2020年翻译资格考试一级笔译材料最新.docx
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1、2020年翻译资格考试(catti)一级笔译材料2020年翻译资格考试(catti)一级笔译材料 Online Education: Patient Learning A new kind of online school wants to teach nursing, and more “I have been this close to buying a nursing school.” This is not a sentence you expect to hear from a startup founder. Nursing seems a world away from the
2、high-tech whizziness of Silicon Valley. And, to use a venture-capital clich, it does not scale easily. Austen Allred, boss of Lambda School, sees things differently. His two-year-old firm matches labour supply and demand by providing fast, efficient training to potential employees. It offers five on
3、line courses that prepare candidates to write software at technology firms. Training nurses, more of which are sorely needed to care for Americas ageing population, is not an illogical next step especially when many nursing schools have to turn people away. Instead of responding to the threat of job
4、lessness posed by automation with a universal basic income, Mr Allred wants to help people to switch jobs faster. Unlike most online courses, Lambda does not charge students up front to attend (though admissions are competitive) and online tuition is live and interactive, not recorded. Full-time stu
5、dents attend for nine months, Monday to Friday, 8am to 5pm San Francisco time. Latecomers risk falling behind. In most recent classes, 85% of students who began a course finished it. The school only starts getting paid back for its services after its students have landed a job which pays them more t
6、han $50,000 a year, something Lambda expends significant energy to help them do. Around 70% of those enrolled do so within six months of graduation. Lambda then gets a cut of about a sixth of their income for the next two years, until they have paid about $30,000. (Or they can pay $20,000 up front.)
7、 The firm devotes about a third of its time and resources to finding jobs for its graduates, an unusually high share. Another third goes to recruiting students and the rest to teaching. Courses are created with employers requirements in mind. For its web-development programme, the list given to Lamb
8、da by companies runs to 280 items. Unlike coding, nursing cannot be taught entirely over the internet, so Lambda wants to co-operate with nursing schools across America that could provide the necessary hands-on instruction. After nursing, Lambda plans to work its way down the list of professions wit
9、h the biggest job shortages. It is also examining the problem from the other side, identifying available jobs that require skills akin to those of victims of automation truckers displaced by self-driving lorries or call-centre workers replaced by robocalls. Lambdas quirks set it apart in Silicon Val
10、ley, but Mr Allred is not the first to recognise the value of work-focused education and training. Germany is famed for its widespread vocational training and apprenticeships. Closer to California, the University of Waterloo, a technology-oriented Canadian institution, has had gainful employment wit
11、hin the field of study as one of its core goals since it was founded 62 years ago. Students seeking an internship can enroll in a special scheme which matches them with firms. Norah McRae, who runs the programme, says that most universities spend little time finding work for the graduates, or teachi
12、ng the skills they need to prosper in the job market. Too often students are treated as cash cows to be milked for research funding. But Ms McRae is also concerned that programmes like Lambda School, though well-meaning, risk undermining existing educational institutions by offering a quicker route
13、to work. The kind of intense optimisation which Lambda espouses cannot, she worries, replace conventional learning, which strives to create not just capable workers but rounded individuals. Such fears presuppose that Lambda can succeed beyond even Mr Allreds wildest dreams or those of the venture ca
14、pitalists who pumped $30m into the firm in January, valuing it at $150m. Student numbers, and so upfront costs, are growing faster than revenues. If Lambda can turn a profit by offering people a stab at a decent job that would be a fine lesson in capitalism. 在线教化:学习护理 一种新型网校想要教授护理和其他许多职业技能 “我离收购一所护理
15、学校只有一步之遥了。”人们不会想到这样的话竟是出自一位创业公司的创始人之口。护理行业好像与硅谷的前沿科技风马牛不相及。而且用风险投资的套话来说,这个行业不简单很快做大。但兰姆达学校的老板奥斯丁奥尔雷德有不同的看法。成立于两年前的兰姆达供应快速、高效的培训,为职场输送新人,以此匹配劳动力供需。公司目前供应五门在线课程,为科技公司培训程序员。下一步它打算开展护士培训,这并非不合逻辑人口老龄化的美国亟需更多护士,尤其是在当前许多护校无力招收更多学生的状况下。 奥尔雷德希望帮助人们更快地转行,而不是用所谓的“全民基本收入”来应对自动化带来的失业威逼。与大多数在线课程不同,兰姆达并不在开课前收学费(尽管
16、入学竞争激烈),其在线教学也是实时互动,而不是事先录制的。全日制学生的学制为九个月,授课时间为旧金山时间周一到周五的上午8点至下午5点。中途入学者可能会跟不上进度。在近期大部分课程中,85%的学生修完了自己选的课程。 只有在学员谋得一份年薪超过五万美元的工作后,学校才起先收取服务回报。而为了帮学生找到一份这样的工作,兰姆达花费了大量精力。约70%的学员在毕业后六个月内达到了这个目标。在此后的两年里,兰姆达会抽取学员收入的约六分之一,最终累计收取约三万美元。假如学员一次性付清,则为两万美元。 兰姆达将三分之一左右的时间和资源花在为毕业学员找工作上,这么高的比重不常见。另外三分之一用于招生,三分之
17、一用于教学。课程是依据雇主的要求而设计的。在它的网站开发课程中,企业开给兰姆达的需求多达280项。而护理有别于编程,不行能完全通过互联网教授,因此兰姆达希望与全美各地能供应必要操作实训的护校合作。 在开展护理培训后,兰姆达还安排逐个进军其他人员最紧缺的职业。同时它也从另一面谛视问题,为那些被自动化淘汰的人员(例如被无人驾驶货车取代的卡车司机,或者被自动语音呼叫取代的呼叫中心员工)找到须要类似技能的就业岗位。 兰姆达的另类做法在硅谷独树一帜,但要说相识到以工作为导向的教化与培训的价值的,奥尔雷德并非第一人。德国就以职业培训和学徒制的普及而著名。离加州更近些的滑铁卢高校是加拿大一所技术型高校。自6
18、2年前创办以来,该校始终将找到与学生专业对口的较高收入工作作为自己的核心目标之一。想找实习机会的学生可以注册一个将他们与企业相匹配的特殊项目。负责该项目的诺拉麦克雷表示,多数高校很少花时间帮助毕业生就业,也很少教授他们在就业市场获得胜利所需的技能。许多时候,学生们都被当成了捞取探讨经费的摇钱树。 但麦克雷也担忧,像兰姆达学校这样的培训项目虽然动身点不错,但可能会因为供应就业上的捷径而损害现有的教化体系。她担忧兰姆达提倡的那种密集型的优化培训并非是对传统教化的一种好的替代,因为后者致力培育的不仅是能胜任工作的员工,还是全面发展的个体。 不过这种担忧成立的前提是兰姆达取得的胜利要远远超出奥尔雷德本
19、人的想象或者那些今年1月向兰姆达投资3000万美元、对其估值1.5亿美元的风险投资家们的想象。目前,学生人数的增长以及由此带来的前期成本的增速超过了收入的增速。假如兰姆达能通过帮助人们拿下一份风光工作来赢利,那还真会是资本主义的一条有益阅历。 2020年翻译资格考试(catti)一级笔译材料 How Birdwatchers, Others Can Help Migrating Bird Populations The kinds of birds coming through your neighborhood are probably changing, and so is the tim
20、ing of their migrations. Birdwatchers noticing these differences are playing a big part in understanding how climate change and severe weather events are affecting bird populations. John Rowden is director of community conservation at the National Audubon Society, which aims to protect birds and the
21、ir environments. He said, “Birders have to be much more alert to when birds are coming through than they used to be, since birds may be coming through much earlier or much later” Birdwatchers are increasingly seeing birds in their area that are usually found elsewhere, Rowden says. And, they are see
22、ing fewer of the birds that usually travel through. “. Just because weve seen these birds year after year doesnt mean theyll always be there. They are declining in numbers because were throwing so many things at them, so we need to do what we can to help them,” Rowden said. At least 314 species of A
23、merican birds are expected to lose 50 percent or more of their range by the end of the century. Those species are listed by the Audubon Society as climate-threatened or endangered, Rowden added. A United Nations science report issued Monday says 1 million species of plants and animals are at risk of
24、 disappearing from Earth. Scientists who issued the report blamed development that has led to loss of habitat as well as climate change, overfishing, pollution and invasive species. Environmentalists say there are a few easy steps people can take to help struggling bird populations. These include pl
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