½Ìѧ¶ÔÏó Teaching Subjects ÖÜ ´Î ¿ÎÐÍ µÚ5-7 ÖÜ 2015¼¶´óѧӢÓï±¾¿Æ ½ÌѧÄÚÈÝ Lesson Content ÊÚ¿Îʱ¼ä Unit 2 College¡ªThe ladder to success? 3ÔÂ21ÈÕ - 4ÔÂ8ÈÕ ¡õ ÀíÂÛ¿Î ¡Ì ÀíÂÛ¡¢Êµ¼ù¿Î ¡õ ʵ¼ù¿Î ¶àýÌå½ÌÊÒ ¿Îʱ·ÖÅä 6 ½Ìѧ»·¾³ Teaching Environment ½ÌѧĿ±ê Teaching Aims After studying this unit, the students are expected to be able to: 1. understand the main idea and structure of Section A and Section B£» 2. master the key language points and grammatical structures in the texts 3. talk about significance of the humanities and gain more insights into life and society and be aware of cultural and religious differences; 4. read with the skill ¡°reading for major details¡±; 5. write a composition to introduce the advantages of something with three main parts: introduction, body and conclusion. 1. Vocabulary accounting, boost, defect, persist, accelerate, dominant, compel, elegant, spectacular, insight,liable,reservoir, in succession, speculate about/on, invest sb./sth. with, in the company of 2. Skills ¡ñ Learn to read with the skill ¡°¡°reading for major details¡± and focus on how the advantages/disadvantages are introduced. ¡ñTo talk about significance of the humanities ¡ñwrite a composition to introduce advantages and disadvantages of some topic. ¡ñTo apply the phrases and patterns Öصã Key Issues Äѵã Potential Problems and Difficulties ½Ìѧ·½·¨ Methodology A combination of traditional teaching methods with the communicative approach will be adopted. Special attention should be paid to classroom interaction like questioning and answers. Small group works are always needed while discussing the questions and the difficult translation practice. More encouragement is needed and more guidance will be given in their extracurricular study. Visual aids, projector, stereo and microphone ½Ì¾ß Teaching Aids ½Ìѧ·Ö×é Teaching Groups Group work and pair work ¿ÎÌÃѧϰÈÎÎñÓë»î¶¯µÄ×éÖ¯Conduct of Tasks and Activities £¨Ê¦Éú»¥¶¯·½Ê½Mode of Interaction; ѧϰ²ßÂÔLearning Strategies£© Students-centered Task-based teaching and learning ²½Öè1 Step 1 µ¼Èë Lead-in I. Greeting and warming-up questions discussion. 1. How do you think of your current major? If you were given a second chance to choose your major, what would you select and why? 2. What liberal arts / humanities courses do you learn in college? Do you think they are necessary for your education? II. Listening and discussing. 1. Listening practice. 2. In your opinion, what are the most important skills you learned in high school? III. Listening to a talk and answer questions on page 30. ²½Öè 2 Step 2 ¿ÎÎÄѧϰ Section A An Impressive English Lesson I. Background information 1. the humanities The humanities are a group of academic disciplines that study the human condition, using methods that are primarily analytical, critical, or speculative. Therefore, they are distinguished from the approaches of the natural sciences. The humanities, called social sciences, include history, anthropology, communication studies, cultural studies, law, language, literature, philosophy, religion, music and theater, etc. Through exploration of the humanities, students learn how to think creatively and critically, to reason, and to ask questions. Because these skills allow students to gain new insights into everything from poetry and paintings to business models and politics, humanistic subjects have been at the heart of a liberal arts education. Today, humanistic knowledge continues to provide the ideal foundation for exploring and understanding the human experience. 2. self-awareness Self-awareness isn¡¯t a quality that you demonstrate by telling a story, but rather it has to do with how you tell the story and your ability to communicate what you learned. Being able to explain to the admissions committee why you value one accomplishment above others, what you learned from a setback, or the deeper meaning of your career goals, is evidence of self-awareness. Furthermore, the self-aware individual has knowledge of both his strengths and weaknesses. II. Useful expressions Practical Phrases Specific Meanings 1. major in Ö÷ÐÞ£¨Ä³Ò»£©¿ÆÄ¿ 2. in succession Á¬Ðø·¢Éú 3. be bound to ¿Ï¶¨»á£¬×¢¶¨ 4. stand up for Ö§³Ö£¬Î¬»¤ 5.speculate about ÍƲ⣬²Â²â 6. invest sb. wth sth. ¸³Ó裨ijÈË/ijÎÒÔijÖÖÐÔÖÊ 7. be liable to ¿ÉÄÜ/Ò×ÓÚ×öijÊ III. Functional Patterns and Functions & Usages 1.Sth. is/are more and more seen as ¡ rather than ¡ ÓÃÓÚ±í´ï¡°ÈËÃǶÔijһÊÂÎïµÄ¿´·¨µÄ±ä»¯¡±¡£ 2.Once + N., sth. now ¡ ÓÃÓÚ±í´ï¡°½ñÎô¶Ô±È¡±¡£ 3. If sb. only do sth. / If sb. do sth. alone, it¡¯s likely that ¡ / sb. are liable to ¡ÓÃÓÚ±í´ï¡°Èç¹ûÖ»×ö¡¡¿ÉÄܳöÏֵĺó¹û¡±¡£ ¢ô.Structure Analysis: Main idea of section A: this text is a narrative that talks about the author¡¯s personal experience in giving an effective English lesson to his son. He claims that students can learn better if they are properly taught. Part I (Paras. 1-5) Part I provides the background information of the argument. By moving away from the humanities and taking some ¡°hard-skill¡± courses instead, students think it would improve their chance of finding a job. Because of the economic downturn, this trend is likely to persist and even accelerate. However, the humanities play a significant role in people¡¯s lives and can¡¯t be ignored. Part II (Paras.6-9) Part II presents the author¡¯s argument to stand up for the true value of the humanities: studying the humanities can improve our ability to read and write, invest us with great insight and self-awareness, thereby releasing our creative energy and talent, and provide the scope of possibilities that are widely open to us. It also suggests that inner insight, combined with technical knowledge, is ideal for the establishment of a good career. Para. II (Para. 10) Part III summaries the main ideas stated in the argument: The humanities help to create well-rounded human beings with inner insight and understanding of the passions, hopes and dreams common to all humanity ²½Öè3 Step 3 ÓïÑÔµãLanguage points Detailed study of the text 1. When the going gets tough, the tough take accounting. (Para. 1) Meaning: When conditions or situations become difficult, determined people choose to study the subject of accounting, hoping they can more easily find a job in the future. ¡ïWhen the going gets tough: when the situation becomes difficult µ±ÐÎÊƱäµÃÑϾþʱ When the going gets tough, women can get as tough as men. µ±ÐÎÊƱäµÃÑϾþʱ£¬Å®ÈË¿ÉÒÔ±äµÃ¸úÄÐÈËÒ»Ñù¼áÇ¿¡£ ¡ïaccounting: n. [C] the work of accountants or the methods they use»á¼Æ; »á¼Æѧ Students¡¯ major objective is to be financially well off. Accordingly, today the most popular course is not literature or history but accounting. ѧÉúµÄÖ÷ҪĿµÄÊǾ¼ÃÉϸ»Ô£¡£Òò´Ë£¬µ±½ñ×îÁ÷ÐеĿγ̲»ÊÇÎÄѧ»òÀúÊ·£¬¶øÊÇ»á¼Æ¡£ ¡ïtake accounting: choose to study the subject of accounting Ñ¡Ôñѧ»á¼Æ 2. When the job market worsens, many students calculate they can¡¯t major in English or history. (Para. 1) Meaning: When there are fewer job openings, many college students make a judgment from the situation and think they can¡¯t study English or history as their major. ¡ïcalculate: vt. 1) make a judgment about what is likely to happen using the available information ¹À¼Æ£»Ô¤²â£»ÍƲâ It¡¯s difficult to calculate the long-term effects of these changes in the law. ÕâЩ·¨ÂÉÉϱ仯´øÀ´µÄ³¤ÆÚÓ°ÏìÊÇÄÑÒÔÔ¤²âµÄ¡£ 2) find out how much sth. will cost, how long sth. will take, etc. by using numbers ¼ÆË㣻ºËËã Nowadays the accountants in the enterprise use computers to calculate the cost of production with accuracy. Èç½ñ£¬ÆóÒµ²ÆÎñÈËÔ±ÀûÓõçÄÔÀ´¼ÆËã׼ȷµÄÉú²ú³É±¾¡£ ¡ïmajor in: study sth. as your main subject at college or university Ö÷ÐÞ£¨Ä³Ò»£©¿ÆÄ¿ The high demand for persons with knowledge about computers is why I chose to major in computer science at the university. ¶Ô¾ßÓеçÄÔ֪ʶÈ˲ŵĸßÐèÇóÊÇÎÒÑ¡ÔñÔÚ´óѧÖ÷ÐÞ¼ÆËã»ú¿ÆѧµÄÔÒò¡£ 3. They have to study something that boosts their prospects of landing a job. (Para. 1) Meaning: They have to study something that improves their chances of success in finding a job. ¡ïboost: vt. increase or improve sth. to make it more successful ´Ù½ø£»Íƶ¯£»Ê¹ÐËÍú Some countries hope that warmer weather and more rain will boost their farm output. һЩ¹ú¼ÒÏ£Íû¸üÎÂůµÄÌìÆøºÍ¸ü¶àµÄ½µÓêÄÜÌá¸ßËûÃǵÄÅ©Òµ²úÁ¿¡£ ¡ïprospect: n. [C, U] sth. that is possible or likely to happen in the future, or the possibility itself ¿ÉÄܵÄÊÂÇ飻ºÜÄÜ·¢ÉúµÄÊÂÇ飻ǰ¾° Career prospects in science and technology are virtually unlimited. ¿Æ¼¼ÀàÖ°ÒµµÄÇ°¾°¼¸ºõÊÇÎÞ¿ÉÏÞÁ¿µÄ¡£ 4. The data show that as students have increasingly shouldered the ever-rising cost of tuition, they have defected from the study of the humanities and toward applied science and ¡°hard¡± skills that they bet will lead to unemployment. Meaning: The facts and information show that as students have spent increasingly more money on tuition, they have turned away from the humanities to some practical courses that they believe will enable them to get a job more easily. ¡ïdefect: vi. Leave a country, political party, or organization to go to another one ±»ÅУ»ÅÑÌÓ He defected from the party in the late 1970s. ËûÔÚ20ÊÀ¼Í70Äê´úºóÆÚ±³ÅÑÁ˸õ³¡£ n. [C] a fault in sb. or sth. ȱµã£»Ç·È±£»²»×ãÖ®´¦ Stammering is probably an inherited defect. ¿Ú³Ô¿ÉÄÜÊÇÒ»ÖÖÒÅ´«È±ÏÝ¡£ ¡ïapplied: a. (usu. before noun) used for describing educational subjects when they are studied for their practical uses £¨Ñ§¿Æ£©Ó¦Óõģ¬ÊµÓÃµÄ Industry leaders want scientists to engage in basic research, not applied research. ²úÒµÁìµ¼ÕßÃÇÏ£Íû¿Æѧ¼ÒÃÇ´ÓÊ»ù´¡Ñо¿£¬¶ø²»ÊÇÓ¦ÓÃÑо¿¡£ ¡ïbet : (bet, bet) vt. be fairly sure that sth. is true, that sth. will happen, etc., although you can¡¯t prove this ¿Ï¶¨ I bet the train will be late. ÎÒ¸Ò´ò¶Ä£¬Áгµ»áÍíµã¡£ v. risk money on the result of a race, game, competition or other future event ϶Ä×¢£»Óë¡´ò¶Ä I bet my life that he will take my money and leave. ÎÒ¸ÒÓÃÎÒµÄÃü´ò¶Ä£¬Ëû½«ÄÃ×ÅÎÒµÄÇ®À뿪¡£ 5. In other words, a college education is more and more seen as a means for economic betterment rather than a means for human betterment. (Para. 2) Meaning: In other words, a college education is more considered as a method to improve students¡¯ economic status rather than improve human nature or behavior. 6. This is a trend that is likely to persist and even accelerate. (Para. 2) Meaning: Very likely, the trend will continue to exist and even go faster than ever. ¡ïpersist: vi. (fml.) continue to exist ¼ÌÐø´æÔÚ£»³ÖÐø 1) If the bad weather persists, the farmers will suffer great losses this year. Èç¹û¶ñÁÓÌìÆø³ÖÐø£¬Å©Ãñ½ñÄ꽫ÔâÊܾ޴óµÄËðʧ¡£ 2) continue to do sth., although this is difficult, or other people oppose it ¼á³Ö£»Ö´Òâ Students must persist in their efforts if they wish to do well. ѧÉúÈç¹ûÏëÈ¡µÃºÃ³É¼¨¾Í±ØÐë¼á³ÖŬÁ¦¡£ ¡ïaccelerate: v. happen or make sth. happen at a faster rate £¨Ê¹£©¼Ó¿ì£»´Ù½ø Human activities can cause or accelerate permanent changes in natural systems. ÈËÀàµÄ»î¶¯¿ÉÄܵ¼Ö»ò¼ÓËÙ×ÔȻϵͳµÄÓÀ¾Ã±ä»¯¡£ 7. Over the next few years, as labor market struggle, the humanities will probably continue their long slide in succession. (Para. 3) Meaning: For the next few years, as the going gets tough with labor markets, the subjects of the humanities