Cocoa Beach /Jupiter Surf Camp — Summer |
Summer Surf Camp is centrally located on the Best Western seashore in Cocoa Beach & Jupiter at Carlin Beach Park with accommodations at the Holiday Inn Express in Juno Beach. |
Summer Surf Camp Dates: ● Surf Camp — Session 1 May 27th—30th Family Surf Week (All Ages) ● Surf Camp— Session 2 June 2nd—6th Family Surf Week (All Ages) ● Surf Camp — Session 3 June 9th—13th Teen Week (Ages 12—17) ● Surf Camp — Session 4 June 16th—20th Family Surf Week (All Ages) ● Surf Camp — Session 5 June 23rd—27th Adults Only (18 and over) ● Surf Camp — Session 6 June 30th—July 3rd Family Surf Week (All Ages) ● Surf Camp — Session 7 July 7th—11th Family Surf Week (All Ages) ● Surf Camp — Session 8 July 14th—18th Women’s Camp (18 and over) ● Surf Camp — Session 9 July 21st—25th Family Surf Week (All Ages) ● Surf Camp — Session 10 July 28th—August 1st Adults Only (18 and over) |
* A 20% discount will be applied to the 4-Day Surf Camp Weeks. * Parents are always welcome to sign up and join their children during the teen week surf camp sessions. Summer Camp Details: ● Use coupon(优惠券) code: “CAMP5” at checkout to get the 5% discount * Daily Rate: $125.00 / person * Surf Camp Runs: 9:30 a.m. — 2:30 p.m. ●Please note: We don’t supervise(监督) the campers after 2: 45 p.m. * Directions to Camp: click here |
1.Who are allowed to take part in Session 5 and Session 8?
A. Mr Johnson and his wife.
B. A couple without children.
C. Mr Black and his 19-year-old son.
D. Mrs Black and her 21-year-old daughter.
2.If Mr and Mrs Brown have a “CAMP5” coupon and want to join in the Summer Surf Camp from June 30th to July 3rd, how much should they pay?
A. $600. B. $760. C. $800. D. $950.
3.What can we know from the form?
A. The campers are supervised all day.
B. A couple can sign up and join in the Camp by fax.
C. Parents can take part in Session 3 together with their children.
D. An adult can join in the Summer Surf Camp on any day in June.
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If You Get In, Make College Count
As tuition costs rise, with post-undergraduate (本科毕业后) jobs difficult to find, is higher education worth the cost?
Here is an unfortunate truth: For far too many incoming freshmen, college-any college-is not worth it. Year after year, students fail to get the full value of their tuition.
Many critics blame this cost/value problem on the universities, though each critic might point to a different reason: teachers always think of difficult research, the high costs of athletics, or the popularity of majors that are supposedly not suited to the new job market, to name some of their favorites.
But these are symptoms and not the illness itself. In our experience, the source of the wasted university experience begins with the student. Too often, students make bad choices or, frankly, just not enough great choices.
Too often we meet students who are so exhausted by the business of getting into college that they don’t work hard once they arrive-one of the most common wastes of time and tuition. A poorly constructed transcript (成绩单) can be destructive to a student’s education. Failure to engage and build professional working relationships with professors in office hours (which may lead to continued study, internships and more) also hurts the student’s experience.
Another mistake is failing to make use of the many support networks on today’s college campuses. It’s almost embarrassing how many good offerings are rolled into each tuition dollar, but most students don’t know they exist.
Another common point of failure is filling the schedule with too many extracurricular activities as students once did in high school, rather than getting intensely involved in one or two at most. The same can be said of overburdened course loads.
The final great failure we frequently see is the approach students (and their parents) take to selecting a major and accurately seeing its impact on a future career. University systems are not vocational schools. While critics nowadays complain about the attraction of useless majors — and some do exist — more frequently we see too many students pursue a course of study that is not their strength, simply because it seems to have obvious connections to a potential job after graduation.
Rather than perform poorly in a “practical” major and be of little interest as a future job candidate, we say it is better to major in a subject where a student would do well and master the tools of communication and analysis. Students who choose a unique major should complement (使更具有吸引力) that with some well-chosen skill courses, internships and other co-curricular activities that help them with career opportunities after college.
So, is college worth it? It can be. Studies show that college graduates have many advantages — material, social and emotional — that can lead to greater success later in life.
To get the full value out of college, students must be as diligent and creative about getting out of college as they were about getting in. After all, the most beautiful, Olympic saltwater pool does you no good if you don’t know how to swim.
Introduction | Students in college are 1. to get the full value of the constantly rising tuition. Critics hold that the universities are responsible for the problem, but actually it is students themselves that are to 2. . |
Students’ mistakes | ● Students tend to stop working hard after3. to college. |
● Students fail to take advantage of the 4. that colleges provide. | |
●5. in too many extracurricular activities makes students overburdened with course loads | |
● Students can’t adopt a correct6. to select a major and accurately see its future potential. | |
Author’s advice | ● Take personal 7. and strength into account. |
● Learn the skills of communication and analysis. | |
● Choose some skill courses, internships and other co-curricular activities to 8. future career chances. | |
● Most importantly, 9. and creativity. | |
10. | Students, and only students themselves, can get the best out of college, as long as they learn the skills to swim in the beautiful pool of college. |