Wednesday, December 31, 2014

BBS I year question model



Tribhuvan University
Faculty of Management
BBS First Year
C. English
2071
Full Marks: 100 Time: 3 hours
Candidates are expected to answer the questions in their own words as far as practicable.

The figures in the margin indicate full marks.

Answer all the questions.

Question 1. Answer any two of the following: (15 marks each)
(a) Read the following passage and answer the questions below:
It is many months now since I found myself obliged by conscience to end my silence and to take a public stand against my country’s war in Vietnam. The considerations which led me to that painful decision have not disappeared; indeed, they have been magnified by the course of events since then. The war itself is intensified; the impact on my country is even more destructive. I cannot speak about the great themes of violence and non-violence, of social change and of hope for the future, without reflecting on the tremendous violence of Vietnam. Since the spring of 1967, when I first made public my opposition to my government’s policy, many persons have questioned me about the wisdom of my decision. “Why you?” they have said. “Peace and civil rights don’t mix. Aren’t you hurting the cause of your people?” And when I hear such questions, I have been greatly saddened, for they mean that the inquirers have never really known me, my commitment, or my calling. Indeed, that question suggests that they do not know the world in which they live.

In explaining my position, I have tried to make it clear that I remain perplexed—as I think everyone must be—by the complexities and ambiguities of Vietnam. I would not wish to underrate the need for a collective solution to this tragic war. I would wish neither to present North Vietnam or the National Liberation Front as paragons of virtue nor to overlook the role they can play in the successful resolution of the problem. While they both may have justifiable reasons to be suspicious of the good faith of the United States, life and history give eloquent testimony to the fact that conflicts are never resolved without trustful give-and-take on both sides. Since I am a preacher by calling, I suppose it is not surprising that I had several reasons for bringing Vietnam into the field of my moral vision. There is at the outset a very obvious and almost facile connection between the war in Vietnam and the struggle I and others have been waging in America.
(Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., “The Trumpet of Conscience”)

i. Why did Dr. King feel that he had to clarify his position against the war?
ii. Why didn’t Dr. King feel the United States could solve the problems between the two sides in Vietnam by fighting there?
iii. Why did Dr. King bring Vietnam into the field of his moral vision?
iv. Was Dr. King as concerned about Vietnamese victims as he was about U.S. victims? Explain.
v. When a government starts a war, its position is that it is acting justly and morally. If a citizen refuses to participate in the war because of personal moral principles, is he/she less moral than the government?

Explain.
(b) Apply the four levels of reading a text to Ray Bradbury’s “A Sound of Thunder” or Lekhanath Paudyal’s “The Parrot in the Cage”.
(c) Who would you argue are more intelligent: men or women? Why? You can base your answer, if you wish, on Bertrand Russell’s essay “Keeping errors at
Bay”.
OR
Are good manners a matter of how we look at ourselves or how we look at other people? Explain. You can use Dr. Peale’s ideas as given in the essay “Courtesy: Key to a Happier World”

Question 2. Answer any five of the following: (10 marks each)
(a) What do you think: If two people from two different linguistic groups, or religions, or tribes, or nationalities, or castes, fall in love, should they marry, even if their families are opposed? Give reasons for your answer.

(b) Edit this paragraph for coherence.
English, like other languages, has conflicting sayings about important matters like love, friendship, and work. In English we say about work, “Never put off till tomorrow what you can do today.” The message is that one can and should always work more—at least until all the work is done. In English we have this proverb: “All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.” The advice is not to work too much. Life without recreation makes one an uninteresting person. How is it that the language has two sayings that give opposite messages? We can assume that work is important to native English speakers. They respect it a lot—perhaps too much. The second saying may be a kind of safety valve. It warns people against going too far in following the advice of the first saying.

(c) Describe a famous building or structure? Where is it? Who built it? When? What is it used for? What do you like or dislike about it?

(d) Tell a story from your life that supports the saying, “Experience is the best teacher.”
 
(e) Explain the unconventional interpretation in each joke below:
 
(i) STRAIGHT MAN: Would you call me a taxi, please.
COMEDIAN: Okay. You’re a taxi.
 
(ii) STRAIGHT MAN: Who was that lady I saw you with last night.
COMEDIAN: That was no lady. That was my wife.

(f) A café owner wants to attract children to he café. She has devised an icecream dish wit cream, chocolate sauce, and strawberries in it. Invent two
different two- or three-word phrases for
(i) the title for the café (specially catering for ice cream, for children)
(ii) the name of the ice-cream (on the menu, containing cream, chocolate sauce, and strawberries)

Question 3. Answer any ten of the following: (2 marks each)
 
(a) Condense the main point of Parijat’s “New Year” into one sentence.
(b) Edit the sentence: “He resembles his brother, who is such a handsome man, and who has been known for a long time to be a hard working kind of guy.” 
(c) Choose the better of the two words shown in parentheses and rewrite each item as one sentence: “Some people feel that total honesty is essential in a
loving relationship others feel it as dangerous to be completely honest. (however / therefore)
(d) The best meaning of the underlined phrase in the sentence: “I recognize this attitude as a healthy component of our survival instinct and one that enables us to carry on so we can make additional choices that sustain us.” is
a. part of our will to live
b. part of the law of the world
c. part of our need to take care of others
(e) Write down the topic and the controlling idea in the sentence: “There are several ways to reduce stress.”
(f) Write down four adjectives to describe the smell of a food.
 
(g) Match the likely purpose to the audience:
Audience Purpose
1. ------ friends a. to show what I have learned
2.------ younger relatives b. to show my ability to do a job
3. ------ instructors c. to teach by example
4. ------ employers d. to entertain
(h) Rewrite the following headline, so as to make it less formal and more “tabloid”: TEENAGERS BURN CAR
(i) What does the word “halo” suggest in the sentence: “The rock singer sang in a halo of spotlight.”
(j) Give any two content words along with their contexts.
(k) Write the sentence “Once there was a poor widow” in four different ways as possible openings for a fairytale.
(l) What is the effect of the mime in “with beaded bubbles winking at the brim"?

BBS I year Question Pattern



Tribhuvan University, Faculty of Management
BBS English
        Evaluation Model
Course Description
The BBS English course is a two-pronged English course emphasizing the core areas of reading and writing along with a strong communication component. It is designed to help students get ahead fast with their general English skills in interdisciplinary contexts with the lessons and speaking skills for general and technical English. It is a theme-based course with comprehensive coverage of English language and critical thinking skills. Authentic listening and reading materials provide models for up to date language, grammar, and vocabulary.
The course has the following four main components:
I.                   Interdisciplinary Approach to Learning English
II.                Functional English Language Texts
III.             Reading for Writing
IV.             Style
Prescribed Books:
Nissani, M., and S. Lohani. Flax-Golden Tales: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Learning
            English. Shorter Edition. Kathmandu: Ekta, 2013. (Sounds of English and Stories and
            Poems on CD)
Savage, Alice, and Patricia Mayer. Effective Academic Writing 2: The Short Essay. Second
            Edition. Oxford: OUP, 2012.
Smalzer, William R. Write to be Read: Reading, Reflection, and Writing. Second Edition.
            Cambridge: CUP, 2005.
Haynes, John. Style. London and New York: Routledge, 1995.

Evaluation
*Questions will be set covering all the prescribed books.
*The questions will be three broad types:
1. Comprehensive/Analytical type: 2 questions each of 15 marks (3 questions will be given): 2×15=30 marks
2. Descriptive/Short answer type: 5 questions each of 10 marks (6 questions will be given): 5×10=50 marks
3. Brief/Objective type: 10 questions each of 2 marks (12 questions will be given): 2×10=20 marks

*The distribution of questions will be as follows:
 1. Comprehensive/Analytical type:
·                      One question from Flax-Golden
·                      One question from Write to be Read
·                      One question from Flax-Golden and/or Write to be Read
 2. Descriptive/Short answer type:
·                      One question from Flax-Golden
·                      One question from Write to be Read
·                      Two questions from Short Essay
·                     Two questions from Style
3. Brief/Objective type:
·                     Two questions from Flax-Golden
·                     Two questions from Write to be Read
·                     Four questions from Short Essay
·                     Four questions from Style
*Students will be tested on their ability to
·         Apply the four levels of reading a text
·         Write convincing paragraphs and essays
·         Discover and communicate meaning holistically
·         Write a variety of functional text, types with a rhetorical focus matching content with style
·         Show an understanding of grammar and vocabulary in context.



Sunday, December 28, 2014

No smoke from the chimneys

No smoke from the chimneys
-          Siddhicharan Shrestha (1912-1992)
(Translated by Michael Hutt)
I.  Literal Comprehension
Context: This poem is written by a famous Nepali poet Siddhicharan Shrestha (1912-1992) and translated by Michael Hutt into English. In this poem, the poet has chosen a freedom fighter as the speaker.
The speaker tells Death not to call him because he is busy wiping up blood from a broken head, i.e. the symbol of a wounded freedom fighter. People who are taking part in the protest programme against the dictatorship are seriously injured, but they are not afraid. The people are fighting for freedom and justice even without food because they have no time for cooking, or no interest in it. Therefore, nothing including the Lady’s (Death’s) calling can stop the speaker’s advancing feet or distract him from taking part in the protest.
II.    Interpretation
The speaker of this poem may be trying to tell us that freedom is more important than food, or fear of death. Therefore, the people have come out of their houses to the streets and they are unstoppable or undistracted. This is a political poem that depicts a time when the Nepalese were struggling for democracy against the autocratic regime.
III. Critical Thinking
I agree with the speaker that there is nothing more important than freedom in one’s life. Therefore, people everywhere in the world are ready to sacrifice their lives for it. For those who are seeking freedom, nothing is so much important. However, I feel the title of the poem is a bit unclear to express the real mood of the poem.  
IV.  Assimilation
The poem has given me a clear picture of how the Nepalese people fought against the autocratic regime. The death could not deter them from establishing democracy in the country. Otherwise, my generation would not have been enjoying the freedom. It has increased my respect to all known and unknown martyrs of democracy.
24.12.14