更多“What are their motives for doing it?A:plans B:answers C:excuses D: reasons”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    ( ) of them knew what the other was doing.

    A、Any

    B、None

    C、Neither

    D、Every


    参考答案:C

  • 第2题:

    A:( ). B:She works in the Oxford University.

    A. What does your mother do?

    B. What do your parents do?

    C. What are your parents doing at the moment?


    答案:A

  • 第3题:

    The project maintains a current and approved set of requirements over the life of the project by doing the following: .(73)all changes to the requirements . Maintaining the relationships among the requirements, the project plans, and the work products . ……

    A.Monitoring

    B.Managing

    C.Gathering

    D.Reducing


    正确答案:B
    解析:在项目的生命周期里,项目通过如下措施维持一个最新的、经批准的需求集合:
      . 管理对需求的变更。
      . 维持需求、项目计划和工作产品之间的关联。
      . ……

  • 第4题:

    —_________

    —Oh,l feel bad. I think I had a headache .

    A. Can I help you?

    B. What's wrong with you?

    C. What are you doing?

    D. What's this?


    正确答案:B
    41.B【解析】根据后面的回答知道生病了,因此前面应该是问“你怎么了”之类。

  • 第5题:

    These are the motives for doing it.

    A:reasons
    B:excuses
    C:answers
    D:replies

    答案:A
    解析:

  • 第6题:

    These are their motives for doing it.

    A:reasons
    B:excuses
    C:answers
    D:plans

    答案:A
    解析:
    题干意为“这些是他们做这事的动机。” 句中划线词意为“动机”。A项reasons意为“原因,理由”;例:I can only guess the rea-son.我只能猜测原因。B项意为“借口,托辞”。C项意为“回答,答案”。D项plans意为“计划,方案”。故选A。

  • 第7题:

    All good lesson plans give a clear picture of what the teacher intends to do in the lesson.()

    A

    B



  • 第8题:

    ()? -I am your agent. I want to see the captain.

    • A、What are you?
    • B、What can I do for you?
    • C、Where are you from?
    • D、What are you doing?

    正确答案:B

  • 第9题:

    单选题
    What is the tide().
    A

    do

    B

    to do

    C

    doing

    D

    to doing


    正确答案: A
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第10题:

    单选题
    According to Maslow, what are “arranged in a hierarchy”?
    A

    Physiological drives.

    B

    An individual’s motives.

    C

    An individual’s needs.

    D

    Abstract desires.


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    本题线索在第二段第二句“but also that they are arranged in a hierarchy whereby the lower order needs must ... play.”,句中“whereby”一词的意思是“凭借该等级”,故“按等级排列的”不应是需要,而应是动机。

  • 第11题:

    问答题
    Discuss, and decide together:  ● What kinds of reasons might there be for staff leaving their jobs?  ● What steps could be taken to reduce staff turnover?

    正确答案:
    【参考范例】
    Candidate A=A Candidate B=B
    A: Let’s get started. I think a lot of reasons account for staff leaving their jobs. Among these reasons, the most common one may be that some staff members feel that he/she is earning very little in his/her job. What do you see it?
    B: Well, I also think there are several reasons, really. I mean, with employees expanding their horizon their outlook becomes more global. To employees, certain questions may be asked like: What do you enjoy about working here? Over the past year, have you considered about leaving? If so, why is that? What can be done to improve our company and create an even better place to work? Form employees, we are most likely to get answers like they want better training, better working conditions and better communications with their supervisors. And, above all, they want their bosses to “make me feel like I make a difference”.
    A: So how can we weigh up all these factors and take appropriate steps to reduce staff turnover?
    B: Well, it’s vital that the management knows exactly what they want from staff and that they have a full understanding of their key steps, one of which is linking pay and bonuses with performance. What do you think about it?
    A: Yes, it’s difficult to change how things are done. Just like people, bureaucracies fall into bad habits, and the process of adapting to change can be painful. All the departments of the company should do their job well to reform the rules and working environment. So far as I am concerned, most employees are reliable and loyal and they are willing to take hard work.
    B: That’s true. Surveys have been conducted recently. They show that when 15,000 employees in retail shops across the country were asked to list the 18 reasons for working where they did in order, they ranked “good pay” third. And “appreciation of work done” is in first place, with “respect for me as a person” second.
    A: Therefore, the management need to put high value on staff moral. High labor turnover that results from the indiscriminate hiring of “cheap” workers can cost a lot. Many companies have declared a “war for people” so as to recruit and keep better staff.
    B: If correct steps are taken to boost staff moral, labor turnover is bound to decline by more than haft. There is enough evidence that the management should spend more money on retaining employees if they hope to spend less on finding and training new ones.
    A: I agree with you. I think, to reduce its labor turnover, we need to get across a simple message throughout our operating divisions, that is loyal, well-motivated employees make customers happy, which in turn, creates bigger profits and happier shareholders. It could also help to improve training of middle manager.. So could a change in bonus arrangements.
    B: Meanwhile, the senior managers may become fussier about the people they recruited. They prefer to screen out job applicants who are mainly motivated by money, in other words applicants, who are pejoratively described as “pay first people” by some companies. Such people make up a surprisingly small, yet evidently disruptive, part of the service-industry workforce. Many companies found in its employee-attitude surveys that only about 20% of their workers regarded pay as their principal reason for working there.
    A: Probably, you’re right. But people do annoying things out of their own will in exchange for money or entertainment, so they may go for the bait. And many middle managers in service industries are more comfortable managing demands for more money than those for increased recognition and better communications. They will need to change their ways. Well, let’s conclude what we have said and make a decision, shall we?
    B: Yes, first we will go over the questions, and then make decisions together.
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第12题:

    单选题
    Passage1There are two kinds of motive for engaging in any activity: internal and instrumental. If a scientist conducts research because she wants to discover important facts about the world, that's an internal motive, since discovering facts is inherently related to the activity of research. If she conducts research because she wants to achieve scholarly renown, that's an instrumental motive, since the relation between fame and research is not so inherent. Often, people have both for doing things.What mix of motives-internal or instrumental or both-is most conducive to success? You might suppose that a scientist motivated by a desire to discover facts and by a desire to achieve renown will do better work than a scientist motivated by just one of those desires. Surely two motives are better than one. But as we and our colleagues argue in a paper newly published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, instrumental motives are not always an asset and can actually be counterproductive to success.We analyzed data drawn from 11,320 cadets in nine entering classes at the United StatesMilitary Academy at West Point, all of whom rated how much each of a set of motives influenced their decision to attend the academy. The motives included things like a desire to get a good job later in life and a desire to be trained as a leader in the United States Army.How did the cadets fare, years later? How did their progress relate to their original motives for attending West Point?We found, unsurprisingly, that the stronger their internal reasons were to attend West Point, the more likely cadets were to graduate and become commissioned officers. Also unsurprisingly, cadets with internal motives did better in the military(as evidenced by early promotion recommendations)than did those without internal motives and were also more likely to stay in the military after their five years of mandatory service.Remarkably, cadets with strong internal and strong instrumental motives for attending West Point performed worse on every measure than did those with strong internal motives but weak instrumental ones. They were less likely to graduate, less outstanding as military officers and less committed to staying in the military.Our study suggests that efforts should be made to structure activities so that instrumental consequences do not become motives. Helping people focus on the meaning and impact of their work, rather than on, say, the financial returns it will bring, may be the best way to improve not only the quality of their work but also their financial success.There is a temptation among educators and instructors to use whatever motivational tools are available to recruit participants or improve performance. If the desire for military excellence and service to country fails to attract all the recruits that the Army needs, then perhaps appeals to money for college, career training or seeing the world will do the job. While this strategy may lure more recruits, it may also yield worse soldiers. Similarly, for students uninterested in learning, financial incentives for good attendance or pizza parties for high performance may prompt them to participate, but it may result in less well-educated students.What do the writers disapprove concerning the current situation of attracting recruits?
    A

    Taking into account applicants' internal motives.

    B

    Making them focus on the meaning of their work.

    C

    Relying on whatever motivational tools available.

    D

    Taking into account applicants' instrumental motives.


    正确答案: D
    解析:

  • 第13题:

    A: ( )? B:She is talking to Mary.

    A. What is she doing right now

    B. What does she do

    C. What is she talking about


    答案:B

  • 第14题:

    —What______you _______at ten o' clock yesterday﹖ —I_______ in class.

    A、were doing studied

    B、was doing was studying

    C、were doing was studying

    D、was doing studied


    正确答案:C

  • 第15题:

    _______ at all is worth doing well. A. Whatever is worth doing B. That is worth doing C. What is worth doing it D. Whatever is worth doing it


    正确答案:A

  • 第16题:

    Through doing this, the teacher will be able to ascertain the extent to __________the children understand what they are reading.

    A.how ?
    B.which
    C.that ?
    D.what

    答案:B
    解析:
    考查定语从句。主句为“the teacher will be able to ascertain the extent”,定语从句为“to the children anderstand what thev are reading”.先行词为extent.短语to…extent意思是“到……程度”。句意为“这样做,老师就能确定孩子们对他们所读的内容理解到什么程度了”。故选B。

  • 第17题:



    Eloise:What are you doing this weekend?



    请在第_____处填上正确答案。


    答案:H
    解析:
    That was part of my plan这是有关周末计划的一段对话。Eloise:你这个周末准备干什么?
    Helen:还不知道呢。你准备干什么?
    Eloise:我在考虑开车去海滩。
    Helen:听来不错!
    Eloise:你愿意跟我一起去吗?
    Helen:当然,非常愿意。你什么时候出发?
    Eloise:我想,咱们可以在周六早上8点出发。
    Helen:我们可以有足够的时间游览。你知道吗,圣巴巴拉海滩有音乐节。
    Eloise:这正是我计划的一部分。
    Helen:好极了。咱们周六见。谢谢你邀我与你同行。

  • 第18题:

    Look at Tom! What()?

    Adoes he do

    Bis he doing

    Che is doing


    B

  • 第19题:

    All good lesson plans give a clear picture of what the teacher intends to do in the lesson.()


    正确答案:正确

  • 第20题:

    -() -I’m the agent.

    • A、What are you?
    • B、Where are you from?
    • C、Who are you?
    • D、What are you doing?

    正确答案:C

  • 第21题:

    单选题
    Passage1There are two kinds of motive for engaging in any activity: internal and instrumental. If a scientist conducts research because she wants to discover important facts about the world, that's an internal motive, since discovering facts is inherently related to the activity of research. If she conducts research because she wants to achieve scholarly renown, that's an instrumental motive, since the relation between fame and research is not so inherent. Often, people have both for doing things.What mix of motives-internal or instrumental or both-is most conducive to success? You might suppose that a scientist motivated by a desire to discover facts and by a desire to achieve renown will do better work than a scientist motivated by just one of those desires. Surely two motives are better than one. But as we and our colleagues argue in a paper newly published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, instrumental motives are not always an asset and can actually be counterproductive to success.We analyzed data drawn from 11,320 cadets in nine entering classes at the United StatesMilitary Academy at West Point, all of whom rated how much each of a set of motives influenced their decision to attend the academy. The motives included things like a desire to get a good job later in life and a desire to be trained as a leader in the United States Army.How did the cadets fare, years later? How did their progress relate to their original motives for attending West Point?We found, unsurprisingly, that the stronger their internal reasons were to attend West Point, the more likely cadets were to graduate and become commissioned officers. Also unsurprisingly, cadets with internal motives did better in the military(as evidenced by early promotion recommendations)than did those without internal motives and were also more likely to stay in the military after their five years of mandatory service.Remarkably, cadets with strong internal and strong instrumental motives for attending West Point performed worse on every measure than did those with strong internal motives but weak instrumental ones. They were less likely to graduate, less outstanding as military officers and less committed to staying in the military.Our study suggests that efforts should be made to structure activities so that instrumental consequences do not become motives. Helping people focus on the meaning and impact of their work, rather than on, say, the financial returns it will bring, may be the best way to improve not only the quality of their work but also their financial success.There is a temptation among educators and instructors to use whatever motivational tools are available to recruit participants or improve performance. If the desire for military excellence and service to country fails to attract all the recruits that the Army needs, then perhaps appeals to money for college, career training or seeing the world will do the job. While this strategy may lure more recruits, it may also yield worse soldiers. Similarly, for students uninterested in learning, financial incentives for good attendance or pizza parties for high performance may prompt them to participate, but it may result in less well-educated students.What can be the best title for the article?
    A

    Motivation and Fame

    B

    Two Types of Motives

    C

    The Secret of Effective Motivation

    D

    The Study on the Function of Motives


    正确答案: C
    解析:

  • 第22题:

    单选题
    Passage1There are two kinds of motive for engaging in any activity: internal and instrumental. If a scientist conducts research because she wants to discover important facts about the world, that's an internal motive, since discovering facts is inherently related to the activity of research. If she conducts research because she wants to achieve scholarly renown, that's an instrumental motive, since the relation between fame and research is not so inherent. Often, people have both for doing things.What mix of motives-internal or instrumental or both-is most conducive to success? You might suppose that a scientist motivated by a desire to discover facts and by a desire to achieve renown will do better work than a scientist motivated by just one of those desires. Surely two motives are better than one. But as we and our colleagues argue in a paper newly published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, instrumental motives are not always an asset and can actually be counterproductive to success.We analyzed data drawn from 11,320 cadets in nine entering classes at the United StatesMilitary Academy at West Point, all of whom rated how much each of a set of motives influenced their decision to attend the academy. The motives included things like a desire to get a good job later in life and a desire to be trained as a leader in the United States Army.How did the cadets fare, years later? How did their progress relate to their original motives for attending West Point?We found, unsurprisingly, that the stronger their internal reasons were to attend West Point, the more likely cadets were to graduate and become commissioned officers. Also unsurprisingly, cadets with internal motives did better in the military(as evidenced by early promotion recommendations)than did those without internal motives and were also more likely to stay in the military after their five years of mandatory service.Remarkably, cadets with strong internal and strong instrumental motives for attending West Point performed worse on every measure than did those with strong internal motives but weak instrumental ones. They were less likely to graduate, less outstanding as military officers and less committed to staying in the military.Our study suggests that efforts should be made to structure activities so that instrumental consequences do not become motives. Helping people focus on the meaning and impact of their work, rather than on, say, the financial returns it will bring, may be the best way to improve not only the quality of their work but also their financial success.There is a temptation among educators and instructors to use whatever motivational tools are available to recruit participants or improve performance. If the desire for military excellence and service to country fails to attract all the recruits that the Army needs, then perhaps appeals to "money for college," "career training" or "seeing the world" will do the job. While this strategy may lure more recruits, it may also yield worse soldiers. Similarly, for students uninterested in learning, financial incentives for good attendance or pizza parties for high performance may prompt them to participate, but it may result in less well-educated students.Which of the following is closest in meaning to the underlined word "cadets" in Paragraph 3?
    A

    In-service soldiers.

    B

    Military researchers.

    C

    Military officers.

    D

    Military trainees.


    正确答案: C
    解析:

  • 第23题:

    单选题
    Passage1There are two kinds of motive for engaging in any activity: internal and instrumental. If a scientist conducts research because she wants to discover important facts about the world, that's an internal motive, since discovering facts is inherently related to the activity of research. If she conducts research because she wants to achieve scholarly renown, that's an instrumental motive, since the relation between fame and research is not so inherent. Often, people have both for doing things.What mix of motives-internal or instrumental or both-is most conducive to success? You might suppose that a scientist motivated by a desire to discover facts and by a desire to achieve renown will do better work than a scientist motivated by just one of those desires. Surely two motives are better than one. But as we and our colleagues argue in a paper newly published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, instrumental motives are not always an asset and can actually be counterproductive to success.We analyzed data drawn from 11,320 cadets in nine entering classes at the United StatesMilitary Academy at West Point, all of whom rated how much each of a set of motives influenced their decision to attend the academy. The motives included things like a desire to get a good job later in life and a desire to be trained as a leader in the United States Army.How did the cadets fare, years later? How did their progress relate to their original motives for attending West Point?We found, unsurprisingly, that the stronger their internal reasons were to attend West Point, the more likely cadets were to graduate and become commissioned officers. Also unsurprisingly, cadets with internal motives did better in the military(as evidenced by early promotion recommendations)than did those without internal motives and were also more likely to stay in the military after their five years of mandatory service.Remarkably, cadets with strong internal and strong instrumental motives for attending West Point performed worse on every measure than did those with strong internal motives but weak instrumental ones. They were less likely to graduate, less outstanding as military officers and less committed to staying in the military.Our study suggests that efforts should be made to structure activities so that instrumental consequences do not become motives. Helping people focus on the meaning and impact of their work, rather than on, say, the financial returns it will bring, may be the best way to improve not only the quality of their work but also their financial success.There is a temptation among educators and instructors to use whatever motivational tools are available to recruit participants or improve performance. If the desire for military excellence and service to country fails to attract all the recruits that the Army needs, then perhaps appeals to money for college, career training or seeing the world will do the job. While this strategy may lure more recruits, it may also yield worse soldiers. Similarly, for students uninterested in learning, financial incentives for good attendance or pizza parties for high performance may prompt them to participate, but it may result in less well-educated students.According to the passage, which of the following is conducive to career success?
    A

    Strong internal and strong instrumental motives.

    B

    Strong internal and weak instrumental motives.

    C

    Weak internal and strong instrumental motives.

    D

    Weak internal and weak instrumental motives.


    正确答案: B
    解析: