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WHY DOES THE STUDENT GO TO SEE THE LAB ASSISTANT?
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- WHY DOES THE LAB ASSISTANT ANSWER THE STUDENT’S QUESTION WITH THIS QUESTION
1.WHY DOES THE STUDENT GO TO SEE THE LAB ASSISTANT?
2. LISTEN AGAIN TO PART OF THE PASSAGE. THEN ANSWER THE QUESTION. (Student) Do we need to work in the lab in a group? (Professor) Yes. (Student) And work with the exact group members we were assigned? (Professor) Is there a problem with your group? WHY DOES THE LAB ASSISTANT ANSWER THE STUDENT’S QUESTION WITH THIS QUESTION: (Professor) Is there a problem with your group? 3. WHAT DOES THE LAB ASSISTANT SUGGEST THAT THE GROUP SHOULD TRY? 4. LISTEN AGAIN TO PART OF THE PASSAGE. THEN ANSWER THE QUESTION. LPREP IBT 3 E AudioScript 101 (Student) OK, I’ll see if I can get my group to try that, but it’ll probably take my group several hours even to decide when to meet, besides actually figuring out what we’re going to do during the lab session. HOW DOES THE STUDENT SEEM TO FEEL ABOUT HIS GROUP? 5. WHAT DOES THE LAB ASSISTANT SAY ABOUT THE LAB REPORT? Page 382 [ mp3 160-161] Questions 6 through 11. Listen to a lecture in an American literature class. (Professor) Continuing our discussion of different genres of American literature, today we’ll be discussing historical fiction. Historical fiction is a kind of fiction that tries to portray a certain time period or historical event while adding to or altering the facts to create a storyline. Often the historical event is told through the eyes of a fictional character, and sometimes the historical facts are altered to improve the storyline. Now, we should distinguish here from general fiction, as well as the genre of alternate history. With both of these genres, the historical events in the story are significantly altered. With non-historical fiction, the events may be totally invented or take place in an alternate reality, as with science fiction. With alternate history, in contrast, the events take place in this reality, but some historical events have been altered. That is, the stories may be about actual historical people and events, but what happens in the stories does not correspond to actual historical facts. Um with historical fiction, every effort is made by the writer to be accurate about actual historical events, and often the author conducts a fair amount of research to be as accurate as possible. The big difference here is that the um main characters are often invented and motivations and feelings of the characters, including the historical persons, are often dramatized. OK, so today I’d like to discuss one of the finest examples of historical American fiction: um the Little House series of books written by Laura Ingalls Wilder. How many of you are familiar with this series of books? Hmm…or maybe some of you are familiar with the television series that was based on it…although since that was the 1970’s and 80’s, maybe you’re not. The Little House books began as a record of the stories Pa told Laura when she was little. When her first book, Little House in the Big Woods, was a success, Laura Wilder was asked to write a series of stories, not the history, of her childhood. The book takes place in the late 1860’s, though it was published in 1932. The point I want you to understand clearly is that the incidents in Laura Wilder’s books are basically true, but Laura purposefully did not tell the whole truth. She wanted to write books that she felt were appropriate for children, so what she did was to leave out events and to replace the names of people that were not presented positively. Um an example of an event that Laura omitted because it was unpleasant was the life of the fourth Ingalls child. The fourth child was a boy, a boy named Charles Fredrick Ingalls, who died before his first birthday; the life of this child LPREP IBT 3 E AudioScript 102 was omitted from her books, since Laura didn’t feel it would be appropriate for a children’s book. Um another example shows how Laura changed the names of people portrayed in a bad light. Um Nellie Olsen was a character in the book rather than a real person. This character was based on a composite of two girls in Plum Creek, Nellie Owens and Ginny Masters, two girls who caused Laura and her sister Mary a lot of trouble. Laura didn’t want to use the real names of these… uh…bothersome girls in her books, so she changed them and attributed their actions to one character. Um from these examples, we can see that one of the ways that Laura made her stories more appropriate for children was to make her stories a little more pleasant than her life had actually been. Um another technique she used to make her stories more appropriate was to simplify the storylines to make the story easier to follow. For instance, Laura altered the description of the moves that her family actually made, for the sake of simplicity. In real life, the Ingalls family moved from the Big Woods in Wisconsin, to Missouri, then to the Indian Territory, back to the Big Woods, and finally to Minnesota. In the Little House books, Laura recorded the Ingalls moving from the Big Woods to Indian Territory and then to Minnesota. There are many other such details and events that Laura felt were not appropriate for children. These changes are what move her work from the genre of autobiography to the genre of historical fiction. So, um to summarize, although the Little House books record true historical events as they happened, the series is considered historical fiction rather than autobiography because Laura Wilder omitted events and altered names to improve the storyline and make her books appropriate for her readers. Download 0.63 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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