Children who spend more time reading with their parents have a greater chance of becoming better readers than those who don’t. With help from their parents, children can learn techniques(技巧) to improve their reading skills.
“A lot of parents think after their child learns to read, they should stop reading to them,” Donna George said. “They are sadly mistaken.”
George offers her services to parents at the Title I Learning Centers. She said reading aloud to children may be the most valuable(有價值的) thing parents can do. “It is better for children to hear things at a higher level than where they are,” George said. “Parents are their child’s first teacher.” Parents help their children build listening, phonics(拼讀法), comprehension(閱讀理解) and vocabulary skills when they read aloud to them.
Before parents can identify reading problems, they should escape the enemy----television and limit the time their children spend watching television. George suggested not allowing kids to have a TV in their bedrooms, setting a schedule of when kids can watch or keeping a list of how many programs children watch. Louise Joiners said while her 14-year-old daughter and 10-year-old son enjoy reading, the television sometimes becomes a distraction. So she tries to build the situation by suggesting books the entire family will enjoy reading together, like the Harry Potter series.
Parents who do not read themselves should not depend on their children being enthusiastic about it. If parents would read to their children at least 15 minutes every day, children would not have so many problems in school. It is the parents’ job to help build that desire in their children, and of course to know what kind of books to read is also important.
【小題1】The underlined word “distraction” means something that .
A.can improve children’s reading. |
B.can make children interested |
C.can make children not pay their attention |
D.can help children’s right way of reading |
A.reading speed | B.reading environment |
C.reading skills | D.reading materials |
A.What TV programs children can watch during reading. |
B.Advice is given to control their children. |
C.Parents choose reading materials for their children. |
D.How children improve their reading by themselves. |
A.Parents Are Their Child’s First Teacher. |
B.How to Improve Children’s Reading Ability. |
C.Children Spend More Time Reading with Parents. |
D.How Parents Make Their Child a Better Reader. |
【小題1】C
【小題2】B
【小題3】C
【小題4】D
解析試題分析:社會教育類文章。本文主要是介紹父母給孩子讀書的重要性,父母給孩子讀書 有利于孩子的閱讀水平的提高。
【小題1】猜詞題:第四段第一句they should escape the enemy----television and limit the time their children spend watching television.就說電視是閱讀的敵人,以及后面對電視的限制,因此可以知道電視不利于讀書,所以“distraction”的意思是“讓孩子不專心”選C
【小題2】細(xì)節(jié)題:從第四段的內(nèi)容可知主要是講了電視對孩子的閱讀會產(chǎn)生不好的影響,常常讀書的環(huán)境沒有電視或者電視關(guān)掉,這些都屬于閱讀環(huán)境的內(nèi)容,因此B正確
【小題3】文章的最后一段的最后一句“of course to know what kind of books to read is also important”暗示了后面應(yīng)該涉及到孩子應(yīng)該讀什么樣的書。因此,C 項正確。
【小題4】標(biāo)題確定題:本篇文章主要是說明父母給孩子讀書的重要性,父母給孩子讀書有利于孩子閱讀水 平的提高。因此 D項正確
考點:考查教育類短文
科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Grown-ups are often surprised by how well they remember something they learned as children but have never practiced ever since. A man who has not had a chance to go swimming for years can still swim as well as ever when he gets back in the water. He can get on a bicycle after many years and still ride away. He can play catch and hit a ball as well as his son. A mother who has not thought about the words for years can teach her daughter the poem that begins "Twinkle, twinkle, little star" or remember the story of Cinderella or Goldilocks and the Three Bears.
One explanation is the law of overlearning, which can be stated as follows: Once we have learned something, additional learning trials(嘗試) increase the length of time we will remember it.
In childhood we usually continue to practice such skills as swimming, bicycle riding, and playing baseball long after we have learned them. We continue to listen to and remind ourselves of words such as "Twinkle, twinkle, little star" and childhood tales such as Cinderella and Goldilocks. We not only learn but overlearn.
The multiplication tables(乘法口訣表) are an exception to the general rule that we forget rather quickly the things that we learn in school, because they are another of the things we overlearn in childhood.
The law of overlearning explains why cramming(突擊學(xué)習(xí))for an examination, though it may result in a passing grade, is not a satisfactory way to learn a college course. By cramming, a student may learn the subject well enough to get by on the examination, but he is likely soon to forget almost everything he learned. A little overlearning, on the other hand, is really necessary for one's future development.
【小題1】What the main idea of Paragraph 1
A.People remember well what they learned in childhood. |
B.Children have a better memory than grown-ups. |
C.Poem reading is a good way to learn words.“ |
D.Stories for children are easy to remember. |
A.presenting research findings |
B.setting down general rules |
C.making a comparison |
D.using examples |
A.a(chǎn) result of overlearning |
B.a(chǎn) special case of cramming |
C.a(chǎn) skill to deal with math problems |
D.a(chǎn) basic step towards advanced studies |
A.It leads to failure in college exams. |
B.It's helpful only in a limited way. |
C.It's possible to result in poor memory. |
D.It increases students' learning interest. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Many people go to work each day to a job they hate. The harmful feelings influence their entire life, putting a negative cloud over the home, their friends and many of their other activities. There is a better way to live your life. Meaningful purpose is a driving force that adds enthusiasm to your days. Here are a few steps to get the new career rolling:
Do some self-analysis. Ask yourself -- What really matters to me? What problem or wrong would I like to fix? What do I enjoy? Where are my interests and hobbies? What are my priorities? What is my secret passion? What do I want to do with the rest of my life? Reviewing these questions can give you new insight to where you want to go.
Use your unique genius and talents. Every person is born with a unique set of natural abilities. Talents, such as managing, creating, researching, training others, drawing, can all seem like easy work because you have a natural flair(才能)for them. True happiness comes from combining your natural talents, developing and excelling in them, and working in a field, job, industry that you have a passionate interest in.
Make a decision. Only action can change your life. Read a book. Take vocational tests. Use a good career-management professional. Do some career exploration and gather all the information you need. Then make a decision and go forward. Outline the action steps to reach your career goal. Finding meaning, passion and purpose every day you go to work is the wonderful reward, so don’t wait any longer. Begin right now and set in motion your own plan to live a happier, more satisfying life.
【小題1】Which is the best title of the passage?
A.Suggestions on How to Build a More Meaningful Career |
B.Steps on How to Live Happily and Comfortably |
C.Do not Hate Your Job Any Longer. |
D.Find Out Your Natural Talents and Make a Success. |
A.know the true meaning of our life |
B.understand better about the career we want |
C.find out our own unique genius and talents |
D.improve relations with our family and friends |
A.persuade people to work hard to make a happier life |
B.reveal some wrong-doings at work |
C.direct people to choose their career |
D.give some solutions to deal with troubles at work |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Teenagers at one German school are learning how to achieve happiness alongside other traditional subjects such as math and languages.
The class sit in a circle with their eyes shut and they count from one to ten: someone starts, the next voice comes from the far right, a third from the other side.
The aim of the game is to listen for an opportunity to shout out the number without clashing (沖突) with another voice or leaving a pause. On the first try, most of the young Germans try to be first, while a few are too shy to join in, but by the fifth time round, they develop a rhythm. The message: give other people space but also confidently claim your own. This is a requirement for social well-being.
The Willy Hellpach School in Heidelberg is the first in the nation to develop a happiness course. It is intended for students preparing for university entrance exams.
"The course isn't there to make you happy," Ernst Fritz -Schubert, the school principal, warned pupils, "but rather to help you discover the ways to become happy."
Cooking a meal together is one of the class exercises. Improving body language under the guidance of two professional actresses is another.
The course is taught for three periods a week. Despite the happy subject, the pupils themselves insist it is no laughing matter.
"In the first period, we had to each say something positive about another member of the class and about ourselves. No laughing at people." said Fanny, 17.
Research by the school shows it is not the first to start happiness classes: they also exist at some U. S. universities, mainly based on positive thinking, using findings from studies of depression.
【小題1】What's the writing purpose of this passage?
A.To help students struggle against being sad. |
B.To describe all the traditional courses. |
C.To arouse the readers' interest in happiness. |
D.To introduce the happiness course. |
A.try their best to get opportunities for themselves |
B.practice how to speak in front of people |
C.equip them with required social skills |
D.confidently speak out one's opinions |
A.to help students discover the ways to happiness |
B.to make all the students happy all the time |
C.required to be taken by the first year students |
D.created by the Willy Hellpach School |
A.the students can certainly become happy after the course |
B.the students just took the course as a laughing matter |
C.the students' self'-respect can also improve happiness |
D.the students waste time learning something without value |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
During her junior year of high school, Diane Ray's teacher handed her a worksheet and instructed the 17-year-old to map out her future financial life. Ray pretended to buy a car, rent an apartment, and apply for a credit card. Then, she and her classmates played the "stock market game", investing(投資) the hypothetical(虛擬的) earnings from their hypothetical jobs in the market in the disastrous fall of 2008. "Our pretend investments crashed," Ray says, still frightened. "We got to know how it felt to lose money."
That pain of earning and losing money is a feeling that public schools increasingly want to teach. Forty states now offer some type of financial instruction at the high-school level, teaching students how to balance checkbooks and buy stock in math and social-studies classes. Though it's too early to measure the full influence of the Great Recession(大蕭條), the interest in personal-finance classes has risen since 2007 when bank failures started to occur regularly. Now, many states including Missouri, Utah, and Tennessee require teenagers to take financial classes to graduate from high school. School districts such as Chicago are encouraging money-management classes for kids as young as primary school, and about 300 colleges or universities now offer online personal-finance classes for incoming students. "These classes really say, 'This is how you live independently,' " says Ted Beck, president of National Endowment for Financial Education.
Rather than teach investment methods or financial skills, these courses offer a back-to-the-basics approach to handling money: Don't spend what you don't have. Put part of your monthly salary into a savings account, and invest in the stock market for the long-term rather than short-term gains. For Ray, this means dividing her earnings from her part-time job at a fast-food restaurant into separate envelopes for paying bills, spending and saving. "Money is so hard to make but so easy to spend," she says one weekday after school. "That is the big takeaway."
Teaching kids about the value of cash certainly is one of the programs' goals, but teachers also want students to think hard about their finances long term. It's easy for teenagers to get annoyed about gas prices because many of them drive cars. But the hard part is urging them to put off the instant satisfaction of buying a new T-shirt or an iPod. "Investing and retirement aren't things teenagers are thinking about. For them, the future is this weekend," says Gayle Whitefield, a business and marketing teacher at Uth’s Riverton High School.
That’s a big goal for these classes: preventing kids from making the same financial missteps their parents did when it comes to saving, spending, and debt. Though the personal savings rate has increased up to 4. 2 percent, that’s still a far distance from 1982, when Americans saved 11. 2 percent of their incomes. “It’s hard for schools to reach strict money-management skills when teenagers go home and watch their parents increase credit-card debt. It’s like telling your kids not to smoke and then lighting up a cigarette in front of them,” Beck says.
Even with these challenges, students such as Ray say learning about money in school is worthwhile. After Ray finished her financial class, she opened up a savings account at her local bank and started to think more about how she and her family would pay for college. “She just has a better understanding of money and how it affects the world,” says her mother, Darleen-and that’s sown to the details of how money is spent from daily expenses to various taxes. All of this talk of money can make Ray worry, she says, but luckily, she feels prepared to face it.
【小題1】The “stock market game” mentioned in Paragraph 1 is meant to .
A.introduce a new course to students |
B.help students learn about investment |
C.teach how to apply for a credit card |
D.encourage students’ personal savings |
A.By giving examples. | B.By providing data. |
C.By raising questions. | D.By making comparisons. |
A.better students’ learning methods |
B.prevent students going into debt |
C.help students get accepted by colleges |
D.make students become very wealthy |
A.pay off all her debts. | B.handle her money better |
C.find a job in a bank. | D.manage the family income |
A.ways to teach students to earn money |
B.how Diane Ray learns to value money |
C.the push to teach personal finance in school |
D.how students choose a proper financial class |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
As computers become all the more popular in China, Chinese people are increasingly depending on computer keyboards to input Chinese characters. But if they use the computer too much, they may end up forgetting the exact strokes(筆畫) of each Chinese character when writing on paper. Experts suggest people, especially students, write by hand more.
Do you write by hand more or type more? In Beijing, students start using a computer as early as primary school. And computer dependence is more wide-spread among university students. Almost all their homework and essays are typed on a computer.
All the students interviewed say they usually use a computer.
It's faster and easier to correct if using a computer. And that's why computers are being applied more and more often to modern education. But when people are taking stock in computers increasingly, problems appear.
"When I'm writing with a pen, I find I often can't remember how to write a character, though I feel I’m familiar with it."
"I'm not in the mood to write when faced with a pen and paper."
Many students don't feel this is something to worry about. Now that it's more convenient and quick to write on a computer, why bother to handwrite?
Many educators think differently. Shi Liwei , the headmaster of a famous primary school in the capital said "Chinese characters enjoy both practical and aesthetic(審美的) value. But those characters typed with computer keyboards only have their practical value. All the artistic beauty of the characters is lost. And handwriting contains the writer's emotion(情緒). Through one's handwriting, people can get to know one's thinking and personality. Beautiful writing will give people a better first impression of them.”
To encourage students to handwrite more, many primary schools in Beijing have made writing classes compulsory(必修的)and in universities, some professors are asking students to turn in their homework and essays written by hand.
【小題1】The students interviewed prefer to write using a computer mainly because______.
A.they are usually asked to e-mail their homework and essays |
B.they can correct the mistakes they make quickly and conveniently |
C.they find it not easy to remember how to write a character |
D.computers have become popular in China. |
A.Chinese characters enjoy both practical and aesthetic value. |
B.The writer’s thinking and personality are shown in his or her handwriting. |
C.Handwriting contains the writer's emotion. |
D.Handwriting can impress people well and build up one’s self-confidence. |
A.getting bored with | B.getting curious about |
C.getting dependent on | D.becoming crazy about |
A.more and more students will pay attention to handwriting |
B.more and more students will give up writing on a computer |
C.writing by hand will give way to typing by computer one day |
D.the typed article better expresses one’s emotion and quality |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
My name is Cherry Carl, and I retired in June, 2003, after 35 years as a teacher and Language Arts Specialist in Santee, California. However, I continued my role as an instructor at the University of California, San Diego, in the Reading Specialist Certification Program until June, 2009.
I wasn't ready to retire. Teaching is in my blood! (My mother always reminded me that when I was little, I dragged the neighborhood kids in to play school whether they wanted to or not!) I still have the strong desire to make a difference for teachers, parents, and students. I'm passionate about the joy of knowing how to read and write and want every child to have the experience of closing a book with a sigh, "Wow, that was a good book!" The only way they can do that is by having the necessary skills and strategies to become independent readers. This website has been created to provide resources and materials for classroom teachers, reading and resource specialists, speech therapists, parents and students in the area of language arts. Please feel free to download and print anything that catches your eye, but please make sure to leave my name on the poetry and worksheets!
If you have specific needs or suggestions, please don't hesitate to a sk. I'm always open to new ideas and requests. That's how the site continues to grow. You can email me at carl1404@msn.com.
Thank you so much for your heartfelt messages and testimonials. You and your children are the reason that I maintain the site and I will continue to offer the materials with little or no fees.
【小題1】By saying “Teaching is in my blood” in Paragraph 2, the author means that ________.
A.she loves teaching all her life |
B.she didn’t want to retire at all |
C.she is a specialist in teaching |
D.teaching is as important as her blood |
A.She became a teacher at the age of 35. |
B.She was interested in teaching as a child. |
C.She is still a teacher in a middle school now. |
D.She gave up teaching totally 35 years ago. |
A.you must pay some money for them |
B.you can always get them free of charge |
C.you should tell her before getting them |
D.you should mark her name on them |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
For many students in the UK today, deciding whether or not to go to university can be as much about affordability as it is about ambition and aspiration.
In the past, students in the UK could apply to a university or college. They were sure that even if they came from a low income family, their tuition fees and some of their living (or maintenance) costs would be covered by a local authority grant(撥款). A university education was, in a financial sense, open to all and the number of students attending university grew yearly.
Sadly, it seems, those days are long gone. The turning point came in 1998, when the Labour Government introduced tuition fees of £1,000 a year and, instead of giving students a maintenance grant, asked them to cover their own living expenses with a repayable student loan. Only students on the lowest incomes were entitled to a grant.
The flood gates had been opened. As time passed, the ceiling on tuition fees rose, and although applicants from Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales still qualified for varying levels of subsidy(補貼), by 2009/10 students in England often found themselves facing tuition fees over£3,000 a year.
In 2011 the Government announced that, from 2012, universities could charge fees of up to £9,000 a year. Although the Government sweetened the pill by stating that postgraduates did not have to begin repaying their student loans until they were earning more than £21,000 a year, the news created over-dissatisfaction. Many students argued that it was unfair that students should have to begin their work life loaded with huge debt, while others complained that the changes would bring back a class divide to university education. These views were reflected in the number of students applying for a university place, which by January 2012 fell by more than 22,000. The Universities Minister, David Willetts, stood by the decision to increase tuition fees, saying that they would not “put universities’ finance on a bearable footing” and that they would accelerate “a stronger focus on high quality teaching.”
【小題1】From the first paragraph, we can infer that _____ in attending university.
A.a(chǎn)ffordability plays more important roles than ambition and aspiration |
B.a(chǎn)mbition and aspiration are more important than affordability |
C.a(chǎn)ffordability is as important as ambition and aspiration |
D.a(chǎn)mbition and aspiration make a greater difference |
A.2 | B.3 | C.4 | D.5 |
A.made a sweet pill | B.made the change appear good |
C.increased the pill | D.reduced the pill |
A.is in favor of | B.is opposed to |
C.takes no notice of | D.is neither for nor against |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Relax. He is the same little boy you loved yesterday. I smiled trying to hold back the tears. “No, he isn’t. Yesterday I dreamed he would be an astronaut. Today I am hoping he will learn to talk.”
It was like some sort of cosmic joke. I could still recall the day that determined my fate. It was October in Ottawa and the summer breezes had given way to the autumn rainfall of leaves. The snow would begin soon. The crispness (清爽) of coming frost was in the air. My casually mentioning Wyatt’s behavior to Dr. Martin aroused his worries. He started asking me questions about Wyatt’s activities speech pattern and emotions. I still see clearly in my mind the cleanness of the room and all its belongings when the doctor turned to me and said, “He almost sounds autistic (自閉) .”
I couldn’t face that picture in my mind. I had to run to get away from this all too painful place that was reminding me of what was to be my child’s life-being strange.
I could not remember how many times I told myself, “This is normal. He is a little boy who is not talking yet,” when my asking questions met with his blank-eyed response in a restaurant; how many times I would tell myself, “He loves to play on his own for hours at a time and he never gets into trouble,” when Wyatt was playing games that no one else could imagine, let alone join in while other boys in the park were playing together or in small groups played around a sand pail(桶) or toy truck. My life was changing direction. So was Wyatt’s.
I started to hide Wyatt from my friends and neighbor especially from a good friend. It was too painful to let others know about my boy acting strange.
It was a Thursday afternoon and I found one half of a great pair of kitchen scissors was missing. They were unbelievably sharp and could be taken apart so they could be washed or the blades (刀片) sharpened. I knew Wyatt had taken the missing blade.
“Wyatt,” I began as patiently as I could, “Do you see this?” I held up the blade. “Do you know what this is?”
Wyatt put a bunch of Fruit Loops in his mouth. No response.
“Wyatt!” I forced eye contact with him. “Where are the other scissors? See these.” I showed him the half pair.
He smiled big. Ate Fruit Loops. Turned the TV on and off. Still no response.
I didn’t know what to do. It was really hard. “Wyatt,” I tried once more, “Mommy wants these scissors. Can you go get them for Mommy? It will make Mommy so happy if you bring me the scissors.”
“Watch Spongebob.” Wyatt asked as he slid down from his kitchen stool and ran off, leaving me shaking my head and wondering in exactly which way this situation was going to end badly.
Five minutes later, I turned my head to see Wyatt coming downstairs, his favorite doll in one hand, the missing half pair of kitchen scissors in the other. I immediately ran over and took it from him.
“Wyatt!” I hugged him. “Thank you for bringing me the scissors! Good job! You did it! These scissors need to stay in the kitchen. These are Mommy’s scissors!”
Wyatt laughed, looked at me straight in the eye and said, “Mommy so happy!”
I came close to tears. A realization dawned on me that he was the best gift I had ever gotten even though he was not as normal as other children. And why did I hide him from others as if he were some dark and terrible secret. No! He was my pride. It was a long, hard battle to get him to this point, expressing his wants and needs without turning to violence in embarrassment. With love and patience I have found the beautiful, happy boy who would teach me more about life.
And that is the solution.
【小題1】From the first part of the story we can get to know that the son’s problem was _______ to the mother.
A.a(chǎn) heavy blow | B.a(chǎn) white lie |
C.a(chǎn)n unforgettable lesson | D.a(chǎn) ridiculous experience |
A.the questions the doctor asked puzzled her. |
B.the cleanness of the doctor’s room stuck her |
C.His son’s illness was beyond her wildest expectation. |
D.The sudden change of weather left her a deep impression. |
A.He never gets into trouble |
B.He responds with blank eyes. |
C.He plays with others for hours. |
D.He likes watching TV programmes. |
A.his mother forced him to do that |
B.he could get his favorite doll in reward |
C.he intended to delight his mother |
D.he realized that the sharp blade would cause danger |
A.Never hiding Wyatt from normal kids. |
B.Turning to violence in disappointment occasionally. |
C.Making Wyatt a kind and joyful boy with great care. |
D.Helping Wyatt learn to talk and become an astronaut. |
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