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VOA慢速英语(翻译+字幕+讲解):新科技帮助非洲妇女阅读

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  • This is the VOA Learning English Education Report.
  • 这里是美国之音慢速英语教育报道。
  • More and more Africans are using text messages, e-mail and social media to communicate.
  • 越来越多的非洲人靠发短信、电子邮件和使用社交媒体来交流,
  • In Senegal, educators are using new technologies to teach women to read.
  • 在塞内加尔,教育者使用新技术来教妇女们学习阅读。
  • The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization, UNESCO, launched the program in Senegal two years ago.
  • 联合国教科文组织(UNESCO)两年前在塞内加尔发起了这一项目,
  • But UNESCO officials are now expanding it to as many as six other African countries.
  • 但该组织官员现在将项目推广到另外6个非洲国家。
  • Mariama Daffe sits in front of a television at her home in a community near Senegal's capital Dakar.
  • 马里亚玛·达菲坐在家里电视机前,她家在塞内加尔首都达喀尔附近一个社区,
  • She is learning to write and work with numbers. Ms. Daffe started this home-study program a year ago. She was 39 years old at the time.
  • 她在学习写字和数数。达菲一年前开始这个在家学习的项目,当时她已经39岁了。
  • The Ministry of Education joined with UNESCO to create these training modules for literacy -- reading and writing.
  • 教育部加入联合国教科文组织并发起了这个扫盲培训,
  • The program appears daily on state television. Women taking part say these lessons have made them more independent.
  • 该项目每天都出现在国家电视台上。参加学习的妇女们说这些课程让她们更独立。
  • Mariama Daffe says, "These days I have my mobile telephone, and I can read messages and I can send messages, too."
  • 马里亚玛·达菲说,“现在我有了手机,我能看短信和发短信。”
  • Ms. Daffe finishes her lesson and starts preparing dinner for her husband and three children.
  • 达菲上完课程,就开始为丈夫和三个孩子准备晚饭。
  • She says the TV programs are convenient. She studies three modules a week, yet she has a full-time job and travels two hours by bus every day.
  • 她说电视节目很方便,她每周学习三个模块,她有份全职工作,每天坐两小时公交上班。
  • At-home study programs are easy to operate and not costly.
  • 在家学习项目很容易操作,且成本低。
  • That makes them especially useful for a place like Senegal, which has limited money to teach literacy.
  • 这对塞内加尔这样扫盲资金有限的地方来说尤其有用。
  • But some women prefer the classroom experience.
  • 但有的妇女更喜欢在课堂上学习。
  • Ten minutes down the road from Mariama Daffe's home, women write on a chalkboard at the local elementary school.
  • 从马里亚玛·达菲家出来走路10分钟,有一所当地小学,妇女们在黑板上写字。
  • Thirty-nine-year-old Astou Keita says it is never too late to learn.
  • 39岁的阿斯托·凯塔说学习永远不会晚。
  • She says, "My kids laugh at me. They think it is funny that I started learning at this age."
  • “我的孩子们都笑我,他们觉得这个年龄开始学习很搞笑。”
  • Mamadou Diallo is a teacher. He uses a laptop computer and a projector to prepare an interactive display wall.
  • 马马杜·迪亚洛是一名教师,他使用笔记本电脑和投影仪来准备一面互动展示墙,
  • The students use the wall while a class in mathematics is taught.
  • 学生们上数学课时要用到这面墙。
  • Mr. Diallo says the first time the women saw the interactive display wall, they became very interested.
  • 迪亚洛说妇女们第一次看到这面互动展示墙时很感兴趣,
  • They could not wait to try it. He told them, "First, we need to work on the chalkboard before we can start the math."
  • 她们等不及要用这片墙了。他告诉她们,“首先,在开始数学课之前,我们需要做黑板上的题。”
  • He asks a student to read a word problem and do the work with numbers. She then answers the mathematical problem on the wall.
  • 他让一名学生读一道题并计算。她回答了墙上的数学题。
  • And that's the VOA Learning English Education Report. I'm Jerilyn Watson.
  • 这就是美国之音慢速英语教育报道,我是杰瑞琳·沃森。


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This is the VOA Learning English Education Report.

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More and more Africans are using text messages, e-mail and social media to communicate. In Senegal, educators are using new technologies to teach women to read. The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization, UNESCO, launched the program in Senegal two years ago. But UNESCO officials are now expanding it to as many as six other African countries.

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Mariama Daffe sits in front of a television at her home in a community near Senegal's capital Dakar. She is learning to write and work with numbers. Ms. Daffe started this home-study program a year ago. She was 39 years old at the time.

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The Ministry of Education joined with UNESCO to create these training modules for literacy -- reading and writing. The program appears daily on state television. Women taking part say these lessons have made them more independent.

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Mariama Daffe says, "These days I have my mobile telephone, and I can read messages and I can send messages, too."

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Ms. Daffe finishes her lesson and starts preparing dinner for her husband and three children. She says the TV programs are convenient. She studies three modules a week, yet she has a full-time job and travels two hours by bus every day.

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At-home study programs are easy to operate and not costly. That makes them especially useful for a place like Senegal, which has limited money to teach literacy.

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But some women prefer the classroom experience.

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Ten minutes down the road from Mariama Daffe's home, women write on a chalkboard at the local elementary school. Thirty-nine-year-old Astou Keita says it is never too late to learn.

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She says, "My kids laugh at me. They think it is funny that I started learning at this age."

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Mamadou Diallo is a teacher. He uses a laptop computer and a projector to prepare an interactive display wall. The students use the wall while a class in mathematics is taught.

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Mr. Diallo says the first time the women saw the interactive display wall, they became very interested. They could not wait to try it. He told them, "First, we need to work on the chalkboard before we can start the math."

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He asks a student to read a word problem and do the work with numbers.

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She then answers the mathematical problem on the wall.

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And that's the VOA Learning English Education Report. I'm Jerilyn Watson.

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文本来自51voa,译文属可可原创,仅供学习交流使用,未经许可请勿转载ed;l(;UtsMn*@nI8-=3S

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intelligence [in'telidʒəns]

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n. 理解力,智力
n. 情报,情报工作,情报

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rescue ['reskju:]

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vt. 营救,援救
n. 营救,救援

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independent [indi'pendənt]

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adj. 独立的,自主的,有主见的
n. 独立

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convenient [kən'vi:njənt]

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adj. 方便的,便利的

 
display [di'splei]

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n. 显示,陈列,炫耀
vt. 显示,表现,夸

 
minutes ['minits]

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n. 会议记录,(复数)分钟

 
elementary [.elə'mentəri]

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adj. 基本的,初级的,元素的

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expanding [iks'pændiŋ]

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扩展的,扩充的

 
costly ['kɔstli]

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adj. 昂贵的,代价高的

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communicate [kə'mju:nikeit]

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v. 交流,传达,沟通

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