单选题We are hoping for a large sale of our new products because the new car design ______ all the latest safety features.
单选题An organization is only as good as the people it employs. Selecting the right person for the job involves more than identifying the essential or desirable range of skills, educational and professional qualifications necessary to perform the job and then recruiting (招募) the candidate who is most likely to possess these skills or at least is perceived to have the ability and inclination to acquire them. This is a purely person/skills match approach to selection.
Work invariably takes place in the presence and/or under the direction of others, in a particular organizational setting. The individual has to fit in with the work environment, with other employees, with the organizational climate, style of work, organization and culture of the organization. Different organizations have different cultures. Working as an engineer at British Aerospace will not necessarily be a similar experience to working in the same capacity at GEC or Plessey.
Poor selection decisions are expensive. For example, the costs of training a policeman are about £20,000. The costs of employing an unsuitable technician on an oil rig (石油钻塔) or in a nuclear plant could, in an emergency, result in millions of pounds of damage or loss of life. The disharmony of a poor person-environment fit is likely to result in low job satisfaction, lack of organizational commitment and employee stress, which affect organizational outcomes, i. e. productivity, high rates of staff change and absenteeism, and individual outcomes i. e. physical, psychological and mental well-being.
However despite the importance of the recruitment decision and the range of sophisticated and more objective selection technique available, including the use of psychometric tests, assessment centers etc. , many organizations are still prepared to make this decision on the basis of a single 30 to 45 minute unstructured interview. Indeed, research has demonstrated that a selection decision is often made within the first four minutes of the interview. In the remaining time, the interviewer then attends exclusively to information that reinforces the initial "accept" or "reject" decision. Research into the validity of selection methods has consistently demonstrated that the unstructured interview, where the interviewer asks any questions he or she likes, is a poor predictor of future job performance and does little better than more controversial methods like graphology (笔迹学) and astrology (占星术).
单选题The news you told me the other day has yet to be ______.(2003年西南财经大学考博试题)
单选题{{B}}Passage Five{{/B}}
"Refrigerator production in China
jumped from 1.4 million units in 1985 to 10.6 million in 1998," according to
David Fridley, a researcher in the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory, USA. The Global Environmental Facility,
through the United :Nations Development Program, has decided to fund $ 9.3
million of the $40 million program to help the government of China transform its
market for refrigerators. The refrigerator project began in 1989 when the EPA
signed an agreement with the government of China to assist in the elimination of
CFCs from refrigerators. Berkeley Lab has been involved in the project since
1995 through the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, developing the market
transformation program based on the success of the first phase of the project,
which involved designing and testing CFC (chlorofluorocabon) free,
energy-efficient refrigerators. Fridley says that beyond his technical
supervisory role, the Laboratory will be involved in training and working with
the State Bureau of Technical Supervision as the new efficiency standards are
developed. "Market transformation," Fridley explains, "is the
process of shifting consumer demand for a product, in this case to a more
energy-efficient, environmentally favorable product through voluntary, market
based means such as technical assistance and training for manufacturers,
consumer education, and financial incentives to manufacture and sell the more
efficient products." "Collectively, we developed a technical
training program for Chinese refrigerator manufacturers interested in developing
CFC free, efficient refrigerators; a financial incentive program to motivate
manufacturers to build the most efficient refrigerator possible; and a mass
purchasing program for Chinese government agencies that acquire refrigerators in
bulk," Fridley says. In 1998, the refrigerator project was
awarded an International Climate Protection Award by the EPA. "It is not widely
known in the United States, but China has had an energy efficiency policy in
place since the early 1980s, says Mark Levine, Environmental Energy Technologies
Division director and an advisor to the Chinese government on energy
efficiency." The government of China is committed to using energy more
efficiently, and this has allowed the economy to grow at nearly twice the rate
of energy consumption. "The Energy-Efficient Refrigerator
Project will have a significant, direct effect on reducing greenhouse gas and
pollutant emissions. We Berkeley Lab are grateful to have the chance to work
with the people and government of China on this project, as well as on our other
refrigerator production projects in energy data analysis, appliance efficiency
standards, and technical advice on cogeneration plants ," adds
Levine.
单选题The little girl wore a very thin coat. A sudden gust of cold wind made her______.
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单选题We will go to the courtyard to meet the other ______ of our apartment building.
单选题It is not enough to observe behaviors and ______them with physiological events that occur at the same time.(2004年西南财经大学考博试题)
单选题The apartment was ______ at $ 20,000 and its owner was happy about that.
单选题Computers are_____much part of everyone's lives now that it's difficult to imagine what people would do without them.
单选题Can you______an escape of gas in this corner of the room?
单选题Fear and its companion pain are two of the most useful things that men and animals possess, if they are properly used. If fire did not hurt when it burnt, children would play it until their hands were burnt away. Similarly, if pain existed but fear did not, a child would burn itself again and again, because fear would not warn it to keep away from the fire that had burnt it before. A really fearless soldier—and some do exist—is not a good soldier because he is soon killed; and a dead soldier is of no use to his army. Fear and pain are therefore two guards without which men and animals might soon die out.
In our first sentence we suggested that fear ought to be properly used. If, for example, you never go out of your house because of the danger of being knocked down and killed in the street by a car, you are letting fear rule you too much. Even in your house you are not absolutely safe: an airplane may crash on your house, or ants may eat away some of the beams in your roof so that the latter falls on you, or you may get cancer !
The important thing is not to let fear rule you, but instead to use fear as your servant and guide. Fear will warn you of dangers; then you have to decide what action to take. In many cases, you can take quick and successful action to avoid the danger. For example, you see a car coming straight towards you; fear warns you, you jump out of the way, and all is well.
In some cases, however, you decide that there is nothing that you can do to avoid the danger. For example, you cannot prevent an airplane crashing onto your house. In this case, fear has given you its warning; you have examined it and decided on your course of action, so fear of this particular danger is no longer of any use to you, and you have to try to overcome it.
单选题Instead of advancing the public discussion of biotechnology, David Shenk succeeds merely in displaying his general ignorance and unfounded fears in his recent article "Biocapitalism" His claim that "no living creature has ever before been able to upgrade its own operating system" ignores transduction ( the act or process of transferring genetic material or characteristics from one bacterial cell to another) and bacterial conjugation (the temporary union of two bacterial cells), which are ways organisms have "upgraded" their own genomes with novel DNA for hundreds of millions of years. A first-year biology major could have told him that. For Shenk to suggest that his daughter may someday use a before-birth genetic test for "quick-wittedness" is extremely dun-witted, ignoring the complexity of polygenetic traits while embracing a shallow genetic determinism. Nurture ——utterly absent from his discussion ——really does matter. Finally, worrying about the effects on the gene pool of a "culture in which millions choose the same desirable genes" is worse than pointless. The United Nations projects an approximate human population of eight billion by the year 2020. Even if Shenk's worst fears are realized, and the wealthy parents of 100 million children can and do select for a polygenetic trait ——say, blue eyes ——this would present only a modest shift in the gene pool of 1 in 80, or 1.25 percent, assuming that none of those children would otherwise have been born with blue eyes. But what truly matters for the gene pool in the 1000-year-long run is the capacity of this trait to grant reproductive success in subsequent generations. Whatever advantage blue eyes currently grant in acquiring a mate presumably derives in part from the trait's relative scarcity. Elementary economics shows that if you flood the market with an asset, you diminish the relative value of that asset: more blue eyes will make blue eyes less sexy. Is it really too much to expect familiarity with either biology or economics from an essay entitled "Biocapitalism"?
单选题The Solar Decathlon is most probably the name of a ______.
单选题In the case of mobile phones, change is everything. Recent research indicates that the mobile phone is changing not only our culture, but our very bodies as well.
First, let"s talk about culture. The difference between the mobile phone and its parent, the fixed-line phone, is that a mobile number corresponds to a person, while a landline goes to a place. If you call my mobile, you get me. If you call my fixed-line phone, you get whoever answers it.
This has several implications. The most common one, however, and perhaps the thing that has changed our culture forever, is the "meeting" influence. People no longer need to make firm plans about when and where to meet. Twenty years ago, a Friday night would need to be arranged in advance. You needed enough time to allow everyone to get from their place of work to the first meeting place. Now, however, a night out can be arranged on the run. It is no longer "see you there at 8", but "text me around 8 and we"ll see where we all are".
Texting changes people as well. In their paper, Insights into the Social and Psychological Effects of SMS Text Messaging two British researchers distinguished between two types of mobile phone users: the "talkers" and the "texters"—those who prefer voice to text messages and those who prefer text to voice.
They found that the mobile phone"s individuality and privacy gave texters the ability to express a whole new outer personality. Texters were likely to report that their family would be surprised if they were to read their texts. This suggests that texting allowed texters to present a self-image that differed from the one familiar to those who knew them well.
Another scientist wrote of the changes that mobiles have brought to body language. There are two kinds that people use while speaking on the phone. There is the "speakeasy": the head is held high, in a self-confident way, chatting away. And there is the "spacemaker": these people focus on themselves and keep out other people.
Who can blame them? Phone meetings get cancelled or reformed and camera-phones intrude on people"s privacy. So, it is understandable if your mobile makes you nervous. Perhaps you needn"t worry so much. After all, it is good to talk.
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单选题In a global economy that has produced more dramatic ups and downs than anyone thought possible, Asia may be______another disheartening plunge.(2013年10月中国科学院考博试题)
单选题I've told you ______ that you cannot go out and play until you've finished your homework. A. once and for all B. to all intents C. all the way D. in all respects
单选题It is often the children who truly lead the elders into America, the sons who take their fathers to their first baseball game or shepherd them to their first rock concert or give them a real sense that they ______ America's future. A. have an impact on B. have a facility for C. have a grasp of D. have a stake in
单选题According to Shannon McGuire, what is making her job harder than before?
