《跨文化交际》试题(附答案)
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《跨文化交际》试题(附答案)
Paper 1 Communication Analysis
The following are three different cases of cross-cultural communication. In each of the cases there is something to be improved upon. Write an analysis on what is to be desired for more successful communication or cultural understanding.
Question 1
Case 1:
Chen Bing, a Chinese tour guide, is talking to a Canadian tourist, Luke Baines, who has no knowledge of Chinese at all. They are having dinner in a restaurant.
Chen: This is Beijing duck, one of China's most famous dishes. You'll love it!
Luke: No, thanks. I don't like duck. I prefer chicken.
Question 2
Case 2:
Feng Li and Tom have been working on a scientific experiment at a British university for some months. It has not been totally successful. They are discussing the situation in the laboratory.
Feng Li: I don't know where it went wrong!
Tom, Don't feel so bad. Cheer up, you've done your job.
Feng Li: But our experiment has turned out to be a failure.
Tom: Relax for a couple of days. I'll face the music.
Feng Li: Tom, we are not playing children's games here. This is a scientific experiment.
Tom, I've never taken the experiment as child’ s play, and I'm playing the game.
Feng Li: You say you're playing the game! It's a rather important experiment!
Feng Li walks out of the Laboratory angrily. Tom is puzzled.
Question 3
Case 3:
This is a more complex situation where there are several things that require more informed cultural analysis. Find the cultural problems and explain the cultural differences. Jim and Li Zhen were students together at Leeds University in Britain. A year later, after graduating, Jim went to Shanghai as a visiting scholar on a year’s exchange.
Jim had never been to China before. Li Zhen took him to a classical piano
concert performed by a famous Chinese pianist. During the performance people were talking and at one stage someone ran up onto the stage and presented the pianist with a bunch of flowers during the playing of a particular musical item. This happened several times during the evening. It also happened when two singers were on stage singing some songs that he was playing. Jim thought all these things quite strange. At the end of the performance the audience applauded the pianist and he applauded them. The audience began to leave while the pianist remained on the stage.
Paper 2 Vocabulary
Choose one word or expression from those in the box below to fill the gap in each of the sentences. Write the correct words in the spaces provided in your answer sheet. Do not change the forms of the
4. After twenty five years working in the bank she decided on a different .
5. Finally, after arguing about the meal for five minutes it was decided he would .
6. Despite the circumstances of the accident there were still some that needed explanation.
7. There are many different used when talking about people's relationships in China.
8. "Mike! Meet Jane, the ."
9. "Ok, the argument is over. Let's forget it, you know."
10. People in English speaking countries also avoid losing face or hurting other people by telling .
11. It is difficult for foreigners to understand British pub culture, especially the system of which all members of the group are expected to join in.
12. It was a crushing blow to her, a hit when she received the news that her husband had left her for another woman.
13. In China there is a real sense of in social situations. Paper 3 Translation
Translate the following passage from English into Chinese. Please write your translation on the answer sheet.
What do we mean by "Intercultural Communications" or "IC"? This is not a description of the popular trend toward talking about international things or going overseas. IC is actually an academic and applied discipline that has developed internationally since the 1950s. Sometimes called "cross-cultural communications" or "comparative culture" , scholars most often use the prefix "inter" with the word "cultural" to describe the interaction between cultures. On one level, IC is represented by culture studies, where we examine the political, economic and lifestyle systems of other countries. On another level, it is applied linguistics, where we seek to understand the relationship between language and culture. Many Chinese English teachers and professors have been interested in this aspect since the 1980s - How to teach English in ways that help students also learn the basic communication practices of Britain, the US or other English speaking countries.
But the discipline of Intercultural Communications is actually a broad and well-developed field of study. IC is an interdisciplinary application of fields like cultural anthropology, sociology, psychology (and social psychology), communication studies, applied linguistics and educational pedagogy. IC is a comprehensive attempt to understand all aspects of human cultures and how they interact with each other.
To understand Intercultural Communications, we seek to understand tradition and modernization, consistency and change. As we understand some of the ongoing national characteristics of a people, we can examine how this culture is seen from the outside, how it interacts with other cultures and how it is changing. In the last thirty odd years, scholars have developed both theoretical framework for comparing cultures and some practical dimensions for considering the similarity and differences between them. One level of intercultural comparison is Cultural Identity. Another level of comparison is Verbal Communication. Another area receiving much attention is Nonverbal Communication. Paper 4 Reading
Passage 1 Questions 15-20
In recent years criticisms have been voiced concerning sexist bias in the English language. It has been argued that some of the vocabulary and grammar we use reflects and reinforces a traditional view of the world as one in which men are dominant and women play a secondary role. Take
the word 'chairman' for example. While this can in fact apply to people of both sexes, it appears to some people to be male-oriented as it ends in 'man'. In the past people taking the role of chairman were exclusively male and the word was obviously originally a compound of 'chair' and 'man'. Many English speakers, however, have ceased to view this word as a compound and no more feel it to be composed of these two units, than they perceive cupboard to be a composite of ' cup' and ' board'. In addition the continued use of chairman might be defended on the grounds that the final syllable is pronounced /m'n/ rather than /mn/, just like the final syllable of woman. Despite such considerations other speakers take a contrary view and are sensitive to the components of which it is made up. They clearly perceive it as a title that perpetuates traditional ideas about the place of women in society. For this reason they seek to replace it with neutral terms such as 'chairperson' or 'chair', so that it is now possible to ask questions such as; 'Who is chair of the committee?' Other changes advocated include the replacement of words such as 'postman', 'fireman' and 'policeman' with more clearly neutral terms such as 'postal worker', fire-fighter' and 'police officer’. There is, however, continuing controversy about how far such language changes should go. Should changes be considered for traditional idioms as 'man in the street' and titles such as 'Peking Man'? What about those words where the male meaning of 'man' is no longer dominant, such as 'manhandle'?
To the extent that changes have taken place, they have done so more in the written language and formal pronouncements than in everyday speech. You would be quite likely to read in the paper that 'Postal workers are to receive a pay increase.' But 'Has the postman been?' would be most likely to be heard in informal conversation. Here 'postma n’ remains firmly entrenched in popular usage.
The extent to which language reflects and shapes attitudes and behaviors is a matter of conjecture. Chinese, Japanese, Persian and Turkish do not make the kinds of sex distinctions English makes through its system of pronouns, but it would be difficult to maintain that males who speak these languages are less sexist than males who speak English! Answer the following questions according to the above text:
15. The general use of the word 'man' added to English words indicates .
A. sexual feelings
B. sexual freedom
C. sexist ideas
D. sexist bias .
16. Generally where language and sex are concerned in Britain .
A. all people agree change is needed
B. some people agree change is needed
C. people can't make up their minds on the issue
D. people think the issue is unimportant and not serious
17. What example does the author give to support a defense of the word 'chairman'?
18. What does the author argue for when the example 'manhandle' is given?
19. What does the author have to say about the impact of language changes?
20. What is the author's argument in the final paragraph?
Passage 2 Questions 21-27
Can Computers Do a Better Job Rating Stocks?
Since May, Charles Schwab has been providing stock ratings to clients using a computerized system that it says tries to remove human bias.
In particular, Schwab says, its system is meant to avoid the conflicts of interest that have plagued traditional brokerage firms, whose research analysts have often acted as cheerleaders for companies being courted by their investment bankers.
"We believe that our single biggest advantage is our objectivity," said Jerry Chafkin, Schwab's executive vice president for investment advice and products. " While the development of the methodology is human, the analysis is being performed systematically and automatically.
Though Schwab is perhaps the most prominent financial services company to use a computer-driven rating system, several others, including Value Line and Zacks Investment Research, pick stocks in a similar way.
The various systems produce very different ratings of individual stocks, and their ability to outperform a market index fund over time has not been proved conclusively. The verdict is still out as to whether computers do it better than people. What is clear, though, is that the major computerized systems hand out fewer positive stock ratings than do Wall Street analysts, who seem to give them out very generously.
People who run computerized selection systems criticize traditional Wall Street analysis as having institutional conflicts of interest, as well as individual bias. "I am very suspicious about opinions and judgments and emotions by humans in individual stock selection," said Samuel Eisenstadt, Value Line's research director.
However, the computer-driven stock-picking systems must rely on the selection criteria of their creators. All try to isolate factors that their developers believe have the greatest ability to predict share prices. Most models compare a company9s historical earnings growth with that of other companies. And many track the extent to which earnings have surprised analysts.
Many firms use their computer-based stock-rating systems as marketing tools.
The designers of these systems say they should be judged on how a group of stocks performs over time. But all the systems assume, as do stock analysts on Wall Street, that superior research, by humans, and analysis can select a group of stocks that will outperform the market averages over the long run.
Market analysts say it is too soon to assess the fledgling Schwab system or new models, like Microsoft's year-old Stock-Scouter
Mark the following statements True (T) / False (F) / Not Given (NG) according to the information provided in the text.
Write T, or F or NG on your answer sheet in the spaces provided for questions.
21. Charles Schwab is a computer company.
22. The method of operation by Schwab is done automatically.
23. 'Value Line' and 'Zacks' have similar operating methods to Schwab.
24. There is no conclusive proof that computers perform better than humans.
25. Wall Street analysts are generous in rating stocks.
26. Human beings make value judgments according to the research director of 'Value Line'.
27. Analysts are surprised at the growth rate of share prices.
答案及评分标准
Paper 1: Communication Analysis
●The following points should be covered in the analysis.
●Award one point for each of the points covered (underlined). Paper 2: Vocabulary
●One point for each item.
●Answers must be the same as the key.
4. vocation
5. foot the bill
6. grey areas
7. kin terms
8. trouble and strife 9. live and let live
10. white lies 11. buying a round
12. below the belt 13. community
Paper 3: Translation
14.“跨文化交际”或“IC”是指什么呢?这并不是对于谈论国际事务或出国大潮的描述。
“IC”实际上是自20世纪50年代以来在世界范围内
发展起业的一门学术及应用学科。
有时称为“跨文化交际”或“比较文化”,学者们大多使用“inter”这一前缀加上“文化”这个词来表述文化间的相互作用。
在一个层面上,IC体现在文化研究上,研究其它国家的政治,经济和生活方式制度等。
在另一个层面上,它是应用语言学,力求了解语言与文化的关系。
20世纪80年代以来,许多中国英语教师和教授对此产生了浓厚兴趣一如何在英语教学中帮助学生同时了解英国,美国或其他英语国家基本的交际行为。
但跨文化交际这门学科实际上是一门广泛且日益完善的研究领域。
IC是涵盖如文化人类学、社会学、心理学(及社会心理学)、交际研究、应用语言学和教育学的跨学科应用。
IC是了解人类文化以及它们间是如何相互影响的综合尝试。
要了解跨文化交际,我们力图探究传统与现代,一致与变化。
由于我们了解了某一民族现存的某些民族特色,我们便可以探究如何从外部审视这一文化,它是如何与其它文化相互影响的,又是如何变化的。
在过去的30多年,学者们发展了用于比较文化的理论框架以及若干用于思考它们异同的实践领域。
跨文化比较的一个层面是文化特性,另一层面是(口头)语言交际。
还有一倍受关注的领域是非语言交际。
Paper 4: Reading
Passage 1
15. D
16. C
17. The pronunciation of the final syllable of 'chairman' is /m'n/ as in the pronunciation of 'woman'.
18. The author argues that the male meaning of 'man' is no longer dominant. OR: The author argues that the male meaning of 'man' is no longer 'dominant.
19. The impact is more in formal and/or written language areas (e. g. the media). Ordinary people still tend to use words ending in ' man'. Therefore In Informal language use there has been little or no impact. 20. Regardless of language structure in any society, non-sexist language use does not mean change will occur if people's attitudes and behaviors do not change.
Passage 2
●Award one point for each item.
●Answers must be the same as the key.
21. F 22. F 23. T 24. T 25. T。