Transcript
Tapescript Section 1: Prime Recruitment Employee Record
Clive:
Hello, Edwina, is it? Have a seat.
Edwina:
Yes, Edwina. Thanks. I’m looking for a job as a nanny. I like working with children. I talked to you yesterday?
Clive:
Oh, yes. Well, we covered most of the ground on the phone yesterday. I’ve got a form I need to complete for my records. So, you’re Edwina Riley, and how should we contact you?
Edwina:
By email I check it regularly.
Clive:
What’s the address?
Edwina:
It’s Edwina like my name then R-I, the first two letters of my surname. at worldnet dot com.
Clive:
E-D-W-I-N-A-R-I at worldnet dot com?
Edwina:
Yes
Clive:
Good. And you’re from Australia?
Edwina:
Actually, I’m a New Zealander.
Clive:
Oh, I’m sorry. I bet it’s really irritating being told you’re an Australian. Like Canadians being asked what part of the States they’re from.
Edwina:
I’m used to it. It happens to us all the time.
Clive:
And now, you said on the phone that you could bring me some references? One from someone who’s known you in a professional capacity and one personal one?
Edwina:
Ah, yeah. Here’s one from John Keen, who was the manager at the play centre in Wellington where I worked for three years after I left school. It’s got all contact details on.
Clive:
Thank you. So this was your last employer?
Edwina:
Yes, apart from a bit of waitressing recently, but that was just temporary. I’m sure John will answer any questions if you contact him.
Clive:
We do run checks, yes. And a personal reference?
Edwina:
Ah, you can contact the friend of my mother’s I’m staying with here in London: Eileen Dorsini. She’s a professor. She’s known me all my life because she used to be our neighbour back home when she was a primary school teacher there. Now she’s working here at the Institute of Education.
Clive:
Oh good!
Edwina:
I’ve got her contact details here for you.
Clive:
Thanks. I think I have some jobs to suit you. Oh, do you have any practical qualifications, by the way? Life-saving, music, anything?
Edwina:
Um, I’ve got an up-to-date first aid certificate. I did a course when I was working.
Clive:
That’s good. First aid. Anything else?
Edwina:
Well, I’ve got a driving licence, as I told you on the phone. But that’s not special, you said, almost everyone needs that really. I’ve got a sailing qualification, it’s a certificate of competence.
Clive:
So you’re a yachtswoman?
Edwina:
I love sailing.
Clive:
Well, I’ll note you have a certificate. Hmm. Now, as I mentioned yesterday, there are three families and the job description is much the same for all of them, as I explained. There are a few other things you need to know. Anyway, the first family’s here in London.
Edwina:
Yes, I did make a few notes. London, er, that’s the Bentons? With two children?
Clive:
Good, but what they mainly want is someone with an interest in sport, as that’s the kind of family they are.
Edwina:
Oh, that’s OK. I’ll enjoy that.
Clive:
Good. Now the next people are in the country, near Oxford.
Edwina:
Oh yeah, the Grangers?
Clive:
So, they have twin boys of five, who are a bit of a handful, I suspect, but it’s a lovely place, quite a grand house, and the family is extremely welcoming. They keep horses. Do you ride?
Edwina:
I did when I was younger. I like animals generally.
Clive:
Well, ‘animal-lover’ was their special request, so you’d be fine there. The last family…
Edwina:
Yes?
Clive:
I don’t think I told you they live in Scotland.
Edwina:
Really? What’s their name?
Clive:
Campbell.
Edwina:
Oh, yes. And they have four girls under ten?
Clive:
That’s it. They have a lovely city flat, and they own a small island.
Edwina:
Wow!
Clive:
Actually, you might get on with them very well. They particularly wanted someone who would be prepared to cook when they go camping on the island.
Edwina:
Camping would really suit me and I’m used to taking my turn doing the food. But it is a long way from London.
Clive:
Mm. Yeah, well, you can think about it. Um, then as soon as I’ve checked your references, we can arrange for you to talk to all of the families.
Edwina:
Right. Thanks very much!
Clive:
Thank you! I’ll email you as soon as I can.
Tapescript Section 2: Cityscope Sports And Leisure
Ladies and gentlemen:
I’m very pleased to be able to welcome you to ‘Cityscope’, our lovely modern sports and leisure facility.
I’ve brought you up to the rooftop café on top of the stadium so that you can enjoy the view while I explain briefly what we have here and point out to you the major features of the site. Then we’ll go round and have a look at ground level.
We’re extremely proud of this new facility. You see, when the project was first discussed, we expected that a multinational company would give us half our funding and the central government grant would make up most of the rest, with a smaller contribution from local business.
Well, we’d got quite far into the planning stage when the multinational pulled out and both central and local government decided they couldn’t afford anything, so we ended up with a beautiful project, a small amount of sponsorship promised by local organizations and nothing else.
We thought we’d never build it, but at the last moment, we had an amazing donation of several million pounds from a national transport company, and that got us going again and we managed to get all the rest from local fundraising.
There’s hardly a street in the city that hasn’t made its contribution one way or another, so there’s a true sense of local ownership here.
So, this is what we got. We wanted a new stadium because the 1950s football stadium is on the other side of town and is shortly due to be pulled down and built over.
This site was the old airport with some playing fields on one side of it and a few buildings from the 1930s when the airfield first opened.
So we were able to plan a new stadium with plenty of room for all the things people wanted.
The playing fields have been upgraded and re-fenced so they are now a set of top-quality outdoor pitches for amateur football, hockey, and so on.
We have both sports and other entertainments here. We want to encourage all kinds of people onto the site and hope some of them may come to use the cinema or the café and end up trying the fitness centre.
These are all grouped together: the café is in the original 1930s passenger hall and the architects have managed to retain some of the elegant style of the building.
The other buildings, like the control tower, which would have made a great feature, and the aircraft hangars which we had hoped might house the fitness centre, were unfortunately not structurally sound enough to preserve. So everything else is newly built, opened in 2010.
Right, now:
If you’d like to gather a little closer to the window I’ll point out the various buildings.
We’re at the highest point of the stadium here in the rooftop café, on the opposite side to the main entrance doors.
On our left, you can see two buildings just beyond the end of the stadium.
The closest one is the business centre, used for meetings and conferences, and so on, which provides a good source of revenue for the upkeep of the sports facilities; and next to the business centre the biggest building is the hotel which is rented from us by an independent company.
As you see, they are served by the perimeter road which runs round three-quarters of the site.
Now, coming round to the front of the building, immediately in front of the entrance, that circular open space at the end of the road is the transport hub.
From here, there are buses and a monorail link to the free car park, about ten minutes from here, but you can’t see that.
There’s also a large secure cycle park. Oh, and secure parking, of course. People find it’s very convenient and it keeps the site virtually car-free.
OK. Now if you look as far as you can over to the right, beyond the buildings, you can see our outdoor pitches, which I mentioned earlier. Between the pitches and the entrance is a little kind of pedestrian plaza…. are you with me?
OK, with the cinema in the building furthest away from us, next to the pitches, then there’s the ten-pin bowling between the cinema and the road.
Near the far end of the perimeter road and between the mini-roundabout and the pitches – there’s our fitness centre, with all kinds of equipment, and a small pool, and changing rooms for teams using the pitches.
Then joined on to the stadium, next to the entrance, is a range of small shops which all specialize in sports equipment, clothes, shoes. They sell toys and so on as well, all that sort of thing. They seem to be doing well!
As you see, the service road goes right round, but we keep the traffic and the pedestrians well apart, so it’s all very relaxed round the plaza, popular with families.
And just in front of the bowling is our lovely restaurant. You can see it from here – it’s that building on the plaza between us and the bowling. It’s open all day and in the evenings.
There’s quite a queue there at weekends, I’m pleased to say. So now, you’ve got the layout, we can go and have a closer look at everything.
Tapescript Section 3: Business Study Course
Chloe:
Oh, hi Ivan.
Ivan:
Oh, hi Chloe.
Chloe:
I’m glad I bumped into you because I’ve been looking at this prospectus about courses at the university.
I’m thinking of doing a business studies degree. Isn’t that what you’re doing?
Ivan:
Yes, I’m about to start my third year. I think you’d enjoy it. Is there something on the course that you’re not sure about?
Chloe:
Well, you know I’ve been working for a publisher for the last four years as a production assistant…
Ivan:
That will be really valuable experience because a lot of people go to university straight from school and don’t have that kind of background.
Chloe:
Yeah, I know and I’m used to dealing with figures and percentages and things, but it’s been a while since I’ve sat down and put my ideas into an essay.
I was never that good at it and I’m not sure I can do it now.
Ivan:
But you did OK at school, so I’m sure you’ll soon get into it again. I was worried about different things when I started, like if I’d be able to use all the computer programs, but you only really need the basics.
You have to do a lot of presentations and I thought that would be hard, but we’d actually had such a lot of practice at school it was fine.
Chloe:
But did you find writing essays easy?
Ivan:
It was OK but I was hopeless at getting them in by the deadline and I was always late for lectures, so I had to work hard at that and I tend to be early now.
Chloe:
It’s good that you’ve sorted yourself out before you go and get a job or you might not have it very long! I think the course looks really interesting.
Ivan:
It is and it also gave me the chance to spend six months working in a local business last year.
Chloe:
That’s not so important for me unless I could go abroad to use my foreign languages but that doesn’t seem to be on offer, which is a shame.
What really appeals to me though, is the idea of being assessed throughout the year, I think that’s a much more productive way of learning instead of everything being decided in an exam at the end.
Ivan:
It’s good for people like you who are hard-working all year round. You’ll be spending all your time in the library. They’ve just expanded it too.
Chloe:
That’s good.
Ivan:
Well, yes and no. They’ve made the study area bigger but it means they’ve taken some of the magazines and periodicals away, so I think it was better as it was.
The university’s expanding all the time and there are lots of new courses coming next year.
Chloe:
Well, that’s great news, isn’t it? It means the college will have a better reputation as more people will hear about it, so that’s good for us.
Ivan:
Mm, I agree but they really need to add more lecture rooms as we often have lectures in tiny rooms.
Chloe:
Well, you obviously think overall it’s a good place to do a degree. I should probably go and have a look around.
Ivan:
Well, it’s holidays now and there’s not much going on there.
Chloe:
Oh, so it’s probably not worth going in now.
Ivan:
But you could email my tutor – I know he’d be happy to answer any questions. I can give you his email address.
I looked at quite a lot of other universities and read loads of prospectuses but I thought this one was the best.
Chloe:
I was a bit unsure about all the different subjects you can choose on this course.
Ivan:
Well, I can tell you a bit about them. There are some subjects you have to do and some that you can choose. The most interesting course I’ve done is public relations.
Chloe:
From what I’ve read it doesn’t look very demanding – some of it is really just common sense.
Ivan:
But it will be really useful if you want to go into marketing or advertising.
Chloe:
That’s true, but I need to find out a bit more about it first before I decide – if it will really help me. It’s difficult to tell from the prospectus.
Ivan:
But you are interested in marketing?
Chloe:
Oh, yes…
Ivan:
Well, you can choose a marketing course. I wasn’t very impressed with that course actually. The tutor didn’t make it very interesting.
Chloe:
Mm, it’s good to put on your CV that you’ve done a marketing course, though, so that would be a definite for me and maybe I’d get a different tutor. What other courses did you choose?
Ivan:
I’m doing taxation as I was thinking of training to be an accountant but I’m not sure now.
Chloe:
Oh, that will be a good option for me because I enjoy working with figures. Although I don’t want to be an accountant. It’ll be good to have an understanding of taxation, especially if I ever run my own business.
Ivan:
Then there’s the most popular course, which is human resources and a lot of people seem to get jobs in that field.
Chloe:
My friend works in human resources and she’s really good at it, but I don’t think I’ve got the right personality so I’d give that one a miss.
I’m more interested in how businesses actually work – the structure.
Ivan:
That’s a compulsory course — the structure of business – but you might find information systems helpful.
Chloe:
Is that kind of computer programs?
Ivan:
Some of it is, but also databases, project management, and other things.
Chloe:
Oh, sounds useful, but I’ll have to look at some of the other possibilities first. You know, Ivan, this course sounds as though it would suit me. I’m going to apply.
Ivan:
Great! If there’s anything else you want to ask me, you’ve got my number.
Chloe:
Thanks!
Tapescript Section 4: History Of Weather Forecasting
I work for the National Weather Service and as part of your course on weather patterns, I’ve been asked to talk to you about how we predict the weather.
We’re so used to switching on our TVs and getting an up-to-date weather forecast at any time of day or night that we probably forget that this level of sophistication has only been achieved in the last few decades and weather forecasting is actually an ancient art.
So I want to start by looking back into history.
The earliest weather forecasts appeared in the 1500s in almanacs, which were lists of information produced every year.
Their predictions relied heavily on making links between the weather and where the planets were in the sky on certain days.
In addition, predictions were often based on information like if the fourth night after a new moon was clear, good weather was expected to follow.
But once basic weather instruments were invented, things slowly started to change. In the mid-fifteenth century, a man called Nicholas Cusa, a German mathematician, designed a hygrometer which told people how much humidity there was in the air.
To do this, Cusa put some sheep’s wool on a set of scales and then monitored the change in the wool’s weight according to the air conditions.
A piece of equipment we all know and use is the thermometer.
Changes in temperature couldn’t really be measured until the Italian Galileo Galilei invented his thermometer in 1593.
It wasn’t like a modern-day thermometer because it had water inside it instead of mercury.
In fact, it wasn’t until 1714 that Gabriel Fahrenheit invented the first mercury thermometer.
In 1643 another Italian called Evangelista Torricelli invented the first barometer which measured atmospheric pressure. This was another big step forward in more accurate weather predicting.
As time went on, during the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, all these meteorological instruments were improved and developed and people in different countries began to record measurements relating to their local weather.
However, in those days it was very difficult to send records from one part of the world to another so it wasn’t possible for them to share their information until the electric telegraph became more widespread.
This meant that weather observations could be sent on a regular basis to and from different countries.
By the 1860s, therefore, weather forecasts were becoming more common and accurate because they were based on observations taken at the same time over a wide area.
In 1863, France started publishing weather maps each day. This hadn’t been done before, and other nations soon followed.
So that was the start of national weather forecasting and I’ll now tell you how we at the National Weather Centre get the information we need to produce a forecast.
Even today, one of the most important methods we use is observations which tell us what the weather is doing right now.
Observation reports are sent automatically from equipment at a number of weather stations in different parts of the country.
They are nearly all based at airports although a few are in urban centres. The equipment senses temperature, humidity, pressure and wind speed direction.
Meteorologists also rely really heavily on satellites which send images to our computer screens. What we see on our screens is bright colours.
Orange represents dry air and bright blue shows moisture levels in the atmosphere. The satellites are located 22,000 miles above the surface of the Earth and it’s amazing that despite that distance, it’s possible for us to make out an individual cloud and follow it as it moves across the landscape.
In addition to collecting data from the ground, we need to know what’s happening in the upper levels of the atmosphere.
So a couple of times a day from many sites across the country, we send radiosondes into the air.
A radiosonde is a box containing a package of equipment and it hangs from a balloon which is filled with gas. Data is transmitted back to the weather station.
Finally, radar. This was first used over 150 years ago and still is.
New advances are being made all the time and it is one method for detecting and monitoring the progress of hurricanes.
Crucial information is shown by different colours representing speed and direction. Radar is also used by aircraft, of course.
All this information from different sources is put into computer models which are like massive computer programs.
Sometimes they all give us the same story and sometimes we have to use our own experience to decide which is showing the most accurate forecast which we then pass on to you.
So I hope next time you watch the weather forecast, you’ll think about how we meteorologists spend our time. And maybe I’ve persuaded some of you to study meteorology in more depth.