
- •Предисловие
- •Unit 1. Types of Family in Modern Society
- •Focus Vocabulary List
- •The British Family
- •The American Family
- •The Future of the Family
- •Vocabulary Exercises
- •Британская семья
- •The Family
- •The Problem of (Cohabit)
- •Integrated Discourse Skills Development
- •III. Monologue Discourse Modelling
- •2. Class Activities
- •IV. Dialogue Discourse Modelling
- •2. Class Activities
- •Unit 2. What Makes a Good Parent? Family Discipline and Changes in Parental Authority
- •Focus Vocabulary List
- •Permissiveness: “a Beautiful Idea” that Didn’t Work?
- •Comprehension Check
- •Article Rendering: Basic Structure Build-Up
- •Parents Are Too Permissive with Their Children Nowadays
- •1. Fill in the columns in the chart with the corresponding adjectives and phrases from the list below. Some descriptions may fit into both columns.
- •2. When you have completed the chart, pick out all the (1) synonyms and (2) antonyms to the following characteristics.
- •1. Synonyms 2. Antonyms
- •3. Make use of the completed chart to give a brief sketch of each child/parent type. Use the following questions as a guide.
- •Difficult Children
- •The Monster Children
- •Life Styles: “What Makes a Good Parent”?
- •Ivan sokolov
- •Vocabulary Exercises
- •The Power of No
- •Integrated Discourse Skills Development
- •I. Agree or disagree with the quotations below. Be sure to provide solid arguments.
- •II. Monologue Discourse Modelling
- •III. Polylogue Discourse Modelling
- •1. Out-of-class Projecting
- •Debate Techniques
- •Introduction
- •Arguments and Counter-arguments
- •Questions
- •2. Class Activities
- •IV. Monologue Discourse Modelling
- •Individual Argumentative Techniques
- •Project on a Problem Situation
- •Introduction
- •2. Class Activities
- •V. Written Discourse Skills Development
- •Unit 3. Problems of a Young Family
- •Focus Vocabulary List
- •Additional Vocabulary List
- •The Child Care Dilemma
- •Comprehension and Discussion Guide
- •It’s 10:00 a.M.: Do You Know What Your Sitter’s Doing?
- •Smart ways to check on your sitter
- •It’s 4:00 p.M.: Do You Know Where Your Children Are?
- •Vocabulary Exercises
- •Back to Day Care
- •Что творят с детьми няни (…или Как проследить за процессом воспитания)
- •Integrated Discourse Skills Development
- •I. Written Discourse Modelling
- •2. Class Activities:
- •II. Polylogue Discourse Modelling
- •III. Monologue Discourse Modelling
- •Unit 4. Hazards of Teenage Sex
- •Focus Vocabulary List
- •Teenage Sex: Just Say “Wait”
- •Lower the Age of Consent
- •Vocabulary Exercises
- •Дочки-матери
- •Integrated Discourse Skills Development
- •I. Polylogue Discourse Modelling
- •III. Dialogue Discourse Modelling
- •2. Class Activities
- •Unit 5. Problems of a Young Family Young Adults: Living in Parental Homes or Living Away?
- •Focus Vocabulary List
- •Show Me the Way to Go Home
- •Comprehension and Discussion Guide
- •Back to Mum After All This Time
- •Could You Throw Out Your Child?
- •Vocabulary Exercises
- •Is Your Nest Too Full?
- •Bit of a Crowd in the Empty Nest
- •Integrated Discourse Skills Development
- •I. Polylogue Discourse Modelling
- •II. Written Discourse Skills Development
- •I. Background Reference Information
- •II. Letter Structure Focus
- •III. Sample Letter Publication Foreword
- •Unit 6. Marriage and Divorce
- •Focus Vocabulary List
- •Vast Majority of Americans Still Believe in the Family
- •Comprehension and Discussion Guide
- •Vocabulary Exercises
- •In Great Britain, an Easier Out
- •Divorce
- •Integrated Discourse Skills Development
- •I. Polylogue Discourse Modelling
- •2. Class Activities
- •II. Monologue Discourse Modelling
- •Individual Argumentative Techniques
- •III. Written Discourse Development
- •IV. Monologue Discourse Modelling
- •References
- •Contents
Back to Day Care
As new (1) … research shows that children in day care develop faster than their peers, more parents are (2) … .
The (3) … was supplied by a (4) … . She was responsive and responsible, and Joan Hocky was confident that her infant son, Ben, was (5) … a qualified sitter. Even so, when he was 11 months old, she (6) … a popular baby-sitting facility in Brooklyn which provided (7) … day care. Hocky liked the idea of Ben being exposed to new toys and (8) … . “My (9) … was that it was (10) … ,” says Hocky, a consultant on community development. “It helps him with (11) ... . To date, I’ve seen a big shift in his general confidence and curiosity.”
All over the country, parents are (12) … the benefits of a centre-based (13) …: social stimulation, as well as multiple caregivers to provide (14) … . Now, more parents are choosing day care than any other (15) … , including relatives or a (16) … in a neighbor’s home. In addition, the comeback to centre-based care reflects the (17) … line between education and caregiving. Where (18) … families used to send their children to nursery school and the (19) … parents were stuck with day care, it’s becoming harder to draw a (20) … now. Both are striving to (21) … the work schedules of harried parents, who don’t want mere (22) … two or three mornings a week.
But for all its advances, centre care is still (23) … . Kids in group care tend to get sick more often. (24) … are more restricted than in an at-home arrangement. And (25) … among workers is high, largely because it rarely (26) … ; the average annual salary is under $15,000.
Ex. 4. Read the following text and decide which option (A, B or C) fits each gap.
Nanny and (1) … sitter scare stories have no doubt influenced some families’ choices of an acceptable childcare setup. Most (2) … , in 1997 British (3) … Louise Woodward was convicted (4) … manslaughter in the shaking death of 8-month-old Matthew Eappen. Other cases are less tragic – but (5) … just the same. Sherry Yandow, executive director of Vermont’s PlayCare Centers, says (6) … a recent day, one family (7) … up after returning home unannounced to find their baby (8) … down for her nap at 9 a.m., while the nanny watched TV. That’s far more typical than (9) … abuse, says Lori Shechter, who runs a nanny (10) … service in Manhattan to families who want to (11) … their nannies in secret, to be on safe ground. (12) … the 5,000 videotapes she’s done, about 10 showed physical abuse and child (13) … , she says. “Most of what people learn is a totally (14) … image of the sitter in the presence of Mom and Dad and poor job (15) … .
As (16) … day care is a major threat to the development of young children, the quality of nanny (17) … agencies is a national (18) … . In one Florida study, Ellen Galinsky, president of the Families and Work Institute, found that (19) … to get obligatory child development training has dramatically improved the quality of child care. The most important is that the sitter be involved – and not just rush for (20) … salaries. Sounds like a good rule of thumb for parents, too.
The Newsweek
A B C
negligible neglectful neglectant
notoriously notifiably notedly
au pair charge at-home sitter
for with of
distressing disappointing distraught
in by on
signed checked snapped
settled put switched
sheer shear seer
videocasting videoscreening videotaping
display monitor screen
from out of among
molestation violation vexation
forged fraud false
engagement fulfillment performance
downstandard substandard understandard
placement replacement settlement
preconception precaution preoccupation
suggesting offering proposing
handsome cushy fringe
Ex. 5. Fill in the correct prepositions where necessary.
The federal health department of Canada estimates that children (1) …demand (2) … day care outnumber the spaces available in licensed centers (3) … almost ten (4) … one.
While many parents still feel guilty (5) … entrusting their children (6) …strangers and admit that it would be smarter to give (7) … (8) … working, most give a higher priority (9) …fulfillment (10) … a career.
Many parents use day care as a kind of an escape and are forced to resort (11) … communal approaches (12) … child-rearing, rooted (13) … the quaint assumption that it fits (14) … the typical model of a perfect day care arrangement.
Few employers go (15) … great lengths to settle (16) … a huge demand (17) … infant care (18) … among their employees. Only a small percentage of private employers provide (19) …-site or (20) …-site day-care facilities for the workers.
While a specific degree (21) …child development is required (22) … a caregiver in some states, parents should expect ongoing training (23) … infant education, (24) … a minimum, according (25) … the American Council of Nanny Schools.
Ex. 6. Translate the following text into English, focusing on the italicized words and phrases. Make use of the key vocabulary.