
新标准大学英语(第二版)综合教程2-Unit-1-B篇练习答案及课文翻译PPT.pptx
123页1,,Contents,Active Reading 2,2,,Listen to a VOA education report. Task 1: Whether the statements are true (T) or false (F). 1. In the United States, the legal age to drink alcohol is 21 one of the highest in the world. 2. All American colleges require all first-year students to take an alcohol prevention and education program, often given online. 3. Susan Davis, a university lawyer, says campus police and local police report underage drinking violations to the parents. Scripts,Warming Up,T,F,F,3,,Task 2: Listen again and answer the questions. 1. What do American college students usually do during the spring break? 2. What will happen to the students who are found to drink in a “zero-tolerance” school? 3. What punishment do the American citizens face for underage drinking in Virginia? 4. If international students are involved in underage drinking in Virginia, what may happen to them in the future? Scripts,Warming Up,4,,1. What do American college students usually do during the spring break? Students might go home to their families or spend a week partying on a warm beach with no parents around. 2. What will happen to the students who are found to drink in a “zero-tolerance” school? Parents are informed of violations and students may be suspended.,Warming Up,5,,3. What punishment do the American citizens face for underage drinking in Virginia? That includes a fine of 500 dollars or50 hours of community service. But first offenders might be given a chance to complete an alcohol education program instead. 4. If international students are involved in underage drinking in Virginia, what may happen to them in the future? Even minor violations stay on a students permanent immigration record. He says international students should know that this can affect them in the future if they try to re-enter the United States.,Warming Up,6,,Scripts This is the VOA Special English Education Report. Most American colleges and universities take a spring break. Students might go home to their families or spend a week partying on a warm beach with no parents around. That is the popular image, at least. In the United States, the legal age to drink alcohol is 21 one of the highest in the world. Americans debate whether it should be lowered, or whether young drinkers would only drink more. In parts of Europe, the legal drinking age for beer, and sometimes hard liquor, is 16. Yet France may raise the age limit for beer and wine sales to 18, the same as for hard liquor there. Rules on alcohol differ from college to college in the United States.,Warming Up,7,,Many schools require all first-year students to take an alcohol prevention and education program, often given online. Some have a “zero tolerance” policy where alcohol is banned from all buildings. Parents are informed of violations and students may be suspended. At the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, permission is needed to serve alcohol at any event on campus. But alcohol is banned in first-year dorms where most students are under 21 anyway. Susan Davis, a university lawyer, says campus police and local police report underage drinking violations to administrators. The university judicial committee decides punishment on a case by case basis. For example, the committee might suspend or expel a student. It might require an alcohol education program. Or it might just give a warning.,Warming Up,8,,Jon Zug is a prosecutor in Albemarle County, where the university is located. He says international students would face the same punishment as American citizens for underage drinking in Virginia. That includes a fine of 500 dollars or50 hours of community service. But first offenders might be given a chance to complete an alcohol education program instead. Schools have to report legal violations by international students to the Department of Homeland Security. International adviser Richard Tanson at the University of Virginia says even minor violations stay on a students permanent immigration record. He says international students should know that this can affect them in the future if they try to re-enter the United States. And thats the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Nancy Steinbach. Earlier reports in our Foreign Student Series can be found at . Im Steve Ember.,Warming Up,9,,Text,The post-everything generation,Background information,Go to the text,10,,Text,Background information Our text is adapted from a 2007 essay by Nicholas Handler, then a junior at Yale University, who wrote it for The New York Times college essay competition, “Whats the Matter with College?” Handlers essay won the first prize. Nicholas Handler was then majoring in history and active in social justice organizations and hoped to become a human rights lawyer.,11,,The post-everything generation Frank Thomas is a sophomore at Princeton, majoring in literary theory. He hopes to become a human rights lawyer.,Text,12,,1 I never hoped to understand the nature of my generation or how American。
