题目
题型:陕西省期中题难度:来源:
training I received, though excellent, did not tell me how it was to work with a real student, however.
When I began to discover what other people"s lives were like because they could not read, I realized the
true importance of reading.
My first student Marie was a 44-year-old single mother of three. In the first lesson, I found out she
walked two miles to the nearest supermarket twice a week because she didn"t know which bus to take.
When I told her I would get her a bus schedule. She told me it would not help because she could not read
it. She said she also had difficulty once she got to the supermarket, because she couldn"t always remember what she needed. Since she did not know words, she could not write out a shopping list. Also, she could
only recognize items by sight, so if the product had a different label, she would not recognize it as the
product she wanted.
As we worked together, learning how to read built Marie"s self-confidence, which encouraged her to
continue in her studies. She began to make rapid progress and was even able to take the bus to the
supermarket. After this successful trip, she reported how self-confident she felt. At the end of the program, she began helping her youngest son, Tony, a shy first grader, with his reading. She sat with him before he
went to sleep and together they would read bedtime stories. When his eyes became wide with excitement as she read, pride was written all over her face, and she began to see how her own hard work in learning
to read paid off. As she described this experience, I was proud of myself as well. I found that helping
Marie to build her self-confidence was more rewarding than anything I had ever done before.
As a literacy volunteer, I learned a great deal about teaching and helping others. In fact, I may have
learned more from the experience than Marie did.
B. Because she lived far away from the bus stop.
C. Because she couldn"t find the right bus.
D. Because she couldn"t afford the bus ticket.
B. She gave single mothers the help they needed.
C. She went to a training program to help a literacy volunteer.
D. She helped someone to learn to read.
B. Interesting
C. Tiring
D. Touching
答案
核心考点
试题【阅读理解。 Last summer I went through a training program and became a literacy vo】;主要考察你对题材分类等知识点的理解。[详细]
举一反三
relatives. On the way, the plane made a one-hour stop to refuel (加油) at the New York Airport.
Thinking that he had arrived, Jack got out and spent three days in New York, believing he was in
Rome.
When his relatives were not there to meet him, Jack thought they had been caught in the heavy Roman
traffic mentioned in their letters. While looking for their address, Jack could not help noticing that
modernization had changed most, if not all, of the ancient city"s landmarks. He also noticed that many
people spoke English with strong American accent. However, he just thought that Americans got
everywhere. He also believed that so many street signs were written in English especially for the
Americans. Jack spoke very little English himself so he asked a policeman in Italian the way to the bus
station. As chance would have it, the policeman came from Italy and replied in the same language. After
twelve hours traveling round on a bus, the driver handed him over to a second policeman. After brief
argument with the policeman, Jack was very surprised to find that the Rome police had employed someone who did not speak his mother tongue.
Jack did not believe he was told that he was in New York. In order to get on a plane to San Francisco, the policeman raced him to the airport in a police car with sirens (报警器) screaming. "See," he said to his interpreter. "I know I"m in Italy. That"s how they drive."
B. In San Francisco
C. In New York
D. The story doesn"t mention
B. He did not want to go to Italy
C. He wanted to see some relatives first in New York
D. He wanted to have short rest in New York
B. The second policeman could not speak Italian at all
C. Jack had a brief argument with the second policeman
D. Jack could speak much English
There lived many mice in the house. The woman in the moonlight saw a mouse crawl (爬行) into the
house. "Look! In comes one," she said to the man in the house. He was so frightened that he hurriedly
crawled out of the house and said to the one waiting outside, "She found me when I was just in." But the
thief outside didn"t believe him, so he said, "Let us two try to crawl into the house together." At that time
two mice happened to crawl into the house, too. The woman saw the mice and shouted, "In come two,
catch them!" The two thieves were terribly frightened. The man in the house said, "You saw them come
in but where are they? I will catch them tonight." The two thieves started running away at once.
The two thieves wanted to make it clear whether they had been found or not the night before. The
next day they acted as men selling sweet potatoes and came before the house. The man and the woman
were ploughing in their fields. The rein(缰绳)broke and the woman came home for a rope. She saw two
men selling sweet potatoes and wanted to buy some. She picked out two which looked like mice. At the
time the man couldn"t wait for her any longer in the fields and he ran back from the fields to hurry her up.
The woman showed the sweet potatoes to the man and said, "How they look like the two of last night."
The man said, "I asked you to fetch a rope, why don"t you hurry for it?" The two thieves ran away very
quickly without their sweet potatoes.
B. they were frightened by what they had heard in the house
C. they didn"t work together well with each other
D. mice stopped them from doing so
B. the woman recognized the two thieves
C. the woman pretended to know nothing about the two thieves and made fun of them
D. the two thieves didn"t know that they were not found at all
B. nothing
C. the mice
D. the ropes
discoveries. The 1 said something that caught my 2 . "All great discoveries," he said, "are made by people
between the ages of 25 and 30." Being a little over 30 myself, I wanted to 3 with him. Nobody wants to
think that he has passed the age of making any 4 . The next day I went to the public library, spending
several hours, and 5 to find the ages of famous people and their discoveries. The announcer was right!
First, I looked at some of the 6 discoveries. One of the earliest, the famous one that 7 that bodies
of different weights 8 at the same speed, was made by Galileo when he was 26. Madam Curie started
her research that led to a Nobel Prize when she was 28. Einstein was 26 when he 9 his world-changing
Theory of Relativity. Well, 10 of that. Yet I wondered if those "best years" were true in other 11 .
Then how about this in 12 ? Surely it needs the wisdom of 13 to make a good leader. Perhaps it
does, but look when these people 14 their careers. Winston Churchill was elected to the House of
Commons at the age of 26. Abraham Lincoln 15 the life of a country lawyer and was elected to the
government at what age? Twenty-six!
But why don"t best years come after 30? After 30, I 16 , most people don"t want to take risks or try
new ways. Then I thought of people 17 Shakespeare and Picasso. The 18 was writing wonderful 19
at the late age of 50, 20 the latter was still trying new ways of painting when he was 90!
Perhaps there is still hope for me.
( )1. A. announcer ( )2. A. mind ( )3. A. disagree ( )4. A. chance ( )5. A. happened ( )6. A. last ( )7. A. found ( )8. A. disappear ( )9. A. invented ( )10. A. plenty ( )11. A. fields ( )12. A. election ( )13. A. age ( )14. A. finished ( )15. A. led ( )16. A. guess ( )17. A. as ( )18. A. first ( )19. A. painting ( )20. A. when | B. conductor B. care B. talk B. discovery B. wanted B. scientific B. proved B. move B. improved B. enough B. science B. politics B. brain B. won B. devoted B. know B. to be B. writer B. idioms B. while | C. speaker C. attention C. meet C. research C. succeeded C. oldest C. doubted C. drop C. published C. much C. courses C. leaders C. living C. started C. began C. believe C. like C. poet C. fiction C. who | D. hostess D. surprise D. advise D. fortune D. managed D. modern D. showed D. fall D. made D. all D. ages D. society D. leadership D. defeated D. gave up D. agree D. about D. former D. works D. after | ||||||||
完形填空。 | |||||||||||
Last night, I was waiting for a taxi. After 5 minutes, I was 1 . The driver seemed to be angry. I asked him what the 2 was. He said he had just come from the airport without a 3 , which was basically $70 in lost fare. Over the course of that ride, the anger slowly 4 . He mentioned he had read an article saying the 5 people are the ones that give, so he hoped he"d have more 6 to give in his life. I was starting to 7 being with him! We continued talking about why 8 is so beneficial both to the giver and the receiver and different ways to 9 it. As we arrived at my destination, I 10 my fare. But I pulled out an extra $20 and said, "Since we"ve been talking about giving this whole time, I wanted to share that 11 with you. I"ve already paid my fare, but here"s an extra little bit. You can 12 it, since you"re already down $70 from the airport. But if you want to experience the 13 of the gift, then tell the next passenger in this taxi that their ride is a gift from another and they can 14 their gratitude in whatever way." The man turned toward me, tears in his eyes, and said, "Sir, I have a better 15 . You give that $20 to a 16 person around here and I"ll treat the next passenger with a 17 ride myself." Wow. This man was 18 10 minutes ago. I got out and walked around trying to find someone who needed help 19 heading to my destination. It was an honor meeting that driver and 20 the lesson of how everyone is capable of giving. | |||||||||||
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