天天商务英语学习(中高级)2007-7-4 MP3下载
[table=98%][tr][td=1,1,639]天天商务词汇 [/td][/tr][/table][table=98%][tr][td=1,1,459][font=Bookman Old Style][b]apologize (verb)[/b] 道歉[/font][/td][td=1,1,179][align=center][url=http://www.youmars.com/07ttxx/20070704%20apologize%20(verb).mp3][color=#0000ff] [/color][/url][/align][/td][/tr][/table][table=98%][tr][td=1,1,131][align=center]解释[/align][/td][td=1,1,507][align=center][font=Bookman Old Style][size=2]to say one is sorry[/size][/font][/align][/td][/tr][/table][table=98%][tr][td=1,1,131][align=center]例句[/align][/td][td=1,1,507][align=center][font=Bookman Old Style][size=2]Even if it wasn't your fault, it's still good policy to apologize to the customer.[/size][/font][/align][/td][/tr][/table][table=98%][tr][td]天天商务报道 [/td][/tr][/table][table=98%][tr][td=1,1,464][font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000]Wanted: Bilingual teachers[/color][/size][/font][font=Bookman Old Style]双语教师:热招之中。[/font][/td][td=1,1,174][align=center][url=http://www.youmars.com/07ttxx/20070704%20Wanted_Bilingual%20teachers.mp3][color=#0000ff][/color][/url] [/align][/td][/tr][/table][table=98%][tr][td][font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000]While most kids are out of school for the summer, school administrators spend the time looking for teachers. And in Texas, bilingual teachers are in particularly short supply. Joy Diaz reports. [/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000][b]TEXT OF STORY[/b][/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000][b]Scott Jagow:[/b] For most school kids, this is the best of time of year. I mean, there's no school. But while the kids are out, the adults who run the schools are probably not.[/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000]School administrators spend their summers looking for teachers. People who teach math and science are always in short supply - and in Texas, so are bilingual teachers. Joy Diaz reports from KUT in Austin. [/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000][b]Joy Diaz:[/b] The Lone Star State has more than 4 million students in grades K through 12. Some 700,000 are English learners.[/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000]Georgina Gonzales leads the Texas Department of Bilingual Education. She says more than 90 percent of students learning English in the state have Spanish as their first language.[/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000][b]Georgina Gonzales:[/b] Our whole goal is the minute that a student walks into a classroom here in Texas, they must start learning English. So while they're learning their oral language proficiency skills in English, their content area will not be behind. So based on that, the bilingual teachers are needed everywhere.[/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000]That need is more evident in the state's fastest-growing areas such as Dallas, Houston, Austin and along the U.S.-Mexico border. These places attract a lot of Latin American immigrants.[/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000]Richard Batlle is principal of Bluebonnet Elementary School about 25 miles East of Austin. He says more than half his students are Hispanic. Most are English learners.[/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000]Batlle says it's so tough to find bilingual teachers that this year, he went south of the border and hired some teachers in Monterrey, Mexico.[/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000][b]Richard Batlle:[/b] We're looking for fluent bilingual teachers. I mean, because our assessments are so rigorous and the Spanish is so formal, we require teachers that have a very good vocabulary and the literature.[/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000]Those teachers can help students pass the state's standardized tests since for the first two years students can be tested in their native languages.[/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000]Teacher Reyna Araceli Perez preps fourth grade English learners at Blue Bonnet Elementary for the state's math test. [/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000][Sound: Perez instructing students][/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000]Perez and Batlle were connected through Region 4, one of the 20 state-approved organizations that recruit bilingual teachers. Most come from Mexico.[/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000]Luz Maria de Los Angeles Loyola teaches in Mexico City, but is gearing up to move to Texas later this summer.[/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000]At a Starbucks in the Mexican capital, Loyola, her husband and their three teenage girls pile out of their SUV. Loyola says she views her move to Texas as a mission.[/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000][b]Angeles Loyola: [/b]It's a very worthwhile challenge. I think these children deserve the opportunity to get an education. If they couldn't have it here in their own country, it is really nice that some other country's offering them the chance.[/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000]Bilingual teachers have different reasons for coming to the U.S., but they all pay a hefty price out of their own pockets. The cost of immigration procedures, remedial courses and taking the test for a Texas teaching license comes to around $8,000. Loyola also has to pay for her entire family to move.[/color][/size][/font]
[font=Bookman Old Style][size=2][color=#000000]But salaries are higher in Texas than in Mexico. Teachers start out earning around $40,000 a year - and most districts offer $5,000 stipends to bilingual teachers. That's about three or four times what they made back home.
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[/td][/tr][/table] 斑主:这段录音不全,麻烦重新上传! :)
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