
- •Word list on the Subject "Choosing a career"
- •Supplementary Word List and Word Combinations on the Subject "Choosing a Career" Professions
- •Places of Employment and Pay
- •Applying for а Job
- •Earnings
- •Work, Job
- •Discharge
- •Communicating at Work
- •Additional Words and Expressions
- •Additional Expressions of the Idiomatic Nature, Colloquialisms With Their Russian and Ukrainian Equivalents on the Subject "Choosing a Career"
- •Future Prospects
- •A Job in Mexico
- •I'll Have a Job
- •Career Success
- •І Don't Want a Routine and Dull Job
- •Bernard Berg
- •The Film Producer's Commentary
- •Success at the Interview Stage
- •Charlie Ewell
- •Mental and Physical Job
- •Applying for a Job
- •What's Your line?
- •Applying for a Job
- •Elusive Job
- •A Resume
- •Job in America
- •Out of Work
- •Getting a Job
- •The Interview
- •Changing jobs
- •Choosing Is Not So Easy As It Looks
- •Career Prospects
- •Job Opening
- •Nine to Five
- •The Job Interview
- •Interview another student. Write down his (her) answers:
- •In the space provided, mark each true statement t and each false statement f:
In the space provided, mark each true statement t and each false statement f:
1. Americans never change jobs during their lifetime.
2. The Small Business Administration is a US government agency established in 1953.
3. Before World War II, most American women work outside the home.
4. In most American families, both husband and wife must work in order to afford a home or a college education for their children.
5. Nowadays most of American husbands do not approve of their wives having a job.
6. American teenagers do not like to take job during their vacations.
7. American teenagers never work during the school year.
8. Many Americans retire at the age of 60.
9. The federal government provides social security for workers who retire.
10. Groups of retired Americans work for educational, social, religious, or political causes.