TextB 重點(diǎn)詞匯:
1. appoint : 任命,委任
appointment
He‘s just been appointed as director of the publishing division. 他剛被任命為出版社的主任。
2. accessible : adj. 易接近的,能進(jìn)去的,
The problem with some of these drugs is that they are so very accessible . 毒品的問題在于毒品太易得到了。
She has made some attempt to make opera accessible to a wider public. 她曾嘗試著讓歌劇走進(jìn)更廣大的大眾。
派生詞:access n. 通路,入口,接近(或進(jìn)入)的機(jī)會(huì)
3. to amount to : 達(dá)到,總計(jì);相當(dāng)于
The cost amounts to $3,000 . 費(fèi)用總計(jì)3000 美元。
Her words amount to a refusal. 她的話無異于拒絕。
4. to blame sb. for : 為… 責(zé)備某人
Public opinion blames Mrs. Smith for leading the girl astray .
輿論責(zé)怪史密斯夫人把那位姑娘引入歧途。
You can‘t really blame Helen for not wanting to get involved .
海倫不想被卷入其中,你確實(shí)不能為此責(zé)備她。
5. by nature : 生來,天生,
He is an optimist by nature . 他生來一個(gè)樂天派。
He was , by nature , a man of few words. 他是天生沉默寡言的人。
a few+可數(shù)名詞
a little + 不可數(shù)名詞
Text B 重點(diǎn)句子:
Advantage Unfair
According to the write Walter Ellis, author of a book called the Oxbridge Conspiracy, Britain is still dominated by the old-boy network: it isn‘t what you know that matters, but who you know .He claims that at Oxford and Cambridge Universities (Oxbridge for short) a few select people start on an escalator ride which, over the years, carries them to the tops of British privilege and power. His research revealed that the top professions all continue to be dominated, if not 90 percent, then 60 or 65per cent, by Oxbridge graduates.
And yet, says Ellis, Oxbridge graduates make up only two percent of the total number of students who graduate from Britain‘s universities. Other researches also seem to support his belief that Oxbridge graduates start with an unfair advantage in the employment market. In the law, a recently published report showed that out of 26 senior judges appointed to the High Court last year ,all of them went to private schools and 21 of them went to Oxbridge.
But can this be said to amount to a conspiracy? Not according to Dr.John Rae, a former headmaster of one of Britain‘s leading private school ,Westminster:
“I would accept that there was a bias in some key areas of British life , but that bias has now gone .Some time ago-in the 60s and before -entry to Oxford and Cambridge was not entirely on merit .Now, there‘s absolutely no question in any objective observer’s mind that entry to Oxford and Cambridge is fiercely competitive.”
However many would disagree with this. For, although over three-quarters of British pupils are educated in state schools, over half the students that go to Oxbridge have been to private, over half the students that go to Oxbridge have been to private, or “public” school .Is this because pupils from Britain‘s private schools are more intelligent than those from state schools, or are they simply better prepared?
On average ,about £5,000 a year is spent on each private school pupil, more than twice the amount spent on state school pupils .So how can the state schools be expected to compete with the private schools when they have far fewer resources? And how can they prepare their pupils for the special entrance exam to Oxford University, which requires extra preparation, and for which many public school pupils traditionally stay at school and do an additional term ?
Until recently, many blamed Oxford for this bias because of the university‘s special entrance exam (Cam bridge abolished its entrance exam in 1986) But last February ,Oxford University decided to abolish the exam to encourage more state school applicants .From autumn 1996, Oxford University applicants, like applicants to other universities , will be judged only on their A level results and on their performance at interviews , although some departments might still set special tests.
However, some argue that there‘s nothing wrong in having elite laces of learning ,and by their very nature ,these places should not be easily accessible. Most countries are run by an elite and have centers of academic excellence from which the elite are recruited. Walter Ellis accepts that this is true:
“But in France, for example, there are something like 40equivalents of university, which provide this elite through a much broader base ,In America you‘ve got the Ivy League, centred on Harvard and Yale .with Princeton ad Stanford and others. But again, those universities together-the elite universities-are about ten or fifteen in number ,and are being pushed aling from behind by other great universities like ,for example, Chicago and Berkeley, So you don’t have just this narrow concentration of two universities providing a constantly replicating elite.”
When it comes to Oxford and Cambridge being elitist becarse orf he number of private school pupils they accept , Professor Stone of Oxford University argues that there is a simple fact he and his associates cannot ignore:
“If certain schools so better than others then we just have to accept it . We cannot be a place for remedial education. It‘s not what Ocford is there to do .”
However, since academic excellence does appear to be related to the amount of money spent per pupil ,this does seem to imply that Prime Minister John Major‘s vision of Britain as a classless society is still a long way off. And it may be worth remembering that while John Major didn’t himself go to Oxbridge most of his ministers did.
1. Britain is still dominated by the old- boy network; it isn‘t what you know that matters, but who you know.
強(qiáng)調(diào)句,不是你懂得知識(shí)重要,而是你認(rèn)識(shí)誰重要
1. appoint : 任命,委任
appointment
He‘s just been appointed as director of the publishing division. 他剛被任命為出版社的主任。
2. accessible : adj. 易接近的,能進(jìn)去的,
The problem with some of these drugs is that they are so very accessible . 毒品的問題在于毒品太易得到了。
She has made some attempt to make opera accessible to a wider public. 她曾嘗試著讓歌劇走進(jìn)更廣大的大眾。
派生詞:access n. 通路,入口,接近(或進(jìn)入)的機(jī)會(huì)
3. to amount to : 達(dá)到,總計(jì);相當(dāng)于
The cost amounts to $3,000 . 費(fèi)用總計(jì)3000 美元。
Her words amount to a refusal. 她的話無異于拒絕。
4. to blame sb. for : 為… 責(zé)備某人
Public opinion blames Mrs. Smith for leading the girl astray .
輿論責(zé)怪史密斯夫人把那位姑娘引入歧途。
You can‘t really blame Helen for not wanting to get involved .
海倫不想被卷入其中,你確實(shí)不能為此責(zé)備她。
5. by nature : 生來,天生,
He is an optimist by nature . 他生來一個(gè)樂天派。
He was , by nature , a man of few words. 他是天生沉默寡言的人。
a few+可數(shù)名詞
a little + 不可數(shù)名詞
Text B 重點(diǎn)句子:
Advantage Unfair
According to the write Walter Ellis, author of a book called the Oxbridge Conspiracy, Britain is still dominated by the old-boy network: it isn‘t what you know that matters, but who you know .He claims that at Oxford and Cambridge Universities (Oxbridge for short) a few select people start on an escalator ride which, over the years, carries them to the tops of British privilege and power. His research revealed that the top professions all continue to be dominated, if not 90 percent, then 60 or 65per cent, by Oxbridge graduates.
And yet, says Ellis, Oxbridge graduates make up only two percent of the total number of students who graduate from Britain‘s universities. Other researches also seem to support his belief that Oxbridge graduates start with an unfair advantage in the employment market. In the law, a recently published report showed that out of 26 senior judges appointed to the High Court last year ,all of them went to private schools and 21 of them went to Oxbridge.
But can this be said to amount to a conspiracy? Not according to Dr.John Rae, a former headmaster of one of Britain‘s leading private school ,Westminster:
“I would accept that there was a bias in some key areas of British life , but that bias has now gone .Some time ago-in the 60s and before -entry to Oxford and Cambridge was not entirely on merit .Now, there‘s absolutely no question in any objective observer’s mind that entry to Oxford and Cambridge is fiercely competitive.”
However many would disagree with this. For, although over three-quarters of British pupils are educated in state schools, over half the students that go to Oxbridge have been to private, over half the students that go to Oxbridge have been to private, or “public” school .Is this because pupils from Britain‘s private schools are more intelligent than those from state schools, or are they simply better prepared?
On average ,about £5,000 a year is spent on each private school pupil, more than twice the amount spent on state school pupils .So how can the state schools be expected to compete with the private schools when they have far fewer resources? And how can they prepare their pupils for the special entrance exam to Oxford University, which requires extra preparation, and for which many public school pupils traditionally stay at school and do an additional term ?
Until recently, many blamed Oxford for this bias because of the university‘s special entrance exam (Cam bridge abolished its entrance exam in 1986) But last February ,Oxford University decided to abolish the exam to encourage more state school applicants .From autumn 1996, Oxford University applicants, like applicants to other universities , will be judged only on their A level results and on their performance at interviews , although some departments might still set special tests.
However, some argue that there‘s nothing wrong in having elite laces of learning ,and by their very nature ,these places should not be easily accessible. Most countries are run by an elite and have centers of academic excellence from which the elite are recruited. Walter Ellis accepts that this is true:
“But in France, for example, there are something like 40equivalents of university, which provide this elite through a much broader base ,In America you‘ve got the Ivy League, centred on Harvard and Yale .with Princeton ad Stanford and others. But again, those universities together-the elite universities-are about ten or fifteen in number ,and are being pushed aling from behind by other great universities like ,for example, Chicago and Berkeley, So you don’t have just this narrow concentration of two universities providing a constantly replicating elite.”
When it comes to Oxford and Cambridge being elitist becarse orf he number of private school pupils they accept , Professor Stone of Oxford University argues that there is a simple fact he and his associates cannot ignore:
“If certain schools so better than others then we just have to accept it . We cannot be a place for remedial education. It‘s not what Ocford is there to do .”
However, since academic excellence does appear to be related to the amount of money spent per pupil ,this does seem to imply that Prime Minister John Major‘s vision of Britain as a classless society is still a long way off. And it may be worth remembering that while John Major didn’t himself go to Oxbridge most of his ministers did.
1. Britain is still dominated by the old- boy network; it isn‘t what you know that matters, but who you know.
強(qiáng)調(diào)句,不是你懂得知識(shí)重要,而是你認(rèn)識(shí)誰重要