Lesson 94 Part Ⅰ
Lesson 94
Part Ⅰ Warming-up Exercises
Note-taking: Scholarship Examination Timetables
January 1983
Grade 12 Scholarship Examination Timetables
Score: _____
Lesson 94 Part Ⅱ Why Go To School ? ( Ⅰ )
Lesson 94
Part Ⅱ Why Go To School ? (Ⅰ)
Exercises:
Lesson 94 Part Ⅲ
Lesson 94
Part Ⅲ Why Go To School ? (Ⅱ)
Exercises:
Lesson 94 Part I
Lesson 94
Part Ⅰ Warming-up Exercises
Note-taking: Scholarship Examination Timetables
Training Focus:
Note-taking: important facts: 1. subjects 2. time 3. numbers Directions: You are going to hear the examination timetables of a high school. Listen carefully. Note down the courses offered, the time and the room numbers.
Key:
January 1983
Grade 12 Scholarship Examination Timetables
Lesson 94 Part Ⅱ Why Go To School ? ( Ⅰ )
Lesson 94
Part Ⅱ Why Go To School ? (Ⅰ)
Ex.
Directions: Listen to this part of the interview carefully.
Write down the questions raised by the interviewer and then re-state the essential points of these questions with the fewest words. Listen again. Write the answers given by the interviewee in note form. The first two questions and answers are given for your reference.
Key: 3. Q: (An efficient way ?)
A: fairly efficiently / great problem / very large classes/reduce by half/more individual attention
4. Q: Do you think the subjects that children study today are adapted to present-day society ? (Adapted to society ?)
A: would be good / more children / opportunity of learning about society / gradual extension of oneself
Tapescript:
Why Go To School ? (Ⅰ) (2′55″)
Matthew: Lesley, you're a teacher. How does the English school system work ?
Lesley: Um, well, first of all most children start school at the age of five and they can't leave school until the age of sixteen, which is just, you know, the age group has just been recently raised. Um…they will go to a primary school from the age of five until eleven…um, and previously they used to take an “eleven----plus” examination which would then determine whether they would go to um a grammar school or alternatively a secondary modern school. But now we have a…a new system where children aren't divided off at the age of eleven and will go into a comprehensive system of schooling, and …will do the things that they're best able to do at certain ages and if they want to take the exams they are able to at…at the age of sixteen.
Matthew: Do you think that's a…an improvement to the system ?
Lesley: Well,…mm, theoretically…it's supposed to be much better because it gives…it stops separating children off at the age of eleven and gives them a better chance, and in fact what usually happens is that those children who wouldn't…er who would have gone to a grammar school tend to he at the top end of the comprehensive system, and those that would have gone to secondary modern school find themselves at the lower levels of the school.
Matthew: Do you think that the present school system is an efficient way of educating children ?
Lesley: Mm…well if you, if you accept that, you know, there have to be schools, it seems to work fairly efficiently. Of course one of our great problems in England is that we have very large classes and …um, it would be very nice if we could reduce that by at least half instead of there being forty children in a class, there are only twenty…mm and so that each child gets more individual attention so that their own particular needs just aren't passed over.
Matthew: Do you think the…the subjects that er…children study today are adapted to present-day society ?
Lesley: It would be very good if…er, more children at school had the opportunity of learning about the society they live in…in economic terms and in social terms so that they are much more aware of the problems that we face today. But I also think that education isn't only something that has to be…has to be relevant…um, I think education can be just a…a gradual extension of oneself, and I don't think it's im…important for subjects to he seen only in terms of how useful they are when you leave school…but how much you enjoy them and how much they mean to you.
Lesson 94 Part Ⅲ Why Go To School ? ( Ⅱ )
Lesson 94
Part Ⅲ Why Go To School ? (Ⅱ)
Ex.
Directions: Listen to this part of the interview carefully. Write down the questions raised by the interviewer and then re-state the essential points of these questions with the fewest words. Listen again. Write the answers given by the interviewee in note form. Some questions and answres are given for your reference.
Key: 5. A: English, Maths, Art, History, Religious Studies, Physics/9 in all
6. Q: You don't have to take every subject in the school ? (Take every subject ?) A: no
7. Q: What about games and drama and things like that ? (Games & drama ?) A: hours games a week / 1 hour Social Studies / Drama, Ecology, Sociology, etc.
8. A: gain a certain amount of knowledge/wish broader/instead of passing exams only, broaden outlook
9. Q: Do you have any specific ways in which you think time at school could be improved ? (Ways to improve ?) A: more encouragement / doing things for their own sake / getting satisfaction / not rat race / get value out of it
10. A: starts the moment born/going on all around / not just in a school building / part of whole life
Tapescript:
Why Go To School ? (Ⅱ) (3' 18 ")
Matthew: David, what would you do in an average day at school ?
David: Um … it mainly consists of English and Maths, which takes up a lot of the lesson time and then …um … like on Mondays, for example …er, we would do … er, I don't know, Maths, English, Art, History and then Tuesdays would be some more English, probably … um, History, Religious Studies, Physics, whatever I'm taking now which is ‘O’levels, which is … is nine subjects in all.
Matthew: I see, so you can choose … the subject you want to take for ‘O’ level …You don't have to take …every subject in the school ?
David: No,… no, no.
Matthew: What about games …er and drama and things like that ?
David: We have about an hour and a half of games a week, and for about an hour a week we …do a …a thing known as er … Social Studies, which is um … it's kind of a cross-section of… er what life will be after we…we leave school …Um …where we do Drama…a …we study Ecology, Sociology et cetera… Um, it's not an ‘O’ level, we don't take an ‘O’ level in it, it's just for er…experience.
Matthew: Janet, do you… think that your daughters gain a tremendous amount from their education ?
Janet: I think they… they gain a certain amount of um …necessary knowledge, yes, but I wish it was broader. I wish that instead of being driven towards passing exams that they had, certainly at this stage of adolescence, the chance to really broaden their outlook completely and not feel this necessity to read towards passing an exam, to collecting a piece of paper at the end of it.
Matthew: Er…do you have any specific ways in which you think… time at school could be improved ?
Janet: Yes, I think there could be a … a lot more encouragement in doing things for their own sake, for getting the satisfaction out of them…um, rather than this ‘rat race’ that everybody's forced into … um …for what is achieved at the end. I think it …a lot more should be done to encourage people to get the value out of it themselves.
Matthew: Do you think that er…education is just something that takes place inside a school building, or is it a… an activity which takes place not only outside but right the way through your life ?
Janet; I think it starts the moment you're born, and …er…that it's going on all around you. It's not just taking place in a school building …um it should be … part of your whole life.