førebuing/ forberedelse...her apprenticeship in the sales and servicing department at a car...
TRANSCRIPT
Førebuing/
Forberedelse 15.11.2017
ENG1002 Engelsk fellesfag
ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag
Nynorsk/Bokmål
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 2 av 20
Nynorsk
Informasjon til førebuingsdelen
Førebuingstid Førebuingstida varer éin dag.
Hjelpemiddel På førebuingsdagen er alle hjelpemiddel tillatne, inkludert bruk av
Internett.
På eksamen er alle hjelpemiddel tillatne, bortsett frå Internett og
andre verktøy som kan brukast til kommunikasjon.
For norsk, samisk, finsk som andrespråk og framandspråka er
heller ikkje omsetjingsprogram tillatne.
Ved bruk av nettbaserte hjelpemiddel under eksamen, er det ikkje
tillate å kommunisere med andre (dvs. samskriving, chat, alle
moglegheiter for å utveksle informasjon med andre).
Bruk av kjelder Dersom du bruker kjelder i svaret ditt, skal dei alltid førast opp på
ein slik måte at lesaren kan finne fram til dei.
Du skal føre opp forfattar og fullstendig tittel på både lærebøker og
annan litteratur. Dersom du bruker utskrifter eller sitat frå Internett,
skal du føre opp nøyaktig nettadresse og nedlastingsdato.
Andre opplysningar Førebuingsdagen er obligatorisk skoledag. I førebuingstida kan du
samarbeide med andre, finne informasjon og få rettleiing.
Informasjon om
vurderinga
Sjå eksamensrettleiinga med kjenneteikn på måloppnåing til
sentralt gitt skriftleg eksamen. Eksamensrettleiinga finn du på
www.utdanningsdirektoratet.no.
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 3 av 20
Bokmål
Informasjon til forberedelsesdelen
Forberedelsestid Forberedelsestiden varer én dag.
Hjelpemidler På forberedelsesdagen er alle hjelpemidler tillatt, inkludert bruk av
Internett.
På eksamen er alle hjelpemidler tillatt, bortsett fra Internett og
andre verktøy som kan brukes til kommunikasjon.
For norsk, samisk, finsk som andrespråk og fremmedspråkene er
heller ikke oversettelsesprogrammer tillatt.
Ved bruk av nettbaserte hjelpemidler under eksamen, er det ikke
tillatt å kommunisere med andre (dvs. samskriving, chat, alle
muligheter for å utveksle informasjon med andre).
Bruk av kilder Hvis du bruker kilder i besvarelsen din, skal disse alltid oppgis på en
slik måte at leseren kan finne fram til dem.
Du skal oppgi forfatter og fullstendig tittel på både lærebøker og
annen litteratur. Hvis du bruker utskrifter eller sitater fra Internett,
skal du oppgi nøyaktig nettadresse og nedlastingsdato.
Andre opplysninger Forberedelsesdagen er obligatorisk skoledag. I forberedelsestiden
kan du samarbeide med andre, finne informasjon og få veiledning.
Informasjon om
vurderingen
Se eksamensveiledningen med kjennetegn på måloppnåelse til
sentralt gitt skriftlig eksamen. Eksamensveiledningen finner du på
www.utdanningsdirektoratet.no.
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 4 av 20
The topic for this examination is:
"Living in English-speaking countries"
There are approximately 400 million people who live in English-speaking countries and there are
millions more who spend a period of their lives working or studying in an English-speaking country.
Each of these people has their own unique experience, yet the language they use each day unites
them and allows them to communicate freely and share their experiences.
The texts in this preparation material aim to give you insight into a variety of perspectives about
living in English-speaking countries. You will read about working and studying in these countries
and about challenges that young people face in their lives. Even people from the same area with
similar social conditions may have very different views about their lives and these texts invite you to
consider these contrasting points of view.
We hope that these texts will inspire you to explore and discuss ideas about this topic. Remember
to look for information from other sources as well, including what you have worked with during your
English course. Make a note of useful keywords and phrases, and remember to note down your
sources.
REMEMBER TO BRING THIS PREPARATION MATERIAL WITH YOU TO THE EXAMINATION. YOU WILL
NEED IT.
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 5 av 20
Text 1
In recent years, several thousand Norwegian vocational students have been on
exchange programmes abroad.
Silje Steffensen is one of the apprentices who has studied abroad. She has spent the last year of
her apprenticeship in the sales and servicing department at a car dealership in Oslo. But she has
also been on a three-month exchange programme with a company in Bristol, England.
“I think it might give me an advantage when I apply for jobs later. I worked in a vintage clothing
business in Bristol called ‘Heartfelt’. I got to experience a workplace that was going through difficult
times economically, and the owners had to work hard to survive,” says Steffensen.
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 6 av 20
Text 2
Six reasons why you should study and take part of your apprenticeship training
abroad
1. You will gain new experiences and relationships
Living in another country will give you the experience of a lifetime. You will establish lifelong
relationships.
2. You will improve in your field of study
When you experience working in a different language you will become more aware of every aspect
of your job because you will have to explain them in a different language. You will also see that your
colleagues are doing things a little differently, and yet the job goes just as well.
3. You will understand Norway better
When you have spent a few months in another country and become accustomed to the way they do
things, you might see Norway from a different perspective.
4. You will learn several ways to solve problems
Taking your apprenticeship training abroad introduces you to a different work culture and a
different language. This will help you to see your own studies in a different light. By learning to
handle challenges in other ways, you will become more creative and a better problem solver.
5. You will become independent
You will be living and studying on your own, and you will have to learn a new language and adapt to
a new culture. When you return to Norway, you will be a more independent person.
6. You will be attractive to Norwegian employers
Whatever your future occupation in Norway, you will be better equipped to relate to people from
other countries and cultures. Having lived and worked in a country with a different work culture, you
will have experienced what it's like to be a foreigner. This experience can make you attractive to
Norwegian employers.
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 7 av 20
Text 3
What Millennials Want In The Workplace (And Why You Should Start Giving It To
Them)
By Rob Asghar
The Millennial Generation* will soon represent the biggest chunk of the American workforce. Jamie
Gutfriend of CAA's Intelligence Group says that 86 million millennials will be in the workplace by
2020, representing a full 40% of the total working population. It's in every organization's interest to
learn how to attract, reach and motivate millennials. A few do it well—but most don't, and they may
soon pay the price. "No organization can afford not to recruit the best talent," she says.
Gutfriend's studies of millennials show that:
64% of them say it’s a priority for them to make the world a better place
72% would like to be their own boss. But if they do have to work for a boss, 79% of them
would want that boss to serve more as a coach or mentor
88% prefer a collaborative work culture rather than a competitive one
74% want flexible work schedules
Millennials want to work in a place where they can make a
difference, preferably a place that itself makes a difference.
Companies can gain immensely by better engaging millennials.
They just need to find ways to wrangle the millennials into their
organizations in a manner that they find compelling and
consistent with their distinct values.
* People born between approximately 1980 and 2000
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 8 av 20
Text 4
Millennials are struggling at work because their parents "gave them medals for
coming last"
By Rachel Hosie
Bosses the world over are struggling with their millennial employees. They say we are self-entitled, narcissistic, lazy and tough to manage. According to motivational speaker and author Simon Sinek,
this is the result of our parents' "failed parenting strategies". He says our parenting, combined with
social media, working environments and our impatience have created a generation plagued by low
self-esteem.
Our parents have now realised that their well-
intentioned parenting strategies may have backfired.
They told us that we were special all the time and
could have anything we want in life. We got medals for
coming in last and if we didn't get into the best clubs,
our parents complained. This meant entering the real
world was a shock and our self-images were
shattered. One problem is that we’ve been brought up
to focus on having a healthy work/life balance.
Sinek believes it's our own fault that our self-esteem
levels are so low. We simply care too much about
getting affirmation. "Millennials say they want
feedback at work, but what they really want is praise
and to be told they're doing well. When you give them
negative feedback, they cry or quit."
Sinek believes growing up in a social media age is also much to blame for our constant need for
praise and inability to deal with negative feedback. How many likes and followers you have is the new
social currency, and all we care about is keeping up appearances online. With every notification we
get, we feel good – it's highly addictive. Sinek doesn't believe technology is necessarily bad, but we
need to be careful of using it too much. Social media has also created an incredibly impatient
generation who wants everything immediately. Millennials don't stick at anything long enough
whether it is a job or a relationship. Isn't life too short to waste doing a job you don't love? "Young
people think they can't waste another month of their lives if they're not changing the world, but it
takes time," Sinek says.
He wants us to learn that building self-confidence, finding job fulfilment, being happy and developing
loving relationships all take time. His main message, however, is that it's by building healthy, strong
relationships that we'll be happier, healthier and more inspired. "We're social animals, and
relationships are the core of joy, happiness and success in life."
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 9 av 20
Text 4
Text 4
Hassnain Khan, 14, Slough, Berkshire
A 15-year-old Sikh boy at my school ran
away last month because he was
bullied. He was gone for three days
before he came home. It is difficult to
understand why some young people get
bullied and others don't. Sometimes I
get picked on by older boys in my school
- they call me names like "dopey". I wish
people would just leave each other
alone.
Lee McConville, 23, Birmingham
What would politicians know about growing up in a deprived
area plagued with drugs, guns, prostitution and gangs? Born
and raised in Lozells, Birmingham, an area plagued with gun
crime, drugs, prostitution and gangs and infamous for its 2005
race riots, I forever found myself in the wrong place at the wrong
time. I was lucky to walk away without being arrested or
stabbed. The government needs to invest more in charity
organisations so they can change young people's lives for the
better and, in some cases, save their lives.
Dan Tait, 19, Basingstoke, Hampshire
I was once nearly killed by a student. He
expressed his homophobic hatred by strangling
me in front of a teacher and other pupils. I
retaliated, and we were both excluded for three
days. The biggest problem in tackling homophobia
is raising awareness for people who lived in a
generation where being gay was socially
unacceptable. The government needs to give
schools guidance on dealing with homophobia
and, more importantly, on how to prevent it.
Alexandra McKenzie, 20, Newcastle upon Tyne
My peers and I have been told that "the sky's the limit," thanks to
encouragement from parents and teachers. As an upper-secondary
student, I've had to work hard and I've avoided obstacles such as failing
my exams. However, the recession has left students like me wondering if
our possibilities really are so limitless. Many don't fully understand the
ins and outs of the current economic crisis. With small businesses
closing, term-time jobs are increasingly hard to come by, but as
companies are unable to pay us for internships or work experience, such
part-time employment is valuable. After creating schemes that have
allowed students from a range of socio-economic backgrounds to pursue
higher education, the government should now ensure that those who
can't afford to accept unpaid experience are not pushed off the job
ladder before they even reach it.
Text 5
"Everyone has problems, don't they?" Young people share their very different accounts of the issues they face growing up, from gun crime to
graduation, teenage pregnancy and homelessness.
Sarah Kigozi, 17, London
I take care of my 16-year-old autistic
brother and also my mother, who has a
form of cancer, non-Hodgkin lymphoma. My
brother spits, speaks in phrases rather than
full sentences and is hyperactive. He has a
mental age of six or seven and attends a
special day school. I've helped take care of
him since I was about nine. As well as
supporting my mum through her illness, my
responsibilities involve interpreting, as her
first language is not English. I read and type
letters, deal with bills and forms, make
phone calls and book appointments. My day
usually starts at 5.30am and ends at 11pm.
Right now, I'm concentrating on my A-levels,
and I want to do a degree in psychology.
One of my ambitions is to build schools in
less developed countries to provide free
education to children with special needs.
Samia Meah, 19, London
When I say the word "homeless", people visualise someone sitting
on the street in a cardboard box, looking terrible and perhaps even
shouting at traffic. This bothers me as I am friends with many
homeless young people who are far from this stereotype. It bothers
me more as I am one of them. We are a group of people in society
that people are often unaware of. We are homeless, but we live in
temporary accommodation - hostels with a room shared with
strangers. I live in shared accommodation, with support from staff at
the homelessness charity Centrepoint. There are people who have
suffered due to domestic violence, abandonment, immigration, self-
harm and sheer neglect. These are people who did not begin life
with a fair chance. Yet here they are, my friends, who have
overcome these devastating situations and have the will not only to
carry on but also excel at what they do.
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 10 av 20
Text 6
Below are four different points of view about the
same news story. Different people of different
ages, genders and backgrounds have responded
in different ways to news about the collapse of
power-sharing talks in Northern Ireland (March
2017).
Siobhan, 14 years old,
Belfast
I’m scared about what
this might mean. I hear
my parents talk about
the Troubles and I don’t
want all of us in the
North to have to live in
fear again.
Adrian, 42 years old, Omagh
I simply don’t understand
what Sinn Fein are playing
at! We’ve had peace for
almost 20 years and these
power-hungry jokers are
willing to risk it. Don’t they
understand that it is not
North and South that we
need to focus on. We need
to make sure that we have
quality education for our
children and job
opportunities for them when
they are finished.
Fintan, 78 years old,
Belfast
I’m proud that Sinn Fein is
standing strong and taking
a risk for the first time in a
long time. I was a teacher
of the Irish language for 35
years and if we don’t make
sure that young people are
learning Irish, then part of
our culture will simply
disappear and we might as
well be English!
Christa, 25 years old,
Derry
This is a crucial time for
my generation. As
Britain is looking to exit
the European Union, we
need to double our
efforts to join the
Republic to keep all of
Ireland prospering. I
want to be a part of
Europe not just the
forgotten Northern Ire-
land in the supposedly
Great Britain!
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 11 av 20
Text 7
Everyone Knows This Is Somewhere
By Chuck Klosterman
THERE is nothing remarkable about how I ended up in New York. Like most people who live here, I
just got out of a cab one afternoon and there I was. That's pretty much the whole story. And it all
seemed completely normal to me -- until I started talking to people and telling them where I was from.
Only then did I realize that I am an absolute alien here, a tiny fish in a massive pond.
I came to New York from Akron, Ohio (pop. 217,000), which is where I lived after moving from Fargo,
North Dakota (pop. 91,000), which is an hour away from my hometown of Wyndmere, North Dakota
(pop. 533), which was five miles from my parents' farm (pop. 9). This apparently qualifies me to write
about my ''personal journey,'' the assumption being that I must have multiple insights and
observations about New York from an outsider’s perspective.
This is what people assume about you when you come from a place where it's totally acceptable to
leave your car running -- with the keys in the ignition and the doors unlocked -- in the middle of the
night. People in North Dakota do this because it falls to 40 below zero in January and the wind
regularly blows in excess of 40 miles an hour, and those climatic conditions cause the fluid in a car
battery to freeze into a brick. This makes it impossible to drive home from the bar. Consequently,
everyone leaves their automobiles running when they're in public, sometimes for up to five or six
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 12 av 20
hours. People in rural North Dakota don't steal cars, and people in New York find that strange. In fact,
people in New York seem to find everything about rural North Dakota strange.
Like many young American idiots, I moved to New York because I wanted to be cool. New York rewards
coolness. In fact, I have met at least 17 people in this city who apparently make a living by being cool
full time. This requires that people (a) never actually work, yet (b) still wear stylish neckties.
Unfortunately, I can't seem to make this lifestyle work. As far as I can tell, being cool in New York
requires you to do something totally and wholly random. These actions include (but are not limited
to) walking around your neighborhood with a parrot on your shoulder, wearing an eye patch and a
weird cap, or smashing a banjo on the subway in the hope of getting spare change.
I'm not necessarily claiming that any of these schemes will work, but you may as well try (it's always
50/50). And being cool is certainly worth the gamble. This is the best place in the universe to be
socially desirable. While walking home from work one afternoon, I decided to count how many
attractive people I saw. Over 18 blocks, the number was 204, and that included one homeless
woman who wore tin foil on her forearms and was talking to an invisible minotaur. New York has got
to be the only city on earth with foxy homeless people.
The main thing I've noticed most about New York is that people who live here have no idea how
anyone else in America lives, thinks or manages to survive. However, it's worth noting that the rest
of the country has the same confusion about New Yorkers, particularly in regard to their level of
general rudeness. It has been my experience that strangers in New York are exceedingly friendly,
almost to the point of being weirdly insecure. I've noticed that if you stand at the top of a subway
platform and appear even mildly baffled, someone will immediately ask you if you need directions
(and they seem almost disappointed if you don't). I suspect this is because just about everyone here
is ultimately from somewhere else.
New Yorkers also love reliving the New York experience. For example, my apartment in Midtown
recently had a mouse; what I did not realize is that at one time or another every apartment in New
York has been plagued by vermin. So whenever I mentioned this mouse problem at a social function,
every other person in the room would insist on telling me his or her own personal mouse story. ''The
glue traps don't work,'' they would say, ''so I bought a cat to eat the mouse, and then I had to get a
dog to take care of the cat problem, and then I had to buy a wolf to eat the dog, and then I had to
sue my landlord for not allowing my wolf to install an air-conditioner. It was a nightmare.'' That's how
all New York anecdotes seem to end: ''It was a nightmare.''
Clearly, living here is not easy. Everything costs too much; getting anywhere is a hassle; most people
are profoundly lazy and nobody is willing to admit to being wrong about anything. I constantly find
myself fighting my Midwestern impulse to stop conversations in mid-flow to tell people: ''You're lying!
And we all know you're lying!''
It may be maddening to live here, but it's also amazing. It's impossible to deny that this city is where
all the good stuff is, and all that stuff can still be purchased at 3:50 a.m. That only happens here,
and I will never live anywhere else.
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 13 av 20
Text 8
Facts and Figures about Young People in some English-speaking Countries
In 2014, the 88% literacy
rate for young men in India
was 14 percent higher than
the 74% rate for young
women.
UK Unemployment rate amongst 16-24 year olds
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 14 av 20
Text 9
Popular: Vintage Wisdom from a Modern Geek
By Maya van Wagenen.
Introduction
(or how this whole thing came to be)
DON’T SKIP THIS PART
NO REALLY, DON’T SKIP THIS PART
-----------------------------------------------------------
“School is the armpit of life,” my best friend Kenzie once told me. Amen. My school is no exception.
Walk through the scratched glass doors on that first day and your life becomes a series of brutal and
painful encounters: being called a dick by the football player who sits near you in science, standing in a
bra and granny panties in front of your gym locker that you can’t open while the girls around you giggle
and point, crying in the bathroom because you didn’t know it was possible for your heart to hurt this
much. There is one thing, though, that can help you navigate this sweaty, smelly underarm, and that is a
careful understanding of how the social food chain is organized.
MY SCHOOL’S POPULARITY SCALE
(From patricians to plebeians)
10 Volleyball Girls
9 Football Faction
8 Rich Gang Members (including More-Popular Girls Who Dress Seductively)
7 Band Geeks
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 15 av 20
6 Choir Geeks
5 Goth Art-Chicks
4 Less-Popular Girls Who Dress Seductively
3 Pregnant Teens (We have two right now, a seventh and an eighth grader)
2 Computer Geeks (There are hardly any)
1 Library Nerds (who read constantly and love Japanese comics)
0 The Ignored (sixth graders)
-1 Social Outcasts
-2 Teachers
-3 Substitute Teachers
You are categorized by where you spend your time and with whom you do, and do not, associate. I
fall into the Social Outcast group, the lowest level of people at school who aren’t paid to be there. I’m
joined in my lowly negative-digit station by my close friend and confidant Kenzie. For the most part,
it’s a quiet, monotonous, invisible existence. That is, until you get noticed and preyed upon by someone
in any of the tiers above you.
So how do those at the top work the class system to their advantage?
There are magazine articles and self-help books about what to wear, what to say, how to behave,
and who to be friends with. In fact, long before I was even born, my father picked up a book at a thrift
store. The faded cover was old and torn, but “There was something about it,” he told me. He thumbed
through the pages until he came upon the title: Betty Cornell’s Teen-Age Popularity Guide. It was
written in 1951, and was full of tips and advice on how to achieve what seemed to be the unachievable:
improving one’s social status. My dad said he found himself laughing right there in the store at some of
the outdated ideas. It being an interesting piece of vintage pop culture, and he being my father, he
bought it right away.
For a long time the book sat in his office (the “chamber of curiosities”) at our house in
Brownsville, Texas. It was gathering dust in a cardboard box sandwiched between a World War I helmet
and a carved stone skull from some tribe in Mexico.
It was waiting to be discovered.
..........................................
As luck would have it, the book did not want to remain hidden. When my parents decided to clean out
Dad’s office (personally, I believe they made the whole mess angrier) Mom opened the box and
rediscovered Betty Cornell’s book. She wasn’t sure what to do with it, so she handed it off to me, Maya,
“Caretaker of All Stuff No One Wants, but Won’t Get Rid Of.”
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 16 av 20
I saw Betty Cornell’s Teen-Age Popularity Guide as nothing more than a quirky book with advice
along the lines of “Don’t wear makeup on your eyes, instead use Vaseline,” and “Close your pores with
ice cubes,” and “All girls should wear a girdle.”
It was written by a former teen model who promised that, with a little hard work, poise, polish,
and popularity were easily attainable for anyone.
Anyone?
I almost laughed.
That was when my mom had the idea – an amazing, terrifying, once-in-a-lifetime idea. “Maya,
you should follow the advice this year, in eighth grade, and write about what happens.”
My immediate answer was no. I couldn’t imagine anything more horrifying. Since when had I
(outwardly) cared about being popular anyway? But my mom planted a seed that day. Her comment was
like one of those zits that starts out small, then gets really big and seems to never go away, not matter
how many times you pop it.
A few days later, flipping through the book (yet again), I discovered this:
You will only make the situation worse if you take a negative attitude, if you
shrug your shoulders and say, “Well, after all, who cares?” Basically
somebody does care. You care. You care, because like everyone else on this
planet you want to be liked, you want to be popular, you want to be a girl who
gets around. You want to have a crowd to pal around with, a few exciting
dates, and at least one boy who thinks you are about the most terrific female
ever. If you say that you don’t, you are really only fooling yourself. You are
certainly not fooling others.
The whole universe stood at attention.
Betty Cornell’s book was published over sixty years ago, but somehow through the vast stretch of
time and space, she saw what I secretly, desperately yearned for. More than that, she promised to help
me get it.
I knew my life would never be the same.
(Extract)
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 17 av 20
Sources
Text 1
Jelstad, J. (09.05.2014). Regjeringen vil ha flere yrkesfagelever på utveksling i utlandet. Retrieved
08.04.2017 from http://www.utdanningsnytt.no/nyheter/2014/mai/regjeringen-vil-ha-flere-
yrkesfagelever-pa-utveksling-i-utlandet/ [Adapted]
[Untitled image collage of apprentices] (n.d.). Retrieved 08.04.2017 from
https://media.licdn.com/mpr/mpr/shrinknp_800_800/AAEAAQAAAAAAAAeKAAAAJDFmOTU
zYzIxLTYxZDctNDVjOC1iOTc4LTkxMzg1NDE3YTg0MA.jpg
Text 2
6 grunner til å velge praksis i utlandet. (2015, mai 28). Retrieved 08.04.2017 from
https://www.nho.no/Politikk-og-analyse/Kompetanse-og-utdanning/6-grunner-til-a-ta-
praksis-i-utlandet/ [Adapted]
Apprentice for Service Technician [Online image]. (n.d.). Retrieved 08.04.2017 from
http://careers.cummins.com/sites/default/files/Apprentice%20for%20Service%20Technici
an_0.jpg
Text 3
Asghar, R. (03.01.2014). What Millennials Want In The Workplace (And Why You Should Start
Giving It To Them). Retrieved 08.04.2017 from
http://www.forbes.com/sites/robasghar/2014/01/13/what-millennials-want-in-the-
workplace-and-why-you-should-start-giving-it-to-them/ [Adapted]
[Untitled image of students]. (n.d.). Retrieved 08.04.2017 from http://www.jeld-
wen.de/media/887602/jeld-wen_studium_702_350.jpg
Text 4
Hosie, R. (20.01.2017). Millennials are struggling at work because their parents "gave them
medals for coming last". Retrieved 08.04.2017 from http://www.independent.co.uk/life-
style/millennials-struggling-work-careers-because-their-parents-gave-them-medals-for-
coming-last-simon-a7537121.html [Adapted]
[Untitled image of child on throne]. (n.d.). Retrieved 08.04.2017 from
http://wol.jw.org/en/wol/mp/r1/lp-e/g/2015/266
Text 5
Young people on the challenges of growing up. (15.04.2009). Retrieved 08.04.2017 from
http://www.theguardian.com/society/2009/apr/14/growing-up-young-people [Adapted]
Text 6
McDonald, H. (26.03.2017). Northern Ireland power-sharing talks break down. Retrieved
08.04.2017 from http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/mar/26/northern-ireland-
power-sharing-talks-break-down
[Untitled image of girl named Christa]. (n.d.). Retrieved 08.04.2017 from https://s-media-cache-
ak0.pinimg.com/736x/8e/4d/51/8e4d5132c7c26653dda5eab7bd782b72.jpg
[Untitled image of Fintan]. (n.d.) Utdanningsdirektoratet
[Untitled image of Siobhan]. (n.d.). Utdanningsdirektoratet
[Untitled image of Adrian]. (n.d.). Utdanningsdirektoratet
Text 7
Klosterman, C. (27.04.2003). Everyone Knows This Is Somewhere. Retrieved 08.04.2017 from
https://www.nytimes.com/2003/04/27/nyregion/everyone-knows-this-is-somewhere.html
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 18 av 20
Manhattan-Midtown-Manhattan-New-York-City. [Online image] (n.d). Retrieved 08.04.2017 from
http://thenaf.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/Manhattan-Midtown-Manhattan-New-York-
City.jpg [Adapted]
Text 8
U.S. teen pregnancy, birth and abortion rates reached historic lows in 2011. (04.04.2016).
Retrieved 08.04.2017 from https://www.guttmacher.org/news-release/2016/us-teen-
pregnancy-birth-and-abortion-rates-reach-lowest-levels-almost-four-decades
10 Facts: Literacy Rates in India. (12.12.2014). Retrieved 08.04.2017 from
https://www.theglobalist.com/10-facts-literacy-rates-in-india/
Ball, J. (09.03.2012). Data showing how young black men have been hit by unemployment.
Retrieved 08.04.2017 from
http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2012/mar/09/black-unemployed-young-men
Gay, M. (17.10.2014). Mental health and youth and young adults. Retrieved 08.04.2017 from
http://nswmentalhealthcommission.com.au/news/galleries/living-well-report-
infographics/mental-health-and-youth-and-young-adults-journey-4
Text 9
Van Wagenen, M. (2014). Popular a memoir: Vintage wisdom for a modern geek. (New York).
Dutton Books. pp 7-11
Book Cover of «Popular». [Online image] (n.d.). Retrieved 08.04.2017 from https://images-na.ssl-
images-amazon.com/images/I/819nU5BbWUL.jpg
Forberedelse ENG1002 og ENG1003 Engelsk fellesfag H2017 Side 19 av 20
Blank side
Schweigaards gate 15
Postboks 9359 Grønland
0135 OSLO
Telefon 23 30 12 00
www.utdanningsdirektoratet.no