大学英语精读第三册--第三版--课件-unit--four.ppt

上传人:得****1 文档编号:76345956 上传时间:2023-03-09 格式:PPT 页数:84 大小:2.20MB
返回 下载 相关 举报
大学英语精读第三册--第三版--课件-unit--four.ppt_第1页
第1页 / 共84页
大学英语精读第三册--第三版--课件-unit--four.ppt_第2页
第2页 / 共84页
点击查看更多>>
资源描述

《大学英语精读第三册--第三版--课件-unit--four.ppt》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《大学英语精读第三册--第三版--课件-unit--four.ppt(84页珍藏版)》请在taowenge.com淘文阁网|工程机械CAD图纸|机械工程制图|CAD装配图下载|SolidWorks_CaTia_CAD_UG_PROE_设计图分享下载上搜索。

1、1.Warm-up Questions 2.Bill Plaschke 3.Baseball4.Los Angeles Dodgers-Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter Reading5.Cerebral Palsy Before Reading_1.1Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingWarm-up Questions Before Reading_1.21.Do you know any disabled persons who are very

2、 successful?Please look at the pictures on the previous page and work in groups to introduce them.2.Whats your feeling when you see the disabled who are doing something difficult for them?3.Without using your hands and feet,could you imagine some other ways to type on a computer?4.What do you know a

3、bout cerebral palsy?Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingBefore Reading_2.Bill Plaschke Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingBill Plaschke(born on April 2,1956)is a U.S.journalist who has been a writer for the Los Angeles Times since 1987.He was born in Louisv

4、ille,Kentucky.He attended Louisvilles Ballard High School.He received a bachelors degree in mass communications in 1980 from Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville in Edwardsville,Illinois.Currently he is one of the panelistson the sports-themed show Around the Horn on ESPN.He is also a member of

5、 the Baseball Writers Association of America and the Professional Football Writers Association.In his career as a sportswriter,Plaschke has been named“National Sports Columnist of the Year”by the Associated Press.He has been nominated for a Pulitzer Prize.Before Reading_3.Baseball Before ReadingGlob

6、al ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingBefore Reading_3.1Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingBaseball is a sport that is so popular in the United States that it is often called the national pastime.Every spring and summer,millions of people throughout the country play this excit

7、ing“bat and ball game.”Millions also watch baseball games and closely follow the progress of their favorite teams and players.There are organized baseball teams for every age group from 6-year-olds to adults.The teams that attract the most interest are those of the two major leagues:the American Lea

8、gue and the National League.These teams are made up of men who rank as the worlds best players.Every year,about 50 million people flock to ballparks to watch major league baseball games.Many more millions watch games on television,listen to them on radio,read about them in newspapers,and discuss the

9、m with their friends.Baseball Before Reading_4.Los Angeles Dodgers Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingThe Los Angeles Dodgers is a major league baseball team in Los Angeles,California.They are in the Western Division of the National League.The team originated in Brooklyn,New Yo

10、rk,where it was known as the Brooklyn Dodgers before moving to Los Angeles for the 1958 season.Before Reading_5.Cerebral Palsy Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingBefore Reading_5.1Cerebral Palsy Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingIt is a disability caused

11、by brain damage before or during birth or in the first few years after birth,resulting in a loss of voluntary muscular control and coordination.Although the exact cause is unknown,apparent predisposing factors include diseases(e.g.rubella,genital herpes simplex),very low infant birth weight(less tha

12、n 3.3 lb 1.5 kg),and injury or physical abuse,etc.Maternal smoking,alcohol consumption,and ingestion of certain drugs can also contribute to the disease.Most cases are associated with prenatal problems and about 10%of the cases are thought to be due to oxygen deficiency during the birth process.The

13、severity of the affliction is dependent on the extent of the brain damage.Those with mild cases may have only a few affected muscles,while severe cases can result in total loss of coordination or paralysis.Globe Reading_main1.Part Division of the Text 2.Further Understanding Before ReadingGlobal Rea

14、dingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingMultiple Choice For Part 1 For Part 3For Part 2 Questions and AnswersGroup Discussion Globe Reading.1.1Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingPart Division of the Text Part Paragraphs Main Ideas 11 425 45346 47The author was impressed by an e-mail f

15、rom a Dodgers fan.How did the relationship between the author and Sarah Morris start and go on?Sarah Morris had a great influence on the author.Globe Reading.2.1Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingQuestions and Answers 1.In what ways was Sarahs e-mail different from other letter

16、s the author had received?2.In what way was Sarahs e-mail similar to other letters the author had received?It contained more details than the usual“Youre an idiot.”,and it was signed.It also criticized the authors comments on the Los Angeles Dodgers.Globe Reading.2.2.1Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDet

17、ailed ReadingAfter ReadingMultiple Choice1.What was Sarahs dream?A)To be a baseball player.B)To be a baseball editorialist.C)To get a job.D)To be a writer.KEY 2.What in Sarahs second e-mail caught the authors attention?A)In the email Sarah asked the author for a job.B)The author learned Sarah was ru

18、nning a website about Dodgers.C)There was a mistake in Sarahs spelling.D)The question Sarah asked.KEY Directions:Choose the best answers.Globe Reading.2.2.2Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter Reading3.What did the author think of Sarahs website?A)Informed but not fancy.B)Very popular.C

19、)Too serious.D)Professional.KEY 4.The author decided to drive a long way to visit Sarah because he was curious about _.A)how did Sarah use a head pointer to type B)whether Sarah was really suffering from physical handicap and speech disability C)how did Sarah become a Dodgers fan D)how did a person

20、with cerebral palsy liveKEY Globe Reading.2.3Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingGroup DiscussionWork with your partner to discuss“How did Sarah Morris change the author and what can you learn from the story of Sarah Morris?”Article1Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAf

21、ter ReadingA sportswriter thinks hes met another crank.Instead,he finds a true winner.The e-mail was in some respects similar to other nasty letters I receive.It took me to task for my comments on the Los Angeles Dodgers and argued that I had got everything wrong.However,the note was different from

22、the others in at least two ways.This note contained more details than the usual“Youre an idiot.”It included vital statistics on the teams performance.It was written by someone who knew the Los Angeles Dodgers as well as I thought I did.Article1_SBefore ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter Read

23、ingA Fans NotesBill PlaschkeAnd this note was signed.The writers name was Sarah Morris.I was impressed.I wrote her back.Little did I know that this would be the start of a most unusual relationship.May I ask you a question?For two years I have been running my own website about the Dodgers.How did yo

24、u become a baseball editorialist?That is my deam.This was Sarahs second e-mail,and it came just as expected.Every time I smile at someone,they ask me for a job.But something else caught my eye.The misspelling in that last line.The part about“my deam.”Maybe Sarah Morris was just a lousy typist.But ma

25、ybe she was truly searching for something,yet was only one letter from finding it.It was worth one more response,I asked her to explain.Article2_SBefore ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingSo here was a physically handicapped woman,covering the Dodgers as extensively as any reporter in

26、 the country,yet writing for an obscure website with an impossible address,with a readership of about two.I am 30 years old.Because I have a physical handicap,it took me five years to complete my associates degree.During the season I average 55 hours a week writing game reports,editorials,researchin

27、g and listening and/or watching games.Sarah called her website Dodger Place.I searched,and found nothing.Then I reread her e-mail and discovered an address buried at the bottom:http:/ clicked there.It wasnt fancy.But she covered the team with the seriousness of a writer.Still,I wondered,is anybody r

28、eading?Nobody ever signs my guestbook.I get one letter a month.Article3_SBefore ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingI have a speech disability making it impossible to use the phone.That proved it.This was obviously an elaborate hoax.This writer was probably a 45-year-old male plumber.A

29、 head pointer?I ask her how long it took her to compose one of her usual 400-word filings.Three to four hours.I did something Ive never before done with an Internet stranger.I ask Sarah Morris to call me.That“deam”was missing a lot more than an r,I thought.I started my own website in hopes of findin

30、g a job.No luck.So what if my maximum typing speed is eight words per minute because I use a head pointer to type?My brain works fine.I have dedication to my work.That is what makes people successful.Article4_SBefore ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingI decided to end the corresponden

31、ce.But then I received another e-mail.My disability is cerebral palsy.It affects motor control.When my brain tells my hands to hit a key,I would move my legs,hit the table,and six other keys in the process.When my mom explained my handicap,she told me I could accomplish anything I wanted to if I wor

32、ked three times as hard as other people.She wrote that she had become a Dodger fan while growing up in Pasadena.In her sophomore year at Blair High,a junior varsity baseball coach asked her to be the team statistician.She did it,with a typewriter and a head pointer.Her involvement in baseball had ke

33、pt her in school,she said despite her poor grades and hours of neck-straining homework.Baseball gave me something to work for.I could do something that other kids couldnt.I wanted to do something for the sport that has done so much for me.Article5_SBefore ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter R

34、eadingOkay,so I believed her.Sort of.Who,in her supposed condition,could cover a baseball team without the best equipment and help?I was curious,so I asked if I could drive over to see her.She agreed,giving me detailed directions involving farm roads and streets with no names.I drove east across the

35、 stark Texas landscape.On a winding dirt road dotted with potholes the size of small animals,I spotted what looked like an old tool shed.Article6_SBefore ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingBut it wasnt a shed.It was a house,a decaying shanty surrounded by tall grass and junk.Could thi

36、s be right?A woman in an old T-shirt and skirt emerged.“Im Sarahs mother,”said Lois Morris,grabbing my smooth hand with a worn one.“Shes waiting for you.”I walked out of the sunlight,opened a torn screen door and moved into the shadows,where an 87-pound figure was curled up in a wheelchair.Her limbs

37、 twisted.Her head rolled.We could not hug.We could not even shake hands.She could only stare at me and smile.But that smile!It cut through the gloom of the battered wooden floor,the torn couch and the cobwebbed windows.Article7_SBefore ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingI could bear t

38、o look at nothing else,so I stared at that smile,and it was so clear,so certain,it even cut through most of my doubts.But still,I wondered.This is Sarah Morris?She began shaking in her chair,emitting sounds.I thought she was coughing.She looked up and giggled.I looked down in wonder and shame.This w

39、as indeed Sarah Morris.The great Sarah Morris.I had contacted Sarah Morris months earlier looking for a fight.I realized now,watching her strain in this dark room to type words that perhaps no other soul will read,that I had found that fight.She was,instead,speaking.Her mother interpreted.“I want to

40、 show you something,”Sarah said.Lois rolled her up to an old desk on cinder blocks.On the desk was a computer.Next to it was a TV.Her mother fastened a head pointer around her daughters temples.Sarah leaned over the computer and used her pointer to call up a story on the Dodger Place website.Peck by

41、 peck,she began adding to that story.Article8_SBefore ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingOnly,it wasnt with Sarah.It was with myself.It is the same fight the sports world experiences daily in these times of cynicism.The fight to trust that athletes can still be heroes.In a place far f

42、rom such doubt,with a mind filled with wonder,Sarah Morris had brought me back.Article9_SBefore ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingArticle2_S1Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingI was impressed.I wrote her back.Little did I know that this would be the start of a m

43、ost unusual relationship.May I ask you a question?For two years I have been running my own website about the Dodgers.How did you become a baseball editorialist?That is my deam.This was Sarahs second e-mail,and it came just as expected.Every time I smile at someone,they ask me for a job.But something

44、 else caught my eye.The misspelling in that last line.The part about“my deam.”Maybe Sarah Morris was just a lousy typist.But maybe she was truly searching for something,yet was only one letter from finding it.It was worth one more response,I asked her to explain.1.Analyze the structure of the senten

45、ce.It is an inverted sentence with the negative word“little”at the beginning.2.Translate the sentence into Chinese.一点也没有想到这一封信引出了一段非同寻常的来往。一点也没有想到这一封信引出了一段非同寻常的来往。Article2_S2Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingI was impressed.I wrote her back.Little did I know that this would be

46、 the start of a most unusual relationship.May I ask you a question?For two years I have been running my own website about the Dodgers.How did you become a baseball editorialist?That is my deam.This was Sarahs second e-mail,and it came just as expected.Every time I smile at someone,they ask me for a

47、job.But something else caught my eye.The misspelling in that last line.The part about“my deam.”Maybe Sarah Morris was just a lousy typist.But maybe she was truly searching for something,yet was only one letter from finding it.It was worth one more response,I asked her to explain.1.Paraphrase the sen

48、tence.Whenever I appear friendly,people take advantage of me and want me to help them get a job.2.Translate the sentence into Chinese.我每次对人微笑一下,人家就向我要一份工作。我每次对人微笑一下,人家就向我要一份工作。Article2_S3Before ReadingGlobal ReadingDetailed ReadingAfter ReadingI was impressed.I wrote her back.Little did I know that

49、this would be the start of a most unusual relationship.May I ask you a question?For two years I have been running my own website about the Dodgers.How did you become a baseball editorialist?That is my deam.6.This was Sarahs second e-mail,and it came just as expected.Every time I smile at someone,the

50、y ask me for a job.But something else caught my eye.The misspelling in that last line.The part about“my deam.”Maybe Sarah Morris was just a lousy typist.But maybe she was truly searching for something,yet was only one letter from finding it.It was worth one more response,I asked her to explain.1.Wha

展开阅读全文
相关资源
相关搜索

当前位置:首页 > 应用文书 > 工作报告

本站为文档C TO C交易模式,本站只提供存储空间、用户上传的文档直接被用户下载,本站只是中间服务平台,本站所有文档下载所得的收益归上传人(含作者)所有。本站仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。若文档所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知淘文阁网,我们立即给予删除!客服QQ:136780468 微信:18945177775 电话:18904686070

工信部备案号:黑ICP备15003705号© 2020-2023 www.taowenge.com 淘文阁