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[고3] 2023년 6월 모의고사 - 한줄해석 (좌지문 우해석)

오늘은 2023년도 6월 고3 영어 모의고사>의 한줄해석(좌지문 우해석) 자료 올립니다.설명문/실용문을 제외한 전지문 작업했습니다.PDF와 워드 파일 모두 올립니다. 필요에 따라 변형해서 

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[3 2023 06 – 18: 공원 재개장 행사  무료 입장 안내]

 

Dear Custard Valley Park members, Custard Valley Park's grand reopening event will be held on June 1st. For this exciting occasion, we are offering free admission to all visitors on the reopening day. There will be a food stand selling ice cream and snacks. We would like to invite you, our valued members, to celebrate this event. Please come and explore the park's new features such as tennis courts and a flower garden. Just relax and enjoy the beautiful scenery. We are confident that you will love the new changes, and we are looking forward to seeing you soon.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Custard Valley Park Invites Members to the Grand Reopening Event 

2. Celebrate Custard Valley Park's Reopening with Free Admission and New Attractions 

3. Join the Festivities at Custard Valley Park's Grand Reopening on June 1st 

4. Explore the New Tennis Courts and Flower Garden at Custard Valley Park's Reopening

 

Main Idea #1:

Custard Valley Park will offer free admission for its grand reopening event on June 1st.

 

Main Idea #2:

Members can enjoy new features like tennis courts and a flower garden, as well as refreshments from a food stand, at the reopening event.

 

Summary:

Custard Valley Park's grand reopening on June 1st will feature free admission, new attractions like tennis courts and a flower garden, and ice cream and snacks for purchase. Members are warmly invited to explore the park's new features and enjoy the day.

 

Key Points:

1. Custard Valley Park's grand reopening will take place on June 1st. 

2. Admission is free for all visitors on reopening day. 

3. New features include tennis courts and a flower garden. 

4. A food stand will sell ice cream and snacks during the event.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 19: 자동차 수리 비용에 대한 걱정과  해소]

 

While the mechanic worked on her car, Jennifer walked back and forth in the waiting room. She was deeply concerned about how much it was going to cost to get her car fixed. Her car's engine had started making noises and kept losing power that morning, and she had heard that replacing an engine could be very expensive. After a few minutes, the mechanic came back into the waiting room. "I've got some good news. It was just a dirty spark plug. I already wiped it clean and your car is as good as new." He handed her the bill and when she checked it, the overall cost of repairs came to less than ten dollars. That was far less than she had expected and she felt at ease, knowing she could easily afford it.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Relief in the Waiting Room: How a Simple Fix Eased Jennifer's Concerns 

2. From Anxiety to Ease: Jennifer's Unexpectedly Affordable Car Repair 

3. When a Small Issue Solves a Big Worry: Jennifer's Car Repair Story 

4. The Surprising Solution: How a Dirty Spark Plug Saved the Day

 

Main Idea #1:

Jennifer was anxious about the potential high cost of fixing her car's engine.

 

Main Idea #2:

The mechanic identified the problem as a dirty spark plug, which he quickly cleaned, resulting in a repair bill of less than ten dollars, much to Jennifer's relief.

 

Summary:

Jennifer was worried about her car's engine issues, fearing an expensive repair. The mechanic found the problem to be a dirty spark plug and fixed it quickly, leaving Jennifer relieved as the bill came to less than ten dollars.

 

Key Points:

1. Jennifer's car had engine problems that made her worry about repair costs. 

2. The mechanic discovered that the issue was just a dirty spark plug. 

3. He cleaned the spark plug, bringing the total repair cost to under ten dollars. 

4. Jennifer felt relieved and could easily afford the unexpectedly low bill.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 20: 창의성 개발을 위한 분야  지식 전이의 필요성]

 

Certain hindrances to multifaceted creative activity may lie in premature specialization, i.e., having to choose the direction of education or to focus on developing one ability too early in life. However, development of creative ability in one domain may enhance effectiveness in other domains that require similar skills, and flexible switching between generality and specificity is helpful to productivity in many domains. Excessive specificity may result in information from outside the domain being underestimated and unavailable, which leads to fixedness of thinking, whereas excessive generality causes chaos, vagueness, and shallowness. Both tendencies pose a threat to the transfer of knowledge and skills between domains. What should therefore be optimal for the development of cross-domain creativity is support for young people in taking up creative challenges in a specific domain and coupling it with encouragement to apply knowledge and skills in, as well as from, other domains, disciplines, and tasks.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Balancing Specialization and Generality for Optimal Creative Development 

2. How Premature Specialization Can Hinder Cross-Domain Creativity 

3. Fostering Creative Flexibility Across Domains by Encouraging Exploration 

4. Developing Cross-Domain Creativity: The Key to Overcoming Excessive Specialization

 

Main Idea #1:

Premature specialization can hinder creativity by narrowing focus too early, limiting cross-domain skill development.

 

Main Idea #2:

Combining specific training with the encouragement of cross-domain exploration supports creative growth, preventing the limitations of both excessive specialization and generality.

 

Summary:

Premature specialization can hinder cross-domain creativity by limiting skill development, while too much generality leads to vagueness. Supporting creative challenges in one domain, while encouraging skill application across others, promotes optimal creativity.

 

Key Points:

1. Premature specialization limits creative potential by narrowing focus too soon. 

2. Excessive specificity leads to rigid thinking and an inability to utilize cross-domain knowledge. 

3. Excessive generality results in vague and shallow creative output. 

4. Encouraging young people to engage in specific challenges while applying skills across domains fosters cross-domain creativity.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 21: 소유권의 다양한 측면을 설명하는 '지분 다발' 은유]

 

Lawyers sometimes describe ownership as a bundle of sticks. This metaphor was introduced about a century ago, and it has dramatically transformed the teaching and practice of law. The metaphor is useful because it helps us see ownership as a grouping of interpersonal rights that can be separated and put back together. When you say It's mine in reference to a resource, often that means you own a lot of the sticks that make up the full bundle: the sell stick, the rent stick, the right to mortgage, license, give away, even destroy the thing. Often, though, we split the sticks up, as for a piece of land: there may be a landowner, a bank with a mortgage, a tenant with a lease, a plumber with a license to enter the land, an oil company with mineral rights. Each of these parties owns a stick in the bundle.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Understanding Property Rights: Ownership as a Bundle of Sticks 

2. The Bundle of Sticks Metaphor: A Modern Approach to Property Law 

3. How Dividing Ownership Sticks Clarifies Property Rights 

4. Splitting the Bundle: The Fragmentation of Property Ownership

 

Main Idea #1:

The "bundle of sticks" metaphor portrays ownership as a collection of rights that can be divided among different parties.

 

Main Idea #2:

In property law, the metaphor demonstrates how ownership rights can be split, allowing various parties to hold different rights, or "sticks," such as mortgage, lease, and mineral rights.

 

Summary:

The "bundle of sticks" metaphor illustrates ownership as a set of rights that can be divided and shared among different parties. This approach, transformative in law, allows for the separation of rights, like leasing and licensing, ensuring each stakeholder controls their specific "stick" in the bundle.

 

Key Points:

1. The "bundle of sticks" metaphor helps explain the complexity of ownership rights. 

2. Ownership rights include the ability to sell, rent, mortgage, or license a resource. 

3. Different parties can own various rights (or "sticks") associated with a single property. 

4. This metaphor has transformed how law is taught and practiced, clarifying property rights.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 22: 온라인 정보에 대한 적절한 경계심의 필요성]

 

When it comes to the Internet, it just pays to be a little paranoid (but not a lot). Given the level of anonymity with all that resides on the Internet, it's sensible to question the validity of any data that you may receive. Typically it's to our natural instinct when we meet someone coming down a sidewalk to place yourself in some manner of protective position, especially when they introduce themselves as having known you, much to your surprise. By design, we set up challenges in which the individual must validate how they know us by presenting scenarios, names or acquaintances, or evidence by which to validate (that is, photographs). Once we have received that information and it has gone through a cognitive validation, we accept that person as more trustworthy. All this happens in a matter of minutes but is a natural defense mechanism that we perform in the real world. However, in the virtual world, we have a tendency to be less defensive, as there appears to be no physical threat to our well-being.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Balancing Caution and Trust: Navigating Anonymity on the Internet 

2. Applying Real-World Defense Mechanisms to the Virtual World 

3. Trust and Anonymity Online: Why a Little Paranoia is Useful 

4. How Cognitive Validation Can Enhance Online Safety

 

Main Idea #1:

It's important to approach the Internet with a level of caution due to its anonymity and the questionable validity of the data received.

 

Main Idea #2:

In real life, people instinctively validate a stranger's identity before trusting them, but online interactions often lack similar defense mechanisms, as the absence of a physical threat makes people less cautious.

 

Summary:

In the virtual world, where anonymity is prevalent, it's crucial to verify information and be cautiously skeptical. Unlike in real-life interactions, where natural defense mechanisms prompt people to validate strangers, the perceived lack of physical threat online often reduces users' defensive behavior.

 

Key Points:

1. The Internet's anonymity requires cautious scrutiny of information received. 

2. In-person interactions involve validating strangers before trusting them. 

3. Online, people are less defensive due to the absence of a physical threat. 

4. Being moderately paranoid about data validity on the Internet is sensible.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 23: 박물관의 전시 공간 중심 운영에 따른 문제점]

 

There are pressures within the museum that cause it to emphasise what happens in the galleries over the activities that take place in its unseen zones. In an era when museums are forced to increase their earnings, they often focus their energies on modernising their galleries or mounting temporary exhibitions to bring more and more audiences through the door. In other words, as museums struggle to survive in a competitive economy, their budgets often prioritise those parts of themselves that are consumable: infotainment in the galleries, goods and services in the cafes and the shops. The unlit, unglamorous storerooms, if they are ever discussed, are at best presented as service areas that process objects for the exhibition halls. And at worst, as museums pour more and more resources into their publicly visible faces, the spaces of storage may even suffer, their modernisation being kept on hold or being given less and less space to house the expanding collections and serve their complex conservation needs.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Balancing Visibility and Preservation: The Hidden Struggles of Museum Storage 

2. How Museums Sacrifice Storage for Gallery Appeal in a Competitive Economy 

3. The Pressure to Modernize: How Museums Neglect Conservation Needs 

4. Behind the Scenes: Why Museum Storage Suffers in Favor of Public Galleries

 

Main Idea #1:

Museums prioritize their public galleries and exhibitions due to economic pressures, often neglecting their less visible storage and conservation needs.

 

Main Idea #2:

The focus on modernizing galleries and creating infotainment for visitors can lead to inadequate resources and space for storerooms, leaving them underfunded and overshadowed.

 

Summary:

Museums, aiming to attract more visitors and boost earnings, emphasize gallery exhibitions and consumer services while neglecting the storerooms. The hidden areas are often underfunded, inadequately modernized, and given less space for expanding collections and conservation needs.

 

Key Points:

1. Museums face economic pressures to focus on publicly visible galleries. 

2. Modernizing galleries and mounting temporary exhibitions attract more visitors. 

3. Storerooms are often overshadowed and underfunded, viewed only as service areas. 

4. Conservation and storage needs are frequently compromised due to budget priorities.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 24: 도시화로 인한 이동성 증가와 그에 따른 문제점]

 

Hyper-mobility ― the notion that more travel at faster speeds covering longer distances generates greater economic success ― seems to be a distinguishing feature of urban areas, where more than half of the world's population currently reside. By 2005, approximately 7.5 billion trips were made each day in cities worldwide. In 2050, there may be three to four times as many passenger-kilometres travelled as in the year 2000, infrastructure and energy prices permitting. Freight movement could also rise more than threefold during the same period. Mobility flows have become a key dynamic of urbanization, with the associated infrastructure invariably constituting the backbone of urban form. Yet, despite the increasing level of urban mobility worldwide, access to places, activities and services has become increasingly difficult. Not only is it less convenient ― in terms of time, cost and comfort ― to access locations in cities, but the very process of moving around in cities generates a number of negative externalities. Accordingly, many of the world's cities face an unprecedented accessibility crisis, and are characterized by unsustainable mobility systems.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Hyper-Mobility and Its Challenges: The Accessibility Crisis in Urban Areas 

2. How Hyper-Mobility Leads to Unsustainable Urban Transportation Systems 

3. Urban Accessibility Crisis: The Consequences of Rapid Mobility Growth 

4. Navigating Hyper-Mobility: Balancing Economic Growth and Sustainable Access in Cities

 

Main Idea #1:

Hyper-mobility, characterized by faster travel over longer distances, is a feature of urban areas where most of the world's population resides.

 

Main Idea #2:

Despite the rapid growth in urban travel, cities face an unprecedented accessibility crisis due to negative externalities like time, cost, and congestion, leading to unsustainable mobility systems.

 

Summary:

Hyper-mobility defines urban areas where rapid, long-distance travel is linked to economic growth. Despite this increase, cities struggle with an accessibility crisis due to congestion, cost, and time, making mobility systems unsustainable.

 

Key Points:

1. Hyper-mobility is a defining feature of urban areas, with rapid travel linked to economic success. 

2. Urban travel is expected to increase significantly by 2050, for both passengers and freight. 

3. Despite the growth in mobility, cities face accessibility issues like time, cost, and congestion. 

4. These challenges have led to unsustainable urban mobility systems globally.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 25: 2017 EU 국가별 연령대에 따른 관광 참여 비율 그래프]

 

The above graph shows the share of the EU-28 population participating in tourism in 2017 by age group and destination category. The share of people in the No Trips category was over 30% in each of the five age groups. The percentage of people in the Outbound Trips Only category was higher in the 25-34 age group than in the 35-44 age group. In the 35-44 age group, the percentage of people in the Domestic Trips Only category was 34.2%. The percentage of people in the Domestic & Outbound Trips category was lower in the 45-54 age group than in the 55-64 age group. In the 65 or over age group, the percentage of people in the No Trips category was more than 50%.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. EU-28 Tourism Participation in 2017: Comparing Age Groups and Destinations 

2. Analyzing Tourism Patterns in the EU-28 by Age and Destination in 2017 

3. Tourism Trends Among EU-28 Age Groups: Domestic vs. Outbound Travel in 2017 

4. Understanding EU-28 Tourism Preferences in 2017 Across Different Age Groups

 

Main Idea #1:

In 2017, over 30% of people in each EU-28 age group didn't travel, with the 65 and over group seeing more than 50% in the No Trips category.

 

Main Idea #2:

Outbound-only travel was more common among those aged 25-34 than 35-44, while the 35-44 group had a 34.2% participation rate in domestic-only trips. Combined domestic and outbound travel was less frequent in the 45-54 age group than in the 55-64 group.

 

Summary:

In 2017, more than 30% of EU-28 residents in each age group did not travel, with the rate exceeding 50% among those 65 and over. Outbound-only travel was higher in the 25-34 group than in the 35-44 group, where domestic-only travel was at 34.2%. The 45-54 age group traveled less domestically and abroad compared to those aged 55-64.

 

Key Points:

1. Over 30% of each EU-28 age group didn't travel, with over 50% among those 65 or older. 

2. Outbound-only travel was higher in the 25-34 group than in the 35-44 group. 

3. The 35-44 age group saw 34.2% taking domestic-only trips. 

4. Combined domestic and outbound travel was less common in the 45-54 age group than in the 55-64 group.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 26: 영화감독  르노아르의 생애 소개]

 

Jean Renoir (1894-1979), a French film director, was born in Paris, France. He was the son of the famous painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir. He and the rest of the Renoir family were the models of many of his father's paintings. At the outbreak of World War I, Jean Renoir was serving in the French army but was wounded in the leg. In 1937, he made La Grande Illusion, one of his better-known films. It was enormously successful but was not allowed to show in Germany. During World War II, when the Nazis invaded France in 1940, he went to Hollywood in the United States and continued his career there. He was awarded numerous honors and awards throughout his career, including the Academy Honorary Award in 1975 for his lifetime achievements in the film industry. Overall, Jean Renoir's influence as a film-maker and artist endures.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Legacy and Achievements of Director Jean Renoir 

2. Jean Renoir: From World War I Soldier to Acclaimed Filmmaker 

3. Artistic and Cinematic Influences of Jean Renoir's Career 

4. Jean Renoir's Hollywood Journey and Lifetime Achievements 

 

Main Idea #1:

Jean Renoir made significant contributions to cinema, creating acclaimed films like *La Grande Illusion*.

 

Main Idea #2:

Despite early challenges, including injuries during World War I and displacement during World War II, Jean Renoir successfully continued his filmmaking career in the United States, receiving multiple awards and recognition for his lasting impact on cinema.

 

Summary:

Jean Renoir, the son of painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir, was wounded in World War I before directing many influential films like *La Grande Illusion*. He moved to Hollywood during World War II and was honored with the Academy Honorary Award for his lifetime achievements.

 

Key Points:

1. Jean Renoir was born in Paris and modeled for his father's paintings. 

2. He was injured in World War I while serving in the French army. 

3. He directed *La Grande Illusion* in 1937, a critically acclaimed film. 

4. After relocating to Hollywood in 1940, he received the Academy Honorary Award in 1975.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 29: 마법사 오즈의 이야기에 담긴 동기 부여의 의미]

 

Consider The Wizard of Oz as a psychological study of motivation. Dorothy and her three friends work hard to get to the Emerald City, overcoming barriers, persisting against all adversaries. They do so because they expect the Wizard to give them what they are missing. Instead, the wonderful (and wise) Wizard makes them aware that they, not he, always had the power to fulfill their wishes. For Dorothy, home is not a place but a feeling of security, of comfort with people she loves; it is wherever her heart is. The courage the Lion wants, the intelligence the Scarecrow longs for, and the emotions the Tin Man dreams of are attributes they already possess. They need to think about these attributes not as internal conditions but as positive ways in which they are already relating to others. After all, didn't they demonstrate those qualities on the journey to Oz, a journey motivated by little more than an expectation, an idea about the future likelihood of getting something they wanted?

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Psychological Insights into Motivation from The Wizard of Oz 

2. Exploring Self-Realization and Expectation in The Wizard of Oz 

3. How The Wizard of Oz Reflects Motivation and Self-Belief 

4. Understanding Dorothy and Friends' Journey as a Study in Motivation 

 

Main Idea #1:

The Wizard of Oz explores the characters' realization that they already possess the traits they seek.

 

Main Idea #2:

Dorothy, the Scarecrow, the Tin Man, and the Lion are motivated to reach the Emerald City, driven by the belief that the Wizard can grant their wishes, only to discover that their desired attributes already exist within them.

 

Summary:

In *The Wizard of Oz*, Dorothy and her friends are motivated to find the Wizard to fulfill their wishes but learn that they already possess the qualities they seek, which are revealed through their actions and relationships during the journey.

 

Key Points:

1. Dorothy, the Scarecrow, the Tin Man, and the Lion believe the Wizard can grant them missing qualities. 

2. They already exhibit these qualities during their journey to the Emerald City. 

3. The Wizard helps them recognize their existing inner strengths. 

4. Motivation is driven by their belief in a future outcome rather than the immediate present.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 30: 기계 지능의 자율성 수준에 대한 설명]

 

To the extent that an agent relies on the prior knowledge of its designer rather than on its own percepts, we say that the agent lacks autonomy. A rational agent should be autonomous ― it should learn what it can to compensate for partial or incorrect prior knowledge. For example, a vacuum-cleaning agent that learns to foresee where and when additional dirt will appear will do better than one that does not. As a practical matter, one seldom requires complete autonomy from the start: when the agent has had little or no experience, it would have to act randomly unless the designer gave some assistance. So, just as evolution provides animals with enough built-in reflexes to survive long enough to learn for themselves, it would be reasonable to provide an artificial intelligent agent with some initial knowledge as well as an ability to learn. After sufficient experience of its environment, the behavior of a rational agent can become effectively independent of its prior knowledge. Hence, the incorporation of learning allows one to design a single rational agent that will succeed in a vast variety of environments.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Importance of Learning for Autonomous Rational Agents 

2. Balancing Prior Knowledge and Learning in Rational Agent Design 

3. Building Rational Agents with Effective Learning Capabilities 

4. Achieving Autonomy in Artificial Intelligent Agents Through Learning 

 

Main Idea #1:

Agents that depend solely on prior knowledge lack autonomy, emphasizing the need for learning to improve rationality.

 

Main Idea #2:

Initial guidance combined with autonomous learning enables rational agents to adapt to various environments and eventually act independently of their initial programming.

 

Summary:

Agents require some initial knowledge to avoid random behavior early on, but learning capabilities are crucial to achieving autonomy, allowing rational agents to adapt and function effectively in diverse environments.

 

Key Points:

1. Prior knowledge alone limits an agent's autonomy. 

2. Learning helps agents correct partial or incorrect initial knowledge. 

3. Initial guidance is important for inexperienced agents. 

4. Through learning, rational agents adapt and thrive in diverse environments.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 31: 물질적 소비에서 라이프스타일 소비로의 전환]

 

People have always needed to eat, and they always will. Rising emphasis on self-expression values does not put an end to material desires. But prevailing economic orientations are gradually being reshaped. People who work in the knowledge sector continue to seek high salaries, but they place equal or greater emphasis on doing stimulating work and being able to follow their own time schedules. Consumption is becoming progressively less determined by the need for sustenance and the practical use of the goods consumed. People still eat, but a growing component of food's value is determined by its nonmaterial aspects. People pay a premium to eat exotic cuisines that provide an interesting experience or that symbolize a distinctive life-style. The publics of postindustrial societies place growing emphasis on "political consumerism," such as boycotting goods whose production violates ecological or ethical standards. Consumption is less and less a matter of sustenance and more and more a question of life-style ― and choice.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Transitioning Economic Priorities: From Material Needs to Lifestyle Choices 

2. The Shifting Values in Consumption: Political Consumerism and Lifestyle Emphasis 

3. Redefining Consumption: From Sustenance to Self-Expression and Ethics 

4. How Self-Expression Shapes Economic Orientations in Postindustrial Societies 

 

Main Idea #1:

Economic orientations are shifting towards valuing stimulating work, flexible schedules, and nonmaterial aspects of consumption.

 

Main Idea #2:

In postindustrial societies, consumption increasingly reflects lifestyle choices, with people prioritizing ethical standards and unique experiences, often paying premiums for goods that symbolize a distinctive lifestyle.

 

Summary:

In postindustrial societies, people prioritize stimulating work and nonmaterial consumption. Increasingly, they choose goods that align with lifestyle preferences and ethical standards rather than focusing solely on sustenance or practical utility.

 

Key Points:

1. Workers in the knowledge sector value flexible schedules and stimulating work. 

2. Nonmaterial aspects influence people's food consumption choices. 

3. Consumers often pay more for unique cuisine or lifestyle symbolism. 

4. Political consumerism encourages avoiding goods that violate ecological or ethical standards.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 32: 노동 분담 집단의 상부상조 정신]

 

In labor-sharing groups, people contribute labor to other people on a regular basis (for seasonal agricultural work such as harvesting) or on an irregular basis (in the event of a crisis such as the need to rebuild a barn damaged by fire). Labor sharing groups are part of what has been called a "moral economy" since no one keeps formal records on how much any family puts in or takes out. Instead, accounting is socially regulated. The group has a sense of moral community based on years of trust and sharing. In a certain community of North America, labor sharing is a major economic factor of social cohesion. When a family needs a new barn or faces repair work that requires group labor, a barn-raising party is called. Many families show up to help. Adult men provide manual labor, and adult women provide food for the event. Later, when another family needs help, they call on the same people.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Moral Economy and Social Cohesion in Labor-Sharing Communities 

2. Labor Sharing Groups: The Role of Trust and Reciprocity in Community Building 

3. Social Cohesion through Labor Sharing: The Tradition of Barn-Raising Parties 

4. How Informal Labor Sharing Sustains Communities through Trust and Reciprocity 

 

Main Idea #1:

Labor-sharing groups operate on principles of trust and reciprocity, with contributions governed by a shared sense of moral obligation.

 

Main Idea #2:

In a North American community, labor sharing fosters social cohesion through events like barn-raising parties, where families provide mutual assistance in times of need without keeping formal accounts.

 

Summary:

Labor-sharing groups, relying on mutual trust and moral obligation, bring communities together through barn-raising events where families help one another with manual labor or food, fostering social cohesion and solidarity.

 

Key Points:

1. Labor-sharing groups operate on regular and irregular bases, depending on needs. 

2. These groups function without formal accounting, relying on shared moral values. 

3. Barn-raising parties involve men providing labor and women supplying food. 

4. The practice strengthens community ties through mutual assistance and reciprocity.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 33: 예술과 과학이 현실을 바라보는 상반된 태도]

 

Whatever their differences, scientists and artists begin with the same question: can you and I see the same thing the same way? If so, how? The scientific thinker looks for features of the thing that can be stripped of subjectivity ― ideally, those aspects that can be quantified and whose values will thus never change from one observer to the next. In this way, he arrives at a reality independent of all observers. The artist, on the other hand, relies on the strength of her artistry to effect a marriage between her own subjectivity and that of her readers. To a scientific thinker, this must sound like magical thinking: you're saying you will imagine something so hard it'll pop into someone else's head exactly the way you envision it? The artist has sought the opposite of the scientist's observer-independent reality. She creates a reality dependent upon observers, indeed a reality in which human beings must participate in order for it to exist at all.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Contrasting Perspectives: How Scientists and Artists Approach Reality 

2. The Diverging Realities of Scientists and Artists: Objectivity vs. Subjectivity 

3. Exploring the Observer-Dependent and Independent Realities of Art and Science 

4. How Scientists and Artists Perceive and Create Different Forms of Reality 

 

Main Idea #1:

Scientists strive to identify observer-independent features, aiming for a reality that remains constant across all perspectives.

 

Main Idea #2:

Artists rely on their creativity to bridge the gap between their subjective vision and their audience's, creating a reality that is dependent on the observer's participation.

 

Summary:

Scientists seek an objective reality that is observer-independent, while artists create subjective realities that rely on shared imagination with their audience, presenting contrasting ways of seeing and understanding the world.

 

Key Points:

1. Scientists focus on quantifiable features that remain constant across observers. 

2. Artists blend their subjective vision with that of their audience to create a shared reality. 

3. Scientists and artists differ in their approaches to reality: one seeks objectivity, the other subjectivity. 

4. Art requires active audience participation for the imagined reality to exist.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 34: 감각 지각과 이성적 인식의 차이]

 

One of the common themes of the Western philosophical tradition is the distinction between sensual perceptions and rational knowledge. Since Plato, the supremacy of rational reason is based on the assertion that it is able to extract true knowledge from experience. As the discussion in the Republic helps to explain, perceptions are inherently unreliable and misleading because the senses are subject to errors and illusions. Only the rational discourse has the tools to overcome illusions and to point towards true knowledge. For instance, perception suggests that a figure in the distance is smaller than it really is. Yet, the application of logical reasoning will reveal that the figure only appears small because it obeys the laws of geometrical perspective. Nevertheless, even after the perspectival correction is applied and reason concludes that perception is misleading, the figure still appears small, and the truth of the matter is revealed not in the perception of the figure but in its rational representation.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Divide Between Sensory Perception and Rational Knowledge in Western Philosophy 

2. Plato's Republic: How Rational Discourse Unveils True Knowledge Beyond Illusions 

3. Understanding the Supremacy of Rational Reason Over Sensory Perception 

4. Rational Knowledge vs. Sensory Perception: The Philosophical Legacy of Plato 

 

Main Idea #1:

Western philosophy distinguishes between sensory perception and rational knowledge, emphasizing the supremacy of rational reasoning.

 

Main Idea #2:

Plato's *Republic* illustrates how rational discourse reveals true knowledge by correcting the illusions presented by sensory perception, such as when logical reasoning explains the geometrical perspective of a distant figure.

 

Summary:

Western philosophy, since Plato, asserts that rational reasoning can reveal true knowledge by correcting the illusions of sensory perception, as shown when logical reasoning identifies perspective laws affecting distant figures.

 

Key Points:

1. Western philosophy emphasizes a distinction between sensory perception and rational knowledge. 

2. Plato's *Republic* argues that senses are inherently unreliable. 

3. Rational reasoning reveals true knowledge by correcting perceptual illusions. 

4. The appearance of a distant figure is explained through the laws of geometrical perspective.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 35: 전문가와 초심자의 인지 부하 차이]

 

Interestingly, experts do not suffer as much as beginners when performing complex tasks or combining multiple tasks. Because experts have extensive practice within a limited domain, the key component skills in their domain tend to be highly practiced and more automated. Each of these highly practiced skills then demands relatively few cognitive resources, effectively lowering the total cognitive load that experts experience. Thus, experts can perform complex tasks and combine multiple tasks relatively easily. This is not because they necessarily have more cognitive resources than beginners; rather, because of the high level of fluency they have achieved in performing key skills, they can do more with what they have. Beginners, on the other hand, have not achieved the same degree of fluency and automaticity in each of the component skills, and thus they struggle to combine skills that experts combine with relative ease and efficiency.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. How Expertise Reduces Cognitive Load During Complex Tasks 

2. The Role of Skill Fluency in Expert Performance of Complex Tasks 

3. Comparing Experts and Beginners: The Impact of Practice on Cognitive Resources 

4. Automaticity and Fluency: How Experts Manage Multiple Tasks with Ease 

 

Main Idea #1:

Experts have practiced and automated key skills in their domain, reducing the cognitive resources needed for complex tasks.

 

Main Idea #2:

Experts perform complex tasks more efficiently than beginners, not due to greater cognitive resources, but because their well-practiced skills require less mental effort.

 

Summary:

Experts handle complex tasks efficiently due to their practiced and automated skills, which lower their cognitive load, while beginners struggle because they haven't yet achieved the same level of fluency and automaticity.

 

Key Points:

1. Experts have extensively practiced their skills within a limited domain. 

2. Their automated skills require fewer cognitive resources, reducing cognitive load. 

3. Experts do not possess more cognitive resources than beginners but use them more efficiently. 

4. Beginners find it harder to combine skills due to a lack of fluency and practice.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 36: 소프트웨어 버그 증가가 안전에 미치는 영향]

 

The growing complexity of computer software has direct implications for our global safety and security, particularly as the physical objects upon which we depend ― things like cars, airplanes, bridges, tunnels, and implantable medical devices ― transform themselves into computer code. Physical things are increasingly becoming information technologies. Cars are "computers we ride in," and airplanes are nothing more than "flying Solaris boxes attached to bucketfuls of industrial control systems." As all this code grows in size and complexity, so too do the number of errors and software bugs. According to a study by Carnegie Mellon University, commercial software typically has twenty to thirty bugs for every thousand lines of code ― 50 million lines of code means 1 million to 1.5 million potential errors to be exploited. This is the basis for all malware attacks that take advantage of these computer bugs to get the code to do something it was not originally intended to do. As computer code grows more elaborate, software bugs flourish and security suffers, with increasing consequences for society at large.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Risks of Software Complexity on Global Safety and Security 

2. How Software Bugs in Information Technologies Threaten Society's Security 

3. Understanding Malware Vulnerabilities in an Increasingly Digital World 

4. From Cars to Airplanes: How Software Bugs Impact Physical Technologies 

 

Main Idea #1:

The increasing complexity of computer software directly affects global safety as physical objects depend more on code.

 

Main Idea #2:

As software code expands, the prevalence of bugs and errors makes critical systems vulnerable to malware attacks, posing a significant threat to society's safety and security.

 

Summary:

With physical technologies becoming more reliant on complex software, bugs and errors in the growing lines of code pose significant safety and security risks, making systems vulnerable to malware attacks that exploit these flaws.

 

Key Points:

1. Physical technologies like cars and airplanes increasingly rely on complex software. 

2. As software grows, so do errors, averaging 20 to 30 bugs per thousand lines of code. 

3. Malware exploits these bugs to manipulate the code for unintended purposes. 

4. The growing complexity of code amplifies global safety and security risks.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 37: 체면 손상에 대한 사과 의미로서의 얼굴 붉힘]

 

Darwin saw blushing as uniquely human, representing an involuntary physical reaction caused by embarrassment and self-consciousness in a social environment. If we feel awkward, embarrassed or ashamed when we are alone, we don't blush; it seems to be caused by our concern about what others are thinking of us. Studies have confirmed that simply being told you are blushing brings it on. We feel as though others can see through our skin and into our mind. However, while we sometimes want to disappear when we involuntarily go bright red, psychologists argue that blushing actually serves a positive social purpose. When we blush, it's a signal to others that we recognize that a social norm has been broken; it is an apology for a faux pas. Maybe our brief loss of face benefits the long-term cohesion of the group. Interestingly, if someone blushes after making a social mistake, they are viewed in a more favourable light than those who don't blush.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Positive Social Impact of Blushing in Human Interaction 

2. Darwin's Observations on Blushing and Its Role in Social Norms 

3. The Apologetic Nature of Blushing and Its Effect on Social Cohesion 

4. Understanding How Blushing Reinforces Social Bonds Despite Embarrassment 

 

Main Idea #1:

Blushing is a uniquely human, involuntary response triggered by embarrassment and self-consciousness in social settings.

 

Main Idea #2:

Blushing serves a positive social role by signaling recognition of a broken norm and serving as a nonverbal apology, which helps maintain group cohesion and fosters a more favorable perception of the blusher.

 

Summary:

Blushing, an involuntary reaction to social embarrassment, signals recognition of a faux pas and functions as a nonverbal apology, ultimately reinforcing social bonds and eliciting a more favorable perception of those who blush.

 

Key Points:

1. Blushing is uniquely human and is linked to social embarrassment. 

2. It is an involuntary signal that acknowledges a social norm has been broken. 

3. This nonverbal apology benefits long-term group cohesion. 

4. People who blush after a mistake are viewed more favorably than those who don't.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 38: 제도와 관행의 내재화 과정]

 

As particular practices are repeated over time and become more widely shared, the values that they embody are reinforced and reproduced and we speak of them as becoming 'institutionalized'. In some cases, this institutionalization has a formal face to it, with rules and protocols written down, and specialized roles created to ensure that procedures are followed correctly. The main institutions of state ― parliament, courts, police and so on ― along with certain of the professions, exhibit this formal character. Other social institutions, perhaps the majority, are not like this; science is an example. Although scientists are trained in the substantive content of their discipline, they are not formally instructed in 'how to be a good scientist'. Instead, much like the young child learning how to play 'nicely', the apprentice scientist gains his or her understanding of the moral values inherent in the role by absorption from their colleagues ― socialization. We think that these values, along with the values that inform many of the professions, are under threat, just as the value of the professions themselves is under threat.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Understanding Institutionalization: How Repeated Practices Shape Social Values 

2. Formal and Informal Aspects of Institutionalization in Social Practices 

3. The Role of Socialization in Shaping Scientific and Professional Values 

4. The Impact of Institutionalization on Professional and Scientific Norms 

 

Main Idea #1:

Institutionalization reinforces specific values through the repetition of practices, with some institutions formalized through explicit rules and others guided informally.

 

Main Idea #2:

While formal institutions have clear rules and protocols, scientists learn values through socialization with colleagues, but these values are increasingly under threat, as is the integrity of the professions.

 

Summary:

Institutionalization, through repeated practices, reinforces values, either through formal rules or informal socialization. Although scientists learn their professional values informally, these values, along with those of other professions, face significant challenges.

 

Key Points:

1. Institutionalization occurs as values are reinforced through repeated practices. 

2. Formal institutions have explicit rules and specialized roles. 

3. Scientists internalize values through socialization rather than formal instruction. 

4. Professional values are increasingly under threat, endangering their integrity.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 39:  전체와 개별 나무 사이의 상호의존성]

 

When trees grow together, nutrients and water can be optimally divided among them all so that each tree can grow into the best tree it can be. If you "help" individual trees by getting rid of their supposed competition, the remaining trees are bereft. They send messages out to their neighbors unsuccessfully, because nothing remains but stumps. Every tree now grows on its own, giving rise to great differences in productivity. Some individuals photosynthesize like mad until sugar positively bubbles along their trunk. As a result, they are fit and grow better, but they aren't particularly long-lived. This is because a tree can be only as strong as the forest that surrounds it. And there are now a lot of losers in the forest. Weaker members, who would once have been supported by the stronger ones, suddenly fall behind. Whether the reason for their decline is their location and lack of nutrients, a passing sickness, or genetic makeup, they now fall prey to insects and fungi.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Importance of Forest Unity: How Tree Collaboration Supports Health and Longevity 

2. Understanding How Tree Cooperation Promotes Growth and Reduces Vulnerability 

3. The Consequences of Isolating Trees: Increased Susceptibility and Reduced Productivity 

4. The Dangers of Isolation: Why Individual Trees Rely on the Collective Support of Forests 

 

Main Idea #1:

Trees thrive when growing together, as resources are optimally shared among them, enhancing the health and longevity of the entire forest.

 

Main Idea #2:

Isolated trees, left without neighboring support, may initially grow stronger but are more vulnerable to diseases and pests, demonstrating that the well-being of individual trees is closely tied to the health of the surrounding forest.

 

Summary:

Trees rely on collective growth, as isolating individual trees leads to vulnerability and health decline due to the absence of shared resources, support, and protection.

 

Key Points:

1. Nutrients and water are optimally shared among trees that grow together. 

2. Isolating trees increases differences in productivity and reduces overall health. 

3. Isolated trees become more susceptible to diseases, pests, and fungi. 

4. A tree's strength is inherently linked to the surrounding forest's health.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 40: 진화의 결과물이 최적의 상태는 아님]

 

The evolutionary process works on the genetic variation that is available. It follows that natural selection is unlikely to lead to the evolution of perfect, 'maximally fit' individuals. Rather, organisms come to match their environments by being 'the fittest available' or 'the fittest yet': they are not 'the best imaginable'. Part of the lack of fit arises because the present properties of an organism have not all originated in an environment similar in every respect to the one in which it now lives. Over the course of its evolutionary history, an organism's remote ancestors may have evolved a set of characteristics ― evolutionary 'baggage' ― that subsequently constrain future evolution. For many millions of years, the evolution of vertebrates has been limited to what can be achieved by organisms with a vertebral column. Moreover, much of what we now see as precise matches between an organism and its environment may equally be seen as constraints: koala bears live successfully on Eucalyptus foliage, but, from another perspective, koala bears cannot live without Eucalyptus foliage.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. How Evolutionary Constraints Shape Organisms' Adaptation to Their Environment 

2. Understanding Evolutionary "Baggage": Constraints on the Evolution of Vertebrates 

3. The Fittest Yet: How Genetic Variation Limits Evolutionary Perfection 

4. Environmental Matching in Evolution: Imperfect Adaptation and the Role of Constraints 

 

Main Idea #1:

Natural selection favors organisms that are the fittest available within the constraints of existing genetic variation and evolutionary history.

 

Main Idea #2:

Organisms' adaptations to their environments are not perfect due to evolutionary "baggage," which constrains future evolution and limits adaptability to specific ecological niches.

 

Summary:

Natural selection leads to the evolution of organisms that are the fittest available, not perfectly adapted, due to inherited evolutionary constraints, which shape their ability to adapt to specific environments.

 

Key Points:

1. Natural selection works with the genetic variation currently available. 

2. Organisms evolve with constraints from characteristics inherited from their ancestors. 

3. Evolutionary "baggage" limits future adaptation to some extent. 

4. Koala bears, for instance, depend on Eucalyptus foliage, representing both adaptation and constraint.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 41~42: 협상에서 고정 관념에 사로잡히면 통합적 해결책을 찾기 어려움]

 

Many negotiators assume that all negotiations involve a fixed pie. Negotiators often approach integrative negotiation opportunities as zero-sum situations or win-lose exchanges. Those who believe in the mythical fixed pie assume that parties' interests stand in opposition, with no possibility for integrative settlements and mutually beneficial trade-offs, so they suppress efforts to search for them. In a hiring negotiation, a job applicant who assumes that salary is the only issue may insist on $75,000 when the employer is offering $70,000. Only when the two parties discuss the possibilities further do they discover that moving expenses and starting date can also be negotiated, which may facilitate resolution of the salary issue. The tendency to see negotiation in fixed-pie terms varies depending on how people view the nature of a given conflict situation. This was shown in a clever experiment by Harinck, de Dreu, and Van Vianen involving a simulated negotiation between prosecutors and defense lawyers over jail sentences. Some participants were told to view their goals in terms of personal gain (e.g., arranging a particular jail sentence will help your career), others were told to view their goals in terms of effectiveness (a particular sentence is most likely to prevent recidivism), and still others were told to focus on values (a particular jail sentence is fair and just). Negotiators focusing on personal gain were most likely to come under the influence of fixed-pie beliefs and approach the situation competitively. Negotiators focusing on values were least likely to see the problem in fixed-pie terms and more inclined to approach the situation cooperatively. Stressful conditions such as time constraints contribute to this common misperception, which in turn may lead to less integrative agreements.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Understanding the Myth of the Fixed Pie in Negotiation 

2. Exploring the Impact of Mindsets on Negotiation Outcomes and Cooperation 

3. Moving Beyond Fixed-Pie Beliefs for More Integrative Negotiation Strategies 

4. How Values-Based Thinking Encourages Cooperative Solutions in Negotiations 

 

Main Idea #1:

Negotiators often mistakenly view all negotiations as zero-sum games, assuming opposing interests and ignoring opportunities for integrative solutions.

 

Main Idea #2:

Negotiators' perspectives influence their approach to conflict resolution, with those focused on values more likely to seek cooperative solutions, while those driven by personal gain tend to fall into fixed-pie thinking.

 

Summary:

Negotiators frequently perceive negotiations as win-lose scenarios, driven by fixed-pie thinking, but research shows that value-based perspectives promote cooperative solutions, while those focused on personal gain are more competitive.

 

Key Points:

1. Fixed-pie thinking leads to suppressing efforts to find mutually beneficial trade-offs. 

2. Salary isn't always the sole issue in hiring negotiations; other factors like moving expenses can resolve conflicts. 

3. Harinck, de Dreu, and Van Vianen's experiment showed negotiators focused on values are more cooperative. 

4. Time constraints can reinforce fixed-pie thinking, reducing integrative agreements.

 

 

[3 2023 06 – 43~45: 아버지 생일 선물 분실  카페에서 되찾은 경험]

 

When invited by her mother to go shopping after lunch, Ellen hesitantly replied, "Sorry, Mom. I have an English essay assignment I need to finish." Her mother persisted, "Come on! Your father's birthday is just around the corner, and you wanted to buy his birthday present by yourself." Ellen suddenly realized that her father's birthday was just two days away. So she altered her original plan to do the assignment in the library and decided to go to the shopping mall with her mother. Upon arrival at the shopping center, her mother inquired, "Ellen, have you decided what to buy for his birthday present?" She quickly replied, "I would like to buy him a pair of soccer shoes." Ellen knew that her father had joined the morning soccer club recently and needed some new soccer shoes. She entered a shoe store and selected a pair of red soccer shoes. After buying the present, she told her mother, "Mom, now, I'm going to do my assignment in the cafe while you are shopping." Ellen wanted to get a strawberry smoothie in the cafe, but it was sold out. So she bought a yogurt smoothie instead. The cafe was not very busy for a Saturday afternoon, and Ellen settled at a large table to work on her assignment. However, after a while, a group of students came in, and there weren't any large tables left. One of them came over to Ellen's table and politely asked, "Could you possibly move to that smaller table?" Ellen replied, "It's okay. I was just leaving anyway." She hurriedly gathered her assignment leaving the shoe bag behind under the table. "It must be in the cafe," Ellen suddenly exclaimed when she realized the gift for her father was missing upon returning home. She felt so disheartened, worrying it would be impossible to find it. "Why don't you call the cafe?" suggested her mother. When she phoned the cafe and asked about the shoe bag, the manager said that she would check and let her know. After a few minutes, she called back and told Ellen that she had just discovered it. Ellen was so pleased that the birthday gift had been found.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Ellen's Journey: A Misplaced Birthday Gift and Finding Solutions 

2. Navigating Surprises and Solutions: Ellen's Shopping and Assignment Day 

3. Balancing Priorities: How Ellen Found Her Father's Birthday Gift 

4. From Essay Plans to Birthday Gifts: Ellen's Unintended Adventure 

 

Main Idea #1:

Ellen initially hesitates to go shopping but adjusts her plans to find a gift for her father.

 

Main Idea #2:

Ellen successfully buys soccer shoes for her father but leaves them behind at a café, and, with the manager's help, finds them again.

 

Summary:

Ellen decides to buy a birthday present for her father, chooses red soccer shoes, and leaves them in a café by mistake. Fortunately, the manager helps her retrieve them, and she feels relieved.

 

Key Points:

1. Ellen chooses to shop with her mother for her father's birthday instead of doing her assignment. 

2. She selects a pair of red soccer shoes for her father's birthday. 

3. After accidentally leaving the shoes in a café, she calls to recover them with the manager's assistance. 

4. Ellen feels pleased and relieved when she successfully retrieves the gift.

 

 

 

 

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[3] 2023 04  18: 법학교수가 인턴 지원 학생을 추천하는 추천서

 

To whom it may concern, I am writing this letter in regard to Sona Lee applying for an internship in your law firm. I have gotten to know her over the past year, as a student in my Contracts course. The assignments she completed were excellent, and demonstrated a thorough understanding of contract law. She also has remarkable energy and interpersonal skills. She represents her class on the law school's student council and has taken on this responsibility with spirit, interacting with students effectively. I support her application wholeheartedly. Sincerely yours, Conan Stevenson

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Recommendation Letter for Sona Lee's Law Internship Application

2. Endorsement of Sona Lee's Skills and Qualifications for a Legal Internship

3. Detailed Appraisal of Sona Lee's Abilities in Contract Law and Leadership

4. Advocacy for Sona Lee's Candidacy in a Law Internship Position

 

Main Idea #1:

Sona Lee has demonstrated exceptional understanding and skill in contract law.

 

Main Idea #2:

Beyond her academic prowess, Sona Lee exhibits strong interpersonal skills and leadership, actively contributing to the student council.

 

Summary:

Sona Lee excels in contract law and possesses impressive energy and interpersonal abilities, making her a strong candidate for an internship. Her active participation on the law school's student council showcases her leadership.

 

Key Points:

1. Sona Lee has excellent academic achievements in contract law.

2. Her assignments reflect a deep understanding of legal principles.

3. She has remarkable energy and interpersonal skills.

4. Sona Lee is an effective representative on the student council, showing leadership.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  19: 은행 계좌 도난 사건에 대한 대화

 

"5,000 dollars has been deposited? Thank you. I'll check it out now." Jerry Shaw hung up with a smile on his face. Humming, he headed to the bank to withdraw some cash. He stopped at the ATM, inserted the card and entered his PIN. The screen flashed the message, "Card not valid ― please see a teller." What? My bonus was deposited just now! Entering the bank, Jerry told the teller what had happened. She studied the screen and frowned. "Mr. Shaw, your account was closed. All your funds were withdrawn when you closed it," she said. "What do you mean? I never did! It must be identity theft!" yelled Jerry, his voice barely under control.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Unpleasant Discovery of Jerry Shaw's Account Closure and Suspected Identity Theft

2. Jerry Shaw's Encounter with a Closed Bank Account and Fraudulent Activity

3. Unexpected Account Closure and Identity Theft: Jerry Shaw's Banking Dilemma

4. The Shocking Realization of Identity Theft and Account Closure for Jerry Shaw

 

Main Idea #1:

Jerry Shaw's anticipated withdrawal turns into a shocking discovery of his closed and emptied bank account.

 

Main Idea #2:

Upon attempting to access his deposited bonus at the bank, Jerry Shaw learns of unauthorized account closure and potential identity theft.

 

Summary:

Jerry Shaw is surprised when his bank informs him of an unauthorized account closure and withdrawal, suspecting identity theft after his deposit fails to process.

 

Key Points:

1. Jerry Shaw is informed his bank account was closed and emptied without his knowledge.

2. He initially visits the bank to withdraw his newly deposited bonus.

3. The ATM rejects his transaction, prompting him to consult a teller.

4. Identity theft is suspected as the reason behind the account's unauthorized closure.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  20: 인류학이 글로벌 문제 해결에 기여하는 중요성

 

Anthropology has become relevant for addressing global issues. This is not to deny the vital role of 'hard' sciences in addressing these problems. However, if we are to solve global problems we need a new way of thinking based in humanities and social sciences. It is impossible to resolve global issues merely by looking at numbers and statistics. Anthropology thus becomes crucial, as a discipline and a profession enabling the collection and interpretation of 'thick data' ― in addition to 'big data' ― and helps us to understand the world we live in more comprehensively. Why is a brand new and expensive 'smart' building a disaster? What will happen in the future with passenger cars? In answering such questions, we should stop relying only on quantitative data analytics; instead, the most important decisions should also be informed by anthropological qualitative approaches which provide a more complete and nuanced picture of people's lives.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Crucial Role of Anthropology in Understanding Global Challenges Beyond Statistics

2. Integrating Anthropology with Hard Sciences to Address Complex Global Issues

3. The Importance of Thick Data in Comprehending and Solving Worldwide Problems

4. Enhancing Global Problem-Solving with Anthropological Insights and Qualitative Data

 

Main Idea #1:

Anthropology is essential in providing a deeper understanding of global issues through the lens of 'thick data' and qualitative analysis.

 

Main Idea #2:

To effectively address global challenges, it is crucial to combine the perspectives of anthropology with quantitative methods from the hard sciences, offering a more holistic view of the issues at hand.

 

Summary:

Anthropology's role in addressing global issues lies in its ability to supplement 'big data' with 'thick data,' providing a nuanced understanding that quantitative methods alone cannot achieve. This integration helps solve complex problems by considering the qualitative aspects of human life.

 

Key Points:

1. Anthropology is vital for a comprehensive understanding of global challenges.

2. The discipline provides crucial qualitative insights that complement quantitative data.

3. Anthropologists interpret complex human behaviors that impact global issues.

4. The field helps answer intricate questions about modern developments and future scenarios.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  21: 스테레오타입에 대한 반응을 연구한 심리학 실험

 

Our brains light up when our predicted reality and actual reality match. Our brains love to be right. We also don't like to be wrong, and we feel threatened when our stereotyped predictions don't come true. Psychologist Wendy Mendes asked White and Asian college students to interact with Latino students who had been hired as actors by the researchers. Some of the Latino students portrayed themselves as socioeconomically "high status," with lawyer fathers, professor mothers, and summers spent volunteering in Europe. Others portrayed themselves as "low status," with unemployed parents and part-time summer jobs. The researchers found that when participants interacted with the Latino students who appeared to come from wealth and thus challenged American stereotypes, they responded physiologically as if to a threat: their blood vessels constricted and their heart activity changed. In these interactions, participants also saw the students who violated stereotypes as less likable. In this way, stereotypes that are descriptive can easily become prescriptive. The phenomenon, it turns out, may have a neuroscientific explanation: it's an angry protest from the brain's reward system.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Neuroscientific Impact of Stereotype Violation on Perception and Physiological Response

2. Exploring the Physiological Reactions to Stereotype Discrepancies in Social Interactions

3. The Effects of Socioeconomic Status Stereotypes on Physical and Emotional Responses

4. Stereotype Threat and Its Impact on Heart Activity and Social Perceptions

 

Main Idea #1:

Interactions that defy stereotypes can trigger a physiological threat response, illustrating the deep-seated nature of stereotypical thinking.

 

Main Idea #2:

When stereotypes are challenged, especially concerning socioeconomic status, it leads to increased physiological stress and a reduction in likability, highlighting the brain's resistance to unexpected social scenarios.

 

Summary:

Challenging stereotypes, particularly socioeconomic ones, elicits a physiological threat response, causing constriction of blood vessels and changes in heart activity. This response not only indicates the brain's discomfort with being wrong but also affects social perceptions, making the stereotype-defying individuals seem less likable.

 

Key Points:

1. Stereotypes influence physiological responses during social interactions.

2. Challenging stereotypes triggers the brain’s threat detection mechanisms.

3. Physiological changes include constricted blood vessels and altered heart activity.

4. Defying stereotypes leads to negative social perceptions of the individuals involved.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  22: 자연수 사용이 정보 전달에 효과적임을 설명

 

We can imagine natural numbers as whole objects, things our hunter-gatherer brains can work with. On the other hand, partial numbers ― decimals, fractions, percentages, and ratios ― simply don't register as real to our minds. We may be able to work with them for a given time when we're in math mode, but if we're asked questions at other times, we tend to have trouble grasping the concept. In other words, any time we give our audience figures that aren't natural numbers, the message is unlikely to make sense to them. Not only are they prone to make errors remembering and calculating the numbers, but there's a good chance they never even envision what we're describing in the first place ― because the number attached isn't solid. Use natural numbers whenever you can to make your message real. For numbers less than 1, you can use a strategy to make things start to show up as natural numbers. If you find that 0.2% of people have a certain trait, using "1 out of 500" makes this abstract percentage into a real thing.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Cognitive Challenges of Processing Fractions, Decimals, and Percentages

2. Why Natural Numbers Resonate More Effectively in Communication

3. The Impact of Number Presentation on Understanding and Recall

4. Transforming Abstract Quantities into Concrete Numerical Concepts

 

Main Idea #1:

Our brains more readily understand and retain natural numbers than complex fractions, decimals, and percentages.

 

Main Idea #2:

Using natural numbers enhances comprehension and memory retention, whereas abstract numerical forms like percentages and ratios are often not conceptualized effectively by our brains.

 

Summary:

Natural numbers are inherently easier for the human brain to process and remember compared to decimals and fractions. To improve understanding and retention, it's beneficial to translate abstract numerical forms, such as percentages, into more tangible natural number equivalents.

 

Key Points:

1. Natural numbers align better with our cognitive abilities than partial numbers.

2. Decimals, fractions, and percentages are challenging for the brain to conceptualize as real.

3. Communicating with natural numbers increases clarity and the likelihood of retention.

4. Converting abstract numbers into natural number ratios can aid in making the data more relatable and understandable.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  23: 지구적인 문제에 대한 개인적 연결감의 중요성

 

Facing large-scale, long-term change can seem overwhelming. Problems like global contagion or economic inequality are so complex that it can be hard to believe any intervention might make a difference. Working through fears of what could be depends on connecting with the abstract. Linking issues like climate change, for example, with the realities of our own neighborhoods, jobs, and relationships, translates conceptual ideas into concrete emotions. Thinking of how the beaches we love might disappear, how more frequent floods might destroy our homes, or how we might have to move to flee mounting wildfire risk, evokes feelings like anger, sadness, or guilt ― feelings that inspire us to act. A recent study found that when people feel personally affected by potential climatic change, they are more likely to support carbon reduction efforts and push for proactive policies. Forming emotional connections to potential futures helps us move from denial and despair to action.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Transforming Abstract Climate Challenges into Personal Motivations for Action

2. The Role of Emotional Engagement in Inspiring Climate Change Activism

3. How Personalizing Global Issues Spurs Community and Individual Action

4. Connecting Climate Change to Personal Experiences to Foster Proactive Responses

 

Main Idea #1:

Personal experiences and emotional responses to potential impacts of climate change motivate individuals to support and advocate for environmental policies.

 

Main Idea #2:

Linking the abstract concept of climate change to tangible effects on personal and local levels can transform feelings of helplessness into actionable concern, driving support for proactive measures.

 

Summary:

By making the abstract impacts of climate change feel personal, through considerations of threats to local environments and lifestyles, individuals are moved by emotions such as anger or sadness to support proactive environmental policies.

 

Key Points:

1. Personal impact feelings increase support for climate action.

2. Emotional responses to local environmental changes can inspire activism.

3. Personalizing global issues like climate change can overcome apathy.

4. Emotional connections lead to practical support for carbon reduction efforts.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  24: 목성의 위성 관찰을 통해 빛의 속도 이해

 

There was once a certain difficulty with the moons of Jupiter that is worth remarking on. These satellites were studied very carefully by Roemer, who noticed that the moons sometimes seemed to be ahead of schedule, and sometimes behind. They were ahead when Jupiter was particularly close to the earth and they were behind when Jupiter was farther from the earth. This would have been a very difficult thing to explain according to the law of gravitation. If a law does not work even in one place where it ought to, it is just wrong. But the reason for this discrepancy was very simple and beautiful: it takes a little while to see the moons of Jupiter because of the time it takes light to travel from Jupiter to the earth. When Jupiter is closer to the earth the time is a little less, and when it is farther from the earth, the time is more. This is why moons appear to be, on the average, a little ahead or a little behind, depending on whether they are closer to or farther from the earth.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Roemer's Discovery of Light Travel Time Through Observations of Jupiter's Moons

2. The Impact of Light Speed on Observations of Celestial Bodies: Jupiter's Moons Case Study

3. Understanding Astronomical Phenomena: The Influence of Distance on Light Travel Time

4. How the Variations in Distance from Earth Affect Observations of Jupiter's Moons

 

Main Idea #1:

The apparent discrepancies in the timing of Jupiter’s moons' orbits were explained by the time light takes to travel from Jupiter to Earth, varying with distance.

 

Main Idea #2:

Roemer's observations of Jupiter's moons revealing that their apparent position changes due to the light travel time helped refine and support existing astronomical laws, rather than contradicting them.

 

Summary:

Roemer's study of Jupiter’s moons showed that their perceived timing inconsistencies were due to the light travel time from Jupiter to Earth, which changes with the planet's distance, thereby aligning with established astronomical laws instead of challenging them.

 

Key Points:

1. Roemer observed that Jupiter’s moons appeared ahead of schedule when Jupiter was close to Earth and behind when farther away.

2. The discrepancies were attributed to the varying light travel time due to the distance between Jupiter and Earth.

3. This observation supported the laws of celestial mechanics by accounting for light speed.

4. Roemer’s findings highlight the importance of considering light travel time in astronomical observations.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  25: 유럽 국가들의 치매 환자  증가 예측 그래프

 

The graph above shows the number of dementia patients per 1,000 inhabitants in six European countries in 2021 and in 2050 (The number in 2050 is estimated). By 2050, the number of dementia patients per 1,000 people is expected to increase by more than 10 in all given countries compared to 2021. In 2021, Italy recorded the highest proportion of dementia patients out of the six countries and it is expected to do so in 2050 as well. The proportion of dementia patients in Spain was lower than that of Germany in 2021, but is expected to exceed that of Germany in 2050. Switzerland and the Netherlands had the same proportion of dementia patients in 2021, and by 2050 those proportions are both projected to more than double. Among the six countries, Belgium shows the smallest gap between the number of dementia patients per 1,000 inhabitants in 2021 and in 2050.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Projected Increase of Dementia Patients per Thousand Inhabitants in Europe by 2050

2. Comparative Analysis of Dementia Prevalence in Six European Countries: 2021 vs. 2050

3. Trends in Dementia Rates Across Selected European Nations Through Mid-Century

4. The Growing Burden of Dementia in Europe: A Forecast into 2050

 

Main Idea #1:

By 2050, the number of dementia patients per 1,000 inhabitants is expected to significantly rise in six European countries, with Italy maintaining the highest proportion.

 

Main Idea #2:

While Italy remains the country with the highest dementia rates, Spain is projected to surpass Germany by 2050, and both Switzerland and the Netherlands are expected to see their rates more than double.

 

Summary:

In six European countries, the proportion of dementia patients per 1,000 people is projected to increase substantially by 2050. Italy is expected to continue having the highest rate, Spain's rate will surpass Germany's, and the rates in Switzerland and the Netherlands will more than double. Belgium will experience the smallest increase.

 

Key Points:

1. All six countries will see an increase of over 10 dementia patients per 1,000 inhabitants by 2050.

2. Italy recorded the highest proportion in 2021 and will continue to do so in 2050.

3. Spain's dementia rates will overtake Germany's by 2050.

4. The rates in Switzerland and the Netherlands will more than double from their 2021 figures.

5. Belgium will have the smallest relative increase in dementia patients.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  26: Josef Frank 비엔나 모더니즘에 대한 비판

 

Josef Frank, born in Austria of Jewish heritage, studied architecture at the Vienna University of Technology. He then taught at the Vienna School of Arts and Crafts from 1919 to 1925. He founded an interior design firm together with some architect colleagues in 1925. He was one of early Vienna modernism's most important figures, but already in the beginning of the 1920s he started to question modernism's growing pragmatism. He had little appreciation for the French architect Le Corbusier's belief that a house should be "a machine for living in." He was against the standardized interior design trend of the time, fearing that it would make people all too uniform. He moved to Sweden with his Swedish wife in 1933 to escape growing Nazi discrimination and gained citizenship in 1939. He was the most prestigious designer at his Stockholm design company. In addition to his architectural work he created numerous designs for furniture, fabric, wallpaper and carpet.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Josef Frank: From Vienna Modernism to Swedish Design Icon

2. The Architectural Journey of Josef Frank: Questioning Modernism and Embracing Diversity

3. Josef Frank: A Legacy of Varied Design Against the Modernist Grain

4. The Evolution of Josef Frank: Architectural Modernism to Swedish Design Mastery

 

Main Idea #1:

Josef Frank, a pivotal figure in early Vienna modernism, critiqued the movement's pragmatism and standardized aesthetics, promoting more individualistic and diverse designs.

 

Main Idea #2:

After moving to Sweden in 1933 to escape Nazi persecution, Josef Frank significantly influenced Swedish design with his versatile creations in architecture, furniture, and textiles.

 

Summary:

Josef Frank, originally a major figure in Vienna modernism, rejected its growing pragmatism and standardization. Escaping Nazi discrimination by moving to Sweden, he became a leading designer, known for his eclectic and personalized designs in various mediums including furniture and textiles.

 

Key Points:

1. Josef Frank played a critical role in early Vienna modernism and later critiqued its principles.

2. He opposed Le Corbusier's utilitarian views, advocating for more diverse and personal interior designs.

3. Frank relocated to Sweden in 1933, becoming a celebrated designer and gaining citizenship in 1939.

4. His contributions to design extended beyond architecture to include furniture, fabrics, wallpapers, and carpets.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  29: 음악 교육에서 세부적인 피드백의 중요성

 

Providing feedback to students is a critical task of teachers. General psychology has shown that knowledge of results is necessary for improving a skill. Advanced musicians are able to self-critique their performances, but developing music students rely on teachers to supply evaluative feedback. The most constructive feedback is that which expresses the discrepancies between a student's performance of a piece of music and an optimal version. Expert teachers give more detailed feedback than general appraisals, and music educators generally recognize that more specific teacher feedback facilitates student performance improvement. Researchers also have explored whether the feedback of effective teachers is more often positively or negatively expressed, that is, constituting praise or criticism. One might intuitively think that positive comments are more motivating to students and, as a result, are more associated with effective teaching. The research, however, paints a slightly different picture. Although positive feedback is likely more helpful with younger learners and in one-on-one instruction, more advanced music students seem to accept and benefit from greater levels of criticism in lessons.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Role of Specific Feedback in the Development of Music Students

2. The Impact of Teacher Feedback on Student Musical Performance

3. Constructive Criticism vs. Praise: Effective Feedback in Music Education

4. Enhancing Music Learning: The Importance of Teacher Feedback Dynamics

 

Main Idea #1:

Effective music education relies heavily on detailed feedback from teachers to highlight discrepancies between a student’s performance and the optimal execution.

 

Main Idea #2:

While positive feedback benefits younger learners, advanced music students often gain more from specific and critical feedback, which aids in their skill development.

 

Summary:

In music education, the effectiveness of teacher feedback is crucial for student improvement. Detailed critiques that compare student performances with ideal standards help refine skills, especially for advanced learners who benefit more from critical rather than solely positive feedback.

 

Key Points:

1. Knowledge of results is essential for skill improvement in music students.

2. Expert teachers provide detailed feedback rather than general comments.

3. Specific feedback helps identify and correct discrepancies in student performances.

4. Advanced students benefit more from critical feedback, which facilitates deeper learning.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  30: 호르몬이 몸에서 반응을 유발하는 과정 설명

 

How do hormones trigger reactions in the body? When a hormone is released from a gland, it travels in the bloodstream through the body in search of its target. Organs, tissues and other glands in the body have receptor sites that hormones must bind to in order to deliver their message and cause an effect. But because every hormone has its own unique shape, they are designed to act only on the parts of the body that have a receptor site with the corresponding shape. This mode of action can be likened to a lock and key mechanism ― if the key doesn't fit the lock, then nothing will happen. When a hormone binds to its receptor, it sets off a chain of other signaling pathways to create a change in the body. Once the desired effect has taken place and there is too much hormone circulating in the blood, this signal is fed back to the glands to reduce further hormone release. This is called a feedback loop and, when functioning correctly, it allows the endocrine system to ensure the conditions in your body remain in balance.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Lock and Key Mechanism of Hormonal Action in the Human Body

2. How Hormones Function: Binding, Signaling, and Feedback in the Endocrine System

3. Understanding the Specificity and Regulatory Roles of Hormones in the Body

4. The Dynamics of Hormonal Interaction: Target Sites and Feedback Loops

 

Main Idea #1:

Hormones trigger specific reactions in the body by binding to uniquely shaped receptor sites on target organs and tissues, initiating signaling pathways that lead to physiological changes.

 

Main Idea #2:

The hormone-receptor interaction functions as a lock and key mechanism, where only hormones with a matching shape to the receptor can bind, thus ensuring precise control over bodily processes through feedback loops that maintain balance.

 

Summary:

Hormones regulate bodily functions by traveling through the bloodstream to bind with specific receptor sites on target tissues, akin to a lock and key mechanism. This binding initiates signaling pathways that alter physiological states. Excess hormones trigger feedback loops that instruct glands to adjust hormone production, maintaining systemic balance.

 

Key Points:

1. Hormones are released by glands and travel through the bloodstream to find their target.

2. Each hormone has a unique shape that fits specific receptors on target tissues.

3. Hormone-receptor binding activates signaling pathways that result in physiological changes.

4. Feedback loops help regulate hormone levels, ensuring the body remains in balance.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  31: 유사한 행동 스타일이 초기 매력에 미치는 영향

 

Although a balance or harmony between partners clearly develops over time in a relationship, it is also a factor in initial attraction and interest in a partner. That is, to the extent that two people share similar verbal and nonverbal habits in a first meeting, they will be more comfortable with one another. For example, fast-paced individuals talk and move quickly and are more expressive, whereas slow-paced individuals have a different tempo and are less expressive. Initial interactions between people at opposite ends of such a continuum may be more difficult than those between similar types. In the case of contrasting styles, individuals may be less interested in pursuing a relationship than if they were similar in interaction styles. Individuals with similar styles, however, are more comfortable and find that they just seem to "click" with one another. Thus, behavioral coordination may provide a selection filter for the initiation of a relationship.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Role of Behavioral Coordination in Initial Relationship Attraction

2. How Similar Interaction Styles Influence Initial Attraction and Comfort in Relationships

3. The Impact of Verbal and Nonverbal Habits on Early Relationship Dynamics

4. Matching Tempos: How Similarities in Pace and Expression Facilitate Relationship Formation

 

Main Idea #1:

Similar verbal and nonverbal behaviors between individuals enhance comfort and interest during initial encounters, influencing the likelihood of a relationship.

 

Main Idea #2:

Behavioral coordination, or the similarity in interaction styles, acts as a selection filter at the beginning of a relationship, helping individuals to feel an immediate connection and ease with each other.

 

Summary:

In initial interactions, individuals with similar verbal and nonverbal habits are more likely to feel comfortable and connected, thereby increasing the chances of pursuing a relationship. This behavioral coordination serves as a crucial filter in selecting potential partners.

 

Key Points:

1. Similar interaction styles in initial meetings promote comfort and mutual interest.

2. Contrasting behavioral tempos can make initial interactions more challenging.

3. Behavioral coordination can significantly influence the decision to pursue a relationship.

4. Similarity in verbal and nonverbal expressions helps partners to "click" right from the start.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  32: 보어버드가 복잡한 구조물을 만드는 예술성

 

Animals arguably make art. The male bowerbirds of New Guinea and Australia dedicate huge fractions of their time and energy to creating elaborate structures from twigs, flowers, berries, beetle wings, and even colorful trash. These are the backdrops to their complex mating dances, which include acrobatic moves and even imitations of other species. What's most amazing about the towers and "bowers" they construct is that they aren't stereotyped like a beehive or hummingbird nest. Each one is different. Artistic skill, along with fine craftsbirdship, is rewarded by the females. Many researchers suggest these displays are used by the females to gauge the cognitive abilities of her potential mates, but Darwin thought that she was actually attracted to their beauty. In other words, the bowers aren't simply signals of mate quality; they are appreciated by the females for their own sake, much as we appreciate a painting or a bouquet of spring flowers. A 2013 study looked at whether bowerbirds that did better on cognitive tests were more successful at attracting mates. They were not, suggesting whatever the females are looking for, it isn't a straightforward indicator of cognitive ability.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Artistic Expressions of Bowerbirds: Nature's Craftsmen in Mating Displays

2. Beyond Instinct: The Role of Art and Aesthetics in Bowerbird Mating Rituals

3. Creativity and Courtship: How Bowerbirds Use Art to Attract Mates

4. The Evolution of Aesthetic Appreciation: Artistic Displays in Bowerbirds

 

Main Idea #1:

Male bowerbirds create unique and elaborate structures as part of their mating rituals, showcasing a form of artistic expression that is evaluated by potential mates.

 

Main Idea #2:

The intricate and varied structures built by bowerbirds are appreciated not just for their functional role in mating but also for their aesthetic value, similar to how humans appreciate art.

 

Summary:

Bowerbirds invest significant effort in constructing unique, artistic structures that serve as stages for their mating dances, suggesting these creations are appreciated for their beauty and not solely as indicators of mate quality. Despite their efforts, success in attracting mates does not directly correlate with the males' cognitive abilities.

 

Key Points:

1. Male bowerbirds dedicate substantial time to building elaborate and unique bowers.

2. These structures are part of complex mating dances that include acrobatics and mimicry.

3. Females may appreciate the aesthetic aspects of the bowers, akin to human appreciation of art.

4. A 2013 study found no direct link between the cognitive abilities of bowerbirds and mating success, indicating that the aesthetic appeal of the bowers plays a significant role.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  33: 소비자 만족도를 높이기 위한 제품 경험 연결

 

Running a business that sells goods and services to consumers requires getting to know the products they like. More than that, however, you want to link positive experiences to the products they purchase. In traditional or online sales, people are bound to favorably regard the vendor and product that they could easily inquire about and quickly acquire in good order. Using the product can increase or decrease their satisfaction, and they will remember to repurchase products that meet and exceed their expectations. Traditional stores make the shopping experience pleasant by their displays and personal service. Internet retailers lead buyers to products they want through speedy searches and clicks. A new online selling method that can generate millions of dollars in purchases within a few minutes is livestream selling. That's when hosts streaming their shows live demonstrate a product and even interactively receive comments and answer questions from their viewers through the power of social media. If they like the product, they buy it immediately through an e-commerce feature on the platform. Buyers say that the experience is so convenient, it is like talking to a friend.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Enhancing Customer Satisfaction in E-Commerce Through Live Stream Selling

2. The Evolution of Online Shopping: From Clicks to Live Streams

3. Connecting with Consumers: Live Streaming as a Powerful Sales Tool

4. How Live Stream Selling Transforms Online Shopping Experiences

 

Main Idea #1:

Businesses enhance customer satisfaction by linking positive experiences to the products through easy access, quick acquisition, and ensuring the products meet or exceed expectations.

 

Main Idea #2:

Live stream selling, an emerging online sales method, combines real-time product demonstrations with interactive elements, significantly enhancing consumer engagement and simplifying the purchasing process.

 

Summary:

Businesses aiming to increase customer loyalty focus on creating positive shopping experiences, both in traditional stores and online. The innovative method of live stream selling on social media platforms offers interactive, real-time engagement, resembling a conversation with a friend, and facilitates instant purchases, reflecting the evolution of consumer preferences in digital commerce.

 

Key Points:

1. Positive customer experiences are crucial for repurchase decisions in both traditional and online settings.

2. Traditional stores use displays and personal service to enhance the shopping experience.

3. Online retailers use efficient search functionalities, while live stream selling adds interactivity to the buying process.

4. Live stream selling rapidly drives sales by combining product demonstrations with real-time viewer interaction.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  34: 헤겔의 철학에서 개체와 보편성의 상호작용

 

In Hegel's philosophy, even though there is interaction and interrelation between the universal and the individual, the universal still has more priority than the individual. For Hegel, individuals are not distinguished in terms of Reason. In Philosophy of Right Hegel stresses particularity and universality as follows: "A man, who acts perversely, exhibits particularity. The rational is the highway on which everyone travels, and no one is specially marked." Here, Hegel maintains that individuals can be differentiated from each other in terms of their acts but they are not differentiated with respect to reason. There are specific thoughts, but they are finally resolved into the universal. One might say that Hegel seems to focus on the individual like Aristotle but in reality, he subtly treats the universal as fundamental whereas Aristotle considers the individual as primary substance and universal as secondary substance; in so doing Aristotle emphasizes the universal to be subordinate to the individual in contrast to Hegel.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Priority of the Universal Over the Individual in Hegel's Philosophy

2. Hegel vs. Aristotle: Differing Views on Universality and Individuality

3. The Role of Reason in Differentiating Individuals According to Hegel

4. Hegel's Emphasis on Universality: A Contrast to Aristotelian Thought

 

Main Idea #1:

In Hegel's philosophy, the universal is given priority over the individual, as individuals are seen as indistinct in terms of Reason.

 

Main Idea #2:

While individuals can be differentiated by their actions, they converge in the realm of Reason, where specific thoughts are ultimately absorbed into the universal, underscoring the dominance of the universal in Hegel's thought.

 

Summary:

Hegel emphasizes the supremacy of the universal over the individual, arguing that while individuals can be distinguished by their actions, they are unified under the universal aspect of Reason. This contrasts with Aristotle's view, where the individual is the primary substance and the universal is secondary, highlighting a fundamental philosophical divergence between the two thinkers.

 

Key Points:

1. Hegel prioritizes the universal over the individual, asserting that individual distinctions are not made in the realm of Reason.

2. Individual actions may differ, but these are reconciled within the universal framework according to Hegel.

3. Hegel's philosophical approach views the universal as fundamental, in contrast to Aristotle who sees the individual as primary.

4. This contrast highlights a significant philosophical difference regarding the relationship between universality and individuality in the work of Hegel and Aristotle.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  35: 언어의 구조와 현실 표현의 문제점 탐구

 

One of the branches of postmodernism examines the structure of language and how it is used. It challenges the assumption that language can be precisely used to represent reality. Meanings of words are ambiguous, as words are only signs or labels given to concepts (what is signified) and therefore there is no necessary correspondence between the word and the meaning, the signifier and the signified. The use of signs (words) and their meaning can vary depending on the flow of the text in which they are used, leading to the possibility of 'deconstructing' text to reveal its underlying inconsistencies. This approach can be applied to all forms of representation ― pictures, films, etc. that gain added or alternative meanings by the overlaying of references to previous uses. This can be seen particularly in the media, where it is difficult to distinguish the real from the unreal ― everything is representation, there is no reality.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Postmodern Challenge to Language: Understanding Signifiers and Signifieds

2. Deconstructing Language and Reality in Postmodern Thought

3. Exploring the Ambiguity of Language in Postmodernism

4. Representation and Reality: A Postmodern Perspective on Media and Language

 

Main Idea #1:

Postmodernism questions the ability of language to accurately represent reality, highlighting the inherent ambiguity in the meanings of words.

 

Main Idea #2:

In postmodern theory, language is seen as a system of signs that do not directly correspond to reality, allowing for the deconstruction of texts to expose their inherent inconsistencies and multiple meanings.

 

Summary:

Postmodernism scrutinizes the structure of language, challenging the notion that words can precisely convey reality. It posits that words are mere signs with ambiguous meanings, leading to the possibility of deconstructing texts to reveal underlying contradictions and varied interpretations in all forms of representation, such as media, where the distinction between real and unreal blurs.

 

Key Points:

1. Postmodernism disputes the precision of language in representing reality.

2. Words are viewed as signs with ambiguous meanings that do not necessarily correspond to the concepts they signify.

3. The variability of meaning in language allows for the deconstruction of texts to uncover inconsistencies.

4. This approach extends to various forms of representation, complicating the distinction between reality and representation in media.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  36: 지구 형성 과정과 초기 조건에 대한 설명

 

The Earth formed from rocky and metallic fragments during the construction of the solar system ― debris that was swept up by an initial nucleus and attracted together into a single body by the force of gravity. The original materials were cold as outer space and dry as dust; whatever water and gases they contained were locked inside individual fragments as chemical compounds. As the fragments joined, the Earth's gravity increased, attracting larger and larger objects to impact the Earth. This increasing gravity, combined with the timeless radioactive decay of elements like uranium and thorium, caused the new Earth to heat up. The internal temperature and pressure were high enough for many compounds to break down or melt, releasing their water and gases. Even solid material could begin to move and flow under such conditions. Separation by density began, and the Earth started to organize into its present layered structure. The heaviest metals sank to the center; the lightest materials migrated outward.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Formation of Earth: From Cosmic Debris to Structured Planet

2. Understanding the Early Stages of Earth’s Formation and Layered Structure

3. The Role of Gravity and Radioactive Decay in Earth's Primordial Development

4. How Earth's Internal Heating Shaped Its Layered Composition

 

Main Idea #1:

Earth formed from the accretion of rocky and metallic fragments in the early solar system, influenced by gravitational forces that attracted these materials into a single planetary body.

 

Main Idea #2:

The internal heating of the Earth, due to gravitational compression and radioactive decay, caused the breakdown of compounds, releasing gases and water and enabling the differentiation into layers based on density.

 

Summary:

The Earth originated from cold, dry fragments in the solar system, which coalesced under the force of gravity. Increasing gravitational pull and radioactive decay heated the planet, causing compounds to release water and gases and facilitating the movement of materials. This process led to the Earth's layered structure, with dense metals sinking to the core and lighter materials forming the crust.

 

Key Points:

1. Earth was formed from the aggregation of rocky and metallic debris in the solar system.

2. Gravitational forces played a crucial role in attracting and assembling these fragments into a planet.

3. Radioactive decay of elements like uranium and thorium contributed to the internal heating of the Earth.

4. This heating led to the breakdown of compounds, release of gases, and initiation of material flow, resulting in the differentiation of the Earth into layers.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  37: 표현의 권력이 문화 지배에 미치는 영향

 

Representation is control. The power to represent the world is the power to represent us in it or it in us, for the final stage of representing merges the representor and the represented into one. Imperializing cultures produce great works of art (great representations) which can be put to work intellectually as armies and trading houses work militarily and economically. Shakespeare, Jane Austen and maps were as important to English Imperial power as was the East India Company, the British army and the churches of England. It is no coincidence that modern Europe, the Europe of colonization, was also the Europe of "great art," and no coincidence either that it was the Europe of great map makers. That is because unless we can control the world intellectually by maps we cannot control it militarily or economically. Mercator, Moliere, Columbus and Captain Cook imperialized in different ways, but they all imperialized, and ultimately the effectiveness of one depended upon and supported the effectiveness of all the others. Similarly the US form of contemporary colonization, which involves occupying economies and political parties rather than physical territories, is accompanied by the power of both Hollywood and the satellite to represent the world to and for the US.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Intersection of Representation, Art, and Imperial Power

2. The Role of Cultural Representation in Imperial and Economic Control

3. How Art, Mapping, and Media Facilitate Imperial Domination

4. The Power of Representation in Shaping Imperial Agendas

 

Main Idea #1:

Representation plays a crucial role in imperial control, merging the creator and creation to influence both intellectual and physical domains.

 

Main Idea #2:

Historically, the production of cultural artifacts such as art and maps has been integral to the expansion and maintenance of imperial power, with representation serving as a tool for intellectual and territorial domination.

 

Summary:

Representation is a form of control, crucial in establishing and maintaining imperial power. Artistic and cultural outputs, from Shakespeare to modern Hollywood, have not only reflected imperial ambitions but have actively shaped and supported them, functioning alongside military and economic efforts to dominate globally.

 

Key Points:

1. Cultural representations, including art and maps, have historically played a key role in supporting imperial ambitions.

2. Great works of art and accurate cartography were as instrumental to the British Empire as its military and economic enterprises.

3. Representation merges the identity of the creator with the creation, influencing how cultures perceive and interact with the world.

4. Contemporary forms of imperialism, such as the U.S.'s economic and political influence, also rely heavily on media and technology to project power and control perceptions.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  38: '동물'이라는 단어가 인간과 동물 구분 강조

 

Language, and the word "animal," deceives us. The word "animal" categorizes all non-human animals and distances humans from other animals. Seeing all other animals as one group in contrast to humans reinforces anthropocentrism, which contributes to the legitimization of practices in which other animals are used for human benefit. Jacques Derrida argues that instead of one line between Man on the one side and Animal on the other, there is a multiple and heterogeneous border; beyond the edge of the "so-called human," we find a heterogeneous plurality of the living. To account for this multitude, using the word "animot" has been proposed. In speech it refers to the plural, the multiplicity of animals, which is necessary because there is no one "animal." The "mot" in "animot" refers to the act of naming and the risks involved in drawing a distinction between human and animal by the human. It reminds us of the fact that it is a word for animals, not a reference to an existing group of animals.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Beyond 'Animal': Derrida's Challenge to Anthropocentric Language

2. The Linguistic Deception of the Word 'Animal' and Its Implications

3. Deconstructing 'Animal': Jacques Derrida's Concept of 'Animot'

4. Reimagining Animal Identity: From Singular to Plural with 'Animot'

 

Main Idea #1:

The word "animal" simplifies and generalizes a diverse group, creating a false dichotomy between humans and other forms of life, thereby reinforcing anthropocentrism.

 

Main Idea #2:

Jacques Derrida proposes the term "animot" to reflect the diversity and multiplicity of non-human life, challenging the conventional, homogenizing language that separates humans from other animals.

 

Summary:

The term "animal" misleads by lumping all non-human species together, which supports anthropocentric views and justifies the exploitation of these beings. Jacques Derrida introduces the term "animot" to emphasize the variety and complexity among living beings, advocating for a linguistic shift that acknowledges this diversity instead of obscuring it.

 

Key Points:

1. The word "animal" groups all non-human animals together, obscuring their diversity and reinforcing human centrality.

2. This categorization supports practices that exploit non-human animals for human benefits.

3. Derrida argues for a complex, heterogeneous conception of life beyond the human-animal dichotomy.

4. The term "animot" is suggested to highlight the plurality and challenge the anthropocentric misuse of the word "animal".

 

 

[3] 2023 04  39: 바빌로니아 천문학이 과학적 방법에 미친 영향

 

Babylonian astronomers created detailed records of celestial movements in the heavens, using the resulting tables to sieve out irregularities and, with them, the favour of the gods. This was the seed of what we now call the scientific method ― a demonstration that accurate observations of the world could be used to forecast its future. The importance of measurement in this sort of cosmic comprehension did not develop smoothly over the centuries. Indeed, in the Middle Ages in Europe, calculating by hand and eye was sometimes seen as producing a rather shabby sort of knowledge, inferior to that of abstract thought. The suspicion was due to the influence of ancient Greeks in the era's scholasticism, particularly Plato and Aristotle, who stressed that the material world was one of unceasing change and instability. They emphasized that reality was best understood by reference to immaterial qualities, be they Platonic forms or Aristotelian causes. It would take the revelations of the scientific revolution to fully displace these instincts, with observations of the night sky once again proving decisive.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. From Babylon to the Scientific Revolution: The Evolution of Empirical Observation

2. The Historical Journey of the Scientific Method from Ancient Astronomy to Modern Science

3. The Impact of Babylonian Astronomy on the Development of Scientific Inquiry

4. Reconciling the Material with the Immaterial: A History of Scientific Thought from Plato to Galileo

 

Main Idea #1:

Babylonian astronomers laid the groundwork for the scientific method by using detailed celestial records to predict future events, demonstrating the power of systematic observation.

 

Main Idea #2:

The evolution of scientific thought faced challenges, especially during the Middle Ages in Europe, where empirical knowledge was often viewed as inferior to abstract philosophical concepts derived from ancient Greek thinkers like Plato and Aristotle.

 

Summary:

The foundations of the scientific method can be traced back to Babylonian astronomers, who used precise observations to predict celestial events. However, this approach to knowledge faced resistance in medieval Europe, where empirical methods were undervalued compared to the abstract ideals of Greek philosophy. It was not until the scientific revolution that empirical observation regained prominence, reaffirming its critical role in understanding and predicting the natural world.

 

Key Points:

1. Babylonian astronomers' detailed observations and predictions marked an early form of the scientific method.

2. In medieval Europe, empirical knowledge was often seen as less valuable than philosophical abstraction.

3. Greek philosophers Plato and Aristotle influenced this view by emphasizing the impermanence and instability of the material world.

4. The scientific revolution eventually highlighted the importance of empirical evidence in gaining a deeper understanding of reality.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  40: 동물이 과장된 자극을 선호하는 실험 결과

 

Experiments suggest that animals, just like humans, tend to prefer exaggerated, supernormal stimuli, and that a preference can rapidly propel itself to extreme levels (peak shift effect). In one experiment, through food rewards rats were conditioned to prefer squares to other geometric forms. In the next step, a non-square rectangle was introduced and associated with an even larger reward than the square. As expected, the rats learned to reliably prefer the rectangle. Less predictable was the third part of the experiment. The rats were offered the opportunity to choose between the rectangle they already knew and associated with large rewards and another rectangle, the proportions of which were even more different from those of a square. Interestingly, rats picked this novel variant, without undergoing any reward-based conditioning in favor of it. A possible explanation is thus that they chose the larger difference from the original square (i.e., the exaggeration of non-squareness).

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Influence of Supernormal Stimuli on Animal Preference: Insights from Rat Behavior

2. Exploring Peak Shift Effects in Rats Through Geometric Form Preferences

3. Rats and the Attraction to Exaggerated Stimuli: A Study of Behavioral Shifts

4. The Dynamics of Preference Evolution in Rats: From Squares to Extreme Rectangles

 

Main Idea #1:

Experiments with rats demonstrate that animals, like humans, develop preferences for exaggerated stimuli, showcasing a rapid escalation to extreme preferences, known as the peak shift effect.

 

Main Idea #2:

In a controlled experiment, rats initially trained to prefer squares over other shapes eventually chose increasingly exaggerated non-square shapes, illustrating their inherent preference for more pronounced deviations from their conditioned stimuli.

 

Summary:

Through a series of experiments, rats were conditioned to prefer squares and then larger rewards were used to shift their preference to rectangles. Surprisingly, without additional conditioning, the rats preferred an even more exaggerated rectangle variant, indicating a natural inclination towards more distinct deviations from the initial square shape, a phenomenon reflecting the peak shift effect.

 

Key Points:

1. Rats were conditioned to prefer squares through food rewards.

2. Preferences shifted to rectangles associated with larger rewards.

3. Without reward conditioning, rats chose an even more exaggerated rectangle.

4. The choice of the more exaggerated shape suggests an innate preference for more distinct deviations, a manifestation of the peak shift effect.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  41~42: 인간의 느린 발달이 다양한 환경 적응을 가능하게 

 

Although we humans are equipped with reflexive responses for survival, at birth we are helpless. We spend about a year unable to walk, about two more before we can articulate full thoughts, and many more years unable to provide for ourselves. We are totally dependent on those around us for our survival. Now compare this to many other mammals. Dolphins, for instance, are born swimming; giraffes learn to stand within hours; a baby zebra can run within forty-five minutes of birth. Across the animal kingdom, our cousins are strikingly independent soon after they're born. On the face of it, that seems like a great advantage for other species ― but in fact it signifies a limitation. Baby animals develop quickly because their brains are wiring up according to a largely preprogrammed routine. But that preparedness trades off with flexibility. Imagine if some unfortunate rhinoceros found itself on the Arctic tundra, or on top of a mountain in the Himalayas, or in the middle of a metropolis. It would have no capacity to adapt (which is why we don't find rhinos in those areas). This strategy of arriving with a pre-arranged brain works inside a particular niche in the ecosystem ― but put an animal outside of that niche, and its chances of thriving are low. In contrast, humans are able to thrive in many different environments, from the frozen tundra to the high mountains to crowded urban centers. This is possible because the human brain is born remarkably incomplete. Instead of arriving with everything wired up ― let's call it "hardwired" ― a human brain allows itself to be shaped by the details of life experience. This leads to long periods of helplessness as the young brain slowly molds to its environment. It's "livewired."

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Unique Development of Human Flexibility: Livewired for Adaptation

2. Comparing Human Helplessness at Birth with Mammalian Independence: A Study of Brain Plasticity

3. The Advantage of Human Developmental Vulnerability: Adapting Across Ecosystems

4. Why Human Infancy Extends Beyond Mammalian Independence: The Role of Brain Wiring

 

Main Idea #1:

Humans experience prolonged helplessness at birth, a stark contrast to many mammals that exhibit independence shortly after birth, due to the uniquely adaptive and flexible wiring of the human brain.

 

Main Idea #2:

While immediate independence in animals like dolphins and giraffes is linked to their brains being largely preprogrammed, humans' prolonged developmental period allows their brains to adapt to a wide range of environments, demonstrating a trade-off between early independence and adaptive flexibility.

 

Summary:

Humans are born in a state of extended helplessness compared to other mammals, which quickly adapt to their environments. This vulnerability is due to the human brain’s capacity to be shaped by its surroundings over time, a process termed "livewiring." Unlike animals with "hardwired" brains prepared for a specific ecological niche, humans can thrive in diverse environments, from arctic tundras to urban landscapes, thanks to this neural adaptability.

 

Key Points:

1. Many mammals are born with the ability to perform survival functions immediately, while humans require years of dependency.

2. The rapid development in other mammals is due to brains that are preprogrammed for specific tasks and environments.

3. Humans' extended dependency period is linked to the flexibility of the brain to be shaped by its environment, enhancing adaptability.

4. This "livewired" brain allows humans to thrive in a variety of ecological niches, unlike animals with more limited adaptability.

 

 

[3] 2023 04  43~45: 과도한 관심이 독립성을 저해할  있음을 비유

 

There were two neighbors living next to each other. One was a professor and the other was a merchant who had an unmotivated son. Both of them had planted the same kind of plant in each of their gardens. The professor gave a small amount of water to his plants and didn't always give his full attention to them. Meanwhile, in the merchant's garden, the merchant gave a lot of water to his plants and looked after them well. The professor's plants were simple but looked good, while the merchant's plants were much fuller and greener. One night, there was a heavy storm. After the storm was over, both of the neighbors inspected the damage to their gardens. The merchant saw that his plants had come out from the roots and were totally destroyed by the storm. But, the plants of his neighbor were not damaged at all and were standing firm. The merchant was surprised to see this because he thought he had given his plants better care than the professor. He went to his neighbor and said, "Only my plants came out from the roots. How is that possible?" The professor smiled and said, "You gave your plants so much attention and water that they didn't need to work for themselves." "Is that really a problem?" said the merchant with a curious look on his face. The professor continued his explanation, "I gave my plants just an adequate amount of water and let their roots search for more. Their roots went deeper and grew stronger." At that moment, the merchant recalled the image of his son, still lazy and dependent on his parents. "Is that how you approach teaching?" asked the merchant. The professor said, "Yes. Students are like plants. Sometimes guiding is better than giving." Nodding silently, the merchant began to rethink what education is.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Tale of Two Gardens: Lessons on Resilience and Overprotection

2. Roots and Resilience: A Parable of Two Neighbors and Their Gardens

3. The Storm and the Strength: A Story of Guiding Versus Over-Giving

4. The Professor, the Merchant, and the Philosophy of Growth

 

Main Idea #1:

The professor and the merchant used different gardening techniques that reflected their approaches to care and resilience, leading to contrasting outcomes during a storm.

 

Main Idea #2:

The professor's method of giving minimal water encouraged his plants to develop deeper roots, which made them more resilient during the storm, unlike the merchant’s well-watered but weaker plants.

 

Summary:

In a story of two neighbors, the professor’s plants survived a storm due to their deep and strong roots formed by minimal watering, whereas the merchant's overwatered plants, though initially lush, were uprooted. This outcome led the merchant to reflect on the parallels between his gardening style and his overindulgent parenting, understanding from the professor that less direct provision fosters greater independence and resilience.

 

Key Points:

1. The professor watered his plants minimally, forcing their roots to grow deeper in search of moisture.

2. The merchant frequently watered his plants, which kept their roots shallow and dependent on regular watering.

3. After a storm, the merchant's plants were uprooted due to their weak root systems, while the professor's plants remained standing.

4. The professor used this experience as an analogy to teach the merchant about the benefits of encouraging independence and resilience through less direct provision, both in gardening and in parenting.

 

 

 

 

 

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ps.

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감사합니다~~

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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[고2] 2023년 6월 모의고사 - 한줄해석 (좌지문 우해석)

오늘은 2023년도 6월 고2 영어 모의고사>의 한줄해석(좌지문 우해석) 자료 올립니다.설명문/실용문을 제외한 전지문 작업했습니다.PDF와 워드 파일 모두 올립니다. 필요에 따라 변형해서 

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[고2] 2023년 6월 모의고사 - 지문 요약 by ChatGPT 4.0

 

[2 2023 06 – 18: 결석 사유 제출 안내  협조 요청 공문]

 

Dear parents, Regular attendance at school is essential in maximizing student potential. Recently, we've become concerned about the number of unapproved absences across all grades. I would like to further clarify that your role as a parent is to approve any school absence. Parents must provide an explanation for absences to the school within 7 days from the first day of any period of absence. Where an explanation has not been received within the 7-day time frame, the school will record the absence as unjustified on the student's record. Please ensure that you go to the parent portal site and register the reason any time your child is absent. Please approve all absences, so that your child will not be at a disadvantage. Many thanks for your cooperation. Sincerely, Natalie Brown, Vice Principal

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Ensuring Student Success: Importance of Approving School Absences 

2. Clarifying Absence Policies: How Parents Can Help Ensure Justified Attendance 

3. Parental Role in School Absences: Procedures for Providing Timely Justification 

4. Preventing Unjustified Absences: Why Regular School Attendance Matters 

 

Main Idea #1:

Parents are reminded to provide timely explanations for their child's school absences to prevent them from being recorded as unjustified. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Parents should use the school's parent portal to register and approve their child's absence within 7 days to ensure accurate attendance records and prevent potential disadvantages.

 

Summary:

Vice Principal Natalie Brown emphasizes the importance of regular school attendance and asks parents to approve their child's absences within 7 days using the parent portal. This ensures that unjustified absences aren't recorded, preventing students from facing any disadvantages due to inaccurate records. 

 

Key Points:

1. Regular attendance is crucial for maximizing student potential. 

2. Parents must provide absence explanations within 7 days to avoid unjustified records. 

3. The parent portal is the platform for registering and justifying absences. 

4. Ensuring all absences are approved prevents students from being disadvantaged.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 19: 우편물 수령  기쁨의 상황 묘사]

 

Ester stood up as soon as she heard the hum of a hover engine outside. "Mail," she shouted and ran down the third set of stairs and swung open the door. It was pouring now, but she ran out into the rain. She was facing the mailbox. There was a single, unopened letter inside. She was sure this must be what she was eagerly waiting for. Without hesitation, she tore open the envelope. She pulled out the paper and unfolded it. The letter said, 'Thank you for applying to our company. We would like to invite you to our internship program. We look forward to seeing you soon.' She jumped up and down and looked down at the letter again. She couldn't wait to tell this news to her family.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Ester's Anticipation: The Excitement of Receiving a Long-Awaited Letter 

2. A Life-Changing Letter: Ester's Joy After Receiving Internship News 

3. From Hope to Reality: Ester's Enthusiastic Response to a Dream Opportunity 

4. The Power of an Invitation: How Ester's Internship Acceptance Transformed Her Day 

 

Main Idea #1:

Ester eagerly anticipated a letter that could shape her future, immediately recognizing its significance upon receiving it. 

 

Main Idea #2:

The letter contained an invitation to an internship program, bringing Ester immense joy as she couldn't wait to share the exciting news with her family. 

 

Summary:

Ester sprinted through the pouring rain to retrieve a long-awaited letter that confirmed her acceptance into an internship program. Filled with excitement, she jumped up and down and looked forward to sharing this life-changing news with her family. 

 

Key Points:

1. Ester anxiously anticipated a letter from a company, rushing out to get it. 

2. The letter confirmed her acceptance into the company's internship program. 

3. Her excitement was palpable as she eagerly prepared to share the news with her family.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 20: 새로운 기술의 지속가능한 발전을 위한 영향 평가의 필요성]

 

The introduction of new technologies clearly has both positive and negative impacts for sustainable development. Good management of technological resources needs to take them fully into account. Technological developments in sectors such as nuclear energy and agriculture provide examples of how not only environmental benefits but also risks to the environment or human health can accompany technological advances. New technologies have profound social impacts as well. Since the industrial revolution, technological advances have changed the nature of skills needed in workplaces, creating certain types of jobs and destroying others, with impacts on employment patterns. New technologies need to be assessed for their full potential impacts, both positive and negative.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Navigating the Dual Impact of New Technologies on Sustainable Development 

2. Balancing Benefits and Risks: How Technology Affects the Environment and Society 

3. The Role of Technology in Sustainable Development: Managing Both Positive and Negative Impacts 

4. Technological Innovation and Its Complex Impacts on Sustainability and Employment 

 

Main Idea #1:

New technologies impact sustainable development in both positive and negative ways, necessitating careful management. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Technological advances bring environmental and social risks alongside benefits, influencing sustainability and employment patterns, so their impacts must be comprehensively evaluated. 

 

Summary:

New technologies can positively and negatively affect sustainable development, requiring careful management. While sectors like nuclear energy and agriculture offer environmental benefits, they also pose risks to the environment and human health. Technological advancements profoundly affect social aspects, creating and eliminating job types, thus impacting employment patterns. Comprehensive impact assessments are needed to fully understand these changes. 

 

Key Points:

1. New technologies bring both positive and negative effects for sustainable development. 

2. Technological advances in sectors like nuclear energy and agriculture can both help and harm the environment. 

3. Social impacts include shifts in employment patterns, as technological advances create and eliminate jobs. 

4. Full assessments are necessary to manage the broad impacts of new technologies.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 21: 미국 전통 음식 문화의 상실 우려]

 

North America's native cuisine met the same unfortunate fate as its native people, save for a few relics like the Thanksgiving turkey. Certainly, we still have regional specialties, but the Carolina barbecue will almost certainly have California tomatoes in its sauce, and the Louisiana gumbo is just as likely to contain Indonesian farmed shrimp. If either of these shows up on a fast-food menu with lots of added fats or HFCS, we seem unable either to discern or resist the corruption. We have yet to come up with a strong set of generalized norms, passed down through families, for savoring and sensibly consuming what our land and climate give us. We have, instead, a string of fad diets convulsing our bookstores and bellies, one after another, at the scale of the national best seller. Nine out of ten nutritionists view this as evidence that we have entirely lost our marbles.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Decline of North America's Native Cuisine: From Regional Specialties to Fad Diets 

2. Native Culinary Heritage vs. Fast Food Culture: How Tradition Lost to Convenience 

3. The Erosion of Authentic Cuisine: Regional Foods, Imported Ingredients, and Dietary Fads 

4. Navigating a Culinary Identity Crisis: How Imported Ingredients and Fads Overtook Native Cuisine 

 

Main Idea #1:

North America's native cuisine has largely disappeared, replaced by regional dishes containing imported ingredients and fast food options high in fats and sugars. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Without strong, family-based food norms that emphasize local produce, North American cuisine has succumbed to dietary fads and convenience foods, which nutritionists consider a troubling trend. 

 

Summary:

North America's native cuisine has largely vanished, leaving behind regional specialties that often rely on imported ingredients or appear on fast-food menus. Lacking solid, family-based norms for enjoying local produce, the continent has embraced fad diets that dominate bookstores and are criticized by nutritionists, who see this trend as an abandonment of traditional culinary values. 

 

Key Points:

1. North America's native cuisine is mostly gone, replaced by regional dishes with imported ingredients. 

2. Fast food options often corrupt traditional flavors with excessive fats and high-fructose corn syrup. 

3. Dietary fads and best-selling diet books have replaced traditional food norms passed down through families. 

4. Nutritionists worry that this reliance on fads shows a loss of sensible culinary practices.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 22: AI 시대에 인간의 감정 지능 역량이 중요해질 ]

 

Perhaps, the advent of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the workplace may bode well for Emotional Intelligence (EI). As AI gains momentum and replaces people in jobs at every level, predictions are, there will be a premium placed on people who have high ability in EI. The emotional messages people send and respond to while interacting are, at this point, far beyond the ability of AI programs to mimic. As we get further into the age of the smart machine, it is likely that sensing and managing emotions will remain one type of intelligence that puzzles AI. This means people and jobs involving EI are safe from being taken over by machines. In a survey, almost three out of four executives see EI as a "must-have" skill for the workplace in the future as the automatizing of routine tasks bumps up against the impossibility of creating effective AI for activities that require emotional skill.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Emotional Intelligence in the Age of AI: Why Soft Skills Will Remain Essential 

2. The Growing Importance of Emotional Intelligence Amid AI Automation 

3. Why Emotional Intelligence Will Be a Vital Workplace Skill in the AI Era 

4. Navigating Automation: How Emotional Intelligence Outshines AI in Human Interaction 

 

Main Idea #1:

The increasing prevalence of AI in the workplace is expected to enhance the value of Emotional Intelligence (EI). 

 

Main Idea #2:

As AI automates routine tasks, jobs requiring emotional skills will remain secure due to the difficulty AI faces in understanding and managing emotions, making EI a highly sought-after skill by executives. 

 

Summary:

The rise of AI in the workplace is predicted to elevate the importance of Emotional Intelligence, as AI cannot effectively mimic emotional interactions. Executives widely recognize EI as crucial for future workplaces, as AI struggles with activities that require nuanced emotional skills. Thus, jobs involving EI will remain safe from automation. 

 

Key Points:

1. AI will elevate the demand for workers with strong Emotional Intelligence (EI) skills. 

2. Emotional messages in human interactions remain beyond AI's current capabilities. 

3. Jobs requiring emotional skills are unlikely to be automated by AI. 

4. Nearly 75% of executives consider EI a crucial skill in the future workplace.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 23: 교육 과정에서 분야  용어 통일의 필요성]

 

Education must focus on the trunk of the tree of knowledge, revealing the ways in which the branches, twigs, and leaves all emerge from a common core. Tools for thinking stem from this core, providing a common language with which practitioners in different fields may share their experience of the process of innovation and discover links between their creative activities. When the same terms are employed across the curriculum, students begin to link different subjects and classes. If they practice abstracting in writing class, if they work on abstracting in painting or drawing class, and if, in all cases, they call it abstracting, they begin to understand how to think beyond disciplinary boundaries. They see how to transform their thoughts from one mode of conception and expression to another. Linking the disciplines comes naturally when the terms and tools are presented as part of a universal imagination.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Creating Connections in Education: The Importance of a Common Core in Learning 

2. Breaking Down Disciplinary Boundaries: How a Universal Imagination Links Subjects 

3. Building a Common Core: How Unified Terminology Enhances Cross-Disciplinary Thinking 

4. Cultivating Universal Thinking: How Linking Educational Terms Encourages Innovation 

 

Main Idea #1:

Education should emphasize a shared core that connects different disciplines, enabling students to see the links between various subjects. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Using the same terminology across the curriculum allows students to recognize connections between different disciplines, transforming their thinking and helping them apply creativity and innovation beyond specific subjects. 

 

Summary:

Education should focus on a shared core that connects all branches of knowledge, allowing students to see interdisciplinary links. When similar terminology is used across subjects, students better understand how to transform and apply their thinking beyond specific disciplines, fostering innovation and creativity. 

 

Key Points:

1. The trunk of knowledge links different branches and disciplines through shared core ideas. 

2. Consistent terminology across subjects allows students to recognize interdisciplinary connections. 

3. Students practicing similar concepts like "abstracting" in writing, art, and other subjects understand how to think across disciplines. 

4. This common language encourages innovative thinking and cross-disciplinary creativity.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 24: 언어는 시대와 함께 지속적으로 변화함]

 

New words and expressions emerge continually in response to new situations, ideas and feelings. The Oxford English Dictionary publishes supplements of new words and expressions that have entered the language. Some people deplore this kind of thing and see it as a drift from correct English. But it was only in the eighteenth century that any attempt was made to formalize spelling and punctuation of English at all. The language we speak in the twenty-first century would be virtually unintelligible to Shakespeare, and so would his way of speaking to us. Alvin Toffler estimated that Shakespeare would probably only understand about 250,000 of the 450,000 words in general use in the English language now. In other words, so to speak, if Shakespeare were to materialize in London today he would understand, on average, only five out of every nine words in our vocabulary.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Evolution of Language: How New Words and Expressions Shape Modern English 

2. From Shakespeare to Today: The Dynamic Transformation of English Vocabulary 

3. New Words, New Era: The Ever-Changing Nature of the English Language 

4. Adapting English: How New Vocabulary Reflects Modern Ideas and Situations 

 

Main Idea #1:

New words and expressions constantly emerge in response to changing ideas, situations, and emotions, altering the English language over time. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Since English was only standardized in the 18th century, modern vocabulary has evolved so much that Shakespeare would understand just a fraction of today's words, demonstrating the dynamic and ever-changing nature of language. 

 

Summary:

The English language evolves constantly as new words and expressions are created to reflect changing circumstances, ideas, and feelings. This continual transformation, since formalized in the 18th century, has left Shakespeare understanding only about five out of every nine words in modern English, emphasizing the significant vocabulary shift over time. 

 

Key Points:

1. The Oxford English Dictionary tracks the continual emergence of new words. 

2. Critics view these changes as a departure from correct English. 

3. English was only standardized for spelling and punctuation in the 18th century. 

4. Shakespeare would struggle to understand much of modern English due to vocabulary shifts.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 25: 2019 기준 국가별 학생 교사 비율 그래프]

 

The graph above shows the average number of students per teacher in public elementary and secondary schools across selected countries in 2019. Belgium was the only country with a smaller number of students per teacher than the OECD average in both public elementary and secondary schools. In both public elementary and secondary schools, the average number of students per teacher was the largest in Mexico. In public elementary schools, there was a smaller number of students per teacher on average in Germany than in Japan, whereas the reverse was true in public secondary schools. The average number of students per teacher in public secondary schools in Germany was less than half that in the United Kingdom. Of the five countries, Mexico was the only country with more students per teacher in public secondary schools than in public elementary schools.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Teacher-Student Ratios in Public Schools Across Selected Countries in 2019 

2. Comparing Student-to-Teacher Ratios in Elementary and Secondary Schools Globally 

3. Global Teacher-Student Ratios: Understanding Differences in Public Schools Across Countries 

4. Teacher-Student Ratios in 2019: Analyzing Trends in Public Education Across Nations 

 

Main Idea #1:

Belgium was the only country with a smaller number of students per teacher than the OECD average in both public elementary and secondary schools. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Mexico had the largest number of students per teacher, and was the only country where secondary schools had more students per teacher than elementary schools. 

 

Summary:

In 2019, Belgium had fewer students per teacher than the OECD average in both public elementary and secondary schools, while Mexico had the highest student-to-teacher ratios overall. In Germany, elementary schools had fewer students per teacher than in Japan, but this trend was reversed in secondary schools. Mexico stood out as the only country where secondary schools had more students per teacher than elementary schools. 

 

Key Points:

1. Belgium had fewer students per teacher than the OECD average in both school levels. 

2. Mexico had the largest student-to-teacher ratios, with more students per teacher in secondary schools.

3. In Germany, elementary schools had fewer students per teacher than in Japan, but secondary schools had more. 

4. Germany's secondary schools had less than half the number of students per teacher compared to the UK.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 26: 식물학자  레이의 생애 소개]

 

Born in 1627 in Black Notley, Essex, England, John Ray was the son of the village blacksmith. At 16, he went to Cambridge University, where he studied widely and lectured on topics from Greek to mathematics, before joining the priesthood in 1660. To recover from an illness in 1650, he had taken to nature walks and developed an interest in botany. Accompanied by his wealthy student and supporter Francis Willughby, Ray toured Britain and Europe in the 1660s, studying and collecting plants and animals. He married Margaret Oakley in 1673 and, after leaving Willughby's household, lived quietly in Black Notley to the age of 77. He spent his later years studying samples in order to assemble plant and animal catalogues. He wrote more than twenty works on theology and his travels, as well as on plants and their form and function.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. John Ray: The Botanist Who Pioneered Plant and Animal Cataloging 

2. From Cambridge Scholar to Naturalist: John Ray's Journey in Science and Theology 

3. The Life of John Ray: A Blacksmith's Son Who Transformed Natural History 

4. John Ray: His Contributions to Botany, Zoology, and Theological Studies 

 

Main Idea #1:

John Ray, the son of a blacksmith, became a renowned scholar, naturalist, and theologian who dedicated his later years to studying plants and animals. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Ray traveled Europe and Britain collecting specimens with his supporter Francis Willughby, later spending his final years cataloging plants and animals, while writing extensively on theology and his travels. 

 

Summary:

John Ray, born in 1627, became a scholar and priest who was drawn to botany after recovering from illness. With support from Francis Willughby, he traveled extensively to collect plants and animals. He later returned to Black Notley, where he wrote over twenty works on theology and natural history, contributing significantly to the cataloging of plant and animal species. 

 

Key Points:

1. Ray studied at Cambridge University and initially joined the priesthood. 

2. His interest in botany grew after illness led him to explore nature walks. 

3. He traveled with Francis Willughby, studying plants and animals across Europe. 

4. Ray returned to Black Notley and spent his later years assembling plant and animal catalogues while writing extensively on theology and natural history.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 29: 자기보고식 설문조사의 한계와 사회적 동기 편향]

 

Research psychologists often work with self-report data, made up of participants' verbal accounts of their behavior. This is the case whenever questionnaires, interviews, or personality inventories are used to measure variables. Self-report methods can be quite useful. They take advantage of the fact that people have a unique opportunity to observe themselves full-time. However, self-reports can be plagued by several kinds of distortion. One of the most problematic of these distortions is the social desirability bias, which is a tendency to give socially approved answers to questions about oneself. Subjects who are influenced by this bias work overtime trying to create a favorable impression, especially when subjects are asked about sensitive issues. For example, many survey respondents will report that they voted in an election or gave to a charity when in fact it is possible to determine that they did not.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Challenges of Self-Report Data: Understanding Social Desirability Bias 

2. Navigating Self-Report Distortions in Psychological Research 

3. The Reliability of Self-Report Data: How Social Desirability Bias Impacts Responses 

4. Research Challenges in Self-Reporting: Why Social Approval Skews Survey Data 

 

Main Idea #1:

Self-report data provides valuable insights but is often affected by social desirability bias, leading participants to offer socially approved answers. 

 

Main Idea #2:

In surveys and interviews, social desirability bias distorts self-reported data, particularly on sensitive topics, as participants tend to misrepresent their behavior to create a favorable impression. 

 

Summary:

Research psychologists frequently rely on self-report data from questionnaires and interviews, benefiting from participants' full-time self-observation. However, these data are prone to social desirability bias, where respondents provide socially approved answers to appear favorable. For instance, participants may claim they voted or donated to charity even when it can be verified that they did not. 

 

Key Points:

1. Self-report data is obtained through questionnaires, interviews, and personality inventories. 

2. Social desirability bias causes participants to give socially favorable responses, particularly on sensitive topics. 

3. Participants often inaccurately report behavior, such as voting or donating, to fit social norms. 

4. This bias remains a significant challenge for research psychologists using self-report methods.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 30: 비관세 장벽이 개발도상국 수출에 미치는 어려움]

 

Over the past several decades, there have been some agreements to reduce the debt of poor nations, but other economic challenges (like trade barriers) remain. Nontariff trade measures, such as quotas, subsidies, and restrictions on exports, are increasingly prevalent and may be enacted for policy reasons having nothing to do with trade. However, they have a discriminatory effect on exports from countries that lack the resources to comply with requirements of nontariff measures imposed by rich nations. For example, the huge subsidies that rich nations give to their farmers make it very difficult for farmers in the rest of the world to compete with them. Another example would be domestic health or safety regulations, which, though not specifically targeting imports, could impose significant costs on foreign manufacturers seeking to conform to the importer's market. Industries in developing markets may have more difficulty absorbing these additional costs.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Economic Impact of Trade Barriers on Developing Nations 

2. How Nontariff Measures Disadvantage Developing Countries in Global Trade 

3. Trade Challenges for Poor Nations: The Burden of Subsidies and Regulations 

4. Reducing Debt but Raising Barriers: How Nontariff Measures Hinder Developing Economies 

 

Main Idea #1:

While debt reduction efforts exist, nontariff trade measures continue to disadvantage developing nations in global trade. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Quotas, subsidies, and domestic regulations create discriminatory barriers that poorer nations struggle to overcome due to limited resources, making it difficult for them to compete with subsidized farmers and conform to costly safety and health standards. 

 

Summary:

Despite debt reduction agreements, developing nations face discriminatory nontariff measures like quotas, subsidies, and domestic regulations that inhibit their exports. Rich nations' subsidies make competition challenging, while health and safety regulations impose significant costs, especially on industries in poorer countries with fewer resources to absorb these expenses. 

 

Key Points:

1. Trade barriers beyond tariffs disadvantage poorer nations in the global market. 

2. Rich nations' agricultural subsidies hinder competition from developing markets. 

3. Domestic health and safety regulations create extra costs for foreign manufacturers. 

4. Developing nations often lack the resources to comply with these costly trade measures.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 31: 환경 규제가 혁신을 촉진한 사례]

 

In the course of his research on business strategy and the environment, Michael Porter noticed a peculiar pattern: Businesses seemed to be profiting from regulation. He also discovered that the stricter regulations were prompting more innovation than the weaker ones. The Dutch flower industry provides an illustration. For many years, the companies producing Holland's world-renowned tulips and other cut flowers were also contaminating the country's water and soil with fertilizers and pesticides. In 1991, the Dutch government adopted a policy designed to cut pesticide use in half by 2000 ― a goal they ultimately achieved. Facing increasingly strict regulation, greenhouse growers realized they had to develop new methods if they were going to maintain product quality with fewer pesticides. In response, they shifted to a cultivation method that circulates water in closed-loop systems and grows flowers in a rock wool substrate. The new system not only reduced the pollution released into the environment; it also increased profits by giving companies greater control over growing conditions.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. How Stricter Regulations Drive Innovation: The Case of the Dutch Flower Industry 

2. Profiting from Regulation: Michael Porter's Insight into Environmental Business Strategy 

3. The Role of Regulation in Business Innovation: Lessons from Dutch Greenhouse Growers 

4. Environmental Regulations and Innovation: How the Dutch Flower Industry Transformed Itself 

 

Main Idea #1:

Michael Porter observed that stricter environmental regulations often lead to business innovation and profitability. 

 

Main Idea #2:

The Dutch flower industry adapted to strict pesticide regulations by developing a closed-loop water system and rock wool substrate, which reduced pollution while improving profitability through better control of growing conditions. 

 

Summary:

Michael Porter's research found that businesses often profit from stricter regulations. For instance, Dutch flower companies adapted to pesticide reduction targets by developing closed-loop water systems and rock wool substrates. These innovations reduced environmental pollution while increasing profitability by allowing greater control over growing conditions. 

 

Key Points:

1. Strict regulations can lead to innovation and increased profitability for businesses. 

2. The Dutch flower industry developed innovative, eco-friendly cultivation methods to meet pesticide reduction goals. 

3. Closed-loop water systems and rock wool substrates reduced pollution and improved profits. 

4. Michael Porter's observations highlight the unexpected benefits of strict environmental regulation on business strategy.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 32: 노력보다 결과를 중요시하는 경향에 대한 비판]

 

It's hard to pay more for the speedy but highly skilled person, simply because there's less effort being observed. Two researchers once did a study in which they asked people how much they would pay for data recovery. They found that people would pay a little more for a greater quantity of rescued data, but what they were most sensitive to was the number of hours the technician worked. When the data recovery took only a few minutes, willingness to pay was low, but when it took more than a week to recover the same amount of data, people were willing to pay much more. Think about it: They were willing to pay more for the slower service with the same outcome. Fundamentally, when we value effort over outcome, we're paying for incompetence. Although it is actually irrational, we feel more rational, and more comfortable, paying for incompetence.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Perception of Value: Why We Pay More for Slower Services 

2. Misjudging Efficiency: How Time Spent Affects Perceived Value in Data Recovery 

3. Valuing Effort Over Outcome: The Irrationality Behind Paying for Incompetence 

4. Speed vs. Skill: Understanding Why Longer Work Times Command Higher Prices 

 

Main Idea #1:

People tend to value effort over outcome, often willing to pay more for slower services despite receiving the same results. 

 

Main Idea #2:

A study found that people were more willing to pay for data recovery when it took longer, revealing an irrational bias that associates longer working time with greater value, even if it reflects incompetence. 

 

Summary:

Despite the irrationality, people tend to pay more for slower data recovery services due to an inherent bias valuing effort over results. Research shows that people are more willing to pay higher prices for the same outcome when it takes longer to achieve, mistakenly associating extended work time with higher value and competence. 

 

Key Points:

1. People value effort over outcome, often willing to pay more for slower services. 

2. A study revealed people would pay more for data recovery that took longer. 

3. This bias leads to an irrational willingness to pay for slower, less efficient services. 

4. It reflects a misplaced belief that longer working times equate to higher value.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 33: 환경과 교류를 통해 지적 성장이 일어남]

 

In adolescence many of us had the experience of falling under the sway of a great book or writer. We became entranced by the novel ideas in the book, and because we were so open to influence, these early encounters with exciting ideas sank deeply into our minds and became part of our own thought processes, affecting us decades after we absorbed them. Such influences enriched our mental landscape, and in fact our intelligence depends on the ability to absorb the lessons and ideas of those who are older and wiser. Just as the body tightens with age, however, so does the mind. And just as our sense of weakness and vulnerability motivated the desire to learn, so does our creeping sense of superiority slowly close us off to new ideas and influences. Some may advocate that we all become more skeptical in the modern world, but in fact a far greater danger comes from the increasing closing of the mind that burdens us as individuals as we get older, and seems to be burdening our culture in general.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Open Adolescent Mind: How Youthful Curiosity Shapes Lifelong Thinking 

2. Embracing New Ideas: How Age Closes Our Minds to Novel Influences 

3. The Closing of the Mind: Navigating Age-Related Declines in Intellectual Openness 

4. Lifelong Learning at Risk: Overcoming Intellectual Rigidity as We Age 

 

Main Idea #1:

During adolescence, our open minds absorb new ideas deeply, influencing our thought processes for decades. 

 

Main Idea #2:

With age, our sense of superiority often closes us off to new influences, posing a greater danger than skepticism by limiting intellectual growth both individually and culturally. 

 

Summary:

As adolescents, we are highly receptive to new ideas that shape our thinking for years to come. However, as we age, the mind tightens like the body, and feelings of superiority close us off to new influences. This closing of the mind threatens intellectual growth and poses a greater danger than skepticism, affecting individuals and society as a whole. 

 

Key Points:

1. Adolescents are deeply influenced by great books and writers due to their openness. 

2. This openness allows young minds to absorb valuable lessons from older generations. 

3. Aging brings about a sense of superiority that limits new intellectual influences. 

4. Closing the mind with age endangers individual growth and burdens cultural progress.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 34: 대중 여론이 반드시 옳지 않을  있음]

 

Many people look for safety and security in popular thinking. They figure that if a lot of people are doing something, then it must be right. It must be a good idea. If most people accept it, then it probably represents fairness, equality, compassion, and sensitivity, right? Not necessarily. Popular thinking said the earth was the center of the universe, yet Copernicus studied the stars and planets and proved mathematically that the earth and the other planets in our solar system revolved around the sun. Popular thinking said surgery didn't require clean instruments, yet Joseph Lister studied the high death rates in hospitals and introduced antiseptic practices that immediately saved lives. Popular thinking said that women shouldn't have the right to vote, yet people like Emmeline Pankhurst and Susan B. Anthony fought for and won that right. We must always remember there is a huge difference between acceptance and intelligence. People may say that there's safety in numbers, but that's not always true.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Danger of Popular Thinking: Why Following the Crowd Isn't Always Right 

2. Challenging Popular Beliefs: How History Shows the Flaws in Majority Opinion 

3. Safety in Numbers: Separating Acceptance from Intelligence in Popular Thinking 

4. The Pitfalls of Popular Opinion: Learning from Copernicus, Lister, and Anthony 

 

Main Idea #1:

Many people find safety in popular thinking, believing it represents fairness and truth, but historical examples show that widely accepted beliefs are often flawed. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Copernicus, Lister, and women's suffrage activists like Emmeline Pankhurst challenged popular thinking to uncover truths that transformed society, demonstrating that acceptance doesn't always equate to intelligence. 

 

Summary:

Although popular thinking is often seen as safe and fair, historical figures like Copernicus, Lister, and Pankhurst showed that widely accepted beliefs can be flawed. They challenged these norms to bring about transformative changes, proving that following the crowd doesn't always lead to intelligent or correct outcomes. 

 

Key Points:

1. People assume popular thinking is fair and intelligent, but this isn't always the case. 

2. Copernicus disproved the belief that the Earth was the center of the universe. 

3. Lister saved lives by challenging the idea that surgery didn't require clean instruments. 

4. Pankhurst and Anthony fought against the belief that women shouldn't vote. 

5. There is a significant difference between acceptance and intelligence.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 35: 런던 택시 운전사 자격 취득의 어려움과  이유]

 

Before getting licensed to drive a cab in London, a person has to pass an incredibly difficult test with an intimidating name ─ "The Knowledge." The test involves memorizing the layout of more than 20,000 streets in the Greater London area - a feat that involves an incredible amount of memory resources. In fact, fewer than 50 percent of the people who sign up for taxi driver training pass the test, even after spending two or three years studying for it! And as it turns out, the brains of London cabbies are different from non-cab-driving humans in ways that reflect their herculean memory efforts. In fact, the part of the brain that has been most frequently associated with spatial memory, the tail of the sea horse-shaped brain region called the hippocampus, is bigger than average in these taxi drivers.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Navigating London: How "The Knowledge" Transforms Taxi Drivers' Brains 

2. The Rigorous Challenge of "The Knowledge": Mapping London's Streets and Changing Minds 

3. London Cabbies and Their Brain Power: Understanding the Impact of "The Knowledge" Test 

4. The Cognitive Demands of Driving in London: How Taxi Drivers Develop Superior Spatial Memory 

 

Main Idea #1:

"The Knowledge" test requires London taxi drivers to memorize the city's layout, with fewer than half of trainees passing after years of preparation. 

 

Main Idea #2:

The intense memorization required for "The Knowledge" test changes London cabbies' brains, enlarging the hippocampus region associated with spatial memory. 

 

Summary:

To be a licensed London cab driver, one must pass "The Knowledge," a challenging test that requires memorizing over 20,000 streets. Less than half of those who attempt it succeed, even after years of studying. This intense preparation alters the brain structure, resulting in a larger hippocampus, the region responsible for spatial memory. 

 

Key Points:

1. "The Knowledge" test demands memorizing the layout of London's 20,000+ streets.

2. Less than 50% of taxi driver trainees pass after years of study. 

3. The hippocampus, associated with spatial memory, is significantly enlarged in London cabbies. 

4. London cabbies' brains reflect the intense cognitive demands of their training.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 36: 정책 수립  의도치 않은 결과에 대한 고려 필요성]

 

When evaluating a policy, people tend to concentrate on how the policy will fix some particular problem while ignoring or downplaying other effects it may have. Economists often refer to this situation as The Law of Unintended Consequences. For instance, suppose that you impose a tariff on imported steel in order to protect the jobs of domestic steelworkers. If you impose a high enough tariff, their jobs will indeed be protected from competition by foreign steel companies. But an unintended consequence is that the jobs of some autoworkers will be lost to foreign competition. Why? The tariff that protects steelworkers raises the price of the steel that domestic automobile makers need to build their cars. As a result, domestic automobile manufacturers have to raise the prices of their cars, making them relatively less attractive than foreign cars. Raising prices tends to reduce domestic car sales, so some domestic autoworkers lose their jobs.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Understanding the Law of Unintended Consequences in Economic Policies

2. The Impact of Tariffs on Domestic Industries and Employment

3. Balancing Policy Decisions with Their Unintended Economic Effects

4. How Protectionist Policies Can Have Ripple Effects Across Industries

 

Main Idea #1:

Implementing a tariff on imported steel to protect domestic steelworkers' jobs can inadvertently lead to job losses in the domestic auto industry.

 

Main Idea #2:

Imposing tariffs on imported steel raises costs for domestic car manufacturers, making their cars more expensive and less competitive, ultimately reducing domestic car sales and leading to layoffs.

 

Summary:

Tariffs on imported steel may safeguard domestic steel jobs but also increase car production costs. Higher prices make domestic cars less competitive internationally, reducing sales and causing domestic autoworkers to lose jobs. Such outcomes exemplify the Law of Unintended Consequences.

 

Key Points:

1. People often overlook unintended consequences when evaluating policies.

2. Tariffs on imported steel protect domestic steelworkers' jobs but increase costs for automakers.

3. Higher car prices reduce domestic auto sales, causing job losses among domestic autoworkers.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 37: 기후 변화로 인한 멸종 위기 동식물 사례 ]

 

Species that are found in only one area are called endemic species and are especially vulnerable to extinction. They exist on islands and in other unique small areas, especially in tropical rain forests where most species are highly specialized. One example is the brilliantly colored golden toad once found only in a small area of lush rain forests in Costa Rica's mountainous region. Despite living in the country's well-protected Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve, by 1989, the golden toad had apparently become extinct. Much of the moisture that supported its rain forest habitat came in the form of moisture-laden clouds blowing in from the Caribbean Sea. But warmer air from global climate change caused these clouds to rise, depriving the forests of moisture, and the habitat for the golden toad and many other species dried up. The golden toad appears to be one of the first victims of climate change caused largely by global warming.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Climate Change and the Vulnerability of Endemic Species to Extinction 

2. How Global Warming Impacts Endemic Wildlife in Tropical Rain Forests 

3. The Fragile Existence of Endemic Species in Unique Habitats 

4. The Golden Toad: A Cautionary Tale of Climate Change Effects

 

Main Idea #1:

Endemic species, found in unique areas like islands and tropical rain forests, are especially susceptible to extinction due to their specialized habitats.

 

Main Idea #2:

The golden toad, once native to a specific region of Costa Rica's rain forest, went extinct due to climate change that dried up its cloud forest habitat by reducing moisture-laden clouds.

 

Summary:

Endemic species, like the golden toad once found only in Costa Rica's rain forest, are particularly prone to extinction. Climate change altered the cloud patterns that previously provided moisture to their habitat, causing the forest to dry up and leading to the toad's extinction. This highlights the threat of global warming to specialized species.

 

Key Points:

1. Endemic species are at higher risk of extinction because of their specialized habitats. 

2. The golden toad lived exclusively in Costa Rica's Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve. 

3. Climate change disrupted the moisture patterns that sustained its habitat, causing the forest to dry up.

4. The extinction of the golden toad exemplifies the harmful effects of global warming on biodiversity.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 38: 통제된 실험 환경의 중요성]

 

The fundamental nature of the experimental method is manipulation and control. Scientists manipulate a variable of interest, and see if there's a difference. At the same time, they attempt to control for the potential effects of all other variables. The importance of controlled experiments in identifying the underlying causes of events cannot be overstated. In the real-uncontrolled-world, variables are often correlated. For example, people who take vitamin supplements may have different eating and exercise habits than people who don't take vitamins. As a result, if we want to study the health effects of vitamins, we can't merely observe the real world, since any of these factors (the vitamins, diet, or exercise) may affect health. Rather, we have to create a situation that doesn't actually occur in the real world. That's just what scientific experiments do. They try to separate the naturally occurring relationship in the world by manipulating one specific variable at a time, while holding everything else constant.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Critical Role of Manipulation and Control in Scientific Experiments 

2. Understanding Controlled Experiments: Separating Variables to Identify Causal Effects 

3. Isolating Variables to Identify Causes: The Foundation of Experimental Research 

4. Manipulation and Control: How Experiments Clarify Variable Relationships

 

Main Idea #1:

The experimental method relies on manipulating a specific variable while controlling for other factors to establish causal relationships.

 

Main Idea #2:

Controlled experiments are essential because real-world observations often involve correlated variables, which makes identifying the direct impact of a single variable difficult without isolating it.

 

Summary:

The experimental method is based on manipulating one variable while controlling others to identify causal effects. Controlled experiments are crucial because, in the uncontrolled real world, correlated factors can obscure the true causes of events. By isolating one variable at a time, scientists can uncover direct relationships.

 

Key Points:

1. Scientists manipulate one variable and control for others to find causal relationships. 

2. Controlled experiments reveal causes by eliminating correlations that confuse real-world observations.

3. Manipulating one variable at a time while controlling others creates unique experimental conditions. 

4. This process helps identify specific effects that would otherwise be hidden in natural settings.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 39: 지중해식 식단의 건강상 이점]

 

Why do people in the Mediterranean live longer and have a lower incidence of disease? Some people say it's because of what they eat. Their diet is full of fresh fruits, fish, vegetables, whole grains, and nuts. Individuals in these cultures drink red wine and use great amounts of olive oil. Why is that food pattern healthy? One reason is that they are eating a palette of colors. More and more research is surfacing that shows us the benefits of the thousands of colorful "phytochemicals"(phyto=plant) that exist in foods. These healthful, nonnutritive compounds in plants provide color and function to the plant and add to the health of the human body. Each color connects to a particular compound that serves a specific function in the body. For example, if you don't eat purple foods, you are probably missing out on anthocyanins, important brain protection compounds. Similarly, if you avoid greencolored foods, you may be lacking chlorophyll, a plant antioxidant that guards your cells from damage.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. How the Mediterranean Diet Promotes Longevity and Reduces Disease 

2. The Role of Plant Phytochemicals in the Mediterranean Diet's Health Benefits 

3. The Colorful Secrets of the Mediterranean Diet for a Longer Life 

4. Exploring the Health Benefits of Phytochemicals in Mediterranean Foods

 

Main Idea #1:

The Mediterranean diet, rich in fruits, vegetables, fish, whole grains, and olive oil, is linked to longer life and lower disease rates.

 

Main Idea #2:

Phytochemicals, non-nutritive compounds that give plants their vibrant colors, are essential to health and found abundantly in the Mediterranean diet. Each color relates to a unique compound that serves a crucial function in the human body, protecting organs and cells.

 

Summary:

People in the Mediterranean live longer and have fewer diseases, partly due to their diet, which is rich in phytochemicals. These colorful compounds offer various health benefits, like anthocyanins for brain protection from purple foods and chlorophyll for cellular protection from green foods. The diverse colors in their diet directly support health.

 

Key Points:

1. The Mediterranean diet is linked to lower disease rates and longer life. 

2. It includes many colorful foods that contain phytochemicals. 

3. Each phytochemical color corresponds to compounds with specific health functions. 

4. Purple foods provide anthocyanins for brain protection, and green foods offer chlorophyll for cellular health.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 40: 행동이 생각에 영향을 미치는 사례]

 

People behave in highly predictable ways when they experience certain thoughts. When they agree, they nod their heads. So far, no surprise, but according to an area of research known as "proprioceptive psychology," the process also works in reverse. Get people to behave in a certain way and you cause them to have certain thoughts. The idea was initially controversial, but fortunately it was supported by a compelling experiment. Participants in a study were asked to fixate on various products moving across a large computer screen and then indicate whether the items appealed to them. Some of the items moved vertically (causing the participants to nod their heads while watching), and others moved horizontally (resulting in a side-to-side head movement). Participants preferred vertically moving products without being aware that their "yes" and "no" head movements had played a key role in their decisions. -> In one study, participants responded favorably to products on a computer screen when they moved their heads up and down, which showed that their decisions were unconsciously influenced by their behavior.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Proprioceptive Psychology: How Behavior Influences Thought 

2. Understanding How Head Movements Affect Decision-Making 

3. The Reverse Influence of Actions on Thoughts in Proprioceptive Psychology 

4. Linking Behavior and Thought: Insights from Proprioceptive Psychology Research

 

Main Idea #1:

People's thoughts and decisions can be influenced by their physical actions, such as nodding their heads up and down or moving them side to side.

 

Main Idea #2:

A study demonstrated that participants favored products more when their head movements mimicked a nodding "yes," showing that unconscious physical behavior can affect preferences and decisions.

 

Summary:

People's physical actions influence their thoughts in predictable ways. A study showed that participants favored products more when their head movements resembled nodding "yes," revealing the unconscious influence of behavior on decision-making.

 

Key Points:

1. People's behaviors, like nodding or shaking their heads, affect their thoughts and decisions. 

2. Proprioceptive psychology studies how physical actions can shape mental processes. 

3. In an experiment, participants preferred products that caused them to nod their heads up and down. 

4. These findings reveal how unconscious behaviors can significantly influence decision-making.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 41~42: 일상적 경험은 기억하기 어렵고 특별한 경험은 기억하기 쉬움]

 

Events or experiences that are out of ordinary tend to be remembered better because there is nothing competing with them when your brain tries to access them from its storehouse of remembered events. In other words, the reason it can be difficult to remember what you ate for breakfast two Thursdays ago is that there was probably nothing special about that Thursday or that particular breakfast ― consequently, all your breakfast memories combine together into a sort of generic impression of a breakfast. Your memory merges similar events not only because it's more efficient to do so, but also because this is fundamental to how we learn things ― our brains extract abstract rules that tie experiences together. This is especially true for things that are routine. If your breakfast is always the same ― cereal with milk, a glass of orange juice, and a cup of coffee for instance ― there is no easy way for your brain to extract the details from one particular breakfast. Ironically, then, for behaviors that are routinized, you can remember the generic content of the behavior (such as the things you ate, since you always eat the same thing), but particulars to that one instance can be very difficult to call up (such as the sound of a garbage truck going by or a bird that passed by your window) unless they were especially distinctive. On the other hand, if you did something unique that broke your routine ― perhaps you had leftover pizza for breakfast and spilled tomato sauce on your dress shirt ― you are more likely to remember it.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Understanding How Unique Events Stand Out in Our Memory 

2. How the Brain Blurs Routine Memories and Highlights the Unusual 

3. The Role of Routine and Novelty in Memory Formation 

4. Why Our Memory Blends Routine Events but Highlights Unique Experiences

 

Main Idea #1:

Our brains remember unique or out-of-the-ordinary experiences better because they have fewer similar events to compete with in memory.

 

Main Idea #2:

Routine activities, like eating the same breakfast daily, blur together in our memory as the brain combines similar events to extract common patterns. Only distinct details, like unusual meals or accidents, stand out clearly.

 

Summary:

Unusual events are easier to recall because they don't compete with similar memories. Routine experiences blend together, as the brain extracts patterns from similar events. Unique instances, like a spilled breakfast or an unexpected meal, stand out and are more memorable.

 

Key Points:

1. Unique events are easier to recall due to a lack of competing memories. 

2. Routine events blur together in memory because the brain extracts abstract patterns. 

3. Routine activities, like repetitive breakfasts, are stored as generic impressions. 

4. Breaking routine, like eating a different meal or encountering an accident, helps specific memories stand out.

 


[
2 2023 06 – 43~45: 유명한 가수인 Henrietta 과거 경쟁자인 Amelia 도와주는 인도적인 행동에 대한 이야기]

 

Henrietta is one of the greatest "queens of song." She had to go through a severe struggle before she attained the enviable position as the greatest singer Germany had produced. At the beginning of her career she was hissed off a Vienna stage by the friends of her rival, Amelia. But in spite of this defeat, Henrietta endured until all Europe was at her feet. Many years later, when Henrietta was at the height of her fame, one day she was riding through the streets of Berlin. Soon she came across a little girl leading a blind woman. She was touched by the woman's helplessness, and she impulsively beckoned the child to her, saying "Come here, my child. Who is that you are leading by the hand?" The answer was, "That's my mother, Amelia Steininger. She used to be a great singer, but she lost her voice, and she cried so much about it that now she can't see anymore." Henrietta inquired their address and then told the child, "Tell your mother an old acquaintance will call on her this afternoon." She searched out their place and undertook the care of both mother and daughter. At her request, a skilled doctor tried to restore Amelia's sight, but it was in vain. But Henrietta's kindness to her former rival did not stop here. The next week she gave a benefit concert for the poor woman, and it was said that on that occasion Henrietta sang as she had never sung before. And who can doubt that with the applause of that vast audience there was mingled the applause of the angels in heaven who rejoice over the good deeds of those below?

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Triumph and Compassion: Henrietta's Journey from Rivalry to Kindness 

2. From Defeat to Fame: Henrietta's Generosity Toward Her Former Rival 

3. Henrietta's Legacy: Overcoming Adversity and Showing Compassion in Song 

4. How Henrietta Transformed Rivalry into Support and Compassion

 

Main Idea #1:

Henrietta rose to prominence as one of Germany's greatest singers despite early struggles, including being jeered off stage by her rival's supporters.

 

Main Idea #2:

After becoming famous, Henrietta showed compassion to her former rival, Amelia, who had become blind, providing financial support and organizing a benefit concert to help her.

 

Summary:

Henrietta, once defeated by her rival Amelia's supporters, rose to fame and extended kindness to the now-blind Amelia by organizing a benefit concert to support her. Henrietta's journey from rivalry to generosity reflects her remarkable triumph and compassion.

 

Key Points:

1. Henrietta faced early career struggles but became one of Germany's greatest singers. 

2. Despite their rivalry, Henrietta cared for her blind former competitor, Amelia. 

3. She organized a benefit concert to support Amelia and her daughter. 

4. Henrietta's act of generosity showed her ability to rise above past conflicts.

 

 

 

 

 

 

오늘은 <2023년도 6월 고1 영어 모의고사>의 지문 요약 자료를 올립니다.


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지문 분석하거나 자료 제작하실 때 참고하세요~♡

 

 

 

ps.

블로그 콘텐츠가 마음에 드신다면, '좋아요' 클릭과 광고 지원으로 응원해 주세요. 

여러분의 작은 도움이 큰 힘이 됩니다! 

감사합니다~~

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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[고1] 2023년 6월 모의고사 - 한줄해석 (좌지문 우해석)

오늘은 2023년도 6월 고1 영어 모의고사>의 한줄해석(좌지문 우해석) 자료 올립니다.설명문/실용문을 제외한 전지문 작업했습니다.PDF와 워드 파일 모두 올립니다. 필요에 따라 변형해서 

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[고1] 2023년 6월 모의고사 - 지문 요약 by ChatGPT 4.0

 

[1 2023 06 – 18: 여름 휴가 패키지 상품 광고]

 

ACC Travel Agency Customers: Have you ever wanted to enjoy a holiday in nature? This summer is the best time to turn your dream into reality. We have a perfect travel package for you. This travel package includes special trips to Lake Madison as well as massage and meditation to help you relax. Also, we provide yoga lessons taught by experienced instructors. If you book this package, you will enjoy all this at a reasonable price. We are sure that it will be an unforgettable experience for you. If you call us, we will be happy to give you more details.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Affordable Summer Getaway to Lake Madison for Relaxation and Rejuvenation

2. Unforgettable Nature Escape with Yoga, Massage, and Meditation at Lake Madison

3. The Ultimate Summer Retreat: Wellness and Tranquility at Lake Madison

4. Lake Madison Travel Package: Rejuvenate Your Body and Mind with ACC

 

Main Idea #1:

The travel package offers a summer escape to Lake Madison with activities promoting relaxation, such as massage, meditation, and yoga.

 

Main Idea #2:

ACC Travel Agency provides an affordable package combining outdoor activities at Lake Madison with wellness practices to ensure an unforgettable summer vacation.

 

Summary:

The ACC Travel Agency offers a summer travel package featuring Lake Madison. Guests will enjoy relaxing activities like yoga, massage, and meditation led by experienced instructors. With reasonable pricing, this nature escape promises an unforgettable holiday.

 

Key Points:

1. The travel package includes trips to Lake Madison.

2. Relaxation activities offered include massage, meditation, and yoga.

3. Experienced instructors will lead yoga lessons.

4. The package is affordably priced for an unforgettable summer experience.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 19: 마술  관람  잠시 분실된 가족을 찾은 이야기]

 

When I woke up in our hotel room, it was almost midnight. I didn't see my husband nor daughter. I called them, but I heard their phones ringing in the room. Feeling worried, I went outside and walked down the street, but they were nowhere to be found. When I decided I should ask someone for help, a crowd nearby caught my attention. I approached, hoping to find my husband and daughter, and suddenly I saw two familiar faces. I smiled, feeling calm. Just then, my daughter saw me and called, "Mom!" They were watching the magic show. Finally, I felt all my worries disappear.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Midnight Worries Disappear as Family Reunites at Magic Show

2. Midnight Search Leads to Reunion and Relief at Hotel Magic Show

3. A Mother's Midnight Scare Turns to Joy at Magic Show

4. Finding Family in the Midnight Crowd: A Mother's Journey to Relief

 

Main Idea #1:

A woman wakes up to find her husband and daughter missing and begins to worry.

 

Main Idea #2:

After searching outside their hotel room, the woman finally finds her husband and daughter watching a nearby magic show, bringing her great relief.

 

Summary:

A woman wakes up near midnight to find her husband and daughter missing from their hotel room. Feeling anxious, she searches the street and spots them at a magic show. Reunited, she finally feels calm and relieved.

 

Key Points:

1. The woman wakes up near midnight and cannot find her family.

2. Their phones are in the room, adding to her worry.

3. She spots a crowd outside and approaches to investigate.

4. She finds her family at a magic show and is relieved.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 20: 업무와 개인 일정을 하나의 캘린더에 통합하는 것이 효율적임]

 

Research shows that people who work have two calendars: one for work and one for their personal lives. Although it may seem sensible, having two separate calendars for work and personal life can lead to distractions. To check if something is missing, you will find yourself checking your to-do lists multiple times. Instead, organize all of your tasks in one place. It doesn't matter if you use digital or paper media. It's okay to keep your professional and personal tasks in one place. This will give you a good idea of how time is divided between work and home. This will allow you to make informed decisions about which tasks are most important.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Managing Time Effectively: Benefits of Consolidating Work and Personal Calendars

2. Streamline Productivity by Combining Professional and Personal Calendars

3. Consolidating Calendars: How Merging Work and Personal Schedules Reduces Distractions

4. Enhance Focus and Prioritize Tasks by Merging Personal and Work Calendars

 

Main Idea #1:

Maintaining separate calendars for work and personal life can create distractions and confusion.

 

Main Idea #2:

Consolidating work and personal tasks into one calendar provides a clearer overview of priorities and helps improve productivity.

 

Summary:

Keeping separate calendars for work and personal life may lead to distractions and frequent list-checking. Instead, merging both into one calendar offers a better view of how time is divided between work and personal life, helping prioritize tasks more effectively.

 

Key Points:

1. Separate calendars for work and personal life can cause distractions.

2. Consolidating tasks into one calendar provides a clearer view of priorities.

3. Using digital or paper media for organization is acceptable.

4. Merged calendars help in making informed decisions about prioritizing tasks.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 21: 고객 만족도 모니터링의 중요성과 입소문 효과]

 

Why do you care how a customer reacts to a purchase? Good question. By understanding post-purchase behavior, you can understand the influence and the likelihood of whether a buyer will repurchase the product (and whether she will keep it or return it). You'll also determine whether the buyer will encourage others to purchase the product from you. Satisfied customers can become unpaid ambassadors for your business, so customer satisfaction should be on the top of your to-do list. People tend to believe the opinions of people they know. People trust friends over advertisements any day. They know that advertisements are paid to tell the "good side" and that they're used to persuade them to purchase products and services. By continually monitoring your customer's satisfaction after the sale, you have the ability to avoid negative word-of-mouth advertising.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Importance of Post-Purchase Behavior in Building Customer Loyalty

2. Why Customer Satisfaction Matters: Turning Buyers into Brand Ambassadors

3. Harnessing Post-Purchase Behavior to Foster Positive Word-of-Mouth

4. Understanding Post-Purchase Behavior: How Customer Satisfaction Influences Repurchasing

 

Main Idea #1:

Monitoring post-purchase behavior helps understand the likelihood of repurchasing and the potential for product returns.

 

Main Idea #2:

Satisfied customers can become brand ambassadors, while careful attention to post-purchase behavior prevents negative word-of-mouth.

 

Summary:

Understanding post-purchase behavior reveals whether customers are likely to repurchase or return a product and if they will recommend it to others. Satisfied customers act as unpaid ambassadors, promoting the business through word-of-mouth, which is trusted more than advertisements. Monitoring post-purchase satisfaction helps prevent negative word-of-mouth.

 

Key Points:

1. Understanding post-purchase behavior indicates repurchasing and return likelihood.

2. Satisfied customers often recommend products to others.

3. People trust recommendations from friends more than advertisements.

4. Monitoring customer satisfaction helps prevent negative word-of-mouth.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 22: 기술 발전으로 소비자에게 떠넘겨진 노동의 증가]

 

The promise of a computerized society, we were told, was that it would pass to machines all of the repetitive drudgery of work, allowing us humans to pursue higher purposes and to have more leisure time. It didn't work out this way. Instead of more time, most of us have less. Companies large and small have off-loaded work onto the backs of consumers. Things that used to be done for us, as part of the value-added service of working with a company, we are now expected to do ourselves. With air travel, we're now expected to complete our own reservations and check-in, jobs that used to be done by airline employees or travel agents. At the grocery store, we're expected to bag our own groceries and, in some supermarkets, to scan our own purchases.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Irony of Automation: How Technology Shifted Work onto Consumers

2. Automation's Unintended Consequences: More Consumer Labor, Less Leisure Time

3. How the Computerized Society Increased Consumer Workload and Reduced Leisure

4. From Promise to Reality: Automation's Impact on Leisure and Consumer Labor

 

Main Idea #1:

The promise of automation reducing human work was not realized, as most people now have less free time.

 

Main Idea #2:

Companies shifted repetitive tasks onto consumers, making them handle jobs that used to be performed as part of a service, like booking travel or checking out groceries.

 

Summary:

Despite the promise that automation would increase leisure time, most people find themselves busier. Companies have shifted tasks to consumers that used to be part of the provided service, such as booking flights or scanning groceries. This has led to more consumer labor and less leisure time.

 

Key Points:

1. Automation was supposed to free up time by reducing repetitive work.

2. People now have less leisure time as companies shifted tasks onto consumers.

3. Examples include handling travel bookings and scanning groceries.

4. Many tasks once part of customer service are now consumer responsibilities.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 23: 사람들은 자신의 능력을 과대평가하는 경향이 있음]

 

We tend to believe that we possess a host of socially desirable characteristics, and that we are free of most of those that are socially undesirable. For example, a large majority of the general public thinks that they are more intelligent, more fair-minded, less prejudiced, and more skilled behind the wheel of an automobile than the average person. This phenomenon is so reliable and ubiquitous that it has come to be known as the "Lake Wobegon effect," after Garrison Keillor's fictional community where "the women are strong, the men are good-looking, and all the children are above average." A survey of one million high school seniors found that 70% thought they were above average in leadership ability, and only 2% thought they were below average. In terms of ability to get along with others, all students thought they were above average, 60% thought they were in the top 10%, and 25% thought they were in the top 1%!

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Understanding the "Lake Wobegon Effect": Why We Overestimate Our Abilities

2. The Lake Wobegon Effect: Illusions of Superiority in Self-Perception

3. Why We All Think We're Above Average: The Lake Wobegon Effect Explained

4. Examining the Lake Wobegon Effect: Overconfidence in Socially Desirable Traits

 

Main Idea #1:

People believe they possess socially desirable traits and lack undesirable ones, often overestimating their abilities compared to others.

 

Main Idea #2:

The "Lake Wobegon effect," named after a fictional town, describes this overestimation, with surveys showing that high school seniors overwhelmingly see themselves as above average in leadership and social skills.

 

Summary:

People consistently believe they are superior in socially desirable traits, a phenomenon known as the "Lake Wobegon effect." A survey of high school seniors revealed that the majority rated themselves above average in leadership and social skills, with many believing they rank among the top.

 

Key Points:

1. People tend to overestimate their socially desirable qualities.

2. The "Lake Wobegon effect" illustrates this overconfidence.

3. High school seniors overwhelmingly believe they are above average in leadership and social skills.

4. The phenomenon highlights widespread illusions of personal superiority.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 24: 부유한 국가일수록 시간적 압박감이 높음]

 

Few people will be surprised to hear that poverty tends to create stress: a 2006 study published in the American journal Psychosomatic Medicine, for example, noted that a lower socioeconomic status was associated with higher levels of stress hormones in the body. However, richer economies have their own distinct stresses. The key issue is time pressure. A 1999 study of 31 countries by American psychologist Robert Levine and Canadian psychologist Ara Norenzayan found that wealthier, more industrialized nations had a faster pace of life ─ which led to a higher standard of living, but at the same time left the population feeling a constant sense of urgency, as well as being more prone to heart disease. In effect, fast-paced productivity creates wealth, but it also leads people to feel time-poor when they lack the time to relax and enjoy themselves.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Time Poverty in Wealthy Nations: The Stress of Fast-Paced Living

2. How Fast-Paced Economies Create Time Poverty and Stress

3. Balancing Wealth and Well-Being: The Hidden Costs of Fast-Paced Economies

4. High Pace of Life in Rich Economies: Wealth, Stress, and the Sense of Urgency

 

Main Idea #1:

Poverty induces stress, with studies linking lower socioeconomic status to higher stress hormone levels.

 

Main Idea #2:

Wealthier economies face distinct stressors from the faster pace of life, creating a time pressure that leaves people feeling constantly rushed and susceptible to heart disease.

 

Summary:

Poverty is linked to high stress hormone levels, but fast-paced living in wealthy economies creates its own stresses. Although this lifestyle boosts productivity and wealth, people feel time-poor and under constant urgency, often experiencing health consequences.

 

Key Points:

1. Poverty is linked to increased stress hormone levels.

2. Wealthier nations have a faster pace of life, leading to constant urgency.

3. This sense of urgency makes people more prone to heart disease.

4. Fast-paced productivity generates wealth but leaves people feeling time-poor.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 25: 1990년과 2019 지역별 산림 면적 비율 그래프]

 

The above graph shows the share of forest area in total land area by region in 1990 and 2019. Africa's share of forest area in total land area was over 20% in both 1990 and 2019. The share of forest area in America was 42.6% in 1990, which was larger than that in 2019. The share of forest area in Asia declined from 1990 to 2019 by more than 10 percentage points. In 2019, the share of forest area in Europe was the largest among the five regions, more than three times that in Asia in the same year. Oceania showed the smallest gap between 1990 and 2019 in terms of the share of forest area in total land area.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Regional Trends in Forest Coverage: Comparing 1990 and 2019

2. Forest Area Declines in Asia and America, Europe Leads in 2019

3. Changes in Global Forest Distribution: Key Regional Differences from 1990 to 2019

4. Regional Shifts in Forest Coverage: Asia’s Decline and Europe’s Dominance

 

Main Idea #1:

Africa maintained over 20% of its land as forest in both 1990 and 2019.

 

Main Idea #2:

The share of forest area in total land decreased in America and Asia, while Europe had the largest share in 2019 and Oceania exhibited the smallest change.

 

Summary:

The share of forest area in total land has generally declined since 1990. Asia's forest area dropped by over 10 percentage points, while America's share also decreased. Europe had the highest forest coverage in 2019, and Oceania showed minimal changes in its forest area percentage over time.

 

Key Points:

1. Africa's forest area remained above 20% of its total land in 1990 and 2019.

2. America’s forest coverage decreased from 42.6% in 1990 to a lower figure in 2019.

3. Asia’s forest area share declined by over 10 percentage points.

4. Europe had the largest forest coverage in 2019, more than three times that of Asia.

5. Oceania had the smallest gap in forest coverage between 1990 and 2019.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 26: 노벨 경제학상 수상자 게리 베커 소개]

 

Gary Becker was born in Pottsville, Pennsylvania in 1930 and grew up in Brooklyn, New York City. His father, who was not well educated, had a deep interest in financial and political issues. After graduating from high school, Becker went to Princeton University, where he majored in economics. He was dissatisfied with his economic education at Princeton University because "it didn't seem to be handling real problems." He earned a doctor's degree in economics from the University of Chicago in 1955. His doctoral paper on the economics of discrimination was mentioned by the Nobel Prize Committee as an important contribution to economics. Since 1985, Becker had written a regular economics column in Business Week, explaining economic analysis and ideas to the general public. In 1992, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in economic science.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Regional Trends in Forest Coverage: Comparing 1990 and 2019

2. Forest Area Declines in Asia and America, Europe Leads in 2019

3. Changes in Global Forest Distribution: Key Regional Differences from 1990 to 2019

4. Regional Shifts in Forest Coverage: Asia’s Decline and Europe’s Dominance

 

Main Idea #1:

Africa maintained over 20% of its land as forest in both 1990 and 2019.

 

Main Idea #2:

The share of forest area in total land decreased in America and Asia, while Europe had the largest share in 2019 and Oceania exhibited the smallest change.

 

Summary:

The share of forest area in total land has generally declined since 1990. Asia's forest area dropped by over 10 percentage points, while America's share also decreased. Europe had the highest forest coverage in 2019, and Oceania showed minimal changes in its forest area percentage over time.

 

Key Points:

1. Africa's forest area remained above 20% of its total land in 1990 and 2019.

2. America’s forest coverage decreased from 42.6% in 1990 to a lower figure in 2019.

3. Asia’s forest area share declined by over 10 percentage points.

4. Europe had the largest forest coverage in 2019, more than three times that of Asia.

5. Oceania had the smallest gap in forest coverage between 1990 and 2019.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 29: 아이에게 긍정적 자아상을 심어주는 칭찬의 중요성]

 

Although praise is one of the most powerful tools available for improving young children's behavior, it is equally powerful for improving your child's self-esteem. Preschoolers believe what their parents tell them in a very profound way. They do not yet have the cognitive sophistication to reason analytically and reject false information. If a preschool boy consistently hears from his mother that he is smart and a good helper, he is likely to incorporate that information into his self-image. Thinking of himself as a boy who is smart and knows how to do things is likely to make him endure longer in problem-solving efforts and increase his confidence in trying new and difficult tasks. Similarly, thinking of himself as the kind of boy who is a good helper will make him more likely to volunteer to help with tasks at home and at preschool.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Positive Parental Praise Shapes Preschoolers' Self-Esteem and Behavior 

2. The Role of Parental Affirmation in Early Childhood Development 

3. How Consistent Praise Boosts Preschoolers' Confidence and Helping Behavior 

4. The Impact of Parental Praise on Preschoolers' Problem-Solving and Volunteering 

 

Main Idea #1:

Positive parental praise shapes a preschooler's self-image, influencing their behavior and confidence. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Preschoolers tend to internalize the positive affirmations they receive from their parents, which increases their problem-solving skills, encourages them to tackle new challenges, and motivates them to be helpful. 

 

Summary:

Praise is a powerful tool that shapes preschoolers' behavior and self-esteem because they believe their parents deeply. Positive affirmations help them internalize these beliefs, encouraging them to face challenges with confidence and to volunteer with helpful tasks. Praise not only molds their self-image but also inspires them to persist in problem-solving and new endeavors. 

 

Key Points:

1. Preschoolers absorb their parents' praise, shaping their self-esteem and identity. 

2. Positive affirmations make children endure challenges and persist longer in problem-solving tasks. 

3. Consistent praise about being helpful encourages children to volunteer for tasks at home and in school.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 30: 광고를 통한 상품 재포지셔닝 사례]

 

Advertisers often displayed considerable facility in adapting their claims to the market status of the goods they promoted. Fleischmann's yeast, for instance, was used as an ingredient for cooking homemade bread. Yet more and more people in the early 20th century were buying their bread from stores or bakeries, so consumer demand for yeast decreased. The producer of Fleischmann's yeast hired the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency to come up with a different marketing strategy to boost sales. No longer the "Soul of Bread," the Thompson agency first turned yeast into an important source of vitamins with significant health benefits. Shortly thereafter, the advertising agency transformed yeast into a natural laxative. Repositioning yeast helped increase sales.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. How Creative Advertising Revitalized Fleischmann's Yeast Sales 

2. Adaptive Marketing: Rebranding Fleischmann's Yeast for Modern Consumers 

3. The Strategic Transformation of Fleischmann's Yeast into a Health Product 

4. Fleischmann's Yeast: From Bread Ingredient to Health-Boosting Laxative 

 

Main Idea #1:

Advertisers adapted their strategies to promote Fleischmann's yeast despite declining demand for homemade bread. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Fleischmann's yeast was successfully repositioned from a bread-making ingredient to a health product, first as a vitamin source and then as a natural laxative, leading to increased sales. 

 

Summary:

As demand for homemade bread fell, Fleischmann's yeast producers adapted their marketing strategy with help from the J. Walter Thompson agency. They repositioned yeast from a cooking ingredient to a health product, emphasizing its vitamin content and laxative properties. This creative advertising approach boosted yeast sales significantly. 

 

Key Points:

1. Advertisers adapted their messaging to align with shifting consumer habits. 

2. Fleischmann's yeast was repositioned from a bread-making ingredient to a source of vitamins and a natural laxative. 

3. The marketing shift increased yeast sales by tapping into emerging consumer health interests.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 31: 명성에 대한 존경심을 활용한 자선 행위 에피소드]

 

Individuals who perform at a high level in their profession often have instant credibility with others. People admire them, they want to be like them, and they feel connected to them. When they speak, others listen ― even if the area of their skill has nothing to do with the advice they give. Think about a world-famous basketball player. He has made more money from endorsements than he ever did playing basketball. Is it because of his knowledge of the products he endorses? No. It's because of what he can do with a basketball. The same can be said of an Olympic medalist swimmer. People listen to him because of what he can do in the pool. And when an actor tells us we should drive a certain car, we don't listen because of his expertise on engines. We listen because we admire his talent. Excellence connects. If you possess a high level of ability in an area, others may desire to connect with you because of it.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Influence of Excellence: How Professional Success Establishes Credibility 

2. Instant Credibility: Why High Performers Garner Admiration and Trust 

3. The Magnetic Power of Excellence: How Professionals Inspire Trust Beyond Their Field 

4. High Performers and Influence: Building Connections Through Talent and Skill 

 

Main Idea #1:

High-performing individuals often have immediate credibility that inspires others, even in areas unrelated to their expertise. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Excellence in a particular field, such as sports or acting, creates a strong connection with others who admire the individual's skill, leading them to trust and follow advice beyond that specific field. 

 

Summary:

Individuals who excel in their professions have instant credibility, inspiring others regardless of the field. Their high-level skill establishes a connection that makes people trust their endorsements and advice, even if unrelated to their area of expertise. Excellence draws admiration and forms connections beyond the original domain. 

 

Key Points:

1. High-performing professionals gain credibility through excellence in their field. 

2. Their influence extends beyond their expertise due to admiration and connection. 

3. Their endorsements often succeed despite lacking specific product knowledge.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 32: 두뇌는 도시처럼 복잡한 상호작용의 결과물임]

 

Think of the brain as a city. If you were to look out over a city and ask "where is the economy located?" you'd see there's no good answer to the question. Instead, the economy emerges from the interaction of all the elements ― from the stores and the banks to the merchants and the customers. And so it is with the brain's operation: it doesn't happen in one spot. Just as in a city, no neighborhood of the brain operates in isolation. In brains and in cities, everything emerges from the interaction between residents, at all scales, locally and distantly. Just as trains bring materials and textiles into a city, which become processed into the economy, so the raw electrochemical signals from sensory organs are transported along superhighways of neurons. There the signals undergo processing and transformation into our conscious reality.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Understanding the Brain as a City: Interconnected Networks and Processes 

2. Comparing the Brain to a City: How Interaction Shapes Conscious Thought 

3. The Brain's Economy: A City-Like Network of Complex Interactions 

4. The Brain and the City: Parallel Emergence Through Networked Interactions 

 

Main Idea #1:

The brain functions like a city, where its "economy" emerges from the complex interactions between different regions. 

 

Main Idea #2:

In both cities and the brain, no neighborhood functions in isolation. Signals from sensory organs are transported via neural networks, processed, and transformed into conscious thought through interconnected interactions. 

 

Summary:

The brain functions like a city, with its economy emerging from interconnected regions rather than a single area. Each neighborhood of the brain collaborates with others, like in a city. Sensory signals travel through neural networks, becoming processed into conscious reality through these interactions. 

 

Key Points:

1. The brain's operation is similar to a city's economy, emerging from interactions between regions. 

2. No brain region operates in isolation, just like neighborhoods in cities. 

3. Sensory signals are transported and processed via neural networks, shaping conscious reality.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 33: 특정 행동을 취하면 그에 상응하는 감정이 유발됨]

 

Someone else's body language affects our own body, which then creates an emotional echo that makes us feel accordingly. As Louis Armstrong sang, "When you're smiling, the whole world smiles with you." If copying another's smile makes us feel happy, the emotion of the smiler has been transmitted via our body. Strange as it may sound, this theory states that emotions arise from our bodies. For example, our mood can be improved by simply lifting up the corners of our mouth. If people are asked to bite down on a pencil lengthwise, taking care not to let the pencil touch their lips (thus forcing the mouth into a smile-like shape), they judge cartoons funnier than if they have been asked to frown. The primacy of the body is sometimes summarized in the phrase "I must be afraid, because I'm running."

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. How Body Language Influences Emotions: The Theory of Emotional Echo 

2. The Power of Body Language: How Smiling and Movement Affect Our Emotions 

3. Understanding Emotional Echo: How Mimicking Body Language Shapes Feelings 

4. The Influence of Physical Expression on Emotions: Why We Smile When Others Do 

 

Main Idea #1:

Emotions can be transmitted through body language, creating an emotional echo that influences our own feelings. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Our emotions often arise from physical actions and expressions; smiling can make us feel happier, while bodily movements can affect how we perceive events and experiences. 

 

Summary:

Our emotions are influenced by the body language of others, creating an emotional echo. For instance, smiling can make us feel happier, and when asked to bite a pencil to mimic a smile, people find cartoons funnier than when frowning. This theory, summarized as "I must be afraid because I'm running," suggests that emotions arise from physical actions and expressions. 

 

Key Points:

1. Body language from others can affect our emotional state through an emotional echo. 

2. Physical actions like smiling can improve our mood. 

3. Mimicking a smile leads people to perceive things as more amusing. 

4. The theory suggests that emotions arise from bodily expressions.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 34: 제한된 구매 수량이 판매를 증가시키는 사례]

 

Restricting the number of items customers can buy boosts sales. Brian Wansink, Professor of Marketing at Cornell University, investigated the effectiveness of this tactic in 1998. He persuaded three supermarkets in Sioux City, Iowa, to offer Campbell's soup at a small discount: 79 cents rather than 89 cents. The discounted soup was sold in one of three conditions: a control, where there was no limit on the volume of purchases, or two tests, where customers were limited to either four or twelve cans. In the unlimited condition shoppers bought 3.3 cans on average, whereas in the scarce condition, when there was a limit, they bought 5.3 on average. This suggests scarcity encourages sales. The findings are particularly strong because the test took place in a supermarket with genuine shoppers. It didn't rely on claimed data, nor was it held in a laboratory where consumers might behave differently.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Scarcity Marketing Boosts Sales: Evidence from Campbell's Soup Experiment 

2. The Impact of Purchase Limits on Consumer Buying Behavior in Supermarkets 

3. How Limiting Purchases Can Drive Sales: Insights from a Marketing Experiment 

4. Scarcity Effect on Sales: How Purchase Restrictions Influence Buying Patterns 

 

Main Idea #1:

Setting limits on the number of items customers can buy leads to increased sales due to the perceived scarcity of the product. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Brian Wansink's 1998 experiment with Campbell's soup found that limiting customers to four or twelve cans boosted sales compared to when no purchase limit was imposed, revealing that scarcity is an effective marketing tactic. 

 

Summary:

Brian Wansink's 1998 experiment demonstrated that imposing a purchase limit on Campbell's soup increased sales, with shoppers buying an average of 5.3 cans when limits were set compared to 3.3 without restrictions. This experiment in a real supermarket setting confirms that scarcity marketing effectively encourages customers to buy more. 

 

Key Points:

1. Restricting purchase limits can boost sales by creating a sense of scarcity. 

2. Shoppers purchased significantly more soup when there was a limit on the number of cans they could buy. 

3. The experiment's real-world supermarket setting adds credibility to the findings. 

4. This marketing tactic doesn't rely on self-reported data or controlled laboratory behavior.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 35: 새로운 기술 도입  생산성에 미치는 영향]

 

Although technology has the potential to increase productivity, it can also have a negative impact on productivity. For example, in many office environments workers sit at desks with computers and have access to the internet. They are able to check their personal e-mails and use social media whenever they want to. This can stop them from doing their work and make them less productive. Introducing new technology can also have a negative impact on production when it causes a change to the production process or requires workers to learn a new system. Learning to use new technology can be time consuming and stressful for workers and this can cause a decline in productivity.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Balancing Technology and Productivity: Navigating Digital Distractions and Learning Curves 

2. The Dual Nature of Technology: How New Systems Can Hamper Workplace Productivity 

3. Understanding the Challenges of Technology Adoption in the Workplace 

4. The Impact of Technology on Productivity: Distractions and Learning Curves 

 

Main Idea #1:

Technology, despite its potential, can reduce productivity due to distractions like social media and personal emails. 

 

Main Idea #2:

New technology can negatively impact productivity if it disrupts existing processes or requires workers to learn unfamiliar systems, as training can be time-consuming and stressful. 

 

Summary:

Although technology can boost productivity, it also brings challenges. In office settings, distractions like social media and personal emails can reduce productivity. Additionally, new systems can disrupt workflows and require time-consuming, stressful training, further hampering productivity. 

 

Key Points:

1. Office workers often get distracted by personal emails and social media, reducing productivity. 

2. New technology can disrupt production processes and require a challenging learning curve. 

3. Training on new systems is time-consuming and can cause stress, leading to reduced productivity.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 36: 시간 측정의 역사와 시계의 중요성]

 

Up until about 6,000 years ago, most people were farmers. Many lived in different places throughout the year, hunting for food or moving their livestock to areas with enough food. There was no need to tell the time because life depended on natural cycles, such as the changing seasons or sunrise and sunset. Gradually more people started to live in larger settlements, and some needed to tell the time. For example, priests wanted to know when to carry out religious ceremonies. This was when people first invented clocks ― devices that show, measure, and keep track of passing time. Clocks have been important ever since. Today, clocks are used for important things such as setting busy airport timetables ― if the time is incorrect, aeroplanes might crash into each other when taking off or landing!

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Evolution of Clocks: From Farming Societies to Modern Airports 

2. The Role of Clocks in Human History: From Seasonal Farming to Precise Aviation 

3. How Clocks Transformed Society: Understanding the Need to Track Time 

4. The Importance of Clocks: From Ancient Religious Ceremonies to Modern Timetables 

 

Main Idea #1:

Clocks were invented to meet the needs of societies transitioning from farming to living in larger, organized settlements. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Clocks have grown in importance, initially aiding religious ceremonies but now playing a crucial role in precise scheduling, such as coordinating airport timetables to prevent accidents. 

 

Summary:

Clocks were first invented to help early societies transitioning from farming to larger settlements accurately track time for activities like religious ceremonies. Today, clocks are indispensable for coordinating complex tasks, such as managing airport schedules to ensure flight safety. 

 

Key Points:

1. Before clocks, early societies relied on natural cycles to manage their daily lives. 

2. Clocks were created to aid priests in timing religious ceremonies. 

3. Modern clocks ensure accurate timetables, preventing potentially dangerous accidents like airplane collisions.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 37: 분업을 통한 생산성 향상 방안]

 

Managers are always looking for ways to increase productivity, which is the ratio of costs to output in production. Adam Smith, writing when the manufacturing industry was new, described a way that production could be made more efficient, known as the "division of labor." Making most manufactured goods involves several different processes using different skills. Smith's example was the manufacture of pins: the wire is straightened, sharpened, a head is put on, and then it is polished. One worker could do all these tasks, and make 20 pins in a day. But this work can be divided into its separate processes, with a number of workers each performing one task. Because each worker specializes in one job, he or she can work much faster without changing from one task to another. Now 10 workers can produce thousands of pins in a day ─ a huge increase in productivity from the 200 they would have produced before.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Understanding Adam Smith's Division of Labor and Its Impact on Productivity 

2. How Specialization Transforms Production: Adam Smith's Division of Labor 

3. Increasing Efficiency in Manufacturing: The Role of Labor Division 

4. Division of Labor: From 20 to Thousands of Pins in a Day 

 

Main Idea #1:

The division of labor is a method to increase productivity by dividing production into specialized tasks. 

 

Main Idea #2:

Adam Smith illustrated the division of labor through pin manufacturing, showing how breaking down the process into specialized tasks allowed 10 workers to make thousands of pins daily, rather than only 200. 

 

Summary:

Managers seek productivity improvements through the division of labor, where each worker specializes in one production task. Adam Smith used pin manufacturing as an example, demonstrating that by dividing the tasks, 10 workers could produce thousands of pins daily, compared to the 200 pins they would produce individually. 

 

Key Points:

1. Division of labor increases productivity by allowing workers to specialize. 

2. In pin manufacturing, production was divided into tasks like sharpening and polishing. 

3. With the division of labor, 10 workers could produce thousands of pins daily, up from 200.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 38: 시간이 지남에 따라 우리 모습도 변화함]

 

Sometimes the pace of change is far slower. The face you saw reflected in your mirror this morning probably appeared no different from the face you saw the day before ― or a week or a month ago. Yet we know that the face that stares back at us from the glass is not the same, cannot be the same, as it was 10 minutes ago. The proof is in your photo album: Look at a photograph taken of yourself 5 or 10 years ago and you see clear differences between the face in the snapshot and the face in your mirror. If you lived in a world without mirrors for a year and then saw your reflection, you might be surprised by the change. After an interval of 10 years without seeing yourself, you might not at first recognize the person peering from the mirror. Even something as basic as our own face changes from moment to moment.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Slow Yet Constant: How Our Faces Change Gradually Over Time 

2. Understanding the Pace of Change: Why Our Faces Seem Static in Daily Reflection 

3. The Gradual Transformation of Faces: Recognizing Long-Term Changes in Ourselves 

4. The Mirror vs. the Photo Album: Perceiving the Subtle Evolution of Our Faces 

 

Main Idea #1:

Our faces change gradually over time, even though daily reflections make them seem static. 

 

Main Idea #2:

The gradual pace of facial changes becomes evident when comparing old photographs, revealing significant differences that are not noticeable in everyday reflections. 

 

Summary:

Our faces change so slowly that daily reflections appear identical, yet comparing them to photographs from years ago reveals stark differences. If deprived of mirrors for a long time, we might not recognize our reflection, demonstrating how subtle changes accumulate over time. 

 

Key Points:

1. Daily reflections make it challenging to perceive gradual changes in our faces. 

2. Old photographs reveal the significant transformation our faces undergo over time. 

3. Without seeing one's reflection for a long period, facial changes become more surprising and recognizable.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 39: 아이의 호기심이 점차 줄어드는 이유]

 

According to educational psychologist Susan Engel, curiosity begins to decrease as young as four years old. By the time we are adults, we have fewer questions and more default settings. As Henry James put it, "Disinterested curiosity is past, the mental grooves and channels set." The decline in curiosity can be traced in the development of the brain through childhood. Though smaller than the adult brain, the infant brain contains millions more neural connections. The wiring, however, is a mess; the lines of communication between infant neurons are far less efficient than between those in the adult brain. The baby's perception of the world is consequently both intensely rich and wildly disordered. As children absorb more evidence from the world around them, certain possibilities become much more likely and more useful and harden into knowledge or beliefs. The neural pathways that enable those beliefs become faster and more automatic, while the ones that the child doesn't use regularly are pruned away.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. How Curiosity Diminishes Over Time: Exploring the Neural Changes from Childhood to Adulthood 

2. The Decline of Curiosity: Understanding Neural Pathway Changes from Childhood to Adulthood 

3. Neural Pathways and Curiosity: How Childhood Brain Development Affects Questioning 

4. From Rich Disorder to Efficiency: How Our Brain Development Limits Curiosity 

 

Main Idea #1:

Curiosity begins to diminish as early as age four, leaving adults with fewer questions and more fixed beliefs. 

 

Main Idea #2:

In childhood, the brain is highly interconnected but disorganized. As children learn more about the world, the neural pathways that reinforce existing beliefs become stronger while unused connections are pruned, leading to faster but more rigid thinking. 

 

Summary:

Curiosity wanes starting at age four as neural pathways in the brain become streamlined. In childhood, the brain is highly connected but disordered. As children gain knowledge, certain beliefs are reinforced through faster neural connections, while unused pathways are pruned away, leaving adults with more rigid thinking patterns. 

 

Key Points:

1. Curiosity decreases significantly beginning at age four. 

2. Children's brains are highly connected but initially disorganized. 

3. As children absorb information, useful neural pathways strengthen while others are pruned. 

4. Adults tend to have fewer questions and more fixed beliefs due to this neural pruning.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 40: 건강한 식단을 위해서는 식품 분류가 아닌 균형 잡힌 섭취가 중요함]

 

Nearly eight of ten U.S. adults believe there are "good foods" and "bad foods." Unless we're talking about spoiled stew, poison mushrooms, or something similar, however, no foods can be labeled as either good or bad. There are, however, combinations of foods that add up to a healthful or unhealthful diet. Consider the case of an adult who eats only foods thought of as "good" ― for example, raw broccoli, apples, orange juice, boiled tofu, and carrots. Although all these foods are nutrient-dense, they do not add up to a healthy diet because they don't supply a wide enough variety of the nutrients we need. Or take the case of the teenager who occasionally eats fried chicken, but otherwise stays away from fried foods. The occasional fried chicken isn't going to knock his or her diet off track. But the person who eats fried foods every day, with few vegetables or fruits, and loads up on supersized soft drinks, candy, and chips for snacks has a bad diet.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. Debunking the Myth of "Good" and "Bad" Foods: Building a Balanced Diet 

2. Beyond Labels: Understanding How Food Combinations Affect Dietary Health 

3. The Importance of Dietary Variety: Why No Single Food Is Universally "Good" or "Bad" 

4. The Complexity of Nutrition: How Food Choices and Combinations Define Diet Quality 

 

Main Idea #1:

Labeling foods as "good" or "bad" is misleading; diet quality is determined by the overall combination of foods consumed. 

 

Main Idea #2:

A diet consisting solely of nutrient-dense "good" foods can still lack essential nutrients, while occasionally eating "bad" foods doesn't necessarily lead to a poor diet unless it's part of an unbalanced, unhealthy eating pattern. 

 

Summary:

Despite popular beliefs, no foods are inherently "good" or "bad." Diet quality depends on the overall combination of foods consumed. Even nutrient-dense foods like broccoli or tofu can't form a complete diet on their own, and occasionally eating fried foods isn't harmful if paired with healthier habits. An unbalanced diet emerges when unhealthy foods dominate, and nutrient-rich foods are neglected. 

 

Key Points:

1. Most U.S. adults label foods as either "good" or "bad." 

2. Even nutrient-dense foods don't provide a complete diet on their own. 

3. The occasional indulgence in "bad" foods is harmless if balanced with healthier choices. 

4. A poor diet results from consistent overconsumption of unhealthy foods paired with neglect of nutrient-rich options.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 41~42: 농업 발달로 잉여 식량이 생기면서 전문 직업이 생겨남]

 

Early hunter-gatherer societies had minimal structure. A chief or group of elders usually led the camp or village. Most of these leaders had to hunt and gather along with the other members because the surpluses of food and other vital resources were seldom sufficient to support a full-time chief or village council. The development of agriculture changed work patterns. Early farmers could reap 3-10 kg of grain from each 1 kg of seed planted. Part of this food/energy surplus was returned to the community and provided support for nonfarmers such as chieftains, village councils, men who practice medicine, priests, and warriors. In return, the nonfarmers provided leadership and security for the farming population, enabling it to continue to increase food/energy yields and provide ever larger surpluses. With improved technology and favorable conditions, agriculture produced consistent surpluses of the basic necessities, and population groups grew in size. These groups concentrated in towns and cities, and human tasks specialized further. Specialists such as carpenters, blacksmiths, merchants, traders, and sailors developed their skills and became more efficient in their use of time and energy. The goods and services they provided brought about an improved quality of life, a higher standard of living, and, for most societies, increased stability.

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Evolution of Early Societies: From Hunter-Gatherers to Agricultural Specialists 

2. How Agriculture Transformed Societal Structure and Work Patterns 

3. The Impact of Agriculture: Surpluses, Specialization, and Societal Development 

4. From Chiefdoms to Cities: The Role of Agriculture in Shaping Human Societies 

 

Main Idea #1:

Early hunter-gatherer societies had minimal structure, with leaders who also worked due to limited food surpluses. 

 

Main Idea #2:

The advent of agriculture allowed societies to generate surpluses, leading to specialization and the growth of towns and cities where nonfarmers could offer specialized goods and services that improved living standards and stability. 

 

Summary:

Hunter-gatherer societies had simple structures due to limited food surpluses. With agriculture, societies created surpluses that supported nonfarmers like chiefs and warriors. This surplus led to the specialization of tasks, improved living standards, and societal stability as groups concentrated in towns and cities and relied on specialized skills like carpentry and blacksmithing. 

 

Key Points:

1. Early hunter-gatherers had minimal leadership structures due to a lack of surpluses. 

2. Agriculture produced surpluses that enabled societal specialization and growth. 

3. Towns and cities emerged, fostering specialists who improved living standards. 

4. Specialization brought stability and a higher quality of life through efficient use of time and skills.

 


[
1 2023 06 – 43~45: 아들을 간호하며 임종을 지켜준 병사의 인간애 실화]

 

A nurse took a tired, anxious soldier to the bedside. "Jack, your son is here," the nurse said to an old man lying on the bed. She had to repeat the words several times before the old man's eyes opened. Suffering from the severe pain because of heart disease, he barely saw the young uniformed soldier standing next to him. He reached out his hand to the soldier. The soldier gently wrapped his fingers around the weak hand of the old man. The nurse brought a chair so that the soldier could sit beside the bed. All through the night the young soldier sat there, holding the old man's hand and offering him words of support and comfort. Occasionally, she suggested that the soldier take a rest for a while. He politely said no. Whenever the nurse came into the room, she heard the soldier say a few gentle words. The old man said nothing, only held tightly to him all through the night. Just before dawn, the old man died. The soldier released the old man's hand and left the room to find the nurse. After she was told what happened, she went back to the room with him. The soldier hesitated for a while and asked, "Who was this man?" She was surprised and asked, "Wasn't he your father?" "No, he wasn't. I've never met him before," the soldier replied. She asked, "Then why didn't you say something when I took you to him?" He said, "I knew there had been a mistake, but when I realized that he was too sick to tell whether or not I was his son, I could see how much he needed me. So, I stayed."

 

 

Possible Titles:

1. The Compassion of a Stranger: A Soldier's Act of Kindness at a Hospital Bedside 

2. Finding Purpose in Compassion: A Soldier's Selfless Vigil for an Elderly Patient 

3. The Power of Empathy: How a Soldier Offered Comfort to a Dying Stranger 

4. A Mistaken Identity, A Selfless Act: The Unexpected Bond Between a Soldier and an Old Man 

 

Main Idea #1:

A soldier offered comfort and stayed by the bedside of an elderly, dying man, despite realizing they were strangers. 

 

Main Idea #2:

After recognizing a case of mistaken identity, the soldier chose to provide solace to the suffering old man, understanding the depth of support and companionship he needed in his final hours. 

 

Summary:

Mistaken for the old man's son, a compassionate soldier stayed by his bedside throughout the night, offering words of support and comfort despite being a stranger. Realizing how much the elderly man needed him, the soldier chose to stay until the old man passed away, embodying empathy and selfless kindness. 

 

Key Points:

1. The nurse mistakenly introduced the soldier as the old man's son. 

2. The soldier recognized the error but stayed to offer comfort to the dying man. 

3. He held the man's hand and provided supportive words throughout the night. 

4. The soldier's empathetic presence eased the old man's final hours, despite their being strangers.

 

 

 

 

오늘은 <2024년도 3월 고3 영어 모의고사>의 지문 요약 자료 올립니다.
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설명문/실용문을 제외한 전지문을 포함했습니다. (PDF 및 Word 파일)  
지문 분석하거나 자료 제작하실 때 참고하세요~♡

 

 

 

ps.

블로그 콘텐츠가 마음에 드신다면, '좋아요' 클릭과 광고 지원으로 응원해 주세요. 

여러분의 작은 도움이 큰 힘이 됩니다! 

감사합니다~~

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  파일 다운로드

 

[고3] 2024년 3월 모의고사 - 제목 요지 서머리 정리 (전지문).pdf
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[고3] 2024년 3월 모의고사 - 제목 요지 서머리 정리 (전지문).docx
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[고3] 2024년 3월 모의고사 - 한줄해석

의 한줄해석 자료 올립니다. 설명문/실용문을 제외한 모든 지문을 포함했습니다. 그리고 자료는 PDF와 워드 파일 모두 올립니다. 지문 분석하거나 자료 제작하실 때 참고하세요. PDF & Word 파일 다

flowedu.tistory.com

 

 

 

 

 

오늘은 <2024년도 3월 고2 영어 모의고사>의 지문 요약 자료 올립니다.
ChatGPT 유료 버전(ChatGPT 4.0)으로 작업했고,

설명문/실용문을 제외한 전지문을 포함했습니다. (PDF 및 Word 파일)  
지문 분석하거나 자료 제작하실 때 참고하세요~♡

 

 

 

ps.

블로그 콘텐츠가 마음에 드신다면, '좋아요' 클릭과 광고 지원으로 응원해 주세요. 

여러분의 작은 도움이 큰 힘이 됩니다! 

감사합니다~~

 

 

 

 

 

 

  파일 다운로드

 

[고2] 2024년 3월 모의고사 - 제목 요지 서머리 정리 (전지문).pdf
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[고2] 2024년 3월 모의고사 - 제목 요지 서머리 정리 (전지문).docx
0.05MB

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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[고2] 2024년 3월 모의고사 - 한줄해석

의 한줄해석 자료 올립니다. 설명문/실용문을 제외한 모든 지문을 포함했습니다. 그리고 자료는 PDF와 워드 파일 모두 올립니다. 지문 분석하거나 자료 제작하실 때 참고하세요. PDF & Word 파일 다

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오늘은 <2024년도 3월 고1 영어 모의고사>의 지문 요약 자료 올립니다.
ChatGPT 유료 버전(ChatGPT 4.0)으로 작업했고,

설명문/실용문을 제외한 전지문을 포함했습니다. (PDF 및 Word 파일)  
지문 분석하거나 자료 제작하실 때 참고하세요~♡

 

 

 

ps.

블로그 콘텐츠가 마음에 드신다면, '좋아요' 클릭과 광고 지원으로 응원해 주세요. 

여러분의 작은 도움이 큰 힘이 됩니다! 

감사합니다~~

 

 

 

 

 

 

  파일 다운로드

 

[고1] 2024년 3월 모의고사 - 제목 요지 서머리 정리 (전지문)_revised_20240330.pdf
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[고1] 2024년 3월 모의고사 - 제목 요지 서머리 정리 (전지문)_revised_20240330.docx
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[오류수정]

31번 지문에 내용 일부 누락되어 수정했습니다. (2024.03.30. 오전 11시)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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[고1] 2024년 3월 모의고사 - 한줄해석

의 한줄해석 자료 올립니다. 설명문/실용문을 제외한 모든 지문을 포함했습니다. 그리고 자료는 PDF와 워드 파일 모두 올립니다. 지문 분석하거나 자료 제작하실 때 참고하세요. PDF & Word 파일 다

flowedu.tistory.com

 

 

[무료 PDF & Word] 2025 EBS 수능특강 영어독해 (전체 범위) - 제목/요지/요약/글흐름 by ChatGPT 4.0

 

<2025 EBS 수능특강 영어독해연습> 요약자료 올립니다.

전체 내용 작업했습니다. (도표나 3문제 장문독해는 제외)

 

혹 필요한 분이 있을지 몰라

워드와 PDF 파일 모두 올립니다.

지문 분석할 때 참고하세요.

 

그리고 다음에는 글의 흐름과 배경지식, 비유, 연관 주제 등을 포함한, 

한글 설명 위주의 좀 더 쉬운 내용으로 

다시 한번 수특영어 수특영독 요약본 만들어서 올려보려고 합니다.

 

자료가 도움이 된다면 아래 하트도 눌러주세요~♡ 

자료 제작에 큰 힘이 됩니다 :)

 

ps

어제 오늘 EBS 자료 제작 금지로 난리군요.

당장 올해 고3 학생들 내신 수업이 걱정이네요ㅠ.ㅠ

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ps.

블로그 콘텐츠가 마음에 드신다면, '좋아요' 클릭과 광고 지원으로 응원해 주세요. 

여러분의 작은 도움이 큰 힘이 됩니다! 

감사합니다~~

 

[고3] 2025년 수능특강 영어독해 - 제목 요지 서머리 정리 (전체 범위)_내용수정_20240229.pdf
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[고3] 2025년 수능특강 영어독해 - 제목 요지 서머리 정리 (전체 범위)_내용수정_20240229.docx
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