大学英语A1

陈度梅

目录

  • 1 FRESH START: TOWARD A BRIGHTER FUTURE FOR ALL
    • 1.1 INTRODUCTION
    • 1.2 Speaking Contest
    • 1.3 LEAD-IN
    • 1.4 GLOBAL READING
    • 1.5 READING SKILLS:previewing
    • 1.6 INTENSIVE READING AND CRITICAL THINKING
    • 1.7 ANALYSIS OF LANGUAGE POINTS
    • 1.8 RHETOTICAL DEVICES AND WRITING
    • 1.9 TRANSLATION
    • 1.10 EXTENDED READING
    • 1.11 PRESENTATION
    • 1.12 COLLEGE ENGLISH TEST (CET) Band 4
    • 1.13 KEY TO EXERCISES
  • 2 LOVING PARENTS,LOVING CHILDREN:A CHILD'S CLUTTER AWAITS AN ADULT'S RETURN
    • 2.1 LEAD-IN:Parental love
    • 2.2 READING SKILLS:Read in thought groups
    • 2.3 GLOBAL READING
    • 2.4 STRUCTURE ANALYSIS AND WRITING
    • 2.5 INTENSIVE READING
    • 2.6 THEME AND CULTURAL EXPLORATION
    • 2.7 TRANSLATION
    • 2.8 PRESENTATION
    • 2.9 KEY TO EXERCISES
  • 3 DIGITAL CAMPUS:COLLEGE LIFE IN THE INTERNET AGE
    • 3.1 LEAD-IN
    • 3.2 READING SKILLS:Distingushing between facts and opinions
    • 3.3 GLOBAL READING
    • 3.4 STRUCTURE ANALYSIS
    • 3.5 INTENSIVE READING
    • 3.6 THEME EXPLORATION
    • 3.7 TRANSLATION
    • 3.8 PRESENTATION
    • 3.9 KEY TO EXERCISES
  • 4 LISTENING COMPREHENSION(CET Band 4)
    • 4.1 NEWS REPORTS 三个新闻听力
    • 4.2 LONG CONVERSATIONS 两个长对话
    • 4.3 PASSAGES 三个篇章听力
    • 4.4 SCRIPT(听力原文) AND SKILLS
    • 4.5 整套试卷
    • 4.6 LINKING
    • 4.7 视听说教程音频
    • 4.8 PRINCESS DAIRY
  • 5 HEROES OF OUR TIME:HEROES AMONG US
    • 5.1 LEAD-IN
    • 5.2 READING SKILLS:scanning and skimming
    • 5.3 GLOBAL READING
    • 5.4 STRUCTURE ANALYSIS
    • 5.5 INTENSIVE READING
    • 5.6 THEME EXPLORATION
    • 5.7 TRANSLATION
    • 5.8 LINKING
    • 5.9 PRESENTATION
    • 5.10 KEY TO EXERCISES
    • 5.11 FLIPPED
  • 6 LISTENING COMPREHENSION 2
    • 6.1 PRACTICE
    • 6.2 TEST 1&2的音频
  • 7 优秀作品展示
    • 7.1 SPEECH
    • 7.2 SONG
    • 7.3 DUBBING
    • 7.4 BOOK READING
  • 8 FINAL EXAMINATION
    • 8.1 期末考试说明
GLOBAL READING
  • 1 Text reading
  • 2 Translation
  • 3 数字化校园

College life in the Internet age



   1 The college campus, long a place of scholarship and frontiers of new technology, is being transformed into a new age of electronics by a fleet of laptops, smartphones and connectivity 2hours a day.


2 On a typical modern-day campus, where every building and most outdoor common areas offer wireless Internet access, one student takes her laptop everywhere. In class, she takes notes with it, sometimes instant-messaging or emailing friends if the professor is less than interesting. In her dorm, she instant-messages her roommate sitting just a few feet away. She is tied to her smartphone, which she even uses to text a friend who lives one floor above her, and which supplies music for walks between classes.


 3 Welcome to college life in the 21st century, where students on campus are electronically linked to each other, to professors and to their classwork 24/7 in an ever-flowing river of information and communication. With many schools offering wireless Internet access anywhere on campus, colleges as a group have become the most Internet-accessible spots in the world.


Students say they really value their fingertip-access to the boundless amount of information online, and the ability to email professors at 2 a.m. and receive responses the next morning. "I always feel like I have a means of communication - in class and out of class," says one engineering major.


5 Many are using smartphones, not only to create their own dialects when texting, but also to do more serious work, such as practicing foreign languages and analyzing scripts from their theater classes. In a university class on the history of American radio, students use smartphones to record their own radio shows. The course instructor said, "It's adding to students' sense of excitement about the subject," Professors have been encouraged to tape their lectures and post them online. "We realized there might be some potential for a device that could get attention and encourage sophisticated thinking," says one leading university director.


6 For most undergraduates, non-stop Internet connectivity is the fuel of college life. More than just toys, these instruments are powerful tools for the storage and management of virtually every kind of information. And as more people around the world adopt these instruments, they are becoming indispensable. So, students should use the wonders of the Internet to do homework, review lecture outlines, take part in class discussions and network online with their friends. But in doing so,students must remember to regulate and balance their time. Too much time online can mean too little time in real-life studying or exercising or visiting with friends. Students should not let the Internet world on their computer screens take them away from the real world outside.


Colleges began embracing Internet access in the mid-990s, when many began wiring dorms with high-speed connections. In the past few years, schools have taken the lead by turning their campuses into bubbles of Wi-Fi networks. In fact, a recent study in the US found that information technology accounted for 5% to 8% of college budgets, up from an estimated 2%to 3% in the mid-980s.


On one campus, students use Wi-Fi to fire off instant messages, review their homework assignments, and check their bank balances. Just nine miles down the highway, another university had been feeling a bit of a technology inferiority complex. To compensate, it spent tens of thousands of dollars to give every one of its incoming freshmen a free AppleiPad.


9 Some universities even require that all students own or lease a laptop. Some say the focus on technology prepares students for a wired world. "You have to keep up with the rest of the world. Students expect high-bandwidth information, and if you can't deliver it, you're at a competitive disadvantage, states a university president.


10 Other colleges are straining to stand out from their peers. The race to attract students with the most modem networks and the hottest systems has reached fever pitch. Some business majors are receiving free portable computers. In an always-connected mode, they can get information anytime and anywhere they need. One university is even giving its freshmen new smartphones to enrich the student experience and prepare them for success in a rapidly changing world.


11 For those who prefer to travel laptop-free,colleges supply several computer labs. And for students who study late into the night, many have set up 24-hour repair shops where students can get their laptops fixed by the next day and receive a loaner in the meantime.


12 Colleges around the world have been replacing their computer systems for the past decade, in large part to provide students with the most advanced free system. The anywhere-anytime access has already yielded amazing benefits in education. With the widespread application of computer technologies, we are going to produce a generation of problem-solvers and intelligent thinkers, which is indispensable for the future of the world.