- •My future profession my future profession
- •Vocabulary
- •Verbs and Verb Phrases
- •I. Oral Practice Section
- •1. Look through the statements/ proverbs and try to outline the problems to be discussed.
- •3. Read the following words and group them according the categories given below.
- •4. Match the explanations on the right with the idiomatic expressions on the left.
- •5. Find all the suitable nouns for each of the adjectives or participles.
- •6. Look at the following pictures and identify the professions. Then match them with the qualities in the box, justifying your choice.
- •7. Explain to your friend what you must do to insure a good career. Use the word given in capitals at the end of each line to form a word that fits in the space in the same line.
- •8. Work in pairs. Speak to your cousin whom you haven’t seen for several years about your relatives/friends and their occupations. Make up a dialogue using the following variations:
- •Electrical and Electronics Engineering1
- •Electronic Engineering2
- •Communications and Control3
- •Computers Engineering4
- •Safety Engineering5
- •10. Work in pairs. Pete is speaking about his future career. Take the parts of Pete, Tom and Susan and reproduce the dialogue. Use the word combinations from the box given below.
- •11. What should you do to find a job? Find the logical sequence of the steps you should take and render it to your partner.
- •14. Work in pairs: respond to the following statements reproduced by your partner choosing one of the phrases on the right and adding a sentence or two to explain why you think so.
- •15. Henry Brown wants to change his work. Here is an ad he has found:
- •Computer system engineer.
- •17. You are lucky to be called for an interview. Do you know how to create a good impression at your first interview? Check the answers you think are right and then discuss your answers in your group.
- •18. Imagine that a friend of yours was the man in this story. The pictures are in the wrong order. Work out what happened. Tell your story, beginning: “This is what happened to a friend of mine…”
- •Interests
- •III. Role Play. An interview for a job.
- •In newspapers for your summer vocations.
- •Interviewers:
- •Comprehensive Prolonged Project «The fair of vacancies»
- •Supplementary material Faculty of Radioengineering and Electronics
- •Electronic Engineering From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- •Radio Engineer
Supplementary material Faculty of Radioengineering and Electronics
The faculty has a rich history. It was founded in 1964 as the Faculty of Radioengineering and had got its present time name in 1980.
The faculty is a powerful scientific and engineering study center, and unites together 1135 students, 69 members of teaching staff including 9 Doctors of Science, 45 PhD's, 4 nominees of the State Scientific and Engineering Prizes (V.A. Labunov, V.A. Sokol, I.L. Baranov, A.G. Tchernykh).
The faculty has the following departments:
Department of radioengineering devices (Prof. V.A. Tcherdyntsev, Head);
Department of radioengineering systems (V.N. Levkovich Ph.D., Head);
Department of microelectronics (Prof. V.A. Sokol, Head);
Department of antennas and microwave devices (Prof. A.A. Kuraev, Head).
The faculty prepares specialists in the following specialties: Radioengineering; Radioelectronic systems; Radioinformatics; Micro and nanoelectronic technologies and systems; Quantum information systems. It helps to train specialists of the new generation in main important areas.
For further education and specialization the faculty has Master Courses in specialities Microelectronics, Radioengineering, Radioelectronic systems, Radiophisics. The most talented graduates have a possibility to continue their researches and to study in Post-graduate Courses. It is widely practiced to send students, post-graduates and young scientists on probation to foreign scientific centres and universities.
Our graduates work practically in all informational intensive fields of science in Belarus and abroad. It is micro and nanoelectronics; radioengineering of mobile and satellite communication networks; computer technologies and banking. Many of them are well known heads of leading companies: N.I. Danilovich-general representative of Motorola in Belarus, S.A. Kostiuchenko-vice president of 'Priorbank', S.I. Kovalev-director of 'Sigma' company , A.A. Troyan-director of JSC 'Inteco', A.S. Rupeka-director of 'Vilgas' company, B.P. Bezruchenok-technical director of 'Belcell', I.E. Kukharenko-director of JSC 'DMT' , A.I. Nareiko-director of 'Travelink-invest' company (mobile communications).
The faculty has partner relations with universities and research centers in Germany, France, Italy, Greece, Switzerland, Sweden, Belgium, United Kingdom, Spain, Poland, USA, Japan, China, India, Russia, and Ukraine.
The faculty of Radioengineering and Electronics gives a possibility to acquire the education that makes the graduate a unique specialist in radioengineering systems, micro- and nanoelectronic technologies and systems, and give the possibility to realize yourself in the informational society of the XXI century.
Electronic Engineering From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Electronic engineering is a professional discipline that deals with the behavior and effects of electrons (as in electron tubes and transistors) and with electronic devices, systems, or equipment. The term now also covers a large part of electrical engineering degree courses as studied at most European universities. Its practitioners are called electronics engineers in Europe. In the Americas and some other parts of the world, the term electrical engineer is used to describe a person doing the same work.
In many areas, electronic engineering is considered to be at the same level as electrical engineering, requiring that more general programmes be called electrical and electronic engineering (many UK universities have departments of Electronic and Electrical Engineering). Both define a broad field that encompasses many subfields including those that deal with power, instrumentation engineering, telecommunications, and semiconductor circuit design amongst many others.
Electronic engineering in Europe is a very broad field that encompasses many subfields including those that deal with, electronic devices and circuit design, control systems, electronics and telecommunications, computer systems, embedded software etc. Many European universities now have departments of Electronics that are completely separate from or have completely replaced their electrical engineering departments.
Electronic engineering involves the design and testing of electronic circuits that use the electronic properties of components such as resistors, capacitors, inductors, diodes and transistors to achieve a particular functionality.
Signal processing deals with the analysis and manipulation of signals. Signals can be either analogue, in which case the signal varies continuously according to the information, or digital, in which case the signal varies according to a series of discrete values representing the information.
For analog signals, signal processing may involve the amplification and filtering of audio signals for audio equipment or the modulation and demodulation of signals for telecommunications. For digital signals, signal processing may involve the compression, error checking and error detection of digital signals.