Write a composition of about 150 to 180 words to express your idea on the topic below.
" What benefits does English speaking club bring about to secondary school students."
Hãy nhập câu hỏi của bạn vào đây, nếu là tài khoản VIP, bạn sẽ được ưu tiên trả lời.
With the help of the Internet, students can learn more effectively.
Many people may agree that the Internet and the airplane are the most sensational invention in the earth. Moreover, the Internet is becoming a representative living tool to human in that it makes possible for people to share of information. Especially, aspects of education, I strongly believe that the Internet is a prudent solution about a cost of social problem which is over concentrating on private classes. Also, it can support students in terms of study methods.
To start with, it is one of the advantages of the Internet to communicate with people who live other countries and to share their perperites. It is evident that students can access a lot of studying materials, such as foreign languages, literatures and developed technologies. For instance, when I was a senior student at the university, must write paper for passing graduation exam. However, it was difficult to survey vast amounts of related articles and materials. At the same time, my academic advisor had recommended that it was more efficient way to use science web-sites which possess innumerable information about my subject. As a result, I could find quickly proper information at the Internet and graduated university successfully. Consequently, There is no debate about an application of the Internet that is the best way to learn knowledge.
Nowadays, English is one of international languages. Because of that, many people learn it. There are many ways to learn it. To me, joining in an english speaking club is a good way to learn English. Firstly, when your English is in basic class, people in the club will help you. And of course, your English will be improved. Secondly, you can prace your speaking skills with your friends. You can learn new things from your friends and your friends can, too. Next, if you are shy and you can't talk in front of your class or the others or whoever, joining in an english speaking club is a great idea. You will be taught how to speak in front of the others in a fluent way. At first, you will be shy as usual. But gradually, you won't be shy anymore. You will be strongly. So, why don't you join in an english speaking club ?
Chúc anh học tốt!
The world is currently very developed, which means that technology is very evolving. And technology brings a lot of benefits, I of course agree. Because it's so useful. Technology makes it easy to communicate with friends, family and work remotely, even when you're in another part of the world. You can communicate verbally, video, audio and exchange other media. All websites, applications and software have been created to help users socialize. Social media, texting, texting, laptops, tablets, and cell phones mean no one needs to feel isolated in the digital world. Users can be regularly updated with news about local events and social developments. We can also learn through technology. Anyone with access to the internet today can access a huge amount of the world's knowledge through the web. Alternatively, lessons and courses can now be offered virtually online. Online social media or playing computer and mobile games is becoming more and more popular. Traditional media also developed, as television and broadcasting were digitized along with radio. It has many benefits, but it also has harmful effects. Nowadays, there are a lot of young people who are interacting too much with internet devices, and can easily watch bad programs, programs that are not good for them. However, Technology is also a lot of benefits, is an important part of our life
Technology is a complex set of processes that includes a skill, method, tool, know-how or means to convert a resource into a product. It is a systematic, creative activity with the main purpose of developing knowledge related to man, nature and society.
In the future, technology can bring us many benefits. Do you think so? And of course, everything in the world also has benefits and harms. But in my opinion, it has a very important effect on human life and nature.
The advent of science and technology, along with advanced scientific inventions, completely changed the face of human life. Smartphones, computers, air conditioners, robots, card payments, mobile phones, cars, self-driving aircraft, ... are advanced and intelligent inventions of mankind. Marking a new era of development in human history. The advent of advanced technological and scientific equipment has boosted the economic and social development. These devices help people to solve jobs quickly and effectively without having to spend too much labor. It is these inventions that have marked people entering a new period of development. Advanced technology equipment, gradually replacing working people, no sellers, unmanned, housework with robots, turning on and off automatic light bulbs, ...
Besides the positives that technology brings, we cannot deny. But besides the positives, there are always negative sides. Technology makes you more lazy, sometimes makes you selfish and insane. You do not want to do housework, you use robot to work for you, while you sit and listen to music, watch movies. You become selfish and crazy when your computer, mobile phone, internet is slow and cannot load. That makes you angry and unjustifiably mad at the phone, the computer. Technology makes you lose your sense of sleep, destroying your biological clock. Because people always have a habit of using the phone before going to bed, or watching movies before going to bed. It is that habit that takes away your sleep, the late sleep habit will destroy your circadian clock. Not only sleep, your health is also severely affected, high risk of cancer, obesity, depression, psychological instability and memory loss. Technology - the risk of unemployment, underemployment. No need for houseworkers, no need to hire a driver, fly a plane, no need for salesmen, or collect money. All seem to be replaced by technology, which affects the lives of many people, unemployment, no job means no money to cover their lives.
Through this we can see that the technological development has brought about a whole new change to people. But it also brings people many undesirable consequences affecting people's health, life, and spirit. Therefore, we must know how to use technology properly, so as not to affect your health, as well as your spirit, your life.
Do you think the same as me? It is these negative effects that the previous benefits gradually disappear. Then one day, our country will perish by this harm.
I strongly agree with the idea: “physical exercises are very useful to our health” for the following reasons. First of all, physical exercises make us stronger. Last year, I used to be very weak, my teacher advised me to exercise more and now I am much taller and stronger than many other friends. Furthermore, physical exercises help us have a nice body and keep fit. For example, my mother used to be overweight but now she is as slim as a Miss. Everyone wonders what makes her become slim like that and the answer is her doing physical exercises regularly. Last but not least, physical exercises help us relax very much. Exercises not only give us encouragement to begin a new day but also help us refesh ourselves after a hard-working day. In conclusion, It is necessary that we do physical exercises
A great deal of what you write is intended to convince the reader that you have an important point to make. When you write a letter applying for a job you want to convince the reader that you are the right person for the job. When you write a review of a film you want to convince the reader that you have something important to say about the film, and maybe you recommend it, or, on the other hand, suggest that it is not worth seeing. In an essay on some aspect of American government you want to convince the reader that you can answer the questions that have been posed and that you can throw light on specific aspects of American government. In all these three examples you want to show your reader that you have something sensible and important to say about the topic that is under discussion.You do this by arguing your case. You offer “a line of argument” keeping it within the framework of the chosen topic. For example, your letter of application for a job has a presentation of yourself and your qualifications as its framework. “You” are the topic! It might therefore be relevant to mention your hobbies in your letter. If you are applying for a job in a bookshop it would be sensible to point out that reading is one of your hobbies, if it is. You include this in the line of argument running through the letter, perhaps giving this information after you have listed your education and other formal qualifications. You do not, however, spend a paragraph writing about your brother’s or sister’s hobbies. That would be irrelevant. Information about them falls outside the framework you have constructed.
Similarly, if the topic is American government and the question is “Does the President have too much power?” you do not write about American geography or American sports. You write about the mechanics of political power in the USA, showing step by step whether, in your view, the President does or does not have too much power.
You must, then, avoid irrelevance. Keep a sharp focus on your topic.
I agree with the idea that science and technology bring a lot of benefits to people. Firstly, people have started to live longer and their health is remarkable. With new technology, medical research is being done everyday to help find cures or vaccines for devastating diseases such as Cancer, AIDS,... Secondly, it helped advance people' knowledge and provide a higher quality of life. For example, students are able to use technology to help them better understand scientific concepts. Technology gives access to items such as maps, videos and simulated labs that appeal to students who learn best from methods other than conventional lectures. For more, life has become easy and stable. Finally, travelling and communication has become easier, cheaper and fast in minutes.
In short, science and technology bring a lot of benefits to people.
Hal Varian, chief economist at Google, has a simple way to predict the future. The future is simply what rich people have today. The rich have chauffeurs. In the future, we will have driverless cars that chauffeur us all around. The rich have private bankers. In the future, we will all have robo-bankers.
One thing that we imagine that the rich have today are lives of leisure. So will our future be one in which we too have lives of leisure, and the machines are taking the sweat? We will be able to spend our time on more important things than simply feeding and housing ourselves?
Let’s turn to another chief economist. Andy Haldane is chief economist at the Bank of England. In November 2015, he predicted that 15 million jobs in the UK, roughly half of all jobs, were under threat from automation. You’d hope he knew what he was talking about.
AdvertisementAnd he’s not the only one making dire predictions. Politicians. Bankers. Industrialists. They’re all saying a similar thing.
“We need urgently to face the challenge of automation, robotics that could make so much of contemporary work redundant”, Jeremy Corbyn at the Labour Party Conference in September 2017.
“World Bank data has predicted that the proportion of jobs threatened by automation in India is 69 percent, 77 percent in China and as high as 85 percent in Ethiopia”, according to World Bank president Jim Yong Kim in 2016.
It really does sound like we might be facing the end of work as we know it.
Many of these fears can be traced back to a 2013 study from the University of Oxford. This made a much quoted prediction that 47% of jobs in the US were under threat of automation in the next two decades. Other more recent and detailed studies have made similar dramatic predictions.
Now, there’s a lot to criticize in the Oxford study. From a technical perspective, some of report’s predictions are clearly wrong. The report gives a 94% probability that bicycle repair person will be automated in the next two decades. And, as someone trying to build that future, I can reassure any bicycle repair person that there is zero chance that we will automate even small parts of your job anytime soon. The truth of the matter is no one has any real idea of the number of jobs at risk.
Even if we have as many as 47% of jobs automated, this won’t translate into 47% unemployment. One reason is that we might just work a shorter week. That was the case in the Industrial Revolution. Before the Industrial Revolution, many worked 60 hours per week. After the Industrial Revolution, work reduced to around 40 hours per week. The same could happen with the unfolding AI Revolution.
Another reason that 47% automation won’t translate into 47% unemployment is that all technologies create new jobs as well as destroy them. That’s been the case in the past, and we have no reason to suppose that it won’t be the case in the future. There is, however, no fundamental law of economics that requires the same number of jobs to be created as destroyed. In the past, more jobs were created than destroyed but it doesn’t have to be so in the future.
In the Industrial Revolution, machines took over many of the physical tasks we used to do. But we humans were still left with all the cognitive tasks. This time, as machines start to take on many of the cognitive tasks too, there’s the worrying question: what is left for us humans?
Some of my colleagues suggest there will be plenty of new jobs like robot repair person. I am entirely unconvinced by such claims. The thousands of people who used to paint and weld in most of our car factories got replaced by only a couple of robot repair people.
No, the new jobs will have to be doing jobs where either humans excel or where we choose not to have machines. But here’s the contradiction. In fifty to hundred years time, machines will be super-human. So it’s hard to imagine of any job where humans will remain better than the machines. This means the only jobs left will be those where we prefer humans to do them.
The AI Revolution then will be about rediscovering the things that make us human. Technically, machines will have become amazing artists. They will be able to write music to rival Bach, and paintings to match Picasso. But we’ll still prefer works produced by human artists.
These works will speak to the human experience. We will appreciate a human artist who speaks about love because we have this in common. No machine will truly experience love like we do.
As well as the artistic, there will be a re-appreciation of the artisan. Indeed, we see the beginnings of this already in hipster culture. We will appreciate more and more those things made by the human hand. Mass-produced goods made by machine will become cheap. But items made by hand will be rare and increasingly valuable.
Finally as social animals, we will also increasingly appreciate and value social interactions with other humans. So the most important human traits will be our social and emotional intelligence, as well as our artistic and artisan skills. The irony is that our technological future will not be about technology but all about our humanity.
Toby Walsh is Professor of Artificial Intelligence at the University of New South Wales, in Sydney, Australia. His new book, “Android Dreams: the past, present and future of Artificial Intelligence” was published in the UK by Hurst Publishers in September 2017. It’s available from the Guardian Bookshop. You can read more at his blog, http://thefutureofai.blogspot.com/
Since you’re here…… we have a small favour to ask. More people around the world are reading The Guardian’s independent, investigative journalism than ever before. We’ve now been funded by over one million readers. And unlike many news organisations, we have chosen an approach that allows us to keep our journalism open to all. We believe that each one of us deserves access to accurate information with integrity at its heart.
The Guardian is editorially independent, meaning we set our own agenda. Our journalism is free from commercial bias and not influenced by billionaire owners, politicians or shareholders. No one edits our editor. No one steers our opinion. This is important as it enables us to give a voice to those less heard, challenge the powerful and hold them to account. It’s what makes us different to so many others in the media, at a time when factual, honest reporting is critical.
Every contribution we receive from readers like you, big or small, goes directly into funding our journalism. This support enables us to keep working as we do – but we must maintain and build on it for every year to come. Support The Guardian