问答题汉语提示:
表明邀请对方参加会议的希望,说明会议和相关活动的名称、时间、地点,对被邀请者的威望和学术水平等表示恭维。如果被邀请者能够接受邀请,会给会议或者活动增光添彩,最后还要请收信人对发出的邀请作出反馈,如确认接受邀请。
问答题They requested that ______ (我借的书还回图书馆) by next Friday.
问答题It is suggested that the air conditioner ______ (要安装在窗户旁).
问答题1. 现在网上购物已成为一种时尚
2. 晚上购物有很多好处,但也有不少问题
3. 我的建议
问答题汉语提示
以销售员刘立维的身份给Robert经理写一封辞职信。内容如下:本人在销售部作销售员已满3年,一直很满意这个职位。最近,一个朋友介绍本人去彩虹公司,为了得到更多的提升和加薪机会,现已决定接受这个职务并正式向公司提出辞职。收信人:Robert,Sales Manager;写信日期:April 19,2010。
要求:
按照书信格式要求,语气尽量婉转、诚恳,要表达辞职的惋惜之情。
Words for reference
提升:promotion
加薪:increase salary
辞职:resign(v.);resignation(n.)
问答题说明:以某公司人事部门助理张华的身份写一份备忘录,向公司总经理报告一次为某部门招聘面试的结果。有3名应聘者:2名男士,1名女士。经过面试,决定录用其中1名男士。简略说明录用理由。
Reference Words:
备忘录memo;面试interview;应聘人candidate;录用employ
问答题假设你叫王平,是某公司的一名职员。用英语写一篇关于推迟约会的留言。
要求:文字简洁,内容清晰,中心突出。
时间:张经理事先约好和你今天晚上见面,可是公司派你去机场接一位来自澳大利亚的朋友,因而你不能按时赴约。为此,你发了这个电子邮件,希望张经理打个电话过来再另约一个时间,或告诉其他同事他何时有空。
To:
From:
Date:
Subject:
问答题说明:根据下列中文信息登一则招聘广告。
《XX日报》是一家全球发行的英文报纸。现招聘一名广告部编辑。
要求:1.精通英文和中文。
2.熟练掌握计算机技术。
3.至少有三年在相关领域的工作经验。
4.能够在压力下按时完成工作。
有意的求职者请在2005年8月31日之前将你的中英文简历通过电子邮件或传真发至:
传真:86-13-7845692
电子邮件:edit@XXdaily.com.cn
Reference Words:
发行distribute;编辑editor;按时完成任务meet deadlines;求职者applicant
问答题Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes
to write a short essay on the topic of Due Attention Should Be Given To
Spelling. You should write at least 120 words following the outline
given below: 1. 如今不少学生在英语学习中不重视拼写 2.
出现这种情况的原因 3. 为了改变这种状况,我认为… Due
Attention Should Be Given To Spelling
From Hobby to Business
Having a hobby to keep you busy in your spare time is one thing, but being able to take the activity you love and turn it into your full-time, money-making job is something very different—and entirely possible. Faze tracked down four "happy hobbyists" who turned their hobbies into full-time work—creating successful, money-making businesses out of what they love to do best.
Robin Woodward
Barbie"s Basement Jewellery is the place to go for funky (时髦的), colourful pop rings, pendants(坠子), chokers, broaches and belt buckles; all inspired by a variety of cult movies and pop icons. Robin Woodward, founder and creative energy behind this new-age pop art, shaped her long-time hobby into a real career when she lost her full- time job and had to find something else to pay the bills. "I realized I wanted to make jewelry when a friend of mine turned to me and asked, "If you could do anything, what would it be?"" Robin confesses. "It was all I wanted to do." So she started to make the rounds at small craft shows and outdoor fairs, showcasing and selling her work.
"Starting small is important," she advises, "especially when you lack experience; that"s how you learn." Starting small, but determined to make her business bigger, Robin realized that she had to take a self-employment course to learn more about how to run a real company. "The small business course taught me business basics and gave me a headspace to take myself seriously as a business." In only seven years, Robin and her partner, Ange Beever, have hundreds of products sold in independent stores across Canada, the United States, Hungary and Japan.
Christa MacLellan
Christa MacLellan, a small-town girl who, as a child, loved to spend her time doing crafts and sewing, graduated from the Fashion Marketing Program at George Brown College in 2004, and was sent to Selengue, Mall as the Canadian representative for Canada World Youth"s Quebec/Mall Community Development Program. Although she loved the adventure, the agricultural work she had to do there didn"t really connect with her. Inspired by the vibrant (鲜明的) colours, customs and styles of the sub-Saharan community, and using her flair for fashion, Christa broke out a sketch pad and began designing African accessories to bring back to North America. In only three months, Christa"s company—Saki by Chata—was born.
When Christa returned to Canada, she tried to display her merchandise at the One of a Kind Show, a mega-event for artisans to showcase and sell their work, but found that it was too expensive and intimidating(吓人的) tot a young, up-and-coming(积极进取的) designer. "So I started Fashion on the Rocks—a small show for accessory designers only," Christa explains. "There were a lot of young designers in the same boat, who needed a place to display their work." Fashion on the Rocks got a lot of media attention and sponsors and is still a big yearly event in the accessories industry.
It was inspiration and a fancy for accessory-making that started Saki by Chata, but it was Christa"s determined will to get her stuff out there—even if it meant creating her own exhibition show to do it—that made it flourish. "I always believe that you should take advantage of every opportunity that you have," she says, "Just go for it, and figure it out along the way."
Jen Kluger and Suzie Orol
Jen Kluger and Suzie Orol, the founders and designers for Foxy Originals, hooked up at the Richard Ivey School of Business in London, Ontario, with a mission to make highfashion, yet affordable jewelry accessible to young women. Together they designed and sold their creations to friends and acquaintances on campus. "We got great feedback from our customers and realized our jewelry was in demand," says Suzie. Soon after, they took to the road selling their pieces at festivals and concerts. "This was a hobby, and we wanted to prove to ourselves and our peers that we could run a business and be successful doing something we love," says Suzie. News spread quickly about the distinct style of Foxy Originals, and soon the jewelry could be found in boutiques across the country. Today it is sold in over 350 stores across North America, showcased in national magazines, and found on celebrity "must have" lists; Eve, Kim Cattrall, Nelly Furtado and Paris Hilton have all been spotted wearing Foxy"s fun and funky creations. Both Jen and Suzie still rely on the skills and knowledge they gained from university to market and promote Foxy in countries around the world, but Suzie says you"ll need more than a formal education, "Really put your mind to it," she says, "Be persistent, ask lots of questions and you will find a way."
Sarah Gold
Sarah Gold, a custom crystallization designer and president and founder of NYC Peach, started her successful accessories design company in 2003. She took everyday objects like cell phones, cameras and business card holders, and made them expressions of personal style by painstakingly applying individual Swarovski lead crystals in a variety of unique designs and colours.
Originally, Sarah"s idea of designing personal items with coloured crystals was just a hobby and a great gift idea for her friends, but soon A-list celebrities like Mischa Barton, Lindsay Lohan, Sarah Jessica Parker and J. Lo were seen sporting (炫耀) the trendy designs on and off on the red carpet. "My business exploded faster than I could have ever imagined," Sarah declares in disbelief. In order to keep up with the demand, she found herself working really hard and staying up late, night after night, filling requests from new customers. "I don"t have a business background," Sarah explains, "but I have always tried to run my business the way I believe all businesses should: rewarding those people who help you with a little bit extra, cutting back on your own salary to get the best product out there, and making it accessible to everyone by putting it online."
Sarah also believes that taking action is the key to turning your hobby into a business. "Your ideas are as good as anyone else"s. If you think you have a good idea, move it on and make it happen," she urges. After all, Sarah points out, "Someone out there is going to make something cool, so it might as well be you."
Protect Your Privacy When Job-hunting Online
Identity theft and identity fraud are terms used to refer to all types of crime in which someone wrongfully obtains and uses another person"s personal data in some way that involves fraud or deception, typically for economic gain.
The numbers associated with identity theft are beginning to add up fast these days. A recent General Accounting Office report estimates that as many as 750,000 Americans are victims of identity theft every year. And that number may be low, as many people choose not to report the crime even if they know they have been victimized.
Identity theft is "an absolute epidemic," states Robert Ellis Smith, a respected author and advocate of privacy. "It"s certainly picked up in the last four or five years. It"s worldwide. It affects everybody, and there"s very little you can do to prevent it and, worst of all, you can"t detect it until it"s probably too late."
Unlike your fingerprints, which are unique to you and cannot be given to someone else for their use, your personal data, especially your social security number, your bank account or credit card number, your telephone calling card number, and other valuable identifying data, can be used, if they fall into the wrong hands, to personally profit at your expense. In the United States and Canada, for example, many people have reported that unauthorized persons have taken funds out of their bank or financial accounts, or, in the worst cases, taken over their identities altogether, running up vast debts and committing crimes while using the victims" names. In many cases, a victim"s losses may include not only out-of-pocket financial losses, but substantial additional financial costs associated with trying to restore his reputation in the community and correcting erroneous information for which the criminal is responsible.
According to the FBI, identity theft is the number one fraud committed on the Internet. So how do job seekers protect themselves while continuing to circulate their resumes online? The key to a successful online job search is learning to manage the risks. Here are some tips for staying safe while conducting a job search on the Internet.
1. Check for a privacy policy.
If you are considering posting your resume online, make sure the job search site you are considering has a privacy policy, like CareerBuilder. com. The policy should spell out how your information will be used, stored and whether or not it will be shared. You may want to think twice about posting your resume on a site that automatically shares your information with others. You could be opening yourself up to unwanted calls from
solicitors
(推销员).
When reviewing the site"s privacy policy, you"ll be able to delete your resume just as easily as you posted it. You won"t necessarily want your resume to remain out there on the Internet once you land a job. Remember, the longer your resume remains posted on a job board, the more exposure, both positive and not-so-positive, it will receive.
2. Take advantage of site features.
Lawful job search sites offer levels of privacy protection. Before posting your resume, carefully consider your job search objectives and the level of risk you are willing to assume.
CareerBuilder.com, for example, offers three levels of privacy from which job seekers can choose. The first is standard posting. This option gives job seekers who post their resumes the most visibility to the broadest employer audience possible.
The second is
anonymous
(匿名的) posting. This allows job seekers the same visibility as those in the standard posting category without any of their contact information being displayed. Job seekers who wish to remain anonymous but want to share some other information may choose which pieces of contact information to display.
The third is private posting. This option allows a job seeker to post a resume without having it searched by employers. Private posting allows job seekers to quickly and easily apply for jobs that appear on CareerBuilder. corn without retyping their information.
3. Safeguard your identity.
Career experts say that one of the ways job seekers can stay safe while using the Internet to search out jobs is to conceal their identities. Replace your name on your resume with a
generic
(泛指的) identifier, such as "Intranet Developer Candidate," or "Experienced Marketing Representative."
You should also consider eliminating the name and location of your current employer. Depending on your title, it may not be all that difficult to determine who you are once the name of your company is provided. Use a general description of the company such as "Major auto manufacturer," or "International packaged goods supplier."
If your job title is unique, consider using the generic equivalent instead of the exact title assigned by your employer.
4. Establish an email address for your search.
Another way to protect your privacy while seeking employment online is to open up an email account specifically for your online job search. This will safeguard your existing email box in the event someone you don"t know gets hold of your email address and shares it with others.
Using an email address specifically for your job search also eliminates the possibility that you will receive unwelcome emails in your primary mailbox. When naming your new email address, be sure that it doesn"t contain references to your name or other information that will give away your identity. The best solution is an email address that is relevant to the job you are seeking such as salesmgr 2004@ provider, com.
5. Protect your references.
If your resume contains a section with the names and contact information of your references, take it out. There"s no sense in safeguarding your information while sharing private contact information of your references.
6. Keep confidential(机密的) information confidential.
Do not, under any circumstances, share your social security, driver"s license, and bank account numbers or other personal information, such as race or eye color. Honest employers do not need this information with an initial application. Don"t provide this even if they say they need it in order to conduct a background check. This is one of the oldest tricks in the book—don"t fall for it.
Six Ways To Die Faster
"Our lifestyle choices are a disaster," according to Dr. Laurence Sperling, chief of preventive cardiology at Emory School of Medicine. He said that we"ve compiled a list of some of the most offensive lifestyle choices you could make, and he hoped that we all chose not to do them... or at least some of them.
1. Overeating
Scientifically, overeating means eating an amount that is "inappropriately large for a given energy expenditure." Realistically, overeating is something that many Americans do as a hobby—at their favorite restaurant, on their favorite holiday, with their favorite snack food, or just because they"re with friends. It doesn"t really matter when; we just do it.
If you only overeat once or twice a year, chances are you"ll be OK, but do it compulsively and you"re headed down the road to obesity, high cholesterol, diabetes, heart disease and depression.
2. Smoking
This one is obvious yet ironic because, according to the American Heart Association, of the estimated 48 million Americans who smoke cigarettes, most are either actively trying to quit or want to quit.
Most people are familiar with the related health effects of emphysema, cancer and heart disease, but smoking can also have negative effects on the eyes, the throat, the urinary tract, the digestive organs, the bones and joints, and the skin.
3. Drinking and Driving
Another obvious one, yet, according to the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, in 2002 about 1.5 million drivers were arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol (or narcotics). And, in 2003, 17,013 people in the United States died in alcohol-related motor vehicle crashes, representing 40 percent of all traffic related deaths.
If there"s going to be drinking, decide on a designated driver beforehand; this one is really that simple
4. Living on fast food
Going hand-in-hand with overeating, living on a junk food diet is another surefire way to end up overweight and suffering from a myriad of health problems ranging from clogged arteries to depression. One only needs to turn on Morgan Spurlock"s documentary "Super Size Me" to find out exactly what the body goes through after consuming nothing but fast food for 30 straight days.
"I start to get tired, I start to get headaches; my liver basically starts to fill up with fat because there"s so much fat and sugar in this food. My blood sugar skyrockets, my cholesterol goes up off the charts, my blood pressure becomes completely unmanageable. The doctors were like, "You have to stop," "Spurlock said.
Still, according to Eric Schlosser"s Fast Food Nation, the average American eats three hamburgers and four orders of fries—every week.
5. No exercising
Given all the great things that we know exercise is good for, including:
Boosting HDL (good) cholesterol
Improving the circulatory system
Lowering blood pressure and blood fats
Reducing the risk for heart disease, heart attack and stroke
Strengthening muscles
Increasing flexibility
Building stronger bones and fighting osteoporosis
Relieving stress and anxiety
It is curious that we"re not all doing it. Imagine a pill that came out with those types of real benefits—it"d be flying off the shelves. To not exercise, then, is akin to turning down all of those excellent health potentials.
6. Stress
We all have stress, but if you don"t do something to relieve it, sooner or later it will take its toll on you. Stress is linked to everything from heart disease and a decrease in immune function to depression and digestive problems. The good news is that stress can be relieved... you just need to find a method that works for you. Here are some tips to try :
Meditation
Yoga
Prayer
Gardening
Reading
Journaling
Soaking in a bath
Hiking, biking or swimming
In the 1900"s, American townspeople usually washed and brushed their teeth and combed their hair in the kitchen. Or they kept a water pitcher(大水罐) and a wash basin in their rooms and took care of these things there.
The bathtub was a wash tub (澡盆)filled with water from the stove. If you were small enough, you could sit down by drawing your knees to your chest. Otherwise, you washed yourself standing up. Often all the women and girls in the family bathed together. Then the men and boys did. In most families, this was Saturday night because Sundays they went church.
A small number of families did have running water. But that depended on whether there was a water system where they lived and on whether they could afford the plumbing (水管设施). Some people had bathtubs in their homes as early as 1895, but many others did not have their first bath in a bathtub until 1910 or later when they were fifteen or sixteen years old.
From childhood to old age, all of us have to use language as a means of broadening our knowledge of ourselves and the world around us. When humans first
1
, they were like newborn children, unable to use this
2
tool. Yet once language developed, the possibilities for human kind"s future
3
and cultural growth increased.
Many linguists believe that evolution is
4
for our ability to produce and use languages. They
5
that our highly evolved brain provides us
6
an innate language ability not found in lower
7
. Proponents (支持者) of this innateness theory say that our
8
tor language is inborn, but that language itself develops gradually,
9
a function of the growth of the brain during childhood. Therefore there are critical
10
times tot language development.
Current
11
of innateness theory are mixed, however, evidence supporting the existence of some innate abilities is undeniable.
12
, more and more schools are discovering that foreign languages are best taught in
13
grades. Young children often can learn several languages by being
14
to them, while adults have a much harder time learning another language once the
15
of their first language have become firmly fixed.
16
some aspects of language are undeniably innate, language does not develop automatically in a vacuum. Children who have been
17
from other human beings do not possess languages. This demonstrates that
18
with other human beings is necessary for proper language development. Some linguists believe that this is even more basic to human language
19
than any innate capacities. These theorists view language as imitative, learned behavior.
20
, children learn language from their parents by imitating them. Parents gradually shape their children"s language skills by positively reinforcing precise imitations and negatively reinforcing imprecise ones.
Five Strange New Facts about Twins
"The fascination with twins is as old as time," says Susan Kohl in her book Twin Stories. "Twins share a strong and powerful bond that neither time nor distance seems to shake." Because of their unique relationship, twins are often the focus of research. Here"s a look at five recent studies that shine new light on these linked individuals, and what they can teach the rest of us.
1. Mothers of twins live longer
Twins have been greeted as everything from an unwanted burden to "a sign of their father"s superior virility," says The Economist. But a new study from the University of Utah shows that twins "have more to do with their mother"s sturdy constitution than their father"s sexual power." Looking at the birth records for 59,000 women between 1800 and 1970, researchers found that women who give birth to twins live longer, have healthier kids, and " appear to be healthier" themselves, says lead author Ken R. Smith. That"s probably because sturdier women have twins, not because having twins is good for you, the study notes.
2. But they get divorced more often
It seems that twins can help unravel a marriage, say Dr. Anupam Jena and his colleagues at Boston"s Massachusetts General Hospital. When a couple"s only children are twins, parents are only about 1 percent more likely to get divorced than parents of singletons(单生子女). But add in more kids(or less income) , and the risk of divorce shoots up. The reason isprobably the added stress, both financial and emotional.
3. Twin fetuses(双胎儿) start playing at 14 weeks
Examining 3D ultrasound images of five pairs of in-utero twins, a team at the University of Padova, Italy, found that fetuses started deliberately interacting at 14 weeks, reaching out and touching each other through the uterine wall. By 18 weeks, they spent more time stroking each other than themselves, and were equally careful when touching their co-twin"s sensitive eye areas. The results are "astonishing," says Jean-Philippe Riviere at Doctissimo. At 14 weeks, "they were already socializing with their sibling in the womb."
4. If you separate identical twins, they still end up similar
Surveying decades of twin research, George Mason University economist Bryan Caplan found the "most prominent conclusion" to be that "practically everything— health, intelligence, happiness, success, personality, values, interests—is partly genetic." We may latch on to the parenting-centric ideas of "Tiger Morn" Amy Chua, says Helen Rumbelow in The Australian. But the dozens of rigorous studies on separated-at-birth twins is much more persuasive than " Chua"s sample of one": As adults, even separated twins are "very similar on almost every count."
5. But identical twins can get sick very differently
In 1983, two identical twin infant boys were given a blood transfusion contaminated by HIV; decades later, one has an almost-normal immune system while the other is faring much worse. Brigham Young University researchers recently tried to explain the different reactions. What they found, says Amanda Carpenter at Virology, is that once identical twins leave the womb and are " exposed to different pathogens (病原体), bacteria, and microbes(微生物)," their immune systems are not identical at all.
Four Surprising Facts about the Color Red
A new study says that humans react more powerfully when they see red. Scientists say red, more than other colors, provokes clearly identifiable reactions in human beings. Here are four recent findings that may change the way you look at crimson:
1. Red intensifies our physical reactions
Seeing red causes people to react faster and more forcefully, according to a new study published in the journal Emotion. Our bodies react to red, a culturally ingrained signal of danger, as if we"ve seen a threat, says study author Andrew Elliot of the University of Rochester, as quoted by MSNBC. The reaction doesn"t last long, and people aren"t even aware of it, but, according to UPI, the findings "may have applications for sporting and other activities in which a brief burst of strength and speed is needed, such as weightlifting."
2. Red makes men more desirable to women
Men in red are "more attractive, more powerful and more sexually desirable to women," according to another study by Elliot, cited by CBS News. The study, published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology, asked women to rate pictures of men framed by or wearing a variety of colors. The women rated men in red "higher in status and more likely to earn a better living." That perception, which may stem from the fact that red pigmentation indicates male dominance in a number of animal species, leads to the attraction. Earlier research found that men also find women in red more attractive because the color suggests "sexual receptivity."
3. Red is the color of winner
The color red can be intimidating--just ask Tiger Woods, who famously wears red on the final day of golf tournaments (and, until recently, tended to triumph). A 2005 study by British scientists found that athletes wearing red "have an advantage over blue- suited competitors," according to MSNBC. "We find that wearing red is consistently associated with a higher probability of winning," the researchers wrote in the journal Nature. The effect is subtle, though, so it may only factor in(将……列入重要因素) when evenly matched competitors face off.
4. Red can cause failure on exams
Seeing "even a hint of red" on an exam can affect a test-taker"s performance "to a significant degree," researchers reported in 2007. Perhaps because instructors often use red ink to mark errors, people associate the color "with mistakes and failures," and, "in turn, they do poorly on" the exam in front of them.
For ebook devotees, reading is a whole new experience
David J. Loehr, a playwright who lives in southern Indiana, was taking his car to the dealership when a stray on the radio caught his attention. A short science piece about "an obscure subject" gave him an idea for a new play.
Ordinarily, Loehr would have had to make do with(设法应付) jotting down some notes or trying to remember his inspiration. But since he had his iPad with him, he bought a few books on the subject and downloaded them as soon as he got to the dealership. He started his research for the play right there, while his car was being serviced.
"I can have all that research on a single tablet instead of carrying around 40 books," Loehr said.
Welcome to the future of books, where your entire library is as portable(便于携带的) as a cellphone.
A recent study by the Pew Research Center"s Internet and American Life Project reported that ownership of e-reader devices—like the Amazon Kindle, Barnes and Noble Nook, Sony Reader and Kobo eReader Touch—doubled between November 2010 and May 2011. Now 12 percent of adults over age 18 own one, while 8 percent own a tablet computer like the iPad.
So what does the increasing popularity of these devices mean for the experience of reading? Do we read differently when we can get (almost) any book ever published, whenever we want?
Reading the future
For their devotees, ebooks have transformed the experience of reading.
Michelle Jones, who writes the Consuming Louisville blog, has a Kindle reader and also uses the Kindle app on her Android phone. "Even when I"m walking the dog, I"m always going to have my phone on me," she said. "I"m not always going to have my book bag. It makes it possible for me to read places I never would have before."
For Jones, the tact that her Kindle syncs with her phone—so her book always knows where she left off—makes reading the same book on different devices effortless.
Jones describes herself as an early adopter. But e-readers also have won over some book lovers who aren"t ordinarily enticed(引诱) by gadgetry, like Madelyn Anetrella, a nonprofit development manager for the American Lung Association.
"I don"t know how to use my iPod," she said, by way of establishing her Luddite bona fides. But she does read on a Kindle and on the Kindle app on her phone.
"I"m always with a book of some sort, whether in hard copy on my Kindle or on the phone," she said. And although the gadgets haven"t replaced her physical books, she does find that they come in handy. "Amazon has a lot of the classics for free, so I"ll read a few pages when I"m online."
Brian Leung, novelist and professor of English at the University of Louisville, said that having your entire library with you wherever you go was pretty extraordinary. "It"s having all your books in your pocket, and having all your magazine subscriptions in your pocket."
Although Leung has a strong preference for physical books, he has started to think about buying ebook versions of things he"s likely to only read once. He recently read Tina Fey"s memoir(回忆录), "Bossypants," and cited it as an example. "It"s something that I wouldn"t go back to," Leung said.
Like Leung, some readers who would never give up physical books have started to opt for ebook versions of one-time reads. James Bickers, the morning host for WFPK, is one. "It"s largely a clutter thing," Bickers said. "I don"t let a book into my house if I don"t think I"m going to read it more than once."
Being able to purchase an ebook and start reading it right away without leaving the house—or the doctor"s waiting room—also increases the convenience of the impulse buy.
Jen Woods, founder and president of the local small press Typecast Publishing, said she often buys books she"s not sure about in the ebook version for her Nook. "For those books, I find that I purchase a lot more of them because I don"t have to store them anywhere. If it is only a peripheral (非主要的,外围的) interest and I don"t read the whole book, it"s OK."
Just being able to carry around lots of books, however, doesn"t mean you"re going to read them. Bickers said that one of the things that attracted him to e-readers was the ability to download public-domain classics for free.
"It"s all stuff that you were meant to read anyway. Now I have these electronic versions of Dickens that I cannot read electronically," he said. "It makes me feel good to know I have Dickens even though I know I"m probably never going to get through it."
Some things never change
As we spend more time online, and increasingly turn to social networks for reading recommendations, writers and publishers are adjusting to fit the expectations of new media.
Woods of Typecast Publishing said she"s a fan of the way electronic media allow her authors to connect with readers—even though her books are mostly printed on letterpress, an old-fashioned and time-consuming physical process.
"I really feel like the digital revolution in reading is only one more tool in our belt that we can use to put content out to readers," she said. "We do most of our work very much in the world of printed object, but one reason why we succeed in that is because of the digital revolution."
Writers, too, have been modifying their work to suit the online marketplace. Rick Moody and John Wray are two novelists who have experimented with Twitter fiction. Paul Griner, a novelist and professor of English at the University of Louisville, said that he tends to write more flash fiction—very short short stories—because they"re easier for grazing online readers to digest.
"The available technology often dictates what form writing takes, rather than the other way around," Griner said, citing the examples of Chekhov and Guy de Maupassant, who wrote their short stories to fit the specifications of the newspapers that published them.
Online-only literary journals like elimae (elimae.com), Five Chapters (fivechapters.com), Fifty-Two Stories (fiftytwostories.com) and Guernica (guernicamag.com) cater to the audience of readers at their desks with short blasts of fiction.
At the same time, some things won"t change. Reading is still a quiet, solitary(独自的) engagement between you and the text, whether that text is printed on dead trees or in e-ink on a screen. The experience of getting sucked into a great story doesn"t differ, according to e-reader owners.
If anything, the growing popularity of ebooks shows that readers are still willing to pay for good writing, despite the profusion (大量) of free content available online. In that sense, it"s a reaffirmation of the old publishing business model.
Petrosino doesn"t think the prevalence of electronic media would affect the way she writes poetry, either. "Poetry is one of the forms that defies (反抗,蔑视) the short attention span. Poetry is a way of paying attention."
And although ebooks continue to increase their share of the market, readers will still buy physical books.
"I think I"m 50-50 with reading actual books and reading on my Kindle," said Anetrella of the American Lung Association. "If I"m at a bookstore and I see a book that I want, I"ll buy it."
Teacher Grades: Pass or Be Fired
Emily Strzelecki, a first-year science teacher here, was about as eager for a classroom visit by one of the city"s roving teacher evaluators as she would be to get a tooth drilled(钻孔). "It really stressed me out because, oh my gosh, I could lose my job," Ms. Strzelecki said.
Her fears were not unfounded: 165 Washington teachers were fired last year based on a pioneering evaluation system that places significant emphasis on classroom observations; next month, 200 to 600 of the city"s 4,200 educators are expected to get similar bad news, in the nation"s highest rate of dismissal for poor performance.
The evaluation system, known as Impact, is disliked by many unionized teachers but has become a model for many educators.
Spurred
(激励) by President Obama and his $5 billion Race to the Top grant competition, some 20 states, including New York, and thousands of school districts are
overhauling
(改革) the way they grade teachers, and many have sent people to study Impact.
Its admirers say the system, a centerpiece of the
tempestuous
(动乱的,狂暴的) three-year tenure of Washington"s former schools chancellor, Michelle Rhee, has brought clear teaching standards to a district that lacked them and is setting a new standard by establishing dismissal as a consequence of ineffective teaching.
But some educators say it is better at sorting and firing teachers than at helping struggling ones; they note that the system does not consider socioeconomic factors in most cases and that last year 35 percent of the teachers in the city"s wealthiest area, Ward 3, were rated highly effective, compared with 5 percent in Ward 8, the poorest.
"Teachers have to be parents, priests, lawyers, clothes washers, babysitters and a bunch of other things" if they work with low-income children, said Nathan Saunders, president of the Washington Teachers Union. "Impact takes none of those roles into account, so it can penalize you just for teaching in a high-needs school."
Jason Kamras, the architect of the system, said "it"s too early to answer" whether Impact makes it easier for teachers in well-off neighborhoods to do well, but pointed out that Washington"s compensation system offers bigger bonuses ($25,000 versus $12,500) and salary enhancements in high-poverty schools.
"We take very seriously the distribution of high-quality teachers across the system," he said.
The evaluation system leans heavily on student test scores to judge about 500 math and reading teachers in grades fore to eight. Ratings for the rest of the city"s 3,600 teachers are determined mostly by five classroom observations annually, three by their principal and two by so-called master educators, most recruited from outside Washington.
For classroom observations, nine criteria—"explain content clearly," "maximize instructional time" and "check for student understanding," for example—are used to rate the lesson as highly effective, effective, minimally effective or ineffective.
These five observations combine to form 75 percent of these teachers" overall ratings; the rest is based on achievement data and the teachers" commitment to their school communities. Ineffective teachers face dismissal. Minimally effective ones get a year to improve.
Impact costs the city $7 million a year, including pay for 41 master educators, who earn about $ 90,000 a year and conduct about 170 observations each. The program also asks more of principals. Carolyne Albert-Garvey, the principal of Maury Elementary School on Capitol Hill, has 22 teachers—she must conduct 66 observations, about one every three school days.
"I"ve really gotten to know my staff, and I"m giving teachers more specific feedback," Ms. Albert-Garvey said. "It"s empowered me to have the difficult conversations, and that gives everyone the opportunity to improve."
Several teachers, however, said they considered their ratings unfair.
A veteran teacher who said he did not want to criticize the school system openly, said that a month after he inherited a chaotic world history class from a long-term substitute, the visiting evaluator
cut him no slack
(绝不放过他) for taking on the assignment and penalized him because a student was texting during the lesson.
Another teacher who expects to lose her job next month because of low ratings said at a public hearing that evaluators picked apart her seventh-grade geography lessons, making criticisms she considered
trivial
(微不足道的). During the most recent observation, her evaluator subtracted points because she had failed to notice a girl eating during class, the teacher said.
"I"m 25 years in the system, and before, I always got outstanding ratings," she said. "How can you go overnight from outstanding to minimally effective?"
A report issued by the Aspen Institute in March said one of Impact"s accomplishments was to align teacher performance with student performance, noting that previously 95 percent of Washington"s teachers were highly rated but fewer than half of its students were demonstrating proficiency on tests. Still, the report quoted teachers who complained of cold-eyed evaluators more interested in identifying losers than in developing winners.
"After my first conversation with my master educator, I felt it was going to be worthwhile—she offered me some good resources," the report quoted one teacher. "My second master educator was kind of a robot, not generous in offering assistance, a much tougher grader."
This month, Mary Gloster, who taught science in three states before she was recruited to Impact in 2009, was at Ballou High, one of the city"s lowest-performing schools, to share the results of some classroom visits.
She met with Mahmood Dorosti, a physics teacher who won a $5,000 award this spring. "Don"t even think about it—you"re highly effective," she told him.
Next was Ms. Strzelecki, 23, who came to Ballou through Teach tor America. The two sat at adjoining desks, with Ms. Strzelecki looking a bit like a doe in the headlights.
But Ms. Gloster, who had watched her teach a ninth-grade biology lesson the week before, offered compliments, along with suggestions about how Ms. Strzelecki might provide differentiated teaching for advanced and struggling students.
"You did a really good job, kiddo," the evaluator ruled, grading her as effective, the equivalent of a B (the same rating she got on previous observations).
"What I liked about Mary was that I felt she was on my side," Ms. Strzelecki said later. "Some teachers feel the master educators are out to get them."
That is a common perception, said Mark Simon, an education analyst for the Economic Policy Institute, which receives teachers" union financing. Ms. Rhee developed the system, he noted, during tough contract negotiations and did not consult with the teachers" union in its design.
"That was a missed opportunity," Mr. Simon said, "and it"s created a lot of resentment."
Be Sure Exercise Is All You Get at the Gym
When you go to the gym, do you wash your hands before and after using the equipment? Bring your own regularly cleaned mat tor floor exercises? Shower with antibacterial(抗菌的) soap and put on clean clothes immediately after your workout? Use only your own towels, razors, bar soap, water bottles?
If you answered "no" to any of the above, you could wind up with one of the many skin infections that can spread like wildfire in athletic settings. In June, the National Athletic Trainers" Association, known as NATA, issued a position paper on the causes, prevention and treatment of skin diseases in athletes that could just as well apply to anyone who works out in a communal setting, be it a school or commercial gym.
The authors pointed out that "skin infections in athletes are extremely common" and account for more than half the outbreaks of infectious diseases that occur among participants in competitive sports. And if you think skin problems are minor, consider what happened to Kyle Frey, a 21-year-old junior and competitive wrestler at Drexel University in Philadelphia.
Mr. Frey noticed a pimple (丘疹) on his arm last winter but thought little of it. He competed in a match on a Saturday, but by the next morning the pimple had grown to the size of his biceps and had become very painful.
His athletic trainer sent him straight to the emergency room, where the lesion (损伤) was lanced(切开) and cultured. Two days later, he learned he had MRSA, the potentially deadly staphylococcus infection that is resistant to most antibiotics.
Mr. Frey spent five days in the hospital, where the lesion was surgically cleaned and stitched and treated with antibiotics that cleared the infection. He said in an interview that he does not know how he acquired MRSA: "The wrestling mat might have been contaminated, or I wrestled with someone who had the infection."
If it could happen to Mr. Frey, who said he has always been health-conscious in the gym and careful about not sharing his belongings, it could happen to you.
The Risks
Recreational athletes as well as participants in organized sports are prone to fungal (真菌的), viral and bacterial skin infections. Sweat, abrasion and direct or indirect contact with the lesions and secretions (分泌物) of others combine to make every athlete"s skin vulnerable to a host of problems. While MRSA may be the most serious skin infection, athlete"s foot, jock itch, boils, impetigo, herpes simplex and ringworm, among others, are not exactly fun or attractive.
Athletes who are infected should be kept from competing in matches for a week or more until treatment renders them noninfectious. The authors of the trainers" study warned against simply covering infections like herpes and active bacterial lesions in order to return to competition.
Likewise, people like you and me who work out at a facility or swim in a public pool should stay away until cleared by a doctor who is well versed in skin diseases.
Steven M. Zinder, a trainer at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and chief author of the new paper, said in an interview that these recommendations are not esoteric (深奥的,秘密的).
"It"s what we all learned—or should have learned—in sixth-grade health class," he said. "It"s all common sense. You need to keep yourself and your equipment clean. You never know who last used the equipment in a gym. It can be a great breeding ground for these bugs, some of which are pretty nasty."
The report, published in the August issue of The Journal of Athletic Training, stated, "Athletes must shower after every practice and game with an antibacterial soap and water over the entire body."
Dr. Zinder noted that after a workout, women tend not to shower at the facility, while men, who are more likely to shower, often fail to cleanse their entire bodies, including their feet. Well-equipped facilities should provide antibacterial liquid soap.
"You should be showering at the gym and putting on clean clothes that are kept separate from the dirty ones," he said. In fact, he added, it"s best to have two bags, one only for clean clothes, and to wash the dirty-clothes bag now and then.
Assume Exposure
Jack Foley, athletic trainer and director of sports medicine at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pa., and co-author of the report, said athletes should always assume they are exposed to skin infections.
At any given time, he said in an interview, one person in three in the United States suffers from a skin disease that can be spread to others, even while in the incubation (潜伏) stage.
The report noted that there had been "an alarming increase in the prevalence of MRSA" in the noses of both healthy children and adults. Thus, sneezing into one"s hand or blowing one"s nose without washing with an antibacterial cleanser afterward may spread these dangerous bacteria to others.
While hand hygiene is most important over all, avoiding fungal infections requires a daily change of athletic socks and underwear; carefully drying the armpits and groin and between toes (perhaps blow-drying the feet on low heat); and using foot powder. Shower shoes can help prevent infection as long as they don"t keep you from soaping your feet.
A viral infection called molluscum contagiosum may not be on the popular tongue, but it is commonly seen in young children, spreads through skin-to-skin contact, and is not uncommon among athletes, including swimmers, cross-country runners and wrestlers, the report stated.
Prevention of this highly contagious infection requires "meticulous hygiene" after contact with secretions from other athletes through benches, towels and mats.
If you plan to work out in a gym or use a locker room, Mr. Foley suggested that before choosing a facility, you quiz the management about the cleaning agents used (they should be approved by the Environmental Protection Agency) and daily cleaning schedule for all surfaces and equipment. If exercise mats are not cleaned between classes, he suggested bringing your own. Antibacterial wipes or spray bottles should be provided and used by everyone to clean equipment after a workout.
Internet Hacking
Two years ago, a fifteen-year-old boy logged onto the Internet under the alias (别名) "Comrade". To some of us, our idea of hacking might include breaking into an email account or viewing confidential(机密的) company information. However, no one expected that "Comrade" would cause a three-week shutdown at NASA, steal government email passwords, intercept over 3000 emails and download close to $ 2 million worth of software used to operate the international space station. If that was not shocking enough, he had twice gained access to the computers used by the Pentagon to monitor threats of nuclear and biological warfare.
Computer hacking has been around for as long as we can remember—certainly as long as we have had a World Wide Web.
Occasionally, the news speaks of silly pranks which imply nothing more than a temporary shutdown of a website, although "Comrade" hack forced a three-week shutdown for repairs and cost the U.S. government $ 41,000.
Recently, the case of the hackers tampering with(损害,影响) the CIA"s website, changing the title to "Central Stupidity Agency" and filling it with obscenities was merely a nuisance for the agency. It posed no real threat because the CIA"s files are inaccessible via that Interact site.
Undoubtedly, there are some who see humour in this—a civilian, probably not even a professional, outwitting an elite US agency.
No Laughing Matter
There are more serious crimes, which are no laughing matter. In one case of corporate espionage(间谍活动), two "heavy manufacturing" firms were bidding on a $ 900 million contract ; one outbid the other by a fraction of a percent.
This was no co-incidence as the losing company later discovered that someone had broken into the company"s computer network and accessed files that contained bidding strategy information.
In another case, authorities are chasing an individual who regularly hires U.S. teens to access confidential documents. One young hacker was paid $1,000-and promised $10,000 more—for stealing design documents for kitchen appliances from U.S. firms.
Beyond selling the trade secrets to a company"s competition, some hackers resort to extortion(敲) of the company. In Sweden, a 15 and 17 year old tried to extort $ 2 million from a cellular company to destroy information they had illegally downloaded.
Like most eases of extortion, the criminal"s identity is especially difficult to trace and is magnified because of the nature of the Net.
When the Internet was gaining immense popularity, businesses were scrambling(争抢) to secure domain names and using the technology to expand their market. Seeing e-commerce as an untapped goldmine, many were eagerly diving headfirst into a slew of (许多) problems, including security breaches.
Companies like eBay, Buy.com, Yahoo, Amazon and Excite were not prepared when "Mafiaboy" decided to strike. The 16-year-old Montreal teen crippled their sites last year when he bombarded them with thousands of simultaneous messages, preventing legitimate users from gaining access. His five-day tirade(长篇大论) caused an estimated $1.7 billion in damages.
These malicious and insidious(隐伏的) attacks threaten security and cost companies and organizations billions of dollars. A survey of the Fortune 1000 companies in 1999 estimates a loss of $ 45 billion from information theft.
Counter Strategies
Many organizations are taking extra security measures, including the usage of firewalls (a security mechanism that allows limited access to sites from the Internet).
Still, hackers will gain access. If a fifteen-year-old can shutdown NASA, what hope is there?
Recently, Ernst the proverbial David struggling against a corporate Goliath. In many of these crimes, people do them to defy corporations or the government; money is not always the motive. However, it is an act that is still unacceptable that victimizes all who use the Internet.
Viruses, shutdowns, crashes and email hacking will be the burden of the user, a company"s money lost to theft will be the burden of its customers and a government"s money spent on security will be the burden of its citizens.
Is there anyone not affected by Internet crime? Nope.
