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Read the magazine article below and think of a title for it. Do the assignments that follow.

  1. A teacher might introduce a discussion activity with the instructions below. Read them and then fill in the blanks.
  2. A) In each set of five below, match a verb on the left with a noun on the right to make collocations for describing skills and qualities.
  3. A) Read the item given below and supply answers; b) Retell the passage; c) Pick out the unfamiliar terms and study them.
  4. A) Study the definitions of the words with similar meanings and think about their proper Russian equivalents.
  5. A) Study the definitions of the words with similar meanings and think about their proper Russian equivalents.
  6. A. Look at the text below and discuss if the job of an auditor is really challenging.
  7. A. Read the extracts from Article 125 of the RF Constitution to add to the information about the Constitutional Court.

The girls in Jill Gugisberg Wall's science class at Farnsworth Elementary School in St Paul, Minnesota, get angry when they think about the bad old days. At the schools they attended before coming to Farnsworth, 'the boys got all the attention,' says Carrie Paladie, 12. 'Every time we asked a question, the teacher would just ignore us.' Her classmate, 11-year-old Jennie Montour, agrees: 'The boys got to participate in everything.' Jennie says the teachers made her feel 'that I was stupid.' Their new science teacher's mission is to change all that. 'In my classroom,' she says, 'I encourage everyone to be involved.'

Unfortunately, there are too few teachers like Wall. Sexism may be the most widespread and damaging form of bias in the classroom, according to a report released last week by the American Association of University Women. The report, which summarized 1,331 studies of girls in school, describes a pattern of downward intellectual mobility for girls. The AAUW found that girls enter first grade with the same or better skills and ambitions as boys. But, all too often, by the time they finish high school, 'their doubts have crowded out their dreams.'

In elementary school, the researchers say, teachers call on boys much more often and give them more encouragement. Boys frequently need help with reading, so remedial reading classes are an integral part of many schools. But girls, who just as often need help with math, rarely get a similar chance to sharpen their skills. Boys get praised for the intellectual content of their work while girls are more likely to be praised for neatness. Boys tend not to be penalized for calling out answers and taking risks; girls who do the same are reprimanded for being rude. Research indicates that girls learn better in cooperative settings, where students work together, while boys learn better in competitive settings. Yet most schools are based on a competitive model. The report also indicates that schools are becoming more tolerant of male students sexually harassing female students.

Despite these problems, girls get better grades and are more likely to go on to college, according to the report. But even these successful girls have less confidence in their abilities than boys, have higher expectations of failure and more modest aspirations. The result, the report concludes, is that girls are less likely to reach their potential than boys.

The differences between the sexes are greatest in science. Between 1978 and 1986, the gap between the national science achievement test scores of 9- and 13-year-old boys and girls widened - because girls did worse and boys did better. Girls and boys take about the same number of science courses, but girls are more likely to take advanced biology and boys are more likely to take physics and advanced chemistry. Even girls who take the same courses as boys and perform equally well on tests are less likely than boys to choose technical careers. A Rhode Island study found that 64 per cent of the boys who had taken physics and calculus in high school were planning to major in science or engineering, compared with only 18.6 per cent of the girls who had taken those courses.

More than two-thirds of the nation's teachers are women. Presumably, their gender bias is unintentional but no less apparent. ... 'When researchers have asked teachers to remember their favorite students, it always ends up being kids who conformed to gender stereotypes,' says researcher David Sadker. 'The ones they like best are assertive males and the ones they like least are assertive females.'

Keith Geiger, president of the National Education Association, the largest teachers' union, advocates incorporating gender awareness into teacher training and classroom reviews. Also, he says, as schools upgrade their math and science standards, they should encourage more participation by girls. A more controversial solution might be single-sex schools or sex segregation at crucial points in a girl's development.

In Jill Wall's class, girls get a lot of support from their teacher. Wall learned more about teaching girls after receiving an AAUW fellowship in 1990 during which she studied elementary science education. ... At Farnsworth, her students give her straight A's. 'She treats us all the same,' says Tamika Aubert, 11. Equity in the classroom won't turn all girls - or boys -into physicists. But maybe a generation of teachers will emerge who can delight in assertive girls and shy boys with a talent for the arts.

(From English for the Teacher

by Mary Spratt)

v Vocabulary Practice



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