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How to Improve Your Study Habits Perhaps you are an average student with average intelligence. You do well enough in school, but you probably think you will never be a top student. This is not necessarily the case, however. You can receive better grades if you want to. Yes, even students of average intelligence can be top students without additional work. Here's how: 1. Plan your time carefully. Make a list of your weekly tasks. Then make a schedule or chart of your time. Fill in committed time such as eating, sleeping, meetings, classes, etc. Then decide on good, regular times for studying. Be sure to set aside enough time to complete your normal reading and work assignments. Of course, studying shouldn't occupy all of the free time on the schedule. It's important to set aside time for relaxation, hobbies, and entertainment as well. This weekly schedule may not solve all of your problems, but it will make you more aware of how you spend your time. Furthermore, it will enable you to plan your activities so that you have adequate time for both work and play. 2. Find a good place to study. Choose one place for your study area. It may be a desk or a chair at home or in the school library, but it should be comfortable, and it should not have distractions. When you begin to work, you should be able to concentrate on the subject. 3. Skim before you read. This means looking over a passage quickly before you begin to read it more carefully. As you preview the material, you get some idea of the content and how it is organized. Later when you begin to read you will recognize less important material and you may skip some of these portions. Skimming helps double your reading speed and improves your comprehension as well. 4. Make good use of your time in class. Listening to what the teacher says in class means less work later. Sit where you can see and hear well. Take notes to help you remember what the teacher says. 5. Study regularly. Go over your notes as soon as you can after class. Review important points mentioned in class as well as points you remain confused about. Read about these points in your textbook. If you know what the teacher will discuss the next day, skim and read that material too. This will help you understand the next class. If you review your notes and textbook regularly, the material will become more meaningful and you will remember it longer. Regular review leads to improved performance on test. 6. Develop a good attitude about tests. The purpose of a test is to show what you have learned about a subject. The world won't end if you don't pass a test, so don't worry excessively about a single test. Tests provide grades, but they also let you know what you need to spend more time studying, and they help make your knowledge permanent. There are other techniques that might help you with your studying. Only a few have been mentioned here. You will probably discover many others after you have tried these. Talk with your classmates about their study techniques. Share with them some of the techniques you have found to be helpful. Improving your study habits will improve your grades.出自《大学英语精读》

大学英语教材课文

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全新版大学英语综合教程第一册单元4课文介绍

导语:美国梦意味着与不同的人不同的东西。 但对许多人来说,特别是移民,这意味着有机会为自己谋生。 对他们来说,梦想是,人才和辛勤工作可以把你从木屋带到白宫。 下面是一篇讲述主人公的美国梦并没有如此高涨,而是设法让自己的梦想成真。

Part I Pre-reading Task

Listen to the recording two or three times and then think over the following questions:

1. According to Dr. Hertz, what did the American Dream mean to his grandparents?

2. In Dr. Hertz's opinion, who wants people to believe in the American Dream? Why?

3. Why does Dr. Hertz say the American Dream is in one's head and in one's pocket?

4. What do you understand by the American Dream?

The following words in the recording may be new to you:

poverty

n. 贫穷

advertising

n. 广告宣传

Part II

Text

The American Dream means different things to different people. But for many, particularly immigrants, it means the opportunity to make a better life for themselves. For them the dream is that talent and hard work can take you from log cabin to White House. Tony Trivisonno did not rise quite so high, yet he managed to make his own dream come true.

TONY TRIVISONNO'S AMERICAN DREAM

Frederick C. Crawford

He came from a rocky farm in Italy, somewhere south of Rome. How or when he got to America, I don't know. But one evening I found him standing in the driveway, behind my garage. He was about five-foot-seven or eight, and thin.

"I mow your lawn," he said. It was hard to comprehend his broken English.

I asked him his name. "Tony Trivisonno," he replied. "I mow your lawn." I told Tony that I couldn't afford a gardener.

"I mow your lawn," he said again, then walked away. I went into my house unhappy. Yes, these Depression days were difficult, but how could I to turn away a person who had come to me for help?

When I got home from work the next evening, the lawn had been mowed, the garden weeded, and the walks swept. I asked my wife what had happened.

"A man got the lawn mower out of the garage and worked on the yard," she answered. "I assumed you had hired him."

I told her of my experience the night before. We thought it strange that he had not asked for pay.

The next two days were busy, and I forgot about Tony. We were trying to rebuild our business and bring some of our workers back to the plants. But on Friday, returning home a little early, I saw Tony again, behind the garage. I complimented him on the work he had done.

"I mow your lawn," he said.

I managed to work out some kind of small weekly pay, and each day Tony cleaned up the yard and took care of any little tasks. My wife said he was very helpful whenever there were any heavy objects to lift or things to fix.

Summer passed into fall, and winds blew cold. "Mr. Craw, snow pretty soon," Tony told me one evening. "When winter come, you give me job clearing snow at the factory."

Well, what do you do with such determination and hope? Of course, Tony got his job at the factory.

The months passed. I asked the personnel department for a report. They said Tony was a very good worker.

One day I found Tony at our meeting place behind the garage. "I want to be 'prentice," he said.

We had a pretty good apprentice school that trained laborers. But I doubted whether Tony had the capacity to read blueprints and micrometers or do precision work. Still, how could I turn him down?

Tony took a cut in pay to become an apprentice. Months later, I got a report that he had graduated as a skilled grinder. He had learned to read the millionths of an inch on the micrometer and to shape the grinding wheel with an instrument set with a diamond. My wife and I were delighted with what we felt was a satisfying end of the story.

A year or two passed, and again I found Tony in his usual waiting place. We talked about his work, and I asked him what he wanted.

"Mr. Craw," he said, "I like a buy a house." On the edge of town, he had found a house for sale, a complete wreck.

I called on a banker friend. "Do you ever loan money on character?" I asked. "No," he said. "We can't afford to. No sale."

"Now, wait a minute," I replied. "Here is a hard-working man, a man of character, I can promise you that. He's got a good job. You're not getting a damn thing from your lot. It will stay there for years. At least he will pay your interest."

Reluctantly, the banker wrote a mortgage for $2,000 and gave Tony the house with no down payment. Tony was delighted. From then on, it was interesting to see that any discarded odds and ends around our place — a broken screen, a bit of hardware, boards from packing — Tony would gather and take home.

After about two years, I found Tony in our familiar meeting spot. He seemed to stand a little straighter. He was heavier. He had a look of confidence.

"Mr. Craw, I sell my house!" he said with pride. "I got $8,000."

I was amazed. "But, Tony, where are you going to live without a house?"

"Mr. Craw, I buy a farm."

We sat down and talked. Tony told me that to own a farm was his dream. He loved the tomatoes and peppers and all the other vegetables important to his Italian diet. He had sent for his wife and son and daughter back in Italy. He had hunted around the edge of town until he found a small, abandoned piece of property with a house and shed. Now he was moving his family to his farm.

Sometime later. Tony arrived on a Sunday afternoon, neatly dressed. He had another Italian man with him. He told me that he had persuaded his childhood friend to move to America. Tony was sponsoring him. With an amused look in his eye, he told me that when they approached the little farm he now operated, his friend stood in amazement and said, "Tony, you are a millionaire!"

Then, during the war, a message came from my company. Tony had passed away.

I asked our people to check on his family and see that everything was properly handled. They found the farm green with vegetables, the little house livable and homey. There was a tractor and a good car in the yard. The children were educated and working, and Tony didn't owe a cent.

After he passed away, I thought more and more about Tony's career. He grew in stature in my mind. In the end, I think he stood as tall, and as proud, as the greatest American industrialists.

They had all reached their success by the same route and by the same values and principles: vision, determination, self-control, optimism, self-respect and, above all, integrity.

Tony did not begin on the bottom rung of the ladder. He began in the basement. Tony's affairs were tiny; the greatest industrialists' affairs were giant. But, after all, the balance sheets were exactly the same. The only difference was where you put the decimal point.

Tony Trivisonno came to America seeking the American Dream. But he didn't find it — he created it for himself. All he had were 24 precious hours a day, and he wasted none of them.

driveway

n. 宅旁私家车道

mow

v. 修剪(草坪),刈(草)

comprehend

vt. understand fully

lawn

n. 草地,草坪

turn away

refuse to help (sb.) or to allow (sb.) to enter a place 拒绝帮助;不让…进入

weed

v. 除去…的杂草;除草

n. 杂草,野草

assume

vt. suppose 假设;以为

compliment▲

vt. praise 赞扬

n. 赞美的言辞或行为

work out

plan; solve; calculate 制定出;解决;算出

weekly

a. happening once a week or every week 每周的;一周一次的

clean up

make clean and tidy 打扫,清除

helpful

a. giving help; useful 有帮助的;有用的

do with

(used in questions with what) 对待,处理

determination

n. 决心,决定

personnel

n. 人事部门;全体人员,全体职员

apprentice

n. 学徒

capacity

n. the ability to understand or do sth. 能力,才能

micrometer

n. 测微计,千分尺

precision

n. the quality of being exact 精密;精确(性)

turn down

refuse 拒绝

graduate

v. (使)毕业

n. (尤指大学)毕业生

skilled

a. having skill; needing skill 熟练的,有技巧的;技术性的

grinder

n. 磨工

grind (ground)

vt. 磨,磨碎,碾碎

instrument

n. 工具,器械,仪器

for sale

intended to be sold 待售

wreck

n. 残破物;(尤指失事船只、飞机等的)残骸

call on

visit (sb.) for a short time 拜访

banker

n. 银行家;银行高级职员

loan

vt. lend (sth.) 借,贷

n. 贷款;借,贷

character

n. (人的`)品德;品质;性格

damn

a.,n. (infml) (usu. used in negatives) of even the smallest amount 丝毫

reluctantly

ad. 勉强地

reluctant a.

mortgage▲

n. 抵押借款,按揭

discard

vt. (fml)throw away 抛弃

odds and ends

零星杂物,琐碎物品

screen

n. 纱门,纱窗;屏;荧屏

hardware

n. 五金器具;(计算机的)硬件

spot

n. a particular place;a small dirty mark 地点;斑点

confidence

n. 信心

amaze

vt. surprise (sb.) very much 使惊愕,使诧异

amazement

n. 惊愕,诧异

pepper

n. 辣椒;胡椒粉

Italian

a. 意大利的

diet

n. food and drink usually taken by a person or group 日常饮食

send for

ask for the arrival of 派人去叫,召唤;派人去取

hunt

v. 寻找;打猎

abandon

vt. give up completely or forever 抛弃,放弃

property

n. land, buildings or both together; sth. which is owned (房)地产;财产

shed

n. 小屋,棚

vt. 使脱落;使流出,散发出

sometime

ad. 某个时候

sponsor

vt. 为…做保证人;主办,发起

n. 保证人;主办者,发起人

amuse

vt. cause to laugh or smile; cause to spend time in a pleasant manner 逗乐;给…提供娱乐

approach

v. come near(er) to 接近

millionaire▲

n. 百万富翁

pass away

(euph) (esp. of a person) die 去世

handle

vt. manage; control 管理,处理;操纵

livable

a. fit or pleasant to live in 适于居住的

homey

a. (infml) pleasant; like home 舒适的;像家一样的

tractor

n. 拖拉机

stature

n. 身材,身高;境界

industrialist

n. 工业家,实业家

route

n. 路线,路程

principle

n. guiding rule for behavior; basic truth 信条;原则;原理

vision

n. the ability to make great plans for the future; sight; the ability to see 远见;视觉,视力

optimism▲

n. 乐观主义

self-respect

n. proper respect for oneself 自尊;自重

above all

most important of all 最重要的是

integrity▲

n. quality of being honest and responsible; state of being complete 正直;完整

rung

n. (梯子的)横档,梯级

basement▲

n. 地下室

giant

a. of great size or force 巨大的

n. 巨人

balance

n. 平衡;余额

balance sheet

资产负债表

decimal▲

小数

create

vt. produce or make (esp. sth. new) 创造,创作

Tony Trivisonno

托尼·特里韦索诺

Frederick C. Crawford

弗雷德里克·C·克罗弗德

Italy

意大利

Rome

罗马(意大利首都)

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