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IV. Read the text carefully. Then remember details about the text.

I. Look at the picture.

 

II. Describe the photo. Where do you think it was taken?

III. Read the text

It is 6.30 a.m. and the sun has only just come up when the two alarm clocks next to Jie Sun's bed ring simultaneously. She gets out of bed and goes to the kitchen. Her eyes half closed, she hardly says a word while she eats breakfast. Next to the table is her blue Benetton school bag which she packed the night before. It weighs just over six and a half kilos. At 7 a.m. she says goodbye to her parents and sets off to her school, just outside the capital city, Seoul. She returns home at 6 p.m. for dinner, but half an hour later she sets off again for a private academy where she studies for another four hours. On a typical night she gets home at midnight and falls asleep, completely exhausted.

Studying for up to 17 hours a day is a fact of life for South Korean secondary school pupils.

They live in a society where education is very important, and there is great competition for a place at university. Getting a good degree from a top university is the only way to be sure of getting a professional well-paid job. The normal secondary school day, as in most other countries, lasts eight hours. But after that most parents make their children stay at school for extra classes.

In theory these classes are optional, but in practice they are compulsory. When the school day ends, the children are not allowed to relax and enjoy themselves. Most of them have to study all evening in libraries, with private tutors or at private academies. Classes of 50 are not uncommon and the teachers are strict. Pupils have to repeat after the teacher and memorise everything. Teachers at my school don't give you any individual attention because they haven't got time,' says Jie Sun. 'They don't let us ask questions because they say it wastes time.

Young people like Jie Sun have almost no social life. They rarely have time to see their friends, and having a boyfriend or girlfriend is unthinkable. 'I've never had a boyfriend and neither have any of my friends,' says Jie Sun. 'Our studies come first.'

This lifestyle may seem very hard to many European schoolchildren, who are accustomed to going out most weekends, and watching TV every evening. But on the other hand, in many British schools, up to 40% of teenagers leave school with no qualifications and the prospect of unemployment. So which system really is better?

 

IV. Read the text carefully. Then remember details about the text.

1) What’s the first thing she does when she gets out of bed? 2) What time does she leave home? 3) Where does she study after dinner? 4) How many hours a day do South Korean secondary school pupils study? 5) Do students have to go to extra classes after school? 6) How many pupils are there sometimes in a class? 7) Why don’t the teachers give pupils individual attention? 8) What happens to many British teenagers when they leave school? 9) What time does Jie Sun get up? 10) How much does her school bag weigh? 11) Where’s her school? 12) What time does she go to bed? 13) Why do South Korean children study so much? 14) What’s the teaching like in South Korean schools? 15) What are the teachers like? 16) What kind of social life does Jie Sun have?

 



 

EDUCATION

 

I. Types of school

· university · secondary school · primary school · boarding schools · private schools · state schools · head · uniforms · mixed · nursery school · nuns · pupils · priests  

 

 

In a typical school system in many countries, there are two kinds of schools: 5___ , which are run by the government, and 6 _____ . Private schools are often stricter than state schools, and in many of them the 7 _____ (schoolchildren) have to wear 8 ____ . Both state and private schools are often 9 ___ (for boys and girls) or are for boys only or girls only. There are also some schools, usually private, where the pupils sleep at school which are called 10 ____ . The ‘boss’ of a school is called the 11 ___ (teacher). In some religious schools there are also 12 ____(women) and 13 ____ (men) who work as teachers.

 

HIGHER EDUCATION


Date: 2016-03-03; view: 1212


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