#ESL Podcast 200 – Meeting a Deadline
##GLOSSARY
**You wanted to see me? –** short for *“Did you want to see me?”*; I’m here as you
wanted or requested
*You wanted to see me? I’ve been out to lunch for the past hour.
**to pull out (all) the stops –** to give something the most effort that you can; to try
as hard as you can
*The university research team pulled out all the stops to make the discovery
before any other university.
**deadline –** the latest time or date that something should be completed
*The deadline to submit your application is Friday at 5:00 p.m.
**milestone –** an important time, action, or event that marks a change in the
development of something
*Most people believe that the 10-year wedding anniversary is a milestone in a
marriage.
**scope –** the boundaries or the outside limit of something
*The wide scope of power he has in this company allows him to make decisions
at all levels of management.
**turned out to be –** a phrase used when someone expect one thing but gets
something else; to wonder about something that is mysterious or unclear and
then to find out what it is
*We thought that there was a dangerous animal trapped under the car, but it
turned out to be a cat.
**to anticipate –** to expect; to predict; to think something is likely to happen
*All of the employees in the company anticipated getting a large cash bonus at
the end of the year.
**to allocate –** to give for a specific purpose
*How can we finish building this park if the city government won’t allocate
enough money for the project?
**resource –** anything valuable or useful that someone can use to do something
*This is a big job but I’m sure we have enough resources in this organization to
get it done right.
**to push back –** to delay; to reschedule for a later time
*She’s too busy right now to take time off from work, so we decided to push back
our vacation from August to September.
**the time to ask (something) was… –** a phrase used to mean that it is too late to
ask for something now; you should have asked for it earlier
*The time to ask for a day off this week was last week when I was making up the
schedule.
**to miss –** to be too late
*She got to the station 10 minutes too late and missed her train to Boston.
**to breathe down (someone’s) neck –** to watch someone very closely, usually
making the person being watched uncomfortable
*Stop breathing down my neck! I’ll finish cooking dinner faster if you stop
bothering me.
**to stall –** to delay to give yourself more time
*He didn’t have enough money to pay his rent and tried to stall the landlord by
telling her that he had already sent a check in the mail.
**you have my word –** I give you my promise
*You have my word that I will be there at 10 a.m. to help you with the
presentation.
**to take the heat –** to take the blame for something
*Even though all four of the kids were responsible for breaking the window,
Lionel took the heat.
**to count on (someone) –** to rely on someone; to be able to be certain that
someone will do what they say they will do
*He knew that he could count on Sarah to be on time for the meeting.
**to let (someone) down –** to disappoint someone
*I’ll give you another chance, but don’t let me down this time.
##COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS
1. What is the reason Pam gives for missing the deadline?
a) The project is more work than she originally thought.
b) The managers have been breathing down her neck.
c) She didn’t know that the deadline was last Monday.
2. Ed is Pam’s
a) co-worker.
b) boss.
c) boyfriend.
##WHAT ELSE DOES IT MEAN?
to push back
The phrase *“to push back,”* in this podcast, means to chathe a scheduled event
to a later date: “Since Dave will be out of town on the 4 , we’ll need to push
back the date of the party.” There is a slightly different phrase, *“to push ahead,”*
that means to continue even though the situation is difficult: “We’re all tired but
let’s push ahead and try to finish this letter before we quit work for the day.” Or,
“A lot of people don’t want us to say anything negative about the new policy, but
we have to push ahead if we want our opinions to be heard.” Another phrase, “to
push around,” means to force someone to do something they don’t want to, by
threatening them with harm: “An older boy at school is trying to push my little
brother around.” Or, “The new boss is trying to push everybody around by
making decisions without asking anyone else.”
to count on
In this podcast, the phrase *“to count on”* means to depend on someone to do
something: “I’ve known him for 10 years and I know that you can count on him to
do a good job.” Another slightly different phrase, *“to count down,”* means to
begin at a higher number and to count to the lowest number: “These are the last
seconds of this year, 2007. Let’s count down: 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1.” Or, “Your
new store opens soon. Are you counting down the days?”
##CULTURE NOTE
In a U.S. business setting, employees are expected to meet deadlines by having
good *“time management skills.”* Time management is a term used to mean being
able to use your time well. It means to be able to schedule and plan your time so
that you will work *“efficiently,”* or to complete good work in the least amount of
time possible. People who *“procrastinate,”* or wait until the last minute to do
something, sometimes have trouble working in a business environment.
Many people believe that one of the best ways to manage your time well is “to
prioritize,” or to decide what is more important and what is less important, since it
is not possible to do everything at the same time. The most important job would
be considered a *“top priority,”* and the least important jobs would be *“low priority.”*
Some people keep a *“to-do list”* that shows the jobs that need to be done, in
order of priority.
Another suggestion for good time management is to be *“proactive,”* or to take
action to make something happen rather than waiting to respond when it does
happen. Being proactive usually means doing something before it becomes a
problem or a *“crisis,”* or a very difficult or dangerous situation. Being proactive
can save time and resources.
Comprehension Questions Correct Answers: 1 – a; 2 – b
##COMPLETE TRANSCRIPT
Welcome to number 200, “Meeting a
Deadline.”
You're listening to episode number 200.
I'm your host, Dr. Jeff McQuillan, coming to you from the Center for Educational
Development in beautiful Los Angeles, California.
As always, we remind you to visit our website at . There you
can find the complete transcript for this podcast in our Learning Guide. It also
contains the definitions, the words, additional cultural notes and other information
about this episode of ESL Podcast.
Today's podcast is called, *“Meeting a Deadline.”* Let's go!
[start of story]
Pam: You wanted to see me?
Ed: Yes, I did. Have a seat. I want to talk to you about the Pulsen project.
Pam: I know I’m a little late in getting that report to you, but I’ve been pulling out
the stops to get it done.
Ed: But it’s still not done, is it? You know that the deadline for the next
milestone of the project was this past Monday.
Pam: Yes, I know, but the scope of the project turned out to be a lot bigger than I
had anticipated. And, they just didn’t allocate enough resources for something
this size. Is there any way we can push back the deadline by a week?
Ed: The time to ask that was last week, not after you’ve missed the deadline. I
have the management breathing down my neck about this report. I’ve tried to
stall them for the past two days and they’re not happy.
Pam: I promise to have it on your desk by tomorrow morning. You have my
word.
Ed: All right. I’ll give you until 9:00 a.m. tomorrow. I’m tired of taking the heat,
though, and I don’t plan to do it any longer.
Pam: You can count on me.
Ed: Don’t let me down.
Pam: I won’t.
[end of story]
The title of this podcast is, *“Meeting a Deadline.”* To meet, *“meet,”* a deadline
means that you do what you are supposed to do before the time that it is due. A
deadline, *“deadline,”* all one word, is the day or date that you have to get
something done. It's the time that you must complete whatever you are told to
complete.
Our dialogue begins with Pam saying to her boss Ed, *“You wanted to see me?”*
This is the same as saying, *“Did you want to see me?”* but we use this
expression, *“You wanted to see me?”* as a question when we are pretty sure that
the person wants to see us, or that we know that they wanted to see us and
we're just confirming, we're just checking, that that is true. You could also say,
*“Did you want to see me?”* if you weren't, perhaps, as certain, though these two
expressions can also mean the same thing and be used in the same way.
Ed says, *“Yes, I did.”* I did want to see you. He tells Pam to, *“Have a seat,”* or to
take a seat, meaning to sit down. He wants to talk to Pam “about the Pulsen
project,” and Pam says, *“I know I’m a little late in getting that report to you.”*
What she means here is that she is late in delivering the report, or handing the
report - the information - to her boss. She's running late, we might say. To run
late is the same as to be late, in this case means that you are not getting things
done when you should get them done.
Pam says that she's, *“been pulling out the stops to get it done.”* The expression,
to pull out the stops, *“stops,”* or to pull out all the stops, means that you are doing
everything possible that you can to get something done. This expression comes
from the organ, as in a church. An organ is a musical instrument that has long
pipes that play different notes. To pull out the stops means to use all of the pipes
of the organ, and it's an expression here which generally means to do everything
possible.
Ed says, *“But it’s still not done, is it?”* He's telling Pam that she still has not
finished the report, even though she has done everything possible, she says. Ed
says, “You know that the deadline for the next milestone of the project was this
past Monday.” Well, deadline, we already know, is when something has to be
finished. A milestone, *“milestone,”* all one word, is when you have a large project
and there are several different parts to the project. Each part of the project has
its own timeline - when you are supposed to get something done for this part, for
part B, for part C, and so forth. Each of these parts would have its own
milestone. A milestone is when you have completed an important or significant
part of the project. So, a big project that takes three months may have a
milestone for part A and then another milestone for part B and a third for part C.
Ed says that the milestone deadline for the project, for this part of the project,
*“was this past Monday,”* meaning it was the Monday that we just passed, the
previous Monday.
Pam says, “Yes, I know, but the scope of the project turned out to be a lot bigger
than I had anticipated.” The scope, *“scope,”* means the range, or the amount, or
the size of the project. *“Turned out to be a lot bigger.”* When we say something
turned out to be, we mean that the result was something that was different than
what you may have expected. Well, *“the scope”* of this “project turned out to be a
lot bigger” - the size of it was bigger than I expected. The word that Pam uses in
the dialogue is anticipated, *“anticipated.”* To anticipate, as a verb, means to
expect, to think about something and how it will happen, what will happen in the
future. This is to anticipate. And, she said that she expected was a smaller
project.
She also complains, because Pam is really complaining to the boss - giving him
excuses, reasons why she didn't finish the project. She says that they “didn’t
allocate enough resources for something this size.” To allocate, *“allocate,”* is a
verb that you will often hear in a business setting, and it means to give. We often
use this verb, to allocate, with the term resources. A resource, *“resource,”* is
anything that you can use to get something done. And, in a business project
resources would include people who could help with the project. It might also
include information you need to do a project. It might include the amount of time
that you have to finish the project. It could be money that you need to complete
the project. All of these things are resources. In general, a resource is
something that you use to complete another task, to finish something else. And,
the term here that you will hear often is allocate resources, meaning that you
need to give people what they need to finish the project.
Pam asks Ed if there is, *“any way,”* that is if it is possible to “push back the
deadline by a week?” To push, *“push,”* back a deadline means to move the
deadline another week in the future. Ed says, “The time to ask that was last
week,” meaning you should have asked that last week, not now – “not after
you've missed the deadline.” To miss, *“miss,”* a deadline is the opposite of to
meet or to make a deadline, when you don't finish what you are supposed to do
by the day you are supposed to do it.
Ed says, *“I have the management breathing down my neck.”* When we say
someone is breathing down your neck, we mean that they are bothering you.
They are waiting for something to get done and they are asking you about it all
the time - *“Is it finished yet? Are you done yet? Why haven't you completed it?”*
So, Ed is saying that his boss - and remember Ed is Pam's boss - his boss has
been talking to him and asking him about the project, putting pressure on him to
complete it, trying to hurry it up.
Ed says that he's *“tried to stall them,”* but *“they're not happy.”* To stall, *“stall,”*
someone means to delay them, to make them wait longer because usually you
aren't finished doing what you're supposed to do. So, if you take your car into
the mechanic to get it fixed and the mechanic says, “It will be done by five o'clock
this afternoon.” You go at five o'clock and the car isn't done and the mechanic
may say, “Oh well, I need to get some more things. Why don't you come back
tomorrow?” He's trying to stall you, to prevent you, or to delay you, from getting
your car back.
Pam says that she promises to have the report on Ed's “desk by tomorrow
morning.” When we say we're going to have something on someone's desk we
mean you're going to give it to them, you're going to deliver it to them. Pam
says, *“You have my word.”* The expression, to have someone's word, means
that the person is promising to do something. They are committing to do
something. *“You have my word.”* I am promising to do it. Ed says okay, “I’ll give
you until nine o'clock tomorrow. I’m tired of taking the heat, though, and I don’t
plan to do it any longer.” To take the heat, *“heat,”* means to be the person who is
being criticized or the person who is being blamed for something that is going
wrong. Ed is saying that the management - his bosses - have been bothering
him, and he's the one who has to take the heat, who has to accept the
responsibility.
Pam says, *“You can count on me.”* To count, *“count,”* on someone means to
depend on them. And, Ed says, *“Don't let me down.”* To let someone down
means to disappoint them. So, to count on someone means to depend or rely or
trust someone to do something, and to let someone down means not to do that
thing, not to do what you promised to do.
Now let's listen to the dialogue, this time at a native rate of speech.
[start of story]
Pam: You wanted to see me?
Ed: Yes, I did. Have a seat. I want to talk to you about the Pulsen project.
Pam: I know I’m a little late in getting that report to you, but I’ve been pulling out
the stops to get it done.
Ed: But it’s still not done, is it? You know that the deadline for the next
milestone of the project was this past Monday.
Pam: Yes, I know, but the scope of the project turned out to be a lot bigger than I
had anticipated. And, they just didn’t allocate enough resources for something
this size. Is there any way we can push back the deadline by a week?
Ed: The time to ask that was last week, not after you’ve missed the deadline. I
have the management breathing down my neck about this report. I’ve tried to
stall them for the past two days and they’re not happy.
Pam: I promise to have it on your desk by tomorrow morning. You have my
word.
Ed: All right. I’ll give you until 9:00 a.m. tomorrow. I’m tired of taking the heat,
though, and I don’t plan to do it any longer.
Pam: You can count on me.
Ed: Don’t let me down.
Pam: I won’t.
[end of story]
The script for today's podcast was written by the very reliable Dr. Lucy Tse.
From Los Angeles, California, I'm Jeff McQuillan. Thank you for listening. As
always, we'll see you next time on ESL Podcast.
is written and produced by Dr. Lucy Tse,
hosted by Dr. Jeff McQuillan. This podcast is copyright 2006.