单选题More Than Just Money
When Patricia Rochester decided to go back to school after ten years as a staff nurse at Toronto Western Hospital. Her employer not only cheered her on. But also Paid her tuition and gave her a day off with pay every week to study. Throughout her years at the hospital, Rochester has also taken workshops on everything from coaching peers to career development——courses that she believes have helped her advance at work. "I"m now head of the mentoring (指导) program for new hires. Students and staff nurses." she says. "There"s a lot of room for personal improvement here."
Perhaps as important, Rochester says her employer supports and values her work. If you put in overtime. The nurse points out "you get your meals—they"ll order in pizza or Greek food or Chinese." And if staffers feel stiff and stressed from too many hours on the ward. They can call for a flee 15-minute shoulder-and-neck massage (按摩) or even sign up for an eight-week evening course on meditation skills and stress-relief. If that"s not enough, employees can take advantage of five family days a year that can be used if the kids come down with the flu or an aging parent needs ferrying to an important doctor"s appointment. And they have access to a range of perks (好处) such as special rates on hotel rooms, drugstore purchases, and scholarships for employees" children.
You might wonder how an organization can provide such resources and still survive. But University Health Network is one of a number of progressive employers in Canada that have discovered that investing in staff is good business.
If such initiatives help companies cut down on turnover (人员更替) alone, they"re well worthwhile. Says Prem Benimadhu, a vice-president at the Conference Board of Canada. It costs anywhere from $3.300 to rehire support staff, an average $13,300 for technical staff and a whopping (巨资) $43,000 for an executive position, according to one study of Conference Board members.
Innovative initiatives help companies attract talented employees, cut down on sick days (which cost Canadian businesses an estimated $17 billion a year, or an average of $3,550 per Employee) and keep employees more interested in their work. With the substantial talent shortage that already exists in Canada and the prospect of mass retirement over the next five years—as many as 50 or 60 percent in some sectors—Benimadhu says that intelligent employers are putting a renewed focus on the people who work for them.
单选题Why do you want to
throw away
those books?
单选题He possesses a remarkable gift for music. A. ability B. capacity C. talent D. competence
单选题After listening to the testimony, the members of the jury delivered their {{U}}verdict{{/U}}.
单选题
Teaching Is "One of the Least Popular Jobs in the
UK" 1 The UK government has just
published a report on the future of secondary-school teaching (pupils aged
11-16), and the conclusion of the report is that many secondary schools now face
great difficulties in finding people who want to be teachers. Since the 1980s,
the number of graduates who say they would "seriously consider" teaching as a
career has fallen sharply, from 64% in 1982 to just 17% today. The report
suggests that urgent action needs to be taken in order to encourage more
intelligent young graduates into teaching. 2 The
main drawback of secondary teaching, according to the report, is the low salary.
Earnings in teaching are much lower than in many other jobs, and this means that
fewer and fewer young people decide to be teachers. Joanne Manners, 24, is a
good example : "I graduated in maths last year, and I was thinking of doing a
teacher-training course to become a maths teacher—but when I looked into the
details, it became clear that teaching isn't a very lucrative (赚钱的 ) job these
days. I saw I could earn twice as much if I worked in marketing or advertising,
and so I decided not to become a teacher. " 3 It's
not just about the money, however. The survey concluded that another reason why
people don' t want to be teachers is that some teenagers behave very badly in
school. A lot of schools have problems with discipline, and it seems clear that
children do not have the same respect for teachers as in the past. Here's the
view of Dave Hallam, an accountant from London: "I think parents are to blame.
They should have stricter rules with their children at home and also teach their
children to have more respect for teachers. " 4 "I
love teaching: it's my passion. I've been a secondary-school teacher of Spanish
for ten years now, and although it's a very demanding job, it's very satisfying.
When I see my students passing their Spanish exams, or singing along to Spanish
pop songs, it makes me feel so proud," says Brian Jones, who works in a
secondary school in London. So what does he think the government should do to
encourage more people to become teachers? "My view is that the government should
reduce the burden of work on teachers. I find that I always have too much work
to do. " 5 The report is clear that the problem of
teacher shortage is a very serious one. It says that the government should raise
teachers' pay significantly, to catch up with workers in other professions. It
also suggests that the government could launch a nationwide publicity campaign,
with some advertisements on TV and in the newspapers, to show the positive sides
of teaching to young people. Another solution could be to set a maximum number
of hours per week that teachers can work, in order to reduce stress on teachers.
"Hopefully," the report concludes, "these solutions can improve the poor image
of secondary teaching, and increase the number of young people who want to
become teachers in the future."
单选题This meeting which should be held today is postponed to next week. A. delayed B. flourished C. poised D. enquire
单选题The book shifted her
outlook
from social to spiritual, for its theme was that before you change other people you have to change yourself.
单选题Something Men Do Not Like to Do Eric Brown hates shopping. "It's just not enjoyable to me," said the 28-year-old. Chicago man who was carrying several shopping bags along the city's main street, Michigan Avenue. "When I'm out (1) , I basically know what I want to get. I rush in. I buy it. I (2) ." Common wisdom says that guys hate to shop. You can ask generations of men. But people who study shopping say that a number of social, cultural and economic factors are now (3) this "men-hate-to-shop" notion. " (4) social class, ethnicity, age — men say they hate to shop," says Sharon Zukin, a City University of New York sociology professor. "Yet when you ask them deeper questions, it turns out that they (5) to shop. Men generally like to shop for (6) , music and hardware. But if you ask them about the shopping they do for books or music, they'll say 'Well that's not shopping. That's (7) .'" In other words, what men and women call "buying things" and how they approach that task are (8) . Women will (9) through several 1,000-square-metre stores in search of the perfect party dress. Men will wander through 100 Internet sites in search of the (10) digital camcorder. Women see shopping as a social event. Men see it as a mission or a (11) to be won. "Men are frequently shopping to win," says Mary Ann McGrath, a marketing professor at Loyola University of Chicago. "They want to get the best deal. They want to get the best one, The last one and if they do that it (12) them happy." When women shop, "they're doing it in a way where they want (13) to be very happy," says McGrath. "They're kind of shopping for love." In fact, it is in clothing where we see a male-female (14) most clearly. Why, grumble some men, are all male clothes navy, grey, black or brown? But would they wear Light green and pink? "These days, many guys wear a sort of uniform", says Paco Underhill, author of Why We Bye, "It's been hard for them to understand what it means to be fashion-conscious in a business way. It becomes much, much easier if you (15) your range of choices." grumble n. 抱怨,发牢骚 ethnicity n. 种族特点 camcorder n. 摄像放像机
单选题Smoking is not
permitted
in the office.
单选题I hate his
adopting
an air of importance when he is talked to.
单选题As a writer, he
turned out
three novels that year.
单选题There was no {{U}}alternative{{/U}} but to close the road.
A. way
B. means
C. choice
D. reason
单选题Volcanoes There are thousands of volcanoes (火山) all over the world. What makes volcanoes? What happens? The inside of the earth is very hot. Because it is very, very hot, the rock has melted like ice. It has become liquid, like water. It is always boiling, like water in a kettle. If you have seen a kettle boiling, you know that the steam and boiling water try to get out. The very hot melted rock inside the earth also tries to get out. Usually it cannot because the outside of the earth is too thick and strong. But in some places the outside of the earth is thin and weak. Sometimes a crack appears. The hot melted rock, which we call "lava" (熔岩), pushes out through the crack and bursts through. Steam and gas shoot up into the air and the hot melted lava pours out. Big pieces of rock may be thrown high into the air. After a while the volcano becomes quiet again. The melted lava becomes hard. Later the same thing happens again and again. Each time more hot lava pours out on top of the cold lava and then becomes hard. In this way a kind of mountain is built up, with a hole down the middle. Perhaps the volcano will then be quiet. Perhaps it will start again hundreds of years later. Vesuvius is the name of a very famous volcano in Italy. It first came to life many, many years ago. It was quiet for hundreds of years. Then in the year 79 it suddenly burst. A great cloud of smoke shot up into the sky with great burning rocks. Hot lava poured down its sides. About 3,000 people were killed. This has happened again many times since that year. Sometimes no damage was caused, or only little damage. But there was serious damage in the years 472, 1631, 1794, 1861, 1872 and 1906. You can see that a volcano can stay alive for many years. There was also serious damage in 1914 but there has not been any since that year.
单选题Rising College Selectivity
Rising college selectivity doesn"t mean that students are smarter and more serious than in the past, although a few clearly are. It"s a function of excess demand for higher education occurring at a time of increased financial privatization of the industry.
The recession has only increased demand. The vast majority of students aren"t going to college because of a thirst for knowledge, or even for the cultural and social adventure they hope to have. They"re there because they need a job, and they need to get the credentials—and, one hopes the knowledge and skills behind the credentials—that will get them into the labor market.
As higher education has become a seller"s market, the institutions in a position to do so are doing what comes naturally: raising their tuitions and their admissions requirements, but at the expense of contributing to the national goal to increase college attainment. The result is that the United States is losing ground in the international race for educational talent, because although we have some of the best institutions in the world, the whole is less than the sum of its parts.
The increasing stratification of higher education is happening on the spending side, as well. As the selective institutions have become more expensive and less attainable, the rest have had to struggle with the responsibility to enroll more students without being paid to do so. Gaps between rich and poor have grown even more dramatically than gaps in entering test scores. While spending is a poor measure of educational quality, we can"t seriously expect to increase educational attainment if we"re not prepared to do something to address these growing inequities in funding.
That said, the educational policy problem in our country is not that the elite institutions are becoming more selective. They are what they are, and they"re getting more like themselves all the time. The problem is on the public policy side. The president and many governors have set a goal to return America to a position of international leadership in educational attainment.
It"s the right goal, we just need a financing strategy to get there. That doesn"t mean just more money, although some more money will be needed. It also means better attention to effectiveness and to efficiency, and to making sure that spending goes to the places that will make a difference in educational attainment. We know how to do it, if we want to.
单选题I am not certain whether he will come.
单选题He felt hopeless about his future.A. uselessB. carelessC. desperateD. confident
单选题The expedition reached the
summit
at 10:30 that morning.
单选题下面的短文后列出了7个句子,请根据短文的内容对每个句子做出判断:如果该句提供的是正确信息,请选择A;如果该句提供的是错误信息,请选择B;如果该句的信息文中没有提及,请选择C。
Scotland: A Land of Wisdom
In the 1740s, the famous French philosopher Voltaire said, "We look to
Scotland for all our ideas of civilization. " That's not a bad advertisement for
any country when it comes to attracting people to search for a first-class
education. According to the American author Arthur Herman, the
Scots invented the modern world itself. He argues that Scottish thinkers and
intellectuals worked out many of the most important ideas on which modern life
depends—everything from the scientific method to market economics. Their ideas
did not just spread among intellectuals, but to those people in business,
government and the sciences who actually shaped the Western world.
It all started during the period that historians call the Scottish
Enlightenment (启蒙运动), which is usually seen as taking place between the years
1740 and 1800. Before that, philosophy was mainly concerned with religion. For
the thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment, the proper study of humanity was
mankind itself. Their reasoning was practical. For the
philosopher David Hume, humanity was the right subject for philosophy because we
can examine human behavior and so find real evidence of how people think and
feel. And from that we can make judgments about the societies we live in and
make concrete suggestions about how they can be improved, for universal
benefit. Hume's enquiry into the nature of knowledge laid the
foundations for the scientific method-the pursuit of truth through experiment.
His friend and fellow resident of Edinburgh, Adam Smith, famously applied the
study of mankind to the ways in which mankind does business. Trade, he argued,
was a form of information. In pursuing our own interests through trading in
markets, we all come to benefit each other. Smith's idea has
dominated modern views of economics. It also has wide applications. He was one
of the philosophers to point out that nations can become rich, free and powerful
through peace, trade and invention. Although the Scottish
Enlightenment ended a long time ago, the ideas which evolved at that time still
underpin(构成……的基础) our theories of human exchange and enquiry. It also exists in
Scotland itself in an educational tradition that combines academic excellence
with orientation (方向).
单选题Cement was seldom used in buildings of the Middle Ages. A. slight B. rarely C. originally D. occasionally
单选题According to the passage, we do not know whether humans will benefit from taking in fewer calories partly because
