- •Г.В. Бочарова, м.Г. Степанова read off! Graded Reader with Exercises
- •Isbn 978-5-9765-0298-7 (флинта)
- •Contents
- •I. Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions. 22
- •I. Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions. 25
- •Part I Text 1 why do we risk it?
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the following statements as they occur in the text.
- •Text 1 why do we risk it?
- •Text 2 attractiveness in the dark
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the statements as they occur in the text. (Give numbers.)
- •Text 3 rich and poor
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the statements as they occur in the text. (Give numbers.)
- •Text 4 brain and body
- •Find English equivalent for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the statements as they occur in the text. (Give numbers.)
- •Text 5 bodily communication
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the statements as they occur in the text. (Give numbers.)
- •Text 6 the face of feeling - facial expressions and production of emotion
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the statements as they occur in the text. (Give numbers.)
- •Text 7 proxemic communication
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the statements as they occur in the text. (Give numbers.)
- •Text 8 the jim and jim twins
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the statements as they occur in the text. (Give numbers.)
- •Text 9 on eccentrics and eccentricity
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the statements as they occur in the text. (Give numbers.)
- •Text 10 teenagers: what problems?
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the statements as they occur in the text. (Give numbers.)
- •Text 11 why aren’t you at school, sonny?
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the statements as they occur in the text. (Give numbers.)
- •Text 12 can we stop the bullies?
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the statements as they occur in the text. (Give numbers.)
- •Text 13 are you a procrastinator?
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the statements as they occur in the text (Give numbers.)
- •Text 14 psychology of colour
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the statements as they occur in the text. (Give numbers.)
- •Text 15 the power of color
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Rearrange the statements as they occur in the text. (Give numbers.)
- •Part II Text 1 what is psychology?
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Text 2 conceptual approaches to psychology
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Text 3 observing and imitating parents
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Text 4 bringing up a better baby (and goodbye dr. Spock)
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Images of life-span development
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Text 6 outside the sandbox
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Text 7 stereotypes
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Text 8 parent-adolescent conflict
- •Old and new models of parent-adolescen — relationships
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Text 9 loneliness
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Text 10 group conflict, order and disorder
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Text 11 marriage and the family
- •Text 12
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Text 13 why are some people happier than others?
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Text 14 upstaging stage fright
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Text 15 bitter could be better
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Text 16 functions of sleep
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Text 17 cultivating curiosity: developing a sense of wonder can be its own reward
- •Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
- •Make an appropriate choice.
- •Part III Text 1 sleep
- •I. Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 2 the world of dreams
- •I. Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •II. Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 3 sleep disorders
- •Insomnia
- •I. Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 4 get over yourself!
- •In Bed with Yourself
- •I. Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Viewpoints on psychological disorders
- •Choose the type of psychological disorders from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 6 mood disorders
- •Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 7 antisocial personality disorder
- •Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 8 the nature of stress
- •Table. Social Readjustment Rating Scale
- •Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 9 extreme stress
- •I. Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •II. Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 10 effectiveness of psychotherapy
- •I. Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 11
- •Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 12
- •Violent pride
- •Vanity Unfair
- •Choose the word characterizing narcissism from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 13 what is social psychology?
- •I. Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Prove the following statements by the facts from the text:
- •Text 14 adulthood
- •Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 15 what is thinking?
- •I. Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 16 creative problem solving
- •Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 17 touching illusions
- •Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that:
- •Text 18 snap judgments
- •I. Choose the word from the box to match the definition on the left.
- •Answer the questions to the text.
- •Choose the facts to prove that
Find English equivalents for the following words and expressions.
Использовать подход; выживать в особой среде; отвергать понятие; развиваться; естественный отбор; открыть первый психологический институт.
Give Russian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
To measure mental processes; to focus on inner sensations; to respond to different situations; to dismiss introspection; to retain information; to sift ideas.
Make an appropriate choice.
At the dawn of modern science in 1600s, John Locke
adopted the notion of inborn ideas
rejected the notion of inborn ideas
ignored the notion of inborn ideas
According to Charles Darwin’s doctrine, which organisms does nature select?
those that can reproduce in the environment
those that are able to survive and reproduce in a particular environment
those that can hardly survive
The first psychological institute was launched in
January, 1875
December, 1876
December, 1879
The young science of psychology evolved from the fields of
biology and sociology
philosophy and physiology
biology and philosophy
According to the text psychology may be defined as
the science of mental processes
the science of behavior and mental processes
the science of emotional states and mental processes
Text 2 conceptual approaches to psychology
The analysis of psychological phenomena can be approached from several viewpoints. One approach to study of human beings attempts to relate their actions to events taking place inside the body, particularly
within the brain and the nervous system. This approach specifies the neurobiological processes that underlie behaviour and mental events.
The view that behaviour should be the sole subject matter of psychology was first advanced by the American psychologist John B.Watson in the early 1990s. He believed that, although man may be at times an active agent in his own development and behaviour, he is still basically what his environment makes him. Therefore, the basic problem is to find out how man behaves or responds as a result of changes or improvements in the environment or stimuli. This view focuses on the observable behaviours of man; that is, those factors that influence him in his environment and his reactions to these forces. This approach is often referred to as stimulus-response or S-R psychology. Perhaps the spirit of behaviourism is best seen in Watson’s belief that he could take any healthy infant at random and, given his own specified world to bring him up in, bring him up to be anything he wished — doctor, prince, lawyer, criminal and so forth.
Another approach to the study of man is psychoanalysis, founded by Sigmund Freud. Freud concluded that personality and our degrees of mental health depend on the actions of three major forces: the id — our unconscious instincts, the ego — our conscious self or intellect — and superego, the conditional reflexes of social rules and internalized values. The ego, or self, is often under strain to withstand the pleasure forces from the id, pressures by the reality forces of the environment and the moral forces of our upbringing (superego). The ego and the superego are the mere tips of the id. It is what is underneath that really counts. For Freudists what is hidden is more important and real than what we feel and do.
The humanistic school view is that man becomes what he makes of himself by his own actions and thoughts. It is concerned with the topics having little place in existing theories and systems: e.g. love, creativity, self-actualization, higher values, humour, affection, courage and so on. These are exactly characteristics that describe our human nature. Humanists believe that man is bom basically good, and that conscious forces are more important than unconscious forces.
Russian psychology was inseparably linked with the development of research into psycho-physiology in the works of I. Pavlov, V. Bekh
terev, L. Orbeli and others. In refuting the idealistic and mechanistic influences, Russian scientists asserted in psychology the marxist teaching on activity and its socio-historical foundation, the ideas of Lenin’s theory of reflection. The theoretical and experimental study of the basic problems of psychology was carried out by A. Luria, A. Leontyev, B. Teplov, S. Rubenstein and others.
Present-day psychology is a complex and differentiated research system extending throughout general, social, developmental, pedagogical, child, medical, engineering psychology.