching of Gaelic and to share with
the children this intercultural experience. It was a great challenge
since a real exchange could be organised with the children, giving
them some samples of our many languages while they talked to us
in Gaelic and English.
|
|
|
|
To enable
this exchange, we wrote short dialogues in different languages
and made up a quiz for children to find out our nationality. We
went to the adult learners language centre to try to get as much
as possible from a survival vocabulary of Gaelic so that local
people may understand our pronunciation. Mary McLoughan, the teacher,
looked very impressed and recognised we were quick learners! This
made us very happy! After all, this is the souvenir we take with
us from the island!
By Dorina Angelescu
|
|
|
The
Lost Student
|
| Many
of the students participating in this project share the experience
of having spent some time abroad because of their studies. This
is an opportunity from which one can learn loads and develop greater
intercultural awareness for their future life. But often, this learning
experience derives from difficult situations.
Such
a situation could be the following role play we did during Dorina´s
lecture on ‘Students´ intercultural experience’:
you are a student who’s going to a University abroad for a
three-week course. You arrive at a train station at 4 o’clock
in the morning in a city you don’t know and where you don’t
speak the native language. The person who was supposed to pick you
up doesn’t show up and you don’t even know how to get
to the University. There is no information point and most of the
local people don’t speak English.
What
would you do?
Start to panic, as one of the Spanish students supposed? Go to the
nearest hotel and wait until the next morning? as a Belgian student
would do, or simply refuse to really think about it, because you
are a German who wouldn’t get into such a mess? Well, what
would you do?
By
Karsten Kneese
|
|
| |
Island
Tour
|
For
the beautiful surroundings of Achill Island, we believe that a picture
says more than thousands words... |
| |
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|