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과학(SCI.TECH)뉴스 과정

Newstalk Science Course

국내외에서 이슈가 된 과학, 환경, 기술, 의료, 엔지니어링 등의 내용으로 강사와 토론 수업을 진행합니다.

과학 뉴스 과정

01 학습대상
  • · 과학에 대해 관심이 높은 분
  • · 과학, 엔지니어링, 컴퓨터, 로보틱
    등에 관심 있는 학생
  • · 전문적인 기사 내용으로 어휘력 및
    상식을 갖추고 싶으신 분
02 추천학습과정
학습과정
주 5회 10분 / 20분 전화영어 6개월
03 학습교재
학습특징
  • · 국내외에서 이슈가 되는 과학과
    관련된 기사들로 수업
    (과학, 미래과학, 기술, 환경, 의료,
    엔지니어링, 컴퓨터 등)
  • · 기사 음원 및 주요 표현, 예상질문
    등의 자료제공

샘플보기

- Science
내 문서 내 문서 내 문서 내 문서 내 문서 내 문서 내 문서

 

 

 

 
Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World that Can’t Stop Talking (2012), by Susan Cain, draws our attention to the physiological link behind the so-called personality development.
 Cain highlights the striking findings by Jerome Kagan, a researcher at Harvard, who devoted his career to studying emotional development of children.
 
Through a series of studies, Kagan followed children from infancy through adolescence, keeping records of their physiologies and personalities along the way.
 Kagan and his team exposed the four-month-olds to a carefully chosen set of experiments. The infants heard unfamiliar voices and balloon popping saw colorful mobiles move before their eyes, and inhale the smell of alcohol on cotton swabs. They had various reactions to these new stimuli. About 20 percent cried and pumped their arms and legs. Kagan called this group “high – reactive.” About 40 percent stayed quiet and calm, moving their arms or legs occasionally but without all the dramatic limb movement. This group Kagan called “low – reactive”. The remaining fell between these two extremes. In startling counterintuitive hypothesis, Kagan predicted that it was the infants the high reactive group – the energetic arm pumpers who were most likely to grow into cautious, and quiet teenagers.
 
How can Kagan predict that the arm – thrashing infants would likely turn into cautious, reflective teens while the quiet babies were more likely to become the forthright? The answer lies in the science of brain.
 
 
 
Also, Kagan’s teams measured their heart rates, blood pressure, finger temperature and other aspects of the nervous system. Kagan chose these measures because they believed these are controlled by an organ (inside the brain) called the amygdale. The amygdale is located deep inside our brain and also found in an ancient brain network of primitive animals like mice and rats. The network- sometimes called the “emotional brain” orchestrating many of the basic instincts we share with these animals, such as appetite and fear. One of amygdale’s functions is to instantly detect threats to us in the environment.
 
Kagan findings suggest that infants born with an especially sensitive amygdale would wiggle and howl when shown unfamiliar objects and grow up into children who would be more likely to feel cautious when meeting new people.
예습
  • - 토픽의 key expression을 보고 주요 표현 및 단어를 미리 숙지
  • - 음원을 이용하여 토픽을 청취하고 받아쓰기함으로써 내용을 이해
  • - 예습 교안을 통해 질문 및 토론 내용에 대해 자신의 생각을 미리 정리
본수업
  • - 외국인 강사와의 1:1 수업진행
  • - 주어진 질문들에 대해 자신의 의견을 영어로 표현하고 토픽을 주제로 대화를 진행
복습
  • - 녹취파일을 들으면서 발음/억양/강세/연음에 유의하고 선생님의 코멘트를 다시 소리내어 읽어봄
  • - 토픽의 주요 표현 및 단어를 다시 암기함