
- •Text a: “about myself”
- •Vocabulary:
- •Add to your active vocabulary (пополни свой активный словарь):
- •Text b: “my biography”
- •Grammar
- •I like coffee and tea. Friendship is very important in our life.
- •I told Jane about that.
- •I have read page eight of the magazine.
- •I don't know the name of this pupil.
- •Притяжательный падеж существительных
- •The boy's books — The boys' books
- •Unit 2
- •Text a: «my working day»
- •Vocabulary:
- •Add to your active vocabulary
- •Text в: «nick's usual working day»
- •Grammar
- •§ 1. Степени сравнения прилагательных и наречий
- •Interesting — more (less) interesting — most (least) interesting,
- •§ 2. Порядок слов в английском предложении
- •§ 3. Основные типы вопросов, используемые в английском языке
- •Порядок слов в общем вопросе
- •Порядок слов в специальном вопросе
- •1. Общие
- •2. Специальные
- •3. Разделительные
- •Unit 3
- •Text a: «ann's academy»
- •Vocabulary:
- •Add to your active vocabulary
- •Text b: «moscow state university»
- •Grammar
- •I cannot find this book anywhere.
- •Unit 4
- •Text a: «sochi» «Big Sochi — the best place on the Earth!»
- •Vocabulary:
- •Add to your active vocabulary:
- •Text b: «rostov-on-don»
- •Grammar
- •§1. Местоимения little и few и местоименные выражения a little и a few.
- •I have a few friends in Minsk I've got only few pencils in the box.
- •§2. Оборот there is / there are.
- •Unit 5
- •Text a: «the russian federation»
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text b: «moscow»
- •Grammar
- •§1. Времена английского глагола.
- •§2. Правильные и неправильные глаголы.
- •Unit 6
- •Text a «the united kingdom»
- •Vocabulary:
- •1) Land, 2) Climate, 3) Population, 4) Ethnic groups, 5) Economy.
- •Text b: "history of london"
- •Grammar
- •Unit 7
- •Text a: «the united states of america»
- •Vocabulary:
- •Add to your active vocabulary:
- •Text в: «transport system of the usa»
- •Roads and Railways
- •Grammar
- •§1. Согласование времен в главном и придаточном предложениях.
- •§2. Страдательный залог (Passive Voice).
- •Unit 8
- •Text a: "higher education in the uk»
- •Vocabulary:
- •Add to your active vocabulary:
- •Grammar
- •§1. Сложное дополнение (Complex object).
- •§2. Причастие и герундий. Их отличие.
- •Unit 9
- •Text a: "my future profession"
- •Vocabulary:
- •Add to your active vocabulary:
- •1) What kind of work are you interested in?
- •2) What position would you like to have?
- •Text b «the future of the engineering profession»
- •Grammar
- •§1. Придаточные предложения условия и времени. Действие которых отнесено к будущему.
- •§2. Сослагательное наклонение в условных предложениях,
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text в: «steel»
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text с: «methods of steel heat treatment»
- •Vocabulary:
- •Famous people of science Dmitry Ivanovich Mendeleyev
- •Unit 2
- •Rolling
- •Extrusion
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text в: «drawing»
- •Sheet metal forming
- •Forging
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text c: «metalworking and metal propeties»
- •Vocabulary
- •Famous scientists
- •Unit3 materials science and technology
- •Text a: «mechanical properties Of materials»
- •Vocabulary
- •Text в: «Mechanical Properties of Materials»
- •Vocabulary
- •«Famous people of science and engineering»
- •Unit 4
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text b: «lathe»
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text с: «milling machine»
- •Drilling and Boring Machines
- •Shapers and Planers
- •Grinders
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text d: «dies»
- •Wiredrawing Dies
- •Thread-Cutting Dies
- •Vocabulary:
- •Famous people of science and engineering George Stephenson
- •Unit 5
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text в: «types of plastics»
- •1. Epoxy resin.
- •3. Polystyrene.
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text с: «composite materials»
- •Vocabulary:
- •Famous inventors
- •Unit 6
- •Gas Welding
- •Arc Welding
- •Shielded Metal Arc
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text в: «other types of welding» Non-consumable Electrode Arc welding
- •Gas-Metal Arc
- •Submerged Arc
- •Resistance Welding
- •Vocabulary
- •Famous people of science and technology
- •Unit 7
- •Automation in Industry
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text в: «types of automation» Applications of Automation and Robotics in Industry
- •Vocabulary
- •Text c: «robots in manufacturing»
- •Vocabulary:
- •4. Станки с числовым программным управлением — хороший пример программируемой автоматизации.
- •Famous people of science and engineering James Watt
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text b: «hardware»
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text c: "types of software»
- •Vocabulary:
- •Famous people of science and engineering
- •Vocabulary:
- •Text b: «windows 95»
- •Vocabulary:
- •4) Create a textual file in WordPad program. Save it as text. Rename it as myfile. Create a shortcut for it. Put the shortcut on the DeskTop.
- •Text c: «introduction to the www and the internet»
- •Vocabulary:
- •Famous people of science and engineering Bill Gates
- •1. Alloys
- •2. Manufacturing of plastics
- •3. Principles and process of polymerisation in plastics production
- •4. Resins
- •5. Industrial plastics:
- •6. Basic principles of welding
- •7. Gear
- •8. Bearings
- •9. Construction of an automobile
- •10. Two-stroke and diesel engines
- •11. Direct-current (dc) generators
- •12. Ac motors
- •13. Engineering as a profession
- •14. Automation in industry.
- •15. History of robotics
- •16. Measurements
- •17. Computers
- •18. History and future of the internet
- •19. Agricultural machinery
- •I come from Russia. — я из России.
- •Наиболее употребительные наречия.
- •II. Префиксы существительных
- •I. Суффиксы
- •II. Префиксы
Unit 8
HIGHER EDUCATION IN THE UK
I. Согласные звуки [w], [].
II. Text A: «Higher Education In the UK».
III.§1. Сложное дополнение (Complex object).
§2. Причастие и герундий.
Согласный звук [w]. При произнесении губы округлены и значительно выдвинуты вперед, а задняя часть языка занимает примерно такое же положение, как при произнесении русского [у]. Струя выдыхаемого воздуха с силой проходит через образованную между губами круглую щель. Губы энергично раздвигаются.
Согласный звук []. При произнесении согласного задняя спина языка смыкается с опущенным мягким нёбом, и воздух проходит через носовую полость.
Exercise A what — why — where whip — wheat — while |
Exercise С wall — wallet — walk walnut — waltz — won |
Exercise В war — wharf — water wedding — wage — wait waitress — waist — waste weather — woman — wind |
Exercise D wing — king — sting sing — nothing — something everything — anything — ring |
Text a: "higher education in the uk»
Education after 16 is voluntary in United Kingdom. Students, who live in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland must take at the age of 16 the examinations for the General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE). In Scotland students receive the Scottish Certificate of Education. After this exam students can choose to stay on in school or attend colleges of further education.
British universities are self-governing and are guaranteed academic independence. Funding for education and research is provided by funding councils set up by Parliament. The number of universities jumped in 1992 when polytechnics and some other higher education establishments were given the right to become universities. By the end of 1994, there were some 90 universities, almost half of them former polytechnics, including the Open University.
Many of the colleges of Oxford and Cambridge universities were founded in the 12th and 13th centuries. All other universities in Britain were founded in the 19th and 20th centuries. The Open University, based in Milton Keynes, England, was founded in 1969. It uses extension techniques of correspondence courses, television and radio programmes, and video cassettes, supported by local study centres and summer schools, to provide higher education opportunities to a wide variety of people.
During the 1960s there was a significant increase in the number of new universities, reflecting a fast growth in student numbers. During the 1980s, an expansion in higher education places led to another large jump in student numbers. In the 1992-1993 academic year there were more than 1,4 million students in full or part-time higher education in Great Britain, compared with just under 850,000 a decade earlier. About one quarter of young people are in higher education in England, Wales, and Scotland; one third in Northern Ireland. About 90 per cent of students get state grants to cover tuition fees and living costs.
The size of the grant is determined by parents income. Since the late 1980s, however, grants have been frozen; students can apply for a student loan.