时间:2018-12-30 作者:英语课 分类:词汇大师(Wordmaster)


英语课

Broadcast on COAST TO COAST: September 4, 2003


AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on Wordmaster: As a new school year gets under way in the United States, English teacher Lida Baker 1 joins us to talk about informality in the classroom.


RS: She says students who come to America to study English in a college-level program are surprised to find that in many cases teachers are less formal than teachers in their own countries.


BAKER: "One of the first things that happens is that the teacher tells students to call him or her by his first name. Call me Bob, call me Jim, call me Lida. The teacher will then ask the students what they want to be called, and most of them will follow the teacher's example and they'll have the teacher call them by their first names, even if this isn't customary 2 in the country where they come from."


RS: "Do they have a problem with that?"


BAKER: "For some students, it kind of sticks in their throat to have to call their teacher by her first name, and some students never quite get around to feeling comfortable with that and will spend the entire ten weeks of the program that I work in calling me 'teacher,' which is fine. I don't discourage them from doing that.


"Other things that students have reported to me as being surprising: the fact that teachers are very forthcoming 3 about making jokes, and a lot of times they'll make jokes about themselves and about members of their own family. Teachers are very forthcoming, talking about themselves, their children, their dogs -- I like to talk about my dog all the time. My dog and my daughter. And I must tell you that students are very, very interested in these topics. They love hearing the details of my private life. [laughter]"


RS: "And you like telling them, right?"


BAKER: "Sure. It's a wonderful way of motivating students and getting them to feel good in the classroom. The style that we have here is more of a participatory one, one of sharing where the student's input 4 is also valued and even expected. Another thing that students have to get used to when they come to study in this country is the fact that teachers expect them to raise their hands and ask questions. Sometimes, in fact, they don't even need to raise their hands. Students express surprise at the fact that a teacher might be talking and someone will interrupt without raising their hand to contradict 5 the teacher or to challenge what the teacher has said."


RS: "But being active in class, that's part of your grade in some classes."


BAKER: "That's right. And teachers do not take offense 6 -- most teachers don't take offense if you question something that they've just said and even if you challenge them and take an opposite point of view. That's considered part of the normal give-and-take in an American classroom."


AA: "And starting on time, also, punctuality?"


BAKER: "Well, punctuality is something that Americans are very, very fastidious about, and students coming to this country have to know that if a class begins at 8:30, you're expected to be there at 8:30. If you don't make it a point to show up on time, it conveys 7 an attitude of disrespect to the person, to the professor -- or, if it's a job interview, to the person who's interviewing you. 'What's this, you're not even able to show up to class on time, so how can I trust you with something of even greater importance?' You see. So punctuality is very important in American culture, and this is something that I always explain to my students."


AA: English teacher Lida Baker says one obvious difference between American classrooms and those in some other countries is how the classroom looks.


BAKER: "Students coming here are sometimes surprised when they come into our classrooms that the chairs are not organized in rows. They might be organized in a circle or in a semi-circle, or there might be large tables in the classroom where students sit in groups around the table."


RS: "So not only do things sound different, but they look different too."


BAKER: "And there's a reason for this kind of classroom organization. It comes back to the idea that learning 8 is a participatory activity. It is something that goes both ways, and it also imbeds the idea that students can learn from one another. And one final thing I want to point out about informality is -- actually there are couple of more things. Students might be surprised to see teachers wearing blue jeans and sandals in the classroom. And there is an expectation by American teachers that students will look them directly in the eyes, and this is an accommodation that students from some countries have to make. Because, in a lot of countries, when you want to show respect to somebody, you never look directly into their face."


AA: Lida Baker writes textbooks for English learners and teaches in the American Language Center at the University of California at Los Angeles. And that's Wordmaster for this week.


RS: Our e-mail address is............ and we're on the Web at voanews.com/wordmaster. With Avi Arditti, I'm Rosanne Skirble.



n.面包师
  • The baker bakes his bread in the bakery.面包师在面包房内烤面包。
  • The baker frosted the cake with a mixture of sugar and whites of eggs.面包师在蛋糕上撒了一层白糖和蛋清的混合料。
adj.习惯上的,惯常的,合乎习俗的
  • He makes his customary visit every week.他每星期都按照惯例造访一次。
  • It is customary with me to do so.这样做是我的习惯。
adj.即将到来的,可得到的,乐于提供消息的
  • He gave me a list of their forthcoming books.他给了我一张他们即将出版图书的目录。
  • Her letter may purport her forthcoming arrival.她的来信可能意味着她快要到了。
n.输入(物);投入;vt.把(数据等)输入计算机
  • I will forever be grateful for his considerable input.我将永远感激他的大量投入。
  • All this information had to be input onto the computer.所有这些信息都必须输入计算机。
vt.反驳,否认...的真实性,与...发生矛盾
  • Young children should never contradict what their parents say.孩子们绝对不应顶撞父母。
  • They contradict each other all the time.他们总是相互抵触。
n.犯规,违法行为;冒犯,得罪
  • I hope you will not take any offense at my words. 对我讲的话请别见怪。
  • His words gave great offense to everybody present.他的发言冲犯了在场的所有人。
v.运输( convey的第三人称单数 );运送;输送;表达
  • The poem conveys his deep reverence for nature. 这首诗表达了他对大自然的深深崇敬之情。
  • The firm conveys goods to all parts of the country. 这个公司向全国各地发送货物。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.学问,学识,学习;动词learn的现在分词
  • When you are learning to ride a bicycle,you often fall off.初学骑自行车时,常会从车上掉下来。
  • Learning languages isn't just a matter of remembering words.学习语言不仅仅是记些单词的事。
学英语单词
a set phrase
accountantlike
acupuncture and moxibustion chart
aktaev
anyone's guess
aortectasis
asbestos textolite
at leisure
Bachelor of Science
Ban Nong Khao
be still my heart
bellavally gap
benzylphenyl carbamate
bidtnic
bring into being
BUL bulletin
bulge coefficient
business driver
cash-call
cellular polyethylene
centi-
cercospora digitalis nakata et takimoto
ceremonials
Chamaegastrodia poilanei
comment spam
continuous-cooling transformation diagrams
control set for sound amplifying in yard
crucible neck
cuevas altas
cybercentric
cyclomenol
cystic myoma
Deficit Spending Unit
dextrocardias
Dionysius Thrax
disentombs
dish and pillar structure
DNS-SD
Dueser
Dumocycline
early-hour
external crack
Fiordland penguin
fire-retardant FR-2
flaw remediation
fulgoraria rupestris
Galitzin
gas dynamics of cosmic clouds
Gentiana wilsonii
Geranium viscosissimum
gigameters
harness mark
head honchos
Hellenising
heublein
hydragoga
ibm business partner
identifier attribute
internal lamella
intestinal tract disease
iraurita
isometries
kantner
koenderman
malignant hyperthermias
Mao Tsetung
merchandise legal value
metallic silicon
methodological document
mother-tongue
no funds
nonconceptualist
nucleus radicis descendentis nervi trigemini
olivetoes
onkolite (oncolite)
outcounting
oxynervonic acid
panitchpakdi
phoenicite
pigment finish
planarium
polar outbreak
process fieldbus
rag papers
rannc
recombined milk
reference department
rhadinophis frenata
ruled off
scavenge pressure fuel oil limit
slip something over on
starch culture-medium
subordinate officer
supervisor system
thermoformer
Trieux
Trojan horses
tuskiest
ultraseptyl
usual practical
western narrow-mouthed toads
white dextrin