时间:2018-12-27 作者:英语课 分类:一起听英语


英语课

顶尖大学你能说出几个?


Rob: Hello! I’m Rob and this is 6 Minute English. I’m joined today by


Alice. Hi Alice.


Alice: Hi Rob.


Rob: Today, we’re talking about universities around the world, and a new list that


shows the top two hundred. I’m going to start by asking you a question Alice


– which university has come number one in this list?


Alice: There are so many famous universities around the World – let me guess – is it


Cambridge?


Rob: Well, Cambridge University, in England, is certainly on the list but you’ll have


to wait until the end of the programme to see if you are right.


Alice: OK.


Rob: This new list is called the London Times Higher Education List. It ranks


universities on a number of factors. These include its quality of teaching, the


influence of its research and the income it gets for research. 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010


Page 2 of 6


Alice: So, if these factors are higher, the university gets a higher ranking.


Rob: That’s right. Of course, funding is very important.


Alice: Funding…that’s money in other words. Is a university more successful if it


gets more funding?


Rob: Well, that is what Professor Steve Smith thinks. He is President of Universities


UK which represents all British universities. He says the US puts two-and-ahalf


times the amount of Gross 1 Domestic 2 Product (GDP) into its universities


than we do in the UK.


Extract 3 1:


The US puts two-and-a-half times the amount of GDP into its universities than we do


and therefore, surprisingly, they get two-and-a-half times the number of universities in


the top two hundred. I think this is all about the investment that countries put in the


future - all about the investment they put in their universities.


Rob: Professor Steve Smith says it’s all about the investment the country puts into


their universities that makes them successful.


Alice: OK. So he says the US invests more money in universities than the UK so they


have more of them on this list. Can I change my answer now?!


Rob: No Alice. You may still be right. Fourteen British institutions are on the list


including Oxford 4 and Cambridge.


It’s interesting that the institutions which dominate 5 the top of the list are


English speaking ones as BBC reporter Jonny Hogg explains…. 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010


Page 3 of 6


Extract 2:


It's English speaking universities, and particularly those in America, that dominate the


top spots in this list. You have to go down to number fifteen to find the first non


Anglophone establishment, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, and surprisingly,


France's renowned 6 Ecole Polytechnique only comes in thirty ninth.


Alice: Ah, so American universities dominate the top of the list, but what does he


mean about the first non-Anglophone establishment being at number fifteen?


Rob: Well, Anglophone means English speaking. So the first non-Anglophone


university in the list was?


Alice: The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. But come on Rob, who was


number one?


Rob: Wait and see Alice! Let’s find out about some of the other countries in the list.


Here’s Jonny Hogg again…


Extract 3:


Elsewhere, Asia has done well, with Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea and China all


having universities in the top forty. Only two African institutions, one, the university of


Capetown in South Africa, the other, the University of Alexandria in Egypt, make the


top two hundred.


Rob: So Jonny Hogg said universities in Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea and


China were in the top forty. 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010


Page 4 of 6


Alice: Yes, mainland China has six universities on the list and there are two in


Africa.


Rob: OK here’s another question – when you choose a university does it really


matter if it has a good ranking?


Alice: Hmmm, the reasons for choosing a university? I suppose its reputation is


important.


Rob: Of course, although the authors of this new list say reputation is not as


important as it used to be. I choose my university because it offered the subject


I wanted to do.


Alice: Really? I chose mine because it was close to home and it had a lively social


scene.


Rob: A good reason! Let’s hear the reasons why Kate and Kaz chose their places to


study.


Extract 4:


Well I went to Edinburgh University, and I chose Edinburgh because I love the city, the


university had a very good reputation, and it was close enough to my home town without


actually being my hometown so it was only about an hour away, so I could go home at


weekends if I wanted to.


I went to Sussex University in the 1970s, and I chose Sussex above other universities,


because it had an excellent reputation in biology which was the subject I studied.


 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010


Page 5 of 6


Alice: So Kate is like me. She chose somewhere that was not too far from home. She


could go home at weekends.


Rob: And the university in Edinburgh had a good reputation. And what about Kaz?


Alice: For him, it had an excellent reputation for teaching biology. So it seems


reputation does actually count.


Rob: OK Alice, it’s time to tell you what was the top university in the London


Times Higher Education List. You thought it was….?


Alice: Cambridge? Am I right?


Rob: Well Cambridge and Oxford in the UK are in the top ten, but the number one


university is…Harvard in the USA.


Alice: Of course! Harvard was going to be my second choice.


Rob: I think you need to go back to university to do some more learning! But before


you do Alice, could you tell us some of the words we have learnt today?


Alice: Research


Income


Funding 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010


Page 6 of 6


Gross domestic product


Investment


Institutions


Anglophone


Ranking


Reputation


Rob: That’s all we’ve got time for today. Thanks for joining us and see you next


time.


Rob/Alice: Bye. 



1 gross
adj.全部的,粗俗的,肥胖的;vt.获得...总收入
  • The gross weight of the box of chocolates is 500 grams.那盒巧克力的全部重量是500克。
  • I consider this a gross oversight on your part.我把这件事看作是你的一大疏忽。
2 domestic
adj.家里的,国内的,本国的;n.家仆,佣人
  • This is domestic news.这是国内新闻。
  • She does the domestic affairs every day.她每天都忙家务。
3 extract
vt.取出,提取,获得,摘录;n.摘录,提出物
  • The article was a choice extract from her writings.这篇文章是从她的著作中摘录出来的精粹。
  • We can extract oil from olive.我们可以从橄榄中榨油。
4 Oxford
n.牛津(英国城市)
  • At present he has become a Professor of Chemistry at Oxford.他现在已是牛津大学的化学教授了。
  • This is where the road to Oxford joins the road to London.这是去牛津的路与去伦敦的路的汇合处。
5 dominate
v.支配,统治,高出,俯视,在...中占首地位
  • They had the ambition to dominate this small country.他们有控制这个小国的野心。
  • The strong usually dominate over the weak.强者常常支配弱者。
6 renowned
adj.著名的,有名望的,声誉鹊起的
  • He is one of the world's renowned writers.他是世界上知名的作家之一。
  • She is renowned for her advocacy of human rights.她以提倡人权而闻名。
学英语单词
a capital go
anadara scapha
araneous
ascending central series
ascientific
be apprised of
beach excavator
Beatrice, C.
beyond bounds
bluff bit
burn-up measuring reactor
cancun
capacity needs
cementing float shoe
centre atomization
communication cycle
compensated current transformator
composite powerplant
creepy peepy
cryocable
cscs
cylindrothorax
deep facial vein
dietarian
dilute Bose gas
diverging yaw
dividend accumulation
drape in
erysiphe plantaginis
evidence subject
exchange activities
executive branch of the government
exo-planet
facultative plant
flammabler
flavo(u)r component
floating signal
front-end communication processor
general price level
get level with someone
Gin Ganga
gross tractive effort
high frequency induction heated cell
hot-bath quenching
immobilising
isberg
jackknife position
Jūbāl, Jazīrat
Laffer
level out
lint patent
liquid toluidine
Locmaria
lunchmeats
metallic cable
micheal
minimal latency subroutine
mycol.
occipital
organize the cabinet
Ourthe
petrosectomy
pollution-prevention
popovs
poy-bird
probeable
psychometric tests
radioactive fallout
ray radiation
realignment of exchange rate
rectangular coordinator
recuperative tank furnace
refracting telescopes
relative diffusion rate
relicense
retrograding sequence
ring fast
rolled
rolled broken stone
round of bilge
sash cords
segelerite
Semigallia
sodium bicarbonate powder
sodium carboxymethyl cellulose
spectral chirping
submerging cage
succession of strata
sundisk
thermal glow
threeleaf akebia
tropic higher-high-water interval
turkey wings
universal administration
vers-
viane
vibration-isolation
Vida Guerra
weakly convergent
White Father
word stress
Zangipur