首页
登录
职称英语
[originaltext]W: Good evening, everybody.(1)Anxiety has now surpassed depressio
[originaltext]W: Good evening, everybody.(1)Anxiety has now surpassed depressio
游客
2023-11-29
33
管理
问题
W: Good evening, everybody.(1)Anxiety has now surpassed depression as the most common mental health diagnosis among college students, though depression, too, is on the rise. More than half of the students visiting campus clinics cite anxiety as a health concern, according to a recent study of more than 100,000 students nationwide by the Center for Collegiate Mental Health at Penn State. Today we have psychiatrist Dr. Brown to join us.
M: Thank you, Lucy.
W: Tell me how serious anxiety among university students is nowadays.
M: Nearly one in six college students has been diagnosed with or treated for anxiety within the last 12 months, according to the annual national survey by the American College Health Association.
W: What are the causes then?
M:(2)The causes range widely from mounting academic pressure at earlier ages to overprotective parents and compulsive engagement with social media. Anxiety has always played a role in the developmental drama of a student’s life, but now more students experience anxiety so intense and overwhelming that they are seeking professional counseling.
W: I guess as students finish a college year during which these cases continued to spike, the consensus among therapists is that treating anxiety has become an enormous challenge for campus mental health centers.
M: Indeed.(3)Like many college clinics, the Center for Counseling and Psychological Services at the University of Central Florida—one of the country’s largest and fastest-growing universities, with roughly 60,000 students— has seen sharp increases in the number of clients: 15.2 percent last year alone. The center has grown so rapidly that some supplied closets have been converted to therapists’ offices.
W: Why is it suddenly increasing there?
M: More students are seeking help partly because the stigma around mental health issues is lessening. Anxiety has become emblematic for the current generation of college students.
W: Why is that?
M: Because of escalating pressures during high school, students arrive at college preloaded with stress. Accustomed to extreme parental oversight, many students seem unable to steer themselves. And with parents so accessible, they have had less incentive to develop life skills.
W: But I bet social media plays another important role too.
M: Yes.(4)Social media is a gnawing, roiling constant. As students see posts about everyone else’s fabulous experiences, the inevitable comparisons erode their self-esteem The popular term is "FOMO"—fear of missing out.
W: Anxiety is an umbrella term for several disorders, including social anxiety disorder and agoraphobia. It can accompany many other diagnoses, such as depression, and it can be persistent and incapacitating. Students who suffer from this acute manifestation can feel their very real struggles are shrugged off, because anxiety has become so ubiquitous, almost a cliche, on campus.
M: But more often, anxiety is mild, intermittent or temporary. The manifestation of a student in the grip of a normal developmental issue can be learning time management, for example, or how to handle rejection from a sorority. Mild anxiety is often treatable with early, modest interventions. But to care for rising numbers of severely troubled students, many counseling centers have moved to triage protocols. That means that students with less urgent needs may wait several weeks for first appointments.
W: What is your advice then?
M: By necessity, most centers can only offer individual therapy on a short-term basis. About 80 percent of clients only need limited therapy. Students are busting their butts academically: they’re financially strapped, working three jobs.(5)There’s nothing diagnosable, but sometimes they just need a place to express their distress.
W: Let’s wish they could get their problems solved in the near future. Thank you for your valuable advice.
This is the end of the first interview. Questions 1 to 5 are based on what you have just heard.
1. What is this interview mainly about?
2. Which of the following is a cause of anxiety among university students?
3. What has the Center for Counseling and Psychological Services at the University of Central Florida seen last year?
4. How do social media affect students’ mental health?
5. What is the man’s advice to anxious students?
选项
A、Controllable devotion to social media.
B、Poor family background.
C、Academic pressure during the whole college years.
D、Overprotection from parents.
答案
D
解析
本题考查选项中哪个是引发大学生焦虑的原因。由“The causes range widely from mounting academic pressure at earlier ages to overprotective parents and compulsive engagement with social media.”可知,早期的学习压力、父母亲的过度保护以及不得不与社交媒体打交道等原因引发了大学生的焦虑症,因此答案为[D]。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3229833.html
相关试题推荐
[originaltext]M:Yeah,youmentionedAmericanizedstyle.Whatisparticularabo
[originaltext]M:Yeah,youmentionedAmericanizedstyle.Whatisparticularabo
[originaltext]M:Yeah,youmentionedAmericanizedstyle.Whatisparticularabo
[originaltext]M:I’mtalkingtoJanetHolmeswhohasspentmanyyearsnegotiati
[originaltext]M:I’mtalkingtoJanetHolmeswhohasspentmanyyearsnegotiati
[originaltext]M:I’mtalkingtoJanetHolmeswhohasspentmanyyearsnegotiati
[originaltext]M:Butdon’tmanymoreparentsliveapartfromtheirmarriedchil
[originaltext]M:Today,we’veProfessorMcKayonourMorningTalkShow.Goodmo
[originaltext]M:Today,we’veProfessorMcKayonourMorningTalkShow.Goodmo
[originaltext]M:Today,we’veProfessorMcKayonourMorningTalkShow.Goodmo
随机试题
A------TakeCareNottoLeaveThingsBehindJ------ShootingProhibitedB------L
Whatisthepassagetalkingabout?______.[originaltext](16)Herearelittl
Meteor-psychologists(气象心理学家)areconcernedwithhowtheweather【B1】______t
某民用建筑需要设置消防水池,有效容积为560m3。关于该建筑消防水池的说法不正确
公路运输成本主要包括()。A.职工福利费 B.燃料费用 C.车辆折
防范由于设备发生故障和修理而导致生产延误的方式是()。A.根据能力使用情况来
男性,27岁。反复尿频,尿急,尿痛伴终末肉眼血尿2年。更换抗生素治疗效果欠佳,且
A.18 B.18π C. D.
苦杏仁烊制的作用有A.除去非药用部位 B.便于有效成分煎出 C.杀酶保苷
应届毕业生与一般员工在许多方面有着相当的差别,这些差别不包括()。A.对公司期
最新回复
(
0
)