全新版大学英语综合教程4的说课(课堂PPT)
全新版大学英语综合教程4_Unit5课件

全新版⼤学英语综合教程4_Unit5课件A Friend in NeedFor thirty years now I have been studying my fellowmen.I do not know very much about them.I shrug my shoulders when people tell me that their first impressions of a person are always right.I think they must have small insight or great vanity.For my own part I find that the longer I know people the more they puzzle me.These reflections have occurred to me because I read in this morning?s paper that Edward Hyde Burton had died at Kobe.He was a merchant and he had been in business in Japan for many years.I knew him very little,but he interested me because once he gave me a great surprise.Unless I had heard the story from his own lips,I should never have believed that he was capable of such an action.It was more startling because both in appearance and manner he suggested a very definite type.Here if ever was a man all of a piece.He was a tiny little fellow, not much more than five feet four inheight,and very slender,with white hair,ared face much wrinkled,and blue eyes.Isuppose he was about sixty when I knewhim.He was always neatly and quietlydressed in accordance with his age andstation.Though his offices were in Kobe,Burton often came down to Yokohama.I happened on one occasion to be spending a few days there,waiting for a ship,and I was introduced to him at the British Club.We played bridge together.He played a good game and a generous one. He did not talk very much,either then or later when we were having drinks,but what he said was sensible.He had a quiet,dry humor.He seemed to be popular at the club and afterwards,when he had gone,they described him as one of the best.It happened that we were bothstaying at the Grand Hotel and next day he asked me to dine with him.I met his wife,fat,elderly,and smiling, and his two daughters.It was evidently a united and affectionate family.I think the chief thing that struck me about Burton was his kindliness.There was something very pleasing in his mild blue eyes.His voice was gentle; you could not imagine that he could possibly raise it in anger;his smile was benign.Here was a man who attracted you because you felt in him a real love for his fellows.At the same time he liked his game of cards andhis cocktail,he could tell with point a good and spicy story,and in his youth he had been something of an athlete.He was a rich man and he had made every penny himself.I suppose one thing that made you like him was that he was so small and frail;he aroused your instincts of protection.You felt that he could not bear to hurt a fly.One afternoon I was sitting in the lounge of the Grand Hotel when Burton came in and seated himself in the chair next to mine.…What do you say to a little drink??He clapped his hands for a boy and ordered two gin fizzes. As the boy brought them a man passed along the street outside and seeing me waved his hand.…Do you know T urner?? said Burton as I nodded a greeting.…I?ve met him at the club. I?mtold he?s a remittance man.?…Yes, I believe he is. We have agood many here.?…He plays bridge well.?…They generally do.There was a fellow here last year, oddly enough a namesake of mine,who was the best bridge player I ever met.I suppose you never came across him in London.Lenny Burton he called himself.I believe he?d belonged to some very good clubs.?…No,I don?t believe I remember the name.?…He was quite a remarkable player.He seemed to have an instinct about the cards.It was uncanny.I used to play with him a lot.He was in Kobe for some time.?Burton sipped his gin fizz.…It?s rather a funny story,?he said.…He wasn?t a bad chap.I liked him.He was always well-dressed and smart-looking.He was handsome in a way with curly hair and pink-and-white cheeks.Women thought a lot of him. There was no harm in him,you know,he was only wild. Of course he drank too much.Those sort of fellows do.A bit of money used tocome on for him once a quarter andhe made a bit more by card-playing.He won a good deal of mine,I knowthat.?Burton gave a kindly chuckle.I knew from my own experience that he could lose money at bridge with a good grace.He stroked his shaven chin with his thin hand;the veins stood out on it and it was almost transparent.…I suppose that is why he came to me when he went broke,that and the fact that he was a namesake of mine. He came to see me in my office oneday and asked me for a job.I wasrather surprised.?He told me that therewas no more money coming from homeand he wanted to work.I asked himhow old he was.…“Thirty-five,”he said.…“And what have you been doing hitherto?”I asked him.…“Well,nothing very much,”he said.…I couldn?t help laughing.…“I?m afraid I can?t do anything for you just yet,”I said.“Come back and see me in another thirty-five years,and I?ll see what I can do.”…He didn?t move.He went rather pale.He hesitated for a moment and then he told me that he had had bad luck at cards for some time.He hadn?t been willing to stick to bridge,he?d been playing poker,and he?d got trimmed.He hadn?t a penny.He?d pawned everything he had.He couldn?t pay his hotel bill and they wouldn?t give him any more credit.He was down and out.If he couldn?t get something to do he?d have to commit suicide.…I looked at him for a bit.I could see now that he was all to pieces.He?d been drinking more than usual and he looked fifty.The girls wouldn?t have thought so much of him if they?d seen him then.…“Well isn?t there anything you can do except play cards?”I asked him.…“I can swim,”he said.…“Swim!”…I could hardly believe my ears;it seemed such an insane answer to give.…“I swam for my university.”…I got some glimmering of whathe was driving at.I?ve known toomany men who were little tin gods attheir university to be impressed by it.…“I was a pretty good swimmer myself when I was a young man,”I said.…Suddenly I had an idea.?Pausing in his story,Burton turned to me.…Do you know Kobe?? he asked.…No,? I said, …I passed through it once, but I only spent a night there.?…Then you don?t know the Shioya Club.When I was a young man I swam from there round the beacon and landed at the creek of T arumi.It?s over three miles and it?s rather difficult on account of the currents round the beacon.Well,I told my young namesake about it and I said to him that if he?d do it I?d give him a job.…I could see he was rather taken aback.…“You say you?re a swimmer,”I said.…“I?m not in very good condition,”he answered.…I didn?t say anything.I shrugged my shoulders.He looked at me for a moment and then he nodded.…“All right,”he said.“When do you want me to do it?”…I looked at my watch.It was just after ten.…“The swim shouldn?t take you much over an hour and a quarter.I?ll drive round to the creek at half past twelve and meet you.I?ll take you back to the club to dress and then we?ll have lunch together.”…“Done,”he said.…We shook hands.I wished him good luck and he left me.I had a lot of work to do that morning and I only just managed to get to the creek at T arumi at half past twelve.But I needn?t have hurried;he never turned up.?…Did he funk it at the last moment??I asked.…No,he didn?t funk it.He startedall right.But of course he?d ruined hisconstitution by drink and dissipation.The currents round the beacon weremore than he could manage.We didn?tget the body for about three days.?I didn?t say anything for a moment or two.I was a trifle shocked.Then I asked Burton a question.…When you made him that offer of a job,did you know he?d be drowned??He gave a little mild chuckle and he looked at me with those kind and candid blue eyes of his.He rubbed his chin with his hand.…Well,I hadn?t got a vacancy in my office at the moment.?For my own part I find that the longer I know people the more they puzzle me.1. What does “for my own part” mean?It means “as far as I am concerned”.2. Translate this sentence into Chinese.拿我⾃⼰来说,我发现,认识⼀个⼈的时间越长,我就越感到困惑。
全新版大学英语综合教程4课件

Recre • Unit 4 News Reporting
01
Unit 1 Ways of Learning
Reading and Vocabulary
• Summary: The reading materials for this unit will cover various topics, including culture, history, society, and science, to help expand students' vocabulary and improve their reading comprehension abilities.
3. The writing section will provide writing exercises to help students apply the grammar and translation skills they have learned to write.
Listening and Speaking
Writing Skills
• Skills: The textbook selects the most common sports related writing skills and patterns, which can help students master the language skills of sports reports, letters, memories, etc. through a series of writing exercises
全新版大学英语综合教程4-ppt-电子教案-Unit4 教学 课件

Money sent by OFWs back to the Philippines is a major factor in the country’s economy, amounting to more than US$10 billion in 2005. This makes the country the fourth largest recipient of foreign remittances behind India, China, and Mexico. The amount represents 13.5% of the Philippines’ GDP, the largest in proportion to the domestic economy among the four countries mentioned. Overseas Filipinos sent $15.9 billion worth of remittances to the Philippines in 2008.
Background Information
The World Economic Forum (WEF)
Samuel Phillips Huntington (1927—2008) —An American Political Scientist
Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs)
An English Song—Imagine
Listen to the song and fill in the blanks with what you hear.
Imagine Imagine there’s no heaven. It’s easy if you _tr_y_. No hell below us, above us only sky. Imagine all the people _li_v_in_g_ for today, ah. Imagine there’s no country. It isn’t hard to do. Nothing to kill or die for, and no _re_l_i_g_io_n_ too. Imagine all the people living life in p__e_a_c_e . You may say I’m a _d_re_a_m__e_r, but I’m not the only one.
全新版大学英语综合教程第四册课件_Unit4

Sentence 3: It is hard to think of this nation---(Line 7): If you know that there are vast areas of the world which are paralyzed and can make any progress, it is hard to imagine this country in decline. Sentence 4:--- that America must inevitably follow historical precedent (Line 11): that American must repeat historical earlier happenings.
Sentence 6:--- a mix of Hispanic---(Line20): America may not be in decline, on the contrary, it will mix with Hispanic and Asian cultures.
Sentence 7: Now is the first chance on a new basis with new---(Line24):现在第一次有了这样一个机遇,在新的基础上用 心技术创建一个有着前所未有的开放型的多元文化.
Sentence 14: The culture of the work force is a mix--(Line 65): The staff’ culture mix Hispanic-Catholic family values with Asian-Confucian group loyalty.
全新版大学英语第4册PPT课件

Unit Six Old Father Time Becomes a Terror Global Reading
Detailed Reading
After Reading
Writing Strategy
Ways to conclude an essay An effective conclusion indicates that you
flecks (spots) of blood on the coat.
Minute, small, little
Minute:很小,细微; small: 大小,数 量,规模,力量,重要性 “小的, 少的”;little小得可爱
He is a ____ man, only one point five meters tall.
What a nice ____ garden! There are ____ particles of gold dust
on the ground.
(w) prosperity
n. State of being economically successful; state of being successful or rich
confusion
bewilderment or embarrassment There is still confusion about the
casualties. 为了避免混淆,各队穿了不同颜色的
衣服。 To avoid confusion, the teams wore
different colors. This misprint led to great confusion.
全新版大学英语综合教程4的说课(课堂PPT)

Unit 6 The pace of life (PARTⅡ) Text A : Old Father Time Becomes a Terror
1
textbook & learners analysis
➢ Aims to develop Ss’ abilities of using English to communicate & doing autonomous learning ;
➢ Lacks some Chinese element in terms of material selection.
15
2,background information
the Author technology stress in the workplace
16
3 Reading for the gist
Reviewing reading skills
(skimming and scanning)
what is the text about?
Teaching method
Teaching philosophy Learning method
Teaching steps
Blackboard design
2
Ⅰ. Book & learners analysis
Book:
教材分析
➢ Advocates Ss-centered teaching;
The perception of time-famine has triggered a variety of reactions.
全新版大学英语综合教程第四册-Unit-7PPT课件

New Yorkers waited at newsstands for the morning papers to arrive while anxious relatives gathered at streetside morgues holding pictures of the disappeared.
-
3
DAY OF TERROR Originally published: 9/12/2001 The morning coffee was still cooling when our grandest illusion
was shattered. Within minutes, one of New York's mightiest symbols was a smoldering mess and the nation's image of invincibility was made a lie. 1. 早晨的咖啡还没有凉,我们最宏伟的幻想却已被粉碎。在数分内, 纽约最显赫的象征之一成了一堆余烟未尽的废墟,而这个国家不 可战胜的形象也成了一个谎言。 2. As the World Trade Center crumpled and the streets filled with screams and scenes of unimaginable horror, choking smoke blotted out the sun and plunged lower Manhattan into darkness.
全新版大学英语(第二版)综合教程4-Unit-6-课件

Unit 6 The Pace of Life
Before Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Suppleme Becomes a Terror Richard Tomkins Once upon a time, technology, we thought, would make our lives easier. Machines were expected to do our work for us, leaving us with ever-increasing quantities of time to waste away on idleness and pleasure. But instead of liberating us, technology has enslaved us. Innovations are occurring at a bewildering rate: as many now arrive in a year as once arrived in a millennium. And as each invention arrives, it eats further into our time.
Unit 6 The Pace of Life
Before Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading
“You’ve got people retiring early, you’ve got the unemployed, you’ve got other people maybe only peripherally involved in the economy who don’t have this situation at all. If you’re unemployed, your problem is that you’ve got too much time, not too little.” Paul Edwards, chairman of the London-based Henley Centre forecasting group, points out that the feeling of pressures can also be exaggerated, or selfimposed imposed. “Everyone talks about it so much that about 50 percent of unemployed or retired people will tell you they never have enough time to get things done,” he says.
大学英语综合教程4unitPPT课件

01
Unit Introduction
Unit Theme
Summary
Unit Theme Introduction
Detailed description
The theme of this unit is "Global Climate Change", which mainly explores the current situation, causes and impacts of global climate change, as well as individual and social response strategies.
Teaching objectives
Summary
Explanation of teaching objectives
Detailed description
The teaching objectives of this unit include: cultivating students' reading comprehension ability, enabling them to master vocabulary and expressions related to global climate change, understanding the scientific principles of global climate change, and improving their critical thinking ability and environmental awareness.
全新版大学英语综合教程4 ppt电子教案Unit7

Unit 7 The 9/11 Terrorist Attack
Before Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading
Time is runnin’ out, let’s roll Time is runnin’ out, let’s roll
No one has the answers Detailed Reading But one thing is true evil You got to turn on ____ When it’s comin’ after you You got to face it down And when it tries to ____ hide You got to go in after it And never be denied
Time is runnin’ out, let’s roll Time is runnin’ out, let’s roll Time is runnin’ out, let’s roll
Unit 7 The 9/11 Terrorist Attack
Before Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading
He would sacrifice himself for justice.
Unit 7 The 9/11 Terrorist Attack
Before Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading
大学英语综合教程unit4 (课堂PPT)

5
take up: 承担
例句:I made a mistake and I will assume
responsibility for it. 我错了,我愿为此承担责任。
do with:利用,忍受
例句:1)If there’s one thing t can’t do with ,it’s
untidiness.
若说净。
2)Anything to do with my finances is ma
wife’s province.
一切有关钱财的事都由我妻子管。
6
Try, Try Again -------- T,H,Palmer
Try, a lesson you should heed, Try, Try again; If at first you don’t succeed, Try, Try again; Then your courage should appear, Foe, if you will persevere, You will conquer, never fear; Try, Try again.
respect and, _a_b_o_v_e__ ___a_l_l __, integrity.
Tony did not begin on the __b_o_tt_o_m_ rung of the ladder. He began in the basement. Tony’s affairs were ______
大学英语4综合教程课件ppt

01
Summary of the reading passage
02
Key points and main ideas presented in the
reading
03
Connection of the reading to the unit's theme
and overall goals
Vocabulary and Grammar: Advisor
Sentence analysis
Select typical sentences from the article for analysis to help learners better understand the article.
Content summary
Exercises and activities to improve listening
03
comprehension and speaking skills
03
Unit 3 The History of Science
Introduction
Content
An overview of the history of science, including the origin and development of science, as well as the contributions of major sciences
New words and phrases introduced in the reading passage
Important grammar points covered in the text
Explanation of Challenging Vocabulary and Grammar Concepts
全新版大学英语_第二版_综合教程4_Unit3_电子教案ppt课件

About the Author — B. Mackay
Warm-up Exercises
Before Reading
Global Reading Detailed Reading
After Reading
Unit 3 Job Interview Supplementary Reading
get him out of bed, telling him to get a job; every
breakfast she would throw the paper down in front of Detailed Reading
him, _p_o_in_t_i_n_g_o_u_t_ the jobs he could apply for. And when he got home at the end of the day without having
Before Reading
Global Reading Detailed Reading
After Reading
Unit 3 Job Interview Supplementary Reading
Listen to the Song
Detailed Reading
Unit 3 Job Interview
Before Reading
Global Reading Detailed Reading
After Reading
Unit 3 Job Interview Supplementary Reading
An English Song — Get a Job
Detailed Reading
Background Information
全新版大学英语(第二版)综合教程4_Unit_4_课件

Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading Globalization is sweeping aside national borders and changing relations between nations. What impact does this have on national identities and loyalties Are they strengthened or weakened The author investigates. In Search of Davos Man Peter Gumbel William Browder was born in Princeton New Jersey grew up in Chicago and studied at Stanford University in California. But don’t ca ll him an American. For the past 16 of his 40 years he has lived outside the U.S. first Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading first in London and then from 1996 in Moscow where he runs his own investment firm. Browder now manages 1.6 billion in assets. In 1998 he gave up his American passport to become a British citizen since his life is now centered in Europe. “National identity makes no difference for me” he says. “I feel completely internat ional. If you have four good friends and you like what you are doing it doesn’t matter where you are. That’s globalization.” Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading Alex Mandl is also a fervent believer in globalization but he views himself very differently. A former president of ATT Mandl 61 was born in Austria and now runs a French technology company which is doing more and more business in China. He reckons he spends about 90 of his time traveling on business. But despite all that globetrotting Mandl who has been a U.S. citizen for 45 years still identifies himself as an American. “I see myself as American without any hesitation. The fact that I spend a lot of time in other places doesn’t change that” he says. Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading Although Browder and Mandl define their nationality differently both see their identity as a matter of personal choice not an accident of birth. And not incidentally both are Davos Men members of the international business élite who trek each year to the Swiss Alpine town for the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum founded in 1971. This week Browder and Mandl will join more than 2200 executives politicians academics journalists writers and a handful of Hollywood stars for five days of networking Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading parties and endless earnest discussions about everything from post-election Iraq and HIV in Africa to the global supply of oil and the implications of nanotechnology. Yet this year perhaps more than ever a hot topic at Davos is Davos itself. Whatever their considerable differences most Davos Men and Women share at least one belief: that globalization the unimpeded flows of capital labor and technology across national borders is both welcome and unstoppable. They see the world increasingly as one vast interconnected marketplace in which corporations search for the most advantageous locations to buy produce and sell their goods and services. Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading As borders and national identities become less important some find that threatening and even dangerous. In an essay entitled “Dead Souls: The Denationalization of the American Elite” Harvard Professor Samuel Huntington describes Davos Man a phrase that first got widespread attention in the 1990s as an emerging global superspecies and a threat. The members of this class he writes are people who “have little need for national loyalty view national boundaries as obstacles that thankfully are vanishing can Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading and see national governments asresidues from the past whose only useful function is to facilitate the élite’s global operations.” Huntington argues that Davos Man’s global-citizen self-image is starkly at odds with the values of most Americans who remain deeply committed to their nation. This disconnect he says creates “a major cultural fault line. In a variety of ways the American establishment governmental and private has become increasingly divorced from the American people.” Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading Naturally many Davos Men don’t accept Huntington’sterms. Klaus Schwab the founder and executive chairmanof the World Economic Forum argues that endorsing aglobal outlook does not mean erasing national identity.“Globalization can never provide us with cultural identitywhich needs to be local and national in nature.” Global trade has been around for centuries thecorporations and countries that benefited from it werelargely content to treat vast parts of the world as placesto mine natural resources or sell finished products. Evenas the globalization of capital accelerated in the 1980smost Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading most foreign investment was between relatively wealthy countries not from wealthy countries into poorer ones. U.S. technology companies and money were often at the forefront of this movement. However the past two decades have witnessed the rise of other significant players. The developed world is beating a path to China’s and India’s door — and Chinese and Indian companies in turn have started to look overseas for some of their future growth. Beijing has eve n started what it calls a “Going Out” policy that encourages Chinese firms to buy assets overseas. Asian nations are creating “a remarkable environment of innovation” graduating Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading says John Chambers chief executive of Cisco Systems. “China and India are graduating currently more than five times the number of engineers that we are here in the U.S.” That means that U.S. and European companies are now facing high-quality low-cost competition from overseas. No wonder so many Western workers worry about losing their jobs. “If the issue is the size of the total pie globalization has proved a good thing” says Orit Gadiesh chairman of consultants Bain Co. “If the issue is how the pie is divided if you’re in the Western world you could question that.” Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading The biggest shift may just be starting. A landmark2003 study by Goldman Sachs predicted that foureconomies —Russia Brazil India and China — willbecome a much larger force in the world economy thanwidely expected based on projections of demographicand economic growth with China potentially overtakingGermany this decade. By 2050 Goldman Sachs suggestedthese four newcomers will likely have displaced all butthe U.S. and Japan from the top six economies in theworld. Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading It’s als o entirely possible that thenear future may see the pendulum ofcapital swing away from Davos Man-style globalization. One counterpointis Manila Woman — low-paid migrantworkers from Asia and elsewhere who are increasinglyworkproviding key services around the world. Valerie Goodingthe chief executive of British health care company BUPAsays the British and U.S. health care system would breakdown without immigrant nurses from the Philippines IndiaNigeria and elsewhere. Unlike Davos Man she says they’renot ambiv alent about being strongly patriotic. Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading DetailedReading After Reading Supplementary Reading Not all Davos Men seek global markets either. Patrick Sayer runs a private equity firm in France called Eurazeo and complains there are still too many barriers to cross-border business in Europe let alone the world. So he’s focused Eurazeo on its domestic market. “I profit from being French in France. It’s easier for me to do deals” Sayer says. “It’s the same elsewhere. If you’re not Italian in Italy you won’t succeed.” Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading That may sound like a narrownationalism yet it contains a hiddenwisdom. Recall that Italy itself wasuntil 1861 not a unified nation but anaggregation of city-states. Despitetension between its north and souththere’s no contradiction betweenmaintaining a regional identity and a national one. MarcoTronchetti Provera chairman of Telecom Italia forexample can feel both Milanese and Italian at once evenas he runs a company that is aspiring to become a biggerinternational presence. The question is whether it willtake another 140 years for Davos Man to figure out how tostrike the same balance on a global scale. Unit 4 GlobalizationBefore Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary ReadingBrowder now manages 1.6 billion in assets. 1. What information can you get from the sentence Browder is quite a rich businessman and right now there are 1.6 billion worth of assets under at his investment firm. 2. Translate the sentence into Chinese 布劳德如今掌管着价值16亿美元的资产。
大学英语4综合教程课件ppt课件ppt

The student workbook completes the main textbook and provides additional exercises and activities for students to practice their English skills outside of class
Chapter Length and Content
The chapters are of modeled length, providing sufficient content for a semester long course Each chapter covers a specific topic or theme, with a focus on enhancing students' reading, writing, speaking, and listening skills
Each unit focuses on a specific topic or skill set and includes a mix of in class activities, home assignments, and online resoБайду номын сангаасrces
The course also includes regular assessments and exams to monitor students' progress and ensure they meet the course objectives
Textbook usage methods
Instrument's Guide
Student Workbook
全新版大学英语综合教程第四册第四单元ppt课件

10月19日,赵薇的酒庄在 天猫旗舰店上线
Before Reading
While Reading
Words
Grammar
Golbalization
.
Before Reading
While Reading
Words
Over many centuries, human societies across the globe have established progressively closer contacts. Recently, the pace of global integration has dramatically increased. Unprecedented changes in communications, transportation, and computer technology have given the process new impetus and made the world more interdependent than ever. .
The former warns that Davos Man poses a threat to
American values, whereas the latter argues that
endorsing a global outlook does not mean erasing
national identity.
Grammar
Before Reading
While Reading
Words
Multinational corporations manufacture products in many countries and sell to consumers around the world. Money, technology and raw materials move ever more swiftly across national borders. Along with products and finances, ideas and cultures circulate more freely. As a result, laws, economies, and social movements are forming at the international level.
全新版大学英语4综合教程UPPT课件

• 7. Signature. (full name) handwriting, and typed.
Lead-in Activity
Most interview questions can be grouped into five basic categories:
Lead-in Activity
Dos:
Be honest about your background and experience.
Ask a few appropriate questions. Think before answering. Remain calm and alert to answer
characters and activities showing these
characters
• 5. End by requesting an interview. Provide a phone number so the employer can contact you quickly. If you can be reached only at certain times, specify them.—— the third part of the letter.( In China, application letter is given with resume, so we don’t have to write address and other means for conWant
Harvey B. Mackay
全新版大学英语(第二版)综合教程4_Unit_3_课件

were any graduates working at Mackay whom he could
intervio grill him in a mock interview? Did he go to the library to find
wasn’t even thinking 85. He was thinking number one.
You can do the same if you work on your weaknesses and develop your strengths. To be able to compete,
Unit 3 Job Interview
Before Reading Global Reading Detailed Reading After Reading Supplementary Reading
As I see it, there are four keys to getting hired: 1. Prepare to win. “If you miss one day of practice, you notice the difference,” the saying goes among musicians. “If you miss two days of practice, the critics notice the difference. If you miss three days of practice, the audience notices the difference.” When we watch a world-class musician or a top athlete, we don’t see the years of preparation that enabled him or her to become great. The Michael Jordans of the world have talent, yes, but they’re also the first ones
- 1、下载文档前请自行甄别文档内容的完整性,平台不提供额外的编辑、内容补充、找答案等附加服务。
- 2、"仅部分预览"的文档,不可在线预览部分如存在完整性等问题,可反馈申请退款(可完整预览的文档不适用该条件!)。
- 3、如文档侵犯您的权益,请联系客服反馈,我们会尽快为您处理(人工客服工作时间:9:00-18:30)。
11
Ⅳ learning method 学法
❖ Way of autonomous learning and finding the problems (自主学习和发现问题法)
❖ Way of summary and reflection (总结反思 法)
能力为中心”的教育质量观) ❖ Three-dimensional teaching(立体化教学)
10
Ⅲ. Teaching method 教法
1,Adopt an eclectic way
Combine communicative teaching method and traditional teaching methods ;
Theme-related language learning (课堂实
践)
4
This text 1.Teaching objectives: Language 1) grasp the main idea and structure of the text; 2) master the key language points ,
grammatical and sentential structures;
3) learn about the new words and phrases .
5
Ability objects (1) To develop the Ss’ abilities of speaking and reading (2) To improve the student’s reading ability, especially their skimming and scanning ability. (3) To train the Ss’ abilities of studying by themselves and cooperating.
➢ Lacks some Chinese element in terms of material selection.
3
Each unit: ➢ 4 parts:
Listening task (课前自学) Reading Task Text A (课堂学习) Home reading Task Text B (课外阅读)
expressions; 3. The use of parenthetical expressions(插入语)
and the structure of “… apart”
8
Ⅰ. Target learners 学情分析
1.Non-English majors, sophomore ; 2. Characteristics: ❖ diligent, ambitious, become independent
Teaching steps
Blackboard design
2
Ⅰ. Book & learners analysis
Book:
教材分析
➢ Advocates Ss-centered teaching;
➢ Aims to develop Ss’ abilitiesቤተ መጻሕፍቲ ባይዱof using English to communicate & doing autonomous learning ;
Special attention should be paid to classroom interaction. More encouragement is needed and more guidance will be given to them in their extracurricular study.
Unit 6 The pace of life (PARTⅡ) Text A : Old Father Time Becomes a Terror
1
textbook & learners analysis
Teaching method
Teaching philosophy Learning method
their aptitude (遵循分类指导和因材施教原则) ❖ Combining classroom teaching and autonomous learning
(倡导课堂教学与自主学习相结合) ❖ Establish “ability centered” educational quality(建立“以
2) to review the traditional Chinese perception of
time and to make comparison.
7
2.Teaching focus: 1. The structure of the text; 2. Useful words (esp. Confusable word) and
6
Emotional or moral objects
By completing the task, the Ss increase their interest in reading and set up self-confidence in learning English.
Culture
1) to know a new British perception of time and pressure;
comparatively weak in listening and speaking
9
Ⅱ Teaching philosophy 教学理念
❖ student-centered teaching approach (以学生为中心) ❖ Learning decide to education (以学定教) ❖ Learning motivation (激发学习动机) ❖ classified guidance and teach students in accordance of
❖ Way of cooperation and exploration(合作探 究法的兵帮兵学习方法 )