Unit-3-Out-of-Step综合教程三-课件.ppt
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1、2020/12/21Watch the movie clip and answer the following questions.1.Where is the engine of the 911?Audiovisual SupplementCultural InformationIn the back of the car.The product and their manufacturing process are one unit.Automation,technology and skilled human labor combine to build the Porsche 911.
2、And the factory runs like a precision machine.2.Whats the secret of success of that factory?2020/12/223精品资料4 你怎么称呼老师?如果老师最后没有总结一节课的重点的难点,你是否会认为老师的教学方法需要改进?你所经历的课堂,是讲座式还是讨论式?教师的教鞭“不怕太阳晒,也不怕那风雨狂,只怕先生骂我笨,没有学问无颜见爹娘”“太阳当空照,花儿对我笑,小鸟说早早早”精品资料2020/12/25 你怎么称呼老师?如果老师最后没有总结一节课的重点的难点,你是否会认为老师的教学方法需要改进?你所经历的课堂,
3、是讲座式还是讨论式?教师的教鞭“不怕太阳晒,也不怕那风雨狂,只怕先生骂我笨,没有学问无颜见爹娘”“太阳当空照,花儿对我笑,小鸟说早早早”2020/12/26Audiovisual SupplementCultural Information2020/12/27Narrator:A German factory builds one of the worlds most famous cars.The 911 is the icon of the sports car industry.Its the shape,its the engine in the back,its the feel i
4、t gives you,its the emotion.The factory runs like a precision machine,building hundreds of engines a day.The product and our manufacturing process are one unit,and thats our secret of success.Automation,technology and skilled human labor combine to build 16 versions of the Porsche 911,including the
5、911 GT3.Audiovisual SupplementCultural Information2020/12/28Car culture has been a major niche lifestyle in America.In the 1950s,the post-war boom produced a generation of teenagers with enough income to buy their own cars.These cars became so much more than just modes of transportation.They were re
6、flections of a lifestyle.The ability to tune and soup-up muscle cars gave average Joes the opportunity to show off their power,their speed and their style in a way that personified the car as character.1.2.Audiovisual SupplementCultural Information2020/12/29We dream of cars as we dream of lovers.Ame
7、ricans have always cherished personal freedom and mobility,rugged individualism and masculine force.3.Audiovisual SupplementCultural Information4.5.6.Like Granny in Jan and Deans 1964 song“The Little Old Lady from Pasadena,”we cant keep our foot off the accelerator.We are crazy about our cars and al
8、ways have been.“The American,”William Faulkner lamented in 1948,“really loves nothing but his automobile.”2020/12/210Text AnalysisStructural Analysis “Out of Step”is an exposition that presents the absurdity of the Americans dependence on cars.The Americans,being so accustomed to using cars,have alm
9、ost forgotten the existence of their legs.Wherever they go,they go in their cars.As a result,pedestrian facilities are neglected in city planning or rejected by the inhabitants.2020/12/211Text AnalysisStructural AnalysisParagraphsMain idea1-67-13 14-20 The writer introduces his idea with an anecdote
10、.In this part,the author presents the fact that the Americans are habituated to using cars for everything.In this part,the author shows that pedestrian facilities are neglected or discarded.2020/12/212 After living in England for 20 years,my wife and I decided to move back to the United States.We wa
11、nted to live in a town small enough that we could walk to the business district,and settled on Hanover,N.H.,a typical New England town pleasant,sedate and compact.It has a broad central green surrounded by the venerable buildings of Dartmouth College,an old-fashioned Main Street and leafy residentia
12、l neighborhoods.It is,in short,an agreeable,easy place to go about ones business on foot,and yet as far as I can tell,virtually no one does.Bill BrysonOut of StepDetailed Reading122020/12/213 Nearly every day,I walk to the post office or library or bookstore,and sometimes,if I am feeling particularl
13、y debonair,I stop at Rosey Jekes Caf for a cappuccino.Occasionally,in the evenings,my wife and I stroll up to the Nugget Theatre for a movie or to Murphys on the Green for a beer,I wouldnt dream of going to any of these places by car.People have gotten used to my eccentric behavior,but in the early
14、days acquaintances would often pull up to the curb and ask if I wanted a ride.“Im going your way,”they would insist when I politely declined.“Really,its no bother.”Detailed Reading342020/12/214 “Honestly,I enjoy walking.”“Well,if youre sure,”they would say and depart reluctantly,even guiltily,as if
15、leaving the scene of an accident without giving their name.In the United States we have become so habituated to using the car for everything that it doesnt occur to us to unfurl our legs and see what those lower limbs can do.We have reached an age where college students expect to drive between class
16、es,where parents will drive three blocks to pick up their children from a friends house,where the letter carrier takes his van up and down every driveway on a street.Detailed Reading5672020/12/215 We will go through the most extraordinary contortions to save ourselves from walking.Sometimes its almo
17、st ludicrous.The other day I was waiting to bring home one of my children from a piano lesson when a car stopped outside a post office,and a man about my age popped out and dashed inside.He was in the post office for about three or four minutes,and then came out,got in the car and drove exactly 16 f
18、eet(I had nothing better to do,so I paced it off)to the general store next door.Detailed Reading82020/12/216Detailed Reading And the thing is,this man looked really fit.Im sure he jogs extravagant distances and plays squash and does all kinds of healthful things,but I am just as sure that he drives
19、to each of these undertakings.An acquaintance of ours was complaining the other day about the difficulty of finding a place to park outside the local gymnasium.She goes there several times a week to walk on a treadmill.The gymnasium is,at most,a six-minute walk from her front door.9102020/12/217Deta
20、iled Reading I asked her why she didnt walk to the gym and do six minutes less on the treadmill.She looked at me as if I were tragically simple-minded and said,“But I have a program for the treadmill.It records my distance and speed and calorie burn rate,and I can adjust it for degree of difficulty.
21、”I confess it had not occurred to me how thoughtlessly deficient nature is in this regard.1112132020/12/218Detailed Reading According to a concerned and faintly horrified 1997 editorial in the Boston Globe,the United States spent less than one percent of its transportation budget on facilities for p
22、edestrians.Actually,Im surprised it was that much.Go to almost any suburb developed in the last 30 years,and you will not find a sidewalk anywhere.Often you wont find a single pedestrian crossing.I had this brought home to me one summer when we were driving across Maine and stopped for coffee in one
23、 of those endless zones of shopping malls,motels,gas stations and fast-food places.I noticed there was a bookstore across the street,so I decided to skip coffee and head over.14152020/12/219Detailed Reading Although the bookshop was no more than 70 or 80 feet away,I discovered that there was no way
24、to cross on foot without dodging over six lanes of swiftly moving traffic.In the end,I had to get in our car and drive across.At the time,it seemed ridiculous and exasperating,but afterward I realized that I was possibly the only person ever to have entertained the notion of negotiating that interse
25、ction on foot.16172020/12/220Detailed Reading The fact is,we not only dont walk anywhere anymore in this country,we wont walk anywhere,and woe to anyone who tries to make us,as the city of Laconia,N.H.,discovered.In the early 1970s,Laconia spent millions on a comprehensive urban renewal project,whic
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