根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。      Let children learn to judge their

根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。      Let children learn to judge their

题型:模拟题难度:来源:
根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。      Let children learn to judge their work. 1_____ If corrected too much, he will stop talking. He notices a
thousand times a day the difference between the language he uses and the language those around him use.
Bit by bit, he makes the necessary changes to make his language like other people"s. 2_____ They learn to
do without being taught to walk, run, climb, whistle, ride a bicycle, compare their own performances with
those of more skilled people, and slowly make the needed changes.
     But in school we never give a child a chance to find out his mistakes and correct them for himself. 3_____
we act as if we thought that he would never notice a mistake unless it was pointed out to him, or correct it
unless he was made to. Let him work out, with the help of other children if he wants it, what this word says,
what the answer is to that problem, whether this is a good way of saying or doing this or not.
     If it is a matter of right answer, as it may be in mathematics or science, give him the answer book. 4_____
Why should we teachers waste time on such routine work? 5_____ Let the children learn what all educated
people must some day learn, how to measure their own understanding, and how to know what they know or
do not know. A. Children learn to do all the other things in the same way.
B. Let him correct his own papers.
C. Point out his mistakes.
D. We do it all for him.
E. We allow him to learn from other children.
F. A child learning to talk does not learn by being corrected all the time.
G. Our job should be to help the child when he tells us that he can"t find the way to get the right answer.
答案
1-5 FADBG
举一反三
完形填空。     Everywhere, you will find "the white-haired boy", sometimes called "the fair-haired" boy. He gets special 
  1  , as if he were above everybody else. You will find him in school, in college, at home, or   2   you work.
     In school, he is teacher"s   3 , her favorite who can do nothing   4  . Sometimes she lets him do little jobs
for her. He comes to class in the morning, all shiny and clean. He is always raising his hand,   5   with answers
to the teacher"s questions. And he knows all the answers. He gets into your hair, especially if you are at the   6   
of the class and the teacher thinks you are slow at learning things. How you   7   the guy!
     At college, he walks across the school ground as if he   8   it. Sometimes he wears a colorful football or
basketball shirt or sweater, with a bright red, or green or yellow college letter   9   worn on the front of it. What 
 10   shoulders, what muscles he has! He  11  the girls happy by just smiling at them. He has the mark of  12  
on him.
     At home, "the fair-haired boy" is  13  choice. Sometimes, he is the oldest son-  14 , the youngest. If you are
in between, you are out of  15 .
     Then, you discover that there are others who  16  your feelings, ready to tell you their private  17 . One of
them asks, "What does he have that I haven"t got?" You ask yourself the same question. 
      18 , there comes a day when you decide to stop hating him. Is it  19  because he has been made boss and
you  20  yourself working for him?
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(     )1. A. treatment 
(     )2. A. somewhere 
(     )3. A. pet       
(     )4. A. correct   
(     )5. A. curious   
(     )6. A. front     
(     )7. A. hate      
(     )8. A. brought   
(     )9. A. freely    
(     )10. A. great    
(     )11. A. makes    
(     )12. A. success  
(     )13. A. Father"s 
(     )14. A. seldom   
(     )15. A. pity     
(     )16. A. understand
(     )17. A. opinions 
(     )18. A. Gradually
(     )19. A. certain  
(     )20. A. see      
B. belief      
B. anywhere      
B. friend        
B. wrong        
B. willing      
B. top           
B. envy         
B. won          
B. quickly       
B. broad       
B. lets          
B. challenge    
B. Mother"s    
B. never        
B. luck          
B. realize      
B. suggestions  
B. Finally       
B. true        
B. know      
C. courage   
C. where            
C. workmate        
C. special          
C. interested  
C. bottom           
C. admire         
C. owned           
C. delightedly      
C. manned         
C. takes          
C. faith          
C. Sister"s      
C. usually      
C. shame              
C. share        
C. expressions    
C. Surprisingly     
C. perhaps     
C. notice       
D. encouragement  
D. everywhere         
D. child                  
D. difficult             
D. ready          
D. point                  
D. like               
D. gained                
D. proudly             
D. bright               
D. keeps                
D. innocence           
D. Grandma"s                    
D. at times          
D. sight                     
D. reach             
D. thoughts            
D. Actually              
D. possible         
D. find            
请认真阅读下列短文,并根据所读内容在文章后表格中的空格里填人最恰当的单词。
注意:每空格1个单词。
     American life before 1950 felt nothing like American life feels now, and a big reason is those three
changes that took place in the second half of the 20th century, which has had the most lasting impact
on our lives today.
     1. The building of the interstates (州际公路).
     2. The covering of the United States with coast-to-coast television.
     3. The introduction and spread of the Internet.
     Before the interstates were constructed, even a trip within an individual state often took considerable
planning; two-lane roads, dangerous and slow, were common. The interstates tore down the invisible
walls around U. S. towns. President Eisenhower was in favor of building the interstates, because he
believed that, in a time of war, they would be helpful in moving troops and supplies. But their immediate
effect was to make Americans feel that certain doors had been unlocked. With the interstates came a sense
of freedom: A person could drive anywhere- everywhere-easily. Suddenly, horizons were unlimited. "Local"
didn"t mean quite the same thing it used to. Getting away was effortless.
     The introduction of national television meant that for the first time in history, people in every corner of
the country were watching exactly the same thing at exactly the same moment. It connected the country,
in a way that even network radio hadn"t accomplished, and it was because of the quality of the TV pictures.
As with the interstates, coast-to-coast television was a cure to separation. Those who ran the newly formed
television networks had an enormous amount of power. Their decisions about what to put on the air determined
what people would be talking about the next day. They controlled what people would laugh at and when, what
people would cry over and when, what would anger people and when it would anger them.
     And then, later in the century, the Internet came along, erasing all symbolic borders. If the interstate
highways had allowed physical freedom, the Internet allowed a different kind of freedom, one unprecedented
(空前的) in human experience. It was no coincidence that it was initially referred to as the information
superhighway: Seemingly overnight, the knowledge of the world was available to anyone with a keyboard and
a modem; people who had never met and would never meet could communicate as if they were lifelong friends.
Now the individual at his or her computer terminal was given the power to decide how he or she would be
informed or entertained at a given moment. No one else had the absolute authority to arrange the individual"s
life; he or she made that decision, moment by moment. What in the past might have taken a person a lifetime-
searching for mankind"s recorded wisdom in distant and magnificent libraries- now, in theory, was available
with a series of key taps from one"s room. What had once seemed unbelievable had, very quickly, become
routine.
     The three developments ended up changing our daily world greatly; largely because of them, it is a world
that would be almost unrecognizable to our grandparents and great-grandparents.
阅读理解。

     If you and your friends wish to share a secret, you can write it in code (编码), and no one else will be
able to read it.
     Codes are one way of writing in secret. Ciphers (暗码) are another. In a code each word is written as a
secret code word or code number. In a cipher each letter is changed. Codes and ciphers have played an
important role in the history of the world. Julius Caesar, the Roman ruler who defeated almost all the countries
in Europe about 2, 000 years ago, used a cipher when he sent secret messages to his troops. During the
American Revolution, George Washington"s spies used a kind of code to send him information about the enemy
before his military (军事的) action. In World War Ⅱ, the Americans "broke", or figured out, Japan"s most
important navy codes and got enough information to destroy a powerful Japanese fleet( 舰队).
     Storekeepers use codes to mark their goods. The codes show how much was paid for the goods or when
 they were added to the stock (商品). Businessmen use codes to hide plans from their business enemies.
Sometimes personal letters or diaries are written in code. Many people enjoy figuring out codes and ciphers
simply as a hobby.
     In the 16th century, codes and ciphers were very popular among scientists. They wrote messages to each
other in code so that no one else would learn their secrets. Geronimo Gardano, an Italian astrologer (星相家),
mathematician, and doctor, invented the trellis cipher. He took two sheets of paper and cut exactly the same
holes in each one. Then he sent one sheet, which he called a trellis, to a friend and kept the other for himself.
Whenever he wanted to write a message, he put his trellis over a clean sheet of paper and wrote the secret
message through the holes. Then he removed the trellis and filled the rest of the paper with words that would
make sense. When his friend received it, he put his trellis over the writing and read the secret message.

1. The best title of this passage would be _______.
A. Codes and Ciphers
B. Differences between Codes and Ciphers
C. History of Codes and Ciphers
D. Inventors of Codes and Ciphers
2. Which of the following statements is true?
A. Ciphers can be broken or figured out more easily than codes.
B. You could read some words in Geronimo"s letter without his trellis.
C. The first person who ever used a cipher in history was Julius Caesar.
D. Fondness of using codes was the hobby of the scientists in the 16th century.
3. According to Geronimo Cardano, a trellis is _______.
A. a piece of paper with many small holes
B. a secret message with a lot of small holes
C. a letter with unreadable words and sentences
D. a sheet of paper with groups of Arabic figures
4. It is NOT mentioned in the passage that codes and ciphers are used for the purpose of _______.
A. military affairs           
B. commercial secrets
C. scientific achievements       
D. personal enjoyment
根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。
     A survey conducted last week by China Youth Daily and Sina.com showed about 70 percent of 3 990
interviewees believe wealthy Chinese do not have a good reputation and are not worthy of respect. "Rich
people on the mainland invest too little in charity and gain too much." a student from Beijing Sports University
said. 1_____ They are a sense of social responsibility, self-discipline and a caring heart.
     The number of people who make at least $ 50 000 a year increases by 15 percent a year according to the
China Economic Times. 2_____
     The question how the rich became rich was on the top of the list from the interviewees surveyed. A post-
graduate student at the Communication University of China said, "3_____" This opinion has been widely
acknowledged by most interviewees. 
     4_____ Many voters thought better of rich people from Hong Kong, Macao, Taiwan and western countries,
rather than the mainland, Hong Kong property tycoon (大亨) Li Ka-shing was most highly regarded, followed
by Bill Gates, mainland property tycoon Wang Shi and basketball player Yao Ming.
     A professor from Renmin University of China called on the heads of Chinese companies to think and invest
in a long-term way. "5_____" the professor added.
A. Even so, the survey also found wealthy people keeping the law, and having a sense of social responsibility
    and a caring heart, are respected.
B. Skilled communication is not the necessary quality for the rich to get social respect.
C. The survey suggests the rich, to become popular and respected, need three things.
D. Their social responsibility is not only in charity, but in being a tie connecting the company with the
     government and the public.
E. What"s more, some wealthy people were found dishonest sometimes.
F. Our country now has l.5 million rich people.
G. Some rich people are thought to have made their wealth through illegal means, such as bribery
阅读理解。
     When I was eight, I saw a movie about an island that had an erupting volcano and jungles filled with wild
animals. The island was ruled by a beautiful woman called Tondalaya, the Fire Goddess of the Volcano. It was
a low budget movie, but to me, it represented the perfect life. But through the years, Tondalaya was forgotten.
     The week I turned 50, my marriage came to a sudden end. My house, furniture and everything I"d owned
was sold to pay debts that I didn"t even know existed. In a week I had lost my husband, my home and my
parents who had refused to accept a divorce (离婚) in the family. I"d lost everything except my four teenage
children. I used every penny I had to buy five plane tickets from Missouri to Hawaii. Everyone said I was
crazy to think I could just run off to an island and survive. I was afraid they were right.
     I worked 18 hours a day and lost 30 pounds because I lived on one meal a day. One night as I walked alone
on the beach, I saw the red orange lava (火山岩) pouring out of Kilauea Volcano in the distance. It was time to
live my imagination!
     The next day, I quit my job, bought some art supplies and began doing what I"loved. I hadn"t painted a
picture in 15 years. I wondered if I could still paint. My hands trembled the first time I picked up a brush. But
before an hour had passed, I was lost in the colors spreading across the canvas (画布) in front of me. And as
soon as I started believing in myself, other people started believing in me, too. The first painting sold for $1 500. 
     The past six years have been filled with adventures. My children and I have gone swimming with dolphins,
watched whales and hiked around the crater rim (火山口边缘) of the volcano. We wake up every morning
with the ocean in front of us and the volcano behind us. The dream I had more than 40 years ago is now reality.
I"m living freely and happily ever after.
1. Why did the writer go to Hawaii?
A. To make a living.
B. To spend her holiday.
C. To free herself from trouble.
D. To realize her childhood dream.
2. Which of the following is the writer"s dream?
A. Get close to wildlife.
B. Live a free and happy life.
C. Live in nature with animals.
D. Become a successful painter.
3. We can infer from the passage that _____.
A. the writer had never done painting before
B. the writer"s parents encouraged her to divorce
C. the writer"s husband took away most of her money
D. the writer wasn"t sure whether she could survive in Hawaii at first