Yesterday was our first course with Mr.Agustinus Setiawidi in our Intensive English Course that held by our school. The way he taught us was just like the way he ever taught us in the first and second semester. "Lihat saja teksnya!" ("Just look at the text!") he said when someone answer a question that he asked not based on the text in the handout he gave to us.
Mr.Agustinus is teaching us Reading Comprehension in the English Intensive Course. So, what we do with him in the course is just reading, reading, and reading, then comprehend the meaning of the text.
From yesterday course, I got a little information about journalism way of write the title of the writing. Mr.Agus asked us what the common of the 5 titles of the text in the handout is. And obviously it is the grammar. The title is always in present tense even if the news or the article is in past form. Just like one of the text in the handout, a news that likely was taken from The Jakarta Post. The title is "Two die in Pakistan cartoon protests". But in the first sentence of the news is "Two demonstrators died Tuesday as angry mobs stormed a diplomatic enclave..."
Actually yesterday I wanted to ask whether that term is just used in journalism or it is also used in other term of writing. But, he was already asked someone to read one of the text in the handout. The question remain as a question for me. Pity, ha?
Mr.Agustinus is teaching us Reading Comprehension in the English Intensive Course. So, what we do with him in the course is just reading, reading, and reading, then comprehend the meaning of the text.
From yesterday course, I got a little information about journalism way of write the title of the writing. Mr.Agus asked us what the common of the 5 titles of the text in the handout is. And obviously it is the grammar. The title is always in present tense even if the news or the article is in past form. Just like one of the text in the handout, a news that likely was taken from The Jakarta Post. The title is "Two die in Pakistan cartoon protests". But in the first sentence of the news is "Two demonstrators died Tuesday as angry mobs stormed a diplomatic enclave..."
Actually yesterday I wanted to ask whether that term is just used in journalism or it is also used in other term of writing. But, he was already asked someone to read one of the text in the handout. The question remain as a question for me. Pity, ha?
Kalasan Dalam, behind Kontras, Jakarta
07:03
June 7th, 2006
DAY8072
07:03
June 7th, 2006
DAY8072
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