Project Binder
Project Binder
Project Binder
Department of English
English Linguistics
PROJECT BINDER
Listening 2 Course
Group members:
January 2021
Lecture 1: THE US POPULATION
Lecture 2: THE IMMIGRANTS
- The active immigrating (coming to a new country to live) is certainly nothing new throughout history.
- People have immigrated or moved to new countries for many different reasons:
Economic
Political
Natural disasters such as droughts and famines
- To escape religious or political persecution
- Most people don’t want to leave their native land ↔ only under great pressure of some sort
≠ a few people quite adventurous and restless by nature, like to move a lot.
→ Came to America to live
- Immigration is quite fascinating to most Americans (who view themselves as a nation of immigrants)
- However, the early Britain considered themselves settlers (colonists) of the US rather than immigrants
↔ think they were merely settling new land for the mother country ≠ moving to a new country
- Large numbers of Dutch, French, German and Scotch Irish settlers & large numbers of blacks were
brought from Africa as slaves at the time of independence from Britain in 1776
- About 40% of people living in the United States were non-British
- The traditions that form the basis of life were mainly British traditions
- This period is usually referred to as the colonial period
1. The great immigration (began 1830 - ended 1930): three major stages
- First stage (1830-1860): before this time, the number of immigrants was comparatively small (only
about 10,000 a year)
The rate began to climb in the 1830s ↔ about 600,000
The rate continued to climb during the 1840s ↔ 1,700,000
The rate continued to climb and during the 1850s ↔ 2,600,000
→ the majority of immigrants came from Germany, Great Britain and Ireland
- Second stage (1860-1890): another 10 million people arrived
The majority continued to be from Germany, Ireland and Great Britain.
A smaller but significant number from the Scandinavian (nations of Denmark, Norway and Sweden)
- Third stage (1890-1930): the era of heaviest immigration
Almost 22 million immigrants arrived in the United States (mostly from the southern European
countries of Greece, Italy, Portugal, and Spain & the Eastern European countries of Poland and
Russia)
2. The reasons why these people immigrated to the United States
- A few interesting facts
The population of Europe doubled between 1750 and 1850 & the industrial revolution in Europe
caused widespread unemployment ↔ the combination of increased population and the demand for
land by industry → that farmland was becoming increasingly scarce in Europe → the abundance of
available land in the growing country of the United States was a great attraction
In 1862, the government offered public land free to citizens and to immigrants who were planning to
become citizen and plentiful jobs during these years of great economic growth
Freedom from religious or political persecution.
The direct result of natural disasters (the frequent failure of the potato crop in Ireland between 1845
and 1849 led to widespread starvation)
Improved ocean transport beginning in the 1840s
→ Summary the reasons: first the doubling of the population in Europe between 1750 and 1850,
second the unemployment caused by the industrial revolution, and third the land scarcity in Europe
followed by religious and political persecution and natural disaster ↔ combined with improved
transportation
Immigration numbers have never again reached the previously discussed levels
- Reasons for the decline
Various laws ↔ limit the number of immigrants coming from different parts of the world to the
United States
The first law was the Chinese exclusion act of 1882, followed by many other laws which also tried to
limit the numbers of immigrants from various countries or parts of the world
Certain economic and geopolitical events also contributed to the decline
The Great Depression starting in 1929 and World War Two
The current situation: is quite different from that in the past
- In 1965 strict quotas based on nationality were eliminated
- According to US census figures in 1860, the percentage of immigrants that were European was 92%
HOWEVER by 1960, it had dropped to 74.5% and 14% by the year 2002
- In 2002, 52.2% of immigrants came from Latin America (the Caribbean, Central America, and South
America)
- More than 1/3 of the total of all immigrants to the United States in 2002 came from Mexico or another
Central American country
- The next largest percentage 25.5% of immigrants were from Asia mainly from the Philippines, China,
and India
- Although immigration dropped sharply when the United States entered WW1, remained low
throughout the depression, and WWII ↔ at the end of the 1940s, immigration began to increase again
and has risen steadily since then
- The actual number of immigrants coming nearly to the states in recent years = the numbers coming
yearly between 1900 and 1910
- The population of the United States is much larger now
- The percentage of the population that is foreign born is considerably smaller today than it was a
century ago
Will the trend continue for non-Europeans to immigrate to the United States? → probably yes
Do these non-European people come to the United States for the same reasons that Europeans came?
well land is no longer plentiful and cheap, industry no longer requires large numbers of unskilled
workers ↔ in fact the government usually tries to restrict immigration to those who already have the
skills to be successful in US society
People come for political and economic reasons and probably will continue to do so
Lecture 3: AMERICANS AT WORK
Lecture 4: FAMILY IN THE UNITED STATES
- The American family is disintegrating ↔ the declining birth rate, a rising divorce rate and the
discontent of women with domestic roles
- A lot of people have one fixed idea of “the family” = a married couple, mother stays home to care for
the children and father works
- How the American family has changed in three different time periods: the mid mid-1940s to the mid-
1960s; the mid-60s to the mid-80s; the present
I. TRADITIONAL FAMILISM: 1940s – 1960s
- After WWII, characterized by a very strong economy a rising standard of living and a growing
middle class.
- Demographically:
Predominant - traditional family: A married couple with children.
Divorce rates were low >< birth rates were high.
TV programs depicted the family in the classical configuration: working father, housewife and
children
- Culturally, 3 dominant characteristics: conformity to social norms, greater male domination of the
family, and clear-cut gender roles → clear and separate roles for men and women at home and at work
II. INDIVIDUALISM: mid 1960s – mid 1980s
- Independence and self-reliance
- One should think and act for himself or herself according to what feels right
- Easily confused with egotism or selfishness but it's much more
- One has the freedom to decide what's best ≠ allowing that decision to be made by the community or
society
- Conflict with the concept of community
- Characterized by a lack of conformity to social norms → 3 important social and political movements:
the sexual revolution, women's liberation and the anti-war movement
- Culture: 2 important developments - the idealization of one's career and work & the drive for self-
expression and self-fulfillment.
- The feminist movement challenged traditional gender roles and male domination of society
Women entered professions previously closed to them: medicine, law, management.
Men began to consider a more active role in raising their children
A time of rapidly rising cost of living
→ These forces changed the demographics of the former picture ↔ the new picture includes new
configurations (families which the husband and wife both worked, families of single parents with children and
families of cohabiting couples with or without children)
- More women pursuing careers and making money → less economic pressure to stay in unsuitable
marriages → divorce rates doubled in a decade
- Rising divorce rates and more financial independence for women ↔ marriage was a less attractive
arrangement
- The number of single parent households tripled
- Less conformity to social norms → cohabitation quadrupled
III. NEW FAMILISM: mid 1980s – present:
- Are constantly informed by the media about the deteriorating American family
- Not willing to give up gender equality, the freedom to leave an unsuitable marriage or the self-
fulfillment of an interesting job at the same time
- Children paid a high price for these: daycare or after school hours home alone while parents both
worked; grew up with only one parent or with stepparents
- Continuing decline in divorce rates + decline in birth: due to families better financial situations
- 1/4 U.S. children live with only one parent
- Birth rate is probably declining because an increasing lifespan results in fewer women of childbearing
age; the reduction in unmarried teen pregnancies
- Balance work with family obligations, especially the care of children: shifting from one's career to
one's family
- Americans want to regain the commitment to family of the first period and keep the quality and
fulfillment of second which requires:
One parent may try to work at home or only work part time to have more time for the children
Places of work may offer more flexible working hours
On-site daycare to allow more time for parents and children
The government could mandate parental leave, family allowances → allow parents to stay home to
look after their newborn children and quality daycare centers → adequately staffed by professionals
who stay at their jobs and with the same children year after year
- None of these changes is guaranteed but changes or similar ones are necessary to ensure a healthier US
family in the future and the health of family is needed to play the central role in every society
Lecture 5: RELIGION
Lecture 6: PASSAGE
- Customs vary from country to country often bewildering for foreigners to understand.
- Ingrained in the culture that most local people accept them without thinking about them.
- Some of the reasons for the customs or traditions are historical and may have been forgotten.
- Some customs that seem natural to local people may seem strange and inexplicable to ppl new to a
country.
- Many ethnic groups still practice customs brought by their ancestors from their countries.
I. BIRTH:
- Momentous occasion.
- Celebrated in some ways or another
Baby shower: non-religious tradition observed by almost everyone
+ A shower is given by a close friend or relative of the expected mother shortly after the baby is due.
● In the past: showers arranged in secret, mom is invited and surprised.
● Now: not always a surprise anymore.
+ Mother-to-be is showered with gifts from small to big.
+ Gifts are open on the spot.
+ Good wishes, admiration, advice, expressions of envy -> the mother is reassured about the coming event
and the desirability of her situation.
+ Man participation is becoming more coming
● In the past when birth mainly took place at home, birth is a strictly female event with man is banished
from the room
+ After women go to hospital to have their babies, men are still expected to wait in the waiting room for
the doctors to tell the good news.
+ Today: modern couples attend classes together to prepare for the babies, men are with their wives in the
delivery to coax them along with the doctors.
● Baptism:
+ After a baby is born a few weeks, many parents want a religious service for their babies even if they are
not religious.
+ Held in church or synagogue.
II. MARRIAGE:
- No longer necessary for a man to ask for her father to hold her hands in weddings.
- In modern couples, a woman is the one to bring up the subject of marriage.
- Most young people still want their parents’ approval.
- Still traditional for a young man to give his fiancée a diamond ring at the beginning of their
engagement period.
- Actual wedding ceremony:
+Traditionally, the bride's family pays for the expenses.
+ The ceremony can be simple or elaborate.
+ Reception: can be simple in a church or a sit-down dinner at a local hotel with dance and private
orchestra.
- Sometimes, people are only invited to the wedding or only to the reception. These events can only be
attended by invitations.
- Shower: the bride-to-be receives gifts to help to set up a new household; wedding gifts are expected
from people who receive invitations.
- Occasionally, they choose not to have religious services -> opt for a civil wedding at a government
building.
- Every bride at her wedding should be wearing or carrying something old, something new, something
borrowed, something blue.
- It’s bad luck for the groom to see the bride in her wedding dress before the ceremony.
- Throwing rice at the bride and the groom to signal fertility -> banned/ rose petals as substitute.
- Brides wear white, female guests should not wear white.
III. DEATH:
- Whether to have a funeral held in a church or a funeral home.
- Whether to have the body cremated or not.
+ If yes a memorial service.
+ If not Whether to display the body at the funeral hold a wake, body is displayed in its casket
express sympathy, words of comfort, a eulogy, good deeds.
- Body taken to a cemetery after another brief religious service.
- Most people learn of the death from family, also printed in the newspaper attend without invitation,
send a sympathy card.
- Send flowers check the correct kind first.
- Clothes: traditionally black but no longer observed.
Lecture 7: PASSAGE
Lecture 8: CRIME & VIOLENCE
- Violent crime decreased in the United States between 1994 and 2001.
Violent crime, homicide rate arson and aggravated assault fell 52% in 1994.
51 victims/ 1000 people over the age of 12 in 2001 dropped by 24/1000.
- The U.S. population is getting older older people commit fewer crimes than younger people.
- Stricter law enforcement + stringent penalties
- White collar crime not getting better: Embezzlement, bribery, political corruption, and corporate
policies.
- 2 theories of crime that are based on one's feelings about the nature of human beings:
I. GOOD BY NATURE:
- Embraced by liberals.
- Society is to blame the cause of the criminal behavior in the United States
- Root causes like racism, poverty, and injustice. Obvious causes like the breakdown of the nuclear
family violence on TV, inferior education for some children, unemployment, child abuse and a
proliferation of drugs.
- Criminals are alienated from society because they have been deprived of the benefits that most
Americans have strike out at the society
- The existence of an underclass in U.S. society lends support to this liberal theory.
- Critics: most from the underclass do not become criminals >< people from rich families become
violent criminals.
II. AGGRESSIVE BY NATURE:
- Embraced by conservatives
- People: innately aggressive and predisposed to violence.
- Society curbs this aggressiveness by socializing us & by punishing us.
- Our conscience functions as a curb on violence and criminal behavior.
- If socialization fails, the fear of punishment should act to curb crime.
- The amount of crime and violence depends greatly on how we bring up our children: how well we pass
on important values, how punishment is used as a deterrent to crime, how effectively the criminal
justice system functions.
- Helps us understand white collar crime because those who commit white collar crime are not part of
the underclass lack a well-developed conscience.
- Critics: children from families with apparently sound values who still become. White collar criminals.
III. SOLUTIONS:
- Both the family and society can play a part in reducing crime.
- The family – socialization children respect themselves, others and the values of their society.
- Society - overcoming the alienation of the underclass by helping these people to feel that they are part
of the society instead of its victims the underclass has the same benefits as the majority; Good
education, health care and employment, justice system.
Lecture 9: CRIME & VIOLENCE
Lecture 10: PUBLIC EDUCATION
- US education is compulsory in most states to the age of 16 or until the students reach 9th grade.
- A small percentage attend private schools, either religious or secular schools. But the vast majority
attend public school.
- The federal government does not determine the curriculum or the examinations.
I. 3 LEVELS OF CONTROL:
1. State Department of Education: 2 basic functions
- Sets basic curriculum requirements for all the schools in its state.
- Sets the number of credits a student must complete to graduate from a high school, includes both
required courses and electives.
2. School district:
- The number of school districts the state has depends on the size of its population and the size of the
state.
- Each school district is run by a school board that is elected by the citizens of the district.
- Responsible for the specific content of courses taught in its schools decides what electives will be
available for students.
- Responsible for the operation of the schools in its district, the hiring of teachers and administrators.
3. The individual school:
- Teachers have primary responsibility for deciding how to teach the content of each course and for
preparing and giving examinations to the students.
II. FUNDING FOR EDUCATION:
- 7% of the money comes from the federal government The rest of the money comes from the state and
local taxes; The percentages fluctuate over time and from state to state.
- Currently, ~49% of school funding comes from the states and about 44% comes from the school
districts.
III. 3 ISSUES RELATED TO FUNDING:
1. Inequality of educational opportunity:
- Public schools are funded to a great degree by local taxes schools in poorer communities do not have
the same amount of money children from poorer areas are less likely to receive a good education.
2. Funding for private schools:
- Generally, run by religious organizations.
- Colonial times - most schools were supported by religious organizations 19th century - public
education paid for by taxes as the best way to provide equal educational opportunity for all children.
- Charter schools are nonsectarian public schools that compete with regular public schools for students;
operate under contract to a sponsor; have greater autonomy.
+ 1st charter schools came into existence - end of the 1980s
+ 2003, 2695 charter schools with 685000 students enrolled: 15% increase over 2002.
+ Charter school students did a little better than their public-school counterparts on standardized
exams.
- The school voucher concept is a much more controversial:
+ The government provides students with a certain amount of money each year that they can use to
attend whatever school they choose. Public or private.
+ Competition will improve the education students receive.
+ Largely private schools
+ Different from charter schools: non-sectarian, charter schools cannot apply restrictive admission
standards as public schools.
+ Today, voucher programs funded by taxpayers are operating in only 3 U.S. cities: Supporters:
private schools offer a better education than public schools; Opponents: vouchers rob public schools of
needed funding, not truly provide school choice because of restrictive admission standards.
3. Increased emphasis in various states on raising standards and on giving students
standardized exams.
- 2002 - education bill that requires extensive testing programs and other systems to ensure adequate
yearly progress of students.
- Funding for schools from the federal government is relatively small, it still represents a lot of money
that schools do not want to lose.
- Some people support this movement toward standardization and accountability in the educational
system, while others see it as a dangerous step away from local control of schools.
Lecture 11: POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION ADMISSIONS
- Facts figures: there are 4182 public and private 4 year and 2 year colleges in the US (range from full
universities with diverse programs to smaller 4 year colleges 2 year community colleges)
- → most of them are accredited = meet certain standards said by institutional and private evaluators
- When applying to a school ↔ make sure it was accredited
- More private colleges than public colleges > 3/4 of students (≈78% are enrolled in public colleges and
universities)
- Some of the small private schools may have < 100 students
- Some of the large State University systems have 50,000 or more
- Most of these schools are co-educational (some of them are primarily for women and others are
primarily for men)
- Some schools may offer only 1 program of study ≠ others have a great variety of programs
- The total cost for attending < $5000/year
- The prestigious private schools ≈ 30 – 40,000/year
- Located all over in industrial areas, agricultural areas, large cities & small towns
- Admissions requirements vary greatly, some are relatively easy to be admitted >< others are highly
competitive
- Most schools will ask undergraduate applicants to submit their high school transcripts (with a record
of their grades) and test results for the standardized tests (regularly offered to high school students)
- The scholastic aptitude test commonly known as the SAT (the most common standardized exam)
- Students who are applying to Graduate School usually take other more specific standardized exams
depending on which college they are applying to
E.g:
Some students are required to take the graduate record exam
The GRE students applying to a business college must take the GMAT
Students applying to law college will have to take the LSAT
- The total exam foreign students must take before being admitted to American colleges or universities
↔ are all prepared by a company (independent of the school system) ↔ have come under a lot of
criticism lately >< they are still widely used as a way to determine who will be admitted to various
schools
- Most schools try to look at the whole student consider factors other than simply grades and test scores
- Some of these factors may be extracurricular activities in school, ethnic background, work experience,
etc.
- Some schools will have personal interviews with students they are considering for admission
- Many schools private as well as public try very hard to have a student population with a wide variety
of backgrounds and ages
- The most prestigious and highly competitive colleges or universities will also consider these other
factors
- Stanford & Harvard have so many more people applying than they can possibly accept → students
take grades and S80 exams very seriously
- General medical and law colleges (private and public) very difficult to get into → test scores on
standardized exams can be extremely important
- Students who want to attend a State College or university ↔ graduate from high school in the upper
3rd or even upper half of high school class
- Community colleges (publicly supported) offered different educational opportunities than those
offered by a senior college or university
1. Admissions requirements in public community colleges are usually much more lenient than a 4-year
college or university
2. It’s cheaper, the tuition and fees are usually quite a bit lower ↔ school does not have dormitories ↔
students often live at home
→ People who are unable to go to a 4-year college or university can have an opportunity for college
credit
3. Community colleges offer 2-year programs → lead to an associate of arts degree (all of it are
vocational in nature)
- People attend community colleges for many different purposes:
may be taking only a course or 2 in some field that particularly interests them (not be planning on
getting a degree)
other people may be going to Community College full time and planning to transfer to a 4-year college
or university
Among the 2.8 million high school graduates in 2002
65.2% were bold in college
more than 90% of those attended full-time are young men represented half of the high school
graduates
68.4% women went on to college
female high school graduates at 62.1%
- More white students enrolled in college than black or Hispanic students (66.7% of white graduates,
58.7% of black graduates and 53.5% of Hispanic students)
- 42.6% of full-time students in 2002 were either employed or looking for work ↔ jumps to 75.7%
for part time students
Lecture 12: DISTANCE EDUCATION
Definition: Instructions when teachers and students are separated by distance or time or both.
1. Reasons why distance education grows quickly:
- Economic conditions professionals need to upgrade their knowledge or skills all the time
- Necessary for pp to improve skills (B.A/ B.S to pursue M.A/ PhD)
→ High demand for postsecondary edu.>< univ. and colleges face budget crunches → find ways to deliver
instructions economically
→ Modern technology postsecondary edu. available to many pp
2. How it works:
Video/ Video conferencing: students can interact with professors
+ Audio: students get audiotapes or record from video conferencing for convenient use
+ CD-ROM: get by mail or download from internet
+ Internet
+ Bulletin boards: log on anytime, read posts from other students, then respond
+ Chat room: offer a forum for real time interaction
+ Emails: convenient when students need to submit assignments or ask professor questions
3. Things to be aware of:
6 points to consider before choosing distance education:
+ Residency requirement: take courses and spend a few days on campus
+ Time limits: courses and programs must be done within limited time. Assignments have deadlines.
+ Admission requirements
+ Saving money: no expenses on traveling to campuses
+ Minimum requirements of computer (windows, micro, sound card, hard drive, RAM, modem, …) and
internet connection
+ Students need to be disciplined and independent
LECTURE 13: THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENT IN THE ECONOMY:
Ancient Egypt's civilization, a civilization that after all, lasted for more than 3000 years with at least 30
consecutive dynasties.
- A dynasty is a series of kings or queens of the same royal family, and the pyramids were constructed
as tombs or burial places for the Egyptian kings and their family members.
- Egyptians believed that they could be assured of an afterlife only if their bodies could be preserved
from decay or destruction = If once mummy was preserved, the soul would go on living.
+ The ancient Egyptians believed that the dead person could take his or her earthly possessions along to the
next world >< Western idea: you can't take it with you when you go.
+ The dead person was provided with food, clothing, furniture, weapons, and even servants => the Pharaohs
wanted to have their bodies and their possessions hidden to protect them from grave robbers.
- Construction of the mighty pyramids:
+ The first and second dynasties:
● Lasted from about 3100 to about 2665 BCE.
● Constructed mastaba which came from an Arabic word meaning “bench” or “long seat”.
● Looked like a low flat-topped rectangle, a low bench, or a shoebox.
+ The third dynasty:
● Lasted from about 2664 until 2615 BCE.
● The first typical pyramid was built.
● This pyramid was for King Zoster (2650 BCE). It was built by an architect named Imhotep.
● This pyramid was constructed as a series of giant steps or stairs => the step pyramid. It was really
simply a pile of mastabas, each step smaller and higher than the one before, and it was never covered
with stone to give it a smooth surface.
+ The fourth dynasty:
● Lasted from 2614 to 2502 BCE.
● The three Great Pyramids of Giza, located near the town of Giza on the west bank of the Nile River,
just outside the capital city of Egypt, Cairo, were built.
● The largest of these pyramids is known as the Great Pyramid was built for King Khufu (Khufu was
called Cheops) => the pyramid of Cheops.
● 2.3 million blocks of limestone were used to build the Great Pyramid, the blocks averaged 2500
kilograms each. The largest stone block weighs about 15,000 kilos
● The base of the pyramid covers 5.3 hectares and area large enough to hold 10 football fields.
- The ancient Greek historian Herodotus said that 400,000 men worked for 20 years to build the Great
Pyramid with only basic mathematics, with iron tools, no modern machinery (cranes, bulldozers, …).
- The second and third pyramids of Giza were built by Khufu his successors, the tomb of Khafre is
the second Pyramid of Giza.
● Its present height is 136.2 meters (the second pyramid).
● The third pyramid built for Menkaure covers only half the area occupied by the Great Pyramid, and
it is only 62.5 meters high.
● Because the pyramid method of burial provided very little or no protection at all for their royal
corpses, King Thutmose had his tomb dug out of the rock of a valley, far from the Nile River and far
from Cairo (11 kilometers from the river on its west bank) => the Valley of the Kings.
=> The Greeks called “the great pyramids of Egypt” one of the seven wonders of the world.
LECTURE 18: THE FIRST EMPEROR OF CHINA
There is a stereotype that: women talk too much, always try to take center stage
Researchers found the exact opposite: Men produce more talk, are more likely to interrupt someone
particularly in public settings.
The same case goes for educated male and women, specifically professors: male professors speak
more, for longer terms, take more center stage, talk more in departmental meetings.
The Rome taxi driver will use English if visitors can’t speak Italian.
Use English at business meetings and international sports events.
The European Union uses English along with French at its meetings.
The Asian trade group uses English at its meetings.
Use English in educational settings, chat room on the internet.