Unit 6. The things I like and Dislike. My Occupation.
Work is a remedy against all ills.
Charles Baudelaire
The happiness of men consists in life.
And life is labour.
Leo Tolstoy
Recommended grammar:
Grammar for writing business letters.
BUILDING-UP YOUR VOCABULARY
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At Sixteen and After
In Britain sixteen is a crucial age. This is when young people have to decide whether to stay at school, to go on to a college, to look for a job or to start some Youth Training Programme.
Most pupils take their GCSE(= General Certificate of Secondary Education)examswhen they are sixteen. Those who get good gradescan stay for further two years and sit for their A-level exams. Good A-level results make it possible for the pupils to go on to a university or polytechnic school.
If one got good grades in GCSE but doesn't want to do A-levels, he can study for a vocational diploma at colleges of further education, which offer a number of vocationally oriented courses for 16-18-year-olds and prepare young people for work in various occupationssuch as business, engineering, administration,catering, or tourism.
Because the unemploymentrateis now high, far fewer 16-year-olds go straight out and look for a job. However, about a third of them still take this option.Most do not find employmentimmediately and many take part in training schemeswhich involve on-the-job trainingcombined with part-timecollege courses. An increasing number of school-leaversenter Youth Training Schemes (YTS [,waiti:'es]) and do vocational trainingfor particular jobs and careers.YTS give two years’ experience to 16-year-old school leavers who do not have a job. People on the scheme get a small pay for the work they do. If a young person takes a place on YTS, he can’t claim unemployment benefit.
Whatever the alternative, all of them have to think about gaining employmentin a job marketwhich demands increasingly skilledworkers.
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a) Cramming for success: study and academic work:
to carry out/ to do research, to get a book through inter-library loan, to drop out, to be good at, to do a subject/ a course, to take an exam in a subject/ to sit for an exam, to pass an exam/ to do well in an exam, to fail/ to do badly in an exam, to re-sit an exam, to do vocational training, to study for a diploma, to cram / review for an exam, to coach up smb. in a subject, to get honours, to qualify for a job/ to do smth. to be qualified;
academic journals (not magazines), papers/articles on specialised subjects, finals (= the last exams before receiving a degree), entrance exam, multiple-choice test, grade, a diploma (certificate) with honours, on-the-job training, handicraft, skilled (unskilled), part-time (full-time) student (worker);
GCSE (General Certificate of Secondary Education) (= the exams taken by most 15-16-year-olds in Britain. Marks are given for all the subjects separately, however, there is a uniform system of marks, all being graded from A to G. Grades A, B and C are good grades).
A-levels (Advanced Levels) (= higher level academic exams set by the same examining boards that set the GCSEs. They are taken mostly by people around the age of 18 who wish to go on to higher education).