One period of our lives when better results are demanded of us is, strangely enough, childhood. Despite being young we are expected to achieve good grades, stay out of trouble, make friends at school, do well on tests, perform chores at home and so on. It’s not easy.
The good news is that being likeable can help a child perform better. Likeable children enjoy many advantages, including the ability to cope(對付) more easily with stresses of growing up.
In her book Understanding Child Stress, Dr. Carolyn Leonard states that children who are likeable and optimistic are able to gain support from others. This leads to focus and resilience, the ability to recover from or adjust early to life stress; a child who has adequate emotional armor can continue down the path to success. Much research shows that resilience has enabled children to succeed in school, avoid drug abuse, and develop a healthy self-awareness.
Why does a likeable child more easily handle stress and do better in his or her life? Because likeability helps create what’s known as a positive feedback loop(回饋圈). The positive feelings you want to see in other people are returned to you, creating constant encouragement and motivation to deal with the daily stress of life.
This feedback loop continues into adulthood. To return once again to the example of teaching, learning becomes easier with a likeable personality. Michael Delucchi of the University of Hawaii reviewed dozens of studies to determine if likeable teachers received good ratings because of their likeability or because they in fact taught well. Delucchi found that “Students who perceive(察覺) a teacher as likeable, in contrast to(比照) those who do not, may be more attentive to the information that the teacher delivers and they’ll work harder on assignments, and they will learn more.”
You may have noticed this pattern in your own life when you try to give some advice. The more positive your relationship with that person, the more he or she seems to listen, and the more you feel certain that that person has heard you and intends to act on your words.
【小題1】The writer implies in the first paragraph that __________.
A.children are expected much than we usually think |
B.life is not easy for every one of us |
C.better education results in smarter children |
D.to be a likable child is almost impossible |
A.can cope more easily with stress independently |
B.know how to avoid trouble and unpleasant events |
C.a(chǎn)re always optimistic and ready to help those in need |
D.can achieve more and understand themselves better |
A.mental support from friends | B.mental support from adults |
C.failures in life | D.a(chǎn)bility to handle life stress |
A.if a likeable teacher has a positive personality |
B.if a likeable teacher draws more attention |
C.how a teacher’s likeability gains popularity |
D.how a likeable teacher’s teaching style is formed |
A.likeable people do better in life generally |
B.likeable people do better in their childhood |
C.social creatures enjoy more advantages |
D.likeable people give better advice |
【小題1】A
【小題2】D
【小題3】D
【小題4】B
【小題5】A
解析試題分析:科學(xué)證明活潑討人喜歡的孩子在人生中獲得成功的機(jī)率會更大。在本文中作者對此進(jìn)行了詳細(xì)的解釋和證明,比如活潑樂觀的孩子容易得到別人的支持,他們也更加善于調(diào)整自己的狀況來應(yīng)對壓力,由此可知培養(yǎng)孩子開朗樂觀的品質(zhì)是非常重要的。
【小題1】A推理判斷題。在文章首段One period of our lives when better results are demanded of us is, strangely enough, childhood中作者用strangely enough表明了在兒童時期孩子們的實際情況不是人們認(rèn)為的那樣,他們期望的東西要比人們想象的多,所以答案選A。
【小題2】D細(xì)節(jié)理解題 。根據(jù)文章第二、三段Likeable children enjoy many advantages, including the ability to cope(對付) more easily with stresses of growing up可以判斷開朗、樂觀、討人喜歡的孩子們會在成長過程中有更多的收獲,答案選D。
【小題3】D詞義猜測題。根據(jù)前面的內(nèi)容This leads to focus and resilience, the ability to recover from or adjust early to life stress可知樂觀、討人喜歡的孩子具有處理好壓力的能力,而具有應(yīng)對生活中壓力的能力是成功的關(guān)鍵,由此判斷“emotional armor”是指應(yīng)對生活壓力的能力,故D選項正確。
【小題4】B細(xì)節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)文章倒數(shù)第二段Michael Delucchi of the University of Hawaii reviewed dozens of studies to determine if likeable teachers received good ratings because of their likeability or because they in fact taught well.可知B選項正確。
【小題5】A主旨大意題。文章開頭用兒童時期的要求引出話題The good news is that being likeable can help a child perform better.然后再通過研究人員的研究結(jié)果來證明樂觀、活潑的孩子能更好地處理生活中的一些狀況,由此判斷作者的寫作意圖是想證明活潑樂觀的人在生活中更能做到游刃有余,故答案選A。
考點:考查社會生活類短文閱讀。
科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Celebrity(名人) has become one of the most important representatives of popular culture. Fans used to be crazy about a specific film, but now the public tends to base its consumption(消費) on the interest of celebrity attached to any given product. Besides, fashion magazines have almost abandoned the practice of putting models on the cover because they don’t sell nearly as well as famous faces. As a result, celebrities have realized their unbelievably powerful market potential, moving from advertising for others’ products to developing their own.
Celebrity clothing lines aren’t a completely new phenomenon, but in the past they were typically aimed at the ordinary consumers, and limited to a few TV actresses. Today they’re started by first-class stars whose products enjoy equal fame with some world top brands. The most successful start-ups have been those by celebrities with specific personal style. As celebrities become more and more experienced at the market, they expand their production scale rapidly, covering almost all the products of daily life.
However, for every success story, there’s a related warning tale of a celebrity who overvalued his consumer appeal. No matter how famous the product’s origin is, if it fails to impress consumers with its own qualities, it begins to resemble an exercise in self-promotional marketing. And once the initial(最初的) attention dies down, consumer interest might fade, loyalty(忠誠) returning to tried-and-true labels.
Today, celebrities face even more severe embarrassment. The pop-cultural circle might be bigger than ever, but its rate of turnover has speeded up as well. Each misstep threatens to reduce a celebrity’s shelf life, and the same newspaper or magazine that once brought him fame has no problem picking him to pieces when the opportunity appears. Still, the ego’s(自我的) potential for expansion is limitless. Having already achieved great wealth and public recognition, many celebrities see fashion as the next frontier to be conquered. As the saying goes, success and failure always go hand in hand. Their success as designers might last only a short time, but fashion—like celebrity—has always been temporary.
【小題1】Fashion magazines today .
A.seldom put models on the cover |
B.no longer put models on the cover |
C.need not worry about celebrities’ market potential |
D.judge the market potential of every celebrity correctly |
A.price rather than brand name is more concerned |
B.producers prefer models to celebrities for advertisements |
C.producers prefer TV actresses to film stars for advertisements |
D.quality rather than the outside of products is more concerned |
A.decrease the popularity of a celebrity and the sales of his products |
B.damage the image of a celebrity in the eyes of the general public |
C.cut short the artistic career of a celebrity in show business |
D.influence the price of a celebrity’s products |
A.celebrity and personal style |
B.celebrity and market potential |
C.celebrity and fashion design |
D.celebrity and clothing industry |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
I’m afraid to grow old—we’re all afraid. In fact, the fear of growing old is so great that every aged person is an insult and a threat to the society. They remind us of our own death, that our body won’t always remain smooth and responsive, but will someday betray(背叛) us by aging. The ideal way to age would be to grow slowly invisible, gradually disappearing, without causing worry or discomfort to the young. In some ways that does happen. Sitting in a small park across from a nursing home one day, I noticed that the young mothers and their children gathered on one side, and the old people from the home on the other.
Whenever a youngster would run over to the “wrong” side, chasing a ball or just trying to cover all the available space, the old people would lean forward and smile. But before any communication could be established, the mother would come over, murmuring embarrassed apologies, and take her child back to the “young” side.
Now, it seemed to me that the children didn’t feel any particular fear and the old people didn’t seem to be threatened by the children. The division of space was drawn by the mothers. And the mothers never looked at the old people who lined the other side of the park. These well-dressed young women had a way of sliding their eyes over, around, through the old people; they never looked at them directly. The old people may as well have been invisible; they offended the aesthetic eye of the mothers.
My early experiences were somewhat different; since I grew up in a small town, my children had more of a nineteenth-century flavor. I knew a lot of old people, and considered some of them friends.
【小題1】People are afraid of growing old because it is usually associated with ______.
A.insult | B.threat | C.death | D.betrayal |
A.grow old slowly and then die unnoticed |
B.grow old suddenly and then die |
C.shut oneself up from others when growing old |
D.remain young all one’s life and then die suddenly |
A.they feared their children might hurt the old |
B.they didn’t like their children to take up the space belonging to the old |
C.they felt it was wrong to play balls near where the old stayed |
D.they didn’t want their children to have anything to do with the old |
A.made by people | B.understandable |
C.formed naturally | D.traditional |
A.used to have the same experience as the young have today |
B.has never been afraid of getting old |
C.was quite free to know and befriend old people in his childhood |
D.both B and C |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
"The Chinese Dream" is a hot topic of this year. Many Chinese young people are inspired by the Chinese Dream. Everyone has their own dreams. They give us courage and confidence to keep us going through difficulties. Here are some advice on how to realize our beautiful dreams.
Never giving up is the key to make our dreams come true. We may fail from time to time, but we can learn from failure, correct our mistakes and try again until we achieve our goals. Our life is like a long journey which is not all roses. It sometimes has wind and rain. We believe rainbows will appear after storms.
Cooperation is also necessary. Everyone likes a person who is good at cooperating with others. Besides, in our society most problems can't be solved by one person alone. Cooperation is becoming one of the most important ways for people living in the developing society.
At the same time, we should learn to examine our abilities because it helps us know our advantages and disadvantages as well as get a full control of ourselves. Then we may be confident enough to face challenges.
Follow the suggestions above, and our dreams are sure to come true.
【小題1】How many suggestions of making dreams come true are mentioned in this passage?
A.One. | B.Two. | C.Three. | D.Four. |
A.never giving up our dreams | B.our life |
C.a(chǎn) long journey | D.learning from failure |
A.The Chinese Dream |
B.Cooperation is Necessary |
C.Examine Our Abilities |
D.Advice on How to Realize Our Beautiful Dreams. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Most people buy a lot of gifts just before Christmas. But some people think we buy too much. They have started a special day called Buy Nothing Day. They don’t want anyone to go shopping that day.
Buy Nothing Day is November 29. It’s 25 days before Christmas. It’s after Thanksgiving and often the first day of Christmas shopping. At this time, we see ads in newspapers and on TV telling us to “buy, buy, buy!”
The idea for Buy Nothing Day started in Vancouver, British Columbia. Now people all over the world celebrate Buy Nothing Day. In California, parents and children get together to read stories, sing songs, and paint pictures. The children talk about why they don’t need a lot of toys. This year, in Manchester, England, people dressed up to tell people that we buy too much.
In Albuquerque, New Mexico, high school students wanted to tell other students about Buy Nothing Day. They organized a spaghetti dinner to give people information about Buy Nothing Day. They asked restaurants in the neighborhood to donate the food. They made posters and talked to other students about it. The dinner was a big success, and many students agreed not to buy anything on November 29. The students at high school liked the idea of this new tradition. Next year, they want to have another dinner to tell more people about Buy Nothing Day!
【小題1】Which of the following is NOT the day for people to celebrate Buy Nothing Day?
A.The first day after Christmas. | B.25 days before Christmas. |
C.After Thanksgiving. | D.November 29 |
A.Before Thanksgiving. | B.On Christmas. |
C.Anytime. | D.Before Christmas. |
A.In California, parents and children get together to play games. |
B.In England, people celebrated by performing plays. |
C.They bought nothing and made the others decide not to. |
D.In Mexico, high school students dressed up. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Whether you’re eating at a fancy restaurant or dining in someone’s home, proper table manners are likely to help you make a good impression. According to a US expert, Emily Post, “All rules of table manners are made to avoid ugliness.”
While Henry Hitchings of the Los Angeles Times admits that good manners can reduce social conflict, he points out that mostly their purpose is protective – they turn our natural warrior-like selves into more elegant ones.
So where did table manners come from?
In medieval England, a writer named Petrus Alfonsi took the lead to urge people not to speak with their mouths full. And King David I of Scotland also proposed that any of his people who learned to eat more neatly be given a tax deduction (減除).
Disappointingly, that idea never caught on. It was during the Renaissance, when there were real technical developments, opinions of correct behavior changed for good. “None of these was more significant than the introduction of the table fork,” wrote Hitchings. “Gradually, as forks became popular, they brought the new way of eating, making it possible, for instance, to consume berries without making one’s fingers dirty.”
Forks were introduced to Britain in 1608 and 25 years later, the first table fork reached America. Yet while most of the essentials (基本要素) are the same on both sides of the Atlantic, there are a few clear differences between what’s normal in the US and what holds true in the UK. For example, in the US, when food needs cutting with a knife, people generally cut a bite, then lay aside the knife and switch the fork to their right hand. Then they pick up one bite at a time. By contrast, Britons keep the fork in the left hand and don’t lay the knife down.
Though globalization has developed a new, simpler international standard of table manners, some people still stick with the American cut-and-switch method.The Los Angeles Times noted, “They are hanging on to a form of behavior that favors manners above efficiency.”
【小題1】What does the story mainly talk about?
A.The importance of proper table manners . |
B.The development of table manners in Western countries. |
C.Some unwritten rules of table manners in the US and UK. |
D.Differences between American and British table manners. |
A.worked in practice | B.became popular |
C.drew attention | D.had a positive effect |
A.The introduction of forks. |
B.The tax deduction policy. |
C.The rise of the Renaissance. |
D.Petrus Alfonsi’s efforts in promoting table manners. |
A.British and American table manners are completely different from each other. |
B.American people pay more attention to their table manners than British people do. |
C.With globalization, the American cut-and-switch method has been abandoned in the US. |
D.British people’s way of using a knife and fork may be more efficient than American people’s. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Pop stars today enjoy what once only belonged to the royalty(皇室).Wherever they go,people turn out in their thousands to greet them.The crowds go wild trying to catch a brief glimpse of their smiling,colorfully dressed idols.The stars are transported in their chauffeur driven Rolls Royces,private helicopters or executive aeroplanes.They are surrounded by a permanent entourage(隨從)of managers,press agents and bodyguards.Photographs of them appear regularly in the press and all their comings and goings are reported,for,like royalty,pop stars are news.If they enjoy many of the privileges of royalty,they certainly share many of the inconveniences as well.It is dangerous for them to make unscheduled appearances in public.They must be constantly shielded from the adoring crowds who idolize them.They are no longer private individuals,but public property.The financial rewards they receive for this sacrifice cannot be calculated,for their rates of pay are great.
And why not?Society has always rewarded its top entertainers lavishly.The great days of Hollywood have become legendary:famous stars enjoyed fame,wealth and adulation(奉承)on an all time scale.By today's standards,the excesses of Hollywood do not seem quite so spectacular.A single gramopphone record nowadays may earn much more in royalties than the films of the past ever did.The competition for the title“Top of the Pops”is fierce,but the rewards are truly huge.
It is only right that the stars should be paid in this way.Don't the top men in industry earn enormous salaries for the service they perform to their companies and their countries?Pop stars earn vast sums in foreign currency—often more than large industrial companies—and the taxman can only be grateful for their massive annual contributions to the exchequer(國庫).So who would begrudge them their rewards?
It's all very well for people in boring jobs to complain about the successes and rewards of others.People who make envious remarks should remember that the most famous stars represent only the tip of the iceberg.For every famous star,there are hundreds of others struggling to earn a living.A man working in a steady job and looking forward to a pension at the end of it has no right to expect very high rewards.He has chosen security and peace of mind,so there will always be a limit to what he can earn.But a map who attempts to become a star is taking enormous risks.He knows at the outset that only a handful of competitors ever get to the very top.He knows that years of concentrated effort may be rewarded with complete failure.But he knows,too,that the rewards for success are very high indeed:they are the payback for the huge risks involved and once he makes it,he will certainly earn them.That's the essence of private enterprise.
【小題1】The author develops the passage mainly by ________.
A.comparing different ideas |
B.giving explanations |
C.inferring |
D.listing typical examples |
A.be jealous of | B.be satisfied with |
C.be anxious about | D.be crazy about |
A.He who laughs last laughs best. |
B.If you venture nothing,you will gain nothing. |
C.He who makes no mistakes makes nothing. |
D.Success belongs to the persevering. |
A.People are blind in idolizing stars. |
B.There is fierce competition in becoming pop stars. |
C.The government taxes pop stars very little. |
D.Pop stars' life is more luxurious than that of royalty. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
In China, people usually set off firecrackers to celebrate Spring Festival. But this year seemed very quiet. It was really different. A man called Zhang Wei was asked by a reporter in an interview. He said that his friends and he hadn’t set off a single firecracker.
“We all suffered from last month’s smog(霧霾). If we don’t call an end to the firecracker, the environment will get worse and worse during the holiday.” Said Zhang Wei. He put up a notice in his community in Jinan, the capital of Shandong Province. In the notice, he called on more people to set off fewer firecrackers during this year’s Spring Festival holiday.
Lots of parents agreed with Zhang Wei’s idea. They said that they hated the noise of firecrackers. The noise used to wake up their babies too early. The babies really needed quiet mornings,
More Chinese looked forward to celebrating the holiday in a greener way. They decided not to set off firecrackers. They also decided not to waste food. They said that the new celebrations sounded fashionable.
“My family didn’t buy any fireworks this year. Instead, we donated the money to charity. It’s good for the environment and charity as well.” Internet user “Fighter” wrote on Sina Weibo.
【小題1】How do people usually celebrate Spring Festival in China?
A.By setting off firecrackers. |
B.By donating the money to charity. |
C.By not wasting food. |
D.By putting up a notice. |
A.they couldn’t afford to buy them. |
B.firecrackers were too expensive. |
C.the noise might wake up their babies. |
D.firecrackers might cause fire |
A.not to get together |
B.not to set off firecrackers |
C.not to throw away more food |
D.to call an end to all the celebrations |
A.Don’t Waste Food | B.Spring Festival Celebrations |
C.Spring Festival Goes Green | D.Firecrackers and Noise |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
It is not unusual for people to speak two or three languages; they’re known as bilinguals or trilinguals. Speakers of more than three languages are known as polyglots. And when we refer to people who speak many languages, perhaps a dozen or more, we use the term hyper-polyglot.
The most famous hyper-polyglot was Giuseppe Mezzofanti, a 19th century Italian cardinal, who was said to speak 72 languages. This claim sounds absurd. If you assume each language had 20,000 words, Mezzofanti would have to learn a word a minute, six hours a day, for eleven years—an impossible task. But Mezzofanti was tested by critics, and they were all impressed.
Did Mezzofanti have an extraordinary brain? Or are hyper-polyglots just ordinary people with ordinary brains who manage to do something extraordinary through hard work?
U.S. linguist Stephen Drashen believes that outstanding language learners just work harder at it and then they acquire unusually strong language ability. As an example, he mentions a Hungarian woman who worked as an interpreter during the 20th century. When she was 86, she could speak 16 languages and was still working on learning new languages. She said she learned them mostly on her own, reading fiction or working through dictionaries or textbooks.
Some researchers argue to the contrary. They believe that there is such a thing as a talent for learning languages. In the 1930s, a German scientist examined parts of the preserved brain of a hyper-polyglot named Emil Krebs, who could speak 60 languages fluently. The scientist found that the area of Krebs’s brain called Broca’s area, which is associated with language, looked different from the Broca’s area in the brains of men who speak only one language. However, we still don’t know if Krebs was born with a brain ready to learn dozens of languages or if his brain adapted to the demands he put on it.
Although it is still not clear whether the ability to learn many languages is in born, there’s no doubt that just about all of us can acquire skills in a second, third, or even fourth language by putting our mind to it.
【小題1】What does the underlined sentence imply?
A.Mezzofanti could remember 360 words a day. |
B.Mezzofanti had a special way to learn languages. |
C.Mezzofanti’s achievement was ridiculous. |
D.Mezzofanti language ability was astonishing. |
A.good memory | B.unique brain | C.hard work | D.learning methods |
A.had an unusual brain |
B.was born with great talent |
C.had worked hard at languages |
D.expected too much of himself |
A.it is not hard to learn foreign languages |
B.hard work plays a part in language learning |
C.there is no such thing as a talent for languages |
D.hyper-polyglots have an inborn talent for language |
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