单选题So long as teachers fail to distinguish between teaching and learning, they will continue to undertake to do for children that which only children can do for themselves. Teaching children to read is not passing reading on to them. It is certainly not endless hours spent in activities about reading. Douglas insists that "reading cannot be taught directly and schools should stop trying to do the impossible." Teaching and learning are two entirely different processes. They differ in kind and function. The function of teaching is to create the conditions and the climate that will make it possible for children to devise the most efficient system for teaching themselves to read. Teaching is also a public activity: It can be seen and observed. Learning to read involves all that each individual does to make sense of the world of printed language. Almost all of it is private, for learning is an occupation of the mind, and that process is not open to public scrutiny. If teacher and learner roles are not interchangeable, what then can be done through teaching that will aid the child in the quest(探索)for knowledge? Smith has one principal rule for all teaching instructions. "Make learning to read easy, which means making reading a meaningful, enjoyable and frequent experience for children." When the roles of teacher and learner are seen for what they are, and when both teacher and learner fulfill them appropriately, then much of the pressure and feeling of failure for both is eliminated. Learning to read is made easier when teachers create an environment where children are given the opportunity to solve the problem of learning to read by reading.
单选题{{B}}Passage 7{{/B}}
Late next century, when scholars are
scripting the definitive history of the PC, these last few years of high-octane
growth may actually be {{U}}(1) {{/U}} as the Dark Ages. Historians will
marvel at {{U}}(2) {{/U}} we toiled in front of monolithic, beige BUBs
(big ugly boxes), suffering under the oppressive glare of cathode-ray tubes
{{U}}(3) {{/U}} our legs scraped against the 10-pound towers beneath our
desks. They may also mark 1999 {{U}}(4) {{/U}} the start
of the PC renaissance, {{U}}(5) {{/U}} manufacturers finally started to
get it: design matters. In this holiday season, computer shoppers will
{{U}}(6) {{/U}} unprecedented variety in shapes, sizes and colors—and
{{U}}(7) {{/U}} in Apple's groundbreaking line of translucent iMacs and
iBooks. {{U}}(8) {{/U}} every major PC maker now has innovative desktop
designs {{U}}(9) {{/U}} the way to market, from hourglass-sculpted
towers to flat-panel displays with all the processing innards {{U}}(10)
{{/U}} into the base. {{U}}(11) {{/U}} industrial designers, who
still think the PC has a long way {{U}}(12) {{/U}} you'll want to
display it on your mantle, the only question is, what took {{U}}(13)
{{/U}} ? "The PC industry has ridiculed design for a long time," says
Hartmut Esslinger, founder of Frog Design. "They {{U}}(14) {{/U}}their
customers and have underestimated their desires." PC makers are
finally catching on-and it's partly {{U}}(15) {{/U}} desperation.
Manufacturers {{U}}(16) {{/U}} to sell computers by trumpeting their
techno bells and whistles, {{U}}(17) {{/U}} processor speed and memory.
But since ever-faster chips have given us more power on the desktop
{{U}}(18) {{/U}} we could ever possibly use, computer makers
{{U}}(19) {{/U}} on price——a strategy that has dropped most units below
$1,000 and slashed profits. Last week IBM limped from the battlefield,
{{U}}(20) {{/U}} it would pull its lagging Aptiva line from store
shelves and sell it only on the Web. Competing only on price "made an industry
shakeout inevitable," says Nick Donatiello, president of the marketing-research
firm Odyssey.
单选题
{{B}}Questions 16-20 are based on the following
passage:{{/B}} Beijing's top hotels are fielding scores of calls
from foreigners and Chinese people eager to book rooms during the 2008 Olympic
Games in the Chinese capital. The luxurious and recently-renovated Beijing Hotel
said it had received nearly 100 telephone inquiries from people wanting to book
rooms during the Games since Beijing won its bid to host the event. "Out of
these people, foreigners make up 30 to 40 per cent, including people calling
from the United States and Europe," a hotel sales manager surnamed Song
said. Minutes before the decision by the International Olympic
Committee (IOC) was announced in Moscow, the hotel had already received 50 to 60
such phone calls from would-be game-goers gambling on the result. Domestic
callers have mainly come from the southern provinces of Guangdong and Fujian.
Song said the hotel was not taking reservations, but only noting down names of
callers, because seven years was too far in advance. The hotel also may be used
by the IOC and would then need to set aside rooms for IOC members, he
said. Beijing will have more than 800 hotels with star ratings
before the Olympic Games in 2008. The city currently has 20 five-star hotels, 34
four-star hotels and 338 other hotels with lower ratings. About 70 hotels will
be designated to accommodate athletes and Olympic officials during the
Games.
单选题A: May I use your phone for a local call? B: ______
sir !
A. Ask me another,
B. Certainly, by no means,
C. It's out of the question,
D. As you wish,
单选题By the end of this month we surely ______ a satisfactory solution to the problem.
阅读理解Karaoke was spread to the whole word ______.
单选题
{{B}}Questions 16-20 are based on the following
passage:{{/B}} In Guangzhou, capital of South China's Guangdong
Province, Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport resumed its international
flights to Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines and other Southeast
Asian nations and regions early this month, said an airport official yesterday.
And the airport's flow of international passengers for July has reached 80 per
cent of the figure for the corresponding month of the previous year.
Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport had to cancel some international
services to Southeast Asian nations and regions because of the outbreak of SARS
beginning in April, the official said. The official predicted his airport's
international service would return to normal operation and handle even more
international passengers in August. Currently, the Guangzhou
airport is operating 22 international flights to 20 foreign metropolises. And
nine foreign airlines have resumed their international flights to the
airport.
单选题A: Don't you think the concert is terrific? B: ______
A. I want to hear other opinions.
B. It certainly is. And I really like the band.
C. Yes, the concert is terrible.
D. No, everything went on perfectly.
单选题She had said little so far, responding only briefly when ______. A. speaking B. spoken to C. spoken D. speaking to
单选题______ on a clear day, far from the city crowds, the mountains give him a sense of infinite peace. A. Walking B. If walking C. While walking D. When one is walking
单选题According to the author, by interacting with people who study liberal-arts, engineering students can______.
阅读理解Most of the things in the store window were
阅读理解Concern with money, and then more money, in order to buy the conveniences and luxuries of modern life, has brought great changes to the lives of most Frenchmen. More people are working than ever before in France. In the cities the traditional leisurely midday meal is disappearing. Offices, shops and factories are discovering the greater efficiency of a short lunch hour in company lunchrooms. In almost all lines of work emphasis now falls on ever-increasing output. Thus the "typical" Frenchman produces more, earns more, and buys more consumer goods than his counterpart of only a generation ago. He gains in creature comforts and ease of life. What he loses to some extent is his sense of personal uniqueness, or individuality.
Some say that France has been Americanized. This is because the United States is a world symbol of the technological society and its consumer products. The so-called Americanization of France has its critics. They fear that "assembly-line life" will lead to the disappearance of the pleasures of the more graceful and leisurely old French style. What will happen, they ask, to taste, elegance, and the cultivation of the good things in life-to joy in the smell of a freshly picked apple, a stroll by the river, or just happy hours of conversation in a local cafe?
Since the late 1940''s life in France has indeed taken on qualities of rush, tension, and the pursuit of material gain. Some of the strongest critics of the new way of life are the young, especially university students. They are concerned with the future, and they fear that France is threatened by the triumph of the competitive, goods-oriented culture. Occasionally, they have reacted against the trend with considerable violence.
In spite of the critics, however, countless Frenchmen are committed to keeping France in the forefront of the modern economic world. They find that the present life brings more rewards, conveniences, and pleasures than that of the past. They believe that a modern, industrial France is preferable to the old.
阅读理解By "casting a wide net"(last paragraph), Laszlo Bock means
单选题 Directions: In this part
there are four passages, each followed with five questions or unfinished
statements. For each of them, there are four suggested answers. Choose the one
that you think is the best answer. Mark your ANSWER SHEET by
drawing with a pencil a short bar across the corresponding letter in the
brackets.{{B}}11-15{{/B}}
For an increasing number of students at
American universities, Old is suddenly in. The reason is obvious: the graying of
America means jobs. Coupled with the aging of the baby-boom (生育高峰) generation, a
longer life span means that the nation's elderly population is bound to expand
significantly over the next 40 years. By 2040, 25 percent of all Americans will
be older than 65, up from 14 percent in 1995. The change poses profound
questions for government and society, of course. But it also creates career
opportunities in medicine and health professions, and in law and business as
well. "In addition to the doctors, we're going to need more sociologists,
biologists, urban planners and specialized lawyers," says Professor Edward
Schneider of the University of Southern California's (USC) School of Gerontology
(老年学). Lawyers can specialize in "elder law", which covers
everything from trusts and estates to nursing-home abuse and age discrimination
(歧视). Businessmen see huge opportunities in the elder market because the baby
boomers, 74 million strong, are likely to be the wealthiest group of retirees in
human history. "Any student who combines an expert knowledge in gerontology
with, say, an MBA or law degree, will have a license to print money," one
professor says. Margarite Santos is a 21-year-old senior at USC.
She began college as a biology major but found she was "really bored with
bacteria". So she took a class in gerontology and discovered that she liked it.
She says, "I did volunteer work in retirement homes and it was very
satisfying."
单选题The output of television sets has ______ in the past five years. A. more than doubled B. more than double C. as many as double D. as much as double
阅读理解The biggest safety threat facing airlines today may not be a terrorist with a gun, but the man with the portable computer in business class. In the last 15 years, pilots have reported well over 100 incidents that could have been caused by electromagnetic interference. The source of this interference remains unconfirmed, but increasingly, experts are pointing the blame at portable electronic devices such as portable computers, radio and cassette players and mobile telephones.
RTCA, an organization which advises the aviation (航空) industry, has recommended that all airlines ban (禁止) such devices from being used during "critical" stages of light, particularly take-off and landing. Some experts have gone further, calling for a total ban during all flights. Currently, rules on using these devices are left up to individual airlines. And although some airlines prohibit passengers from using such equipment during take-off and landing, most are reluctant to enforce a total ban, given that many passengers want to work during flights.
The difficulty is predicting how electromagnetic fields might affect an aircraft''s computers. Experts know that portable devices emit radiation which affects those wavelengths which aircraft use for navigation and communication. But, because they have not been able to reproduce these effects in a laboratory, they have no way of knowing whether the interference might be dangerous or not.
The fact that aircraft may be vulnerable (易受损的) to interference raises the risk that terrorists may use radio system in order to damage navigation equipment. As worrying, though, is the passenger who can''t hear the instructions to turn off his radio because the music''s too loud.
阅读理解Even plants can run a fever, especially when they''re under attack by insects or disease. But unlike humans, plants can have their temperature taken from 3,000 feet away-straight up. A decade ago, adapting the infrared scanning technology developed for military purposes and other satellites, physicist Stephen Paley came up with a quick way to take the temperature of crops to determine which ones are under stress. The goal was to let farmers precisely target pesticide (杀虫剂) spraying rather than rain poison on a whole field, which invariably includes plants that don''t have pest (害虫) problems.
Even better, Paley''s Remote Scanning Services Company could detect crop problems before they became visible to the eye. Mounted on a plane flown at 3,000 feet at night, an infrared scanner measured the heat emitted by crops. The data were transformed into a color-coded map showing where plants were running "fevers"; Farmers could then spot-spray, using 40 to 70 percent less pesticide than they otherwise would.
The bad news is that Paley''s company closed down in 1984, after only three years. Farmers resisted the new technology and long-term backers were hard to find. But with the renewed concern about pesticides on produce, and refinements in infrared scanning, Paley hopes to get back into operation. Agriculture experts have no doubt the technology works. "This technique can be used on 75 percent of agricultural land in the United States." says George Oerther of Texas A&M. Ray Jackson, who recently retired from the Department of Agriculture, thinks remote infrared crop scanning could be adopted by the end of the decade. But only if Paley finds the financial backing which he failed to obtain 10 years ago.
阅读理解
阅读理解Today is the anniversary of that afternoon in April a year ago that I first saw the strange and appealing doll (玩具娃娃) in the window of Abe Sheftel''s toy shop on Third Avenue near Fifteenth Street, just around the corner from my office, where the plate on the door reads: Dr. Samuel Amory. I remember just how it was that day: the first hint of spring floated across the East River, mixing with the soft-coal: smoke from the factories and the street smells of the poor neighborhood. As I turned the corner on my way to work and came to Sheftel''s, I was made once more aware of the poor collection of toys in the dusty window, and I remembered the approaching birthday of a small niece of mine in Cleveland, to whom I was in the habit of sending modest gifts. Therefore, I stopped and examined the window to see if there might be anything suitable, and looked at the confusing collection of unappealing objects—a red toy fire engine, some lead soldiers, cheap baseballs, bottles of ink, pens, yellowed envelopes, and advertisements for soft-drinks; And thus it was that my eyes eventually came to rest upon the doll stored away in one corner, a doll with the strangest, most charming expression on her face. I could not wholly make her out, due to the shadows and the film of dust through which I was looking, but I was aware that a tremendous impression had been made upon me as though I had run into a person, as one does sometimes with a stranger, with whose personality one is deeply impressed.
