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Welcome to Our University for English Training

Welcome to Our University for English Training. The Aim of This Training. After this training, you are expected to know : Skimming and Scanning . The author’s viewpoint . The structure of the passage. The structure of paragraphs. Students' Anticipation( 推测) .

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Welcome to Our University for English Training

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  1. Welcome to Our University for English Training

  2. The Aim of This Training After this training, you are expected to know : Skimming and Scanning . The author’s viewpoint . The structure of the passage. The structure of paragraphs. Students' Anticipation(推测) . Punctuation . Summarizing .

  3. During our classes, you’re required to (1)同义: When the officer surrendered, the others gave up too. (2)对照: At the beach, some parts are deep, and others are shallow. (3)比喻: Rhythmic speech or writing is like waves of the sea, moving onward with alternating rise and fall.

  4. (4)定义: Linguistics is the study of the way in which language works. (5)重述: Professor Wilson's approach to research is eclectic. He learns all the currently relevant theories and then tries to combine the best features of each theory.

  5. Chapter 1 Skimming Skimming  Before starting to read a passage in detail, I first ask the students to take a moment to preview the passage. Read quickly, without pausing to study the details. This is called skim reading. The students ask them to have these in mind: for which the passage was written, what type of passage it is, what the purpose and attitude of the author is and what the style of the article is. After having skimmed the passage, the students can study the passage in more detail, reading more slowly and carefully and looking for specific information that the questions are concerned with.

  6. This is called scanning. When students do the scanning, I ask them to read without any sound, to notice only the key words and not to pay too much attention to the new words but to pay the sense group and the main meaning of the sentence. Especially pay attention to the first sentence and the last sentence of the paragraph.

  7. Chapter 2 The author’s viewpoint • The author’s viewpoint • In reading a passage I ask the students to makes guesses about the position of the author. Is the author neutral or does the author show his own opinion. The author often shows his opinion either by adding certain phrases or by adding a value to a word. I let the students to pay more attention to these words that the author can add, like luckily, unfortunately to show that he is pleased or not pleased with something.

  8. He can also add words, which show his surprise, regret or other emotions, for example surprisingly, to shock, unexpectedly, regrettably, pity, desirable, to be disappointed, etc. The author may also use words to indicate the level of certainty, for example: certain, obviously, undoubtedly, naturally, always, often, likely, probably, maybe, unlikely, hardly, rarely, never, etc. Another possibility is that the author adds words to comment on more or less objective facts.

  9. Chapter 3 The structure of the passage I let the students know that the structure of a passages mostly with a title and sometimes a subtitle. After that, the introduction and the body followed by a conclusion or summary. An important aspect of reading is prediction. The better the student can predict what he or she is going to read, the faster and more effective he or she will read. The prediction process begins with the title. The introduction mostly informs the student about what he can expect.

  10. The body consists of paragraphs. Each paragraph deals with one aspect of the subject matter. Paragraphs are linked in a logical way; and the conclusion puts the subject matter in the right perspective. I asked the students' to form the main idea of the passage by putting the topic sentence of every paragraph.

  11. Chapter 4 The structure of paragraphs I tell the students that a paragraph is a group of sentences. A typical paragraph consists of three parts. The first sentence usually contains the topic sentence, which is the heart of the paragraph. The topic sentence contains the new aspect of the subject of the passage. The second part of the paragraph contains sentences, which develop the aspect.

  12. These sentences may contain arguments, explanations, details, examples, and other supporting evidence. The last sentence of a paragraph is often a summary of the paragraph or a linking sentence to the next paragraph. So we can get a good impression of the contents of the paragraph by the structure.

  13. Chapter 5 Students' Anticipation(推测) I let students know that even if you have a wide and flexible vocabulary you will encounter words of which they do not know the meaning. Very often there is not enough time to look up all those words in a dictionary. This means that students should be able to guess the meaning of the word. This is often possible if the student understands the relationships between words in meaning and form. I ask the student to notice the word formation if they meet new words. From the roots and affixes and conversion and compounding, they learn to try to guess the meaning of the word according to the content.

  14. To make a good guess at the meaning of the word, I ask students to pay attention to the clues; indications that help him find that meaning. If you meet new words and try to find if there are synonyms and repeated ideas of the new words.

  15. I teach students to follow these steps: • Determine the word class, i.e. a verb, a noun, an adjective, an adverb, etc. • Determine its function in the sentence, i.e. is it an attributive or an adverbial? • Contextual clues, is the context in which we find this word positive or negative; what does the context tell us about the word?

  16. 4)Word formations, is there any relation between this word and a word that is familiar to you? 5)Guess the eventual meaning of the word logically and reasonably.

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