时间:2019-03-04 作者:英语课 分类:英语听力精选进阶版


英语课

Can you concentrate in a crowded environment? If you want to work in a modern office you'd better start getting used to it. Millions of workers spend their long shifts in open-plan offices these days. And your co-workers? Well, don't stretch your arms out too far or you might knock over their cup of coffee!


Offices today might have the latest computers, but the idea of having dozens of workers gathered in a big room isn't new. Henry Ford 1, the American industrialist 2 of the late 19th and early 20th Centuries, had a lot to do with that. The owner of the famous Ford cars loved efficiency - one of the main themes in the story of open-plan offices.


Companies say they use these layouts to encourage communication and collaboration 3 among staff. But does this really happen?


Franklin Becker, social psychologist at Cornell University in the US, doesn't think so. He says: "The fundamental reason why open-plan has taken root has to do with the fact that you can reduce the amount of space per person in an open-plan versus 4 any kind of closed cellular 5 office."


Becker says that if you put walls amongst the desks, offices would look like prison cells. But a big room feels different, so having lots of workers is acceptable.


Although an open-plan office can save a company money, they might have a negative impact on productivity.


Sound expert Julian Treasure, chairman of the Sound Agency, explains: "We have bandwidth for about 1.6 people talking. If I'm trying to do work it requires me to listen to a voice in my head to organise 6 a flow of words and put them on paper. If you're talking at the same time, then you're taking up one of my 1.6. I'm left with 0.6 in my head."


Well, it sounds like that big report you have to finish by end of play might be just a whisper inside your head struggling against all that chatter 7 around you.


So, do you like open-plan offices?


Quiz 测验


1. True or false? According to the article, one problem of working in an open-plan office is that workers steal each other’s coffee.


False. The article warns workers not to stretch their arms out because they might knock each other's coffee over.


2. Who does the article say is an important figure in the history of open-plan offices?


The American industrialist Henry Ford.


3. True or false? Franklin Becker believes that the real reason that open plan offices have become common because more people can fit into them than into traditional, smaller, closed offices.


True.


4. Why might offices with walls between desks not be popular?


According to social psychologist Franklin Becker, they remind people of prison cells.


5. True or false? Sound expert Julian Treasure says that listening to a colleague's voice uses up all the 'bandwidth' that we have for listening to voices both inside and outside our heads.


False. He says we have a 'bandwidth' of about 1.6. Listening to a colleague’s voice uses about 1.0, leaving us with 0.6 in our heads.


Glossary 词汇表


to concentrate 集中注意力


shift 当班时间


open-plan office 开放式办公室


industrialist 工业家


efficiency 效率


collaboration 合作


staff 员工


to take root 建立;确立


per person 人均


productivity 生产力;生产率


flow 某事物的持续或连续供应(量)


end of play 下班的时候


chatter 喋喋不休的说话声



n.浅滩,水浅可涉处;v.涉水,涉过
  • They were guarding the bridge,so we forded the river.他们驻守在那座桥上,所以我们只能涉水过河。
  • If you decide to ford a stream,be extremely careful.如果已决定要涉过小溪,必须极度小心。
n.工业家,实业家
  • The industrialist's son was kidnapped.这名实业家的儿子被绑架了。
  • Mr.Smith was a wealthy industrialist,but he was not satisfied with life.史密斯先生是位富有的企业家,可他对生活感到不满意。
n.合作,协作;勾结
  • The two companies are working in close collaboration each other.这两家公司密切合作。
  • He was shot for collaboration with the enemy.他因通敌而被枪毙了。
prep.以…为对手,对;与…相比之下
  • The big match tonight is England versus Spain.今晚的大赛是英格兰对西班牙。
  • The most exciting game was Harvard versus Yale.最富紧张刺激的球赛是哈佛队对耶鲁队。
adj.移动的;细胞的,由细胞组成的
  • She has a cellular telephone in her car.她的汽车里有一部无线通讯电话机。
  • Many people use cellular materials as sensitive elements in hygrometers.很多人用蜂窝状的材料作为测量温度的传感元件。
vt.组织,安排,筹办
  • He has the ability to organise.他很有组织才能。
  • It's my job to organise all the ceremonial events.由我来组织所有的仪式。
vi./n.喋喋不休;短促尖叫;(牙齿)打战
  • Her continuous chatter vexes me.她的喋喋不休使我烦透了。
  • I've had enough of their continual chatter.我已厌烦了他们喋喋不休的闲谈。
学英语单词
a good field
abiding-place
all hail
Althusserian
arc self-regulation
art galleries
asymptotically normal
automatic moisture titrator
baedekers
barbel
body of incus
bounce impact force
buncher beam
cartographic projection
cephalical
colour method
communications slot
cycloramic
cytohistologic
day-care centre
de Moivre
depolymerizer
desilylate
destemming
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dourada
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drop type sprag
electroacoustic instability
fatty iodine value
fillis
firehose cursor
floating point data
food fortification
food intake
frontal dilators of the pharynx
furan nucleus
gap cavitation
gas starter system
glenospore disease
gubble
Hjerkinn
homlolgation
hook for cleaning chips
inscroll
ischnafiorinia bambusae
isothermal surface coordinates
joint aging time
l'air
lime cake drainage
longwall retreating
macrophytic algae
marae
materials
microhyla inornata
millimeter wave isolater
molybdenyl
multiparty line
multiple-length numeral
nan-nings
Nativelle's digitalin
net defence
network facilities
nonbacteraemic
normic form
nuclear option
ochratoxins
Othman I
out-phase component
paper gauge
patitz
Pedicularis dissectifolia
Petrospongium rugosum
progressive block welding sequence
pull someone's chestnuts out of the fire
ramus dorsalis n. branch.
ratio-differential relay
resistance indicator
resubscribes
rubber latex condom
scanse
simplex telegraph circuit
skinned calf
spatially scanned interferometry
speed distortion
spun-off
sq ft
staccati
strain-sensitive axis
Subprime Auto Loan
tail wheel boot
telatinib
tripple-error-correcting
Typhonium kunmingense
unforgettably
usnea schadenbergiana
vitreous humor mucin
wandering electron
weekly premium
wet arc-over voltage
wrestle with in prayer
write circuit