时间:2019-01-10 作者:英语课 分类:高中英语人教版必修第三册


英语课

[00:08.20]Within a few decades, a quarter of China’s population will be aged 1 60 or over.

[00:13.77]As a result, there will be fewer full-time 2 workers between the age of 20 and 65 to support the older people and children in the society.

[00:24.03]As the age distribution of the population changes,

[00:27.59]education will become increasingly important as a means of improving the health and employment opportunities of older people.

[00:35.58]It will also help strengthen family relationships and the sense of community.

[00:40.52]The Ministry 3 of Education introduced the first University of the Third Age (UTA) in Shandong in 1983.

[00:51.12]There are now about 17,000 UTAs in China providing a wide-ranging curriculum 4 to about 1.4 million older people.

[01:01.88]When the age restriction 5 for the University Entrance Exams was lifted in 2001,

[01:08.26]several other people, including a 73-year-old Shandong man, signed up to take the test.

[01:14.81]In the autumn of 2004,

[01:14.92]business woman Liu Fuzhen joined her 14-year-old son at Yincai Junior Middle School in Lingshai as a full-time member of second grade class.

[01:25.16]It is 23 years since Mme Liu dropped out of school to help her family through financial difficulties by finding work.

[01:33.57]Having set up a successful property business,

[01:37.00]Mme Liu has now decided 6 to pursue her childhood ambition of completing high school and attending university.

[01:43.94]READIGN

[01:47.99]DISANCE LEARNING

[01:49.74]Distance learning is being adopted in several countries to help children in remote rural schools,

[01:56.25]and it is also becoming increasingly popular with individuals as a means of obtaining higher or further education.

[02:04.01]While distance learning is a very different experience from attending a university or college,

[02:09.62]it does have several advantages and can be ideal for people in particular circumstances and with certain characteristics.

[02:18.45]Distance learning students do not need to be in the same place as the course provider.

[02:24.20]They can even be in different country.

[02:26.65]As a result, the cost is usually much lower than attending a university or college.

[02:31.91]Students can also take as long as they want to complete the course,

[02:36.01]so they can organize their study while they are working.

[02:38.65]Many distance learners even continue to do a full-time job.

[02:42.46]Distance learning allows students the freedom to arrange their own study schedule,

[02:48.23]but the disadvantage of it is that many students tend to put off their study tasks and spend much longer on their course.

[02:56.15]Distance learners never meet the other students or teachers face to face

[03:00.85]so they have to motivate themselves to complete projects without encouragement and advice from other people.

[03:07.41]While students who attend college or university are able to acquire information from lectures,

[03:14.01]distance learners usually depend only on written materials.

[03:18.53]To be successful, distance learners have to be good readers.

[03:22.77]They must be able to analyse and absorb written texts with little help from a teacher.

[03:28.51]Because distance learners are not in the academic environment of a university,

[03:33.82]they have to discipline themselves while studying.

[03:36.95]For example, students with children may be disturbed by their children from time to time.

[03:42.28]Other features of campus life that distance learners cannot experience are the lively social and sports activities.

[03:49.96]Therefore distance learning would not suit people who wee further or higher education as an opportunity to make friends and have fun as well as to study.

[04:00.67]MAKING THE MOST OF YOUR MEMORY

[04:05.08]Have you ever heard anyone say “I have a terrible memory”?

[04:10.07]It is quite common for people to believer that their difficulties in remembering are just part of their personality.

[04:17.34]In fact, research has proved that human beings’ memories are surprisingly similar and our ability to remember can easily be improved


[04:26.45]The German philosopher Hermann Ebbinghaus carried out one of the earliest studies of human memory,

[04:33.69]which resulted in the “ Ebbinghaus Forgetting Curve”.

[04:37.16]His experiments were conducted in 1885,

[04:40.87]but his conclusions still apply to students today.

[04:44.32]Ebbinghaus discovered that when we learn something new,

[04:44.75]we forget most of it immediately.

[04:47.21]He found that more than 50% of the information is forgotten after one hour,

[04:53.24]and almost two-thirds within one day.

[04:55.70]The good news is that our rate of forgetting then declines 7,

[05:00.06]so the material we can recall after one day (usually about 20%) will stay in our memory.

[05:07.90]Ebbinghaus then carried out experiments to see if reciting made a difference to our ability to remember.

[05:14.82]It is evident that reciting the information just once increases how much we can recall to about 66%,

[05:23.36]and we remember it for several weeks. This rate is even higher if the facts or ideas are “meaningful”,

[05:30.70]and further reciting keeps the material permanently 8 in our memories.

[05:35.33]As we forget most new information within one day,

[05:38.56]the first recitation should take place as soon as possible-no later than 24 hours after learning it.

[05:46.01]Although Ebbinghaus referred to “reciting”,

[05:49.33]many educators today prefer to use the term “to review”.

[05:53.58]The reason for this is that learners frequently misunderstand what effective reciting involves.

[05:59.96]Take language learning an example: students often tend to recite lists of single vocabulary items,

[06:07.64]rather than to review them in a context 9.

[06:10.07]If you try doing this, you will find that you do remember a lot of words,

[06:15.27]but you will not understand how to use them appropriately.

[06:19.11]A more useful method is to use the new vocabulary by describing or retelling the main ideas of the text,

[06:26.81]presentation or discussion in your own words.

[06:29.63]In the way, you “review” or “recite” the vocabulary in a context,

[06:35.67]so the information becomes “meaningful” and you will remember much more



adj.年老的,陈年的
  • He had put on weight and aged a little.他胖了,也老点了。
  • He is aged,but his memory is still good.他已年老,然而记忆力还好。
adj.满工作日的或工作周的,全时间的
  • A full-time job may be too much for her.全天工作她恐怕吃不消。
  • I don't know how she copes with looking after her family and doing a full-time job.既要照顾家庭又要全天工作,我不知道她是如何对付的。
n.(政府的)部;牧师
  • They sent a deputation to the ministry to complain.他们派了一个代表团到部里投诉。
  • We probed the Air Ministry statements.我们调查了空军部的记录。
n.课程,(学校等的)全部课程
  • Is German on your school's curriculum?你们学校有德语课吗?
  • The English curriculum should stress both composition and reading.英语课程对作文和阅读应同样重视。
n.限制,约束
  • The park is open to the public without restriction.这个公园对公众开放,没有任何限制。
  • The 30 mph speed restriction applies in all built-up areas.每小时限速30英里适用于所有建筑物聚集区。
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的
  • This gave them a decided advantage over their opponents.这使他们比对手具有明显的优势。
  • There is a decided difference between British and Chinese way of greeting.英国人和中国人打招呼的方式有很明显的区别。
辞谢,谢绝(邀请等)( decline的第三人称单数 ); (道路、物体等)下倾; (太阳)落下; (在品格、价值上)降低
  • As one grows older one's memory declines. 一个人的记忆力随着年老而衰退。
  • Hearing sensitivity declines with age. 听觉因年老而衰退。
adv.永恒地,永久地,固定不变地
  • The accident left him permanently scarred.那次事故给他留下了永久的伤疤。
  • The ship is now permanently moored on the Thames in London.该船现在永久地停泊在伦敦泰晤士河边。
n.背景,环境,上下文,语境
  • You can always tell the meaning of a word from its context.你常可以从上下文中猜出词义来。
  • This sentence does not seem to connect with the context.这个句子似乎与上下文脱节。
学英语单词
abd al maasir hill
abfrontal
academic excellence
adaptor-1
adjacent field-of-view method
almon distributed lag
azeotrope forming liquids
bearing protective device
Belloc, (Joseph)Hilaire (Pierre)
bits-denotation
bridge rail joint
caffetan
cam gecidi
carrier amplifier
cascading menus
cervone
chamber space
Christ Jesus
circle of longitude
circuit non-repetitive peak off-state voltage
CNO cycles
compensating accumulator
cryovolcanism
crystallines
cycloleucine
directionality
Duke of York Islands
DWOP
dysfunctionally
eberhart
electrobiogenesis
esophageal carcinoma
exterior measure
ferrographie
fixed hopper
flag smut funguss
foot trip
gnathalgia
heroic metre
heterogenous tumor
hilborn
hits upon
home server
in personality
indoyl
intensity
jolile
Kunisaki-hanto
labangs
Lederer
leskinen
level-handedness
lifter board
linear elliptic equation of higher order
mirror image convention
modifying feedback
Monarch Mountain
motor brake magnet
multipath signal
multiplexer channel
N-nitrosodiisopropylamine
non monetary account
nozzle-stream angle
nutmeg-shaped
osteolytic osteosarcoma
overpray
pipe manifold
pole-mounteds
prevailing formation
prosecutor general
radiometric method
rapidly-growing
reach an impasse
reconfined
recovery of critical
rect.p.
repairative regeneration
rosefinch
satellite business system
school-dinners
scoops
semisimple algebraic group
SEMS (severe environment memory system)
series-chain model
serviles
sheer height
snap up
solid wood dryer
special automatic vacuum welding chamber
special equivalent
SXO
symbolism
takeing-off weather forecast
throwing machine
trainfuls
unique information
unlimited register machine
vibrational quantum
VoIP PBX
wind warmth
Xylanche himalaica
yarkend