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IV. Higher education Topical vocabulary

1. Who is who: applicant/prospective student; freshman; sophomore, junior, senior, undergraduate student; graduate (grad) student; part-time student; transfer student; night student; faculty (the entire teaching staff at an educational institution); teaching assistant, assistant professor, associate professor, (full) professor; counselor.

2. Administration: dean, assistant dean, department chairman; President of the University; academic vice-president; student government; board of trustees.

3. Structure: college (college of Arts and Sciences); school (school of Education), evening school; grad school; summer school; college of continuing education (service training, updating one’s qualification); department; career development and job placement office.

4. Academic calendar: fall, spring term/semester; fall, winter, spring, summer quarter; school/academic year; exam period/days — reading days/period; break/recess; deadline (last date for a retake); fall term break; winter recess or winter holidays, summer vacation.

5. Academic programs: course (a one / three credit course) to take a course, to give a lecture; pass-fail course (A course where you don’t take an examination, but a pass-fail test (зачет); elective, a major/to major (what’s your major?); a minor (second in importance); discussion session; seminars; a more academic class, usually with grad students; a student-teacher.

6. Grades: to get/to give a grade; pass-fail grading (e. g.: to take grammar pass-fail); grades A, B, C, D, E; A-student; to graduate with straight A; a credit, to earn a credit; education record (information on a student’s attendance, enrollment status, degrees conferred and dates, honours and awards; college, class, major field of study; address, telephone number).

7. Tests: quiz; to take/to give an exam; to retake an exam (a retake); to flunk a course; to flunk smb; to drop out/to withdraw; a pass-fail test; multiple choice test; essay test; SAT, PSAT (preliminary SAT) ACT; GPA (Grade Point Average — a grade allowing to continue in school and graduate).

8. Red Tape: to register (academically and financially); to enroll for admission; to interview; to sign up for a course; to select classes/courses; to drop a course, to add a course (to take up an additional course for personal interest, not for a credit and to pay for it additionally - факультатив); a student I.D. (Identification Document) — студенческий билет), library card; transcript; degrees: B.A., MA, Ph. D.; to confer a degree; to confer tenure, thesis, paper, dissertation.

9. Financing: full-time fees; part-time fees; grants; student financial aid; to apply for financial aid; to be eligible for financial assistance; scholarship; academic fees; housing fees; a college work-study job.

Reading 1

British and American universities

British and American universities are similar in their pursuit of knowledge as a goal but are quite different in their organization and operation.

English universities and colleges, because of their selective intake, are relatively small. American universities, which combine a number of different colleges and professional schools, are large, sometimes with 20,000 to 25,000 students on one campus. Teacher training colleges and polytechnics are alternatives to the university course for some students in England, being established for specific purposes. In contrast, virtually all schools of education, engineering and business studies, are integral parts of universities in the United States. In England universities receive about 70% of their financial support through Parliamentary grants. Similarly, in the United States, public institutions receive about 75% of their funds from local, state, and federal sources, but private colleges and universities receive little or no government support. In England, personal financial aid is provided by the government to over 80% of the students through local educational authorities according to the parents’ income. In the US student’s aid is administered by the university or the sponsoring agency and is provided by private organizations and the state or federal governments. Obviously British and American universities have similar educational aims but different means of achieving those aims.

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