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Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Acknowledgment…………………………..1
My Autobiography……………………..…..2
Educational Career Plan………….………3
Resume……………………………….…….4
Goals………………………………….…….5
Types of language Assessment………….6
Assessment Tools………………………....7
Examples
When is each tools utilized?
How do language test measure language
performance?……….……………………….8
What is your reflection and what have
you learned?………………………………..9
Artifacts Documents…………………….…10
Artifacts Selection/Placement………….....11
Language testing: Approaches and
Techniques………………………………….12
Discussion points w/ Reflection
Test Construction………………………..…13
Discussion points w/ Reflection
Quantitative Analysis………………………14
Discussion points w/ Reflection
Qualitative Analysis………………………..15
Discussion points w/ Reflection
Testing the Receptive skills……………….16
Discussion points w/ Reflection
Testing literature……………………………17
Discussion points w/ Reflection
Examples of Testing Productive skills…...18
3 Examples of testing receptive skills……19
Photocopy of Summary…………………….20
Khalil Gibran Biography.com
Author, Illustrator, Poet, Journalist(1883–1931)
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QUICK FACTS
NAME
Khalil Gibran
OCCUPATION
Author, Illustrator, Poet, Journalist
BIRTH DATE
January 6, 1883
DEATH DATE
April 10, 1931
PLACE OF BIRTH
Bsharri, Lebanon
PLACE OF DEATH
New York, New York
AKA
Khalil Jubran
Khalil Gibran
Kahlil Gibran
ORIGINALLY
Jubran Khalil Jubran
SYNOPSIS
CITE THIS PAGE
Philosophical essayist, novelist, poet and artist Khalil Gibran wrote
The Prophet, a book of poetic essays that achieved cult status among
American youth.
IN THESE GROUPS
Born in 1883 in Lebanon, Khalil Gibran was a writer and poet whose book The Prophet,
achieved cult status in the United States. The book of essays grew in popularity during the 1930s
and found a particular resurgence in the counterculture movement of 1960s America. He was
also a prolific artist who studied in Paris hundreds of paintings and drawings.
Biography
Khalil Gibran was born Gibran Khalil Gibran on January 6, 1883, in Bsharri, Lebanon. He
immigrated with his mother and siblings to Boston in 1895 - his father remained in Lebanon to
address financial matters. Gibran would return to Lebanon three years later to continue his
education but returned to America after illness took the life of one of his sisters. He met Mary
Haskell who encouraged his artistic development. During his life, Gibran was a prolific artist
who created hundreds of paintings and drawings.
In 1920, he was a co-founder, along with other poets of Arab and Lebanese backgrounds, of The
Pen-bond Society, a literary society, also known as Al Rabitat al Qualamiya.
Gibran's works, written in both Arabic and English, are full of lyrical outpourings and express
his deeply religious and mystical nature. The Prophet (1923), a book of poetic essays, achieved
cult status among American youth for several generations.
In 1928, he published Jesus, the Son of Man. Gibran died in New York City on April 10, 1931.