This guide to the top ten languages of ELL students offers educators communication resources like picture dictionaries, parent letters, and common phrases in native languages.
Garth works at the intersection of math, science, and humor, with a background including a growing list of bestselling books, a Magna Cum Laude pre-med/music degree from Cornell University, and math-for-hire for mobile app and tech companies. In addition to conferences, colleges, and bookstores, you may have seen Garth's work on the Science Channel, where he's a frequent onscreen contributor, online at his popular blog (scientificblogging.com), or in magazines including Esquire, Wired, Publisher's Weekly, and Congressional Quarterly.
Garth grew up on Bainbridge Island, a short ferry ride from Seattle, where his dad----a former President of the American Accounting Association----taught for 34 years in the UW business school. Garth lives in Ojai, California, with his wife, two small kids, and one large Labrador, commonly found shoulder-deep in Ojai's municipal fountain (the dog, not the kids; the kids only go in up to their knees).
Stay tuned for more fun, fascinating and sometimes useful books nestled at the nexus of pop and science.
The Cantonese chapter is inaccurate. The writers state they used Simplified Chinese, but everything was written in Traditional Chinese. Also, there was NO mention that Cantonese was a tonal dialect (and no tones were shown for pronunciation). Although the book is from 2003, I still have no clear idea why Cantonese was included instead of Mandarin-I have never taught an L1 Cantonese speaker here in the US that wasn’t from Hong Kong and thus had some English. This was not the resource I’d hoped for to recommend for my university students to use in their own classrooms.