旅游英语课件第一讲

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unit1 tour guideppt课件

unit1 tour guideppt课件
unit1 tide
General introduction
旅游(Tour)来源于拉丁语的 “tornare”和希腊语的“tornos”, 其含义是“车床或圆圈;围绕一个中 心点或轴的运动。”这个含义在现代 英语中演变为“顺序”。后缀—ism 被定义为“一个行动或过程;以及特 定行为或特性”,而后缀—ist则意 指“从事特定活动的人”。词根tour 与后缀—ism和—ist连在一起,指按 照圆形轨迹的移动,所以旅游指一种 往复的行程,即指离开后再回到起点 的活动;完成这个行程的人也就被称 为旅游者(Tourist)。
Work independently Leadership Security precautions Cooperation and collaboration Problem-solver Flexibility Be healthy Be positive
• • • • • • •
Good sense of humor Good entertainer Excellent navigator Responsibility Knowledgeable and professional Self-study and advancement Cross-cultural awareness
• • • • • • • Patriotism Observance and integrity Service English fluency Detail-oriented planning Communication style Interpersonal skills
• • • • • • • •
Questions before study:
• What is tourism? • What is tour guide? • Do you want to be a tour guide? why? • What is the prerequisites for becoming a tour guide?

旅游英语课件Unit 1 Travel and Tourism

旅游英语课件Unit 1 Travel and Tourism
Tourism English Unit One Travel and Tourism
主编:孙南南 2013.12
Section A Passage Reading
Text A Travel Agency
Background Information:
1. Thomas Cook 近代旅游业之父 In 1841, as secretary of the South Midland Temperance
Section A Passage Reading
Text B Independent Travel
New Word: resident [ 'rezidənt ] n. 居民 bulk [ bʌlk ] n. 大部分,大块,容量 facility [ fə'siliti ] n. 设施,设备 book [ buk ] v. 预定,登记 at short notice 在短时间内,立刻 transfer [ træns'fə: ] n. 转让,转移,传递 baggage [ 'bægidʒ ] n. 行李
Package holidays are organized by a tour operator and sold to a consumer by a travel agent. Some travel agents are employees of tour operators, others are independent.
Association, Thomas Cook persuaded the Midland Countries Railway Company to run a special train between Leicester and Loughborough for a temperance meeting on July 5. He organized an excursion for his members at a fare of one shilling return. It turned out to be an immediate success—altogether 570 seats were sold. For his efforts Cook received a 5 percent commission. Although not the first excursion train run in England, it was believed to be the first publicly advertised excursion train organized by a middleman. Thus Thomas Cook ct rail excursion agent whose pioneering efforts were eventually to be copied widely in all parts of the world.

旅游英语课件 Tourism

旅游英语课件 Tourism

Unit1 What is Tourism?When we think of tourism; we think primarily of people who are visiting a particular place for sightseeing, visiting friends and relatives, taking a vacation, and having a good time. They may spend their leisure time engaging in various sports, sunbathing, talking, singing, taking rides, touring, reading, or simply enjoying the environment. If we consider the subject further, we may include in our definition of tourism people who are participating in a convention, a business conference, or some other kind of business or professional activity, as well as those who are taking a study tour under an expert guide or doing some kind of scientific research or study.These visitors use all forms of transportation, from hiking in a wilderness park to flying in a jet to an exciting city. Transportation can include taking a chairlift up a Colorado mountainside or standing at the rail of a cruise ship looking across the blue Caribbean. Whether people travel by one of these means or by car, motorcoach, camper, train, taxi, motorbike, or bicycle, they are taking a trip and thus are engaging in tourism.Any attempt to define tourism and to describe its scope fully must consider the various groups that participate in and are affected by this industry. Their perspectives are vital to the development of a comprehensive definition. Four different perspectives of tourism can be identified:1. The tourist. The tourist seeks various psychic and physical experiences and satisfactions. The nature of these will largely determine the destinations chosen and the activities enjoyed.2. The businesses providing tourist goods and services. Business people see tourism as an opportunity to make a profit by supplying the goods and services that the tourist market demands.3. The government of the host community or area. Politicians view tourism as a wealth factor in the economy of their jurisdictions. Their perspective is related to the incomes their citizens can earn from this business. Politicians also consider the foreign exchange receipts from international tourism as well as the tax receipts collected from tourist expenditures, either directly or indirectly.4. The host community. Local people usually see tourism as a cultural and employment factor. Of importance to their group, for example, is the effect of the interaction between large numbers of international visitors and residents. This effect ma be beneficial of harmful, or both.Thus, tourism may be defined as the sum of the phenomena and relationships arising from the interaction of tourists, business suppliers, host governments, and host communities in the process of attracting and hosting these tourists and other visitors.Tourism is a composite of activities, services, and industries that delivers a travel experience: transportation, accommodations, eating and drinking establishments, shops, entertainment, activity facilities, and other hospitality services available for individuals or groups that are traveling away from home. It encompasses all providers of visitor and visitor-related services. Tourism is the entire world industry of travel, hotels, transportation, and all other components, including promotion, that serves the needs and wants of travelers. Finally, tourism is the sum total of tourist expenditures within the borders of a nation or a political subdivision or a transportation-centered economic area of contiguous states or nations. This economic concept also considers the income multiplier of these tourist expenditures.One has only to consider the multidimensional aspects of tourism and its interactions with other activities to understand why it is difficult to come up with a meaningful definition that will be universally accepted. Each of the many definitions that have arisen is aimed at fitting a specialsituation and solving an immediate problem, and the lack of uniform definitions has hampered study of tourism as discipline. Development of a field depends on (1) uniform definitions, (2) description, (3)analysis, (4) predictions, and (5) control.Modern tourism is a discipline that has only recently attracted the attention of scholars from many fields. The majority of studies have been conducted for special purposes and have used narrow operational definitions to suit particular needs of researchers or government officials; these studies have got encompassed a systems approach. Consequently, many definitions of “tourism” and “the tourist” are based on distance traveled, the length of time spent, and the purpose of the trip. This makes it difficult to gather statistical information that scholars can use to develop a database, describe the tourism phenomenon, and do analyes. The problem is not trivial. It has been tackled by a number of august bodies over the years, including the League of Nations, the united Nations, the World Tourism Organization (WTO), the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD),the National Tourism Resources Review Commission, and the U.S. Senate’s National Tourism Policy Study.World Tourism OrganizationThe international Conference of Travel and Tourism Statistics convened by the World Tourism Organization (WTO) in Ottawa, Canada, in 1991 reviewed, updated, and expanded on the work of earlier international groups. The ottawa Conference made some fundamental recommendations of definitions of tourism, travelers and tourists. The United Nations Statistical Commission adopted WTO’ recommendations on tourism statistics on March 4, 1993.TourismWTO has taken the concept of tourism beyond a stereotypical image of “h oliday-making.” The officially accepted definition is:Tourism comprises the activities of persons travelin to and staying in places outside their usual environment for not more than one consecutive year for leisure, business and other purposes.” The term u sual envi-ronment is intended to exclude trips within the area of usual residence and frequent and regular trips between the domicile and the workplace and other community trips of a routine character.1. International tourism:a. Inbound tourism: visits to a country by nonresidents.b. Out bound tourism: visits by residents of a country to another country.2. Internal tourism: visits by residents of a country to their own country.3. Domestic tourism: internal tourism plus inbound tourism (the tourism market of accommodation facilities and attractions within a country).4.National tourism: Internal tourism plus outbound tourism (the resident tourism market for travel agents and airlines).Traveler Terminology for International TourismUnderlying the foregoing conceptualization of tourism is the overall concept of traveler, defined as “any person on a trip between two or more countries or between twoor more localities within his/her country of usual residence.” All types of travelers engaged in tourism are d escribed as visitors, a term that constitutes the basicconcept of the entire system of tourism statistics. Visitors are persons who travel to a country other than the one in which they generally reside for aperiod not exceeding 12 months, whose main purpose is other than the exercise of an activity remunerated from within the place visited. Visitors are subdivided into two categories:1. Same-day visitors: visitors who do not spend the night in a collective or private accommodation in the country visited: for example, a cruise ship passenger spending four hours ina port.2. Tourists: Visitors who stay in the country visited for at least one night: for example, a visitor on a two-week vacation.There are many purposes for a visit, notably pleasure, business, and other purposes, such as family reasons, health, and transit.Wordschairlift an apparatus which carries people up and sown steep slopesin chairs that hang from a moving wire 升降椅;空中缆椅camper a motor vehicle big enough to live in when on holiday, use.Having cooking equipment and beds in the back part 野营车motorbike a motorcycle 摩托车psychic of the mind as opposed to the body精神上的jurisdiction the right to use the power of an official body, esp. in order tomake decisions on questions of law 管辖权;司法权,审判权composite something made up of different parts or materials 混合物,合成物encompass to include or be concerned with (a wide range of activities,subjects, ideas) 包含,包括;涉及subdivision the act of dividing something that has already been divided,or the parts that result from doing this 再分,细分contiguous (to, with) touching, next (to); having a shared borde(正式)接触着的,接近的;接壤的multidimensional 多维的hamper to cause difficulty in movement or activity 阻碍,妨碍;牵制trivial of little worth or importance 琐碎的,没有价值的august lit noble and grand 威严的;高贵的convene to call (a group of people, committee) to meet 召集(会议);召集开会stereotypical as in an overly simple picture or opinion of person, group, orthing老套的,旧框框的consecutive following in regular unbroken order 连续的,连贯的domicile formal or law a person’s home; the place where a personlives or is considered to live for official purposes[法]户籍,正式居住地,信处workplace the room r building in which workers perform their work工作场所;工厂;车间inbound AmE incoming; inward bound 进来的outbound mowing sway from the speaker or the starting point 外出的,离开出发点underlie to be a hidden meaning or cause of 位于……之下;成为……基础foregoing (the one) that has been mentioned 前面的(事物),刚提到的(事物)conceptualization something that form a concept or concepts of概念化remunerate to reward; pay (someone) for work or trouble(正式)给……报酬;补偿transit the going or moving of people or goods from one place toanother通行;过境Additional ReadingText A Mass TourismThe Historical SettingTourism harks back to the conquest of Alexander the Great (356-323BC) and the subsequent development of the Hellenistic urban system. It is argued that tourism requires both large claustrophobic cities and the means to escape from them, both of which were present in Greece during this period.Within modern times, the notion of tourism is closely linked to the idea of the “Grand Tour”, which spanned the 16th to 19th Centuries. The Grand Tour is a “tour of certain cities in Western Europe undertaken primarily, but not exclusively, for education and pleasure”. This later era of grand tourism was typified by long, expensive, “classical” and “romantic” visits, mainly by the British aristocracy, to France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and the Low Countries. Over time, and with the rise of the middle professional class, the Grand Tour was patronized by a wider segment of the population. Nonetheless, only 3%~4% of the Population represented the nucleus from which Grand Tourists might have be drawn. The golden age of the Grand Tour was the 18th Century, particularly the 30 years before the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789. By the 1830s, the length of the Grand Tour fell from an average of 40 months in the mid-16th Century to an average of only 4 months.The growth of tourism to “mass” proportions as it is known today, has its fo undation in several timely innovations: technologically in the field of transportation; and in the existence of a critical facilitating force, entrepreneurship-in the person of Thomas Cook.In 1815, 1 year after the Battle of Waterloo ended the Napoleonic wars, the first channel crossing by steamer was made (the site of the battle itself becoming a major tourist attraction). By 1812, a regular service was operated between the ports of Dover and Calais. In 1828 the first railways were laid in France and Aust ria, and in 1844 the railway reached Switzerland. “This revolution in Transport technology and the low cost, speed and efficiency that it provided, led to an immediate expansion of European tourism.”Complementing transportation technology was the existence of entrepreneurial talent, “initiative” and “organizing genius” in the person of Thomas Cook. “His originality lay in his methods, his almost infinite capacity for taking trouble, his acute sense of the needs of his clients, his power of invention and hi s bold imagination” (Young, 1973). It has been written that “thefather of modern tourism was unquestionable Thomas Cook” (English, 1986). “Cook was the perfect entrepreneur, a brilliant opportunist, quick to sense the need of his clientele…” (Turner and Ash, 1975). He was a true Schumpeterian entrepreneur-“a leader, a disturber of the peace”, who had the initiative, authority, foresight, and intuition and psyche to carry out innovations.Thomas Cook organized travel on a scale that had never been seen before. He heralded an era of organized, large-scale, relatively cheap tourism spread across national, regional and international destinations. If Europe had the “hot spots” for the Grand Tourists, the opening of the Far East, India and America, were the hallmarks of the Cook era. Until the early 1860s, Britain remained the main field of Cook’s activities; in 1862 he moved into Europe; he moved into America in 1866; took his first round-the-world trip in 1872; reached India and the Far East by the 1880s; and the first Cook hotel was established at Luxor (Egypt) in 1877.In 1862, the first true package tours were provided by Cook-all the details of transport and accommodation were pre-arranged for tourists who were, generally, of modest means. Spurred on by his example and the profits made by this entrepreneur, many imitators entered the fray. Turner and Ash write, for example, that ‘it was not long before his example was imitated; in 1863, the Stangen Travel Agency was established in Breslau. Stangen soon moved his center of operation to Berlin and became a successful rival to Cook’ (Tuner and Ash, 1975). By 19th –Century advances in transport technology, Thomas Cook and Son had effected a revolution in tourism by the end of the century. No longer the preserve of the wealth and the leisured, tourism was now an industry. While an average of 257 people per annum took part in Grand tourism during the 1547-1840 period (Towner, 1985), Cook had taken 20000 people to the Paris Exhibition of 1879-such was the magnitude of his entrepreneurial prowess.Despite the leaps and bounds that the industry experienced, tourism, until the 1930s, was still a matter of trains, boast and coaches. Travel by water transportation was a very important form of tourism during the 1920s and 1930s. The ships themselves were a form of floating hotel, where the act of travel was equated with tourism. Travel was seen as an end in itself. As if the industry has gone full circle, today, cruise tourism is one of the fastest growing segments of the international tourism industry.It was in 1950 that the first package holiday built around air transport was organized. This was undertaken by Vladimir Raitz, a Russian émigré educated at the London School of Economics. His successful company, Horizon Holidays (now merged with Thomson, the largest UK operator) was one of the top three tour operators in Britain. By the 1960s, the package holiday business began to use air transport in a major way as Raitz’s competitors, spurred on by his success also began using the aircraft.Still, foreign travel in the 1930s remained a luxury commodity within the reach of only a privileged few having both plenty of free time and considerable purchasing power. This picture was to change when, coupled with post-war peace and prosperity, came innovations in aircraft technology and changes in labor legislation, which provided paid holidays, and the development of the package tour. Aided by these innovations, mass tourism had arrived.Mass Tourism DefinedMass tourism is a phenomenon of large-scale packaging of standardized leisure services at fixed prices for sale to a mass clientele. Mass tourism refers to key characteristics that the international tourism industry displayed during the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. Mass tourism existsif the following conditions hold.1. The holiday is standardized, rigidly packaged and inflexible, no part of the holiday could be altered except by paying higher prices.2. The holiday is produced through the mass replication of identical units, with scale economies as the driving force.3. The holiday is mass marketed to an undifferentiated clientele.4. The holiday is consumed en masse, with a lack of consideration by tourists for local norms, culture, people or the environments of tourist-receiving destinations.Standardization and rigidity are very clear characteristics of package tours offered on a large scale. An inclusive charter tour provides the same level of transportation, accommodation, meal and transfer services to all the clients who pay the same price, visit the same sun destination, sunbathe on the same beaches, sleep in the same high-rise hotels and in the same type of beds, read the same tourist brochures, visit the same sites, stay the same length of time, take the same kinds of photographs and even buy the same souvenirs.Within the confines of mass, standardized and rigidly packaged tourism, choice, individuality, personalized services and flexibility are just not possible (or where possible, it is at horrendous prices compared with the package price). There is little place within mass tourism for the individual who wishes to be different from the crows, who wishes to use different accommodation or participate in different holiday activities. It is true that many tourists have avoided the ¹mass¹tourist holidays and many have used the relatively cheap services of mass tourism as launching pads for their own vacations. However, in the 1960s and the 1970s, these were the exceptions rather than the common trend.Mass tourism certainly had its time and place. Today the tourism industry is in crisis. Mass tourism is no longer best practice. Conditions the gave birth to it –the frame conditions, consumers, technology, production and management practices-are themselves changing. Understanding how mass tourism came about and why it was best practice at the time are key to understanding why international tourism industry is being transformed and the shape that the new best practice is taking.Text B the Implications of New TourismNew tourism will change the boundaries of the tourism industry and radically alter the position of industry players. Players closest to consumers (e.g. travel agents, hotels, cruise ships) and those in control of the industry’s information (e.g. those that own CRSs) are expect ed to gain. CRSs will increasingly become the flexible alternative to pre-packaged holidays offered by tour operators. The role of tour operators is expected to decline in importance. It is no longer relevant whether a company is an airline, a travel agent, hotel or tour operator. What becomes more relevant are the activities along the value chain that they control.These changes imply a radical transformation of the opportunities available to the various players in the tourism industry. New functions and demands will emerge (e.g. quality control, flexible holidays). While at the same time other key activities will become less important (e.g. pre-packaged tours). Thus, the position of each player within the value chain will have to be re-thought. In addition, as the rules of the game continue to change, the pressures of cooperation and /or concentration are likely to be more intense.Diagonal integration-a process whereby firms use information technologies to logicallycombine services for best productivity and most profitability-will be one of the most significant developments in the international travel and leisure industry. Diagonal integration will become a international travel and leisure industry. It will continue to blur the boundaries among industry players and make the travel and tourism industry a system of wealth-creation. Already, the boundaries within the tourism industry, and between this industry and others, are becoming increasingly blurred. Players are crossing each others’ bor ders more than ever before: banks move into travel agencies; insurance companies acquire hotel interests; airlines provide credit card; department stores operate travel agencies; and pleasure-boat companies move into hotels.The industry, as a result of this trend, will be come more “s y stem”-like in nature. One of the key implications of the trend towards diagonal integration is that competitors will increasingly come from outside the industry. Equally, diagonal integration will offer opportunities for travel and tourism players to move into other industries, particularly services.New tourism holds a number of key implications for industry players. In what follows, we will briefly examine some of the implications for tour operators, travel agents, and hotels.Tour OperatorsSeveral of the value-creation activities of tour operators will decline in importance-particularly those of packaging, risk brokerage and distribution. These functions are being increasingly superseded by computerized reservation systems. In response to the declining importance of key activities, tour operators will have to take action several fronts. They will have to:●create more flexible packaged holidays;●expand their information functions (e.g. provide computerized reservation niches for specific products of destinations);●develop creative relationships with travel agencies (selected agents could have the option of flexible packaging holidays on-line from the tour operator’s portfolio); and●control the quality of the product at al levels.Quality control at all crucial phases in the delivery of the holiday will become a key source of competitive advantage for tour operators. Tour operators will have to take a far broader view of the holiday that they deliver. They will have to find ways of better controlling and influencing the product delivered to consumers.Travel agenciesThe importance of travel agency reservations, ticketing the client advice functions are all expected to grow in importance. Already travel agencies handle a large and growing proportion of airline bookings. In creating more value from these activities, travel agencies will have to use their CRSs creatively and provide the information that consumers want.It is to ensuring the satisfaction of the travel consumers that agencies must give priority in order to ensure their own long-term survival and competitiveness. The ability of travel agents to acquire, provide and transmit unbiased information in a courteous, efficient and timely manner will be key to their competitive success. Indeed, a competitor agency will be able to copy a convenient ‘high-street’ location, subscribe to the same airline reservation system and place satellite printers in their corporate clients’ offices. However, a competitor will have tremendous difficulty in copying travel agency personnel who place the interest of the consumers first, causing them to be loyal.New opportunities for travel agencies to create value will emerge in the areas of packagingand in the representation of services other than those of tour operators. Travel agencies will have the information at their finger-tip to provide flexible itineraries. Strategically, through cooperation with other agencies, agents can increase buying power with airlines and other suppliers in order to obtain competitive prices for package components. This will allow travel agencies the avenue to provide competitively priced, flexible holiday packages. Travel agencies will also find it profitable to represent other services such as cruise ships, pleasure boats, car-rental companies, hotels, spas and other segments that will grow in importance in the travel and leisure industry.HotelsHotels will no longer be able to leave their marketing to tour operators or their reservations systems. They will have to get closer to their consumers and to travel agents in the market place. This is the only way that hotels will be able to adjust effectively their products to suit their changing clients. Being close to consumers and supplying the experiences they want have become so important that hotels can no longer simply sit back and expect their rooms to be sold.One of the key ingredients in the success of Sandals and SuperClub all-inclusive hotels in the Caribbean, for example, is the strong links they have established with travel agents in the marketplace. Nothing is left to chance. Sandals and SuperClub employ sales agents in the marketplace whose business it is to travel the length and breath of the USA (and increasingly European) markets to educate travel agents about their product, new services, new properties and new experiences being offered.Hotels will have to work more closely with their guests, listen to them and modify the services they offer to meet the new demands. Hotels will also have to identify market niches, segment the market and provide the experiences that consumers want and for which they are willing to pay.什么是旅游一提到旅游,我们首先会想到这样一些人:他们到某个特定的景点去观光、去拜访朋友或亲戚、去度假,并且过得很愉快。

旅游专业英语教学课件unit 1 How to Give theTourists a Good Impression

旅游专业英语教学课件unit 1 How to Give theTourists a Good Impression
places to visit. (10)China Youth TrTavraevl/eTlour Service is very famous in China.
3. Translate the following sentences into English with the words given in the brackets.
in front of the guests for the first time?
Vocabulary Study
1. Find the answers of the following words or phrases from the Chinese given below, then compare the answers with your partner.
(3)他的热情服务给我们留下很深的印象。(enthusiastic) His enthusiastic service gave us a very deep impression.
(4)请随时跟我们保持联系(keep in contact with) Please keep in contact with us at any time.
F 中国康辉旅行社 G 转交 H 担任……角色;起……作用
I 行李提取处
J 停车场 K 全陪 L 旅游团
E 地陪
2. Choose the correct word underlined in each sentence.
(1)We received enthuseiansthtiucs/eianstthiucsiasm service at the restaurant which made us very satisfied. (2)Tom is full of humohrouumso/huurmour that we laugh all the time when we stay with him. (3)I will tell him when he arriavrersiv/aersrival home. (4)He is a very conscidoenrsaitdee/craotnesider friend and we don’t have to worry about anything. (5)Please hand this parcel ouot/voevrer to my brother. (6)Please keep in contaccotn/ctaocnttract with us. (7)How many pieces of luggaluggeg/lauggegages do you have? (8)Sometimes we do a lot of sightseseiginhgts/seiegihntgseeings on holiday. (9)A local gnuaitdioe/nnaaltgiounidaleguide refers to the person who accompanies tourists to the other

最新旅游英语PPT课件

最新旅游英语PPT课件
be finished by today. • 2. who would have thought : (spoken) to
show you are surprised about sth • e.g Who would have thought that Johui
• 1. Dialogue: Climbing Mt.Huang • 2. Passage 2: Mt. Jiuhua
1. Dialogue: Climbing Mt.Huang
II. Proper names and expressions to be remembered
III. Answer the following questions:
• 1. How did Mt. Huang get its name while it is really green?
• 2. What is the best season to visit Mt.Huang? • 3. What are the Four Wonders of Mt.Huang? • 4. What is the steepest peak on Mt. Huang? • 5. What is the highest peak? • 6. What did Xu Xiake once say • about Mt. Huang?
III. Answer the following questions
• 1. How did Mt. Huang get its name while it is really green?
• 2. What is the best season to visit Mt.Huang? • 3. What are the Four Wonders of Mt.Huang? • 4. What is the steepest peak on Mt. Huang? • 5. What is the highest peak? • 6. What did Xu Xiake once say about Mt. Huang?

旅游英语课件(一)

旅游英语课件(一)

旅游英语课件(一)旅游英语课件教学内容1.旅行预定:酒店、机票、租车等预订相关词汇和句子2.旅游问询:向他人询问旅游信息的常用表达3.旅行中的交通和导航:公共交通、交通工具、路线指示等词汇和句子4.旅游活动:参观景点、购物、用餐等相关词汇和句子教学准备1.PowerPoint 或其他幻灯片工具2.课堂黑板和白板3.教学用例句和练习题材料4.学生课前阅读材料教学目标1.学生能够在日常旅行中准确有效地使用英语进行交流2.学生能够掌握旅游预定、问询、交通和导航、旅游活动相关的词汇和句子3.学生能够自信流利地运用所学知识进行角色扮演和实际情境练习设计说明1.教学内容按照实际旅行流程组织,便于学生理解和应用2.采用多媒体辅助教学,包括图片、音频和视频等资源,提高学习兴趣和理解能力3.设计个别和小组活动,鼓励学生积极参与互动,提升口语表达和交流能力教学过程1.导入:通过展示美丽风景照片或旅游视频激发学生对旅游英语学习的兴趣2.分组活动:将学生分成小组,每个小组选择一个主题景点进行介绍,并汇报给全班3.教学内容1:介绍旅行预定相关的词汇和句子,并提供实际场景模拟练习4.角色扮演:学生模拟预定酒店、机票等场景进行角色扮演,互相练习对话5.教学内容2:讲解旅游问询常用表达,并进行案例分析和演练练习6.小组活动:学生分组,设计旅游问题,进行交流和回答,增强互动和实际应用能力7.教学内容3:介绍旅行中的交通和导航相关的词汇和句子,并进行实际情境练习8.综合练习:学生分组,设计一日游计划,包括交通工具选择和路线指示的描述9.教学内容4:讲解旅游活动相关的词汇和句子,并进行实际情境练习和游戏10.结束:总结所学内容,鼓励学生自主学习和实践,并提供相关学习资源和建议课后反思1.总结教学过程中学生的表现,包括参与度、理解度和口语表达能力等方面2.收集学生和家长的反馈意见,了解教学效果和改进方向3.调整课程设计和教学方法,以适应不同学生的学习需求和能力水平。

Unit1《旅游英语》PPT课件

Unit1《旅游英语》PPT课件
3. Lodging and Catering:
This component consists of those who provide accommodations to people in the form of hotels, resorts, apartments, camps, guesthouses etc. The accommodations may be marketed individually or through the tour operators in the form of package. Direct marketing may require huge costs on advertisements while sales through a tour operator may guarantee the occupancy rate throughout a holiday season. These service providers also take care of the catering needs of the people by providing them with huge cafeterias, various fast food outlets in house or in the form of a galleria.
(Adapted from Technofunc)
Part Three: Text B: A Brief History of Tourism
The history of tourism can be traced back to ancient years. As ancient world empires grew in Africa, Asia and the Middle East, the infrastructure necessary for travel such as land routes and water ways were created and vehicles and other means for travel were developed. During the Egyptian dynasties, travel for both business and pleasure began to flourish and hospitality centers were built along major routes and in the cities to accommodate travelers travelling between central government posts and outlying territories. At the height of the Assyrian empire, the means of travel were improved, the roads were improved, and markers were established to indicate distances and directions. Later, the Persians made further improvement to the road systems and developed four-wheeled carriages for transportation.

旅游英语 清华大学出版社课件Unit1

旅游英语 清华大学出版社课件Unit1
• • • • • •
1. Exemplify some famous scenic spots in Beijing. The Great Wall, the Forbidden City, Tian An Men Square, the Ming Tomb 2. What are the characteristics of the landscape in Guilin? The landscape is characterized by terraced rice paddies, water buffalos, and bamboo groves, and peasants with turn up trousers and cone-shaped straw hats. 3. Give a brief introduction to the Yangtze River. Yangtze River is the largest river in China, the lifeline of China, which flows through nine provinces, with its 700 tributaries, covers an area of 1.8 million sq. km, which is 19 percent of the total area of China. 4. Which city is known as the “City of the Sun”? Lhasa. 5. What are the ancient mysteries of the Silk Road people can discover? Bazaars where merchants haggle over camels and carpets, where you can meet the nomadic minorities of China, and attend music, dance and artistic performances.

旅游英语课件第一讲ppt课件

旅游英语课件第一讲ppt课件
本课程设计的理念是以行业为依托,以各岗位所需要的基本的、常用的英语语言知识为基础, 通过有目的的实践训练,建立英语与旅游业相结合的综合教学体系。
English for Tourism
4
The idea of the course is to improve the ability of language application in terms of the needs of tourism, in which students are the center and practice is the core by the combination of classroom teaching and practice activities, and tries to construct TLSP method, namely the teaching model of task, listening , speaking and practicing.
1
English for Tourism
主讲人: 党立新
Everyday English
2
➢ The purpose of life is to enjoy every moment
➢ After a hurricane comes a rainbow.
English for Tourism
3
I. The Curriculum
设计思路是:以旅游岗位需求为依据,进行语言实践能力培养。把课堂教学与实践 教学相结合,以学生为中心,以实践为核心,以语言到语言加岗位技能综合能力为课 堂主线,构建了TLSP,即task,Listening,Speaking,Practicing的教学模式。
English for Tourism

旅游英语电子课件Unit1Overview of the Tourism Industry

旅游英语电子课件Unit1Overview of the Tourism Industry
6. Tourism Services The tourism services sector is aimed at helping to develop the tourism industry. It includes trade press, research centers and information centers. 6. 旅游服务 旅游服务部门的目标是为发展旅游业服务,它包括旅游媒体、研究中 心和游客信息中心。
Correct order: ④①②③
Look and Learn Dialogue Reading Learn More New Words and Phrases
Unit 1
Lesson 14
旅游服务体系六大构成要素
There are six sectors in the tourism industry. They are attractions, travel trade, accommodation, food & beverage, transportation and tourism services.
recreation vehicle transportation
beach attraction
currency exchange travel trade
motel accommodation
Look and Learn Dialogue Reading
information center tourism service sector
旅游业有六大构成要素,它们是景点、旅游贸易、住宿、餐饮、交通 和旅游服务。
1. Attractions Attractions, also known as places of interest, include natural and cultural tourist spots, such as beaches, mountains, rivers, museums, theme parks and heritage buildings. 1. 景点 景点也称名胜古迹,包括自然和文化景观,如沙滩、山川、博物馆、 主题公园和古建筑。
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1
English for Tourism
主讲人: 党立新
Everyday English
2
➢ The purpose of life is to enjoy every moment
➢ After a hurricane comes a rainbow.
English for Tourism
3
I. The Curriculum
本课程设计的理念是以行业为依托,以各岗位所需要的基本的、常用的英语语言知识为基础, 通过有目的的实践训练,建立英语与旅游业相结合的综合教学体系。
English for Tourism
4
The idea of the course is to improve the ability of language application in terms of the needs of tourism, in which students are the center and practice is the core by the combination of classroom teaching and practice activities, and tries to construct TLSP method, namely the teaching model of task, listening , speaking and practicing.
设计思路是:以旅游岗位需求为依据,进行语言实践能力培养。把课堂教学与实践 教学相结合,以学生为中心,以实践为核心,以语言到语言加岗位技能综合能力为课 堂主线,构建了TLSP,即task,Listening,Speaking,Practicing的教学模式。
English for Tourism
5
II. Teaching Methods
➢Do written translation and oral interpretation
➢ Get some idea of the tourism development in and outБайду номын сангаасide of China and cultural background information about the countries we are going to travel in class by watching relevant VCDs.
《旅游英语》原本是为旅游管理专业学生开设的一门综合英语技能课,是加强英语听说, 交际能力必需的基础课程。通过对学生进行听力、口语等英语听说技能的训练,使学生能用 所学英语开展实际业务工作,进行酒店的前厅接待、客房服务、餐饮服务及旅游接待、涉外 导游,提高学生的听力理解水平、口语表达能力和对语言运用的分析理解能力。
本课程采用主体式多方位教学方法,如提问法、情景模拟法、讨论法、辩论 法、讲解法、听说法、交际教学法等多种形式,尽量多给学生语言实践机会。 不仅可以摆脱枯燥乏味的学习过程,还可以通过音频材料深入了解不同国家社 会的方方面面,从而提高学生的文化素质。本课程的教学手段主要用图像、声 音、动画等多种手段展示教学内容,有效提高学生的听说能力。
English for Tourism
6
III. Focal points
Teaching objectives
➢Help you engage in fluent and understandable oral English communication
➢Compose practical writing assignments
Concept and Ideas
Based on the industry in which basic and commonly-used English language is needed for all posts, a comprehensive teaching system is built with the combination of English and tourism.
Multiple teaching methods are used in the course, such as questions, scene simulation, debate, interpretation, listening and speaking and communication etc. More chances of practice are provided for students to get rid of not only the boring, but also the facets of different countries to expand their horizon in cross-cultural communication. A lot of means are tried in teaching the course, such as image, sound, animation and so on to improve students' listening ability.
Nature and Function
Tourism English, as a course of comprehensive English skills intended for students of professional tourism management, aims at strengthening their English listening, and communication skills as well as comprehension ability through the training of listening, oral English and other relevant skills in actual business, such as hotel reception, room service, catering service and travel reception and foreign tour guide etc.
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