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I was born into a family of educators. G...

    I was born into a family of educators. Growing up, I___________ stories about my grandfather, a headmaster in Guyana. His wife was a teacher. My father and mother continued the _________, teaching at the secondary school levels. As we _________ National Teacher Appreciation Week, I was ___________ by Charles Blow’s Op-Ed column in The New York Times to _________ two teachers who had never failed me: my parents.

I hardly remember a period when my parents were not engaged in the act of ___________ and teaching. When I was born in 1991, my dad, William Panaram, was trying to___________a doctor’s degree in plant science in North Dakota. After we ___________ to the Bronx, New York, my mom, Dhanwanti Panaram, started night ___________ to get a master’s degree in nutrition.  ____________  my mom studied, she also managed a full-time job, raised me, and learned a new city.

As I watched their schooling ____________, I learned that receiving an ____________ meant much more than getting high grades. In fact, a true education has meaning when its learners ____________.

Both my parents show me daily how to live as a good ____________. Both teach me how to love. My parents—my educators for life—make it ____________ that a teacher’s job is ____________ the classroom. A meaningful teacher stays with students ____________ , in mind or in person. I am determined to be a teacher myself, helping young students think freely and ____________ their own ideas, which is a __________  of living, learning, and loving with my first teachers.

National Teacher Appreciation Week might come around once a year, but the reality is that every single day we need to thank those who__________more about others than they do about themselves. Who will you thank today?

1.A.told B.heard C.made D.wrote

2.A.culture B.custom C.tradition D.job

3.A.celebrated B.shared C.congratulated D.reported

4.A.beaten B.praised C.read D.inspired

5.A.treat B.entertain C.recognize D.thank

6.A.acting B.learning C.feeding D.supporting

7.A.consult B.abandon C.admire D.acquire

8.A.turned B.referred C.moved D.settled

9.A.clubs B.classes C.bands D.films

10.A.But B.Because C.While D.Although

11.A.experiences B.movements C.positions D.benefits

12.A.instruction B.examination C.education D.award

13.A.take back B.give back C.look back D.call back

14.A.learner B.believer C.conductor D.performer

15.A.independent B.important C.necessary D.clear

16.A.beyond B.across C.inside D.to

17.A.even B.forever C.before D.once

18.A.stop B.accept C.receive D.develop

19.A.purpose B.decision C.result D.chance

20.A.care B.wait C.account D.look

 

1.B 2.C 3.A 4.D 5.D 6.B 7.D 8.C 9.B 10.C 11.A 12.C 13.B 14.A 15.D 16.A 17.B 18.D 19.C 20.A 【解析】 本文是夹叙夹议文。作者出生于教育世家,从小受家庭影响,尤其是父母终身学习的影响,明白了接受教育的意义远不止获得高分,一个有意义的老师会永远和学生在一起。作者在文中表达了对父母的感激之情。 1. 考查动词词义辨析。句意:我出生在一个教育世家。从小到大,我听过我祖父的故事,他是圭亚那的一名校长。A. told告诉;B. heard听到;C. made制造;D. wrote写。此处指听到关于祖父的故事,故选B。 2. 考查名词词义辨析。句意:他的妻子是一名教师。我的父亲和母亲延续了这一传统,在中学教书。A. culture文化;B. custom习惯;C. tradition传统;D. job工作。祖父是校长,祖母是教师,父母也都是教师,此处指父母延续了当教师的传统。故选C。 3. 考查动词词义辨析。句意:在我们庆祝全国教师感恩周的时候,我受到了Charles Blow在《纽约时报》专栏的启发,感谢两位从未让我失望过的老师:我的父母。A. celebrated庆祝;B. shared分享;C. congratulated祝贺;D. reported报道。此处指庆祝全国教师感恩周活动,故选A。 4. 考查动词词义辨析。句意:在我们庆祝全国教师感恩周的时候,我受到了Charles Blow在《纽约时报》专栏的启发,感谢两位从未让我失望过的老师:我的父母。A. beaten 打败;B. praised赞扬;C. read读;D. inspired激发,鼓舞。作者受《纽约时报》专栏的启发,借庆祝全国教师感恩周的机会感谢父母。故选D。 5. 考查动词词义辨析。句意:在我们庆祝全国教师感恩周的时候,我受到了Charles Blow在《纽约时报》专栏的启发,感谢两位从未让我失望过的老师:我的父母。A. treat对待;B. entertain娱乐,招待;C. recognize认出,识别;D. thank感谢。根据下文Both teach me how to love. My parents—my educators for life和最后一段we need to thank those可知是感谢父母。故选D。 6. 考查名词词义辨析。句意:我几乎不记得父母有一段时间没有从事学习和教学活动。A. acting表演;B. learning学习;C. feeding饲养;D. supporting支持。通过下文父母攻读学位可知他们时刻在学习,故选B。 7. 考查动词词义辨析。句意:1991年我出生的时候,我的父亲William正在北达科他州攻读植物科学博士学位。A. consult咨询,请教;B. abandon遗弃,放弃;C. admire钦佩,赞美;D. acquire获得,取得。指获得学位,故选D。 8. 考查动词词义辨析。句意:我们搬到纽约布朗克斯区后,我妈妈Dhanwanti开始上夜校,以获得营养学硕士学位。A. turned 转动;B. referred涉及,参考;C. moved搬家;D. settled定居,解决。和to搭配,指搬家到某地,故选C。 9. 考查名词词义辨析。句意:我们搬到纽约布朗克斯区后,我妈妈Dhanwanti开始上夜校,以获得营养学硕士学位。A. clubs俱乐部;B. classes 课;C. bands乐队;D. films电影。根据to get a master’s degree可知是在夜校上课,故选B。 10. 考查连词辨析。句意:在我母亲学习的同时,她还管理着一份全职工作,抚养我,并了解一个新的城市。A. But但是;B. Because因为;C. While在……期间,尽管;D. Although尽管。此处指母亲获得营养学硕士学位期间,故选C。 11. 考查名词词义辨析。句意:当我看到他们的求学经历时,我明白了接受教育的意义远不止获得高分。A. experiences 经历,经验;B. movements 运动;C. positions 位置;D. benefits利益,好处。此处指父母求学的经历,继续深造的经历。故选A。 12. 考查名词词义辨析。句意:当我看到他们的求学经历时,我明白了接受教育的意义远不止获得高分。A. instruction指令,命令;B. examination考试;C. education教育;D. award奖。根据下文a true education has meaning可知是教育的意义,故选C。 13. 考查动词短语辨析。句意:事实上,真正的教育只有在学习者回馈的时候才有意义。A. take back拿回,撤销;B. give back回馈,归还;C. look back回顾;D. call back回电话,收回。此处指学习者的回馈,故选B。 14. 考查名词词义辨析。句意:我的父母每天都教我如何成为一个好的学习者。A. learner学习者;B. believer信徒;C. conductor指挥;D. performer表演者。与上文a true education has meaning when its learners呼应,作者认为父母是好的学习者。故选A。 15. 考查形容词词义辨析。句意:我的父母——我一生的教育工作者——清楚地告诉我,教师的工作不仅仅是在教室里。A. independent独立的;B. important重要的;C. necessary必要的;D. clear清楚的。父母通过自身行为让作者清楚明白了教育的意义,故选D。 16. 考查介词辨析。句意:我的父母——我一生的教育工作者——清楚地告诉我,教师的工作不仅仅是在教室里。A. beyond超过;B. across穿过;C. inside在……里面;D. to对于,朝。根据下文A meaningful teacher stays with students forever , in mind or in person.可知教师的工作是超出教室的,故选A。 17. 考查副词词义辨析。句意:一个有意义的老师会永远和学生在一起,无论是在心里还是在身边。A. even甚至;B. forever永远;C. before以前,过去;D. once一次,曾经。根据in mind or in person可知是永远和学生在一起,故选B。 18. 考查动词词义辨析。句意:我决心成为一名教师,帮助年轻学生自由思考,发展自己的想法,这是我和我的启蒙老师一起生活、学习和热爱的结果。A. stop停止;B. accept 接受,承认;C. receive收到;D. develop发展,进步。根据think freely 和their own ideas可知是鼓励学生发展自己的观点,故选D。 19. 考查名词词义辨析。句意:我决心成为一名教师,帮助年轻学生自由思考,发展自己的想法,这是我和我的启蒙老师一起生活、学习和热爱的结果。A. purpose目的;B. decision决定;C. result结果;D. chance机会。此处指作者的决心是受父母长期影响的结果,故选C。 20. 考查动词词义辨析。句意:全国教师感恩周可能每年举行一次,但现实是,每一天我们都需要感谢那些关心别人胜过关心自己的人。A. care关心;B. wait等待;C. account解释,导致;D. look看。与上文A meaningful teacher stays with students forever , in mind or in person.呼应,care about“关心”,故选A。
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Rising through stages to realize ourselves

Many modern people have the problem that they don’t know who they are and what their purpose is. 1.. Once high school seniors graduate, they seem to lose their identity. They once studied hard. But after they stop working, they begin to lose their way.

In the theory of the Hierarchy of Needs (需求理论), Abraham Maslo, put forward a similar situation, which consists of the five levels of a person’s need. The fifth and final level is self-realization, which is where our final achievement lies. 2..

I think self-realization has three major aspects. The first stage is acceptance, the second stage is discovery and the last stage is perseverance.

Acceptance is the first stage. We should be reminded that we are all born unique, so we all have our own strengths and weaknesses. Only when we understand these, can we pursue them or change them. 3..

Once we’ve accepted ourselves, we can discover what we are interested in and what we want to be. 4. but indeed we should live for ourselves. So before we start working towards a purpose, we should ask ourselves “Is this what we truly desire?” and “Is this going to change the situation we’re in?”

The last stage is perseverance. 5.. Those who can self-realize are people who focus on the things they want to change.

Through the three stages, we could gain recognition of ourselves. And by this point, whatever our lives were like, we would be able to stand tall, confident of ourselves.

A.It’s nothing to a man of perseverance

B.Only by acceptance of the past can we change it

C.This is especially common among college students

D.Many people tend to go along with social expectations

E.Being objective and yet tolerant is the key to acceptance

F.It is the process of knowing ourselves and finding a purpose

G.Exploring our potential isn’t going to be done in a short time

 

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    What defines who we are? Our habits? Our tastes? Our memories? Like many other people who speak more than one language, I often sense that I’ m a slightly different person in each of my languages — more confident in English, more relaxed in French, more sensitive in Czech. Is it possible that, my moral compass also points in somewhat different directions depending on the language I’ m using at the time?

Psychologists who study moral judgments have become very interested in this question. In a research led by Albert Costa, volunteers were presented with a moral dilemma known as the “trolleybus problem”: imagine that a trolleybus is moving quickly towards a group of five people standing on the tracks, unable to move. You are next to a switch that can shift the trolleybus to a different set of tracks, therefore sparing the five people, but resulting in the death of one who is standing on the side tracks. Do you pull the switch?

Most people agree that they would. But what if the only way to stop the trolleybus is by pushing a large stranger off a footbridge into its path? People tend to be very hesitant to say they would do this, even though in both situations, one person is sacrificed to save five. But Costa and his colleagues found that putting the dilemma in a language that volunteers had learned as a foreign tongue dramatically increased their willingness to push the person off the footbridge, from fewer than 20% of respondents working in their native language to about 50% of those using the foreign one.

According to one explanation, such judgments involve two separate and competing ways of thinking—one of these, a quick, natural “feeling”, and the other, careful consideration about the greatest good for the greatest number. When we use a foreign language, we unconsciously sink into the more cautious way simply because the effort of operating in our non-native language signals our cognitive system to prepare for difficult situation.

An alternative explanation is the differences between native and foreign tongues. There’s strong evidence  that memory connects a language with the experiences and interactions through which that language was learned. Our childhood languages, learned in the middle of passionate emotion, become filled with deep feeling. By comparison, languages acquired late in life, especially if they are learned through limited interactions in the classroom or dully delivered over computer screens and headphones, enter our minds lacking the emotionality that is present for their native speakers.

1.What does “this question” in Paragraph 2 refer to?

A.What can contribute to improving one’s foreign language?

B.Is it necessary to learn more than one foreign language?

C.How do people deal with moral dilemmas in a foreign language?

D.Does the language one uses influence one’s moral judgments?

2.When the “trolleybus problem” was presented in a foreign language, volunteers were more likely to ________.

A.sacrifice the stranger on the footbridge B.care less about the five people

C.pull the switch to the side tracks D.remain hesitant about what to do

3.What can be inferred from the passage?

A.People who speak more than one language are less emotional than others.

B.Native language learning involves greater emotional reactions.

C.Moral judgments made in a foreign language are more careless.

D.Foreign language learning can be promoted by academic settings.

4.What is the author’s purpose in writing the passage?

A.To provide guidance on how to shape our life.

B.To stress the importance of judging in a foreign language.

C.To suggest a way of learning a foreign language.

D.To state the influence of a foreign language on moral judgments.

 

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    The English-language version of Wikipedia has almost six million articles. And if you’re a cheating student, that’s six million essays already written for you. But plagiarism isn’t really an effective way—just type the text into a search engine and the game is over. Then what about having a ghostwriter compose your final essay?

“Standard plagiarism software cannot detect this kind of cheating.” said Stephan Lorenzen, a data analyst at the University of Copenhagen. In Denmark, where he’s based, ghostwriting is a growing problem at high schools. So Lorenzen and his colleagues created a program called Ghostwriter that can detect the cheats.

At its central part is a neural network trained and tested on 130,000 real essays from 10,000 Danish students. After reading through tens of thousands of essays labeled as being written by the same author or not, the machine taught itself to possess the characteristics that might spot cheating. For example, did a student’s essays share the same styles of punctuation? The same spelling mistakes?

By examining inconsistencies like those, Ghostwriter was able to seek out a cheated essay nearly 90 percent of the time. The team presented the results at the European Meeting on Artificial Neural Networks, Computational Intelligence and Machine Learning. There’s one more aspect here that could help students. Your high school essays probably get better over time as you learn to write and the machine can detect that. The final idea is to detect students who are at risk because their development in writing style isn’t as you would expect. Teachers could thus give extra help to kids who really need it, while sniffing out the cheaters too.

1.When a student wants to cheat in writing an essay, ________.

A.his cheating may be detected in a certain way

B.essays offered by Wikipedia can’t be downloaded

C.he won’t hire a ghostwriter to write one for himself

D.ghostwriting can be detected by standard plagiarism software

2.Which aspect of the program “Ghostwriter” is talked about in Paragraph 3?

A.Its components. B.Its weaknesses.

C.Its influences. D.Its working theory.

3.Which one of the following is the function of “Ghostwriter”?

A.It never fails to find out a cheated essay. B.It can detect a student’s progress in writing.

C.It can help a student to correct his pronunciation. D.It can give extra help instead of teachers.

4.Where is the text most likely from?

A.A guidebook. B.A magazine.

C.A novel. D.A diary.

 

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    If you are reading this, you were probably born in the 2000s. The oh-ohs. The 21st century. That would make you young, creative, connected, global, and no doubt smart. Maybe good-looking, too. Right? But what do other people think about your generation?

Some adults worry that you’re more interested in the screen in front of you than the world around you. They think of you as the “face-down generation” because you use your phone so much and they wonder how you will deal with school, friends, and family. Are today’s teenagers too busy texting and taking selfies to become successful in real life—or “IRL”, as you would say?

Other adults worry that today’s youth are spoilt and don’t want to face the challenges of adult life. Many children born in the 1990s and 2000s were raised by “helicopter parents", who were always there to guide and help their children with a busy schedule filled with homework and after-class activities such as dancing, drawing, or sports. With parents who do everything for them, today’s youth seem to prefer to live like teenagers even when they are in their 20s or 30s.

With these taken into account, does the face down generation need a warning? Well, probably not. The fact is that many of today’s teenagers are better educated and more creative than past generations. They seem to be enthusiastic and willing to be become leaders. More young people than ever volunteer to help their communities. There are also brave young people such as Malala Yousafzai, the teenager who won the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize for pushing girls’ rights to go to school.

So if you’re one of the oh-ohs, there are reasons to be hopeful about the future. Things are looking up for the face-down generation. Chances are that you will do GR8 (great) and LOL (laugh out loud).

1.Which of the following words can not be used to describe the oh-ohs?

A.Creative. B.Caring.

C.Ignorant. D.Intelligent.

2.What does the underlined phrase “helicopter parents” in Paragraph 3 mean?

A.parents who are rich and travel by helicopter.

B.parents who always watch over their children.

C.parents who have a very busy schedule.

D.parents who only turn up when necessary.

3.What can we learn from the passage?

A.The writer is a member of the face-down generation.

B.The writer is optimistic about the future of the oh-ohs.

C.The oh-ohs are more good-looking than their parents.

D.The oh-ohs care about nothing other than their phones.

4.What can be a best title for the passage?

A.The “helicopter parents” B.The over-worried parents

C.The spoiled generation D.The face-down generation

 

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    Recently, as I watched my son Nathan play basketball for his high school team, I started to feel sorry for myself and for him. His team was facing adversity (逆境) — it was the opponent’s home gym filled with their supporters, and Nathan’s team was left behind for three quarters of the game.

As for me, I had been fired earlier in the day. I was prepared for it as I had experienced the same thing 14 years earlier, but, just like a punch in the mouth, the blow is never softened because you were expecting it.

As I watched the adversity on the court that my son was experiencing, I recalled my earlier events, packing up everything in a box and waving goodbye to a great group of colleagues with whom I’d had the pleasure of working. During my driving home, I kept telling myself “Just like that time, I will find work again in a short time—I am confident in my experience and abilities.” It was the same belief that I tried to teach my son.

The basketball game entered the fourth quarter with Nathan’s team still trailing.  As Nathan and his teammates fought back, I saw the focus and determination on him, as well as his teammates’faces. Then, with a tie game and seconds on the clock, Nathan found himself with the ball. There was no room for self-doubt. With skill and confidence he was able to tune out all that could drive his attention away and make the throw as if he had done it a thousand times. The joy on his face, the cheering from the crowd, and the silence on the other side of the gym—it was a moment that would make any parent proud.

As I sat there, my heart bursting with pride, it dawned on me that I had taught him determination in the face of adversity, and he had just taught me the same lesson. That brief moment of self-doubt and feeling sorry for myself was blown away by the actions of my son on the basketball court. He will play in the finals, but it doesn’t matter if he wins or loses, at this moment.

1.What did the author intend to show by mentioning his experience 14 years ago?

A.He quit a job again. B.He disliked working with the colleagues.

C.He made a right career choice. D.He had confidence in his abilities.

2.What can we infer from the passage?

A.Nathan’s teammates couldn’t focus on the play.

B.The author was never worried about his son’s team.

C.Nathan’s team lost the game at last.

D.The game was in a tie at one time.

3.What is the passage mainly about?

A.A blow from losing a job. B.A lesson on the court.

C.The importance of teamwork. D.The rise and fall of a game.

 

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