Nội dung text SỬA LỖI SAI ĐOẠN VĂN ÔN THI HSG & CHUYÊN ANH.docx
SỬA LỖI SAI ĐOẠN VĂN ÔN THI HSG & CHUYÊN ANH 3 following definition: “Literacy is the ability to identify, understand, interpret, create, communicate and compute, using printed and written materials associated with varying contexts. Literacy involves a continua of learning to enable an individual to achieve his or her goals, to develop his or her ability and potential, and to participate fully in the wider society.” Many policy analysts consider literacy rates a crucial measure of a region human capital. This claim is done on the grounds that literate people can be trained less expensively than illiterate people, generally have a higher socio-economic state and enjoy better health and employment prospects. Policy makers also argue that literacy increases job opportunities and access higher education. In Kerala, India, for example, female and child mortality rates declined in the 1960s, when girls educating in the education reforms after 1948 began to raise families. Recent researchers, however, argue that correlations such as the one listed above may have more to do without the effects of schooling rather than literacy in general. Regardless, the demand for educational systems worldwide include a basic context around communication through text and print, which is the foundation of most definitions of literacy. 5. A feminist is a person, usually a woman, who believes that women should be regarded as equally to men. She, or he, deplores discrimination against women in the home, place of work or anywhere, and her principle enemy is the male chauvinist, who believes that men are naturally super. Tired of being referred to as “the weaker sex”, women are becoming more and more militancy and are winning the age-old battle of the sexes. They are sick to death of sexy jokes which poke fun at women. They are no longer content to be regarded as second - class citizens in term of economic, political and social status. They criticize beauty contests and the use of glamour female models in advertisements which they describe as the exploit of female beauty, since women in these situations were represented as mere sex objects. We no longer live in the male – dominate societies of the past. Let us hope, moreover, that the revolution stops before we have a boring world in which sex doesn’t make much difference. We already have unisex hairdressers and fashions. What next? 6. A MODERN-DAY PROBLEM In the hustle and bustle of today’s hectic world, all of us, without exception, have to contend with some level of stress. Obviously, the source and amount of stress are relatively to the individual. Just as causes and quantities of stress are subject to personal factors, so is the way in that a person deals with them.