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Experiencing English 2

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Title: Experiencing English 2


1
Experiencing English 2
2
Unit 2Jobs and Careers
3
Unit 2Jobs and Careers
In this unit, you will
? first listen, and then learn to ask about job
opportunities and go for job interviews ? read
about online job applications and first job
experiences ? learn new words and expressions ?
write your own résumé ? visit Culture Salon for
some new terms in careers ? check goals.
4
home
Teaching procedures I.
Listen and Talk
Lead in
Dialogue Samples
II. Read and Explore
Passage A
Think About It
Related Information
Notes to the Text
Summary of the Text
Words and Expressions
Understanding the Text
III. Culture Salon
5
Unit 2Jobs and Careers
Part I
Listen
Talk
6
Unit 2Jobs and Careers
Directions Listen to the following passage and
try to fill the missing words. Click here to
listen.
What kind of job are you looking
for? The classified ads are a good place to begin
a 1.___ for employment. They are a great resource
to learn about what companies look for in
employees and 2. ___ a little information about
the company as well.Applying and interviewing for
a job requires skills worth developing.Being able
to 3. ___   one's strengths, effectively
communicating with 4. ___ , having a desire to
learn more about the 5. ___ , and displaying
enthusiasm can sometimes make up for
inexperience. As you look at the pictures, think
about the different 6. ___   each profession or
vocation requires. A construction worker, a
waiter and a farmer may not need higher education
for their pursuits, but it 7. ___   helps.
Secretarial work requires less education than
being a teacher or a doctor, but each job is
important in society. While
becoming a teacher requires a 8. ___   of four
years study at a university, teaching entails
constant learning. Understanding deeply the
subject matter being taught and discovering the
9. ___   of students are just two areas of 10.
___   for teachers. Many studies continue to
research how to effectively teach and how to
teach students to effectively learn. In one way
or another, we are all teachers.
7
  • keys
  • 1. search 2.offer
  • 3. identify 4. confidence
  • 5. employer 6. qualifications
  • 7. certainly 8. minimum
  • 9. learning style 10. importance

8
  • Dialogue Samples
  • Dialogue 1
  • Asking About a job Opening
  • A applicant calls a
  • company asking about
  • a job for a clerk typist.

Applicant
personnel
9
  • Dialogue 1
  • Asking About a job Opening
  • Key words and patterns
  • ? qualifications for the job. ?
    temporary or permanent job? ? The starting
    salary is 1200 per month, plus the basic
    benefits such as health insurance, sick leave,
    and paid vacation .

10
  • Dialogue 2
  • Interviewing for a job
  • the personnel manger
  • interviews the applicant
  • about his application
  • for a nurse assistant.

11
  • Dialogue 2
  • Interviewing for a job
  • Key words and patterns
  • Do you have any experience in this type of work?
  • Why did you leave your last job?
  • What are your future career plans?
  • Do you want full-time or part-time work?
  • What are your strengths?
  • What salary do you expect?

12
Unit 2Jobs and Careers
  • Passage A
  • Your Dream
  • Job A Click Away

13
Lead-in Pictures
Before reading Passage A, describe the following
pictures .
Free career sites like Careerbuilder that enable
job seekers to search for jobs on dozens of the
best careers
14

  • Unit 2 Jobs
    and Careers
  • These photos are all related to job and
    career. Describe them to your classmates with the
    help of the following question.
  • 1. What are the most effective ways to find a
    job?
  • 2. What are the major procedures you
  • need to know in applying for a job?
  • 1) Read the Want Ads in the
  • newspapers for suitable vacancies.

15
  • 2) Phone or write to the contract person.
  • 3) The contract person, either the employer
    himself or a representative , will advise the
    applicant about The job if it has not yet been
    taken, and grant the applicant an interview if he
    or she chooses to. Occasionally an interview may
    take place by phone, but most often contract
    person will want to see the applicant or vice
    versa.

16
  • 4) If an interview is granted, the applicant will
    be asked many questions, both personal and
    professional, so that the employer can decide
    whether or not the applicant is suitable for the
    job. The applicant may also ask questions as he
    or she , too, must make sure about the
    suitability of the job. But many personal
    questions are prohibited because of anti-
    discrimination.
  • 3.How much money
  • do you want to earn
  • per month?

17
  • 4. What kind of job would you like to pursue
    as your career? Explain
  • 5. What are necessities of finding a good
    job?
  • A college degree is a career necessity in
    today's business world.
  • Enough professional
  • knowledge
  • Enough work experience
  • A resume

18
  • Words and expressions
  • 1.access v. find information, especially on a
    computer ????
  • eg She accessed three different files to find
    the correct information.
  • access n. 1) A means of approaching, entering.
  • eg There is no access to the street through
    that door.
  • 2) the right to approach, enter,
    or make use of.
  • eg The journalist has no access to the
    restricted area.
  • 2. Annual a. (happening, appearing, etc.) every

19
  • year or once a year ?????
  • eg What is your annual income?
  • yearly annual ring(??)
  • 3.calculator n. a small machine which can
  • perform calculations ???
  • eg a pocket calculation
  • Calculate v. 1) find out or make a firm guess
    about , esp. by using numbers.
  • eg They use a computer to calculate the cost of
    wages as a percentage of the companys income.
  • 2) be calculated to do sth to
    be planned with the intention of ?? ?????
  • eg The new regulations are calculated to make

20
  • cheating impossible.
  • Calculus n.????
  • 4.Classified adj. with information arranged in
    groups according to subjects.
  • eg If you look in the classified part of the
    telephone book you will find plenty of
    companies.
  • be classified as ???
  • be classified by ???
  • be classified into ???
  • 5.Criterion n. a standard or principle by which
    something is judged ??

21
  • eg What criteria do you use to judge a good
    wine?
  • criteria or criterions (pl.)
  • 6.elevate v. raise, especially to a higher rank
    or position ??,??
  • eg He was elevated to the rank of captain.(??)
  • 7.entry n. 1) a piece of information that is
    written or included in a list, a book, etc. ??
  • eg She made an entry in her diary to remind
    herself of the date.
  • 2) (into) the act of coming or
    going
  • eg He was charged with trying to gain illegal
    entry into the builing.

22
  • 8. Intrigue v. interest (someone) a lot,
    especially by being strange, unusual or
    mysterious ??????
  • eg You intrigue me tell me more.
  • intrigue n. the act of planning secretly
  • eg She got to her present high position by
    intrigue.
  • intriguing adj. very interesting fascinating
  • eg an intriguing idea/ story/ woman
  • 9. Procedure n. a set of actions necessary for
    doing something ??
  • Eg Writing a cheque is quite a simple procedure.

23
  • 10.Profile n. 1) a short description, especially
    of a persons life and character ??????
  • eg A complete profile of president
  • 2) a side view, esp. of
    someones head.
  • eg he drew her profile.
  • 11.Refer v.1) (to) mention or speak out
  • eg The scientist referred to the discovery as
    the most exciting new development in this field.
  • 2) refer to sth to look at for
    information

24
  • eg Let me just refer to my notes to find the
    exact figures.
  • 12.Scan v. look at quickly without careful
    reading, often looking for a particular thing
    ??,??
  • eg I scanned the list of names to see if hers.
  • 13.Spot v. 1) pick out with the eye ??,??
  • eg He is a very tall man, easy to spot in a
    crowd.
  • 2) (with) usu, in pass. mark with
    spots.
  • eg I chose a white cloth spotted with green.

25
Unit 2Jobs and Careers
Part II
Read
Explore
26
Contents
  • Related Information
  • Notes to the Text
  • Summary of the Text
  • Words and Expressions
  • Understanding the Text

27
  • WARM UP ACTIVITIES
  • Questions
  • 1. What do you usually do with the internet?
    And do you think the internet will be used more
    extensively in your lifetime?
  • References
  • Many students log on the internet frequently.
    They may use the internet to search for useful
  • information they need,
  • visit a chat room, email
  • messages to their friends,
  • or play video games.

28
  • 2. Have you ever thought about how you would find
    your job after graduation?
  • Open

29
  • 3. What is job application online? Have you ever
    tried it?
  • References
  • Job application online means doing all the
    application on the internet. One can fill in the
    application form and send it in an email form to
    potential employers website, together with all
    necessary materials about oneself.

30
Notes to the Text
  • Click the following words to listen to the text.

Listen to the whole text.
Listen to paragraph 1.
Listen to paragraph 13.
Listen to paragraph 2.
Listen to paragraph 14.
Listen to paragraph 3.
Listen to paragraph 15.
Listen to paragraph 4.
Listen to paragraph 16.
Listen to paragraph 5.
Listen to paragraph 6.
Listen to paragraph 7.
Listen to paragraph 8.
Listen to paragraph 9.
Listen to paragraph 10.
Listen to paragraph 11.
Listen to paragraph 12.
31
  • Summary of the Text
  • Since most students will choose to work
    after graduation, job-hunting is of great
    importance to them. They will write plenty of
    résumés about their education and send them to
    the companies they want to work for. It takes
    both time and energy to do so. Now, thanks to the
    development of the Internet, job-hunting becomes
    much easier. Job-hunters can find a job just by
    clicking a mouse on the computer.

32
  • Summary of the Text
  • many of them make their dream come true through
    the Internet.
  • This article describes the experiences of
    five people who used online sources to look for
    new jobs. Theresa Casebeer used the JOB-TRAK
    website to find an administrative assistant's job
    at a university. Steven Toole used the Career
    Builder website to find a marketing management
    position. Madeline Gragg used Yahoo! to find a
    job teaching English in Japan. Nedzad Dozlic
    used a

33
  • Summary of the Text
  • newspaper website to find a driver's job with a
    car dealership. Wendy Mello used Career Builder
    to find a position in human resources for a
    media-information-services company. Mello also
    used another website to calculate the cost of
    living in her new location and decide what salary
    to request. All these are typical examples of
    online job searches, since many different types
    of jobs can now be found this way.

34
  • Understanding the Text
  • 1. What is JOB-TRAK?
  • It is an Internet website that lists as many as
    45,000 job opportunities.
  • 2. How can you locate a potential job vacancy you
    are interested in online?
  • You need to, first of all, punch in a few
    keywords and start the searching machine.
  • 3. Does one need to have a lot of knowledge about
    the Internet before using it?
  • Not necessarily so. According to Smith, the
    Internet was very easy to use. She found her job
    online with no training.

35
  • 4. How did Tools get the job as a marketing
    manager?
  • He got the job because of his curiosity about
    the employment site named Career Builder.
  • 5. Why did Gragg apply to teach English in Japan?
  • Because she wanted a change in her life.
  • 6.What is Dozlic's job now?
  • He is now a driver at a local car dealership.
  • 7. What preparations did Mello make before she
    went for her interview?
  • She searched the Internet for information about
    the financial performance of the

36
  • company she was interested in, the salary she
    should ask for, and the possible living
    accommodations available to her there.

37
  • First Reading
  • Go through the passage quickly and try to find
    answers to the following questions.
  • 1. How many job hunters are mentioned in the
    passage? 2. What employment sites are mentioned
    in the passage?
  • 3. Besides finding a job, what else can you do
    with the help of the internet?
  • 4. What might be the topic sentence of the
    passage if you're required to find one?

38
Reading for Detail
Reading for Detail
Name Former job Website New job Evaluation on internet job-hunting Purposely or accidentally
Therasa Simith
Steven Tools Not mentioned
Madeline Gragg
Nedzad Dozlic Not mentioned
Wendy Mello Not mentioned
39
  • Your Dream Job A Click Away
  • Less than a month from graduation day,
    Theresa Smith of Northwestern University in
    Evanston, Illinois, had yet to find the right
    job. The career placement center referred the
    liberal-arts major to JOB-TRAK, an Internet site
    listing 45,000 entry-level positions. Smith
    selected four keywords Chicago, business,
    marketing and full-time. Immediately she found 45
    jobs meeting her criteria, including one as an
    assistant to an administrator at the University
    of Chicagos business school. Four weeks later she

40
  • was hired at a starting salary of
    32,000.
  • I had no training, says Smith, but the
    Internet was extremely easy to use. Id never
    have known about this job without it. Smith
    is one American who clicked her way into a job.
    Steven Tools is another. In 1996, the
    Rockville, Md., resident came across an
    employment site named Career Builder. He had just
    been promoted to director of marketing for a
    company that produces tradeshow exhibits and
    wasnt looking for a job. But curious, he decided
    to give it a try.

41
  • Tools filled out a profile with the keywords
    marketing manager and entered his electronic-mail
    address. Within a week his computers mailbox was
    filling up with available positions. Two
    interviews later he jumped to a new job. The
    Internet is like hiring a personal assistant,
    says Tools. Effortlessly you can become aware of
    opportunities that may elevate your career.
    Even a couple of years ago, most job listings on
    the Internet were in high-tech fields. Today,
    non-technical jobs salesclerks, bank tellers,
    secretaries, for

42
  • example are the fastest growing
    segment of Internet employment opportunities.
    Most major newspapers and trade publications have
    online versions of their classified listings,
    enabling job-seekers to scan for work available
    across town, in another state, or around the
    world. Madeline Gragg and Nedzad Dozlic are
    still another two who clicked their luck online.
    In 1996, Madeline Gragg, a 28-year-old high
    school teacher from St. Louis, wanted a change.
    When a friend mentioned teaching English in
    Japan, Gragg was intrigued.

43
  • She visited the popular Yahoo! website and
    typed teaching English in Japan for a list of
    employment opportunities. She then followed the
    procedure for the online application. A week
    later she received a call and set up an interview
    with a recruiter in Chicago and got the job.
    ?Nedzad Dozlic, 27 years old, was scanning the
    Houston Chronicles Web site for the latest
    baseball trades. While online, he decided to
    check out the classifieds and spotted a job for a
    driver at a local car dealership. A refugee of
    the war in Bosnia, Dozlic had had a variety of
    jobs but was now ready for something new.

44
  • He read more about the position on the
  • dealers Internet site and called the number
    listed. Two days later he was hired. Its really
    funny, he says, I was just checking sports, and
    I ended up with a better job. Another
    valuable use of the Internet is to research
    potential employers. When Wendy Mello started her
    job search in the summer of 1997, she logged on
    to Career Builder, where she learned of a human
    resources opening at Arbitrons, a
    media-information-services company in Columbia,
    Maryland. With a click of her mouse, Mello sent
    her résumé to the company via e-mail and soon

45
  • received an invitation for an interview.
    To find out more about the company, she clicked
    on to Artitrons home page and that of its parent
    company, Ceridian Corp., where she reviewed an
    annual report and the companys financial
    performance .
  • Mello also wanted to know how much shed
    have to earn to maintain her present standard of
    living. Using an online salary calculator, she
    typed in her current salary, 34,000, and
    Baltimore (the nearest big city to Columbia).
    Within seconds her computer

46
  • flashed 44,000. Because of the salary
    calculator, I knew what to ask for, says Mello.
    By accessing an online real estate service,
    she saw color photos of rental properties,
    including detailed floor plans. When Mello
    arrived in Columbia, she felt completely
    prepared. The interview was a success, and the
    next day she was offered a job at a salary of
    47,800.
  • The Internet is easy to use and it works,
    says one job seeker, What more could you want?

47
Words and Expressions
  • 1. career a job or profession for which one is
    trained and which one intends to follow
    for the whole of one's life

Examples
  • There are many more careers open to
  • women now than fifty years ago.
  • Florence Nightingale made nursing her
  • career.

48
Words and Expressions
  • 2. refer to send (someone or something) to (usu.
    someone else) for decision or action
  • mention,speak about

Examples
  • The Local Court has referred the whole
  • case to the High Court.
  • Don't refer to the matter again.

49
Words and Expressions
  • 3. resident a person who lives ( in a place)
    and is not just a visitor

Examples
  • The local residents were angry at the lack
  • of parking spaces.
  • The residents of the town are proud of its
  • new library.

50
Words and Expressions
  • 4. come across meet or discover, esp. by chance

Examples
  • I have just come across a beautiful poem
  • in this book.
  • She came across some old letters in the
  • course of her search.

51
Words and Expressions
  • 5. fill out/in put in (whatever is needed to
    complete something)

Examples
  • After Tom passed his driving test he filled
  • out an application for his driver's license.
  • The policeman filled out a report of the
  • accident.

52
Words and Expressions
  • 6. fill up make or become completely full

Examples
  • The room soon filled up with people.
  • The rain has filled up the ditches again.

53
Words and Expressions
  • 7. procedure an action or set of actions
    necessary for doing something

Examples
  • Writing a check is quite a simple procedure.
  • We have worked out a new set of
  • procedures for using this machine.

54
Words and Expressions
  • 8. potential that can or may come into
    existence or action

Examples
  • Although this area is very poor now, its
  • potential wealth is great.
  • We should always be on the lookout for
  • potential dangers.

55
Words and Expressions
  • 9. financial connected with money

Examples
  • In that case they would receive financial aid
  • from the state.
  • They are now confronted with a serious
  • financial crisis.

56
Words and Expressions
  • 10. current of present time

Examples
  • They suggested measures to overcome
  • current difficulties.
  • In some schools children study current
  • affairs as a subject.

57
Notes to the Text
  • 1.The career placement center referred the
    liberal-arts major to JOB-TRAK, an Internet site
    listing 45,000 entry-level positions. (para. 1)

The career placement center advices the student
majoring in liberal arts to visit JOB-TRAK, a
website containing 45,000 jobs for new workers.
????????????????JOB-TRAK??,???????45,000?????????
58
Notes to the Text
  • 2. Smith is one American who clicked her way into
    a job. (para. 4)

Casebeer is one American who found a job online.
?????????,???????????????????,
59
Notes to the Text
  • 3. "The Internet is like hiring a personal
    assistant," says Tools. "Effortlessly you can
    become aware of opportunities that may elevate
    your career." (para. 6)

The Internet is like a personal helper. It can
easily tell you about new chances to improve your
career.
?????,??????????, ????????????????????,????????
?????
60
Notes to the Text
  • 4. Most major newspapers and trade publications
    have on-line versions of their classified
    listings, enabling job-seekers to scan for work
    available across town, in another state, or
    around the world.(para. 7)

Most major newspapers and specialist journals
have their job advertisements online, to help
job-seekers quickly spot job vacancies anywhere
in the world.
??????????????????????, ????????????????????????
61
Notes to the Text
  • 5. A refugee of the war in Bosnia, Dozlic had had
    a variety of jobs but was now ready for something
    new.(para. 11)

Dozlic, who escaped from the war in Bosnia, had
done several different jobs but was now ready to
find a new one.
??????????????,???????????,??????????
62
Notes to the Text
  • 6. To find out more about the company, she
    clicked on to Artitron's home page and that of
    its parent company, Ceridian Corp., where she
    reviewed an annual report and the company's
    financial performance. (para. 13)

To learn more about the company she entered its
website and the website of its headquarters, and
studied it's the company's yearly report and
financial situations.
????????????,?????Artitron???,???????Ceridian
Corp.???,?????????,???????????
63
Related Information
  • Northwestern University
  • JobTrak.com
  • CareerBuilder
  • The State of Illinois
  • Chicago
  • The State of Maryland
  • Japan
  • Houston Chronicle.com
  • Yahoo

64
Northwestern University
http//www.nwu.edu
Northwestern University is a private,
coeducational institution with campuses in
Evanston and Chicago, Illinois. The school was
founded in 1851. It opened for instruction in
1855 with only ten students. Women were first
admitted in 1869. The university confers
bachelors, masters, doctoral, and professional
degrees in a wide range of fields.
65
(No Transcript)
66
CareerBuilder
CareerBuilder is an online recruiting and
job awareness service. Job seekers are exposed to
more than 300,000 updated jobs, representing more
than 25,000 of the top employers in almost every
industry and field.
CareerBuilder makes it easy for employers to
reach the audiences they want and hire the talent
they need to get the most out of their return on
investment.
http//www.headhunter.net/
More than 6 million who visit CareerBuilder each
month. In addition, employers have access to more
than 4 million active resumes in CareerBuilder's
extensive resume database.
67
JobTrak.com
JOBTRAK.COM is the largest and most popular
job listing service on the Web for college
students, MBAs and alumni. Through its
exclusive partnerships with career centers
nationwide, JOBTRAK.COM allows you to reach
job-seeking students and alumni from your choice
of more than 1,000 colleges and university career
centers, MBA programs, and alumni associations.
JOBTRAK.COM is utilized by more than 450,000
employers.
http//www.jobtrak.com/
http//static.jobtrak.com/job_search_tips2/
68
Passage A
69
the State of Illinois
the State of Illinois
Illinois is a state in the north central
United States, in the heart of the Midwest. It
was little more than a vast wilderness 200 years
ago. Since entering the Union on December 3,
1818, as the 21st state, the economy of Illinois
has expanded until today. Illinois is one of the
most productive agricultural and industrial
states in the Union, and its economic influence
now extends far beyond the Midwest.
http//www100.state.il.us/
70
Chicago
Chicago
City skyline, Chicago
Chicago night view
http//www.ci.chi.il.us/
The city of Chicago is located in
northeastern Illinois, on the shore of Lake
Michigan and at the mouth of the Chicago River.
The presence of numerous waterways and one of the
nations busiest airports helps make Chicago a
major shipping and transportation center.
71
(No Transcript)
72
the State of Maryland
the State of Maryland
http//www.mdarchives.state.md.us/
The Maryland colony was founded in 1634 and
was named for the wife of English King Charles I,
Queen Henrietta Maria. Colonial Maryland
attracted many settlers and, as its economy
prospered, so did its social, political, and
cultural life. Maryland entered the Union on
April 28, 1788, as the 7th of the original 13
states.
73
Japan
http//www.japan-zone.com/
  • Japan is an island nation in East Asia,
    located in the North Pacific Ocean off the coast
    of the Asian continent. It comprises the four
    main islands of Honshu, Hokkaido, Kyushu, and
    Shikoku, in addition to numerous smaller islands.
    The Japanese call their country Nihon or Nippon,
    which means origin of the sun. The name arose
    from Japans position east of the great Chinese
    empires that held sway over Asia throughout most
    of its history. Japan is sometimes referred to in
    English as the land of the rising sun. Tokyo is
    the countrys capital and largest city.

74
Houston Chronicle.com
http//www.chron.com/
  • Houston Chronicle.com is an integrated
    website for daily information, including news,
    sports, entertainment, AD search, classified, etc.

75
The Homepage of Yahoo
Drawing some 220 million visitors each month,
Yahoo! lays claim to the top spot among Internet
portals. Its Web site features a search engine
and directory that helps users navigate the Web.
It also aggregates content from a variety of
sources, including news, financial information,
and streaming media, and offers registered users
personalized Web pages, free e-mail, and
calendars. The company has localized Web sites in
25 countries.
http//www.yahoo.com/
76
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