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C2 Dictation – The Future of Work and AI

English Studio

C2 Dictation - The Future of Work and AI

Instructions: Listen carefully and write down the passage as it is read aloud.

(Teacher’s Script – 15 Sentences):

By the end of this decade, AI will have been reshaping the workforce for over twenty years.

Many routine tasks will have been automated in sectors once thought irreplaceable.

Had companies invested in reskilling sooner, more workers might have transitioned successfully.

That AI enhances scalability and reduces error is no longer disputed.

Nevertheless, the autonomy it introduces poses new ethical and logistical dilemmas.

Were employment models to remain static, widespread displacement would be inevitable.

Some experts predict that hybrid roles combining human insight with machine precision will dominate.

While productivity gains are anticipated, the social cost of transition must not be underestimated.

It is likely that emotional intelligence will become a key differentiator in leadership.

Had emotional labor been recognized earlier, HR strategies might look different today.

By 2040, most employees will have been adapting to shifting demands for decades.

The notion that every job is at risk, though exaggerated, is grounded in rapid disruption.

If policy frameworks had evolved faster, the transition might have been less painful.

And yet, many institutions will still have been lagging behind technological realities.

Ultimately, the future of work will depend not on what is possible—but on what is prioritized.

1. What sectors are mentioned as being affected by automation?

2. What problem results from static employment models?

3. What combination is predicted for future roles?

4. What skill is expected to grow in value?

5. What is implied about the speed of policy response?

6. What does the passage say about future priorities?

7. AI (reshape) the workforce for decades by 2040.

8. If firms (invest) in retraining earlier, transitions (be) smoother.

9. Many jobs (automate) in unexpected industries.

10. Were labor markets more flexible, displacement (reduce).

11. HR strategies (look) different if emotional labor had been valued.

12. Institutions (lag) behind despite rapid change.

13. By 2035, employees (adapt) to new roles for years.

14. policy evolved, fewer disruptions might have occurred.

15. Leadership (depend) more on emotional insight than technical skill.

16. The future (shape) by human values as much as innovation.


 

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