2017年湘潭大學(xué)考博英語(yǔ)真題(寫作)

考博英語(yǔ) 責(zé)任編輯:楊曼婷 2021-08-18

摘要:以下是希賽網(wǎng)整理的2017年湘潭大學(xué)考博英語(yǔ)寫作部分真題,希望能對(duì)各位考生有所幫助。詳細(xì)內(nèi)容見(jiàn)下。更多關(guān)于考博英語(yǔ)的相關(guān)信息,請(qǐng)關(guān)注希賽網(wǎng)考博英語(yǔ)頻道。

希賽網(wǎng)為考生們整理了2017年湘潭大學(xué)考博英語(yǔ)寫作部分真題,供考生們備考復(fù)習(xí)。

Directions: For this part you are required to summarize the main idea of the following passage in no more than 60 words. Write your summary on the ANSPVER SHEET .

As researchers in psychology, economics and organizational behavior have been gradually discovering, the experience of being happy at work looks very similar across professions. People, who love their jobs, feel challenged by their work but in control of it. They have bosses who make them feel appreciated and co-workers they like. They can find meaning in whatever they do. And they aren’t just lucky. It takes real effort to reach that Sublime State.

An even bigger obstacle, though, may be our low expectations on the job. Love, family, community—hose are supposed to be the true sources of happiness, while work simply gives us the means to enjoy them. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, who coined the term flow, which adherents of positive psychology would use to describe the job-induced highs, says that distinction is a false one.“Anything can be enjoyable if the elements of now are present,” he writes in his book Good Business.” Within that framework, doing a seemingly boring job can be a source of greater fulfillment than one ever thought possible.”

Csikszentmihalyi encourages us to reach a state in which work is an extension of what we naturally want to do. Immersed in the pleasure of work, we don’t worry about its ultimate reward. If that sounds out of reach, take heart. You may soon get some encouragement from the head office. A growing body of research is demonstrating that happy workers not only are happier in life but are also crucial to the health of a company.

Thirty-five years ago, the Gallup Organization started researching why people in certain work groups, even within the same company, were so much more effective than others. Donald Clifton, the Gallup researcher who pioneered that work, conducted a series of extensive interviews with highly productive teams of workers. From those interviews, Gallup developed a set of 12 statements designed to measure employees’ overall level of happiness with their work, which Gallup calls ’’engagement". Some of the criteria reflect the obvious requirements of any worker (Do you have what you need to do your job? Do you know what's expected of you at work?), while others reveal more subtle variables (Do you have a best friend at work? Does your supervisor or someone else at work care about you as a person?). Gallup started the survey in 1998, and it now includes 5.4 million employees at 474 organizations; Gallup also does periodic random polls of workers in different countries.

The polls paint a picture of a rather disaffected U-S. work force. In the most recent poll, from September 2004, only 29% of workers said they were engaged with their work. More than half, 55%, were not engaged, and 16% were actively disengaged. Still, those numbers are better than those in many other countries. The percentage of engaged workers in the U. S. is more than twice as large as Germany's and three times as great as Singapore's. But neither the late 1990s boom nor the subsequent bust had much impact in either direction, indicating that the state of worker happiness goes much deeper than the swings of the economy.

James Harter, a psychologist directing that research at Gallup, says many companies are simply misreading what makes people happy at work. Beyond a certain minimum level, it isn’t pay or benefits; it’s strong relationships with co-workers and a supportive boss. ’’These are basic human needs in the workplace, but they're not the ones thought by managers to be very important." Harter says. Gallup has found that a strong positive response to the statement” I have a best friend at work”, for example, is a powerful predictor for engagement at work and is correlated with profitability and connection with customers. "It indicates a high level of belonging," Hatter says.

Without it, a job that looks good on paper can make a worker miserable. Martina Radix, 41, traded a high-pressure job as an executive assistant at a company where she liked her colleagues for a less taxing position as a clerical worker in a law firm six years ago. She has more time and flexibility but feels stifled by her co-workers and unappreciated by her boss. nI am a misfit in that department,” she says. "No matter how good your personal life is, if you go in to a bad atmosphere at work, it takes away from it.”

In fact, engagement at work is less a function of your personality than is happiness in general. Harter estimates that individual disposition accounts for only about 30% of the difference between employees who are highly engaged and those who are not. The rest of it is shaped by the hundreds of interactions that employees have every day with co-workers, supervisors and customers.

The most direct fix, then, is to seek out a supportive workplace. Finding a job that fits a life calling unlocks the door to happiness. Lissette Mendez, 33, says her job coordinating the annual book fair at Miami Dade College is the one she was born to do. "Books are an inextricable part of my life," she says.

Even if your passion does not easily translate into a profession, you can still find happiness on the job. Numerous studies have shown correlations between meaningful work and happiness, job satisfaction and even physical health. That sense of meaning, however, can take many different forms. Some people find it in the work itself; others take pride in their company's mission rather than in their specific job. People can find meaning in anything.

The desire for meaning is so strong that sometimes people simply create it, especially to make sense of difficult or unpleasant work. In a recently completed six-year study of physicians during their surgical residency, for example, it was found that the surgeons were extremely dissatisfied in the first year, when the menial work they were assigned, like filling out endless copies of patient records, seemed pointless. Once they started to think of the training as part of the larger process of joining an elite group of doctors, their attitude changed. They're able to reconstruct and make sense of their work and what they do. By the end of year one, they've started to create some meanings.

While positive psychology has mostly focused on the individual pursuit of happiness, a new field -positive organizational scholarship -has begun to examine the connection between happy employees and happy businesses. Instead of focusing on profitability and competition to explain success, researchers in this field are studying meaningfulness, authentic leadership and emotional competence. Not the typical B-school buzzwords, but they may soon become part of the language spoken by every M. B. A.

Until recently, business people would dismiss employee well-being as "outside their domain and kind of fringe-ish, says Thomas Wright, a professor of organizational behavior at the University of Nevada, Reno. Early hints of the importance of worker happiness were slow to be accepted. A 1920s study on the topic at the Hawthorne Plant of the Western Electric Co. in Cicero. It looked at whether increased lighting, shorter workdays and other worker-friendly fixes would improve productivity. While the workplace changes boosted performance, the experimenters eventually discovered that the differences workers were responding to not in the physical environment but in the social one. In other words, the attention they were getting was what made them happier and more effective. This phenomenon came to be known as the Hawthorne effect. "The researchers came to realize that it was people’s happiness that made the difference," Wright says. But later studies that looked at job-satisfaction ratings were inconsistent. Broader measures of happiness, it turns out, are better predictors of productivity.

Making any of those changes depends on the boss, although not necessarily, the CEO. So a handful of business schools are trying to create a new kind of frontline manager, based on the idea of "authentic leadership’'. Instead of imposing faddish management techniques on each supervisor, authentic leadership begins with self-awareness. Introverted bosses have to know their own style and then find strategies to manage people that feel natural. In other words, by figuring out their

strengths, they learn to recognize those of employees.

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