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Unit 1 College cultureVocabulary and structure1 Complete the sentences using the correct form of the words in the box.characterizeindustrialprofounddenounceultimatelylaunchissueprospectprotestbraceletfrustrationopportunitygenderdestructionemphasize1 1The manager decided toa sales promotion.2 2The fate of a nation isdependent upon the quality of its people and its leaders.3 3Hundreds of people took to the streets toagainst police brutalities.4 4The 1980s wereby high inflation and high unemployment.5 5The question of pay is not an importantat the moment.6 6There are far morenow for school leavers than there were 50 years ago.7 7A charmis an item of jewellery worn around the wrist.8 8Hethat all the people taking part in the research were volunteers.9 9Scientific discoveries are often applied toproduction methods.10 10Many species are in danger because of ourof their natural habitat.11 11The scientists found no relationship between weight and the students race or.12 Theand sadness almost overwhelmed me as I felt I was discarded and I thought for sure I would never pick up my pen to write.13 The mothers behaviour has a(n)impact on the developing child.14 China provides the finestfor overseas investors.15 The presidents speech _the killing of hostages by the terrorists.2 Complete the sentences with the correct form of the expressions in the box.by definition; in descending order;give rise to;stand for;make sense; be associated with;pass over;drop out;sit up; form an alliance with;set up;keep off;bring sb / sth to ones / its knees1 1I had toall night writing the report.2 2Her name will everthe womens liberation.3 Innovation and creativity are, _, not orderly, and not regulated.4 The coal miners strikethe economy.5 The companytop US companies in the e-commerce industry.6 The numbers are arranged.7 The doctor has told me tocigarettes and alcohol.8 Wefreedom of speech for everyone regardless of colour, race or creed.9 Kate and her partnertheir own printing business.10 Many studentsbecause they are not prepared for our challenging programme.11 Read this passage and tell me if it.12 Bad conditions woulda lot of crimes.13 Sex is a subject he prefers to _ because it embarrasses him3 Match the words in the box with their synonyms or spectrebelclashheadyprimeprofoundobscurepassionshrinkrepressiveliberaleraradical1 chief_ 8 revolt_2 age_ 9 outlook_3 oppressive_ 10 fight_4 conservative_ 11 exciting_5 clear_ 12 deep_6 love_ 13 enlarge_7 extreme_4 Choose the best word to complete the sentences.1 1Many parents feel _ to pay for at least part of the wedding.(a) honoured (b) obliged(c) offered(d) permitted2 2The new job is not a promotion as such but it brings goodfor the future.(a) priorities (b) proposals (c) purposes (d) prospects3 3These subjects are remarkablyto the mind of the students.(a) stimulating (b) striking(c) boring(d) extreme4 4To say that something is inevitable is tothat it will occur no matter what precedes it.(a) assess(b) assist(c) assert(d) assign5 5It is a(n)feeling to unload the burden that has been weighing us down for years.(a) illuminating (b) appealing (c) liberating (d) forbidding6 We operate in 100 countries withbusinesses in Europe, North and South America, Australasia and Africa.(a) well-balanced (b) well-built (c) well-founded (d) well-established7 Were looking for dynamic individuals with diverse backgrounds andabout doing business.(a) emotional (b) passionate (c) interested (d) expressive8 I am able to attend an interview at any time that isfor you. And if appointed, I can start working within one month.(a) convenient (b) handy(c) proper(d) satisfying9 While I had other serious injuries, my legs were myconcern.(a) primitive (b) perfect(c) prime(d) private10 If your prices arewe would expect to conduct a significant volume of business.(a) competent (b) commercial (c) common (d) competitive11 The report shows that there have beenimprovements in some areas in the past ten years.(a) dreadful(b) dramatic (c) domestic (d) doubtful12 Hisposes the question of whether we now need a deputy leader.(a) residence (b) resignation (c) resistance (d) reliance13 The novel praises the _spirit of the hero against the old society.(a) rebel(b) reluctant (c) obedient (d) oppositeTranslation1 Complete the sentences by translating the Chinese in brackets into English.1 We will naturally(把現(xiàn)代奧林匹克運(yùn)動(dòng)與聯(lián)系起來(lái))Pierre de Coubertin.2 Since the end of the Cold War,(重大而深刻的變化)have taken place in the international situation.3 It is a formidable task, but we are(決不退縮)4 No one has yet come up with(一個(gè)令人滿意的定義)of happiness.5 It(買那件貴的外套毫無(wú)道理)when these cheaper ones are just as good.2 Translate the paragraph into English, using the words and expressions in the box.differ from to; be assumed to; be responsible for; focus on; rather than;slow down; up to; assert; take the initiative to do; keep up盡管各個(gè)校園的大學(xué)文化存在差異,但是也有許多相同之處。例如,學(xué)生們被當(dāng)作成年人看待。他們需要自己解決問(wèn)題,而且老師更注意與學(xué)生,而不是與家長(zhǎng)共同解決問(wèn)題。如果你需要幫助或者需要老師放慢課堂講解進(jìn)度,你必須自己提出要求并發(fā)問(wèn)。有的大學(xué)課堂進(jìn)度很快,你必須爭(zhēng)取主動(dòng)跟上大家。 3 Translate the sentences into Chinese.1 Generation X, commonly abbreviated to Gen X, is a term used to refer to people who were born and grew up during the later years of, and in the decade following the Cold War. 2 Because of the increasing rate of divorce and number of working mums, Gen X got the traits of independence, resilience and adaptability.3 Gen X saw the inception of the home computer, the rise of videogames, and the Internet as a tool for social and commercial purposes.4 Every student in College Internship Programme in this university has a story to tell about overcoming adversity.5 College students from many universities in the city joined the demonstration; they carried a large, blue banner marked with their opposition to the war.Reading comprehension (Skimming and scanning)In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions. For Questions 1-7, choose the best answer from the four choices marked (a), (b), (c) and (d). For Questions 8-10, complete the sentences with the information given in the passage.Binge drinking entrenched in college cultureIts been nearly a year since 19-year-old Samantha Spady was found dead of alcohol poisoning in a fraternity house (美國(guó)大學(xué)生聯(lián)誼會(huì)會(huì)堂)at Colorado State University. Spadys blood alcohol content was 0.436 - five times the legal limit - and investigators say she consumed up to 40 drinks the day before she died.Spadys death was far from the only alcohol-related campus tragedy last year. Each year, college drinking contributes to an estimated 1,400 student deaths, 500,000 injuries and 70.000 cases of sexual assault or date rape, according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.Government and universities are pouring millions of dollars into programmes to crack down on campus binge drinking, but theres been little change in students behaviour over the past decade.Many experts studying alcohol use on college campuses say excessive drinking is so deeply established in the culture, only a radical shift in students attitude towards drinking will help.What is binge drinking?Spadys parents, Patty and Rick, have started a group called the SAM (Student Alcohol Management) Spady Foundation, whose mission is to educate students and parents about risky alcohol use.Patty Spady says she and her husband regret daily that they never talked to Sam - a former homecoming queen and high school class president - about the fact that heavy drinking could be deadly. But she also admits that she wasnt totally aware of the dangers herself.Binge drinking is commonly defined as having five or more drinks in one sitting, and the number of college students considered binge drinkers - around 44 per cent - has stayed about the same for the past decade. But many college students say that definition of binge drinking seems ridiculous.Barrett Seaman, a former Time magazine editor, observed student behaviour on 12 college campuses for his recently released book, Binge: What Your College Student Wont Tell You. He found that many students are drinking far more than five drinks over the course of a night.Students are routinely knocking back 20 shots a night, Seaman said.Pregaming and other drinking ritualsSeaman, who admits he did his fair share of drinking at Hamilton College in upstate New York in the 1960s, says he was struck by the intensity of student drinking today.One common ritual he saw was pregaming, where underage students sat in their dorm rooms or apartments and drank massive amounts of alcohol, usually hard liquor, in order to catch a buzz before going out for the evening.Seaman says that because drinking is illegal for so many college students, they are forced to do it covertly - and often dangerously - because theres no telling when they will get another drink as they roam from party to party.It is cool to be ostentatiously (夸耀地)drunk, he said. It shows youre part of the elite who has access to alcohol.Dr Hoyt Alverson, an anthropology professor at Dartmouth University, had his undergraduate students spend three years studying fellow students social behaviour at the school. Alcohol, he says, is inextricably linked with social life on campus.His study indicates that first-year students especially fear being alone in their new environment, and drinking is simply the best and easiest way of forming friendships, competing, blowing off steam. fitting in and getting ahead amongst ones peers.Harm reduction and social normingColorado State Universitys Alcohol Task Force kicked into high gear after Spadys death. But the campus didnt disband all fraternities or ban alcohol in general. Instead, CSU and other colleges are hoping that educating students about the harmful consequences of heavy drinking - like sexual assault and alcohol poisoning - will be more successful.Many colleges harm reduction programmes include peer-education groups and tips on staying safe while drinking that go far beyond a dont drink and drive message. They are telling women students to stick together at parties and never leave a friend behind, and how to recognize if someone is in physical danger from drinking.CSU is also trying out a social norms campaign, which attempts to correct students misperceptions about fellow students behaviour.In a sense, social norming is peer pressure in reverse. The theory is that students overestimate how much their peers drink, and that by giving them accurate information about campus norms, it will encourage them to change their behaviour. And according to the National Social Norms Resource Center, campuses that have used social norms programmes have seen rates of heavy episodic alcohol consumption drop significantly.Some call for a culture changeIn American culture, college students occupy that vague place between adolescence and adulthood, and in many ways, drinking, partying and breaking the rules are part of this transitional growing-up period.So while drinking at college is nothing new, what is new is the way todays students are doing it.Seaman and Alverson agree that raising the drinking age to 21 has been counterproductive (適得其反). By making it illegal to drink, students behaviour is repressed and driven underground. Their drinking becomes secretive, intensified and, in many cases, dangerous.Besides going to several American campuses, Seaman also visited McGill university in Montreal - a college that more than 2,000 American students attend. The drinking age there is 18, and Seaman said the attitude towards drinking at McGill is far more civilized, even among American students.Both Seaman and Alverson say that changing the drinking age back to 18 would be a good start in changing campus drinking culture. If you treat them as adults, theyll act like adults, Seaman said. But they also say that a radical behaviour and attitude shift would take time.1 1From the passage, we can learn that binge drinking.(a) (a)is a campus tragedy(b) (b)has changed students behaviour(c) (c)is something new in the culture(d) (d)causes a lot of campus crimes2 2Samantha Spadys parents regret daily because _.(a) (a)their daughter used to be a good girl(b) (b)they think they are partly responsible for their daughters death(c) (c)their daughter never listened to them(d) (d)their daughter was too young to realize heavy drinking is deadly3 3Pregaming is a drinking ritual among college students, where they.(a) (a)sit in their dorm rooms or apartments(b) (b)have their fair shares of drinking before going out of the party(c) (c)make up, in order to be cool before going out for the evening(d) (d)drink massive amounts of alcohol before going out for the party4 In the sentence Seaman says that because drinking is illegal for so many college students, they forced to do it covertly ., the word covertly is closest in meaning to.(a) secretly(b) openly(c) illegally (d) madly5 According to Dr Alverson, first-year students drinking is due to the fact that _.(a) they are under great pressure of the study(b) they feel alone in their new environment(c) it is a way to express their feelings(d) it is a social norm6 In order to reduce the harm of heavy drinking, CSU _.(a) disbands all fraternities(b) tries out a social norms campaign(c) bans alcohol in general on campus(d) raises the age of drinking7 What can we learn from Seamans word If you treat them as adults, theyll act like adults?(a) Raising drinking age is very important.(b) Cutting down the drinking age will make students realize they are adults.(c) Respect is more important than restriction.(d) Drinking age is the key factor for college drinking.8 The mission of the SAM is to.9 Binge drinking is commonly defined as.10 The theory of social norming is that by_it will encourage them to change their behaviour.Reading comprehension (Reading in depth)1 There is a passage with ten blanks. You are requested to select one word for each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the passage. Read the passage through carefully before making your choices. Each choice in the bank is identified by a letter. You may not use any of the words in the bank more than once.College culture is different from high school culture. In high school, student behaviour is often closely controlled. In college, students are assumed to be (1).In high school, the only way to get out of a class is to drop out of school or create a huge (2).In college, students often sign up for extra classes to shop around, and they can drop well into the semester. But if they stop coming they will not necessarily be dropped; many college teachers let non-attending students deal with their own paperwork, or it doesnt get done. Many students who stop (3) _and neglect to drop get Fs.In high school, students are forced to stay in school and (4)for cutting class. In college, students choose to come to class - or not. They are considered adults who take the responsibility for the (5)_of their own actions in terms of grades or later earning power.In high school, teachers often end up being disciplinarians (維持紀(jì)律的人). Discipline problems are rare in college, and teachers can focus more on teaching. If discipline problems arise, (6) _students can quickly and easily be (7)_from class so the focus on learning is retained.In high school, teachers are under (8)to teach to tests and to (9)state standards. In college, there may be considerable variation between teachers within the same discipline; being (10) _to many different styles of teaching is part of the experience, and there is wider latitude for teachers to express their views and opinions in the classroom. Colleges value academic freedom.(a) attending(b) fuss(c) discipline(d) established(e) common(f) adults(g) pleasure(h)consequences(i) conventional(j) removed(k) pressure(1) punished(m) disruptive(n) prevented(o)exposed2 There is a passage followed by five questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked (a), (b), (c) and (d). You should decide on the best choice.It takes a very delicate balance of social life and academics to be successful in college. This isnt an easy task and even more difficult for freshman. The sudden influx (大量涌入) of personal freedom when it comes to their academic responsibilities seems fantastic at first. A day full of classes can easily be followed by two days with only two classes. This large amount of free time is a fools paradise of postponement (延緩) to those who arent used to a college schedule.There are a few things to keep i

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