Podcast appearances and mentions of Catherine Parker

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Best podcasts about Catherine Parker

Latest podcast episodes about Catherine Parker

Sermon Segments Podcast
Episode 273: Nail It Down

Sermon Segments Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2024 46:18


Sermon featuring Evg. Catherine Parker.  Today's message is titled "Nail It Down" taken from James 3.  Thank you for listening and Be Blessed!

Sermon Segments Podcast
Episode 262: Get Right Because Jesus is Coming

Sermon Segments Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2023 33:34


Sermon featuring Evg. Catherine Parker.  Today's message is titled "Get Right Because Jesus is Coming". Thank you for viewing and Be Blessed!!!!

Let’s Go with Catie Keogh
Let's Go Talk with Catherine Parker

Let’s Go with Catie Keogh

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 9:44


Catie Keogh talks with Catherine Parker, award-winning Travel Writer and Journalist, to cover recommendations for first-time visitors to Yellowstone, and to share some history about the National Park. You can find more information about Yellowstone National Park and find more of Catherine's work at: catherinemparker.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Sermon Segments Podcast
Episode 219: Being Let Go

Sermon Segments Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2022 49:15


Sermon segment featuring Evg. Catherine Parker.  Today's message is titled "Being Let Go" taken from Philippians 3:13-15.  Thank you for viewing and Be Blessed!

Escuchando Peliculas
Doctor Sueño (2019) #Terror #Thriller #Sobrenatural #audesc #podcast #peliculas

Escuchando Peliculas

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2021 145:37


País Estados Unidos Dirección Mike Flanagan Guion Akiva Goldsman, Mike Flanagan. Novela: Stephen King Música The Newton Brothers Fotografía Michael Fimognari Reparto Ewan McGregor, Rebecca Ferguson, Kyliegh Curran, Zahn McClarnon, Carl Lumbly, Cliff Curtis, Alex Essoe, Bruce Greenwood, Jacob Tremblay, Catherine Parker, Robert Longstreet, Carel Struycken, Emily Alyn Lind Sinopsis Secuela del film de culto "El resplandor" (1980) dirigido por Stanley Kubrick y también basado en una famosa novela de Stephen King. La historia transcurre algunos años después de los acontecimientos de "The Shining", y sigue a Danny Torrance (Ewan McGregor), traumatizado y con problemas de ira y alcoholismo que hacen eco de los problemas de su padre Jack, que cuando sus habilidades psíquicas resurgen, se contacta con una niña de nombre Abra Stone, a quien debe rescatar de un grupo de viajeros que se alimentan de los niños que poseen el don de "el resplandor".

This Travel Tribe
12 Amazing Places to Visit on a US Road Trip

This Travel Tribe

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2021 27:52


Ready to hit the road on an adventure with your family? There are so many amazing places to visit in the United States with your family. Sometimes it can feel a bit overwhelming to narrow down your destination options. Let today's podcast guest, Catherine Parker, from Carful of kids joins us to share her family's 12 favorite places to visit in the US. They have visited all 50 states as a family so they have seen a lot of great places. Learn more about their 12 favorites!

Sermon Segments Podcast
Episode 155: Love Your Enemies

Sermon Segments Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2021 35:04


Sermon segment featuring Evg. Catherine Parker.  Today's message is titled "Love Your Enemies" taken from Matthew 5:42-44. Thank you and Be Blessed!

Sermon Segments Podcast
Episode 143: Who Hindered You?

Sermon Segments Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2021 41:05


Sermon featuring Evg. Catherine Parker.  Today's message is titled "Who Hindered You?" taken from Galatians 5:4-7.  Thank you for listening and Be Blessed!

Pensacola Morning News
06/02/21 - Catherine Parker - Faunal Analyst at the UWF Archeological Institute

Pensacola Morning News

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2021 10:16


Catherine Parker of the UWF Archeological Institute joins the Pensacola Morning News to discuss what food was like during the 1800s in Escambia County.

Sermon Segments Podcast
Episode 122: True Vine

Sermon Segments Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2021 33:37


Sermon featuring Evg. Catherine Parker of St. Paul Believers Holiness Church, where the pastor is Daniel D. Fluellen, Sr. Today's message is titled "True Vine" taken from John 15:1-2. Thank you for listening and BE BLESSED!!!!

TEFL Training Institute Podcast
Authentic Texts and Tasks (with David Nunan)

TEFL Training Institute Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2020 15:00


David Nunan joins us to discuss the input we use in language lessons and what we do with it.For more podcasts, videos and blogs, visit our website Support the podcast – buy us a coffee!Develop yourself! Find more about our teacher training courses Watch as well as listen on our YouTube channel Ross Thorburn: Hi, everyone. Welcome back to "TEFL Training Institute" podcast. I'm Ross Thorburn and this week we're talking about authentic texts. It's a topic I've wanted to talk about for a long time.I can remember, even as a first year teacher, printing off news articles and bringing them to the classroom and, much more recently, using textbooks made for American primary schools with students, young learners, here in China.Obviously there's huge advantages to using authentic texts. You get all this real language which has been unfiltered and it's real and it's natural, and hopefully the texts can be very motivating for students.There's also lot of downsides as well to using authentic texts. It can be very difficult to understand. Sometimes I think they can be really off‑putting for students, if you get presented with something that's real and you can't understand any of it.I think as a student that can be a really demotivating experience. So, to help us with this topic today, we have David Nunan. David is, I think it's not an exaggeration to say, one of the most influential people in our field in the last 40 years. David, as well as writing numerous academic books for teachers and researchers, he's also author of the bestselling coursebook series "Go for It!" and David is currently based in Hong Kong.Enjoy the interview.Ross: David, thank you very much for joining us. To start off with, would you like to tell us a bit about your experiences of using authentic materials as a teacher?David Nunan: Yeah. I'm a dinosaur. I trained in the '60s, early '70s, and was trained in the audio‑lingual methods. "This is a pencil. Pen. This is a pen. Idiot. You're an idiot."Ross: [laughs]David: The funny thing was, in the mid '70s coming to the UK to do a couple of higher degrees including one in language teaching...Prior to that, the language institute I was working at at the university in Sydney with a number of highly enthusiastic teachers who were bored out of their brains with all this audio‑lingual stuff, we started doing things.I developed a listening course by actually lugging this reel‑to‑reel tape recorder out and interviewing native speakers, then using that as a resource in the classroom. One of my other co‑teachers, Jane Lockwood, she used to work with Mario Rinvolucri at Pilgrim School in the UK. Of course she had got all of the Mario, she had the Mario virus. She was great, she was great on using drama techniques and so on.We were kind of inventing communicative language teaching without actually knowing what we were doing. [laughs] In those days, the label was only just starting to come into currency. But using authentic materials and using simulations and getting the learners to do stuff out of the classroom and all those other things.Ross: I can image, David, quite a few listeners are going to be doing a Google Image search for a reel‑to‑reel tape recorder after that.Let's talk a bit more about this notion of authenticity, then. There's obviously this idea of authenticity in terms of the language. How real it is, is it something recorded specifically for a language class? Like your example earlier, something from a real conversation or from a TV show or radio show or maybe even a news article, something like that.The other bit of the puzzle there, I guess, is what you get students to do with that. If the idea of task authenticity, so our learners, for example, listening to something and then giving an opinion and discussing it, or using it to solve some kind of problem or maybe they are doing something more focused on the language like read this passage and then circle the verb.Suppose there are different possibilities there combining either authentic or inauthentic text with authentic or inauthentic tasks. Can you tell us a little bit more about those? What are the advantages and disadvantages there?David: Yeah. Well, the minute you take a piece of authentic language into the classroom you deal with authenticating it, in a sense.The authenticity of the input, the reading and the written‑spoken text that they're exposed to, but then there's the notion of task authenticity. I've seen teachers take ‑‑ no, I'm not necessarily criticizing it ‑‑ but I'll get a piece of authentic listening material. Then I'll get the student doing a close activity and listen to this weather forecast [inaudible 4:35] .The other aspect is learner authentication. You can have an authentic piece of listening material and you can have an authentic task. For example, listen, your teacher has left a message on your phone about an excursion you're going to tomorrow. She gives the information right, make a note of the essential information like where to meet, what to bring, what to wear, and so on.When you see the [inaudible 5:01] in the classroom doing that kind of thing, it does resemble something they might actually do in the world outside the classroom. That's not to say what I call pedagogical tasks are not reasonable to do in the classroom.A lot of the techniques that got developed quite a few years ago things like jigsaw listening or spot the difference where learners have got two different versions of the picture and they have to describe the picture, and then figure out where the differences are.I don't know about you, I've never seen anybody outside of the classroom [laughs] saying. We'll guess what the differences are in my picture. It's pedagogically defensible. It's good for practicing particularly with lower level learners. It's good news. It's quite easy to create picture challenges that get them practicing things like prepositions of place.That's a typical one where you've got a beach scene or a picture of a...although that's good for activities. He's running, she's sleeping, he's swimming, practicing prepositions in place [inaudible 6:00] . We have two versions of somebody's bedroom, and with dining room and you have to exchange information to decide where things are.Ross: Going back to authentic texts then, there are a lot of reasons why those might be too difficult for students to understand. I think a lot of teachers assume that in order to simplify text, you probably want to make it shorter and take out some of the more difficult words. But that's not always the case.Taking out words or taking out difficult words can end up making a text more difficult rather than more simple.David: Craig Shodron and his colleague Catherine Parker years ago, did a study where they were looking at simplified texts versus what they called elaborative modification or some fancy term on that. What that meant was that if you're using a listening text, might be a lecture or it could be a conversation, rather than dumbing it down.More or less keep it to the original, authentic picture, you add in a lot of redundancy. In other words, you say the same thing. I'm doing it now. Right? You add in a lot of [inaudible 7:16] . In other words, you say the same thing using slightly different words and you do comprehension checks and you know what I mean? You know what I mean Ross?[laughter]Ross: Yes, I do understand. That redundancy idea is really nice, isn't it? Because you just demonstrated, it's also very natural as well. Something I think that happens quite a lot in spoken conversation anyway.Let's talk about written texts for a moment. You are also [laughs] a very successful coursebook writer, David. How do you go about using texts when you write coursebooks?I guess there's two schools of thought on this. One of them is decide on the language that you want to teach and then create texts around those words or grammar points or whatever, or the other end of the spectrum is finding authentic texts and then teaching from those.David: What I've tried to do is to get texts that are engaging for the learners at a given level. For example, when I wrote the textbook for middle school to junior high kids who go for it, it was originally written for Latin America, but then the Ministry of Education in China decided that they wanted to adapt that one for use in schools in China.I actually took a sabbatical for about 10 months. I just spent the whole time running back and forth to Beijing. Working with a team up there. Because it was co‑published deal with PP. As you probably know, you can't fit if you're writing for the schools in China. They have to be co‑published and so PP with the co‑publishers.Anyway, so step number one was to find texts that would be engaging, Interesting, given subject matter, and so on for the kinds of learners that we were running the material for. Then make sure I was building in the appropriate vocabulary because when the text goes up for approval by the Ministry, they'll look through and I have long lists of pages and pages of vocabulary.A lot of those vocab lists really don't make any sense. At one stage, I pointed it out.Ross: Sorry, David. Those lists, are those coming from an exam board. Is that right?David: From the Ministry of Education in China, yeah. There were very interesting conversations. Another project I was working on, I had this graded vocab list, and that had to be built in, and I pointed out that, for a start, there were certain vocab items that I wouldn't even know. I'm Australian. I wouldn't teach kids in that situation. Like, kangaroo was on the list, but computer wasn't. [laughs]I know with corpus linguistics, that they have corporate now, that they don't have a lot more integrity, but a lot of them, the West's General Service List, that was written in about 1951, that was the most comprehensive fun.A lot of the vocab lists that subsequently got developed came from that. Paul Nation's obviously the last word on that and, as Paul points out, it's not just frequency of the occurrence, but it's also what equals, I think, potency, how potent a particular vocab item is for learning.Ross: So I suppose that sort of demonstrates the value of using authentic texts as the sort of building blocks of your coursebook, then you don't have those problems of inauthentic language. Authentic texts, I guess, almost by definition, are going to include more of the most frequent vocabulary in them and then that more frequent vocabulary, I guess, is going to be more useful to students?David: Yeah. But you also get a lot of low frequency words. One of the books that I used, when it came out years ago in the UK, was Michael Swan and Catherine Walter's "Cambridge English Course" and, particularly in the higher levels, they actually used authentic listening materials. I remember one of them.There was one lesson, I was prepping for, it must have been an interview, because they were working with CUP, it must have been an interview with somebody who worked in the CUP office.You know, "OK. You're employed, so you've got to come and sit down and be interviewed."This was pretty well‑unexpurgated. I was listening to it and whoever was interviewing said, "So, what do you do?" and the guy said, "I'm a printus reader." Well, what? I had a look at the tapescript. He was a printer's reader. He was a proofreader basically, for the publisher. [laughs]Extremely low frequency vocab item, and at normal speed, and I thought, "This is going to freak my kids out." So I actually gave them the vocab.Ross: I guess, there, David, you just hit on that authentic text can be really, really challenging for learners. Do you have any advice on how to use authentic text with, especially, very low level learners? How would you go about doing that?David: One of the techniques that I use is this progressively structured listening, where first, the low level learners...one of the big challenges getting them over the...you know how it completely freaks you out. When I first came here to Hong Kong, 25 years ago, when I decided to try and start learning Cantonese by myself, without taking regular classes or anything.It was just like this stream. I couldn't segment the stream of language in any way that made sense for a long time. Until I enlisted the help of some of my native‑speaking colleagues and so on. One of the techniques I used to use was to say, I'm going to play you five little forte conversations. Three of them are in English and two of them are not.You have to just listen and all you have to do is to be able to pick which ones are English, then of course, if the distractors are Hindi and Arabic, that's a lot easier to do than if the distractors are German or Dutch. I remember the first time I ever went to Amsterdam. I thought I could swear, sounded so English [laughs] but it wasn't.When they can do that, they realized that they can get some level of me even just identifying which conversations are English in which are and then maybe the next level, you might get them to identify how many speakers there are.Again, if there are three males or three females, that's how to do if there is a male or female and adult and a kid, then you get the missing four key words, you get them identifying whether the conversation is asking for directions to a hotel or asking directions to supermarket.As they start to get more relaxed then they're prepared to get the message. When you're listening to your first language, you don't listen to every big word. It depends on purpose for listening as well then you get the idea about listening just for gist or listening for specific information.Once they've listened to it, a text four or five times and they've done different things with the text through to some kind of information transfer, filling in a table or whatever, or the example I gave earlier about taking down key information from a mobile phone message, then they start to develop good listening skills in the target language.Ross: One more time, everyone that was David Nunan. If you enjoyed that and you'd like to find out more from David, check out his website, www.davidnunan.com. Thanks for listening and we'll see you again next time. Goodbye.

Dr. Annette Richard's Origin Stories Podcast
Catherine Parker - Dr. Annette Richard's Origin Stories Podcast #9

Dr. Annette Richard's Origin Stories Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2020 49:34


Dr. Annette Richard interviews Catherine Parker. Catherine is happiest when helping! Learn more about Dr. Annette Richard on her website: https://www.drarichard.ca

Sermon Segments Podcast
Conversation of the Cross

Sermon Segments Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2020 64:08


Sermon segments podcast of our Good Friday Platform service featuring Elder Charles Miller, Min. Shirley Maxwell, Elder Ophelia Porchea, Min. Anthony Greggs, Evg. Catherine Parker and Evg. Jackie Chandler. Please listen to the Conversation of the Cross and Be Blessed.

RedBlueTalk
Westchester Eye On The Radio / WVOX / Catherine Parker / 3-9-2020

RedBlueTalk

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2020 28:01


Westchester Eye on the Radio is a weekly public affairs program hosted by Peter Moses and Ardina Seward on WVOX 1460 AM. Along with guest host Charles Stern, in this broadcast they interview Catherine Parker, candidate for US House of Representatives, CD-17 (NY).

radio ny cd us house westchester wvox catherine parker
Sermon Segments Podcast
Are you ready for the Challenge

Sermon Segments Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2020 14:54


Sermon segment featuring Evg. Catherine Parker. Listen and Be Blessed.

sermon be blessed evg catherine parker
Below the Belt Show
Interview: Actress Catherine Parker from The Haunting of Hill House (11/6/19)

Below the Belt Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2019 7:02


In a Below The Belt Show (www.belowthebeltshow.com) exclusive from Monstermania in Cherry Hill, NJ(www.monstermania.net), we present an on-location interview with actress Catherine Parker from The Haunting of Hill House! Catherine talks about working with creator and director Mike Flanagan, the possibility of working on Haunting of Bly Manor and more!

Below the Belt Show
Ep 652: Catherine Parker, Dawn Gardner, Kofi Siriboe, Katya Bakat and Natalie Malaika (11/6/19)

Below the Belt Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2019 170:30


Below The Belt Show is on fire this week! In association with our friends at Click On This (www.clickonthis.tv) we present our final exclusive interviews from the Split Screens Festival (www.splitscreensfestival.com) in New York. BTB's own Al Sotto interviews the cast of Queen Sugar including Dawn-Lyen Gardner and Kofi Siriboe! Also in at BTB exclusive from Monstermania in Cherry Hill, NJ(www.monstermania.net) we present an on-location interview with actress Catherine Parker from The Haunting of Hill House! Our call in guests include actress Katya Bakat from the film Angel Has Fallen and Natalie Malaika from Netlix's Fractured! BTB’s host with the most Al Sotto brings you another entertaining program! On the panel this week we welcome Paul "Darth" Wallis and returning to BTB airwaves after a couple years we welcome back comedian CJ Burney. Model and Filmmaker Elena Rose also joins in on the fun! So expect all the late-breaking news on pop culture, entertainment, and more! Listen to our gut busting humor, insightful commentary, and thought provoking opinions on the world of entertainment uncensored only on Below The Belt Show (www.belowthebeltshow.com)! Classic Cut: Solu Music featuing Kimblee "Fade" NOTE: Due to copyright, songs have been removed from the podcast show so listen to our show LIVE to hear all the music and commentary uncensored!

WUWF Public Media
Monday, October 14, 2019

WUWF Public Media

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2019 5:03


In this Gulf Stories Moment, we visit with UWF archeologist Catherine Parker, who tells us about the culinary heritage of the Gulf Coast from colonial times until today.

gulf coast uwf catherine parker
Indivisible Westchester: The Podcast
Episode 4: Get Involved In Local Elections

Indivisible Westchester: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2019 33:19


How to get involved in local elections, and an interview with Catherine Parker, Westchester Board of Legislators Majority Leader, who previews the upcoming BOL races.

The Hour of Intercession
Pastor Joseph Parker Is Joined By Catherine Parker, Restoration Project

The Hour of Intercession

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2019 54:15


Monday Morning Critic Podcast
(Episode 109) "The Haunting of Hill House" Actor: Catherine Parker.

Monday Morning Critic Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2018 61:55


Catherine Parker was born in Virginia. She is an actress, known for Absentia (2011) and her Emmy worthy and amazing  performance as Poppy Hill in The Haunting of Hill House. Catherine plays the amazing "Silent Sarey" in Stephen King's "Doctor Sleep", released in January 2020. Meet the funny, beautiful, supremely talented- Catherine Parker.

PregTASTIC Online Radio
Ep005 Prenatal Massage

PregTASTIC Online Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2006


A new baby is a wonderful joy and a blessing, but it can also bring about questions and concerns. Catherine Parker educates us about pre-natal massage techniques. How can a pre-natal massage help and what should and should not be massaged? What should you expect to pay and where can you find someone qualified to give prenatal massages?