- •Unit 6 Employment
- •Application Letters and Resumes
- •2. Understanding the main points
- •3. Dictionary skills: Identifying the correct meaning
- •In the article, the word handle is a verb, so only look at the dictionary extract for verbs.
- •Succeed at Your Job Interview
- •1. Using background knowledge
- •2. Understanding the main points
- •3. Activating Topic vocabulary
- •Succeed at your job interview
- •People in Different Jobs
- •Jobs in a Shrinking World
- •Women in Unusual Jobs
- •Balancing Home and Work
- •Value of housework
- •I. Answer the following questions.
- •II. Compare your answers with a partner.
- •The Changing Workplace
- •3. The sentences below could be placed at the end of one of the paragraphs in the text. Discuss with your partner where they could be placed and why.
- •1. Find words in the text that mean the same as the words below:
- •2. Compare your answers with a partner. Explain which parts of the text helped you to find the correct words.
- •Work Trends
- •1. Pre-reading task
- •2. While reading task
Jobs in a Shrinking World
H. NED SEELYE, J. LAURENCE DAY
New technology links the world as never before. Our planet has shrunk. It’s now a ‘global village’ where countries are only seconds away by fax or phone or satellite link. Teleconferencing, portable satellite links, radio telephones, and other high-tech advances make foreign markets as close as our cross-town branch office. And, of course, our ability to benefit from this high-tech communication equipment is greatly enhanced by foreign language skills.
Deeply involved with this new technology is a breed of modern businesspeople who have a growing respect for the economic value of doing business abroad. In modern markets, success over-seas often helps support and revitalize domestic business efforts.
Overseas assignments are becoming increasingly important to advancement within executive ranks. The executive stationed in another country no longer need fear being ‘out of sight and out of mind.’ He or she can be sure that the overseas effort is central to the company’s plan for success, and that promotions often follow or accompany an assignment abroad. If an employee can succeed in a difficult assignment overseas, superiors will have greater confidence in his or her ability to cope back in the United States where cross-cultural considerations and foreign language issues are becoming more and more prevalent.
Thanks to a variety of relatively inexpensive communications devices with business applications, even small businesses in the United States are able to get into markets where the medium of exchange is the mark, the yen, the peso, or the pound. Large corporations have international branches or divisions, and they deal with foreign investors and buyers on a daily basis.
English is still the international language of business. The American dollar still talks clearly in the world marketplace. But there is an ever-growing need for people who can decipher another tongue. A second language isn't generally required to get a job in business, but having language skills gives a candidate the edge when other qualifications appear to be equal.
The employee posted abroad who speaks the country’s principal language has an opportunity to fast-forward certain negotiations, and can have the cultural insight to know when it is better to move more slowly. The employee at the home office who can communicate well with foreign clients over the telephone or by fax machine is an obvious asset to the firm. Such persons build a niche for themselves in the firm. They find themselves included in the ‘loop’ in which key company business is discussed.
Task 1. Identifying the main idea: In your own words, write one sentence that reflects the main idea of the whole selection.
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Task 2. Distinguishing main ideas from supporting ideas: The following is a list of ideas taken from the text. Write M next to those statements you think are main ideas and S next to the ones you think are supporting details.
______1. New technology links the world as never before.
______2. Teleconferences, portable satellites, and radio telephones make foreign markets very close.
______3. Promotion often follows an assignment in another country.
______4. Even small businesses in the U.S. are getting into the foreign market.
______5. A second language isn't required to get a job in business, but it helps.
______6. An employee working in another country who speaks the native language can influence negotiations.
______7. The ability to communicate with foreign clients over the phone is an asset.
______8. Modern businesspeople are increasingly aware of the economic benefits of doing business in other countries.
Text 6.