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22. Read the texts again and make notes under the following headings. Then use your notes to talk on the topics.

1. Vision and its Value.

2. Computers in Education.

3. Technical and Non-technical Description.

4. Intelligence and Gardner’s Theory.

5. Stereotyping: For and Against.

6. Parents and Children.

UNIT V. The Power of Communication and Creativity

B efore you start: Think it over. Agree – Disagree

“Education makes machines, which act like men and produces men who act like machines”.

Erich Fromm, 1900 - 1980, US psychoanalist, author

“That is what learning is. You suddenly understand something you’ve understood all your life, but in a new way.” Doris Lessing, b. 1919, prose writer, dramatist

There is nothing impossible to him who will try.

Alexander The Great , 356 - 323 B.C., king of Macedonia

Reading, Vocabulary & Creative Practice

1. Words to be remembered (Texts: a, b).

adult

advertising

anticipate

appreciate

argument

attempt

communicate

consumer

contemporary

continue

conversation

daydream

debate

dramatic

dramatics

encounter

engage in

enjoy

entertain

enthusiastic

estimate

expose

favour

fictional

imaginative

influence

interest

literary

major

media

model

outlet

percent

period

persuasive

pointing

quality

receive

recreate

refund

research

role-playing

sandbox

setting

share

specific

speculate

target

tug

upset

vast

whine

2. Translate the sentences. Pay attention to the words in italics.

1. Advertising is the business of encouraging people to buy goods.

2. This film is for adults only.

3. The conversation stopped when she made her dramatic entrance.

4. Dramatics is the study of theatrical skills such as acting.

5. We explained our plans, and he was very enthusiastic about them.

6. “Everything you can imagine is real.” (Pablo Picasso)

7. Don’t let me influence your decision.

8. Her written work is a model of imaginative mind, and neatness.

9. The car needs major repairs.

10. Her major is computer science.

11. It is difficult to recruit teachers of quality.

12. Will they publish the results of their research?

13. Sand-box is a low box holding sand for children to play.

14. The teacher gave us very specific (detailed) instructions.

15. We don’t know all the circumstances, so it is pointless to speculate.

3. Scan text a carefully paying attention to the words in bold type.

Text A. Imaginative Communication

Imaginative communication may be defined as the process through which invented situations are created and, in most cases, shared. Whenever people invent jokes or stories, speculate, daydream, or make believe, they are engaged in imaginative communication. People also engage in imaginative communication when they appreciate fictional messages found in books, magazines, newspapers, films, television dramas, plays, and conversations.

Imaginative communication plays a major role in the lives of all people. Preschool children watch television cartoons and "read" picture books. They appreciate stories read to them by older children and adults. They play "house," "store," and "school" and create imaginary castles and mountain roads in their sandboxes. In elementary school, children encounter an increasing number of imaginative messages as they learn to read and explore literature. Through writing activities children create their own literature. Using the works of others as models, students create poems, stories, plays, and cartoons as they express their individual creativity. Creative dramatics and role-playing enable students to recreate history or understand present events. In their free time elementary and middle school students continue to enjoy television cartoons and dramatic programming and may develop an interest in sports programming.

Secondary school students are introduced to important literary works and, in some schools, to quality films and media programs. In many high schools, however, students receive little encouragement to create imaginative messages of their own. Gifted students find a creative outlet in debating, drama, journalism, creative writing, and media activities. The vast majority of students, though, are merely exposed to the imaginings of others through literature. In their free time secondary school students enjoy televised sports, drama, and cartoons. Their interest in music and films usually grows dramatically during this period of their lives.

Adults are enthusiastic consumers of imaginative messages. It has been estimated that adults devote 40 percent of their free time to being entertained by television or computer. Unfortunately, too few adults read books for pleasure, attend plays and concerts, or search for quality programs on television. Even fewer adults seek to express their imaginations by creating original messages. Unhappily, as creators of formal imaginative messages, most people tend to reach a peak during their childhood.

Comprehension Check 1

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