UNIT 6 - Jobs
UNIT 6 - Jobs
UNIT 6 - Jobs
Diverse societies place different levels of importance on the concept of going to work. For
some peoples, work is less important to perceptions of individual, social connection or value,
while in other societies an individual’s sense of worth and social standing is strongly
connected to what someone does for a living.
Work is, according to Webster Dictionary, an activity in which one exerts strengths or
faculties to do or perform something: a: sustained physical or mental effort to overcome
obstacles and achieve an objective or result. b: the labour, task or duty, that is once
accustomed, means of livelihood.
According to the same dictionary, occupation is an activity in which one engages or the
principal business of one’s life, while profession is defined as a calling requiring specialized
knowledge and often long and intensive academic preparation or a principal calling, vocation
or employment.
Generally, employment is a type of contract between two parties, one being the employer and
the other being the employee. An employee could be defined as a person in the service of
another under any written contract of hire, where the employer has the power to control and
direct the employee. In a business environment the employer is responsible for the whole
activity in view of generating a profit, while the employee contributes labour to this activity,
usually in return for a salary. Employers offer hourly wages or a salary in exchange for the
worker’s labour power, depending upon whether the employee is paid by the hour. A salaried
employee is typically not paid for more hours worked than the minimum, whereas wages are
paid for all hours worked including overtime.
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Part-time employment is a form of employment that carries fewer hours per week than a full-
time job. Part-time employees usually do not receive the same health insurance, retirement,
and other benefits full-time receive. People may work part-time voluntarily, too. A full-time
job is a job in which an employee works the maximum number of legal hours, typically 40 in
the work week, although this standard varies around the world and can be referred to as full-
time employment or FTE.
A full-time job may be permanent or temporary. A permanent full-time job usually has
benefits (e.g. health care, vacation time, sick pay), while temporary full-time jobs do not have
benefits. Full-time jobs are often considered careers and usually paid more than part-time jobs
and there is the possibility of overtime pay. A full-time position is one of more authority and
compensation for the full-time job may be offered in the form of salary. A salary is a set
compensation, rather than an hourly wage, which is also a compensation, usually financial,
received by workers in exchange for their labour.
A fee is the price one pays as remuneration for services. Traditionally, professionals in Great
Britain receive a fee (attorneys, solicitors, doctors etc).
Full-time varies between companies, and is often based on the shift the employee must work
during each work week. The standard work week consists of five, eight-hours a day, totaling
forty hours. A person who needs full-time work, but is dropped to part-time is
underemployed, which is sometimes a form of dismissal strategy to avoid paying
unemployment benefits to a laid-off worker.
Besides this classification of workers within a company (part-time and full-time) many
companies further classify employees as exempt or non-exempt. This specification is used to
separate employees that are eligible for overtime from those who are not. An exempt
employee is one that is typically salaried and eligible to work overtime; non-exempt
employees are typically paid hourly and are eligible for overtime pay.
An offer of employment, however does not guarantee employment for any length of time and
each party may terminate the relationship at any time. This is referred to as at-will
employment. In some professions it is according to the rule to offer two weeks’ notice when
resigning from a job.
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systematic knowledge and proficiency. Historically there were only three professions:
divinity, medicine and law. Nowadays professions also include accountants, architects
researchers, nurses, lawyers, vets, engineers, teachers, diplomats, librarians, a.s.o.
Professions enjoy a high social status, regard and esteem conferred upon them by the society
they live in. This high esteem arises primarily from the higher social function of their work,
which is regarded as vital to the society. All professions involve technical specialized and
highly skilled work (professional expertise). Training for this type of work involves obtaining
degrees and professional qualifications and this training requires regular updating of skills
through continuing education.
II. Find the topic sentence for each paragraph and then the main idea of the whole text.
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IV. Fill in the gaps with suitable words:
risk, interview, money, newspaper, available,
If a person is looking for a job, they will often look in a.............or at a Job Centre and when
they find something they are interested in, they send a written ......... and their ............. If they
are successful they are invited to an ............. and asked questions about themselves, and may
be asked to give the names of former ............. who can talk about them. In most companies
there is an official process for giving ............a job and it is not usual to get a.............. because
you have a friend or a .............. who can help you. Sometimes people looking for a job, accept
dangerous occupations, too. There are many reasons why people work in dangerous .............
Sometimes such jobs are the only jobs...............in certain communities, such as logging, mill
work, and fishing. Many times there may be other jobs in the community, but none that pay as
............. as the more dangerous jobs. Others take........... jobs in order to serve and protect
others.
The decision to leave a dangerous job is not.................. as easy as it may seem. For some
people, this is the only ........... they know. Others need the............. In many communities there
is no other .................. Some place duty, honor, and service above their own
personal...............and put their lives at................... in order to serve others.
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2. Speak about your parents’ jobs.
3. Have you ever worked during your summer holiday? What did you do?
4. Speak about the qualities of a successful businessman.
5. Are there professions for women only?
6. Speak about unemployment in our country.
VI. Give synonyms and then provide the opposites:
Easy Engage
Educated Enjoy
Effective Entire
Elegant Everlasting
Employed Exhausted
Empty Expend
Energetic Expired
A.
1. If you have a problem with your car, I can help fix it.
Physicist/ physician/ car salesman/mechanic
2. I bring you your dinner in a restaurant. After dinner I bring the check. Remember to leave
me a tip.
A cook/ a hostess/an escort/ a waiter
4. If you want to buy a loaf of bread, you'll have to pay me on your way out of the
supermarket.
A lawyer/ a clerk/ a cashier/ a shop assistant
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8. When you ride on an airplane, I'm the person flying it.
A flight attendant/ a mechanic/ an assistant/ a pilot
9. I teach in a school.
A professor/a principle/a librarian/a teacher
1. The rate of unemployment is very high. Many people are out of........
Employment/ work/ occupation/profession
6. The workers in our company will remain on strike until they get a fair…….
Advantage/ pay/ deal/ profit
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VIII. Match the words in column A with the words in column B:
An actor a study
A novelist a stock exchange office
A trader a stage
A chef a surgery
A secretary a warehouse
A deliveryman a kitchen
Some teachers a waiting room
Patients (waiting) field/ greenhouse
A gardener a staff room
A doctor an office
4 I am interested in applying for the ………. of general manger with this firm.
Post/ position/ posture/ posting
5. He expressed his gratitude for the ……. he received on his final day at work.
Giving/ gift/ give/ giver
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8. I’m afraid your offer is …….. .
Acceptance/ accepting/ acceptable/ unacceptable
X. What do these people do? Explain what each person does in that profession? Can you
suggest any new professions and occupations?
Key terms
Add other words or phrases you know related to the topic of “Work, Jobs and Professions”.
Activity Job
Degree Occupation
Employment Perform
Fee Profession
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Resign Train
Salary Update
Skill Wage
Related terms - Make up some sentences of your own with five of the most relevant terms.
A. General:
letter of application for a job, resume/ CV, interview; contract, work agreement;
employer, employee, staff member, to be on staff; temporary worker, season
worker;
to hire, to work full-time, to work part-time, to have a part-time job, to work
overtime, flexitime; work-at-home programs
pay, wages, salary, income; pay slip, wage cut, pay day;
to be paid by the hour, to be paid by the month; to earn one’s living; to run a firm;
monthly pay, weekly pay, hourly pay, yearly pay / annual pay;
gross pay, net pay, take-home pay, bonus, overtime pay;
taxes, expenses, deductions;
fringe benefits, sick leave, medical insurance;
a regular job, skilled/unskilled worker, apprentice, vacancy;
B. Unemployment:
Period of notice, to be unemployed, to be out of work, to be on the dole (BE), to
fire,/ to sack (B.E), to give someone notice, to dismiss somebody, to hand in
one’s notice, to resign to quit; unemployed, jobless, to look for a job;
C. Recent terminology:
shift system: with companies opened 24 hours a day operate on a: 3 shift
system
work-at-home programs = allow employees to do all or some of their work at
home
telecommuting = employees are connected by technology to the workplace
job-sharing = two employees sharing a full-time job
Some organizations permit flexitime, which involves allowing employees to
partially set their own work hours.
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a band time = the total time the company operates: 8 am to 7 pm
the core time = when all employees must be at work: 10 am to 4 pm
fringe benefits or perks = free or subsidized meals, a company car, low
interest credits etc.
employee (fixed) benefits = extra rewards such as health insurance, retirement
plans or child-care
II - Focus on grammar
Perfect Forms
Present perfect tense describes an action that happened at an indefinite time in the past or that
began in the past and continues in the present. This tense is formed by using has/have with
the past participle of the verb. Most past participles end in -ed. Irregular verbs have special
past participles.
Example Meaning
The tourists have travelled to many countries in order to see as much At an indefinite time
as they could.
Women have voted in presidential elections since 1921. Continues in the
present
Past perfect tense describes an action that took place in the past before another past action.
This tense is formed by using had with the past participle of the verb.
e.g. By the time they arrived at conference hall, the lecture had ended.
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Future perfect tense describes an action that will occur in the future before some other action.
This tense is formed by using will have with the past participle of the verb.
e.g. By the time the students return, the teachers will have spent several days waiting.
Present perfect progressive tense describes an action that began in the past, continues in the
present, and may continue into the future. This tense is formed by using has/have been and
the present participle of the verb (the verb form ending in -ing).
e.g. The management has been considering a transfer of the business to a new location
where profits would be higher.
Past perfect progressive tense describes a past, ongoing action that was completed before
some other past action. This tense is formed by using had been and the present perfect of the
verb (the verb form ending in -ing).
e.g. Before the budget cuts, the students had been participating in many outdoor
activities.
Future perfect progressive tense describes a future, ongoing action that will occur before some
specified future time. This tense is formed by using will have been and the present
participle of the verb (the verb form ending in -ing).
e.g. By the year 2030, anthropologists will have been studying and defining the human
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society for more than 200 years.
III. Activities
2. Put the verb into the most suitable form- continuous or present simple
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10. They.................(to work) for Coca-Cola.
6. You.......to a word...........
Listened- I haven’t said/ didn’t listen- I say/ listen-saying/ haven’t listened- I’ve said
8. .....................in England?
Did you ever was/ have you ever been/ were you /didn’t you have been
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4. Use the words in brackets and fill in the gaps with the appropriate tense:
Last night, while I was doing my assignment my friend................. (call). She said
she..........(call) me on her cellular from her English class at the FEAA. I asked if
she..........(wait) for class, but she said that the teacher was in front of the room lecturing while
she..............(talk) to me. I couldn’t believe she...........(make) a phone call during the class. I
asked what was going on.
She said her English teacher was so boring that several of the students..................(sleep
actually) in class. Some of the students...............(talk) about their plans for the weekend and
the students next to her...........(draw) a picture of a horse. When Dana............................(tell)
me she was not satisfied with the class I ............(mention) that my English teacher was quite
good and ...............( suggest) that she switched to my class.
5. Fill in the gaps with the appropriate tenses using the words in brackets:
2. After I ..........(find) the wallet full of money, I....................... (go, immediately) to the police
and...........................(turn) it in.
4. Dan is in the bedroom watching TV. At this time yesterday, he (watch, also)........television.
That’s all he does all day long.
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5. When I .....( walk) into that office the secretary...............talk on the phone with the
customer, several girls................(work busily) at their desks and two
supervisors.............(discuss quietly) matters to improve customer service.
6. Andra.....(be) in the room when Dan told me what .........(happen), but she didn’t hear
anything because she...............(not listen).
7. It’s strange that you..........(call) because I.............. (think, just) about you.
9. Anna...........(live) in Timisoara for more than two years. In fact she.......(live) there when
the Revolution started.
10. The fireman...............(rescue) the old lady who......(trapped) on the second floor.
IV. Evaluation
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