新编英语教程第6册教案
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Unit TwelveTEXT IGRANT AND LEE: A STUDY IN CONTRASTSBruce CattonObjectives: to make a table of all the contrasts and similarities between Grant and Lee and explain them;to analyse the organization of this essay and learn the ways of comparison and contrast;Pre-class work1. Find some brief information about the following persons and events.--- American Civil War--- Ulysses S. Grant--- Robert E. Lee2. Try to answer the questions in Org. & Devl. , and Analysis.3. Identify in the text as many contrasts and similarities between Grant and Lee as you can, and make a table of your own to show all these.Contrasts in family background, in personality, in opinions on privilege, equality, past and future, what to fight for, etc.Similarities as shown in LW 4, but try to explain.Pre-reading Questions1. Tell what you know about American Civil War, Ulysses S. Grant, and Robert E. Lee.(Refer to the attachment copied from Encyclopedia Britanica.)In-reading DiscussionStep 1The usual ways or the basic patterns to organize the comparison and contrast (Analysis)1. Subject-by-subject pattern: A1, A2, A3,...... B1, B2, B3, ......2. Point-by-point pattern: A1, B1; A2, B2; A3, B3; ......3. Subject-by-subject plus point-by-point pattern: combination of 1 & 2. Step 2 Part division (Org.& Devl.)--- Paras. 1-3: Introduction The purpose is to present the two generals for comparison and to put forth the significance of their meeting at Appomattox.--- Paras. 4-12: Contrasts between Grant and Lee.Subject-by-subject comparison (categories compared: background,personality, notions of equality, privilege, past and future, what to fight for, etc.) Paras. 4-6: Lee; 7-8: Grant; 9, 11: Grant; 10: Lee; 12: Summary of the contrasts--- Para. 13: Transition to link the section about the contrasts to the section about the similarities. The transitional word ‘yet’ and the concessional clause prepare the readers for the turn of direction. Their similarities are briefly mentioned in the last two sentences.--- Paras. 14- 16: Similarities between Grant and Lee.Point-by-point comparison (categories compared: tenacity and fidelity, daring and resourcefulness, ability to make peace)Step 3 Contrasts between Grant and Lee in background, in personality, in underlying aspiration (para. 13) including opinions on / notions of privilege, equality, social structure, past and future, what to fight for, etc.(Ask individuals to talk about the contrasts one by one while the teacher makes some necessary explanations of the difficult sentences in the text.)1. tidewater Virginia:(Note 3) a state in the South of America, known at that time for its large plantations and its slaveholding tidewater aristocracy.2. Ohio: (note 8) a part of the Western frontier for those oppressed,discontented, ambitious, and restive people who sought adventures and made fortunes in the West.1. What does the word ‘chivalry’ suggest? (3-1) Or, what are the personality of chivalry, knight, the English country squire?the qualities that knights in the Western countries in the Middle Ages were expected to have, such as courage, honour, courtesy, loyalty, generosity, devotion to the weak and helpless, to the service of women1. pronounced: definite2. There should be a leisured class ... as the chief source of wealth and influence.Society is in need of a class of people who are not job-holders butland-owners, for their land may well help make society rich and powerful.3. Why should the leisured class enjoy privilege? (ll. 25-31)It was this leisured class of wealthy people that supported the society and made the nation powerful. They had a strong obligation to save or help the community instead of gaining advantage for themselves. It was this privileged class that should gain the leadership, decide social values - of thought, of conduct, of personal deportment.4. No man was born to ... how far he could rise.Nobody was born into this world with any rights or privileges; what he might do is to fully utilize every single opportunity with his reach and strive to achieve success.1. What do the words ‘steel and machinery’, ‘crowded cities’ symbolize?And what do the words ‘restless burgeoning vitality’ connote? (3-4) Mechanization, industrialization, and urbanizationDynamism, life, potential of growth and development1. Through him, the landed nobility justified itself.2.He had passed into legend before Appomattox.3. What was Lee’s ideal?a leisured class that had the ownership of wealth, that had all the privileges, that had the obligation to support the nation, to lead the nation in its development, to decide everything including social values.4. What did his men fight for? Why? (ll. 34-41)They fought for the ideals Lee stood for, for him himself. They fought heroically and desperately because they thought they were carrying on a holy cause. They were even willing to die for him because they considered him the Confederacy, the symbol of everything.Their faith in Lee was nearly fanatical, don’t you think so? (3-2)5. Why did Lee fight for his own community / locality?to defend his locality, i.e., all the wealth, the privileges, the power, which are the things that made his life meaningful. (ll. 70-71) So he treasured them and would do everything to preserve them.6. Why did Grant fight for the national community?He believed people could prosper only when their community prospered. He saw his fate in terms of the n ation’s own destiny. (= He had linked his own future with that of his country.) He would become wealthy if his country grew and developed well. (He had an acute dollars-and-cents stake in the continued growth and development of his country.) (para. 9)His living was closely connected with the growth, expansion, and development. He would survive as his country survived; he would fall if his country fell. Therefore, he would take some actions to defend his country when it was in danger. He would fight for his country against the danger with all his might because he thought this danger would bring forth the destruction of the country in which he lived. (He would combat it ... from under his feet.) (para. 11)7. What does ‘it’ in para. 11 refer to? (3-3)An attempt to destroy the nation.Summary:1. Each man was the perfect champion of his cause, drawing both his strengths and his weaknesses from the people he led. (= Each of the two men was the leading figure of his cause, defending his own faith, and each of them was the representative of his class, possessing all the characteristics and qualities - strengths and weaknesses - of his own class.)2. What is the most striking contrast between Grant and Lee according to Catton? What, in your opinion, makes him think so? (3-11)Grant was a nationalist and a democrat while Lee was a regionalist, an aristocrat, and a conservative.Of all their differences, this perhaps was the most essential one, which determined their different notions of the kind of nation America was to be built into.Step 4 Similarities between Grant and Lee1. Refer to LW4, and try to explain by giving synonyms in right column for the words in the left column.2. What is the most important similarity between Grant and Lee? Do you agree with Catton on this? Why? (3-10)to turn quickly from war to peace once the fighting was over. (16)This was the most important similarity because it made possible the reconciliation at Appomattox, which led to the reunification of the North and the South and the creation of the American nation, a most significant event in American history.3. Is the last para. the conclusion? Why did the author conclude the essay in this way? (Org. & Devl. - 3)There is not a separate para. that concludes the essay, but it is properly concluded in the last para., which is supposed to present the last, and also the most important similarity. This has such great significance for the outcome of the encounter at Appomatox that it is hardly possible for Catton to start another para. to restate the historic meaning of this event.Post-reading Activities1. Comp. 1, 22. In this comparison between two historical figures, no mention is made of their physical appearance. Is this a weakness of the essay or is there some justification for avoiding such details? Explain your answer. (3-12) Normally it would be considered a defect. But C. is writing about the two soldiers as large-than-life exeplars of social trends. Also he is writing about their beliefs and deeds rather than about their personal appearance.3. How is the beginning of the essay echoed by the ending? (3-13)What is said in the 1st para. ‘... a great chapter in American life came to a close, and a great new chapter began’ is restated in the last sentence ‘... one ofUnit 12Organization and Development Paras. 1-3IntroductionParas. 4-11Paras. 12Summary of the contrasts Para. 13TransitionParas. 14-16Similarities between Grant and Le (Language Work IV)。
Unit 10TEXT ISTRAIGHT-A ILLITERACYJames P. DegnanObjectives: to understand what straight-A illiteracy means and define it;to make a comparison between ordinary illiteracy and straight-A illiteracy and comments on it;to discuss the appropriate diction in writing.Pre-reading Questions1. What does ‘straight-A illiteracy’ mean?A straight-A student is one who gets A’s for all the courses he takes. He is generally admired for his excellent scholarship.It seems paradoxi cal to call someone a ‘straight-A illiterate’. What does the author mean by it? Read the article and try to understand and define what straight-A illiteracy means.In-reading ComprehensionPara. 11. as often as not: at least half the time; frequently2. How many kinds of illiterate according to D.?Two kinds: ordinary illiterates who are unable to read or write. There are quite a lot of this kind of illiterates in schools.straight-A illiterate who is typically a Ph.D., a successful professor and textbook author, and who is more influential.3. Why does D say that a straight-A illiterate is more influential? (comp. 3-2)He is usu. one who occupies a position at the top of the academic hierarchy; the way he writes is considered exemplary, and his judgment of what is appropriate is directive.4. What do people do with these two kinds of illiterate?More concern has been shown for the ordinary illiterates. People even make fuss about this kind of illiteracy. However, little attention is aroused to straight-A illiterates. So, the purpose of this article is to give them as much attention as has been paid to ordinary illiterates. (ll. 6-7)Para. 21. What is this para. about?D’s treatment with a disease of straight-A illiteracy in his office.2. Do you think D’s comparison of straight-A illiteracy to a disease is appropriate? Explain. (comp. 3-3)Yes. Like a disease, it victimizes healthy persons; it has its symptoms, and its agents.3. Who is the straight-A illiterate?a college senior ... outstanding graduate schools.He is extremely clever and highly talented in language. He has done an excellent job in his studies, so he has been awarded an opportunity to further his study in one of the nation’s best graduate schools.4. How does the treatment go?They have been going over the student’s paper sentence by sentence, word by word for an hour, prying and probing for its meaning.‘Prying and probing’, the repetition of the same structure, is to emphasize the extreme difficulty of the task.5. Are there any other words to highlight the extreme difficulty in understanding Mr. Bright’s paper? (comp. 3-4)interrogating, cross-examining, pause to catch my breath, on earth, his brow furrowed, tries mightily, finally ... finally, another hour, decode ....6. Try to explain why the following pairs of sentences are the same in meaning: ll. 15-17, ll. 23 (comp. 3-8)As intended by the student, ‘The choice ... multi-colinearity’ corresponds to ‘demand’ while ‘... the derivations ... coefficients’ corresponds to ‘supply’.This is a very abstruse sentence to unravel.7. Why does D insert the word ‘allegorically’ in ‘... whom I call, allegorically,Mr. Bright’? (comp. 3-5)‘allegory’ in Lib. Work.When the author calls his student Mr. Bright allegorically, he does not mean to refer to this particular straight-A student only. He is using the term to cover all those students, college seniors, and Ph.D.’s who may seem bright when judged by their academic records, but who nevertheless fail to detect gibberish in their own writings or in those of others.The student given the name Mr. Bright thus becomes a symbol.Is he really bright? No, here in an ironical sense.Para. 31. It attacks best minds, ... in that of others.It does harm to the most intelligent individual and, by and by, wears away his ability to judge, eventually reducing him to being unable t Para. 3o detect nonsense either in his own writing or in that of others.This is the harm that straight-A illiteracy does to people.2. Reword the following sentences so that they are more easily understood: ll. 34-35, ll. 37-41 (comp. 3-9)ll. 34-35: The shop assistants had better have in stock what our customers need, or we won’t be in business long (=This is said or written by an ordinary illiterate, who is poor at spelling (them), pronunciation, punctuation, grammar (had + better, stock -up on, ain’t gonna be). So he makes many mistakes, and so he is kept out of institutions of higher learning. (l. 33)ll. 37-41: You must focus your attention on what your customers need so that you are able to tell what is necessary from what is unnecessary when you replenish your stock.This is written by a straight-A illiterate, who would never make spelling, grammar, punctuation mistakes, but who is incapable of making his ideas simple and clear in his writing. However, it is for writing this gibberish that he can be awarded straight As on his papers and the opportunity to continue his study, receiving higher and higher education until he has successfully got the Ph.D.The higher education one receives, the more serious his disease of straight-A illiteracy becomes. (ll. 27-28)3. Make complete the elliptical sentence ‘Not our man’. What is the function? (comp. 3-6)‘This is not what our man would say’. This ellipsis contrasts the two types of illiteracy, and with it D turns back from one type to the other.Para. 41. What is the major cause of straight-A illiteracy?the stuff - the textbooks and professional journals that the straight-A illiterate is forced to read during his years of higher education.He reads gibberish, and gradually he forms a habit of writing gibberish himself, which he has been instructed to learn an exemplary writing of sophisticated taste. (ll. 46-47)2. Give the examples of gibberish D quotes from professional journals.jargons as ‘ego-integrative action orientation’ and ‘orientation toward improvement of the graficational-deprivation balance of the actor’‘homologous’ or ‘isomorphic’, meaning ‘alike’‘allotropic’, meaning ‘different’‘dichotomize’ or ‘bifurcate’, meaning ‘divide anything3. D concludes his article by using quite a number of unintelligible words and expressions in place of clear and simple English. Is it effective? Why?This usual arrangement has undoubtedly enabled the reader once again to feel even more the absurdity of the practice to express simple ideas in an almost incomprehensible way, adding more weight to the point he intends to make. (Analysis)Post-reading Discussion1. Makeadefinition of ‘straight-A illiteracy’. (comp. 1-A)2. What is the purpose of D’s writing? (comp. 3-1)to find the cause of straight-A illiteracy.to give straight-A illiterate equal time with his widely publicizedcounterpart. (para. 1)to expose and condemn the use of professional jargon, which fills the reading materials that highly educated people are forced to read as they pursue their education. (Analysis)3. Comp. 24. Group work: Compare briefly the two types of illiteracy. Which type in your opinion presents a graver problem to society? (comp. 3-10)TEXT IITHE QUALITIES OF GOOD WRITINGJacqueline Berke1. This is an excerpt from Twenty Questions for the Writer, a widely used writing textbook, the kind of which we need to read to further our learning by ourselves. What do you usu. do when you read this kind of book by yourselves? Underline or highlight the important words or sentences, or make notes of your own so as to get the gist of it. Suppose you have borrowed this book from the library and come to read this part. What will you do with it? Study the text individually before class and do what you usu. do to catch the gist.2. Have group work for about 20 mins., exchanging what you have learned after reading it, and preparing for a presentation of this text. Your presentation can be based on Questions 1, 2, & 4 on p165.3. Presentation: Ask 4 groups to present the three qualities and human nature of writing respectively.4. As college seniors, we need to choose those more specific, exact, meaningful words in our writing rather than those common words as ‘good’, ‘nice’, etc. Do you consider using those more specific, exact, meaningful words as a kind of straight-A illiteracy? Give your opinions.。
《新编英语教程》第六册(修订本)教学要求:〔一〕语言体系知识:学生在掌握系统的语言基础知识的基础上,加深英语语言知识的学习,拓宽知识面,学会对有一定难度的句子进行分析,培养较强的语言分析,逻辑推理和运用能力。
〔二〕口头表达:能流利地就各种话题(topic),发表自己的看法,表达具有条理性和完整性。
〔三〕书面表达:能在一小时内写出350词左右的短文,其文体正确,内容完整,条理清楚;语法正确,语言通顺流畅。
〔四〕翻译能力: 通过对有一定难度的句子进行分析,能用通顺汉语准确、通顺地表达其意义及相关信息。
(五) 文化素养:通过各种渠道了解相关文化背景知识;在教师指导下,认识和辨别课文中出现的各种修辞手法;了解各种文体的写作特点,分析和欣赏文章的写作技巧与语言特点。
教学内容:UNIT TWOText I The Fine Art of Putting Things Off (2学时)Text II Gossip (2学时)Exercises for Unit Two In Workbook (2学时)UNIT THREEText I Walls and Barriers (2学时)Text II Barrier Signals (2学时)Exercises for Unit Three In Workbook (2学时)UNIT SIXText I Dull Work (2学时)Text II Doing Chores (2学时)Exercises for Unit Six In Workbook (2学时)UNIT SEVENText I Beauty (2学时)Text II Sexism in English: A Feminist View (2学时)Exercises for Unit Seven In Workbook (2学时)UNIT EIGHTText I Appetite (2学时)Text II Wanting an Orange (2学时)Exercises for Unit Eight In Workbook (2学时)UNIT NINEText I A Red Light for Scofflaws (2学时)Text II Trust (2学时)Exercises for Unit Nine In Workbook (2学时)UNIT TENText I Straight-A Illiteracy (2学时)Text II The Qualities of Good Writing (2学时)Exercises for Unit Ten In Workbook (2学时)UNIT ELEVENText I On Consigning Manuscripts to floppy Discs and Archives to Oblivion (2学时)Text II This Is Progress? (2学时)Exercises for Unit Eleven In Workbook (2学时)UNIT TWELVEText I Grand and Lee: A Study in Contrasts (2学时) Text II Grand and Lee (2学时)Exercises for Unit Twelve In Workbook (2学时)UNIT THIRTEENText I Euphemism (2学时)Text II Clutter (2学时)Exercises for Unit Thirteen In Workbook (2学时) UNIT FOURTEENText I That Astounding Creator --- Nature (2学时) Text II When the Young Have It Good (2学时) Exercises for Unit Fourteen In Workbook (2学时) UNIT FIFTEENText I Teaching as Mountaineering (2学时)Text II A Liberal Education (2学时)Exercises for Unit Fifteen In Workbook (2学时)。
新编英语教程6教案教案标题:新编英语教程6教案教案目标:1. 帮助学生掌握新编英语教程6中的词汇、语法和句型。
2. 提高学生的听、说、读、写的能力。
3. 培养学生的跨文化交流能力。
教案步骤:Step 1: 导入 (5分钟)通过引入一段与本课相关的话题或问题,激发学生的兴趣。
例如,你可以问学生是否喜欢旅行,以及他们最喜欢的旅行目的地是哪里。
Step 2: 词汇学习 (10分钟)介绍本课的重点词汇,并帮助学生理解词汇的意义和用法。
可以使用图片、示范以及例句等方式进行教学。
同时,可以设计一些词汇练习活动,如填空、配对等,以巩固学生的词汇记忆。
Step 3: 语法和句型 (15分钟)介绍本课的重点语法和句型,并通过一些实例进行解释和演示。
可以设计一些语法练习活动,如改写句子、完成对话等,以帮助学生掌握语法规则和句型结构。
Step 4: 听力训练 (15分钟)选择本课相关的听力材料,根据学生的听力水平选择合适的难度。
播放录音时,可以提前给学生一些听力问题,以便他们有针对性地听取信息。
播放完毕后,可以带领学生进行听力理解和回答问题的练习。
Step 5: 口语练习 (15分钟)设计一些口语练习活动,如角色扮演、对话练习等,以帮助学生运用所学知识进行口语表达。
可以设置一些情景,让学生在真实的语境中进行口语练习,提高他们的口语流利度和交际能力。
Step 6: 阅读与写作 (15分钟)选择一篇适合学生阅读的文章,并设计一些阅读理解题目,以帮助学生理解文章内容。
同时,可以引导学生根据文章的内容进行写作练习,如写一篇关于旅行经历的短文或写一封感谢信等。
Step 7: 小结与反思 (5分钟)对本节课的学习内容进行小结,并向学生提供一些反思问题,让他们思考自己在本节课中的收获和不足之处。
同时,可以向学生征求他们对下节课的期望和建议。
以上是一个基本的教案框架,你可以根据具体的教学内容和学生的实际情况进行相应的调整和修改。
记得根据学生的学习特点和能力,合理安排教学活动,使学生在轻松愉快的氛围中积极参与,提高英语学习的兴趣和效果。
Unit SixTEXT IDULL WORKEric HofferObjectives: To catch the central idea of each paragraph.To discuss that eventful life kills rather than stimulates a man’s instinct for creation./all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.Pre-class work:Find out more about the figures mentioned in the text than those provided in the notes: Amos, Socrates, Omar, Jesus Christ, Albert Einstein, Niccolo Machiavelli, Immanuel Kant, John Keats, Sophocles, John Milton, Benvenuto Cellini.Pre-reading Questions:1. Do you think you can achieve much if you live a plain, ordinary life?2. Does monotonous, routine work dull one’s mind?In-reading ComprehensionPara. 11. There seems to be general assumption that brilliant people cannot stand routine; that they need a varied, exciting life in order to do their best.to do their best: to achieve their potential creativeness; to best exercise their talent (comp. 3-1)It is generally believed that a colorless life can freeze a creative mind, and only a colorful life can inspire a man to creative work.2. Tell about this para. in your own words.There is an assumption that brilliant people cannot stand routine life, and they need a colorful life; while dull people are suited for dull work. The present-day young are more brilliant than the young of the past because they are better educated. Therefore they prefer a colorful life to a dull, routine one.3. What is the purpose of this para.?This is an introductory para. to put forward an assumption (successful men - colorful life; unsuccessful - dull, routine life) so as to raise a question: Is the assumption right or wrong?Para. 21. What is the ‘opposite’ that H says is ‘nearer the truth’? What is the purpose of this para.? (comp. 3-2)As it goes in the 1st sentence, the successful men do not crave for (= long for) colorful life. The contrary is also true (反过来说): people who achieve much are often those content with the routine, uneventful life they live, or, the successful men are satisfied with the routine/uneventful/colorless life they are leading.This is the central idea of this para. and H supports it by citing examples of some well-reputed men who led a colorless routine life.2. Identify those great figures mentioned in this para. and say something about them.Amos the sheepherder: a minor prophet in the Old Testament 阿摩斯,旧约中12个小先知中的第三名Socrates the stonemason: Greek philosopher well known for his sophistry Socrates of Athens, who flurished in the last half of the 5th century, was the 1st of the great trio of ancient Greeks - Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle - who laid the philosophical foundations of Western culture.He was born in or about 470 BC. His father Sophroniscus was a sculptor, mother a midwife, 3 sons, one an infant. There were 2 counts in the accusation: ‘corruption of the young’ and ‘neglect of the gods whom the city worships and the practice of religious novelties.’ An escape was planned by his freind Crito, but S refused to hear of it, on the grounds that the verdict, though contrary to the fact, was that of a legitimate court and must therefore be obeyed. The story of his last day, with his drinking of the hemlock, has been perfectly told in the Phaedo of Plato.Though a good fighting man, his outward appearance was grotesque. Stout and not tall with prominent eyes, snub nose, broad nostrils, and widemouth, he seemed a very Silenus. But as his freinds knew, he was ‘all glorious within,’ ‘the most upright man of that day.’ (Plato)Omar the tentmaker: Persian astronomer and poetJesus Christ: 上帝的独生子。
Unit 1Text I Two words to avoid, two to rememberI. objectives: 1. to discuss the instructive significance of the text;2. to catch the key points in each para. and grasp the main idea of the essay;3. to appreciate the way the author write the story.II. pre-class work: Read Org.& Dev. and Analysis.III. introduction:1. Have you ever felt regretful of doing something? Would you share with us your regretfulexperiences?2. What would say to comfort yourself?3. What are the two words the author advises the reader to avoid and the two words to remember?“If only” and “next time”4. What do they mean respectively?①“If only”if it were possible that; used to introduce a wish, esp. one that seems unlikelyor impossible; (We must use subjunctive mood after “if only”) e.g.If only it would stop raining.If only I had worked harder I would have passed the exam.If only I had taken his advice, I would have become a rich man.Its synonyms are “provided that”, and “supposed”.②“next time”the time that follows this time; used to introduce a plan esp. one thatseems likely and possible;(We should use future tense after “next time”)I will work harder next time.I will take his advice next time.5. What are the different effects that theses two phases bring on you?The former one gives a sense of regret and disappointment. While as the latter one providesa feeling of determination and encouragement.IV. Organization and Development:This is a piece of narration. The story is related in a chronological sequence.characters: I and "the Old Man"time: a wintry afternoonplace: at "the Old Man's" officescause: The author's project had failed because of his miscalculation.development: I told the Old Man what was bothering me.He brought me to his offices.He let me listen to three short recordings and asked me to spot the common denominator in them.I failed to find out their common denominator. And the Old Man said it was "if only".He explained to me why should one avoid using "if only" and remember to use "next time"I accepted his advice. Whenever he find himself thinking "if only", he change it to "next time". theme: Nothing in life is more exciting and rewarding than sudden flash of insight that leaves youa changed person -- not only changed, but for the better.IV. In-reading comprehensionPara.1What is the theme of the text? How do you paraphrase the sentence?"Nothing in life is more exciting and rewarding than sudden flash of insightthat leaves you a changed person -- not only changed, but for the better.The most inspiring and gratifying fact of life is the unexpected spark of enlightenment that makes youdifferent and a better person than before.Para.21. introduction about Manhattan:Manhattan, borough of New York City, coextensive with New York County, southeastern New York, at the head of Upper New York Bay. The main economic hub of New York City, Manhattan is one of the world’s leading commercial, financial, cultural, manufacturing, medical, and tourist centers. Manhattan Island, which makes up almost all of the borough, is bounded on the north and northeast by Spuyten Duyvil Creek and the Harlem River, which separate it from the borough of the Bronx; on the east by the East River, which separates it from the boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn; on the south by Upper New York Bay; and on the west by the Hudson River, which separates it from New Jersey. The borough, about 80 sq km (about 31 sq mi) in area, also encompasses a small exclave (Marble Hill) on the Bronx mainland; several islands in the East River, including Franklin D. Roosevelt Island (the site ofa large modern housing complex), Randalls Island, and Wards Island; and Governors Island inUpper New York Bay.The name Manhattan is derived from an Algonquian term for “island of hills.” In 1524 the island, then inhabited by Native Americans, was probably seen by the Italian navigator Giovanni da Verrazzano.Ethnic and social groupings characterize some residential areas of the borough. Lower Manhattan contains fairly well-defined quarters inhabited by persons of Italian, Chinese, and Hispanic descent. Also in the southern part of the borough are Greenwich Village and SoHo, districts noted for artistic and cultural activities. Battery Park City, a large-scale residential and commercial development on landfill near the tip of Manhattan Island, was constructed during the 1980s. One of the most socially select sections of Manhattan is the Upper East Side, which borders Central Park on the east and includes portions of Park and Fifth avenues. The Upper West Side, located adjacent to the western part of the park and including a portion of Riverside Dr., is another major residential area. Harlem, situated astride 125th St., contains large communities of blacks and Hispanic-Americans. Many Hispanics also live in northern Manhattan, which takes in the Washington Heights and Inwood districts.Manhattan is one of the world’s great educational and cultural centers. Facilities of higher education in Manhattan include City College (1847) and Hunter College (1870), both part of the City University of New York; Columbia University; Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art; Fordham University at Lincoln Center; the New School for Social Research (1919); New York University; Pace University (1906); Rockefeller University;Yeshiva University; and such predominantly religious schools as Union Theological Seminary,the General Theological Seminary (1817), and the Jewish Theological Seminary of America.Specialized instruction in music, drama, and painting is offered by the Juilliard School, the Manhattan School of Music (1917), the American Academy of Dramatic Arts (1884), and the School of Visual Arts (1947).2. How were the author and the old man related?The old man was an eminent psychiatrist and the author was a client of his.3. According to the author, how much did the session with his psychiatrist friend that afternoonmean to him?Refer to para. 1. To him, the session was just like “a flash of insight that leaves him a changed person not only changed, but changed for the better.4.fall through fail to be successfully completed; come to nothing. e.g.: Our plans fell through at the last minute.fall apart to break down; collapseThe rickety chair fell apart.fall away decreaseAttendance fell away after the third week of the course.fall off to become less; decreaseThe number of staff meetings fell off after a few months.fall upon to attack suddenly and viciously:The enemy fell on him and pinned his arms tight.fall over drop accidentally to ground:I fell over a pile of books that had been left on the floor.fall to be duty of somebodyIt falls to the council to decide the matter.fall back upon to rely onWe should fall back on old friends in time of need.fall in with to agree with or be in harmony withTheir views fall in with ours.fall between (the) two stools to fail because of an inability to reconcile or choose between two courses of action.5. prospect n. ①something expected; a possibilityThere's not much prospect of Mr. Smith's being elected as Congressman.②a scenea beautiful prospect over the valleyv. to search for or explore (a region) for mineral deposits or oilThe prospecting team ploughed their way through the snows.Para. 31. Paraphrase the first sentence.At last he walked over from the other side of the street, wrapped in his old fashioned overcoat, his bald head covered by a shapeless felt hat. He looked like a dwarfish old man full of energy rather than a well-known psychiatrist.2. eminent ①outstanding, as in character or performance; distinguished, e.g.an eminent historian②towering or standing out above others, e.g.an eminent peak3. What is a psychiatrist and why people consult psychiatrist.Psychiatry, branch of medicine specializing in mental illnesses. Psychiatrists not only diagnose and treat these disorders but also conduct research directed at understanding and preventing them.A psychiatrist is a doctor of medicine who has had four years of postgraduate training inpsychiatry. Many psychiatrists take further training in psychoanalysis, child psychiatry, or other subspecialties. Psychiatrists treat patients in private practice, in general hospitals, or in specialized facilities for the mentally ill (psychiatric hospitals, outpatient clinics, or community mental health centers). Some spend part or all of their time doing research or administering mental health programs. By contrast, psychologists, who often work closely with psychiatrists and treat many of the same kinds of patients, are not trained in medicine;consequently, they neither diagnose physical illness nor administer drugs.Psychiatrists use a variety of methods to detect specific disorders in their patients. The most fundamental is the psychiatric interview, during which the patient's psychiatric history is taken and mental status is evaluated. The psychiatric history is a picture of the patient's personality characteristics, relationships with others, and past and present experience with psychiatric problems—all told in the patient's words (sometimes supplemented by comments from other family members). Psychiatrists use mental-status examinations much as internists use physical examinations. They elicit and classify aspects of the patient's mental functioning.Para. 41. invariable ①never changing②invariables: mathematics constant quality.2. preliminary n. ①something that precedes, prepares for, or introduces the main matter,action, or business. 开端,初步②Sports A contest to determine the finalists in a competition. 【体育运动】预赛③often preliminaries Printing The front matter of a book. 【印刷术】前言:书的开头内容adj. Prior to or preparing for the main matter, action, or business;introductory or prefatory, 开头的,初步的:先于主要事件、行动或业务的或为其作准备的;预备性的或前面的e.g.a preliminary examination; a preliminary investigationPara. 51. perceptiveness unusual ability to notice and understand; awareness and understanding.(=perceptivity)2. proceed ①to go forward or onward, especially after an interruption; continueproceeded to his destination②to begin to carry on an actionlooked surprised, then proceeded to roar with laughter③Law to institute and conduct legal actionproceeded against the defaulting debtorPara. 6-101. Why did the old man advise the author to do to get out of his depressed state of mind?The three speakers on the tape were all unhappy, and the two words they all used frequently in what they said were “if only.” What the old man wanted to point out to the author was that to keep saying “if only”would not change anything; on the contrary, it only kept the person facing the wrong way backward instead of forward. Thus it did more harm than good to the person who kept saying them.2. Sigmund FreudFreud, Sigmund (1856-1939), Austrian physician, neurologist, and founder of psychoanalysis.In 1886 Freud established a private practice in Vienna specializing in nervous disease. He met with violent opposition from the Viennese medical profession because of his strong support of Charcot’s unorthodox views on hysteria and hypnotherapy. The resentment he incurred was to delay any acceptance of his subsequent findings on the origin of neurosis.Freud created an entirely new approach to the understanding of human personality by his demonstration of the existence and force of the unconscious. In addition, he founded a new medical discipline and formulated basic therapeutic procedures that in modified form are applied widely in the present-day treatment of neuroses and psychoses. Although never accorded full recognition during his lifetime, Freud is generally acknowledged as one of the great creative minds of modern times.Para. 111. berate to rebuke or scold angrily and at lengthscold,berate,These verbs mean to reprimand or criticize angrily or vehemently.Scold implies an annoyed or bad-tempered reproof: 暗示恼怒或坏脾气:The young woman's parents scolded her for questioning their authority.Berate suggests scolding or rebuking angrily and at length: 指长时间愤怒地责备或谴责:The dissatisfied customer berated the florist.2. Paraphrase the third sentence of the paragraph.The next speaker on the tape was a woman who had remained single because she thought she was obliged to take care of her mother who was a widow. She still remembered and told others miserably about all the chances of marriage she had missed.Para. 12-161. woeful mournful2. lament ①to express grief for or about:lament a death②to regret deeplyHe lamented his thoughtless acts.3. Paraphrase the last sentence of para. 15.Eventually, if you form a habit of saying “if only”, the phrase can really turn to an obstruction, providing you with an excuse for giving up trying anything at all.Para. 17-241. hash over discuss carefully; review2. Paraphrase the first sentence of para.18.… you are always thinking of the past, regretting and lamenting. You did not look forward towhat you can do in the future at all.3. rueful inspiring pity or compassionruefully regretfully4. Why did the old man advise the author to do to get out of his depressed state of mind?Shift the focus; substitute “next time” for “ if only”.5. grim Unrelenting; unpleasant, dreadfulto look grimI've had a grim day.Para. 25-331. In what way are the two phrases “if only” and “next time” different?They point to entirely different mental directions; one is backward and negative, and the other forward and positive.2. Paraphrase para.28and 29.The Old Man said to me trickily, using the phrase “if only” on purpose, “if only we’d got here ten seconds earlier, we’d have caught the cab.” I laughed and understood what he meant. So I followed his advice and said, “Next time I’ll run faster.”3. What do you think is the tone of the passage?It is instructive and inspirational.Text II The Romance of Words1. What is the writer’s purpose of writing? Where in the essay is it first made clear? Is it echoedsomewhere else?The writer’s purpose of writing is to call upon the readers to pay more attention to words, which they tend to take for granted. This is made clear at the very beginning of the article by the sentence “From now on we want you to look at words intently, to be inordinately curious about them and to examine them syllable by syllable, letter by letter.” This is echoed by the sentence in the last paragraph: “From this time on, as we enter our word studies, try to become self-conscious about words.”2. To show the dynamic nature of words, the writer have used two analogies. What are they?Which one do you concentrate on?The two analogies the writers have made are “human beings” and “living trees”. But in the article they concentrate on the analogy of “living trees”.3. Where in the essay can you find the writers’ explanations of the root of a word, the branches,and the leaves of our language respectively?Their explanations can be found in para. 6,12,and 16 respectively:The story of the root of a word is the story of its origin.The branches of our language tree are those many groups of words that have grown out from one original root.The leaves of this language tree would be the words themselves and their meanings.4. In the essay the writer have used various examples to illustrate what is meant by the root of aword, the branches, and the leaves of the language. Now try to provide similar examples of your own. You can refer to dictionaries and books, especially those on English lexicology.。
新编英语教程6Unit3教案Unit ThreeTEXT IWALLS AND BARRIERSEugene RaskinObjectives: To discuss the different functions of different kinds of walls.To identify in the text the contrasts between walls as barriers and walls as screens.To write an essay on the different conceptions of money in the past and now by using the technique of making comparisons and contrasts.Pre-reading DiscussionThe questions discussed in this section concern with the major points or the general ideas of the text. The purpose is to see how well students have prepared the text as well as to stimulate students’ interest.1. Walls are seen everywhere, around a school campus or a hospital compound, around a small park or even a small private garden. We have the (city) wall around the Jingjiang Palace /Chamber, which was the ancient wall.From the title, what do you think of the relation between walls and barriers? Do walls all serve as barriers? Give some examples.In the old days, walls were erected as barriers against danger from without, and the Great Wall of China can serve as a typical example of this.The Great Wall of China was first built following the unification of China by the First Emperor of the Qin Dynasty in221 B.C. It was renovated and rebuilt in succeeding dynasties. In its present form, it substantially dates from the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). It stretches from Gansu Province to Shanhaiguan, Hebei, winding continuously across northern China and totaling 6,7000 kilometers in length. The wall was erected to protect China from1northern tribes.Most walls in China function as barriers (an obstruction or an obstacle). The wall of a park serves to enclose; the wall of a prison to prevent communication; the wall of a castle to check (e.g., the advance of an enemy); the wall of a kindergarten to keep away from danger/to guarantee security; the wall of a residence to protect privacy, etc.2. A wall is usually a solid structure of stones, bricks, concrete, etc. in China. What other materials can be used to build a wall? What if it is built with glass or very thin metal materials, or shrubs or fence as it is more and more commonly seen nowadays? Does this kind of wall also serve as barrier? What is the function?In Singapore, not as many walls as in China are seen. If there are any, they are mostly shrubs' walls / green walls, a continuous and vertical structure of iron bars/wire meshes/wire netting with shrubs stretching in all directions. These are open walls, I would like to call. Everything inside is open to the outsiders. You can see everything inside as far as your eyesight can reach. E.g., NUS, SP, condominiums, etc. These walls just serve to divide off other places, such as town, house, room, field, etc. There is nothing to do with security.The walls of many companies, supermarkets, malls, restaurants are walls of glass. Even the bank where security mustensure is walled with glass. Is the bank not afraid of robbery or burglary? E.g. Dahua Bank.Cash is now rarely used. Money, in most of the time, takes the form of credit cards, a book-keeping banking matter.The bank functions more as a service than a safe for money.These glass walls seem unsafe, but modern architects prefer this kind of walls. Since every inside place is air-conditioned, these glass walls only function to separate the outside air from the inside controlled temperature and2humidity. And at the same time, people can have adequate screening inside.Philip Johnson even goes to the extreme. The Glass House for his residence in Connecticut has glass walls everywhere around except the walls in the bathroom, where the only real privacy is found.It seems that the walls in modern times serve more as separations than as barriers.3. Is the new function of walls in modern times the result of advanced technology? Why? If not, what is the real reason?The new architectural design of walls nowadays is not the result of advanced technology, but the change of mental conceptions of ourselves and of the world. We feel safe. We are not always in fear of danger as in the primitive society. We think we are powerful to conquer the nature as well as the world. We need more inter-communication. Therefore, we don’t need the heavy walls to protect ourselves from danger, to confine ourselves tightly/closely. We d on’t need any barriers to separate ourselves from the outside world.So, walls are not barriers in our modern time.In-reading interpretationComp. 1 - Main Idea:B. Architecture is an expression of people’s mentality; therefore, changes in their view of the world and of themselves are bound to be mirrored in architecture.In other words, changes in people’s view incur changes in architectural designs of walls and in the functions the walls serve as well.So, contrasts in people’s mentality, in wall designs, and in its functions are made in this text.Step one--- To specify the paras. in which contrasts between walls as barriers and walls3as screens are found.Paras. 3 - 5: The change in people’s notion of money, in the function of the bank, and in its architectural features.Paras. 6: Classical and new criticism of architectureParas. 7 - 10: Attitude toward privacy and possible hostility from without in primitive and modern world--- To organize group work, listing the contrasts of all the above, and then make class presentations with necessary explanations.Paras. 3 - 5:The change in people’s notion of money, in the function of t he bank, and4Necessary explanation--- of money:1. What is the meaning of ‘custom’ in line 10? (comp. 2-2)It means ‘regular patronage’, business patronage, regular support given to a tradesman by those who buy his goods. In other words, it means the frequent, or constant, or regular purchase of the customers.2. A deficit economy accompanied by huge expansion, has led us to think of money as a product of the creative imagination.A deficit economy largely results from huge expansion. As we see from the Asian currency crisis, over expansion, or over development, or over investment in real estate brought about the economy crisis or the devaluing in currency, esp. in Thailand. Because of the deficit economy, the government has to loan money from the World Bank, or others.--- of the architectural designs of banks:1. If a building’s design made it appear impregnable, theinstitution was necessarily sound, and the meaning of the heavy wall as an architectural symbol dwelt in the prevailing attitude toward money, rather than in any aesthetic theory.If a building was made to look sturdy / invulnerable, it would be accordingly regarded as reliable, and the significance of the thick walls would be measured not by their architectic value, but by their seeming ability to provide a safe location for money.Or, if a building was designed to appear unattackable, it would be regarded as safe, and the reason for the architectural feature of the heavy walls lay in people’s attitude toward money, i.e. money, such tangible commodity, should be kept in a very safe place. The heavy walls were not designed to meet the needs of aesthetics, or for the purpose of showing the beauty or the taste.--- of the function of the bank:51. a service in which the most valuable elements are dash anda creative flair for the invention of large numbers.a service in which money including coins and banknote becomes active and vigorous as far as the invention of money is concerned. In other words, money is not always kept in a bank for security; rather, it is in active and vigorous circulation, being used to buy and sell commodities.2. this bank by its architecture boasts of its imaginative powers.the bank in this kind of architectural design, i.e. with glass walls, window-display doors, has its imaginative powers.3. it is hard to say where architecture ends and human assertion begins.it is hard to tell the division between architectural design andpeople’s mentality, for the former is the product or the reflection / expression of the latter.Paras. 6:1. It is in the understanding of architecture as a medium for the expression of human attitudes, prejudices, taboos, and ideals that the new architectural criticism departs from the classical aesthetics.From the contrasts given in the last few paras., architecture is a medium for the expression of human attitudes, prejudices, taboos, and ideals. This is the point that R wants to illustrate by dealing with the changes in paras. 3 - 5.If you understand this point, you can separate the new architectural criticism or theory from the classical one. Or, you will come to know the difference between the new architectural criticism or theory and the classical one.2.How does R contrast ‘classical’ and ‘new’ theories of architecture? (comp. 3-4)The latter relied upon pure proportion, composition, etc., as bases for artistic judgment. In the age of sociology and psychology, walls are not simply walls but physical symbols of the barriers in men’s minds.6composition: arrangement into proper proportion or relation and esp. into artistic formClassical aesthetics holds that constructions in pure proportion are regarded as the most beautiful, the excellent. Most of the ancient constructions in China are in pure proportion, e.g. the Forbidden City and the folk residence in Beijing.The new theory of architecture claims the function of architecture as a manifestation of human mentality.Paras. 7 - 10:Attitude toward privacy and possible hostility from without in primitive and modern world. These are the two aspects of life R contrasts the modern men and their predecessors. (comp. 3-8)7--- Attitude toward possible hostility from without:1. In a primitive society, for example, men pictured the worldas large, fearsome, hostile, and beyond human control.People in a primitive society, for example, saw the world as an enormous planet full of fear, hatred and disorder.2. Can you illustrate attitude toward possible hostility from without in your own words? or, why did primitive people need heavy walls?They thought themselves not powerful enough to control the nature, to control the outside world. They had great fear that they might be attacked or aggressed by others. So they needed heavy walls to confine themselves within their own cages, and to protect themselves against the possible hostility from without. They felt quite safe inside of their cages surrounded with heavy walls.3. The principal function of today’s wall is to separate possibly undesirable8outside air from the controlled conditions of temperature and humidity which we have created inside.Today a wall serves mainly as a physical means to protect the desired atmosphere inside from being disturbed by anything unwelcome outside.Inside, it is air-conditioned, and the temperature and the humidity is controlled. Surrounding is therefore needed to prevent the outside air from coming inside. This is the main function of the walls today.--- Attitude toward privacy:1. Why did they do so?They believed that the beauties and values of life lay within itself rather than in the outer appearance. You could find them if you got close to a personal life rather than a public life. Theprimitive decorative arts, as well as its philosophies, were as rich and intricate as the walls themselves, so intricate and rich that it is difficult to understand, to see the inside, the privacy. (para. 7) 2. Why are glass walls becoming popular in architecture? (comp. 3-9)The traditional functions of walls have changed, and glass walls can perform the functions walls are expected to perform in modern architecture. What’s more, glass walls adequately express the beliefs of the modern man. Step two T o go through the rest of the paras.Para. 11. Why didn’t R.’s father want to put money in the bank at 43rd Street and 5th Avenue? (comp.2-1)Because he did not trust a bank with glass walls.2. Why does R. begin his essay by quoting his father? Do you think this is an effective opening? (Org. &Devl.- 2)His father is made to represent the earlier generation. His is a voice from the past. R’s is a voice of the present. He begins by quoting his father and then proceeds to contrast the old views with the modern ones. This is an effective opening.Para. 291. Of course, my father is a gentleman of the old school, a member of the generation to whom a good deal of modern architecture is unnerving; but I suspect --- I more than suspect, I am convinced --- that his negative response was not so much to the architecture as to a violation of his concept of the nature of money.Brought up in the old tradition, my father is naturally not prepared to accept the idea of modern architecture; his objectionto it, I would assume, indeed I should say I am pretty sure, is not a result of his strong dislike of the physical building itself, but rather that of his refusal to change his attitude towards money.Para. 111. To repeat, it is not our advanced technology, but our changing conceptions of ourselves in relation to the world that determine how we shall build our walls.Again, the decisive factor that can influence the design of a wall is not the advancement of science and technology, but our ever-changing attitude towards our place in this world.2. The ‘open plan’ and the unobstructed view are consistent with his faith in the eventual solution of all problems through the expanding efforts of science.Such architectural design as ‘open plan’ and unobstructed view (referring glass walls) is the result of people’s faith that all the problems can be solved through the advanced science and technology.3. What general conclusion can you draw with regard to the relation between the form and function of architecture from R.’s article? (comp. 3-10) The form of architecture is determined by its function. Function goes first.3. R. concludes his essay with a reference to a proverb. In what way does it resemble his reference to his father at the beginning? (Org. & Devl. 3) The proverb: People who live in glass houses should not cast stones. (meaning ‘People whose conduct is open to criticism should not criticize the10conduct of others, who may retaliate by accusing their accusers.)The last sentence means the modern man studies ‘the fearof the cast stone’ with the result that he dismisses the fear.Both references illustrate how traditional wisdom is substituted by a new wisdom of the new generation.Post-reading activities1. To check the comprehension by doing Comp. 1, 2, 3.TEXT IIBARRIER SIGNALSDesmond MorrisStep one1. What is a Barrier Signal as defined by Morris?It is a trivial action a person performs unconsciously to fend off any potential threat.2. What is the posture ‘Body-cross’? (3)The hands or arms are brought into contact with one another in front of the body. It is done unconsciously.3. Read the article and try to memorize as many examples as possible.Step twoOne tells the examples and another performs.--- childhood hiding (1): if... if... if...--- a special guest on a gala occasion? (4, 5, 6)His right hand reaches across his body and makes a last-minute adjustment to his left cuff-link.A female reaches across her body with her right hand and slightly shifts the position of her handbag, which is hanging from her left forearm.A male may finger a button or the strap of a wristwatch instead of his cuff.A female may smooth out an imaginary crease in a sleeve, or re-position a scarf or coat held over her left arm.All these Examples are to illustrate the various ways in which Body-cross, the most popular form of Barrier Signal, is disguised.11--- in the restaurant: (8)As he walks across the open space, he rubs his hands together, as if washing them. Or he advances with them clasped firmly in front of him.--- when edged too close? What is the message it conveys?(11) Arm-fold, in which the left and right arms intertwine themselves across the front of the chest. It transmits a ‘come-no-farther’ message.--- when seated with the companion approaching too close?(12)A crossing of the legs away from the companion; to press the tightly clasped hands down on to the crotch and squeeze them there between the legs, as if protecting the genitals; the desk.Step threeFurther comprehension1. Who is most likely to make the Barrier Signals / body-cross movement in greeting situation? And why? (9)The new arrival, because it is him who is invading the home territory of the greeters. The greeters are on their own ground or, even if they are not, they were there first and have at least temporary territorial ‘rights’ over the place. This gives them an indisputable dominance at the moment of greeting. However, if they are extremely surbordinate to the new arrival, they are likely to take the body-cross role.2. What is the message that the body-cross movement conveys? (10)I am nervous but I will not retreat.3. Does an adult have the Barrier Signals in some social occasion? (2)Yes. The fears are still there, but their expression is blocked. The fearful actions are transformed into less obvious movements and postures.4. What is the thesis statement of the article?The first sentence of the essay.5.. Are there any other Body-cross movement?Open to discussion.TEXT 1 Unit 312The change in people’s notion of money, in the function of the bank, and in its architectural features13TEXT 1 Unit 3Attitude toward the world of nature and of men in primitive and modern world.14。
新编英语教程6Unit13教案Unit 13TEXT IEUPHEMISMNeil PostmanObjectives: to understand the author’s own opinion on euphemism;to have a better comprehension of the figure of speech‘euphemism’.Pre-reading Questions:1. What is ‘euphemism’? Can you give some e xamples both in English and in Chinese languages? (Lib. W.)(Pre-rd): the substitution of a mild, indirect, or vague expression for one thought to be offensively harsh or blunt.Ency. Bri. (CD, 98): the substitution of an agreeable or inoffensive expression for one that may offend or suggest something unpleasant.NEC (Book 4): (an example of) the use of a pleasanter, less direct name for something thought to be unpleasant.or, the substitution of a mild or vague expression for a harsh or blunt one. The word is derived from a Greek word meaning ‘to speak favorably’. The Greek prefix eu- means ‘well’.1. Euphemisms are used to replace words associated with subjects that are‘sensitive’ or ‘taboo’, such as death, sex, ma dness and so on. e.g. we avoid saying ‘He died last night’, but say instead ‘passed away’, ‘join his maker’, ‘left us’, ‘kicked the bucket’.2. Sometimes euphemisms are employed out of politeness.The words we use to refer to our natural bodily functions are generally euphemisms. The word ‘lavatory’ is itself a euphemism, derived from the Latin ‘lavatorium’ meaning ‘a place for washing’. The American word ‘rest-room’ is another example. ‘Offal’(Brit) or ‘inside’ (US) is used to refer to a pig’s stomac h, liver, or lungs. Such euphemisms may be stylistically ‘permissible’ if they are kept within limits.3. Euphemisms are also used by politicians and advertisers to hide reality from us. Euphemisms of this kind often lead to a distortion of style and meaning because they tend to be used to defend practices that would sound ugly and brutal in plain words. As George Orwell pointed out in his essay ‘Politics and the English language’:In our time, political speech and writing are largely the defense of the indefensible. Thus political language has to consist largely of euphemisms. Defenseless village are bombarded from the air, the inhabitants driven out into the countryside, the cattle machine-gunned, the huts set on fire: this is called ‘pacification’.And a motorcar becomes ‘a symphony of speed and style’ by the advertisers. Other examples:at liberty - out of work, senior citizen - old people, in the family way - pregnant,burier - undertaker, mortician, prison - correctional institution,去世、逝世、作古、牺牲、与世长辞(死亡),身体发福(胖)、赋闲、下岗、分流、待业(失业)、拮据(贫困)2. Do you think the use of euphemisms makes our language more pleasant?In-reading InterpretationPara. 11. What is the definition of euphemism according to the author?... as an auspici ous or exalted term (like ‘sanitation engineer’) that is used in place of a more down-to-earth term (like ‘garbage man’).auspicious or exalted: favorable or dignified, glorified, raising the status of a man referred tomore down-to-earth: factual, telling what something actually isWhy is a term like garbage man down-to-earth, and sanitation engineer auspicious or exalted? (3-2)Garbage man is a man cleaning the garbage, which is factual, telling what something actually is. But by using sanitation engineer, the same man cleaning the garbage seems to become an engineer, which is a more glorifiedterm.2. People who are partial to ... really talking about.Euphemism-prone people are subject to the charge that they are insincere.Peo ple don’t believe them as well as what they talk about.3. What is the example given in this para. to illustrate it?‘Operation Sunshine’ : a pretty name for the experiments with the hydrogen bomb in the South Pacific, which actually bring a lot of harms to the surrounding areas. This is an immoral act, but by giving this pretty name, the govt. tried to expunge the hideous imagery that the bomb evokes.The name is pretty, but the reality is ugly.This sort of process ... is such a bad name. (this is why euphemism has such a bad connotation: People who are partialto ... really talking about.) 4. What is G.Orwell’s opinion on euphemism?(Note 1) Politicians prefer to euphemisms. Their speech and writing consist largely of euphemisms, trying tomake some brutal reality vague, etc. e.g. British rule in India, the Russian purges and deportations, the dropping of the atom bomb on Japan, the Japanese invasion of the Asian countries (建立大东亚共荣圈).5. What is the function of the last sentences?Transition, guiding the reader to the next para., telling them what will be talked about next.6. What is this para. about?a common definition, euphemism has got a bad name.Para. 21. How do you understand ‘Things do not have real names’? Can you give examples? (3-3, 4)The meaning of the majority of words is arbitrary and conventional; thus words are no more than labels given to things.The name of an object was given in the ancient times. It has been handed down through generations so that it becomes conventional. Names are symbols of the things. They can be changed.If we first called the man cleaning garbage some other name instead of garbage man or sanitation engineer, that would be OK. If we called the animal we call pig now ‘shrimp’, it would become a shrimp, and vice versa. So are the names of ‘lumbering elephant’ for an automobile, and ‘perfume’ for Bronx odor. As Shakespeare said in Romeo and Juliet, ‘What’s in a name? That which we call a rose By any other name would smell as sweet.’(Even if we change the name of the plant we call conventionally ‘rose’ to some other name, this plant will stillsmell as sweet as before/usual.)Therefore, it is wrong to assume that a name and a thing are one and the same.In other words, names can be changed at any time if we want or need. 2. But a name is usually ... one from the other.Is this sentence contradictory to the first one in this para.? (3-5)No. Things do not have real names. Names can be changed. But since we have been using the name for a long time, we are most probable / gradually come to establish a kind od association, particularly in semantics, between the two. e.g. When we call the animal ‘pig’, we tend to think it fat, stupid, eating and sleeping, etc. Because of this semantic association, we have the expressions as make a pig of oneself (eat too much), buy a pig in a bag (buy without checking it up), etc.3. This is all because what we call things affects how we will perceive them.(= Things will take on a different look when named differently. The name we give to something affects our perception.) It is not only harder to ... the horse mackerel. 凤爪,龙虎斗,牛鞭, Goldlion - 金狮,金利来,山水豆腐4. It would appear ... of the thing itself.It seems that mankind is predisposed to regard things as being inseparable from the labels they bear. This is a most intriguing delusion. We naturally think that things and their corresponding names are the same, but this is the illusion.There is some truth in this illusion.With the change of the names of things, you have changed their images in the eye of people, which, in effect, means a change in what the things really are. If you change the names of things, you change your way of perception, and you, in effect, change the nature of the things.5. Do you agree with P on this point? (3-6)This may sound a bit dubious. While the 1st change (change in the way people regard things) has been evidenced, the 2nd change (change in the nature of the thing itself) has not.6. Main idea: A change in name leads to a change in nature.Para. 31. All sorts of scoundrels ... they are promoting.The scoundrels give a charming name to the dirty thing they are committing to hide its real dirty or illegal nature, to make us believe they are doing something good.抢劫-交保护费2. Euphemizing ... of perceiving things.Giving a new name to some thing by using euphemism will generate a new way of perceiving things. This is the same as What we call things affects how we will perceive them.e.g. The man who wants us ... notice or respect. The status of a garbage man is considerably raised in the eye of the public f rom a ‘man’ to ‘an engineer’. ‘Garbage’, a word with bad connotations is replaced by ‘sanitation’, a shift focus from what he disposes of to what he preserves.3. The teacher who ... be attended to.It is true that the teacher is euphemizing when he has us use ‘culturally different children’ in place of ‘slum children’, but what he is doing is t o try to turn our attention to an aspect of life that might easily be neglected.4. Main idea: euphemism - a method of generating new and useful ways of perceptionPara. 41. Euphemizing itself is not contemptible. It is contemptible only when it tries to hide something true, esp. the dirty nature.e.g. Operation Sunshine ... but ‘culturally different children’ isdifferent.2. Main idea: euphemism not a contemptible process.Para. 51. I grant that ... the intended effect.Sometimes euphemism is only a superficial term. It cannot achieve the intended effect: to elevate the praise or the status, or to call attention to ... (as stated in l.53) In other words, although the name changes, the nature remains the same.E.g. (ll. 56-60) Even if a teacher, who believes ‘slum children’ are those who are in great porverty, less educated, rude, rough, impolite, or the like, use the term ‘culturally different children’, it makes no difference to the effect that people intend to achieve when creating this euphemism. Other examples: senior citizen - old people, mental institution - lunatic asylums2. Nonetheless, euphemizing ... on a subject.However, if we change the name by using euphemism, we will also change our way of perception. This is the same as we have in l. 27, ll. 32-3.e.g. (ll. 62-4) senior citizens for old people - perceive them to have political identities though they are of an old age. Though they are old, they still have the political identities and they can still be elected as President or something.3. In fact, ... to predict: whether a particular euphemistic expression will be accepted or not, whether it will change people’s way of perception or not.e.g. (ll. 65-70) chairperson, sanitation engineer, senior citizen, tuna fish4. There is danger ... appear ridiculaous.The change of people’s way of perception does not occur quickly or always. Sometimes we have such change, butsometimes not. And the change needs to undergo a long way. The change will occur if there is a social, cultural, (or other’s) tendency. i.e. if the new perspective coincides with a kind of tendencyin the society, otherwise, the euphemistic name will remain incongruous or ridiculous.e.g. (ll. 73-5) ‘facilitator’ (teacher): wildly accepted in ELT field now, pedegogical theory‘childperson’ (boys and girls): ridiculous5. Why the attempt to rename ‘old people’ ‘senior citizens’ has turned out successful and that to rename ‘boys and girls’ ‘childpersons’ would not? (3-8) Among the general public as well as the old people themselves, there is the urge for recognition of their political identity. But so far there has not emerged such an urge to eliminate the gender distinction between ‘boys’ and ‘girls’.6. Main idea: change must be supported by authentic trendsThere is a danger in supposing that a new name can change attitudes quickly or always.Para. 61. But to suppose ... the power of names.As we know from above, a new name cannot always change attitudes.But if we think a new name will not at all change the attitudes, we underestimate the power of names.e.g. (ll. 77-80) black - negro (euphemism) - black (euphemism in reverse): perceptions and attitudes have changed significantly with the change of the name.2. Do you think so? (3-9)Not really. The change in name might not have been sopowerful as P assumes. If there was any marked change in people’s perception of and attitude to the Americans of African origin in t he 60’s, it should really be a ttributed to the mounting civil rights movement at that time.3. Main idea:Para. 71. The key idea ... employ euphemism.Euphemizing can affect the culture, e.g. black (race discrimination), chairperson (sex discrimination)I don’t think euphemism is not ‘earthy’ (down-to-earth), direct language.e.g. dead, pass away - both plainly and honestly, but different conception of what the event means. shithouse, restroom - both lead to the same place, but different attitude towards privacy and propriety (= politeness).facilitator, teacher - both refer to the person doig the same job, but different function in education2. What I am saying ... to value and to see.Changing a name by using euphemism (this figure of speech) has nothing to do with morality. Only when the name has some moral content explicitly or implicitly, we have the morality question.e.g. Operation Sunshine: hide the ugly reality, an immoral act, hide the immoral realitybut, sanitation engineer: nothing to do with morality3. Main idea: a more elaborated definitionNATO plays word gamesWHILE launching an undeclared war against Yugoslavia, US-led NATO is playing a game of words.At news briefings, Pentagon and NATO officials are likely touse euphemisms to whitewash their crimes in Yugoslavia.Shortly after US-led NATO began its air strikes against Yugoslavia, Pentagon officials touted their actions as "humanitarian intervention" to justify their barbarism.During their more than 70 days of strikes, they repeatedly played the same game of words. First, they explained their missile raids on the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade as a "mistake," and then attempted to transform their atrocities into regrettable but necessary "collateral damage."In their eyes, no other means is more effective in hoodwinking the public than euphemisms, with which they lull theircitizens into thinking that to die for this war amounts to "joining the immortals." What a smart expression!While inflicting the scourge of war on Yugoslav people, Pentagon officials seem to let the world know that Yugoslavia should thank them for not using "selective ordinances."Every phrase used is so "sweet" and "gracious" to hear, it is difficult to associate the words with war maniacs stained by the blood of Yugoslavians.Their well-prepared euphemistic words, however, cannot fool people of common and moral sense.Pentagon officials made a fatal mistake when they cooked up their lies: Who can believe a wolf in sheep's clothing?(Jin Zeqing)。
Unit 10TEXT ISTRAIGHT-A ILLITERACYJames P. DegnanObjectives: to understand what straight-A illiteracy means and define it;to make a comparison between ordinary illiteracy and straight-A illiteracy and comments on it;to discuss the appropriate diction in writing.Pre-reading Questions1. What does ‘straight-A illiteracy’ mean?A straight-A student is one who gets A’s for all the courses he takes. He is generally admired for his excellent scholarship.It seems paradoxi cal to call someone a ‘straight-A illiterate’. What does the author mean by it? Read the article and try to understand and define what straight-A illiteracy means.In-reading ComprehensionPara. 11. as often as not: at least half the time; frequently2. How many kinds of illiterate according to D.?Two kinds: ordinary illiterates who are unable to read or write. There are quite a lot of this kind of illiterates in schools.straight-A illiterate who is typically a Ph.D., a successful professor and textbook author, and who is more influential.3. Why does D say that a straight-A illiterate is more influential? (comp. 3-2)He is usu. one who occupies a position at the top of the academic hierarchy; the way he writes is considered exemplary, and his judgment of what is appropriate is directive.4. What do people do with these two kinds of illiterate?More concern has been shown for the ordinary illiterates. People even make fuss about this kind of illiteracy. However, little attention is aroused to straight-A illiterates. So, the purpose of this article is to give them as much attention as has been paid to ordinary illiterates. (ll. 6-7)Para. 21. What is this para. about?D’s treatment with a disease of straight-A illiteracy in his office.2. Do you think D’s comparison of straight-A illiteracy to a disease is appropriate? Explain. (comp. 3-3)Yes. Like a disease, it victimizes healthy persons; it has its symptoms, and its agents.3. Who is the straight-A illiterate?a college senior ... outstanding graduate schools.He is extremely clever and highly talented in language. He has done an excellent job in his studies, so he has been awarded an opportunity to further his study in one of the nation’s best graduate schools.4. How does the treatment go?They have been going over the student’s paper sentence by sentence, word by word for an hour, prying and probing for its meaning.‘Prying and probing’, the repetition of the same structure, is to emphasize the extreme difficulty of the task.5. Are there any other words to highlight the extreme difficulty in understanding Mr. Bright’s paper? (comp. 3-4)interrogating, cross-examining, pause to catch my breath, on earth, his brow furrowed, tries mightily, finally ... finally, another hour, decode ....6. Try to explain why the following pairs of sentences are the same in meaning: ll. 15-17, ll. 23 (comp. 3-8)As intended by the student, ‘The choice ... multi-colinearity’ corresponds to ‘demand’ while ‘... the derivations ... coefficients’ corresponds to ‘supply’.This is a very abstruse sentence to unravel.7. Why does D insert the word ‘allegorically’ in ‘... whom I call, allegorically,Mr. Bright’? (comp. 3-5)‘allegory’ in Lib. Work.When the author calls his student Mr. Bright allegorically, he does not mean to refer to this particular straight-A student only. He is using the term to cover all those students, college seniors, and Ph.D.’s who may seem bright when judged by their academic records, but who nevertheless fail to detect gibberish in their own writings or in those of others.The student given the name Mr. Bright thus becomes a symbol.Is he really bright? No, here in an ironical sense.Para. 31. It attacks best minds, ... in that of others.It does harm to the most intelligent individual and, by and by, wears away his ability to judge, eventually reducing him to being unable t Para. 3o detect nonsense either in his own writing or in that of others.This is the harm that straight-A illiteracy does to people.2. Reword the following sentences so that they are more easily understood: ll. 34-35, ll. 37-41 (comp. 3-9)ll. 34-35: The shop assistants had better have in stock what our customers need, or we won’t be in business long (=This is said or written by an ordinary illiterate, who is poor at spelling (them), pronunciation, punctuation, grammar (had + better, stock -up on, ain’t gonna be). So he makes many mistakes, and so he is kept out of institutions of higher learning. (l. 33)ll. 37-41: You must focus your attention on what your customers need so that you are able to tell what is necessary from what is unnecessary when you replenish your stock.This is written by a straight-A illiterate, who would never make spelling, grammar, punctuation mistakes, but who is incapable of making his ideas simple and clear in his writing. However, it is for writing this gibberish that he can be awarded straight As on his papers and the opportunity to continue his study, receiving higher and higher education until he has successfully got the Ph.D.The higher education one receives, the more serious his disease of straight-A illiteracy becomes. (ll. 27-28)3. Make complete the elliptical sentence ‘Not our man’. What is the function? (comp. 3-6)‘This is not what our man would say’. This ellipsis contrasts the two types of illiteracy, and with it D turns back from one type to the other.Para. 41. What is the major cause of straight-A illiteracy?the stuff - the textbooks and professional journals that the straight-A illiterate is forced to read during his years of higher education.He reads gibberish, and gradually he forms a habit of writing gibberish himself, which he has been instructed to learn an exemplary writing of sophisticated taste. (ll. 46-47)2. Give the examples of gibberish D quotes from professional journals.jargons as ‘ego-integrative action orientation’ and ‘orientation toward improvement of the graficational-deprivation balance of the actor’‘homologous’ or ‘isomorphic’, meaning ‘alike’‘allotropic’, meaning ‘different’‘dichotomize’ or ‘bifurcate’, meaning ‘divide anything3. D concludes his article by using quite a number of unintelligible words and expressions in place of clear and simple English. Is it effective? Why?This usual arrangement has undoubtedly enabled the reader once again to feel even more the absurdity of the practice to express simple ideas in an almost incomprehensible way, adding more weight to the point he intends to make. (Analysis)Post-reading Discussion1. Makeadefinition of ‘straight-A illiteracy’. (comp. 1-A)2. What is the purpose of D’s writing? (comp. 3-1)to find the cause of straight-A illiteracy.to give straight-A illiterate equal time with his widely publicizedcounterpart. (para. 1)to expose and condemn the use of professional jargon, which fills the reading materials that highly educated people are forced to read as they pursue their education. (Analysis)3. Comp. 24. Group work: Compare briefly the two types of illiteracy. Which type in your opinion presents a graver problem to society? (comp. 3-10)TEXT IITHE QUALITIES OF GOOD WRITINGJacqueline Berke1. This is an excerpt from Twenty Questions for the Writer, a widely used writing textbook, the kind of which we need to read to further our learning by ourselves. What do you usu. do when you read this kind of book by yourselves? Underline or highlight the important words or sentences, or make notes of your own so as to get the gist of it. Suppose you have borrowed this book from the library and come to read this part. What will you do with it? Study the text individually before class and do what you usu. do to catch the gist.2. Have group work for about 20 mins., exchanging what you have learned after reading it, and preparing for a presentation of this text. Your presentation can be based on Questions 1, 2, & 4 on p165.3. Presentation: Ask 4 groups to present the three qualities and human nature of writing respectively.4. As college seniors, we need to choose those more specific, exact, meaningful words in our writing rather than those common words as ‘good’, ‘nice’, etc. Do you consider using those more specific, exact, meaningful words as a kind of straight-A illiteracy? Give your opinions.。