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ВИЩА ОСВІТА КОНТРАСТИ ТА ПРОБЛЕМИ IV курс.doc
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13.B Explain the following concepts from the text.

Top-up fee; extravagant promise; financial gap; U-turn; election pledge; the Nobel prize; degree studies; trickle; money talks; academe; Ivy League university; direct fee payment; Oxbridge; counterpart; cut-price university; student-teacher ratio; one-to-one tutorial; academics; queue of talent; millstone; to devalue; A-level school-leaver; post-graduate qualification; 50% target; general taxation; tax burden; graduate tax; working life; student loan; on a deferred basis; taxpayer; to be subsidised; to duck the issue.

13.C. Discuss the following questions and issues with a partner and share your opinions with the rest of the class.

1. What consequences does the "historic commitment" to increase the accessibility of higher education to all social groups put forward in the Labour's election manifesto entail?

2. What are the manifestations of the current crisis in UK higher education? Rate factors contributing to the critical situation.

3. How important is individual approach for the quality of education? Does mass education always mean mediocrity?

4. What strategies can you suggest to remedy the critical situation with UK higher education? Will financial investment suffice?

14.A You will hear a text dwelling on problems in uk education, which are a cause of concern for British academics. After listening, complete statements 1-5 with the correct alternative (a-b).

1. Professor H. Newby urged vice-chancellors of UK universities to consider

a) the rise of student fees;

b) profound structure changes in the universities;

c) long-term prospects of UK universities.

2. The review produced by the vice-chancellor of Southampton's University supports the widely held assumption that universities will have

a) to introduce top-up fees

b) to offer a wider range of training

c) to raise student fees

3. The Newby review highlights

a) some ominous trends for UK universities over the next 10-15 years

b) the necessity for radical reformers in the higher education sector

c) the need to exploit the increasingly global market place through distance-learning courses;

4. Universities are criticized for being unable

a) to revive regional economies

b) to develop a true market for higher education

c) to restructure the higher education sector to sustain a globally competitive economy

5. The Newby report has a distant advantage over the Dearing report as it

a) investigates thoroughly some of the educational issues

b) produces a short-term political fix

c) seeks to develop the long-term vision for British universities

14.b Listen to the last paragraph of the text again and jot down the essence of the four envisaged practices for UK universities. Which of them seems to you most / least feasible? How are issues raised in the text relevant to your educational establishment?

IV. Uk university faculty and academic process

1. Consider the vocabulary which may be of help while talking about the teaching staff at uk universities and colleges.

a university teacher/a professor (AmE),

subject teacher, a maths/chemistry, etc. teacher, a teacher of English/ an English teacher

assistant teacher/instructor, a senior teacher/instructor

good, poor, bad, excellent, experienced, mediocre, born, superior, great teacher

tutor – someone who gives lessons to just one student or a small group of students, e.g. They hired a private tutor to help Mary with her French.

• A tutor in Cambridge is called an adviser.

• The basis of tuition in Oxford is the tutorial for which students are re­quired to meet with their tutor once or twice a week, individually or perhaps, with one or two other students.

lecturer (BrE) — someone who teaches at university or college, e.g. a lecturer in World Politics

professor — a university teacher of the highest rank in Britain, any uni­versity teacher in the USA who has a higher degree such as a Ph. D.: a linguistics professor, e.g. He's a professor of biology at Cambridge.

faculty (AmE)/teaching/academic staff (BrE) - all the teachers working at a certain university