- •Передмова
- •Методичні рекомендації до організації та проведення самостійної роботи студентів магістратури
- •I. Complete the gaps in the following article with a word from the box. Oxbridge
- •II. Choose the correct definition of the word.
- •VII. Change the verbs in brackets to either the Present Simple or the Present Continuous.
- •VIII. Answer the following questions. Make up a story:
- •I. Read the article and do the quiz. Harvard university
- •II. Remember the following words and word combinations and use them in the sentences of your own:
- •III. Explain the difference between:
- •IV. Complete the sentences below with prepositions from the box. Some words may be used more than once.
- •V. Change the verbs in brackets to either the Past Simple or the Past Continuous.
- •VI. Write a paragraph about the rules you are supposed to obey in a library/ your university/ your office. Unit 3
- •I. Read the article and answer the questions.
- •II. Fill in the blanks with the proper words from the box.
- •III. Translate into English:
- •IV. Complete the sentences below with prefixes from the box.
- •V. Change the verbs in brackets to either the Past Simple or the Present Perfect.
- •VI. Write a passage, explaining the meaning of the proverb “Little knowledge is a dangerous thing”. Unit 4
- •I. Read the article:
- •Admission guidelines for graduate applicants
- •II. Answer the following questions.
- •III. Look through the text and find equivalents of the following words:
- •IV. Complete the sentences with the appropriate prepositions.
- •V. Look at the news extracts below and change the verbs in brackets to the simple or continuous form of the Past, Present or Present Perfect. In some cases the order of the words may change.
- •VI. Write your cv, using the example.
- •I. Complete the gaps in the following article with a word from the box. Life on campus
- •II. Translate the following word-combinations into English and use them in the sentences of your own describing the students’ life at your university:
- •III. Write t (for True) or f (for False) to each of the statements.
- •IV. Complete the following test with a/ an or the. Leave a blank if no article is required.
- •V. Each of the following sentences has an error. Find it.
- •VI. Write a letter to your American friend asking him about students’ customs and lifestyle. Unit 6
- •I. Complete the gaps in the following article with words from the box.
- •Welcome to wales
- •II. Pick out compounds from the article, comment on their structure and meaning.
- •III. Complete the sentences with suitable prepositions.
- •Scotland: the view today
- •II. Arrange the following words into groups according to the part of speech they belong to:
- •IV. Complete the following sentences with the. Leave a blank if the article is not needed.
- •V. Link the sentences to make one complete sentence that means the same. Change the base forms of the verbs in brackets to the correct form and make any other changes that are necessary.
- •VI. Complete the sentences below with the most appropriate adverbs from the box.
- •VII. Supplementary reading. Translate the article and write about the university you are studying at. The universities of scotland: Edinburgh University
- •I. Complete the gaps in the following article with words from the box. Republic of ireland
- •VII. Supplementary reading. What was g. B. Shaw’s contribution to the world literature?
- •I. Read the article and write t (for True) or f (for False) to each of the statements. The “melting pot”
- •II. Correct the misspelled words:
- •III. Write the following in words.
- •III. Complete the sentences with words from the box.
- •IV. Rewrite the following sentences, using the Complex Object.
- •V. Supplementary reading. Write a summary of the article. United states culture
- •Unit 10
- •I. Read the article and answer the questions. Primitive society on the territory of the british isles
- •III. Complete the sentences with the prepositions from the box.
- •IV. Complete the sentences in the affirmative or the negative, according to the cues in brackets, using the modals from the box. In some cases there is more than one possibility.
- •V. Choose the phrases which best complete the sentences.
- •VI. Supplementary reading. Read the article and complete the chart below. Ukrainian culture
- •Unit 11
- •I. Read the article and divide it into four or five paragraphs. What is the purpose of each paragraph? Complete the chart below. Scientific communication
- •II. Match the words with their definition.
- •III. Use the required tenses instead of the infinitives in brackets.
- •IV. Complete the questions with a preposition from the box.
- •V. Words that go together. Choose the best answer a, b, c, or d.
- •VI. Supplementary reading. Translate the article and write a paragraph about the role of computers in your life. Uses of computers
- •Unit 12
- •I. Read the biographical information about a famous American educator and answer the following questions in a written form. John dewey
- •II. Explain the italicised parts:
- •III. Fill in the blanks with prepositions.
- •IV. Complete the conversation. Choose the correct form.
- •V. Which modals fit?
- •I. Read the article and fill the gaps with a clause below.
- •Postgraduate education
- •II. Fill in the blanks with the proper words.
- •III. Convert into indirect speech.
- •IV. Write in the correct form of the infinitive of the verb in brackets.
- •V. Give a brief account of your life up to the present. What do you think is the most important event in your life? unit 14
- •I. Read the article and write t (for True) or f (for False) to each of the statements.
- •Teacher training
- •II. Combine the sentences, remembering to put the preposition after the verb in the relative clause.
- •III. Put each sentence into the passive to make it sound more natural.
- •IV. Open the brackets, using the correct form of the Gerund.
- •V. Write a paragraph about probable changes that may take place in the field of education in the 21st century. Unit 15
- •I. Read the article and write t (for True) or f (for False) to each of the statements.
- •Montessori’s method
- •II. Choose which words fit the sentences.
- •III. Rewrite these sentences using the words in brackets.
- •IV. Had done, had been doing or was doing? Put in the correct form of the verbs.
- •I. Read the article and answer the questions in a written form.
- •The library of congress
- •II. Choose the correct meaning of the word:
- •III. Put the verb in brackets in the correct tense to form either the first, second, third, or zero conditional.
- •V. Correct the mistakes in word order in the sentences.
- •VI. Write a paragraph, explaining the idea of the saying “Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body”. Unit 17
- •I. Summarize the information from the article in a paragraph.
- •Computer-aided instruction
- •II. Translate from Ukrainian into English:
- •III. Rewrite the sentences so that they have a similar meaning. Use the prompts. Include an infinitive or an -ing form.
- •IV. Complete the sentences, putting the verbs in brackets into the correct form.
- •V. Choose the correct preposition: a) in; b) with; c) on; d) from.
- •VI. Filling in an application form.
- •West London College
- •2. Information about you
- •Unit 18
- •Standardized tests
- •II. Identify the one underlined word or phrase that must be changed in order for the sentence to be correct.
- •III. Put the verb in brackets in either the -ing form or the infinitive.
- •IV. Choose the correct answer.
- •V. Study the content and composition of a personal invitation to a conference:
- •VI. Supplementary reading. Translate the article. Prepare additional information on psychological testing in Ukraine.
- •Unit 19
- •I. Read the article and make a plan with key words (word combinations) to each item. Libraries
- •II. Give the definitions of the words. Use the word combinations in brackets.
- •III. Rewrite each sentence so it has a similar meaning to the first. Use the word in bold.
- •IV. Rearrange the words to make excuses in the third conditional.
- •V. Complete the sentences with one of the phrasal verbs in its correct form.
- •VI. Writing a covering letter.
- •Unit 20
- •I. Read and translate the article. Summarize the information in a paragraph. Distance education
- •II. Words other than if. Choose the correct word.
- •III. Put one of the nouns in the box into each gap.
- •IV. Rewrite the sentences, making them more emphatic.
- •V. Supplementary reading. Translate the article and write a paragraph about the problems in teaching talented children. Gifted students
- •Supplementary wikipedia articles bologna process
- •Academic aspects
- •Effects by state
- •Germany
- •Ukraine
- •United Kingdom
- •England and Wales
- •Scotland
- •Education in ukraine
- •Major universities
- •Languages Used in Educational Establishments
- •Higher education in Ukraine
- •Postgraduate Education
- •American university system
- •College Admissions in the United States
- •How to choose a college that's right for you
- •Social customs
- •Beginning your u.S. Education
- •Cheating
- •Plagiarism
- •Adult education
- •Education in england
- •Open university
- •Universities in the united ksngdom
- •Читання словосполучень
- •Читання голосних буквосполучень
- •Читання деяких приголосних і їх сполучень
- •Irregular verbs
- •Indefinite Tenses
- •English-ukrainian dictionary of educational lexicon
- •Keys unit 1
- •Unit 10
- •Unit 11
- •Unit 12
- •Unit 13
- •Unit 14
- •Unit 15
- •Unit 16
- •Unit 17
- •Unit 18
- •Unit 19
- •Unit 20
- •Література
I. Read the article and write t (for True) or f (for False) to each of the statements. The “melting pot”
The United States has long been known as a “melting pot”, because many of its people are descended from settlers who came from all over the world to make their homes in the new land, which was sparsely populated by native Indian tribes. The first immigrants in American history came from England and the Netherlands. Attracted by reports of great economic opportunities and religious and political freedom, immigrants from many other countries flocked to the United States in increasing numbers, the flow reaching a peak in the years 1880-1914. Between 1820 and 1979, the United States admitted more than 49 million immigrants – 73 per cent of them from Europe – but many came also from Latin America, Asia, Africa, Australia and Canada.
Some 1,534,000 Indians, Eskimos and Aleuts, descendants of North America’s first inhabitants, now reside in the United States. Most live in the West, but many are in the South and the north central area. Of more than 300 separate tribes, the largest is the Navaho in the Southwest.
Black people were first brought to America from Africa as slaves. Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 declared the slaves free, but slavery was not abolished irrevocably until ratification of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution in 1865, after the Civil War Blacks currently make up more than 11 per cent of the population. They once lived mainly in the agricultural South but now are scattered throughout the nation. In the Midwest city of Chicago, for example, there are 1.2 million black residents – more than three times as many as in 1940. New York State has the largest black population – 2,402,000, an increase of close to one million in 20 years.
Hispanics and Asians constitute two of the fastest growing segments of the United States today, now numbering 14,606,000 and 3,615,000 respectively, or 6.5 per cent of the population.
In the Hawaii, more than a third of the residents are of Japanese descent, a third are Caucasians, about 15 per cent are of Polynesian background, and the others are mainly of Filipino, Korean, and Chinese descent.
Every 10 years the U.S. Census Bureau makes a complete count, or census of its people and industries. When the first census was taken in 1790, then new nation had fewer than 4 million people, almost all living along the East Coast. Today there are more than 232.6 million. In the past 20 years many people have moved to the western and southern parts of the country. California, on the Pacific Coast, now has the nation’s largest population, and the Atlantic Coast state of New York is second. Another western state, Colorado, is growing almost twice as fast as the nation as a whole. Some other western states have had spectacular population booms: Arizona has more than doubled its population since 1960, while Nevada has almost tripled its population in the same period. The southern state of Florida, known for its pleasant climate, has almost twice the number of residents it had in 1960.
The population of the United States is growing older. In 1960 35.7 per cent of the population was under 18; today that figure has shrunk to 27.1 per cent. In 1960 there were 16,560,000 persons 65 or older; in 1982 – 25,824,000.
The American people are always on the move – from one part of the country to another, from one city to another, from farm to city, from the city to the suburbs. 17 per cent of all Americans move to new homes every year, searching for job opportunities, a better climate, or for other reasons. Many industries have scattered their factories far from the parent plant, and many of their workers have decided to try the new locations.
The first immigrants in American history came from Holland and England.
Immigrants were attracted to America by large territories and a good climate.
Most of the immigrants came from Latin America as it is geographically closer than Europe.
The largest Indian tribe in the USA is the Navaho in the Northwest.
Slaves were brought to America from Africa.
It was Abraham Lincoln who abolished slavery.
Almost one in ten is a black resident in the USA today.
The U.S. Census Bureau has to make a census every five years as the population is growing rapidly.
Among the states with a constantly increasing population are Nevada, Arizona, Florida, and Colorado.
10) The American people are always on the move because of unemployment.
