新编英语教程 3 Unit 2 拓展知识.doc
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1、Unit 2 Unwillingly on HolidayFurther development1. Understanding of Text II, knowing more information on April Fools Day.2. Oral work: on the train3. Interaction activities: an unforgettable experience4. Precis writing: unwillingly on holiday5. Supplementary readingChild Abuse: How Much Longer?We al
2、l know that prevention is better than cure, but provincial ministries of health devote less than 1% of their budgets to prevention of mental health problems. Most of the money goes toward treatment. We want teenagers unprepared for parenthood to stop having children, but we are unwilling to invest i
3、n family planning, educational and preventive services. The result: Teenage pregnancy in Canada has sharply risen in recent years, an increase from 39,340 in 1987 to 45,771 in 1995.We know that about 26% of Canadian children experience behavioural, learning, emotional or social problems, but nobody
4、seems to panic. We understand that brain malleability is greatest during the first years of life, but we spend most of our economic and social resources on adults and seniors. We have social funds for unemployed people and pension plans for the retired, but there is no comparable fund for disadvanta
5、ged children.We hear the economy is doing very well, but the number of children at risk goes up all the time. While provincial and federal budgets are being balanced, children continue to suffer, perhaps more than before. A child is reported missing in Canada about every 9 minutes, for a total of mo
6、re than 56,000 cases a year. Many of these children leave their homes to escape abuse. Close to a million and a half, or 21% of Canadas children live in poverty, half a million more than in 1989, when the entire House of Commons voted to end child poverty by the year 2000.We want communities to cont
7、ribute to the well-being of children and youth, but instead of supporting formal and informal services we cut their funding. Recently, the National Forum on Health, the Standing Committee on Health of the House of Commons, Health Canada, the National Crime Prevention Council, and the Canadian Associ
8、ation of Public Health, to name but a few, affirmed the importance of strong communities for childrens health. These claims are at odds with prevailing policies of social disinvestment.We are proud of the international reputation of Canada in promoting childrens rights, but the country has higher ra
9、tes of child poverty than most industrialized nations. In a report entitled Towards Well-Being, the Standing Committee on Health of the House of Commons stated that poverty among children in Canada is especially troublesome when compared with the rate in other industrialized countries. The rate of c
10、hild poverty in Canada after government redistribution is four times the rate in Sweden, twice as high as in France and Germany, and 1.4 times the rate in Great Britain. Only in the United States is the rate higher than in Canada.We require a license to fish, but have no standards to ensure that par
11、ents know how to treat their children. We watch ads to prevent cruelty against animals and trees, but see no such thing to stop child abuse.So what, you might say, life is full of contradictions, and besides, were not perfect. True, were not perfect, but unless like Rip Van Winkle, weve been peacefu
12、lly sleeping for the past 20 years, we must be disturbed by these contradictions.Child abuse happens every day, in every community. Yet public concern is only sporadic, elicited mainly by reports of brutal assaults against children. Child maltreatment, however, is not just about brutality; it is als
13、o about subtle but protracted and piercing pain, about feeling lonely, abandoned, betrayed, rejected and unworthy. Daily humiliation, however, is not newsworthy. Childrens silent anguish is not flashy enough for the nightly news. Albeit poignant reports on the subject have been published and hotly d
14、ebated, they have been only temporarily considered and permanently shelved. Lack of sustained attention to child abuse and neglect notwithstanding, the problem persists, and it is close to all of us.Maltreatment is about trust betrayed, love warped, and opportunities lost; it is about stealing happi
15、ness and depriving joy; it is about exploiting power and denigrating others. Abuse is about a vicious cycle that affects victims, their offsprings, and society at large. While some children develop resiliency and overcome abusive backgrounds to become loving, caring, and productive citizens, many ot
16、hers succumb under the weight of the trauma and develop psychological problems. Crime and delinquency, which cost Canadians approximately $46 billion annually, have been linked to histories of abuse. The enormous price of punitive and rehabilitative services drains our social wealth to the point tha
17、t little is left for preventing abuse from occurring in the first place.The answer: Address the root causes of the problem and interrupt the vicious cycle. The barrier: Cynicism about governments and communities abilities to stop abuse. The evidence: Many emotional, cognitive, behavioural, and socia
18、l problems, including child maltreatment, can be significantly prevented. Research shows that some prevention programs are effective and save governments up to 7 dollars for each dollar invested.Unless we are determined to eradicate child abuse, we can expect the cost of remedial and therapeutic ser
19、vices associated with it to go up endlessly. The more abuse there is, the stronger the call for reactive services, and fewer the dollars for proactive interventions. It is only by a massive investment in prevention that we can reasonably expect less suffering. Such an investment, while costly at fir
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