单选题Many international conferences are held in Geneva.A. groupsB. companiesC. organizationsD. meetings
单选题Approaches to Understanding Intelligences
It pays to be smart, but we are not all smart in the same way. You may be a talented musician, but you might not be a good reader. Each of us is different.
Psychologists disagree about what is intelligence and what are talents or personal abilities. Psychologists have two different views on intelligence. Some believe there is one general intelligence. Others believe there are many different intelligences.
Some psychologists say there is one type of intelligence that can be measured with IQ tests. These psychologists support their view with research that concludes that people who do well on one kind of test for mental ability do well on other tests. They do well on tests using words, numbers or pictures. They do well on individual or group tests, and written or oral tests. Those who do poorly on one test, do the same on all tests.
Studies of the brain show that there is a biological basis for general intelligence. The brains of intelligence people use less energy during problem solving. The brain waves of people with higher intelligence show a quicker reaction. Some researchers conclude that differences in intelligence result from differences in the speed and effectiveness of information processing by the brain.
Howard Gardner, a psychologist at the Harvard School of Education, has four children. He believes that all children are different and shouldn"t be tested by one intelligence test. Although Gardner believes general intelligence exists, he doesn"t think it tells much about the talents of a person outside of formal schooling. He thinks that the human mind has different intelligences. These intelligences allow us to solve the kinds of problems we are presented with in life. Each of us has different abilities within these intelligences. Gardner believes that the purpose of school should be to encourage development of all of our intelligences.
Gardner says that his theory is based on biology. For example, when one part of the brain is injured, other parts of the brain still work. People who cannot talk because of brain damage can still sing. So, there is not just one intelligence to lose. Gardner has identified 8 different kinds of intelligence: linguistic, mathematical, spatial, musical, interpersonal, intrapersonal, body-kinesthetic (身体动觉的), and naturalistic.
单选题"I"m not meddling," Mary said
mildly
. "I"m just curious."
单选题The medical world is gradually realizing that the quality of the environment in hospitals may play a significant role in the process of recovery from illness. As part of a nation-wide effort in Britain to bring art out the galleries and into public places, some of the country's most talented artists have called in to transform older hospitals and to soften the hard edges of modern buildings. Of the 2 500 National health Service hospitals in Britain, almost 100 now have significant collections of contemporary art in corridors, waiting areas and treatment rooms. These recent initiatives owe a great deal to one artist, Peter Senior, who set up his studio at a Manchester hospital in north-eastern England. The quality of the environment may reduce the need for expensive drugs when a patient is recovering form an illness. A study has shown that patients who had a view on to a garden needed half the number of strong pain killers compared with patients who had no view at all or only a brick wall to look at during the early 1970s. he felt the artist had lost his place in modern society, and that art should be enjoyed by a wider audience. A typical hospital waiting room might have as many as 5 000 visitors each week. What better place to hold regular exhibitions of art? Senior held the first exhibition of his own paintings in the out-patients' waiting area of the Manchester royal Infirmary in 1975. Believed to be Britain's first hospital-artist, Senior was so much in demand that he was soon joined by a team of six young art school graduates. The effect is striking. Instead of the familiar long, barren corridors and dull waiting rooms, the visitors experience a full view of fresh colours, playful images and restful courtyards.
单选题One theory postulates that the ancient Filipinos came from India and Persi
单选题Please watch the milk carefully; I don't want it to boil over.A. spitB. splitC. spillD. spin
单选题Jean has Umade up her mind/U not to go to the meeting.
单选题On the battlefields Nightingale and her nurses proved to be
单选题I can' t put up with his behaviors any more.A. tolerateB. careC. misunderstandD. disappoint
单选题Many difficult words are outside the {{U}}scope{{/U}} of this learner's.
单选题A Tale of Scottish Rural Life
Lewis Grassic Gibbon"s Sunset Song (1932)was voted "the best Scottish novel of all time" by Scotland"s reading public in 2005. Once considered shocking for its frank description of aspects of the lives of Scotland"s poor rural farmers, it has been adapted for stage, film, TV and radio in recent decades.
The novel is set on the fictional estate of Kinraddie, in the farming country of the Scottish northwest in the years up to and beyond World War I. At its heart is the story of Chris, who is both part of the community and a little outside it.
Grassic Gibbon gives US the most detailed and intimate account of the life of his heroine (女主人公). We watch her grow through a childhood dominated by her cruel but hard-working father; experience tragedy (her mother"s suicide and murder of her twin children); and learn about her feelings as she grows into a woman. We see her marry, lose her husband, then marry again. Chris has seemed so convincing a figure to some female readers that they cannot believe that she is the creation of a man.
But it would be misleading to suggest that this book is just about Chris. It is truly a novel of a place and its people. Its opening section tells of Kinraddie"s long history, in a language that imitates the place"s changing patterns of speech and writing.
The story itself is amazingly full of characters and incidents. It is told from Chris"s point of view but also from that of the gossiping community a community where everybody knows everybody else"s business and nothing is ever forgotten.
Sunset Song has a social theme too. It is concerned with what Grassic Gibbon perceives as the destruction of traditional Scottish rural life first by modernization and then by World War I. Gibbon tried hard to show how certain characters resist the war. Despite this, the war takes the young men away, a number of them to their deaths. In particular, it takes away Chris"s husband, Ewan Tavendale. The war finally kills Ewan, but not in the way his widow is told. In fact, the Germans aren"t responsible for his death but his own side. He is shot because he is said to have run away from a battle.
If the novel is about the end of one way of life it also looks ahead. It is a "Sunset Song" but is concerned too with the new Kinraddie, indeed of the new European world. Grassic Gibbon went on to publish two other novels about the place that continue its story.
单选题I didn't help him. I would have,however,I didn't have the money. A. or B. but C. otherwise D. still
单选题Happiness If your sense of well-being fluctuates with stock market, you might be comforted to know that money can't buy you happiness anyway. In one American study conducted in 1993, level of income was shown to have an inverse relation to happiness: The group whose income had declined was happier overall than the group whose income had increased. A soon-to-be published review of the hundreds of studies on this subject supports the 1993 findings. In developed countries, the correlation between income and happiness is close to zero and sometimes negative. With a correlation between level of income and happiness somewhere between 0.12 and 0.18, the United States is near the bottom of the list; that factors other than income are overwhelmingly more important in explaining happiness. Also, as our material wealth increases, the gap between income and satisfaction with life seems to be widening. Predictably, money has its most positive effect on the poor, but once a person has achieved a minimal standard of living level of income has almost nothing to do with happiness. Close relationship, rather than money, is the key to happiness. Indeed, the number of one's personal friends is a much better indicator of overall satisfaction with life than personal wealth. One stands a better chance of achieving a satisfying life by spending time with friends and family than by striving for higher income. Incidentally, in the US, as people become richer, the probability of divorce increases. Our need for companionship is partly biological. All primates respond with pleasure to demonstrations of affection and with pain to loss of companionship. Isolated monkeys will sacrifice food just for the glimpses of another monkey. By ignoring our biologically programmed need for each other, we risk physical and mental distress. A recent cross-national study of mental depression in the US found that in advanced countries, there is a rising tide of major depression. Teenage suicides have increased in recent decades in almost all advanced countries. Moreover, in the US since World War II, there has been an actual decline in the proportion of people who report themselves to be "very unhappy." You can easily test the claim that companionship exceeds wealth as a source of happiness. Ask yourself which has a greater influence on your satisfaction with life: your income or the affection of your intimate companions and the well-being of your children? Conversely, which would make you more depressed: a reduction in salary or a divorce and isolation from your friends? Capitalism succeeds in creating material riches, but it is less successful in building companionable societies and protecting family integrity. But developing countries still have much work to do in pursuing material wealth, where a rise in productivity still greatly increases happiness. For poorer countries, the time is not yet ripe for a shift in priorities from wealth accumulation to companionship. Can we afford to believe that the pursuit of material gain will lead to self-fulfilhnent? We should continue to enjoy our wealth in good company, or else we may find that it is not satisfying.
单选题China does
a lot of
trade with many countries.
单选题Gas does accumulate in the mines around here. A. increase B. spread C. collect D. grow
单选题 Laughter There is an old saying in English: "Laughter is the best medicine". Until recently, few people took the saying very seriously. Now, however, doctors have begun to investigate laughter and the effects it has on the human body. They have found evidence that laughter really can improve people's health. Tests were carried out to study the effects of laughter on the body. People watched funny films, while doctors checked their heart rate, blood pressure, breathing and muscles. It was found that laughter has similar effects to physical exercise. It increases blood pressure, the heart rate and the rate of breathing; it also works several groups of muscles in the face, the stomach, and even the feet. If laughter exercises the body, it must be beneficial. Other tests have shown that laughter appears to be capable of reducing the effect of pain on the body. In one experiment doctors produced pain in groups of students who listened to different radio programs. The group which tolerated the pain for the longest time was the group which listened to a funny program. The reason why laughter can reduce pain seems to be that it helps to produce endorphins (内啡肽) in the brain. These are natural chemicals which diminish both stress and pain, There is also some evidence to suggest that laughter helps the body's immune system, that is, the system which fights infection. In an experiment, one group of students watched a funny video while another group served as the control group - in other words, a group with which to compare the first group. Doctors checked the blood of the students in both groups and found that the people in the group that watched the video had an increase in the activity of their white blood cells, that is, the cells which fight infection. As a result of these discoveries, some doctors and psychiatrists (精神病学家) in the United States now hold laughter clinics, in which they try to improve their patients' condition by encouraging them to laugh, They have found that even if their patients do not really feel like laughing, making them smile is enough to produce beneficial effects similar to those caused by laughter.
单选题{{B}}第二篇{{/B}}
Warm People Likely to Keep Cold at
Bay Staying positive through the cold season
could be your best defense against getting ill, new study findings suggest. In
an experiment that exposed healthy volunteers to a cold or flu virus,
researchers found that people with a generally sunny disposition were less
likely to fall ill. The findings, published in the journal
Psychosomatic Medicine, build on evidence that a "positive emotional style" can
help ward off the common cold and other illnesses. Researchers believe the
reasons may be both objective as in happiness boosting immune function and
subjective as in happy people being less troubled by a scratchy throat or runny
nose. "People with a positive emotional style may have different
immune responses to the virus. " explained lead study author Dr Sheldon Cohen of
Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. "And when they do get a cold, they may
interpret their illness as being less severe. " Cohen and his
colleagues had found in a previous study that happier people seemed less
susceptible to catching a cold, but some questions remained as to whether the
emotional trait itself had the effect. For the new study, the
researchers had 193 healthy adults completes stand, self-perceived health and
emotional "style". Those who tended to be happy, energetic and easy-going were
judged as having a positive emotional style, while those who were often unhappy,
tense and hostile had anegative style. The researchers gave them
nasal drops containing either a cold virus or a particular flu virus. Over the
next six days, the volunteers reported on any aches, pains, sneezing or
congestion they had, while the researchers collected objective data, like daily
mucus production. Cohen and his colleagues found that based on objective
measures of nasal woes, happy people were less likely to develop a
cold.
单选题Once this profile is thoroughly drawn, you can begin to think about setting health priorities based on your particular portrait. For example, if "you drink two martinis every evening, have a high - stress job, are overweight, smoke a pack of cigarettes a day, and use marijuana occasionally on weekends, you should quit smoking first, followed by losing the excess weight, reducing the stress of your job, giving up your marijuana habit, and then finally giving some thought to those martinis if you want to prevent first cancer, and then hean disease. Even for the youthful working person who has never been sick a day in his life, who is in excellent health, a good look at all health habits and at work and home environments may suggest changes that will benefit him in the future. If one smokes, holds a stressful job, suffers from obesity and uses marijuana occasionally, what should he do first to reduce the possibility of heahh hazards?A. Quit smoking.B. Losing excess weight.C. Reduce the stress of work.D. Giving up marijuana us
单选题{{B}}第二篇{{/B}}
The seriously depressed person sees
himself in a very negative way. He is sure that he is alone and hopeless. He
often blames himself for ordinary faults and shortcomings which he exaggerates.
He is very discouraged about himself, the world, and his future. He becomes less
interested in what is going on around him and doesn't get satisfaction from
things he used to enjoy. Fatigue and early morning sleeplessness are quite
common. The depressed person may want to sleep more than usual. He may lose his
appetite and lose weight or eat more than normally and gain weight. Another
particular sign, seen in women is crying spells. Many of these spells are short
and common. Some depressive illness may not show the usual signs
of moody sadness and hopelessness. In these cases, the potential
depression may mask itself as physical discomfort. It may be a cause of
alcoholism, or it may cause addiction to a drug. Chronic fatigue and boredom, as
well as continual failure, may be unrecognized forms of depression. There is
even evidence that the overly active child may be making up for an potential
depression. Depressives share the feeling that they have lost
something very important to them, though often this is not really the case. From
a feeling of loss, the depressed person progresses to false ideas that he is a
loser and will always be a loser, that he must be worthless and perhaps not fit
to live. He may even attempts suicide. So many very depressed people attempt
suicide that depressive illness may be considered the only fatal mental illness.
Not all those suffering from depressive illness do attempt suicide. Nor are all
those who attempt suicide necessarily suffering from illness. But the
relationship is striking. It is estimated that as many as 75 percent of those
who attempt suicide are seriously depressed, Other studies show that the person
hospitalized for depression is about 36 times more likely to commit suicide than
is the non-depressed person. The greatest risk occurs during or immediately
after hospitalization. After age 40, the possibility of suicide increases in
very depressed persons. Almost twice as many women as men suffer from depressive
illness. Almost twice as many women as men attempt suicide, but three times more
men than women succeed, Depressions is a tragic condition which often leads to
broken homes, ruined friendships and careers, and disrupted
lives.
单选题 下面有3篇短文,每篇短文后有5道题。请根据短文内容,为每题确定1个最佳选项。{{B}}第一篇{{/B}}
It came as something of a surprise when Diana,
Princess of Wales, made a trip to Angola in 1997, to support the Red Cross's
campaign for a total ban on all anti-personnel landmines. Within hours of
arriving in Angola, television screens around the world were filled with images
of her comforting victims injured in explosions caused by landmines. "I knew the
statistics," she said, "But putting a face to those figures brought the reality
home to me: like when I met Sandra, a 13-year-old girl who had lost her leg, and
people like her. " The Princess concluded with a simple message:
"We must stop landmines. " And she used every opportunity during her visit to
repeat this message. But, back in London, her views were not
shared by some members of the British government, which refused to support a ban
on these weapons. Angry politicians launched an attack on the Princess in the
press. They described her as "very ill-informed" and a "loose cannon"
(乱放炮的人). The Princess responded by brushing aside the
criticisms: "This is a distraction (干扰) we do not need. All I'm trying to do is
help. " Opposition parties, the media and the public immediately
voiced their support for the Princess. To make matters worse for the government,
it soon emerged that the Princess's trip had been approved by the Foreign
Office, and that she was in fact very well-informed about both the situation in
Angola and the British government's policy regarding landmines. The result was a
severe embarrassment for the government. To try and limit the
damage, the Foreign Secretary, Malcolm Rifkind, claimed that the Princess's
views on landmines were not very different from government policy, and that it
was "working towards" a worldwide ban. The Defense Secretary, Michael Portillo,
claimed the matter was "a misinterpretation or misunderstanding. "
For the Princess, the trip to this war torn country was an excellent
opportunity to use her ,popularity to show the world how much destruction and
suffering landmines can cause. She said that the experience had also given her
the chance to get closer to people and their
problems.
