大学英语外报外刊阅读教程(第二版)课件+教学参考手册 (34)[28页]

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大学英语外报外刊阅读教程Lesson2

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程Lesson2
spheres C. The majority of Hispanics are U.S. – born D. Immigration is the top concern of all Hispanics
Lesson 2
1. What is the purpose of the debate between Mateo and Martínez?
Lesson 2
J-Lo – Jeniffer Lopes
Jennifer Lopez, born in 1970, American actor, singer, and dancer, highly popular for her work in films as well as music. In 2001 she became the first woman to have the highest-grossing motion picture (The Wedding Planner) and album (J. Lo) in the United States in the same week.
Lesson 2
John Kerry (Line 7, Para. 7)
John F. Kerry, born in 1943, American politician and Democratic Party candidate for the United States presidency in 2004. Kerry, a U.S. senator from Massachusetts, lost to President George W. Bush in a hard-fought battle that divided the American public. A graduate of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, Kerry served as an officer in the Vietnam War (19571975), winning numerous commendations for bravery. He returned to the United States disillusioned about the war and rose to national prominence as he led a group of veterans who sought a U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam. Kerry was first elected to the U.S. Senate in 1984 and was reelected in 1990, 1996, and 2002.

全新版大学英语 第二版 阅读教程

全新版大学英语 第二版 阅读教程

哈维.米尔克(HARVEY MILK)由街道组成的城市A City of Neighborhoods美国梦是从街道开始的。

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------哈维.米尔克(1930-1978)是第一个被选入旧金山市管理委员会的公开的同性恋者。

三次竞选失败后,米尔克于1977年代表卡斯特罗区──一个不同种族的人杂居的地区──入选市管委会。

对许多当地居民来说,这个区就像一座小城。

他们不欢迎市区再建。

尤其不欢迎用推土机铲平街道,代之以高楼大厦的做法。

米尔克的选民们对是否能保存他们生活的特点,避免发生在其它大城市中已毁了街区的衰败现象感到疑虑,忧心忡忡。

米尔克意欲爲同性恋问题以及美国城市街道复兴而大声疾呼。

然而1978年11月27日哈维.米尔克和乔治.莫斯肯市长被一名心怀仇恨的前市管委会成员暗杀。

哈维.米尔克在就任市管委会职务后不久在一次募集基金的宴会上发表了以下这篇演讲。

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------……对这-点我们可别弄错:美国梦是从街道开始的。

如果我们要重建城市,我们就必须首先重建街道。

而要这麽做,我们就必须认识到,生活的品质比生活的标准更重要。

坐在门前台阶上──不论它是-座小城住宅的游廊还是一个大城市住宅的混凝土门廊──与我们的邻居闲聊,要比挤坐在起居室的躺椅上看一个顔色失真的虚假世界重要得多。

进步并非美国的唯一事业──当然也不是它最重要的事业。

随着技术的发展,生活的品质下降了,这岂不是咄咄怪事? 哦,洗盘子更容易了。

正餐本身也更方便了──只须加热,端上饭桌,虽说若是我们吃了广告扔掉食品,营养或许更丰富。

当客人来访时,我们再也不怕玻璃器皿上会有污点了。

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程Lesson

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程Lesson

Key to Questions
3. Why does the author say Latino turnout and preference will be decisive in the election?
3. The author says Latino turnout and preference will be decisive in the election because they are the majority minority and more of Latinos than ever before are expected to go to the polls, and a large number of those people are not tied to either political party.
Lesson 2
Key to Questions
4. According to the article, how can a candidate lock up Latinos’ vote?
4. According to the article, a candidate who figures out how to talk to Latinos about education and healthcare in a compelling way can lock up Latinos’ vote.
1.The purpose of the debate between Mateo and Martinez is to focus on the specific needs of Latinos that both parties are courting.

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程(第二版)课件+教学参考手册 (29)[24页]

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程(第二版)课件+教学参考手册 (29)[24页]

Small Businesses in the United States A business can be large or small depending on factors like capital invested, the number of people, quantity produced and so on. A small business is generally one that is independently owned and operated by one or more individuals, is not one of the dominant players in that particular industry, and its size comes under the size limits defined by the regulatory authority of small businesses in the country. In the U.S., the definition of a small business varies in every industry but according to the Small Business Administration, a small manufacturing business will have less than 500 employees, and non-manufacturing businesses will have less than $7 million in annual receipts.
大学英语
外报外刊阅读教程
(第二版)
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大学英语外报外刊阅读教程(第二版)课后习题参考答案

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程(第二版)课后习题参考答案

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程教学参考手册第二版端木义万主编Lesson 1Answers to the QuestionsV. 1.B2. B 3. D 4. AVI.1. According to Ms. Wellington, GenX’ers are attracted to their organizations for utterly traditional reasons: reputation of the organization, opportunities to advance.2. Catalyst and other research organizations caution that this age group has high demands for employers. If their demands are not met, they will leave. And they are highly sensitive to the way in which they are treated. If the G enX’er believes that his employer is not making a commitment to him, he will leave.3.The survey found that more than 70 percent of them rated companionship, a loving family and enjoying life as extremely important. In contrast, fewer than 20 percent of them said earning a lot of money and becoming an influential leader were extremely important goals.4. According to Robert Morgan, the corporate loyalty is rising in the current economic climate partly because of job insecurities. Besides, there is the war for talent. As labor shortages intensified in recent years, employers have worked hard at retaining good workers.OutlineI.(1) Summary leadIncreasing job loyalty of GenX’ersII. (2 –6) Catalyst’s survey about job loyalty of GenX’ers1. General situation of the job loyalty2. Findings about the similarities between GenX’ers and the previous generationsa. Old-fashioned goalsb. Traditional attractions3. Findings about the differences between GenX’ers and the previous generationsa. High demands for employersb. High sensitiveness to the way they are treatedIII. (7 – 8) Specific example of Colleen GalleReasons for staying: job satisfactionjob loyaltyIV. (9 – 11) More details of the survey1. Scope, objects and focus of the survey2. Findings about the factors in job loyalty:Companionship, loving family, enjoying life3. Statistics showing job loyaltyV. (12 – 15) Analysis of job loyalty1. Not surprising in the current economic climate2. Comparison between 1999 and 2001 in job loyalty3. Reasons for the increase of job loyaltya. Present job insecurityb. Employers’ efforts at retaining the talentedLesson 2Answers to the QuestionsV. 1.A 2.A 3. B 4. DVI.1.The purpose of the debate between Mateo and Martinez is to focus on the specificneeds of Latinos that both parties are courting.2.The problems pointed out by Martinez are bad education, unemployment and lackof health insurance.3.The author says Latino turnout and preference will be decisive in the electionbecause they are the majority minority and more of Latinos than ever before are expected to go to the polls, and a large number of those people are not tied to either political party.4.According to the article, a candidate who figure out how to talk to Latinos abouteducation and healthcare in a compelling way can lock up Latinos’ vote.5.The term “Hispanic”came into official use in 1973, when the Nixonadministration formally divided Americans into five races. Liberals prefer the term “Latino” on the grounds that the Spaniards were the very people who destroyed the indigenous cultures of Latin Americans)6.The author thinks that the term “Hispanic” is a marketing term and it’s aterm used by politicians at election time.7.The author thinks that the term “Hispanic” is a marketing term and it’s aterm used by politicians at election time. It cannot reflect cultural realities.OutlineI. (1 – 2) Debate between Mateo and Martinez1. Main issues for the debate and the purpose of the debate2. Audience’s response: louder opponents’ voicesII. (3 – 5) Latinos’ importance in election1. Decisive role of Latino voter turnout and preference2. Reason for the importance of Latino vote: Latinos’ ascent to the majorityminority in 20033. Factors limiting Latinos’ voting strengtha. Many of them are not yet US citizens.b. One third of Latinos are under 18.III. (6 – 8) Latinos’ prime concerns1. Importance of education and healthcare to Latinos2. Reasons for the importance of those issuesa. U.S.– born Latinos form the majority.b. It’s more likely for Latinos to lack healthcare and education.IV. (9 – 10) Discussion about the term “Hispanic”1. The origin of the term and the problems with the term2. Rich diversity of LatinosV. (11) Increased visibility of LatinosLesson 3Answers to the QuestionsV.1.C 2.D 3.C 4. AVI.1.WWII led to women’s entry into the workforce. As men marched off to fight, womentook their husbands’ places in factories and on the farms. They never looked back. Most now take it for granted that women have as much to offer at work as men do.2.No, it is more than a financial issue because it raises social as well as economicquestions and its resolution will involve governments, employers and people.3.The babyboom generation is far larger than the generation that follows it orany that preceded it. Its achievement will cast a shadow over the companies it is set to leave.4.The present ways of dealing with a falling supply of labor are shifting workoffshore, laxer immigration rules and use of new equipment.5.If they were offered the chance of staying on at work, many older employees wouldjump at the chance because they will no longer be able to retire in the style they have been led to expect. Corporate pension schemes and health benefits are becoming even less generous. Besides the need for money, many elderly people want to continue working for mental stimulation.6.The author thinks that older workers need to adapt and accept a relative declinein salary and status7.The significance of babyboomers’ changing the world of work will be moreprofound and longer lasting than the changes they have brought since the 1960s.OutlineI. (1 – 2) Social changes in western countries after WWII1.Women’s entry into the work force2.Retirement pensions for the elderlyII. (3 – 4) Problems caused by the present retirement pensions1. Heavy burden of financing retirement pensions for babyboomers2. Companies’ shortage of skilled workersIII. (5 – 7) Need to keep the elderly at work1. Present ways of dealing with a falling supply of labour2. Elderly people’s desire for worka. Elderly people’s need for moneyb. Elderly people’s desire for mental stimulationIV. (8 –10) Suggestions to governments and companies about how to keep the elderly people at work1. Separation of pension from their final salaries2. Freeing up labor markets instead of focusing on legislating to ban discrimination on grounds of age3. Offering flexible work scheduleV. (11) Suggestion to the elderly workersNeed to adapt to a relative decline in salary and statusVI. (12) Significance of babyboomers’ changing the world of workLesson 4Answers to the QuestionsV.1.D 2.A 3.D 4.BVI.1.According to the new government figures, British female full time workers willbe paid £ 369,000 less than their counterparts over their lifetime.2.That lifetime disparity would be enough to pay for 31 years of childcare or 22new cars, or to pay off the average student debt 18 times over.3.Britain’s gender pay gap of 2008 was larger than that of 2007. Men were paid17.1% more than women for full-time work while the disparity in part-time wageswas 36.6%, up from 35.8% in 2007.4.The Fawcett Society has called on the government to include mandatory payauditing in the equalities bill, scheduled to be introduced in next month’s Queen’s speech.5.According to the article, Sri Lanka is judged the fifth most equal in the worldon political empowerment because of the long incumbencies as prme minister and president of Sirimavo Bandaranaika and Chandrika Kumaratunga.6.According to Yvonne Galligan, younger parliaments, in general, were often muchmore representative.7.Dr. Selvi Thriuchandran felt puzzled by the WEF findings, pointing out that asidefrom the Bandaranaikes, Sri Lanka had the worst record in South Asia in terms of representation in the legislature and executive.OutlineI. (1 – 4) ONS’s finding about gender pay gap in Britain1. Lifetime pay gap for female full-time workers2. Gender pay gap’s widening in 20083. Concrete value of the lifetime disparity4. Rake’s comment on the pay gap’s wideningII. (5 – 7) WEF’s finding about UK women’s status’s drop from 11th to 13th in terms of economic, political, health and educational status2. UK’s ranking in terms of progress on equal pay3.Sectors with wide gender pay gapsIII. (8 – 9) Efforts made to address the problem1. Fawcett Society’s call for the inclusion of mandatory pay auditing in the equality bill2. Harriet Harman’s announcement of a requirement to publish gender pay gaps IV. (10 – 12) Analysis of women’s political empowerment1. Analysis of Sri Lanka’s high ranking on political empowerment2. Yvonne Galligan’s analysis of UK women’s political empowermenta. Low percentage in the House of Commonsb. Healthier gender balance in the Scottish parliament and the Welsh assembly3. Women’s higher representation in younger parliamentsV. (13 – 14) Dr. Selvi Thriuchanara’s view on women’s status in Sri Lanka1. Disputing WEF’s conclusion2. Problems faced by women in Sri LankaLesson 5Answers to the QuestionsV.1.A 2. B 3.D 4. BVI.1.The first power shift is a rebalancing of moral authority. The major factor in the shift is the receding moral superiority of the west.2. The double standard in Paragraph 3 refers to the US different rules for the two financial crises. During the Asian financial crisis, the US bashed Hong Kong when its government intervened in August 1998 in the stock market to fend off the western investment banks and hedge funds bent on destroying the city’s currency. Yet onlya month later, the US intervened in the market to bail out LTCM.3. The author thinks that the minor adjustment in voting rights in the World Bank and International Monetary Fund is symbolic of the increase of the east’s say in decision making in global economic affairs.4. Reminbi has gained an elevation in status. Over time , some countries will keep more Reminbi, making it more like reserve currency.5. The recent crisis shows that blindly seeking growth is dangerous. To many wealthycountries, it is unrealistic.6. The five power shifts are for the most part desirable. They provide a more balanced and stable world.OutlineI. (1) Appearance of global rebalancingII . (2 – 6) Rebalancing of moral authority1. Double standard maintained by the West to financial crisis2. Many conflicts of interest inherent in the West’s investment banking3. The West’s moral dilemma in dealing with China4. Equal footing of the two sidesIII. (7 – 8 ) The West’s loss of domination in global economic affairs1. Increase of the East’s say in global economic affairs2. Approach of relative balance between the East and the WestIV. (9) Shift in the center of economic gravity from the Atlantic to the Pacific1. Earlier rise of Japan2. China’s growth momentum and increased economic powerV. (10) Decline of the US dollar’s statusVI. (11) Most developed economies’switch to the attempt to maintain present growth VII. (12) Effects of the five power shiftsLesson 6Answers to the QuestionsV.1. D 2.C 3 A 4.AVI.1.The letters which millions of Americans got were quarterly reports telling themwhat had happened to their savings invested in the stockmarket. They have been more effective than any campaign ad.2.Accoring to the Wisconsin Advertising Project, 73% of McCain’s ads and 61% ofObama’s ads are negative.3.He thinks that negative campaign ads are more informative than positive ones.4.Obama’s ads attack McCain for the many ways he plans to make life wretched fornearly everyone.5.McCain’s attacks on Obama focus on his slender résumé, his dodgy associatesand the possibility that he will raise taxes.6.Some Democrats complain that McCain’s attacks are stoking up violent racialhatred against Obama.7.The author thinks that they are unfounded.OutlineI. (1) Effects of factual adsHelping Obama double his lead over McCainII. (2 – 4) Both sides’ use of negative campaign ads1. Attack ads’ percentage and John Geer’s view on their function2. Obama’s ad attacks on McCain3.McCain’s ad attacks on ObamaIII. (5) Expenditure on attack ads and ways of running those adsIV. (6 – 7) Effects of negative campaign ads1. Worry and complaints about ad attack s’possible effect of fanning up violence2.Author’s view: unfounded predictionsLesson 7Answers to the QuestionsV. 1. D 2. B 3. A 4. DVI.1. The Conservative Party and the Liberal-Democratic Party have formed the British coalition government.2. Clegg decided that he could not form a coalition with the Labour Party due toa revolt inside the parliamentary Labour Party at the concept of a deal, as well as its likely terms.3. If the deal works, it will change the shape of the Conservative Party.4. The Lib Dems secured 5 cabinet posts and a commitment to 15 other ministerial jobs across Whitehall. On the Conservative side, George Osborne will the chancellor of the exchequer and William Hague foreign secretary.5. The serious problems confronting the coalition government are a huge deficit, deep social problems and a political system in need of reform.6. In the negotiations, the Tories agreed to drop their plans to raise the threshold for inheritance tax and provide extra money for disadvantaged pupils.7. When the Lib Dem-Con deal was secured, George Brown went to the Queen to tender his resignation. Later, he told party workers he was resigning immediately as party leader, leaving Harriet Harman in charge.OutlineI.(1 – 4 ) Formation of the Conservative Party – the Liberal Democratic Party coalition1. Coalition with Cameron as Prime Minister and Clegg as his deputy2. Labour Party’s failure to forge a coalition with Lib Dems3. End of five-day power struggle4. Cameron’s resolveII. ( 5 – 7) The deal and its impact1. The deal making2. The deal impact on the two parties3. Power division between the two partiesIII. (8 – 10) The new government’s resolve1. Admission of some deep and pressing problems2. Call on the people for support3. Promise to form a new kind of governmentIV. (11 – 13) Negotiations and results1. Agreements and compromises reached in the negotiations.2. Lib Dems’ endorsement of the derailed condition dealV. (14 – 16) Brown’s resignation and apology1. Tendering the resignation to the Queen2. Statement about his resignation as party leader3. Apology for his failure to forge a coalitionVI. (17 – 18) Recriminations by the Lib Dems and the Labour on each other1. Lib Dems’ attack on the Labour2. Lord Adonis’s attack on the Lib DemsLesson 8Answers to the QuestionsV. 1. A 2. D 3. D 4. AVI.1. America’s standing in world opinion is at an all-time low. Even its closest allies oppose U.S. policies.2. Its unpopularity is dangerous and expensive. It leads to high military costs abroad, skyrocketing security costs at home, and the loss of trade as America’s goods become shunned overseas. All this causes an economic drain.3. If Americans travelled more, they’d better understand their place on this complex planet and fit in more comfortably, and eventually the U.S. wouldn’t need to spend as much as the rest of the world combined on its military to feel safe.4. Travel helps Americans celebrate, rather than fear, diversity of culture.5. Travel gives Americans a perspective that can translate, through the voting booth, into American policies that will not alienate them from the family of nations. And when that happens, Americans’ safety will be improved.OutlineI (1-2) Need for Americans to gain a better understanding of the world by travelling II (3-5) America’s unpopularity and its harmful effects1.America’s low standing in world opinio n2.Being routinely outvoted at the U.N. on a variety of issuesIII (6-18) Benefits of thoughtful travel1.Gaining a better understanding of America’s place on the complex planet 2.Getting a clear idea about how the world sees America3.Gaining a better understanding about other societiesa. Getting a firsthand look at the complexity and struggles of othersocietiesb. Helping Americans celebrate diversity of culturec. Helping Americans appreciate the challenges other societies face4.Combating ethnocentrism5.Helping to ensure sound policiesLesson 9Answers to the QuestionsV. 1. C 2. D 3. B 4.BVI.1.It is a non-profit group that promotes the importance of family and fatherhood. It is based in New York.2.The sexual revolution of the 1960sand '70s swept away a concept of datingin which there was an implicit understanding that each party was shopping for a mate and not just for sex.3.If women are not hooking up, they frequently fall into fast-moving, "joined-at-the-hip" relationships with men, spending nights in oneanother's rooms.4.In the author’s opinion, the rules of courtship in the 1950s were clearer than those of the present. But they proved unfulfilling either, because at that time those who were courting got to know each other under artificial circumstances. They were well dressed and put their best foot forward. This was not the best way to get to know people.OutlineI.(1)News leadSummary of the survey’s reportII. (2—3)The dating scene on college campuses1. Two choices for women2. Women’s desire for long-term relationship and marriageIII. (4)The surveyThe agency doing the investigation; aim, objects and means of the surveyIV. (5—7)Reasons for the appearance of the dating scene1. The sexual revolution2. Women’s lower propor tion3. Lack of clear rulesV. (8—10)Main forms of sexual relationship1. Hook-upForms of hookup: kissing, oral sex and intercourse2. Intense, but vague relationship3. Women’s tendency to act like menVI. (11—12)Impact of the dating scene on marriage1. Less likely to marry or find happiness in marriage2. More likely to marry laterVII. (13—14)The past dating scene1. Rules of courtship: Clearer in the past2.Artificial circumstancesVIII. (15)The problem with both dating scenes: not the right way to know menLesson 10Answers to the QuestionsV.1.C 2. B 3. C 4. CVI.1. The American traditional family is a family made up of two biological parentsand two or three children with the father as the only breadwinner.2. No. The traditional family has lost its predominant place. Today only about 20percent of American families fit the traditional structure.3. The new American family is a household with fewer children, with both parents working, and with mothers giving birth to their children at an ever older age, having fewer children, and spacing them further apart.4. The stable family of two biological parents is the ideal vessel for moldingcharacter, for nurturing, for inculcating values, and for planning for a child’s future.5. The result of Am erica’s family changes is a serious new divide in the American society between the children of poorer, less educated, single parents and those of richer, better educated, and married parents.6. Mother-only families produce harmful effects on children. They are more likely than those with two parents to suffer poverty, to be suspended from school, to have emotional problems, to become delinquent, to suffer from abuse, to take drugs, and to perform poorly on virtually every measure.7. Today, 81 percent of American women think she should have her own career, and 70 percent think that both husband and wife should earn money. The vast majorityof working mothers say that even if the family did not need the income, they would continue working.8. The author thin ks that America’s Social Security and welfare should be reformed so as to nourish marriage and raise the proportion of children who grow up in two-parent families.OutlineI.(1)Traditional family’s loss of its predominanceII. (2)Reasons for traditional f amily’s loss of its predominance1. Late marriage2. Increased divorce rates3. Cohabitation4. Births to unmarried mothersIII. (3-5)Effects of family changes1. Importance of family stability for children2. Result of family changes3. Harmful effects of single-parent families on childrenIV. (6)Women’s changed concepts on family rolesV. (7-8)Ways to nourish marriage1. Reforming Social Security and welfare2. Educating people about the importance of marriage3. Giving incentives for couples to form and sustain healthy marriageVI.(9)Family trend and the way to deal with the trend1. Shift from traditional to contemporary family2. Tempering the trend by nurturing the American family with public policy infavor of marriageLesson 11Answers to the QuestionsV. 1. B 2. D 3. A4. CVI.1.Kaiser Permanente Bellflower Medical Center had organized a 52-member medical team for delivering the babies with each of them designated and assigned to nurses, doctors and surgical assistants. At 10:43 a.m. on January 26, they were all ready.2. Before the multiple birth, Nadya Suleman was a recently-divorced single mother who already had six children ranging in age from 2 to 7, two of them 2-year-old twins and one of them autistic.3. The news report stoked the furor created by the delivery of the octuplets.4. Nadya Suleman used the last of her remaining embryos and got impregnated through in-vitro fertilization.5. Nadya Suleman’s mother sees it less glowingly. She believes that her dau ghter is obsessed and misguided for she already had six beautiful children.6. After being released from the hospital, Nadya Suleman will be faced with problems of child support and child care.OutlineI.(1)Deilvery of Nadya Suleman’s eight babies at Kais er1. Kaiser’s preparation for the delivery2. Delivery of seven babies3. Delivery of the eighth baby4. Present condition of Nadya Suleman and her eight babiesII. (2) Controversy over Nadya Suleman’s multiple birth1. Nadya Suleman’s way of i mpregnation2. Her mother’s view3. Society’s responses4. Her neighbour’s viewsIII. (3) Nadya Suleman’s obsession with having kids1. Angela Suleman’s explanation of her daughter’s obsession2. Yolanda Novak’s explanation of Nadya’s obsession3. More information about Nadya’s way of impregnationIV. (4) Issue of Nadya Suleman’s impregnation1. Fertility doctor’s stand2. No detail about the impregnation3. Kaiser’s advice to Nadya SulemanV. (5-6)Problems facing Nadya Suleman1. Financial support problem2. Childcare problemLesson 12Answers to the QuestionsV. 1.C 2. D 3. A 4. BVI.1. The author suggests that the husband and the wife should offer each other more positive statements, less negative statements, heart-felt and specific compliments and thank-yous.2. Human touch aids the release of feel-good endorphins for giver and receiver.3. To build a fortress of love, he or she should fully support his or her spouse, take his or her spouse’s side whenever possible if trouble arises in the “outside world”.4.Trying to improve the spouse puts him/her on the defensive and cast you in a drearyrole. The result is that everyone is unhappy.5. When a marriage needs improvement, the true solution is that you should change yourself first, address your own flaws and seek the best in your spouse.6. Good feelings can improve marriage. The happier you feel, the happier your marriage will be and the easier it will be to manage conflicts.7. When conflict is handled with the right tools and attitude, it becomes a gateway to deeper intimacy – the chance to be seen and lived for who you truly are, to accept your mate’s adorable, vulnerable real self and build a strong union without caving in or silently seething.8. A couple should av oid tough talks when they’re not rested well, well fed and when drunk.OutlineI. (1-2) Introduction to the 7 secrets of sexy marriageII. (3-5) Build up love balance1. Function of love balance2. Way to build up love balanceIII. (6-7) Reach out1. Function of human touch and the way to improve it2. Function of fortress of love and the way to build the fortressIV. (8-10) Remember that nobody’s perfect1. Desire to blame your spouse and change him/her2. Harmful effects of trying to change your spouse3. Need to change yourselfV. (11) Add some zing1. Function of attraction2. Way to enhance attractionVI. (12-14) Always fight fairly1. Function of conflict solution2. Right way to handle conflictsVII. (15-17) Pick the right time and place1. The right time for tough talks2. The right place for tough talksVIII. (18) Open your ears1. Importance of listening more2. Right way to respond to a combative talkLesson 13Answers to the QuestionsV. 1. B 2. A 3. D 4. BVI.1. Sam Zell blamed “a perfect storm” of factors behind the Tribune Company’s bankruptcy filing.2.Newspaper Association of America figures show that advertising revenues have been falling since the summer of 2006.3. It was the accele ration of advertising revenues’ fall, coupled with the sheer amount of debt Mr Zell took on to buy Tribune, which led the Los Angeles Times and Chicago Tribune to the bankruptcy courts.4.Moody’s last Month predicted “dire straits” for some publishers in 2009.5.Publishers’ options are shrinking because prospective buyers struggle to find acquisitions.6. The fact that the New York Times wroke down the value of its newspapers showed that asset sales may yield less than once hoped.7.According to Paper Cuts, more than 15,000 U.S newspaper positions have been cut.8.Moody expects most publishers that default to be able to restructure their debt, rather than close titles.OutlineI.(1-4) Newspaper industry’s decline.1.Tribune Company’s bankruptcy filing2. Causes of newspaper industry’s declinea. Debates about the causesb. David Hamburger’s viewII. (5-7) Worsening situation this year1.Acceleration of the deterioration during the four quarters2. Bankruptcy of the Los Angeles Times and Chicago TribuneIII. (8-10) Impact of the financial crisis1. Taking a toll on newspaper groups2. Moody’s prediction of dire straits for some publishers in 20093. Advertising revenue’s, sharp drop resulting form the crisisIV. (11-15) Publishers’ efforts to cope with the situation1. Selling newspapers to raise cash2. Shrinking options for publishers3. Sharp decline of newspaper assets in value4. Reducing staff sizeV. (16-17) Newspaper industry’s prospects1. Most publishers’ ability to restructure their debt rather than closetitles2. Staff reduction’s lasting damaging effects on newspaper brandsLesson 14Answers to the QuestionsV. 1. D 2. B 3. C 4. AVI.1. Because they want to improve their public image. They believe that reputationsand jobs can be lost based on the smallest slip in rank.2. Because they intended to make their colleges more selective. They thought topapplicants might opt for more prestigious institutions, lowering the school’s crucial “yield” and making it appear less desirable.3. If accepted, enrollees tend to boost a school’s yield and its statistical cachet.But the process denies students the broader choice that comes with applying to more than one college and ties them to a school regardless of its financial aid offer.4. The author believes the rankings have become an unhealthy force in higher education,because the time and money colleges spend gaming the magazine’s rankings are resources lost on improving education and serving their real consumers, the students.OutlineⅠ. Problem of college officials’only concern for poll ranking and its bad effects (1―3)1. The issue of college officials’ efforts to push up the ranking2. Bad effectsa. Overlooking education improvementb. Sacrificing students to the college’s vanityⅡ. Colleges’ ways to polish image(4—7)1. Ways to hike the percentage of alumni’s givinga. Cornell’s removal of some students from the listb. Alumnus’ making a major gift in the names of his entire class2. Tricks for improving selectivity rankinga. Soliciting more applicants from less qualified studentsb. Waitlisting many top applicants while accepting students with lesscredentials3. Device for exaggerating SAT average scoresDe-emphasizing the SAT score4.Way to boost a school’s yield and its statistical cachetEarly decision programsⅢ. Students’ view on the magazine rankings(8)Fewer than 10% of freshman rate the ranking importantⅣ. Colleges’ explanation for their attempts(9)。

外报阅读(2)ppt

外报阅读(2)ppt

▪ President Obama arrived in on Thursday morning to formally accept the Nobel Peace Prize and to attend a daylong series of events to commemorate the award.
Lead or Climax
Important Facts
Unimportant Facts
News Story Structure
ቤተ መጻሕፍቲ ባይዱ
▪ This style of news story organization allows the reader to grasp the most important facts first.
★The “What” Lead The What Lead emphasizes the object or objects described, e.g.:
New safety regulations concerning air bag in automobiles were announced during a press conference in Washington, D.C. this morning.
Introduction
Facts
Climax
Short Story Structure
But the news reporter begins with the climax. Then, as he discloses the most important information, he works away from the climax to the less important facts. He does so because the newspaper reader wants the most important information first. Such a format of news writing is called the inverted pyramid.

大学优品PPT精选版《大学英语外报外刊阅读教材第二版》Lesson13-15

大学优品PPT精选版《大学英语外报外刊阅读教材第二版》Lesson13-15
①deny sb. sth. — make sb. lose sth. ②regardless of — paying no attentionews & World Report 《美国新闻与世界报道》
— is one of the three big
news magazines along with Time and Newsweek .
(2)Retention: six–year graduation rate and first–year student retention rate
(3)Faculty resources: average class size, faculty salary, faculty degree level, student-faculty ratio, and proportion of full–time faculty
(3)Community college: primarily two or three years public institutions, providing students associate’s degrees.
Lesson 14
College and University Rankings in America America’s best–known American college and university rankings have been compiled since 1983 by U.S. News & World Report and are widely regarded as the most influential of all college rankings.
Lesson 14

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程(第二版)课件+教学参考手册 (27)[26页]

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程(第二版)课件+教学参考手册 (27)[26页]

Recycling
Recycling is processing used materials (waste) into new products to prevent waste of potentially useful materials, reduce the consumption of fresh raw materials, reduce energy usage, reduce air pollution (from incineration) and water pollution (from landfilling) by reducing the need for "conventional" waste disposal, and lower greenhouse gas emissions. Recycling is a key component of modern waste reduction and is the third component of the "Reduce, Reuse, Recycle" waste hierarchy.
Lesson 27
Lesson 27
Lesson 27
1. keeping $150,000 in its for-profit arm (Line 4, Para. 3) — 在其以盈利为目的的分部留了 15 万美元 (forprofit — established or operated with the intention of making a profit; arm — an administrative or functional branch, as of an organization) 2. and counting (Line 6, Para. 3) — used after a number or an amount of something, meaning that the number or amount is continuing to increase 3. venture into (an activity) (Line 6, Para. 5) — do something that involves the risk of failure because it is new and different

大学优品PPT精选版《大学英语外报外刊阅读教材第二版》Lesson22-24

大学优品PPT精选版《大学英语外报外刊阅读教材第二版》Lesson22-24
Lesson 24
1. What does Haase do in a manufacturing firm in Milwaukee?
She works as a receptionist and payroll administrator in a manufacturing firm in Milwaukee.
Lesson 24
1. She finds limited opportunities to take on more duties. (Line 3, Para. 1)
她感到承担更多职责的机会有限。
2.The authors, business consultants in Europe, explain that boreout, the opposite of burnout, consists of three elements: being "understretched," uncommitted, and bored in the workplace. (Line 1, Para. 4) 作者均是欧洲的商业顾问,他们解释道,闷爆是倦怠的反 义词,常常表现在三个方面:工作负担很轻,不受约束, 乏味无聊。
4. Maybe the boredom is a real message that you need to make a change. (Line 1, Para. 14) 或许感到无聊是在传递一个重要信息:你得换一下工作了。
Lesson 24
Lesson 24
Lesson 24
1. It can be seen from the article that what Nicole Haase really wants to do is ____.

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程(第二版)课件+教学参考手册 (33)[28页]

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程(第二版)课件+教学参考手册 (33)[28页]
By Alexi Mostrous
Author: A Brief Introduction
Alexi Mostrous
Alexi Mostrous, works at the Guardian as the producer of a series of high-profile political interviews with leading world figures. While at the Guardian, he also wrote for the news section.
In 2007 he transferred to The Times where he has written for home and business news. Over the last two years he has written a series of agendasetting stories on subjects including immigration, mental health and civil liberties.
Lesson 33
After many years of efforts, the housing conditions of American people have improved greatly. In 1950, there were 1.5 rooms for each person on average and it increased to two rooms in 1981. By American standards, it would be considered ―overoccupied‖ if a room is used by more than one person.

大学优品PPT精选版《大学英语外报外刊阅读教材第二版》Lesson4-6

大学优品PPT精选版《大学英语外报外刊阅读教材第二版》Lesson4-6
还记得西方领导人在亚洲金融危机时所取得的道德优势 吗?(high ground – the advantage in an argument)
Lesson 5
For the first time in centuries, the developing east has some say. (Line 4, Para. 7) 发展中的东方几个世纪以来第一次有了一些发言权。(say – the right, power or authority to make or to help make a decision)
Lesson 5
1. What is the first power shift? What is the major factor in the shift?
The first power shift is a rebalancing of moral authority. The major factor in the shift is the receding moral superiority of the west.
Lesson 5
Asian economies have long lagged behind the West in the pace of financial innovation and integration. As a result, Asia was often criticised for being backward in financial products and inefficient in cross-border financial intermediation. Ironically, such ‘backwardness’ and ‘inefficiency’ turned out to be a big strength in the recent crisis as it limited the contagion effect in the region.

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程(第二版)课件+教学参考手册 (11)[31页]

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程(第二版)课件+教学参考手册 (11)[31页]

Lesson 11
With fraternal multiples, each child is a separate fertilized egg, making the children similar genetically as with single birth children. Within higher multiple groups, a combination of the two is possible. For instance, in the case of quadruplets, two of the children can come from a single egg, making them identical, while the other two may be the result of individually fertilized eggs.
Lesson 11
Lesson 11
A Mom’s Controversial Choice
By: A Brief Introduction
Jill Smolowe
Jill Smolowe is an award-winning journalist. She is currently on staff at People.
大学英语
外报外刊阅读教程
(第二版)
***
***
Lesson 11 A Mom’s Controversial Choice
Background Information
Additional Notes
Photos and Diagrams Key to Questions
Structure Analysis

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程教学设计

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程教学设计

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程教学设计一、教学目标•了解外国主流报刊的特点和读写规律,建立初步的阅读技能。

•提高英语阅读水平,扩大词汇量和语篇理解能力。

•学会有效的外语阅读方法和技巧,为日后留学或工作做好准备。

二、教学内容1. 报刊的阅读技巧•给学生讲解报纸和杂志的版面结构特点,让学生掌握各种刊物的基础知识。

•教授阅读报纸和杂志的技巧,如如何快速定位主题、选取有用信息和归纳总结内容等。

•提供阅读材料,教学生识别标题、副标题和导语等,并通过注释和翻译帮助学生理解文章。

2. 内容的选择•选取有代表性的英语报纸和杂志,包括《BBC新闻》、《经济学人》、《卫报》、《时代》等。

•选取与学生所学专业相关的文章,综合考虑内容难度和语言难度,适当调整难度。

•根据教学进度,及时更新阅读材料,有助于培养学生的学习兴趣和阅读能力。

3. 阅读教学方法•将阅读教学划分为课前学习,课堂讲解和课后作业等环节。

•课前学习:通过课前任务和阅读指导,帮助学生了解选取的杂志和文章,并提前预习文章内容。

•课堂讲解:老师对文本的核心内容进行讲解和解释,学生思考问题,交流感想和阅读体验。

•课后作业:让学生回归文本,对文章进行阅读、理解和总结,以巩固和深化阅读技能。

三、教学策略1. 布置任务型作业•教师可以布置类似于摘要、精读和泛读等任务,让学生有针对性地阅读文本并掌握语言特点和写作风格。

•常包含以下内容:关键词和短语的选取、文章主旨的概括、重要信息和细节的归纳总结、生词和短语的查阅和理解等。

2. 适当降低难度•初学者应首先从简单易懂的内容入手,逐步提高难度。

•英语语言水平较高的学生,可以选择更为复杂的文章,以挑战学生的英语能力。

3. 考虑学生的兴趣和需求•选取与学生所学专业相关的文章,符合学生的学习需求和兴趣爱好。

•对于想要留学或考取国际证书的学生,可以选取相关的阅读材料,帮助学生更好地准备考试和申请。

4. 多种评价方式•不仅可通过平时作业和期末考试来评估学生的阅读能力,也可以根据学生的发言和参与程度进行教学评估。

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程第二版课程设计

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程第二版课程设计

大学英语外报外刊阅读教程第二版课程设计一、课程背景在大学英语教学中,英语外报和外刊阅读已经逐渐成为重要的教学手段和手段。

通过阅读外刊,学生可以了解更广泛的社会和文化信息,提高了解全球视野的能力;通过阅读外报,学生可以提高英语的阅读理解能力和全球时事观念,为日后进一步探索国际市场、进行跨国交流奠定基础。

二、课程目标本课程旨在帮助大学英语学生提高英语阅读和理解能力,扩大阅读原文素材,丰富知识和见识。

三、课程内容1. 外刊阅读本课程将会提供世界各地的不同外刊,学生将会学习阅读和理解各种不同的世界文化及时事情报。

2. 外报阅读本课程将提供国际知名媒体的不同外报,学生将可以了解到最新的国际发展,包括政治、经济、文化和体育。

3. 阅读题目学生将阅读一定数量的题目,包括文字阅读、填空和问答。

通过这些题目,学生将提高他们的英语阅读和理解能力。

4. 语言练习学生将会进行一些语言练习,通过这些练习,他们将提高他们的英语口语和写作能力。

四、教师角色在本节課程中,教师的角色将是引导学生,提供指导和鼓励,让学生有信心探索外国文化和最新时事。

教师将为学生提供相应的技巧和策略,帮助他们阅读外刊和外报,提高他们的英语实用能力。

教师将检查学生的阅读、口语和写作并及时进行评估,教师将为学生提供及时的反馈和指导。

五、教学方法1. 阅读指导教师将指导学生如何阅读和理解外刊和外报。

2. 组织学习教师将组织学生阅读文化信息,扩大他们的文化背景,帮助他们扩大阅读素材。

3. 分组讨论教师将组织学生进行分組讨论,让学生了解其他国家的文化和传统,提高他们的社交和团队协作技能。

4. 语言实践教师将组织语言实践,帮助学生提高他们的英语口语和写作能力,让他们能够更好地表达自己的观点。

六、教学评估教学评估将注意学生的英语阅读能力和语言实践能力,包括口语和写作。

学生将进行阅读、口语和写作方面的评估测试。

七、总结本课程将会提供广泛阅读素材,通过外刊和外报,让学生拓宽视野,了解最新时事,扩大他们的文化背景。

大学英语泛读教程第2册课件Unit 4 The Lady on Pemberton Street

大学英语泛读教程第2册课件Unit 4 The Lady on Pemberton Street
Founding editor of the Drexel Online Journal
Albert DiBartolomeo
Published
• fiction in Italian Americana
• personal essays in Reader’s Digest, Philadelphia Magazine (《费城杂志》), Chicken Soup for the Soul (《心灵鸡汤》) and Human Ecology (《生态学期刊》)
1. Some people think it is everyone’s responsibility to improve their communities while some others do not think so. What’s your idea?
2. Do our society still need people like “Lei Feng”?
Because they wanted to live near Philadelphia’s Center City. • needed work → fairly handy • neighborhood → their block OK • the only place within their means
• commentaries in the Philadelphia Inquirer (《费 城问询者》) and Newark-Star Ledger (纽瓦克明 星纪事报》)
block captain
Leader in a Citizen Awareness Program (CAP), responsible for contacting the neighborhood and ask them to participate in the program. Homes in their section would provide a name, address, home and work telephone number. The block captain will collect this information and make a phone chain to facilitate the transfer of information around the neighborhood. 街区监督员,街区负责人

英语报刊阅读教程ppt【1】讲解PPT文档34页

英语报刊阅读教程ppt【1】讲解PPT文档34页

6、最大的骄傲于最大的自卑都表示心灵的最软弱无力。——斯宾诺莎 7、自知之明是最难得的知识。——西班牙 8、勇气通往天堂,怯懦通往地狱。——塞内加 9、有时候读书是一种巧妙地避开思考的方法。——赫尔普斯 10、阅读一切好书如同和过去最杰出的人谈话。——笛卡儿
英语报刊阅读教程ppt【1】讲解

6、黄金时代是在我们的前面,而不在 我们的 后面。

7、心急吃不了热汤圆。

8、你可以很有个性,但某些时候请收 敛。

9、只为成功找方法,不为失败找借口 (蹩脚 的工人 总是说 工具不 好)。

10、只要下定决心克服恐惧,便几乎 能克服 任何恐 惧。因 为,请 记住, 除了在 脑海中 ,恐惧 无处藏 身。-- 戴尔. 卡耐基 。
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大学英语
外报外刊阅读教程
(第二版)
***
***
Background Information
Additional Notes
Photos & Diagrams Key to Questions
Structure Analysis
Lesson 34
Lesson 34
Reading the Abortion Ruling
Lesson 34
Roe v. Wade Supreme Court Decision
Roe v. Wade is the historic Supreme Court decision overturning a Texas interpretation of abortion law and making abortion legal in the United States. The Roe v. Wade decision held that a woman, with her doctor, could choose abortion in earlier months of pregnancy without restriction, and with restrictions in later months, based on the right to privacy.
Lesson 34

In the west, Christian churches have been strongly opposed to abortion since the very beginning. It was not until 19th century that an anti-abortion law was actually passed and put into practice.
Lesson 34
Whether to allow abortion – pro choice or pro life – is a debate that never seems to come to an end. While a pro choice stance supports giving a woman the legal right to take decisions regarding her fertility, pro-lifers oppose such an action saying that carrying out an abortion is violating the sanctity of life.
Is the high court's 'partial-birth' decision
a major shift or a narrow exception?
By Jay Tolson
Author: A Brief Introduction
Jay Tolson Jay Tolson is a senior writer at U.S. News & World Report, covering culture, ideas, and religion. Previously the editor of the Wilson Quarterly, he has written for the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal, the New Republic, the Times Literary Supplement, Civilization, Slate, The Sciences, Double Take, and other publications. A graduate of Princeton University, he is the author of Pilgrim in the Ruins: A Life of Walker Percy (1992), which won the Southern Book Award, and the Hugh Holman Prize for Outstanding Scholarship in Southern Literary Studies.
Lesson 34
The abortion debate was first centered on the fetus itself. However, the problem was divided into two arguments from the 1960s—fetus’s right to live and mother’s right to make a choice. Pro-choicers argue that, as is stipulated in the 14th amendment of the constitutional law, reproductive freedom and the freedom to have an abortion is also a part of the human rights.
Lesson 34
Lesson 34
Form the 1960s, all sectors of American society have been fighting over the problem of abortion. It is so controversial that abortion has become a topic far beyond constitutional, moral and medical spheres. It has profound impact on American’ political life. The debate over abortion should be reckoned with when observing American culture and politics.
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