新标准大学英语综合教程4课后答案.pdf
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1、综 合 教 程 4 课 后 答 案 Handouts and Key to book4 unit 1-4Unit 1Active reading(1)Looking for a job after university?First,get off thesofaBackground informationAbout the passage:This is an article by an EducationCorrespondent,Alexandra Blair,published inSeptember 2008 in The Times,a long-established Britis
2、hquality newspaper.In Europe generally,and inBritain in particular,for a number of years there hasbeen a rising number of students who go to universityand therefore more new graduates seeking employment.However,for many graduates finding a job becameharder in 2008-2009 because the economic downturn-
3、then a recession-meant that many employerswerereducing their workforce.After their final exams,some students rested in the summer before looking forjobsand then they found that it was difficult to findemployment in their field or at the level they wanted.Thearticle addresses the problems of such new
4、 graduateswho might be stuck at home and advises their parentsto be there for their children(ie to be available iftheir children want to talk about the problem or if theyneed help).The article recommends finding work in abar or supermarket rather than sitting unemployedat home since this is more lik
5、ely to lead to betteremployment later.The style is partly of a report,butalsoof a humorous comment for light entertainment(seen inthe jokey language and problem-solving advice toparents).Why finding a job in 2008 is so difficult for universitygraduates?Universities in Europe,particularly in Britain,
6、haveexpanded greatly in the last fifteen years(over 45%ofyoung adults now go on to higher education),so thereare more graduates looking for jobs.This competitivesituation became a lot worse in 2008 onwards with thecredit crunch and economic depression,which meantthat there were fewer jobs available
7、and a rise inunemployment.Thus new graduates have to be activeto seek a job,they need to fill in many applicationforms and try to get job interviews:they won t findemployment by lying on the sofa at home.Culture pointsTraditionally,in the Britishuniversity system,BA and BSc honours degrees areawarde
8、din different categories:a first class degree(writtenusing Roman numbers as I),a second(divided into twosubcategories,written as Ilii and Ilii,which arecalled“a two one and a two two),a third(written III)anda pass degree.Most people get a second.There are alsoordinary degrees with more general cours
9、es of studywithout these categories.Generation Y and Grunt:The main idea here is that thereis a succession of different generations orcohorts of adults who come into the workforce in NorthAmerica which are given different informal namesto characterize them.First,“Baby boomers“were bornin the great i
10、ncrease(the boom)of births after WorldWar II(1946-I960),followed by“Generation Xpeople(born 1960-1980)who were said to bring newattitudes of being independent,informal,entrepreneurial,and expected to get skills and havea career beforethem.GenerationY“or the Millenial Generationv(born 1980s and 1990s
11、 and becoming adult in the newmillenium)are now making up an increasing percentageof the workforce;they are said to be spoilt by dotingparents,to have structured lives,to be used toteamwork and diverse people in a multicultural society.Inthe passage,this generation is now becoming(morphinginto)Gener
12、ation Grunt,which is an ironic namereferring to repetitive,low status,routine ormindless work-this may be the only work availableto somegraduates,who may have to take very ordinary jobs toget experience before they find something moresuitable.Grunt“also refers to coarse behaviour orbad manners and t
13、o the deep sound that is made by a pig;when people“grunt“they express disgust but do notcommunicate with words-this may be how the parentsof new graduates think their children communicate withthem!A refers to a British type of secondaryschool which became popular in thel960s.Before thatthere were ac
14、ademic ugrammar schools“and moregeneral usecondary modern“schools for those who didnot pass the grammar school entrance tests,but thecomprehensive schools were designed for all studentsina social philosophy of bringing diverse studentstogether whether they were academic or not.Thosestudentswho went
15、to a comprehensive school probably felt thathad to study particularly hard(I worked my backsideoff)to get to university,compared to those who wentto grammar schools where all students were academic-comprehensive students felt they had to struggle toget to university.This refers to a large yellow cos
16、tume thatsomeone wears which makes the person look like agiant chicken.Before he became a famous actor,BradPitt once dressed in such a costume when he had a jobadvertising for a restaurant called El Polio Loco(TheCrazy Chicken in Spanish)-the job meant that hehadto walk around the streets 1 ike a ch
17、icken to attractcustomers to come to the restaurant.Language points1 Those memories of forking out thousands of pounds a yearso that he could eat well and go to theodd party,began to fade.Until now.(Para 1)The parents paid a lot of money for their son suniversity fees and living expenses(so that he
18、couldeatwell)and for occasional social events-at graduationthese memories of money were mostly forgottenbecause the parents were proud.But now the parents arethinking of money again because the son doesn thave a job and doesn t seem to be actively seeking one.2 This former scion of Generation Y has
19、morphed overnightinto a member of Generation Grunt.(Para 2)The distinguished son of Generation X(of the parents?generation who worked hard,got jobs,and hadgood careers and expected their son to do the same)haschanged into a member of Generation Grunt-hedoesn t seem to communicate much,lies around an
20、ddoesn t get a job(or can only do a low status routingjob).3 I passed the exams,but at the interviews they accused meof being too detached and talking inlanguage that was too technocratic,which I didnt thinkpossible,but obviously it is.(Para 5)He passed the entrance exams for a government post,buthe
21、 was criticized in the selection interviews:They said he was detached(not personally involved)andtoo technocratic(he used the language of atechnical expert or high authority).As a new graduatehe probably wanted to show his expertise in hislanguage so he can t understand this criticism.4 For the rest
22、 it is 9-to-5 chilling”before heading to the pub.(Para 6)The others who do not have a routine low status job(likestacking goods on a supermarket shelf)chill outall day(they spend their time casually relaxing-theydon t look for work)and go to pub for a drink in theevening.5 I went to a comprehensive
23、and I worked my backside off togo to a good university.(Para 6)He went to a school for students of all abilities(notto a special school for academic students)and so hehad to work very hard to enter a good university:Yourmeans your bottom-the part of yourbody that you sit on-to isinformal and it mean
24、s you work very hard indeed.6.but having worked full-time since leaving school herself,she and her husband find it tricky toadvise him on how to proceed.(Para 7)The mother has always had a full-time job(presumablythe father is also working full-time),so she doesnot have relevant personal experience.
25、For her,it istricky to give advice(difficult to do).Carry on life as normal and dont allow them to abuseyour bank account or sap your reserve ofemotional energy.(Para 11)The advice from Gael Lindenfield here is that parentsshould live as usual.They should neither lettheirchildren spend the parents m
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