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4. Human Learning

1. Learning and Training

: when you train dog, we need to know entry behavior, goals of the task, methods of training, evaluation procedure

: you must have a comprehensive knowledge of the entry behavior of a person, of objectives you wish to reach, of possible methods that follow from your understanding of the first two factors, and of an evaluation procedure

: these steps derive from your conception of how human beings learn

Behavioristic viewpoint

Pavlov's Classical Behaviorism

: a series of experiences in which he trained a dog to salivate to the tone of a bell

: Classical Conditioning

: learning process consisted of the formation of associations between stimuli and reflexive responses

: a previously neutral stimulus (the sound of the bell) had acquired the power to elicit a response (salivation) that was originally elicited by another stimulus (the smell of meat)

: learning -> by the process of conditioning, we build an array of stimulus-response, and more complex behaviors are learned by building up series or chains of responses

Skinner's Operant Conditioning

: Neobehaviorist (because he added a unique dimension to behavioristic psychology -> Respondent Conditioning ), Operant conditioning

: Operant behavior is behavior in which one 'operates' on the environment; within this model the importance of stimuli is deemphasized

: Thorndike's Law of Effect

Reinforcement (satisfactory consequences) -> stronger association of stimuli and responses

Punishment -> weaker association of stimuli and responses

: Punishment can be either the withdrawal of a positive reinforcer or the presentation of an aversive stimulus

: the events or stimuli-the reinforcers-that follow a response and that tend to strengthen behavior or increase the probability of a recurrence of that response constitute a powerful force in the control of human behavior

: reinforcers are far stronger aspects of learning than is mere association of a prior stimulus with a following response

: operants are classes of responses

: sets of responses that are emitted and governed by the consequences they produce

: respondents are sets of responses that are elicited by identifiable stimuli

: punishment, in the long run, does not actually eliminate behavior, but that mild punishment may be necessary for temporary suppression of an undesired response

: the best method of extinction... absence of an reinforcement and active reinforcement of alternative responses

 

* The technology of Teaching (1986)

: programmed instruction (carefully designed program of step-by-step reinforcement)

: it was limited to very specialized subsets of language

 

* Verbal Behavior (1957)

: language is a system of verbal operants

: Skinnerian view of both language and language learning dominated foreign language teaching methodology for several decades (-> controlled practive of verbal operants under carefully designed schedules of reinforcement)

: ALM (1950s~ early 1970s)

Rational/ Cognitive stance

Ausubel's Subsumption Theory

: learning takes place in the human organism through a meaningful process of relating new events or items to already existing cognitive concepts or propositions

: meaning is not an implicit response, but a 'clearly articulated and precisely differentiated conscious experience'

 

* Rote VS. Meaningful Learning

: rote learning involves the mental storage of items having little or no association with existing cognitive structure

: meaningful learning, or subsumption; a process of relating and anchoring new material to relevant established entities in cognitive structure

: any learning situation can be meaningful if

learners have a meaningful learning set

the learning task itself is potentially meaningful to the learners

: manufacturing meaningfulness-association, memory strategies

: systematic, meaningful subsumption of material at the outset in order to enhance the retention process

: the importance of meaning in language and of meaningful contexts of linguistic communication

: parlor games; by associating items either in groups or with some external stimuli, retention is enhanced

 

* Systematic Forgetting (=cognitive pruning)

: pruning is the elimination of unnecessary clutter and a clearing of the way for more material to enter the cognitive field

: the single blocks are lost to perception, or pruned out, to use the metaphor, and the total structure is perceived as a single whole without clearly defined parts

: language attrition; long-term forgetting can apply to certain linguistic features, center on strength and conditions of initial learning, on motivational factors contributing to forgetting, and on cultural identity

: subsumption theory provides a strong theoretical basis for the rejection of conditioning models of practice and repetition in language teaching

: rote learning can be effective on a short-term basis, but for any long-term retention it fails because of the tremendous buildup of interference

: systematic forgetting-in the early stages of language learning, certain devices (definitions, paradigms, illustrations, or rules) are often used to facilitate subsumption -> these devices can be made initially meaningful by assigning or 'manufacturing' meaningfulness -> cognitive pruning -> automaticity

Constructivist School of Thought

Roger's Humanistic Psychology

: Roger's humanistic psychology has more of an effective focus than a cognitive cone

clinical work in an attempt to be of therapeutic help to individuals

: Roger & Vygotsky - social and interactive nature of learning

: Client-Centered Therapy (1951)

: learning from a phenomenological perspective (in sharp contrast to that of Skinner)

: whole person as a physical and cognitive, but primarily emotional, being

: 'fully functioning persons' live at peace with all of their feelings and reactions

: Roger's focus is away from 'teaching' and toward 'learning'

: the goal of education is the facilitation of change and learning

: learning how to learn is more important than being taught something form the 'superior' vantage point of a teacher who unilaterally decides what shall be taught

: teacher=facilitators

must be real and genuine

need to have genuine trust, acceptance,, and a prizing of the other person (student) as a worthy, valuable individual

need to communicate openly and empathetically with their students

 

: in Carl Roger's humanism, if the context for learning is properly created, then human beings will learn everything they need to

: be care not to take the nondirective approach too far, to the point that valuable time is lost in the process of allowing students to 'discover' facts and principles for themselves

: facilitative tension needed for learning (the positive effects of competitiveness in a classroom, as long as that competitiveness does not damage self-esteem and hinder motivation to learn)

: CCL

: Pedagogy of the Oppressed (1970)

: importance of the empowerment of students in classrooms

Vigorously objected to traditional 'banking' concepts of education

 

6. Types of Learning

: signal learning, stimulus-response learning, chaining, verbal association, multiple discrimination, concept learning, concept learning, principle learning, problem solving

 

Transfer

a general term describing the carryover of previous performance or knowledge to subsequent learning

Interference

previously learned material interferes with subsequent material-a previous item is incorrectly transferred or incorrectly associated with an item to learned

Overgeneralization

: generalizing a particular rule or item in the second language beyond legitimate bounds

: the incorrect application-negative transfer-of perviously learned second language material to a present second language context

all generalizing involves transfer, and all transfer involves generalizing

7. Transfer, Interference, and Overgeneralization

 

8. Inductive and Deductive Reasoning

Inductive

stores a number of specific instances and induces a general law or rule or conclusion that governs or subsumes the specific instances

classroom learning tends to rely more than it should on deductive reasoning-especially Grammar Translation

Deductive

movement from a generalization to specific instances

communicative second language learning points to the superiority of an inductive approach to rules and generalizations

 

9. Language Aptitude

: do certain people have a ‘knack’ for learning foreign language?

: Modern Language Aptitude Test (MLAT)

: Pimsleur Language Aptitude Battery (PLAB)

: these test measured ability to perform focused, analytical, context-reduced activities

: the results may lead biases to both teachers and students

: Dornyei and Skehan (2003), aptitude may be related to various ‘stages’, or what might also be called processes, of second language acquisition

   

 

10. Intelligence and Language Learning

: traditional IQ (Intelligence Quotient): linguistic and logical mathematical abilities

: Howard Gardner (1983) advanced a controversial theory of intelligence that blew apart our traditional thoughts about IQ -> different forms of knowing, ‘multiple intelligences’ (p.108)

: Sternberg’s three types of ‘smartness’ (p.109)

: Daniel Goleman’s emotional intelligence, EQ (Emotional Quotient)

 

: in its traditional definition, intelligence may have little to do with one’s success as a second language learner(people within a wide range of IQs have proven to be successful in acquiring a second language)

but, Gardner attaches other important attributes to the notion of intelligence, attributes that could be crucial to second language success: musical intelligence, bodily-kinesthetic, interpersonal intelligence

: Sternberg’s experiential and contextual abilities cast further light on the components of the ‘knack’ that some people have for quick, efficient, unabashed language acquisition

the EQ (emotional quotient) may be far more important than any other factor in accounting for second language success both in classrooms and in untutored contexts

: effective language learning thus links surface forms of a language with meaningful experiences, as we have already noted in Ausubel’s learning theory

 

11. Learning Theories in Action: Two language teaching methods in contrast

11-1. The Audiolingual Method

: Army Specialized Training Program (ASTP), or, more colloquially, the ‘Army Method’-pronunciation and pattern drills and conversation practice, none of the grammar and translation found in traditional classes

: Audiolingual Method (ALM)

: behavioristic psychologists advocated conditioning and habitformation models of learning

: success could be more overtly experienced by students as they practiced their dialogs in off-hours

: its ultimate failure to teach long-term communicative proficiency

 

11-2. Community Language Learning

: Chomskyan revolution in linguistics toward ‘deep structure’ of language, when psychologist began to recognize the fundamentally affective and interpersonal nature of all learning

: cognitive and affective factors

: Community Language Learning (CLL), expressly constructed to put Carl Roger’s theory of learning into action

to facilitate learning in a context of valuing and prizing each individual in the group

in such a surrounding, each person lowers the defenses that prevent open, interpersonal communication

: the teacher’s presence is as a ‘counselor’, the teacher’s role is to center his or her attention on the clients (the students) and their needs

: CLL is an attempt to overcome some of the threatening affective factors in second language learning

but, the counselor-teacher can become too nondirective

the success of CLL depends largely on the translation expertise of the counselor

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3. Age and Acquisition

1) Types of comparison and contrast

C1

A1

C2

A2

child adult

L1

L2

 

(C1-C2) First and second language acquisition in children, holding age constant

(C2-A2)

: Second language acquisition in children and adults, holding second language constant

: What type of comparison is the most fruitful in yielding analogies for adult second languqge classroom instruction?

: What will be the central focus in this chapter?

(C1-A2)

: First language acquisition in children and second language acquisition on adults

: What type is one of the traditional comparisons, which needs extreme caution (diff btw child & adults)?

 

2) The Critical Period Hypothesis

Critical Period Hypothesis

: biologically determined period of life when language can be acquired more
easily and beyond which time language is increasingly difficult to acquire

: there is such a biological timetable

: initially the notion of a critical period was connected only to first language acquisition

Lenneberg(1967), Bickerton (1981): in favor of a critical period before

which and after which certain abilities do not develop

: second language researchers have outlined the possibilities of extrapolating
the CPH to second language contexts

: Bialystok (1997), Singleton & Lengyel (1995), Scovel (1998, 1999)

: Classic view - A critical point for second language acquisition occurs around
puberty particularly about 'accent'

 

3) Neurological Considerations

3-1) Hemispheric Lateralization

: intellectual, logical, and analytic functions appear to be largely located in the left hemisphere, while the right hemisphere controls functions related to emotional and social needs

: enough data have accumulated to challenge the simple view that the left hemisphere is the language hemisphere and the right hemisphere does something else

: a more crucial question for second language researchers on when lateralization takes place, and whether or not that lateralization process affects language acquisition

: Eric Lenneberg (1987) and others-lateralization is a slow process that begins around the age of two and is completed around puberty

* Time of lateralization

- Lenneberg: complete around puberty

- Norman Geschwind(1970): much earlier age

- Stephen Krashen (1973): around age five

: one must be careful to distinguish between ‘emergence’ of lateralization (at birth, but quite evident at five) and ‘completion’ (only evident at about puberty)

 

3-2) Biological Timetables

: Scovel, ‘sociobiological critical period’ -> toward the development of a socially bonding accent at puberty

: an accent emerging after puberty is the price we pay for our preordained ability to be articulate apes

 

3-3) Right-Hemispheric Participation

: there is significant right hemisphere participation and that ‘this participation is particularly active during the early stages of learning the second language’

: Genesee (1982), second language learners, particularly adult learners, might benefit from more encouragement of right-brain activity in the classroom context

 

3-4) Anthropological Evidence

: Sorenson, during adolescence, individuals actively and almost suddenly began to speak two or three other languages to which they had been exposed at some point

: in adulthood (a person) may acquire more language; as he approaches old age, field observation indicates, he will go on to perfect his knowledge of all the languages at his disposal

 

4. The Significance of Accent

: research on the acquisition of authentic control of phonology of a foreign language supports the notion of a critical period

: it is clear that the chances of any one individual commencing a second language after puberty and achieving a scientifically verifiable authentic native accent are infinitesimal

: upon reviewing the research on age and accent acquisition, as Scovel (1999) did, we are left with powerful evidence of a critical period for accent, but for accent only!

* Arnold Schwarzeneggar Effect, whose accent is clearly noticeable yet who is arguably as linguistically proficient as any native speaker of American English.

 

5. Cognitive Considerations

:Human cognition develops rapidly throughout the first 16 years of life and less rapidly thereafter.

Jean Piaget, outlined the course of intellectual development in a child

-sensorimotor stage (birth to 2)

-preoperational stage (ages 2 to 7)

-operational stage (ages 7 to 16)

-concrete operational stage (ages 7 to 11)

-formal operational stage (ages 11 16)

* Ausubel (1964), adults learning a second language could profit from certain grammatical explanations and deductive thinking that obviously would be pointless for a child

* lateralization, as the child matures into adulthood, some would maintain, the left hemisphere (which controls the analytical and intellectual functions) becomes more dominant than the right hemisphere (which controls the emotional functions)

 

Equilibration

: progressive interior organization of knowledge in stepwise fashion, and is related to the concept of equilibrium

: cognition develops as a process of moving from stages of doubt and uncertainty (disequilibrium) to stages of resolution and certainty (equilibrium) and then back to further doubt

: periods of disequilibrium mark virtually all cognitive development up through age 14 or 15, when formal operations finally are firmly organized and equilibrium is reached

 

rote and meaningful learning

: foreign language classroom should not become the locus of excessive rote activity-rote drills, pattern practice without context, rule recitation, and other activities that are not in the context of meaningful communication

6. Affective Consideration

: empathy, self-esteem, extroversion, inhibition, imitation, anxiety, attitudes

: very young children are highly egocentric

: in preadolescence children develop an acute consciousness of themselves as separate and identifiable entities but ones which, in their still-wavering insecurity, need protecting -> they therefore develop inhibitions about this self-identity, fearing to expose too mush self-doubt

: at puberty these inhibitions are heightened in the trauma of undergoing critical physical, cognitive, and emotional changes

: adolescents must acquire a totally new physical, cognitive, and emotional identity -> their egos are affected not only in how they understand themselves but also in how they use the communicative process to bring on affective equilibrium

 

* Language ego

: account for the identity a person develops in reference to the language he or she speaks

: language ego may account for the difficulties that adults have in learning a second language

: the child’s ego is dynamic and growing and flexible through the age of puberty -> a new language at this stage does not pose a substantial ‘threat’ of inhibition to the ego

: language ego becomes protective and defensive (the younger, the less protective and defensive : 어릴 때 시작하는 것이 좋다)

: making the leap to a new or second identity can be successful only when one musters the necessary ego strength to overcome inhibitions

: successful adult language learner is someone who can bridge this affective gap

: master adults manifest a number of inhibitions

 

* Peer pressure

: children, they had better ‘be like the rest of the kids’

: adults tend to tolerate linguistic differences more than children (the younger, the stronger peer pressure) and therefore errors in speech are more easily excused

 

7. Linguistic Consideration

: Bilingualism

- code­switching (the act of inserting words, phrases, or even longer stretches of one language into the other) ex. Don't 잔소리

- considerable cognitive benefit of early childhood bilingualism

: Interference btw first and second languages

- transfer (positive / negative (overgeneralization(L1-L1. L2-L2), interference(L1-L2, L2-L1))

- linguistic and cognitive processes of second language learning in young children are in

general similar to first language processes

 

*age-and-acquisition-inspired teaching method

: total physical response, the natural approach

: "learners would benefit from delaying production until speech "emerge," that learners should be as relaxed as possible in the classroom..."

 

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2. First Language Acquisition

Extreme behaviorist position: Children come into the world with a tabula rasa, a clean slate bearing no perceived notions about the world or about language, and children are then shaped by their environment and slowly conditioned through various schedules of reinforcement.

Extreme cognitivist position: Children come into this world with very specific innate knowledge, prepositions, and biological timetables.

Extreme constructivist position: Coginitivist position and that they learn to function in a language chiefly through interaction and discourse.

 

Behaviorism Approaches

: Repetition, Imitation, Practice

: The behaviorist might consider effective language behavior to be the production of correct responses to stimuli. If a particular response is reinforced, it then becomes habitual, or conditioned.

: B.F. Skinner-Operant conditioning(stimulus-response)

-consequences are rewarding the behavior is maintained and is increased in strength and perhaps frequency

-consequences are punishing, or there is total lack of reinforcement the behavior is weakened and eventually extinguished.

 

 

Features

Challenges

Behaviorism Approaches

: Repetition, Imitation, Practice

: The behaviorist might consider effective language behavior to be the production of correct responses to stimuli. If a particular response is reinforced, it then becomes habitual, or conditioned.

: B.F. Skinner-Operant conditioning

(stimulus-response)

-consequences are rewarding the behavior is maintained and is increased in strength and perhaps frequency

-consequences are punishing, or there is total lack of reinforcement the behavior is weakened and eventually extinguished.

: No one would agree that Skinner's model of verbal behavior adequately accounts for the capacity to acquire language, for language development itself, for the abstract nature of language, or for a theory of meaning.

 

: every sentence you speak or write is novel, never before uttered either by you or by anyone else.

 

Nativist Approaches

: We are born with a genetic capacity that predisposes us to systematic perception of language around us.

: innate abilities to generate a potentially infinite number of utterances

 

-Skinner’s Verbal Behavior

: behavior is controlled by its consequences(stimulus-response theory)

 

-Language Acquisition Device(LAD)

: a special neurological system in the human brain that facilitates language development

: a set of language leaning tools, provided at birth like a little black box in the brain

: distinguish speech sounds from other sounds

: organize linguistic date into various classes

: knowledge that only a certain kind of linguistic system is possible

 

-Universal Grammar (UG)

: sum total of all the immutable principles

: UG covers grammar, speech and meaning

:all human beings are genetically equipped with abilities that enable them to acquire language regardless of their environmental stimuli. ex) Mommy sock (pivot word + open word)

: Genetically pre-programmed language organ in the brain The knowledge is built in. We can learn English as well as any other language, with all its richness because we are designed to learn language based upon a common set of principles, which we may call UG.

 

:Chomsky's position

-Language is not acquired through simple imitation.

-Human beings are generically predisposed to acquire a language.

-Language acquisition is subserved by a language-specific mental faculty.

 

: Jean Berko (1958) demonstrated that children learn language not as a series of separate discrete items but as an integrated system. (wug/gling)

: parallel distributed processing (PDP) (Spolsky, 1989)

- information is processed simultaneously at several levels of attention not as serially connected rules or items like Chomsky's UG.

- linguistic performance may be the consequence of simultaneous neural interconnections rather than a serial process of rule.

 

: connectionism (Rumelhart & McClelland, 1986)

- experience leads to learning by strengthening particular connections

- there are no 'rules' of grammar.

 

: Emergentism

- the complexity of language emerges from, relatively simple developmental process being exposed to a massive and complex environment.

Functional Approaches

: constructivism

: social interaction

-communicative functions of language

:discourse

: cognition and language

: functions of language

: children’s background knowledge (schema) plays an important role

- development is paced by the growth of conceptual and communicative capacities, operating in conjunction with innate schemas of congnition

: formal of language

- development is paced by the growth of perceptual and information-processing capacities, operating in conjunction with innate schemas of grammar

: Piaget - what children learn about languages is what they already know about the world

 

 

* Piaget Vs. Chomsky

Piaget

Chomsky

The child passes through Cognitive states. Cognitive development is at the very center of the human organism and language is dependent upon and springs from cognitive development. Functional Approaches

He placed much more emphasis on the role of Experience in cognitive development than I do. The Nativist Approach

 

Competence Vs. Performance

: competence - underlying knowledge of a system, event, or fact.

performance - overtly observable and concrete manifestation or realization of competence

* competence가 빙산이라면, performance는 빙산의 일각

 

Comprehension Vs. Production

: comprehension before production? or production before comprehension?

Nature Vs. Nurture

Universals (Principles ve. Parameters)

Systematicity Vs. Variability

Language and Thought

Practice and Frequency

Input

Discourse

Imitation

: surface-structure imitation

: rote pattern drills

 

 

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1. Language, Learning, and Teaching

: a picture of both the slipperiness of SLA and the systematic storehouse of reliable knowledge that is now available to us: eclectic, cautious

: your understanding of the components of language determines to a large extent how you teach a language

 

1. Learning and Teaching

: the second language learner brings all these variables into play in the learning of a second language

: teaching cannot be defined apart from learning

: your understanding of how the learner learns will determine your philosophy of education, your teaching style, your approach, methods, and classroom techniques

: your theory of teaching is your theory of learning ‘stood on its head’

 

2. Schools of Thought in Second Language

early 1990s and 1940s and 1950s

Structural Linguistics and Behavioral Psychology

: rigorous application of scientific observations of human languages

: structuralist; only publicly observable responses could be subject to investigation

: ignore mentalistic approach; unobservable guesses, hunches, and intuition

: typical behavioral models were classical and operant conditioning, rote verbal learning, instrumental learning, discrimination learning, and other empirical approaches to studying human behavior

: Pavlov’s dog and Skinner’s boxes

description, observable performance, scientific method, empiricism, surface structure, conditioning, reinforcement

1960s, 1970s, and 1980s

Generative Linguistics and Cognitive Psychology

* generative-transformational linguistics

: Noam Chomsky; principled basis, independent of any particular language, for the selection of the descriptively adequate grammar of each language

: important distinction between the overtly observable aspects of language and the hidden levels of meaning and thought that give birth to and generate observable linguistic performance

 

* cognitive psychology

: meaning, understanding, and knowing were significant data for psychological study

: David Ausubel

: sought to discover underlying motivations and deeper structures of human behavior

generative linguistics, acquisition, innateness, interlanguage, systematicity, universal grammar, competence, deep structure

1980s, 1900s, and 2000s

Constructivism

: emphasis on social interaction and the discovery / the importance of social interaction and cooperative learning in constructing both cognitive and emotional images of reality

Jean Piaget

Lev Vygotsky

“learning is a developmental process that involves change, self-generation, and construction, each building on prior learning experiences

* zone of proximal development (ZPD)

: the distance between learners’ existing developmental state and their potential development

: important facet of social constructivism because it describes tasks “that a child cannot yet to do alone but could do with the assistance of more competent peers or adults”

importance of individual cognitive development as a relatively solitary act

social interaction was foundational in cognitive development and rejected the notion of predetermined stages

interactive discourse, sociocultural variables, cooperative learning, discovery learning, construction of meaning, interlanguage variability

 

3. Language Teaching

19 centuries

Classical Method

(Grammar Translation Method(GTM))

: grammatical rules, memorization of vocabulary and of various declensions and conjugations, translation of texts, doing written exercise

20 centuries

(1940s. 1950s)

Audiolingual Method(ALM), Direct Method(DM

: rules and the ‘cognitive code’ of language

20 centuries

(1970s)

Communitive Language Teaching(CLT)

: growing interest in interpersonal relationships, the value of group work, and the use of numerous cooperative strategies for attaining desired goals

: authentic uses of the second language

 

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이지 350 v2 스태틱 후기

 

 

이지 350 v2 스태틱입니다

봄까지 못기다릴만큼 너무 예뻐요!

 

 

이건 이지 350 v2 스태틱 사이즈 225에요

 220이랑 225 다 신어보았는데

결국 220으로 신을 것 같아요

사이즈는 정사이즈로 나온 것 같아요

 

 

겉에나 속이나 다 화이트에요

신기 아까울 정도에요 ><

회색이랑 하얀색이랑 섞여 있는데 색이 고급진 것 같아요

개인적으로 이지 지브라보다 마음에 들어요

 

 

 

속이랑 뒤까지 디테일이 맘에 들어요 !

 

 

이지 350 v2 스태틱 옆모습입니다

옆에가 약간 반투명이라고 해야하나 ?

그래서 양말 색깔이 보여요

그래서 알아서 취향에 따라 양말색으로 포인트 줄 수 도 있을 것 같아요

 

225 사이즈라서 그런지 귀여워요

개인적으로 넘넘 마음에 들어서 소장하려고 합니다 ><

 

 

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건대 맛집 케밥인(KEBAB INN) 후기

 

 

건대에서 케밥 파는 곳을 찾기가 힘든데

우연히 건대역 1번 출구 근처에서 케밥집을 발견했어요

건대역 1번 출구에서 5분도 안걸리는 것 같아요

 

 

케밥인 메뉴판입니다.

종류가 되게 많아요

가격은 6000원에서 만원 이상까지 있는 것 같아요

 

 

케밥인 직원분들은 모두 터키인이신 것 같아요

정확한 국적은 모르겠지만

케밥을 파는 곳이니 터키인이시겠져 ?

BGM도 그 나라의 노래인 것 같고

분위기로는 신뢰가 가는 느낌 ><

 

 

저는 치킨 케밥 단품으로 2개랑

감자튀김, 음료수를 시켰어요

저 날 치킨 케밥이 특별할인해서

3500인가 그 정도에 먹은 것 같아요

그리고 소스도 추가로 주시는데 저희는 저 소스 두개 다 엄청 잘 먹었어요

매운 맛 소스랑, 기본 소스 인 것 같아요

 

 

케밥인의 치킨 케밥 비주얼입니다

이태원 케밥이랑 비슷해요

><

배부르게 맛있게 먹고 왔습니다

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이지부스트 V2 트리플화이트 350 후기

 

 

이지 350 입니당

완전 새하얗더라고요

신기 아까울 정도였어요 ㅠㅠ

 

 

이지 350 옆모습입니다

아래 부분도 엄청 하얘요! !

위랑 다르긴 하지만 어쨋든 하얘서

신다가 색이 쉽게 변할 것 같기도 해요

그래도 여전히 옆모습이 이쁘긴 하져

 

참고로 이건 사이즈 230이에요

저는 이지 사이즈 220~230 다 신어요

 

 

뒷 부분에

저렇게 고리같은 게 있어요

뒷모습도 예쁜 이지 350 !

 

 

마지막으로

이지 350 전체샷입니당

 

앞면, 옆면, 뒷면 다 넘넘 예쁜 이지 350!

너무 하얘서 신기 아깝지만 만족합니당

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이지700 후기 (사이즈 220)

 

 

이지 700 후기 앞모습입니다

사이즈는 220이에요 이지 여자 사이즈가 비주얼로도 넘 예쁜 것 같아요

색감이 엄청 선명하고 예뻐요

 

 

옆모습이에요

처음에 이지 700 사진으로 봤을 때는

신발이 너무 크고 퉁퉁해서 공룡같았는데

막상 실물 보니까 그렇게 심하진 않더라고요

오히려 그냥 귀엽고 예뻐요

물론 사이즈가 220이라 그럴 수도 있어요

그리고 실제로 보면 각 색깔이 구분이 더 선명하고 잘 어울려요

 

 

뒷모습입니다

뒤에도 디테일이 ! ! 역시 이지 700

 

 

바닥면에도 아이다스 로고가 있어요

끈 색은 거의 연한 노란색이에요

개나리색 같아요 !

 

 

마지막으로 이지 700 전체샷입니당

개인적으로 넘넘 맘에들고

연청이나 검정 바지랑 잘 어울리는 것 같아요

 

 

이지 700 후기였습니다 ><

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아디다스 이지 500 후기

 

 

아디다스 이지 500 선물받았어요 !

처음에 사진으로 봤을 때는

신발이 너무 울퉁불퉁하고 진짜 이름 그대로 어글리해서

걱정이 많았는데 막상 실문 보니까

생각보다 얄상하고 예쁜 이지500

 

 

옆에서 본 이지500

바닥이 진짜 울퉁불퉁 !

근데 깨알같이 아디다스 로고가 있어요

그리고 소재가 다양하게 있어요

사진에서는 잘 안보일 수도 있는데

각 패턴마다 다른 소재에요

 

 

저는 이번 이지 500 색깔이 넘 맘에들어요

봄이랑 너무 어울리고

제가 원래 단색 옷을 좋아해서

아무 코디랑 다 어울릴 것 같아요

 

 

더 가까이서 찍어봤어요 !

아 그리고 제껀 사이즈 220 이에요

저는 원래 220-230 다 신는데

이지가 신발이 좀 큰 느낌이라서

220으로 했어요

근데 발도 편하고 커보이지도 않고 맘에 들어요

 

 

처음 개봉 했을 때 ! !

공룡이 누워있는지 알았지만 . .

ㅋ ㅋ ㅋ 그래도 막상 신어보면 예뻐요

 

 

아직 제대로 코디해서 신어보진 못했는데

이지 받자마자 넘 궁금해서

음식점에서 신어봤어요! !

히히

 

아무튼 저는 사이즈, 디자인, 실용 등

모든 면에서 만족하는

아디다스 이지 500 후기였습니다 :)

 

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나이키 에어맥스 97 OG 실버 후기

 

 

나이키 에어맥스 97 OG 실버를

생각지도 못하게 선물로 받았어요

요즘 구하기 힘들다던데ㅠㅠ

울트라는 좀 봤어도 이거는 실물도 보기 처음이네요

흑흑

 

나이키 에어맥스 97 OG 실버 정면 샷이에요

전체적으로 동글동글한 느낌이에요

 

 

나이키 에어맥스 97 OG 실버의 옆모습입니다

선물해준 오빠의 말로는

이 옆모습이 어느 나라의 기차가 지나가는 빠른 모습을 보고

영감을 받아서 이 신발을 디자인했다고해요 !

그래서 이렇게 옆 물결 모양이 간지나나봐요

 

회색과 하얀색이 같이 있고

빨간색 나이키 로고로 포인트!

밑에 에어도 굿굿

 

 

뒤에도 나름의 에어맥스 포인트가 있어요

 

원래는 220도 신는데

이 신발은 짱짱하게 나오기도 했고

너무 발이 작아보이는 것보단

키랑 적당하게 비율이 맞는게 좋을 것 같아서 230 신었는데

오히려 발이 편하고 좋더라고여 ~ ~

 

그렇다고 이 신발이 작게 나왔다는건 아니니까

사이즈업 할 필요는 없을 것 같아요

근데 워낙 신축성이 없어서 반사이즈 업하는건 추천입니당

 

 

조금 위에서 찍어봤어요

고급진 느낌~ ~

러닝화라서 그런지 신었을 때도 편하고 좋지만

디자인면으로도 되게 스포티해요

근데 실제로 보면 더 반짝거리고 고급져요

그게

나이키 에어맥스 97 OG의 장점인 것 같아요><

 

 

회색만 있었으면 뭔가 이상했을 수도 있는데

흰색 줄도 있어서

밑창이랑도 더 어울려요

디테일하게 만들어져서

보면 볼수록 예쁜

나이키 에어맥스 97 OG 실버 230 후기였습니다 ^^*

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