Assignment for the 3rd-year students
1. Warming up.
What comes to your mind
when you see or hear the word "science"?
2.
Look through the following text and say what ideas you’just discussed it
contains. What have not you mentioned? Translate the text.
Can the average
person really understand science? Does the average person want to know about
science? Does science matter to us?
For
many of us, however, the mere memory of physics, chemistry, and biology classes
in high school and college makes our eyes glaze over. We left the classroom
with the belief that science was dull and abstract and virtually impossible for
the average person to understand. Back then, it wasn't cool to understand
science, and it seemed to have little immediate relevance to our lives. Yet as
we matured and headed into the world, we found ourselves face to face with
sophisticated computers at work and frequent headlines about matters of science
— mapping the human genetic make-up, cloning, test-tube babies, and the August
1996 discovery of the possibility of past life on Mars, to name a few.
Suddenly, scientific knowledge has not only become acceptable, it has become a
useful, essential, and inescapable part of our lives. For some of us, our
fascination with science began in the 1950's and 1960's, when the Soviet Union
launched Sputnik or when Neil Armstrong set foot on the Moon — striking
evidence of man's ability to apply scientific knowledge to accomplish extraordinary
goals. For others, all it took to become interested in science was getting out
of high school or merely witnessing the unending series of new scientific
achievements and inventions that occurred during the 1970's, 80's, and 90's:
the Venus landing, fiber optics, deciphering DNA code, black holes, space
stations, microchips and computers, microsurgery, the Space Shuttle, heart
transplants, artificial hearts, superconductivity, the discovery of other
solar systems, and much more.
You
don't have to be a theoretical physicist to be awed by space exploration or
curious about whether life exists on Mars or how Universe began. You don't have
to be a biochemist to have an interest in the fundamental processes of life.
It's impossible not to be curious about such matters. Scientific
knowledge and discoveries are much too interesting and profound to be left
only to scientists.
Science
can be fascinating. Many great discoveries of past have now, in our lifetime,
culminated in the most incredible and pervasive scientific and technological
revolution that could be imagined. Whether we approve of it or not, we're swept
up in that revolution and the resulting culture — unless you live in a cave.
Not only is science fascinating, it matters to us because it is our life. They
say that whatever road we take, our fate is indissolubly bound up with science.
It is essential as a matter of simple survival for us to understand science.
The more we know science, the better we understand life. It means feeling more
comfortable with our everyday lives, and using science and technology to
accomplish goals. Science is a part of our culture and heritage. It is of great
importance for not merely "ivory tower" intellectuals but for the
masses of average people.
Knowledge
is our destiny. Homo sapiens will continue to search for the answers to
new questions. We will develop new concepts, new theories, and we will
continue our quest to understand the natural world. We must continue to
discover, create, explore, and invent. We must search for the cure and the
life-saving solution, for we are the discoverers, creators, explorers, and
inventors. We seek the unknown — the deep, the dark, the never before seen —
and we have within us the capacity for ever greater wisdom.
We
have come to the future. We have found our place by looking back and understanding history. We are poised to
become twenty-first centurions. As one scientist said: "We don't have to
look too far to see the future. We can already see it will be
magnificent." We have now reached the 15-billion-year journey.
3.
Look through the text again and entitle it.
4.
Look through the text once more and say what kind of passage it is:
1. A
scientific paper.
2. A
fragment from a science fiction story.
3. An
introduction to a book for science students.
4. A
fragment from a popular scientific article.
What makes you think so?
5.
Read
the text thoroughly with a dictionary and answer the following questions:
1. What
does the author say about general attitude to science in high school or
college?
2. When,
according to the author, do we find ourselves face to face with science?
3. Where
is the news about scientific achievements published? What makes you think so?
4. Why,
in the author's opinion, has science become a useful, essential and inescapable
part of our lives?
5. What
scientific achievements of the 1970's, 80's, and 90's does the author mention?
6. Why
does the author think it's impossible not to be curious about scientific
matters?
7. Why
does science matter to us?
8. Who
does the author call "ivory tower" intellectuals?
9. Do
you agree with the answer to the questions given at the beginning of the text?
What makes you think so?
6.
Give Russian equivalents to the following words, word combinations and scientific
terms from the text:
|
|
to matter |
|
DNA code |
|
|
virtually |
1 |
heart transplants |
|
|
to glaze over |
1 |
to be curious |
|
|
an average person |
2 |
pervasive |
|
|
it wasn't cool |
2 |
to be swept up |
|
|
immediate |
2 |
to be awed |
|
|
to have relevance |
2 |
to be indissolubly bound up |
|
|
to head into the world |
2 |
survival |
|
|
matter (n) |
2 |
heritage |
|
|
genetic makeup |
2 |
Ivory tower intellectuals |
|
|
test-tube babies |
2 |
destiny |
|
|
to name a few |
2 |
quest |
|
|
to set foot on |
2 |
wisdom |
|
|
striking evidence |
3 |
to be poised |
|
to accomplish a goal |
3 |
headline |
|
|
|
fiber optics |
|
fascination |
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