Why take a gap year? 6 Minute English

241,351 views ・ 2019-12-05

BBC Learning English


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00:06
Neil: Hello. This is 6 Minute English
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and I'm Neil. And joining me
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to do this is Georgina.
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Georgina: Hello.
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Neil: Now, Georgina, I know you
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went to university
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to study for a degree but before
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you moved from college to university,
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did you take a year off?
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Georgina: I did.
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Neil: Well, you're not alone.
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Many students choose to take a break
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from their studies
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to travel or gain work experience
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before moving on to university.
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Georgina: Yes, and this is what
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we call a 'gap year'.
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Neil: And in this programme we're
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talking about taking a gap year
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and why doing this
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has become more important than ever.
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But first, as always, I need
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to challenge you and our
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listeners, Georgina, to answer a question.
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Are you ready?
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Georgina: Ready and waiting, Neil!
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Neil: According to the Institute of Fiscal
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Studies, which subject studied
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at university will lead to the highest
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average earnings
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five years after graduating? Is it...
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a) Law, b) Veterinary science,
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or c) Medicine and dentistry?
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What do you think, Georgina?
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Georgina: Well, all are subjects
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that involve lots of studying...
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but as a guess, I think those studying
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veterinary science end up working
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as vets and earning the most money ...
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so it's b), I think.
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Neil: OK. Well, we'll find out if you're right
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at the end of the programme.
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Let's get back to talking about gap years -
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as the name suggests, it's a break
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or gap in between your studies
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- we might also call it a year out.
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It's not a new concept - meaning idea -
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and there are a number of reasons
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why someone may choose to take one.
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Georgina: That's right. The BBC's
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Smart Consumer podcast looked at
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this and heard from two students -
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one, Meg, took a gap year and
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the other, Tom, didn't.
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Let's hear from them now...
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Meg: I knew I wanted to go to university,
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but... I decided I'll do it after a year out, and
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that way I can wait till I get my official
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results and apply to university with those
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rather than getting predicted grades
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and then, you know, potentially
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being surprised and
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not being able to follow the path I wanted.
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I just always had in the back my mind that
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I'd spend a year doing
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something productive and something
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that would just be good fun.
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Tom: It's not something that I really knew
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about to be honest, I think, until I started
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university. It was a bit of an alien concept
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to me. It's something I've never
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thought about - it would have been
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far too expensive and it's not something
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that would have been able to rely on
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my parents or family members for.
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Neil: Two different experiences there. So
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Meg said she had 'in the back of my mind'
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doing a gap year.
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That means she had the idea
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but didn't think about it frequently - it
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was stored deep in her memory.
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Georgina: And she had the idea of doing
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something productive - that means
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leading to a good
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or useful outcome - and, of course,
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having fun at the same time!
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Neil: She also wanted to do something
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while she waited for her exam results
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to come in, rather than applying
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for a university place based on predicted
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results which may turn out to be wrong.
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If something is predicted, it's an
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estimation of what is likely to happen in
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the future based on current information.
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Georgina: Now, Tom had
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a different experience.
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He wasn't really aware of the gap year
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and described it as an alien concept -
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so an idea that is strange and not familiar.
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Neil: Tom also mentioned a gap year
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would have been too expensive - but
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according to Chris Rea from
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the organisation Prospects, it needn't
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cost a lot of money. Speaking on
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BBC Radio 4's You and Yours programme,
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he says it's about gaining skills
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and being more employable...
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Chris Rea: I think the experience
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of the gap year has become actually
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much more practical, partly as I say
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to do with university participation
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increasing, but also because
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of the demands on developing skills,
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specifically employability skills.
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Actually from an employer's point
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of view, certainly, any form of experience
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and skills acquisition
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that you've undertaken is valuable.
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Neil: According to Chris Rea,
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the focus these days is for a gap year
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to be more practical - this adjective
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describes the learning of
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real skills which can be usefully applied.
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Georgina: Yes, and these are skills that
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help you compete for a place
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at university and ultimately make you
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more employable - they
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help you get a job.
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Neil: Right, but which job might earn you
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the most money, Georgina? Earlier I asked
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you, according to the Institute
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of Fiscal Studies, which subject
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studied at university will lead to the
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highest average earnings, five years
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after graduating? Is it...
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a) Law, b) Veterinary science,
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or c) Medicine and dentistry.
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What do you say, Georgina?
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Georgina: I said veterinary science.
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Was I correct?
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Neil: Sadly you weren't.
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The correct answer
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is c) Medicine and dentistry.
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According to research in the UK,
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graduates of medicine and dentistry
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earn an average of £46,700.
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Georgina: That's more than
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an English teacher
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I suspect, but that's not going to stop us
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recapping today's vocabulary.
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Neil: OK. So, we've been talking about
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a gap year - that's a year between leaving
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school and starting university that is
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usually spent travelling or working.
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Georgina: When we say something is
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at the back of my mind, we mean
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an idea we don't think about
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frequently but keep stored deep
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in our memory.
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Neil: And when something is productive -
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it describes something that leads
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to a good or useful outcome.
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Georgina: Next, we mentioned
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the word predicted.
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If something is predicted, it's
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an estimation of what is likely
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to happen in the future
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based on current information.
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Neil: An alien concept is an idea that is
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strange and not familiar.
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Georgina: And when you're
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doing something practical,
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you're doing something that is real and
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useful because you learn skills that
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can be used in the future.
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Neil: Thank you, Georgina, for that
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practical run through of our vocabulary.
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So that's all from 6 Minute English
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for now. Goodbye!
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Georgina: Bye!
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