21-ラジオビジネス英語 8/5

今日の「ラジオビジネス英語」の勉強内容です。
tweet で発信してきたものを、
ブログで、まとめたものです。
(基本的に、テキストに書かれているものは省略しています)

Interview 5 Part 3  21st-Century Skills (Ben Nelson)

▶︎ラジオビジネス英語では、
毎週木曜・金曜日は、有名人とのインタビューを題材としています。
▶︎8月Ben Nelson さんとのインタビュー。
– ペンシルバニア大学ウォートンスクール卒業
– 2005年 Snapfish(写真共有サービス)のCEOに就任
– 2014年9月に Minerva Schools at KGI (ミネルバ大学)を解説

Opening 

👉ジェニーさんの部分だけです。
▶︎And I’m Jenny Silver.
Welcome to Business English for Global Competence.

▶︎Yes, let’s learn how to communicate effectively 
in business.

▶︎So let’s get started!

▶︎OK, let’s listen to today’s interview.

Words and Phrases 

● informed ▶︎情報に基づいた
– Educated, having sufficient information to make a decision.
Having knowledge about something.
– Informed decisions are decisions that are made with plenty
of information.
– For example, she did lots of research, and got a second
opinion in order to make an informed decision about her
treatment.

● rigorous ▶︎厳格な
– “Rigorous” is an adjective that can mean accurate or 
precise as well as disciplined, rigid and law-abiding.
– Mr. Nelson mentioned rigorous liberal arts education 
which would be very strict, precise and detailed.

● far transfer ▶︎違う分野に知識を応用すること
– A “far transfer” is the transfer of knowledge between 
contexts that are not similar. 
– The opposite of this is “near transfer,” which is the transfer
of knowledge between similar contexts.
– Mr. Nelson describes far transfer as an ability to take something
that you learned in one context, and be able to apply it in another.

● metacognitive ▶︎メタ認知の
– Metacognition is an awareness understanding of your own 
thought processes and patterns behind them.
– An example of metacognition is learning about ways that
help you remember the people’s names.

● transferable skills ▶︎転用・応用が可能なスキル
– “Transferable skills” are known as portable skills, because
you can use them in many different situations.
– Some examples of transferable skills are team work,
leadership, and communication. These are useful skills
in many different jobs.

● non-existent ▶︎存在しない
– Not existing, does not exist.
There’s usually implication that it should exist, or that it’s
surprising that it doesn’t exist.
– For example, in many high schools, coding classes were 
non-existent until recently. So programmers learned on 
their own or went to special schools.

● strive to 〜 ▶︎〜することを目指す
– To work hard to achieve, or obtain something.
To try hard to make something happen especially if that goal
is hard, or takes some long time to complete.
– For example, our company strives to have a positive impact
on environment and reduce wast.

 

 

 

 

 

これで、
Interview 5 Part 3 は終了です。

コメント

タイトルとURLをコピーしました