新编英语教程 5 Unit 11 教案.docx
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1、新编英语教程 5 Unit 11 教案 Unit 11 TEXT 1 CULTIVATING A HOBBY Winston Churchill Objectives: to take notes as completely as poible in cla. to present their interpretations of each paragraph. Section one Pre-reading questions: (15 mins.) 1. What does hobby mean? (refer to Lib.work) 2. Do you have any hobbies
2、? What are they? 3. Do your hobbies do you any good? In what ways? 4. Who is W.Churchill? Whats his hobby you know from what you have learned or from this text? (refer to Lib.work) In-reading interpretation: The teacher explains every sentence to the students while the latter try to take notes as qu
3、ickly and completely as poible. After the text interpretation, the students are required to explain some sentences by their own.Para.1 (15 mins.) 1. Worry is a spasm of emotion; the mind catches hold of something and will not let it go. spasm: an involuntary muscular contraction; here, a sudden viol
4、ent spell (of); a sudden convulsive movement Worry is a kind of feeling which catches you suddenly so that you cant have any peace of mind. This feeling arises when you think about something without being able to discontinue thinking about it. Thus worry results.2. It is usele to argue with the mind
5、 in this condition. in this condition = when the mind catches hold of something and will not let it go It is of no use trying to stop the troubled mind / the worry when it catches 1 hold of something and will not let it go. i.e., when worry comes.3. The stronger the will, the more futile the task. (
6、LW6-1) The stronger your will (to argue with the mind, or to stop the worry) is, the more ineffective/unsucceful/usele it will be for you to achieve this task of stopping the worry. The more you attempt to shake off your worry, the harder it will be for you to get rid of it / have it off your mind.
7、Then what can we do to stop the worry? 4. One can gently insinuate something else into its convulsive grasp. insinuate = introduce indirectly and subtly convulsive grasp = the worry The only way is to have something else in mind so that it will not be grasped by worry / so as to replace the worry. W
8、hat does something else imply? Something else implies the hobby.5. And if this something else is rightly chosen, if it is really attended by the illumination of another field of interest, gradually, and often quite swiftly, the old undue grip relaxes and the proce of recuperation and repair begins.
9、attend = accompanied (comp.3-2) illumination = enlightenment, edification another field of interest = hobby the old undue grip = worry recuperation and repair = not becoming worried any longer If you choose the right thing to conquer your mind, if you have another field of interest to enlighten you,
10、 your worry, gradually or swiftly, will be relieved./ you will be released from the worry.6. This para.is about worry, which is repeatedly talked about. Instead of mentioning worry again and again whenever it is talked about, Churchill uses some other phrases to refer to this annoying state of mind
11、so as to avoid the monotony of expreions. Identify these phrases in the 1st paragraph. (comp.3-1) a spasm of emotion, its convulsive grasp, the old undue grip 2 Para.2 (10 mins.) 1. The cultivation of a hobby and new forms of interest is therefore a policy of first importance to a public man. It is
12、the most important for a public man to cultivate a hobby, because he is likely to have more worries in his work concerned with interrelationships with various kinds of people.2. But this is not a busine that can be undertaken in a day or swiftly improvised by a mere command of the will. The growth o
13、f alternative mental interests is a long proce. improvise = make or do without preparation, practice, sufficient material, etc. But a hobby cannot be cultivated and developed so quickly as you expect in your busine. No matter how strong your will is, hobby cultivation has to undergo a long proce.3.
14、The seeds must be carefully chosen; they must fall on good ground; they must be sedulously tended, if the vivifying fruits are to be at hand when needed. (comp.3-3) This is a metaphor to describe the cultivation of a hobby. Explain it. The author compares hobby to seed, fitne (of a hobby) to an indi
15、vidual to good ground, and the effect (in leening ones worry) to fruit so that the reader can have something concrete to look at. This is certainly a more effective way to explain an idea, esp.an abstract or complex idea. (Analysis) sedulously = diligently, carefully, aiduously vivifying fruits = re
16、sults that give one relaxation / refreshment The cultivation of a hobby is compared to that of a plant. First of all, the right hobby (the seed of a plant) must be carefully chosen for a person (good ground); then the proce of cultivating a hobby, like that of growing a plant, requires care and effo
17、rt. Only in this way can one reap in due time the fruit of ones laborfor them a new pleasure, a new excitement is only an additional satiation. (LW6-4) command = have within reach, be master of, poe gratify = give pleasure or satisfaction to, indulge caprice = sudden wish to have, or do sth., whim s
18、atiation = complete satisfaction, wearying oneself with too much Since those very wealthy people can afford to get acce to almost anything they may think of ( those people can get whatever they want) and to turn the most fanciful ideas into reality (to turn whatever they dream or desire into reality
19、), there is nothing in this world that can interest or excite them any more. To them, a new pleasure, a new excitement may very often make them even more bored about life. They are the unfortunate people. (comp.3-5) Why does Churchill claify as unfortunate those people who can command everything the
20、y want, gratify every caprice and lay their hands on almost every object of desire? Do you think Churchills attitude towards those people is really one of sympathy? These people are simply hopele; nothing works to relieve them of their boredom. Churchill does not really feel sympathetic towards them
21、. Note the phrase avenging boredom. He seems to think that this is what they deserve.2. In vain they rush frantically round from place to place, trying to escape from avenging boredom by mere clatter and motion. frantically = widely excited (with joy, anxiety, pain, etc.)狂乱地 avenging boredom = (note
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