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II. Translate the sentences with the words and phrases in italics from the text.

III. Describe the University you study at and the Language Department of your University using the vocabulary of the text.

IV. Read the conversation and suggest a suitable title for it. Find out what topic is discussed.

John: Look, that’s my tutor.

Olaf: What is a tutor?

John: The tutorial System is one of the ways in which Oxford and Cambridge differ from all other English universities. Every student has a tutor. Your tutor, more or less, plans your work, suggests the books you should read and sets work for you to do, for example an essay to write.

Olaf: Does the tutor also give lectures?

John: Yes, he may.

Olaf: But aren’t lectures given by the professors?

John: Yes, though professors don’t give a great many lectures. They are often appointed not so much to do teaching work as to carry on research in their particular subjects.

Olaf: I saw in the porch of one college some notices about “Societies” there seemed to be quite a lot of societies.

John: There are dozens of them: dramatic societies, rowing, boxing, political clubs of all colours, cinema clubs – clubs, in fact, for almost every activity under the sun. Each society arranges for a leading expert in his subject to come and talk to its members. So in term time you get a regular steam of politicians, musicians, poets, painters, film producers and so on. The best-known society, I suppose, is the Union a debating club a sort of training ground for our future statesmen.

Olaf: There’s another tutor, I suppose, that man in the cap and gown with those two men in bowler hats behind him.

John: No, he’s a proctor. And the two men behind him are “bull-dogs”. The proctor’s job is to keep discipline, to see that students aren’t out after midnight, or aren’t driving a car without having first received permission from the proctor.

Olaf: What punishment can the proctor give?

John: Students can be fined a sum of money, or, for a very serious offence, they can be expelled.

Olaf: And the “bull-dogs’, what are they for?

John: They are to catch the student if he tries to run away before his name can be taken.

V. Answer the questions.

1. What are responsibilities of a tutor?

2. Who gives lectures at British universities?

3. What societies can students join at British universities?

4. What does a proctor do?

5. What are ‘bull-dogs’?

VI. Read the excerpts of the letter, written by a student at Oxford, and compare each point with the practice of teaching and learning in Belarus.

  • I know that over 90 per cent of full-time students receive grants from public or private funds. The grants are paid towards tuition and living costs….

  • Here in Great Britain degree courses, leading to a BA or BSc, usually take three years…

  • In many universities students live in their college for at least part of their student years…

  • It is almost impossible to move from one university to another during a degree course; if you do move, you will probably have to begin the course again…

  • The system of learning is quite similar to ours. Students attend tutorial as well as lectures. The tutor sets work for his small group of students. It is criticized and discussed every week or fortnight by the tutor in person.

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