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基础综合英语听力材料邱东林.doc

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1、-目录Unit one Education3*Part one Problems with us Education*.3Listening Script one.3Listening Script two.4*Part two Arts Education * 5Listing script one .5Listening Script two.6*Part Three graduate education*.7Listening Script one.7Listening Script two.8Unit two love.9*Part One Romance*.9Listening sc

2、ript one .9Listening script two .10*Part Two Eternal love*.12Listening script one .12Listening script two .13*Part Three The Power of Love* .15Listening script one .15Listening script two .16Unit Three Health18*Part One Is Overweight a Problem?*.18Listening script one .18Listening script two .19*Par

3、t Two New Four Food Group* .20Listening script one .20Listening script two .21*Part Three There Are Worse Things than Dying* 22-Listening script one .22Listening script two .24Unit four technology .25*Part one cell phone* .25Listening script one .25Listening script two .26*Part two internet* .27List

4、ening script one .27Listening script two .28*Part three computer giants*30Listening script one .30Listening script two .31Unit Five Success and Happiness32*Part one Success Is a Choice* 32Listening Script one.32Listening Script two.33*Part Two Can We Find Happiness* .34Listening Script one.34Listeni

5、ng Script two.35*Part Three The Sweet Success of Branding* .36Listening Script one.36Listening Script two.38Unit Six Globalization.40*Part one Three Eras of Globalization* .40Listening Script one.40Listening Script two.40*Part Two Globalization and China*.41Listening Script one.41Listening Script tw

6、o.42*Part Three Globalization and Inequality* 43-Listening Script one.43Listening Script two.44Unit Seven Plagiarism .45*Part one Defining Plagiarism* .45Listening Script one.45Listening Script two.45*Part Two Plagiarism in College* .46Listening Script one.46Listening Script two.47*Part Three Avoidi

7、ng Plagiarism*.48Listening Script one.48Listening Script two.49Unit Eight Patriotism.50*Part one My Chinese Heart* 50Listening Script one.50Listening Script two.51*Part Two Comments on Patriotism* 52Listening Script one.52Listening Script two.53*Part Three Pride of the Nation* .53Listening Script on

8、e.53Listening Script two.54Unit one Education*Part one Problems with us Education*Listening Script one When I was in college I had an English major and for a while I considered going into -teaching. While I was exploring the possibility of becoming a teacher, I did a lot of thinking about the way th

9、at the education system in the United States is run. And I disagree with a lot of the ways that things seem to happen and have happened for a long time in our educational system.Uh . people dont seem to recognize various kinds of intelligence; they seem to just want to give standardized tests and pe

10、g you for what you are capable of very early on your education. Ive always felt that a lot of classes that youre forced to take in high school are not really geared towards what you are going to be doing. Theres very little emphasis on your own special interests. Uh . everybodys sort of treated like

11、 theyre the same person. Everything is very generalized. Theres a lot of uh . theres a lot of pressure on students to be as well-rounded as possible. I think being well-rounded isnt really possible because it becomes impossible to develop any one part of yourself, um . to any great degree. And as a

12、result people cant get into good colleges if they, yaknow, havent, yaknow, scored the . the right thing on the math section of SAT, even if they are brilliant writers, and vice versa. You know, um. people just really are not given a chance, I think, in a lot of cases.Another thing that really distur

13、bs me is the way that students are separated from each other. I got involved with vocational education, uh . which means that the kids go out to a technical or trade school for part of the week, and then they come back to the home school for the other part of the week and they take their academic cl

14、asses. However, those kids are kept separate from the rest of the school almost as if theyre below them. Theres a lot of stratification. Um . at any rate I feel that the kids are very aware of the way that theyre perceived by the educators, by their teachers and, yaknow, by their peers. And I think

15、that it . it causes them to act in a way that. is . not really optimal. And thats pretty sad to me. I actually had kids tell me when I was teaching them, “yaknow, were the just bad class; we. yaknow, its not that we have a problem with you personally; yaknow, we are just bad. We are bad kids” becaus

16、e pretty much that was what they felt they were. And yaknow, their classes were very limiting, uh the teachers never try to do anything creative with those classes. I think that many of the kids in that class were intelligent, but never actually realized their potential because of the way they were

17、tracked very early on their education.Listening Script twoMargaret Warner: Mr. Unz. Why do you believe that bilingual education should be scrapped?Ron Unz: Well, the overwhelming practical evidence is that bilingual education has failed on every large scale case thats been tried in the United States

18、, in particular in California. The origins of this initiative was the case last year of a lot of immigrant Latino parents in -downtown LA, who had to begin a public boycott of their local elementary school to try to force the school to give their children the right to be taught English, which the sc

19、hool was denying. And I think that really opened my eyes to the current state of the program in California, where the statistics are dreadful.Margaret Warner: Mr. Lyons.Janies Lyons: It is not the case that bilingual education is failing children. There are poor bilingual education programs, just as

20、 there are poor programs of every type in our schools today. But bilingual education has made it possible for children to have continuous development in their native language, while theyre in the process of learning English, something that doesnt hap pen overnight, and its made it possible for child

21、ren to learn math and science at a rate equal to English-speaking children while theyre in the process of acquiring English.Margaret Warner: Mr. Unz, what about that point for these children who dont speak English well they will fall behind in the basic subjects if they cant be taught those in Spani

22、sh, or whatever language? I shouldnt say just Spanish, but whatever their familys language is.Ron Unz: Thats a very reasonable point. And to the extent that were talking about older children. 14 or 15 year olds who come to the United States, dont know any English and are put in the public schools I

23、think a very reasonable case can be made for bilingual education. I dont know if its correct, but at least you can make a case for it. But most of the children were talking about enter California or America public schools when theyre five or six or seven. At the age of five years old, the only acade

24、mic subjects a child is really doing is drawing with crayons or cutting and, you know, with paper and that type of thing. And at that age children can learn another language so quickly and easily that the only reasonable thing to do is to put them in a program where theyre taught English as rapidly

25、as possible and then put into the mainstream classes with the other children so they can move forward academically.Margaret Warner: There is something to that point, isnt there, Mr. Lyons, that very young children do absorb languages very quickly?James Lyons: They absorb certain facets of language v

26、ery quickly. They learn to speak in an unaccented form like a native English speaker. But the research shows that actually adults are much more efficient and quicker language learners than children because theyre working from a broader linguistic base, a greater conceptual base. I really take object

27、ion to what Mr. Unz is saying that children at the age of five, six, and seven are only coloring and cutting out paper. That isnt going to lead to the high standards.-*Part two Arts Education *Listing script oneInterviewer: Professor Gardner, what did you find in your studies to be the biggest diffe

28、rence between arts education in the United States and arts education in China? What struck you most, then?Gardner: I was so struck by the differences between arts education in the United States and arts education in China. US youngsters love to explore and think that they explore very well; and yet,

29、 without the requisite discipline, their products are typically of little interest except perhaps to their doting parents.Education in all of the arts in China is very precisely prescribed. Teachers and parents know exactly what they want children to be able to do and they know how to get the desire

30、d behaviour and performance in almost perfect fashion. On the other hand, there is little free exploration.But I must add another surprise. When young children in China were given a novel task in the arts, they performed very well. Before visiting China, I had thought that young people must always b

31、egin with a period of free exploration, before they begin to acquire discipline and skills. After visiting China and thinking about what I had seen, I came to a different conclusion. It is not important that one “explore“ first; what is important is that one has a significant period for exploration,

32、 either before, during, or after one has acquired some discipline.Interviewer: As you might have noticed, these days after-school classes in music, dance, painting and calligraphy are very popular in China, although many of the “young emperors“ might not be so willing to learn all these “extra skill

33、s.“ Whats your opinion on this?Gardner: The fewer children you have, and the more resources at your disposal, the more likely you are to give your children every form of enrichment. China has thousands of years of history of encouraging talent development, so it is not at all a surprise that many ki

34、ds are taking after-school arts classes. But what children do when their parents push them, is very different than what they do when they grow up, and their parents are no longer in control of the rewards and punishment. By and large, those grown up students who continue their area of talent are tho

35、se who use the talent professionally and those who gain intrinsic pleasure from the activity.-Interviewer: In recent years, art museums and community arts centres have been mushrooming in China as the country experiences rapid modernization and internationalization. How do you balance arts education

36、 in schools and arts education beyond school Walls?Gardner: It is entirely to the good that students now have opportunities to learn about the arts outside of class in museums, in childrens palaces, through the electronic media, community centres, and outdoor installations. Very often children learn

37、 much more comfortably and personally in what we call “informal educational settings.” Optimally, there should be a division of labour between schools and informal settings. As just one example: Schools could focus more on providing history and cultural background whereas museums might provide the o

38、pportunity to learn about special topics, or probe into a topic more deeply.Listening Script twoAnn: Do you find theres much opportunity. to do other things, besides studying, during term- time? I mean, if you have a, a very academic course, you say the social life is good, but you might not always

39、have time to, er, enjoy it, if you . have a lot.Ian: Not being a very academic course, I wouldnt know.Ann: How about you, Tony?Tony: I suppose . a business course isnt particularly academic, if you like, but, er, I certainly find quite enough time to do newspapers and . all I want to do on the socia

40、l side. Yes Go to dances and so, on.Ian: But then you work till five in the morning, dont you? LaughterTony: Lets not bring personalities into this!Ann: Dyou think that a lot of students, are interested in producing things like newspapers and plays and writing poetry?Tony: No, but a lot of students

41、like to have those things and a few students like to do them. This is why, I mean if you hadout of a college of, what is it, fifteen hundred students if you had five hundred students going along to the Drama Club on the first week of term . they try and mount two productions out of five hundred peop

42、le. Itd be absolutely impossible. Yet, there are those, the sufficient people to see, what is it, twenty, thirty people, doing those productions. Its the same with the newspaper.-Ann: Yes. But erm, I think this is because more students havent got the confidence to show the work they do. I think a lo

43、t of students write things and paint, in the background, and just dont like to er .Ian: Er, I think, I think myself, theyre just not interested, in You don sort of taking part in joint efforts. They prefer just to erm, well, they might write poetry on their own or something, but they were asked to w

44、rite something for a newspaper, they wouldnt be interested.Ann: Is this because the courses are too difficult? They have too much academic work, as I said before?Tony: I think its all psychological, to bring a nice big word into it! Erm . those students think they shouldnt do it, because they think

45、they wont have Mm time and so on. I think this is the thing. Its not a question of not having enough time. Its just organizing it. I mean, Ian says I stay up till five in the morning or whatever, you know, never go to bed till two. Yes You can, if you, if youre determined to do something, you can ar

46、range it. You can say, “Okay, Ill do the newspaper between lectures finishing at four, or whatever, and go home at six”, and you have two hours a day on the newspaper, say. You know, Yes just, say, this is a way of organizing things. A lot of other students will say at four, “Oh dear, I must go on working, but before that I must have a break”. And they spend two hours in a coffee bar. Okay, this laughter is the way they want to organize their time. Yes They spend it. you know . its just that I want to do it doing newspaper,

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