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全國英語等級考試教材第三級Unit15

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[00:00.00] CHAPTER 15 JOBS AND OCCUPATION

[00:14.99]Unit 15 Jobs and Occupation

[00:22.36]Conversations

[00:25.89]part 1

[00:29.36]An interview between a woman and an officer of the company.

[00:34.93]Officer:I wonder if you'd mind me your full name please,Miss Howard?

[00:42.29]Woman:Miranda Howard.

[00:45.95]Officer:Thank you.Now let me see,uhmm,you were an English major,weren't you?

[00:52.82]Woman:Yes,that's right.I graduated from New Hampshire State College.

[00:59.35]Officer:When was that?

[01:02.59]Woman:In 1997.

[01:06.25]Officer:So you've been out fo school for about 5 years? Woman:Right.

[01:12.49]Officer:And could you tell me what kind of office experience you've had?

[01:18.26]Woman:Well.I'm working for Britain Airlines at the moment.

[01:23.51]Officer:And what do you do there exactly?

[01:27.35]Woman:I'm in financial department.

[01:31.51]Officer:I see.And how long have you been with them?

[01:36.05]Woman:For four years.

[01:39.71]Officer:And would you mind telling me your present salary?

[01:44.46]Woman:I'm making fifteen hundred a monty at present.

[01:50.03]Officer:Fifteen hundred?Uh huh.

[01:54.29]OK,well,you have read the job description for this position..

[02:00.76]part 2

[02:05.02]Wang Lin,a student from China,is telling George,

[02:11.50]an English friend,why he came to study architecture in England.

[02:17.35]George:What did you say you were going to take up as a career?

[02:23.23]Wang:Architecture.Actually,I've already started.

[02:29.79]George:What are you going to do when you finish?

[02:34.93]Wang:Oh,I shall go back home and practise there.

[02:40.99]There's a great deal of scope for architects in my country

[02:47.16]and a lot of useful work to be done.

[02:51.89]George:Will you need English in your job?

[02:56.95]Wang:It'll be useful in many ways

[03:01.50]because there's a lot about architecture written in English

[03:07.38]and besides many professional people in my country use English as a second language.

[03:16.62]When you attend international conferences,

[03:21.98]English is so often the official language.

[03:27.75]George:What made you decide to choose architecture as a career?

[03:34.10]Wang:Well,I was good at Maths and Art at school

[03:40.06]and I think I had a certain feeling for design.

[03:46.22]And I also suppose my personal qualities made me choose architecture.

[03:53.87]part 3

[03:57.11]Ms.Moore is interviewing Ms.White.

[04:02.08]Moore:Let's discuss your educational background,

[04:07.25]Ms.White,you were a law major,weren't you?

[04:12.71]White:Yes.That's right.It was my best subject at college.

[04:19.66]Moore:Fine.And could you tell me what kind of work experience you've had?

[04:26.53]White:My last position was with Joanna and Frazer.That's a law firm in Chicago.

[04:34.89]Moore:And when was that exactly?

[04:39.33]White:From 1993 to 1996.

[04:45.81]Moore:Uh huh.

[04:49.33]White:Before that I worked for Soft Logic Compute Co.,Ltd.

[04:56.18]Moore:Well,Ms.White,your qualifications for the job are excellent.

[05:03.33]Could you tell me what kind of salary you are expecting?

[05:08.79]White:Well,in my last job I was making $1 900 a month.

[05:15.92]I understand that this position has a starting salary of around $2 000 a month.

[05:24.36]Moore:That's right.

[05:27.89]White:That would be fine with me.

[05:32.28]Moore:Is there anything you'd like to ask about the job?

[05:38.13]White:Yes.I'd like to know if the company provides opportunities for further education.

[05:46.31]Moore:Yes.Our employees are allowed to take up six hours a week at full pay,

[05:53.85]to attend college courses.

[05:57.93]White:That's great!

[06:01.69]Moore:Anything else?

[06:05.45]White:No,not at this time.

[06:09.61]Moore:Well,we'll call you this week.

[06:14.18]White:Thank you.I appreciate your talking with me.

[06:19.64]part 4

[06:22.98]Williams is discussing with Chuck

[06:27.74]about an applicant who applied for the position of journalist.

[06:33.48]Williams:Have you ever looked at this application yet?

[06:38.73]Chuck:The one from the plaze,you mean?Yeah,I've just read it.

[06:44.90]Williams:Has he ever worked on a newspaper before?

[06:49.94]Chuck:No,not exactly,but he used to edit a magazine when he was in college.

[06:58.30]Williams:Well,that's good.And what did he do after?

[07:04.05]Chuck:Well,after he finished school,he went to Seattle.

[07:10.11]Williams:Oh,really?What did he do there?

[07:14.86]Chuck:He was an English teacher in an elementary school

[07:20.01]and while he was teaching there he wrote some really fine articles.

[07:26.17]Williams:Uh huh.And what's he been doing since then?

[07:31.50]Chuck:He's been working as a freelance journalist for the past two years.

[07:38.14]Williams:Hmm.Sounds quite good.Maybe he is our man.

[07:44.07]Passage

[07:47.02]How to Write a Winning Resume

[07:51.28]The main purpose of a resume is to convince an employer to grant you an interview.

[07:58.93]There are two kinds.

[08:02.77]One is the familiar"tombstone"that lists where you went to school

[08:08.93]and where you have worked in chronological order.

[08:13.37]The other is what I call the"functional"resume-descriptive,fun to read,

[08:20.64]unique to you and much more likely to land you an interview.

[08:26.20]It's handy to have a"tombstone"for certain occasions.

[08:31.76]But peospective employers throw away most of those unrquested"tombstone"lists,

[08:39.21]preferring to interview the quick rather than the dead.

[08:44.36]What follows are tips on writing a functional resume that will get read-

[08:50.73]a resume that makes you come alive and look interesting to employers.

[08:56.89]Put yourself first:

[09:00.66]In order to write a resume which others will read with enthusiasm,

[09:07.50]you have to feel important about yourself.

[09:12.07]Sell what you can do,not who you are:

[09:16.83]Practice translating your personality traits,

[09:21.97]character,accomplishments,and achievements into skill areas.

[09:27.61]There are at least five thousand skill areas in the world of work.

[09:33.78]Toot your own horn:Many people clutch when asked to think about their abilities.

[09:41.33]Some think they have none at all!

[09:45.40]But everyone does,and one of yours

[09:50.45]may just be the ticket an employer would be glad to punch if only you show it.

[09:57.11]Be specific,be concrete,and be brief!

[10:02.67]Turn bad news into good:Everybody has had disappointment in work.

[10:09.62]If you have to mention yours,look for the positive side.

[10:15.26]Never apologize:

[10:19.13]If you're returning to the work force after fifteen years as a parent,

[10:25.06]simply write a short paragraph(summary of backgroung)

[10:30.62]in place of a chronology of experience.

[10:35.17]Don't apologize for working at being a mother:it's the hardest job of all.

[10:42.01]If you have no special training or higher education,just don't mention education.

[10:49.46]How to psych yourself up:

[10:53.51]The secret is to think about the self before you start writing about yourself.

[10:59.96]Thake four or five hours off not necessarily consecutive,

[11:05.91]and simply write down every accomplishment in your life on or off the job.

[11:13.18]That made you feel effective.

[11:17.25]Don't worry at first about what it all means.

[11:21.90]Study the list and try to spot patterns.

[11:26.86]As you study your list,you will come closer to the meaning:

[11:33.39]identifying your marketable skills.

[11:37.94]Once you discover patterns,give names to your cluster of accomplishments

[11:44.50](leadership skills,budget management skills,child development skills,etc.)

[11:52.25]Try to list at least three accomplishments under the same skills heading.

[11:58.42]Now start writing your resume as if you mattered.

[12:03.57]It may take four drafts or more,and several weeks,

[12:09.16]before you've ready to show it a stranger(friends are usually too kind)

[12:15.69]for a reaction.

[12:19.03]When you're satisfied,send it to a printer;

[12:23.99]a printed resume is far superior to photocopies.

[12:29.45]It shows an employer that you regard job hunting as serious work.

[12:35.70]Words and Expressions

[12:39.46]major airline financial salary

[12:42.49]大學的主修科目 航空公司 財政的;金融的 按月發(fā)的薪水

[12:45.52]position take up professional subject

[12:48.60]職位,職務 從事某項職業(yè)或活動 專業(yè)的,內(nèi)行的 學科;課程

[12:51.68]firm qualification employee application

[12:54.61]公司 資歷;資格 受雇者,雇員 書面申請;請求

[12:57.53]freelance resume grant chronological

[13:00.66]自由作家 簡歷,個人必履歷 給予;準許 按年代排序的

[13:03.78]tombstone unique handy prospective

[13:06.65]基碑,基石 獨特的,不平常的 方便的,簡便的 未來的

[13:09.53]tip enthusiasm trait toot

[13:12.56]有用的意見 熱情;興趣 品質 使發(fā)嘟嘟聲

[13:15.59]horn clutch psych sb.up consecutive

[13:19.13]號角 抓住 使某人心理上做好準備 連續(xù)的

[13:22.66]cluster budget draft photocopy

[13:25.60]叢;串 預算 草稿 復印

[13:28.54]Exercises

[13:31.99]Section I Listening Comprehension

[13:36.95]Listen to the record.

[13:40.61]Answer each question by choosing A,B,C or D from the four possible choices.

[13:50.04]A 1.M:Is there any chance of my having a job in your company?

[13:57.62]W:I'm afraid that you basically can not,

[14:02.58]why not try another place to see another boss?

[14:08.46]2.W:Can you come to my birthday party tomorrow afternoon?

[14:14.81]M:I'd like to,but I can't.I'll be in surgery at 3 o'clock.

[14:21.68]I'll be operating on a patient then.

[14:25.93]3.M:But I still can't understand,Jane,why are you working for J.D.Company?

[14:33.98]W:J.D.offered me a job as a secretary and I need a job.

[14:41.63]4.W:Have a seat.What can I do for you?

[14:47.98]M:I'm going to be an engineer,

[14:51.74]but I'm having a little trouble deciding which field to go into

[14:57.80]5.M:Make thirty copies for me and twenty copies for Mr.Brown.

[15:04.96]W:Sure,sir.As soon as I have typed this letter.

[15:10.52]6.W:Maryhy worked as a secretary for three years.

[15:17.79]Then she became a reporter.After that she started writing novels.

[15:24.76]M:I know.And she has been doing nothing else ever since.

[15:30.64]7.W:Open wide. Now show me where it hurts.

[15:37.77]M:Here on the bottom,especially when I bite into something hot or cold.

[15:44.30]B W:On the matter of employer-employee relations,

[15:50.36]we read a lot and hear a lot about union poroblems and strikes.

[15:57.02]M:Well,I think that,from an employer's standpoint,

[16:01.88]the easiest thing for an employer to do would be to join a union.

[16:07.55]W:Could you make it clear?

[16:11.39]M:The reason is that you have the security of never having to worry about having employees.

[16:18.76]W:Uh-huh... M:You'd be meeting a certain criteria

[16:24.11]because the unions set the criteria for the people that work

[16:29.75]their salaries,their fringe benefits,and so on.

[16:35.42]W:And you probably have one outfit to deal with.

[16:40.57]M:That's correct.

[16:44.04]So from the employee's standpoint,of course,

[16:48.80]you have the problem that the employee is a captive to a set of criteria..

[16:54.75]W:Yeah,that's right.

[16:58.59]M:And his freedom is greatly reduved because of the fact that his bargaining agent is someone else-

[17:06.25]it's not himself.

[17:10.01]W:He is no longer in an individual-to-employer situation.

[17:16.46]M:That is correct.

[17:19.70]W:Is it a trade-off to a certain extent?

[17:24.14]M:My feeling is that's one of the great advantages

[17:29.18]working for a small business which is non-union.

[17:34.01]You have a higher degree of freedom.

[17:37.78]And that it's much easier from the employee's standpoint.

[17:43.13]W:Uh-hm...That's fine.

[17:47.49]M:But when you become a captive to any big organization-

[17:52.64]whether it's a corporation,a union or a government,

[17:57.71]you just absolutely lose your freedom.

[18:01.65]C I'm the manager of the department called the Banking

[18:07.82]and Portfolio Department for a large multinational corporation.

[18:14.09]The responsibility of that department is to handle all the bankiing matters..

[18:21.14]er...relationship,credit issue,opening and closing accounts.

[18:28.22]We also manage the..er...investment of the company's excess funds.

[18:36.26]The best thing about working in the department...

[18:41.83]that we have is that you get to take decisions at a relatively low management level in the company

[18:50.66]you get to watch the decision come,

[18:55.33]follow through and you get to see the effect on the bottom-line profit of the company.

[19:03.28]We are one of the few areas within a world..er..

[19:09.05]Within a headquarters-type atmosphere where there is a profit center,bottom line.

[19:16.78]One of the things I find the most frustrating is that...er...

[19:23.73]the company is still very bureaucratic.

[19:28.59]We tend to produce a lot of paperwork and reports

[19:34.05]that don't seem to have any fit with the...today's company business.

[19:41.41]And they've been generated for years and we continue to generate them..er...

[19:48.78]because management has asked for them.

[19:53.54]We are attempting to change that but it continues to be a source of frustration

[20:00.61]for myself and my staff.

[20:05.06]Supplementary Reading

[20:08.61]Learn to Love Your Job

[20:12.76]Is your job running you over like a lawnmower?

[20:18.04]You spend too much time at work to be miserable.

[20:23.50]Stop the madness!You can go through by putting the following advice into action.

[20:30.76]Be Honest with Your Boss

[20:35.12]Your boss may be talented and inspirational,but probably not a mind-reader.

[20:42.38]If you are frustrated at work,speak up.

[20:47.35]Your boss has a right to know if you are feeling undervalued,burned out,

[20:53.83]or desperately in need of a more flexible schedule.

[20:58.97]There are,of course,

[21:02.24]ways to conduct this talk so that you don't sound whiny or hopelessly confused.

[21:09.68]You may be more appreciated and have more options than you thought.

[21:15.93]A good boss can give you strategies to pull your attitude out of a funk.

[21:22.90]Give it a chance,and be honest in your discussion.

[21:28.36]Let the Job Bring out Your Best

[21:33.01]If you have a job that matches your skills poorly,you will end up having it.

[21:40.56]For example,sales jobs are not for everyone.

[21:45.60]An introverted,

[21:48.76]quiet person is likely to feel uncomfortable chasing down some sales quota.

[21:55.53]Your job should fit like a glove,not force you to be something you are not.

[22:02.48]Un-fitting jobs cause stress,according to psychologist Bill Gawford,

[22:09.35]stress is a signal that something needs to change.

[22:14.67]"Suffering is when we don't make the change,"Crawford explains,

[22:20.84]"often we don't listen to the signal of stress in our lives until it becomes a severe problem."

[22:28.28]If your job is not fulfi-lling,get creative.

[22:33.85]Drastic changes are not always necessary.

[22:38.71]Arlene S.Hirsch,author of Love Your Work and Success Will Follow,

[22:45.37]tells the story of a banker with strong financial analysis skills

[22:51.61]who was experiencing great job dissatisfaction.

[22:56.86]He recaptured his love for music by accepting a job as CFO for a symphony orchestra.

[23:05.72]Smart move!

[23:09.06]Acknowledge Your Anger

[23:12.93]If you really hate your job,it's likely you are fired up about something.

[23:19.69]Pinpointing the source of your anger is a crucial first step.

[23:25.65]According to Dr.Hendrie Weisinger,there are 5 main anger-provoking work situations:

[23:33.70](1)Being left out.

[23:38.37]Not being accepted by your peers severely limits how effective you can be on the job,

[23:45.42]and shakes your tundamental need for acceptance.

[23:50.86](2)Critical bosses.

[23:54.91]Nitpicking bosses are infuriating.

[23:59.48](3)Not getting promoted.You try your best and it's never acknowledged.

[24:06.14](4)Being maligned by co-workers.

[24:11.18]Being victimized by false rumors is a consistent anger arouser.

[24:17.55](5)Incompetent bosses.

[24:22.10]An incompetent boss can stifle your enthusiasm

[24:27.38]and torpedo your chances for job satisfaction.

[24:32.34]Get Rid of Grudges

[24:36.28]When people work together,hurt feelings,misunderstandings,

[24:41.54]and cross words are inevitable.

[24:46.11]If you are mistreated at work,you'll be tempted to get even.

[24:51.44]Be careful:Making enemies can lead straight to job misery.

[24:57.89]Even if you have been treated unfairly,you can take the high road.

[25:03.84]While practicing forgiveness may be the last thing you want to do,

[25:09.41]it is often the wisest move.

[25:13.67]Offenders may not deserve your kindness,but you do.

[25:18.94]By forgiving abusive jerke,you are actually giving yourself a break.

[25:25.00]Sure,you can quit your job in a huff and seek greener pastures elsewhere.

[25:31.48]Find a place where people treat you with the love,and respect that you deserve.

[25:38.01]Right?Wrong!You will find"challenging"co-workers wherever you go.

[25:45.07]They just look different and have different names.

[25:49.74]You'd be better off finding ways to live in peace

[25:54.18]with people with various value system.

[25:58.54]Above all else,try to keep your perspective.

[26:03.61]We all hate our jobs occasionally.

[26:08.05]The trick is to keep those times few and far between.

[26:13.62]Putting these tips into practice will help you gain greater satisfaction at work.

[26:20.28]And when you consider that happy employees are more likely to get along,

[26:26.83]isn't that a goal worth smiling about?

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