英语精读1

于冰,张莹,张恒,崔永光,韩春侠

目录

  • 1 精读课程导读
    • 1.1 如何学好精读课?
    • 1.2 Asking the right questions
    • 1.3 思维误区与批判式思维
  • 2 Unit 1  Half  a day
    • 2.1 课文导读-形式:小说的人类进化图;Setting&Theme
    • 2.2 Define yourself
    • 2.3 课文音频+课文文本
    • 2.4 单词讲解
    • 2.5 To Make a living or make a Life,that is a question.
    • 2.6 Rip van winkle(children’s poetry)
    • 2.7 Rip van winkle
    • 2.8 Overcoming your inner voice
    • 2.9 Further Reading
    • 2.10 拓展视频学习
    • 2.11 词语辨析练习&翻译练习
    • 2.12 优秀习作
    • 2.13 章节测试
  • 3 Unit 3 Message of the land
    • 3.1 课文导读--Inference:How to read between the lines?
    • 3.2 课文音频
    • 3.3 课前讨论
    • 3.4 课文重点
    • 3.5 Urbanization
    • 3.6 34 Unforgettable Photos Of China’s Massive, Uninhabited Ghost Cities
    • 3.7 Left behind children in China
    • 3.8 Isolated and abandoned the heartbreaking reality of old age in rural China
    • 3.9 NEGLECTED ELDERLY PEOPLE IN CHINA
    • 3.10 Belonging:Home away from home
    • 3.11 chez moi
    • 3.12 China’s ‘Kingdom of Daughters’ draws tourists
    • 3.13 Naxi Minority-Mosuo people
    • 3.14 China celebrates the ‘kingdom of women’
    • 3.15 章节主题presentation
    • 3.16 拓展视频学习
    • 3.17 章节测试
  • 4 Unit 4 The Green Banana
    • 4.1 课文导读
    • 4.2 课文音频
    • 4.3 三人行,必有我师焉。择其善者而从之 ,其不善者而改之。
    • 4.4 Discuss the topics below with a partner
    • 4.5 Online Investigation
    • 4.6 Listen and answer the questions
    • 4.7 Learning moments
    • 4.8 Life-Changing Events That Can Shake Us To Our Core
    • 4.9 Ethnocentrism
    • 4.10 White Supremacy
    • 4.11 However the election ends, white supremacy has already won
    • 4.12 尺有所长寸有所短
    • 4.13 A Debate
    • 4.14 New England-Beacon of light
    • 4.15 拓展视频
    • 4.16 章节测试
  • 5 The kindness of strangers
    • 5.1 课文导读---critical thinking
    • 5.2 课文音频
    • 5.3 课后练习
    • 5.4 Listening---trust or believe?
    • 5.5 Speech on Importance of Trust
    • 5.6 The Importance of Trust
    • 5.7 who do you trust
    • 5.8 Staged crash fraud
    • 5.9 5 signs you've been in a staged car crash
    • 5.10 Trust among Chinese 'drops to record low'
    • 5.11 Chinese distrust strangers, lack shared values
    • 5.12 Why Chinese Don’t Smile at Strangers | “In” & “Out” Groups
    • 5.13 How the sharing economy makes us trust complete strangers
    • 5.14 ‘This kindness made my heart sing’
    • 5.15 Compassion Fatigue & Integrity Crisis
    • 5.16 主题presentation
    • 5.17 拓展视频
    • 5.18 章节测试
  • 6 Clearing in the sky
    • 6.1 课文导读
    • 6.2 课文音频
    • 6.3 About Living
    • 6.4 rugged individualism
    • 6.5 Obama: Obamacare "Rugged Individualism That Defines America"
    • 6.6 Herbert Hoover
    • 6.7 Column: U.S. individualism isn’t rugged, it’s toxic — and it’s killing us
    • 6.8 Puritanism
    • 6.9 american farmer
    • 6.10 拓展视频
    • 6.11 作文点评
    • 6.12 电影推荐-Redemption of Shawshank
    • 6.13 章节测试
  • 7 Unit 6 Christmas Day in the morning
    • 7.1 课文导读
    • 7.2 课文音频
    • 7.3 Origin of Christmas
    • 7.4 Christmas vs Spring Festival
    • 7.5 Charles Dickens-A Christmas Carol
    • 7.6 Christianity & its history
    • 7.7 拓展视频
    • 7.8 章节测试
Trust among Chinese 'drops to record low'

Trust among Chinese 'drops to record low'

Updated: 2013-02-18 01:42

By He Dan (China Daily)

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Trust among people in China dipped to a record low with less than half of respondents to a recent survey feeling that "most people can be trusted" while only about 30 percent trusted strangers.

The Blue Book of Social Mentality, the latest annual report on the social mentality of China, analyzed respondents' trust toward different people and organizations and drew a conclusion that trust in society is poor. The trust level was 59.7 points out of a full mark of 100 points.

In 2010, the trust level was 62.9 points.

The study, conducted by the Institute of Sociology under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, was based on a survey that asked more than 1,900 randomly selected residents in seven cities including Beijing and Shanghai about their opinions on trust.

The latest poll also found that in China, family members are viewed as the most trustworthy, followed by close friends and acquaintances.

It showed that around 30 percent of the people polled trusted strangers on the street and about 24 percent trusted strangers online.

Ma Jinxin, 27, of Beijing, said he learned about the difficulty of building trust with a stranger at a railway station.

Ma said he had returned to Beijing after a business trip and needed to call a friend but his cell phone was dead. He asked a man at the station if he could borrow his phone, but "the guy refused and asked me to look for a public phone", Ma said.

"I think we tend to become suspicious about any stranger who asks for help because we were taught to do so at school and at home.

"When we see people begging on the street, the first thought that occurs to us is that they are cheaters."

Shi Aijun, director of the residential committee at Yulindongli community in Beijing's Fengtai district, said mistrust among people leads to some challenges in her work.

"It's difficult to persuade people to open their door for the census and answer surveys that require them to give personal information," she said.

"However, I think this phenomenon is very normal in cities as people live in a so-called stranger society and when you explain yourself clearly, most people will trust you and cooperate."

When respondents were asked to name institutions that they generally trust, about 69 percent said government, 64 percent public media, 57.5 percent non-governmental organizations, but only about 52 trusted commercial organizations.

The study also found that mistrust among different social groups, particularly between government officials and ordinary citizens as well as doctors and patients, has grown.

An official from Daqing, Heilongjiang province, who spoke to China Daily on condition of anonymity, said forced demolition in China's urbanization is one of the social issues that has resulted in tension between governmental officials and ordinary people.

"In terms of demolition, some residents assumed that parts of their compensation have been embezzled by local officials, so they resort to petition to seek higher subsidies, while some local officials treat them as troublemakers and do everything possible to stop them," he said. "Then mistrust grows stronger."

Wang Junxiu, who co-edited the blue book from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the low level of trust in China has led to many problems such as the waste of resources.

To improve trust, Wang urged the government to work harder to ensure all powers are under close watch and punish people who operate scams.

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