参考答案和解析

C) involving  vt. 1. 使卷入,连累;牵涉[(+in/with)] 2. 需要,包含,意味着[(+in)][+v-ing]

更多“Therehasbeenacollision___anumberofcarsonthemainroadtotown.A)composingB)consistingC)involvingD)engaging”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    从供选择的答案中选出应填入英语文句中()的正确的答案。

    Software quality assurance is now an (A) sub-discipline of software engineering. As Buckly and Oston point out, (B) software quality assurance is likely to lead to an ultimate (C) of software costs. However, the major hurdle in the path of software management in this area is the lack of (D) software standards. The development of accepted and generally applicable standards should be one of the principal goals of (E) in software engineering.

    A: ① emerging ② emergent ③ engaging ④ evolve

    B: ① effective ② effortless ③ light ④ week

    C: ① balance ② growth ③ production ④ reduction

    D: ① usable ② usage ③ useless ④ useness

    E: ① management ② planning ③ production ④ research


    正确答案:A: ① B: ① C: ② D: ① E: ④
    A: ① B: ① C: ② D: ① E: ④

  • 第2题:

    Before engaging the turning gear and turning the diesel engine, which of the following operation should be done except______.

    A.open the indicator cocks

    B.supply some CYL.Oil to cylinder liner wall with lubricator (only for two stoke diesel engine)

    C.put the fuel handle in the "stop" position

    D.pump up the air bottle


    正确答案:D

  • 第3题:

    材料:

    An aircraft lift on board RFA Argus was loaded beyond its safe working load of 18.4 tonnes.There were no injuries to any personnel,or material damage to the ship or its equipment.

    During a planned stay in port,500 compressed CO2 cylinders were required to be landed.These were normally stowed on a lower deck and needed to be transferred to the weather deck before being taken ashore.Before the vessel&39;s arrival in port,the planned operation was discussed between various officers and senior ratings,one of whom was to supervise final discharge of the cylinders from the ship.

    Once in port,a senior rating gave instructions to three juniors to transfer a number of cylinders to the weather deck.He then left them alone to load the cylinders onto the platform. of an aircraft lift.The cylinders weighed 19.95 tonnes,which was greater than they had been instructed to load.In addition to this excess weight they added a fork lift truck weighing 5.5 tonnes.The lift was then raised.

    When it reached the weather deck,the lift was unable to stow at the correct level.When investigated it was discovered that the load of both CO2 bottles and the fork lift truck was greater than its safe working load(SWL)and this had prevented the locking cleats at the flight deck(weather deck)engaging.

    问题:

    The lift was taken out of service for testing and inspection. The safe working load of the aircraft lift is ________ tonnes.

    A.18.4

    B.19.95

    C.5.5

    D.500

    The aircraft lift was overloaded by a weight which is ________ more than its SWLA.1.55

    B.3.95

    C.5.5

    D.7.05

    It is implied in the passage that ________.A.the lift should be raised slowly to avoid the accident

    B.the aircraft lift on board RFA Argus should be driven by super power

    C.the senior rating should give instructions in more detail to the three juniors to transfer a number of cylinders to the weather deck

    D.if the unloading operation was supervised by an officer who has sufficient experience of the loads,lifting equipment and the overall operation,the accident would had been avoided

    It was the ________ that had prevented the locking cleats at the flight deck(weather deck)engaging.A.fork lift

    B.CO2 bottles

    C.overloaded weight

    D.the three juniors

    请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!


    问题 1 答案解析:A


    问题 2 答案解析:D


    问题 3 答案解析:D


    问题 4 答案解析:C

  • 第4题:

    __________ may be defined as any kind of engaging with the language on the part of the learners, usually under the teacher's supervision, whose primary objective is to consolidate learning.

    A.Presentation
    B.Practice
    C.Production
    D.Preparation

    答案:B
    解析:
    考查3P教学法。presentation是“新课展示”,是对新课内容进行教学的,practice是“练习”,练习是针对所学内容进行训练与巩固的,production是“产出”,产出是指在熟练掌握所学内容的基础之上进行提高的部分,preparation是“准备”,准备通常是指在课前进行准备。因此正确答案为B。

  • 第5题:

    In the Communicative classrooms, the teacher might be a “ _____” ---engaging in communicative activities along with students.

    A.co-communicator
    B.co-instructor
    C.co-learner
    D.co-performer

    答案:A
    解析:
    本题考查教学实施中教师的角色。
    本题答题技巧在于关键词,由“communicative activities”破折号后的内容“与学生一起在交际活动中交流”可知,此时教师的角色是合作交流者。综上,A选项正确。
    故正确答案为A项。

  • 第6题:

    __________may be defined as any kind of engaging with the language on the part of the learners, usually under the teacher's supervision, whose primary objective is to consolidate learning.

    A.Presentation
    B.Practice
    C.Production
    D.Preparation

    答案:B
    解析:
    考查3P教学法。Presentation是“新课展示”,是对新课内容进行教学的,Practice是“练习”,练习是针对所学内容进行训练与巩固的,Production是“产出”,产出是指在熟练掌握所学内容的基础之上进行提高的部分。preparation是“准备”,准备通常是指在课前进行准备。因此正确答案为B。

  • 第7题:

    Businesses have also been engaging in a type of electronic commerce, ______ occurs when one business transmits computer-readable data in a standard format to another business.

    A.EFT
    B.EDI
    C.ERP
    D.CRM

    答案:B
    解析:

  • 第8题:

    共用题干
    第二篇

    Students Learn Better with Touchscreen Desks

    Observe the criticisms of nearly any major public education system in the world,and a few of the many
    complaints are more or less universal.Technology moves faster than the education system.Teachers must
    teach at the pace of the slowest student rather than the fastest. And一particularly in the United States一
    school children as a group don't care much for,or excel(擅长)at,mathemnatics. So it's heartening to learn
    that a new kind of"classroom of the future"shows promise at easing some of these problems,starting with
    that fundamental piece of classroom furniture:the desk.
    A UK study involving roughly 400 students,mostly aged 8一10 years,and a new generation of
    multis-touch,multi-user,computerized desktop surfaces is showing that over the last three years the technology
    has appreciably boosted students'math skills compared with peers learning the same material via the con-
    ventional paper-and-pencil method.How?Through collaboration,mostly,as well as by giving teachers better
    tools by which to micromanage individual students who need some extra instruction while allowing the rest of
    the class to continue moving forward.
    Traditional instruction still shows respectable efficacy(效力)at increasing students'fluency in mathe-
    matics,essentially through memorization and practice一dull,repetitive practice.But the researchers have con-
    cluded that these new touchscreen desks boost both fluency and flexibility一the critical thinking skills that al-
    low students to solve complex problems not simply through knowing formulas and devices,but by being able
    to figure out what the real problem is and the most effective means of stripping it down and solving it.
    One reason for this,the researchers say,is the multi-touch aspect of the technology.Students working in
    the next-gen classroom can work together at the same tabletop,each of them contributing and engaging with
    the problem as part of a group.Known as SynergyNet,the software uses computer vision systems that see in
    the infrared(红外线的)spectrum to distinguish between different touches on different parts of the surface,
    allowing students to access and use tools on the screen,move objects and visual aids around on their desk-
    tops,and otherwise physically interact with the numbers and information on their screens.By using these
    screens collaboratively,the researchers say,the students are to some extent teaching themselves as those with
    a stronger grasp on difficult concepts pull other students forward along with them.

    What is the benefit students get from the new tech?
    A:It makes them more fluent in public speech.
    B:It enables them to develop critical thinking ability.
    C:It offers them more flexibility in choosing courses.
    D:It is effective in helping them solve physical problems.

    答案:B
    解析:
    由第一段第三句可知D项说反了,实际上公共教育系统下,老师的教学进度是适应学 得最慢的学生的。
    由第二段最后一句“...giving teachers better tools by which to micromanage individual students who need some extra instruction while allowing the rest of the class to continue moving for- ward.(······给予老师更好的工具,老师们可以利用这些工具对需要额外指导的学生进行微观 处理,而班上的其他同学可以继续向前学。)”可知答案,C项是该含义的同义表述。mi- cromanage意为“微观处理,微观管理”。
    由第三段第二句话“...these new touchscreen desks boost both fluency and flexibility一the critical thinking skills that allow...(这些新的触屏桌面提高了流畅性和灵活性——允许学 生······的批判性思维技巧)”可知答案。
    由最后一段第二句“ Students working in the next-gen classroom can work together at the same tabletop(下一代的课堂中,学生们可以通过同一个桌面一起学习)”可排除A项。由最后 一段第三句“Known as SynergyNet , the software uses computer vision systems that see in the infra-red spectrum to distinguish between different touches on different parts of the surface,allowing students to access and use tools on the screen...(名为‘协同网络’的软件利用能在红外光谱中观 察的计算机视觉系统来区别表面不同部分的不同触摸,允许学生们访问和使用屏幕上的工 具······)”可知,该软件并不能自动识别不同的使用者,而是借助于计算机视觉系统,故排除C; 文中只是说学生可以使用屏幕上的工具,并没说是不同的工具,故排除D。所以选B,这也可通过结合第三段第二句“…these new touchscreen desks boost both fluency and flexibility一thecritical thinking skills that allow…(这些新的触屏桌面提高了流畅性和灵活性——允许学 生······的批判性思维技巧)”和第四段第一句“One reason for this, the researchers say, is themulti-touch aspect of the technology.(其中一个原因,研究者称,就是该技术的多点可触性。)”得出。
    由最后一段第二句“Students working in the next-gen classroom can work together at thesame tabletop(下一代的课堂中,学生们可以通过同一个桌面一起学习)”可知答案。

  • 第9题:

    Text 3 According to the old saw,anyone who wishes to maintain respect for sausages and laws should not see how either are made.Congress has just finished validating that saying by engaging in the sorry every-five-years exercise known as drafting a farm bill.This mess of subsidies and regulations claims to protect U.S.agriculture,not just from the vagaries of pests,crop diseases and weather but also from the ups and downs of the free market itself.Inevitably,the farm bill showers benefits on well-to-do business owners who don't need or deserve taxpayer help under the cover of deliberately obscure terms such as"federal milk marketing orders".It's true that farm income has dropped in each of the past four years because of falling commodity prices,but Congress showered agribusiness with taxpayer largesse when incomes reached all-time highs a half-decade ago,too.Clumsy manipulation by government probably exacerbates market swings.Where is it written that this one sector deserves federally guaranteed profitability'?You will hear a Iot about the need for food security,but it's mostly nonsense:A mere 6.3 percent of Americans'consumer expenditures were on food consumed at home in 2016,according to the Agriculture Department.This was easily the lowest percentage in the world,as it has been for many years.Even in the wildly unlikely event it doubled,we'd still be better off than developed countries such as Sweden and France.If Congress really wanted to help farmers,it would do something to stop President Trump's trade war,which has provoked retaliatory tarif{s by many countries against U.S.farm exports.This year's process has introduced a new level of ugliness to this inherently unlovely law.The House version of the farm bill,passed with Republican votes only,would add a work requirement to the government's largest food aid program for the poor,the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program,or SNAP.Helping poor people buy groceries is the main way the farm bill actually enhances food security;for decades,linking SNAP to farm subsidies in a single bill has been the price of urban lawmakers'support for rural corporate welfare.Mr.Trump applauded the measure,which would make most adult SNAP recipients(up to 7 million people)spend 20 hours per week either working or participating in a state-run training program as a condition of receiving benefits,which at present average$125 per month to 42.3 million Americans.Democratic representatives,mostly from urban America,and several Republicans,too,recoiled.Correctly,they cited the bill's insufficient funding for training programs,as well as the added paperwork and administrative burden.They might also have noted the bill's juxtaposition of tougher eligibility criteria for the poor with continued sugar price supports for agribusinesses in the South and Midwest.A large bipartisan majority of the Senate rejected the work requirement,which may mean that it can't survive the conference committee.The mere fact that it has gotten this far,however,tells you something about farm-bill politics in general and the priorities of the Republican House in particular.The old saw is cited to introduce a bill that____.

    A.can improve the free market
    B.aims to reform farm subsidies
    C.is made public too soon
    D.has too many drawbacks

    答案:D
    解析:
    [信息锁定]首句谚语把“法律”和“香肠”相提并论看似荒谬,但“要想对两者保持尊重.就别看它们是怎么制成的”暗示两者共性:外表光鲜.实则加工过程腐败,暗病多多。②句随即指出“国会刚刚亲身印证了该谚语一一参与了农业法案的起草”,修饰语sorry以及下句的mess也提示此举历来令人失望,法案是一团糟,可见开篇谚语旨在引出一项“出台过程腐败,存在诸多弊病”的法案,D.正确。[解题技巧]A.源于段末protect.…from the ups and downs of the free market,但该信息是法案声称要实现的内容(claims to.......)并非事实。B.从③句碎片信息mess of subsidies.…臆断法案宗旨,法案虽难免涉及对补贴的调整.但文中并未指出法案意在对其改革。C.干扰源于首句字面信息“应避免(提前)了解法案的具体制定”,但该内容实际意在“’风刺”.而非“建议”。

  • 第10题:

    资料:Demystifying how social and human-like robots work is vital so that we can understand and shape how they will affect our future, Dr Hatice Gunes will tell the Hay Festival next week. (1)
      Fear mongering and myth-making about human-like and social robots is stopping us from engaging with the technology behind them and having an input into how they—and we—evolve, says Hatice Gunes, Associate Professor at University of Cambridge's Computer Laboratory. (2)
      Dr Gunes will be speaking about her research at the Hay Festival on 1st June and says we need to move beyond sensationalist portrayals of human-like robot. Her Hay talk will centre on human robot interaction [ HRI] and how it can be used for our benefit, for instance, for helping children with autism learn how to read expressions and to stimulate the senses of elderly people in care. (3)
      Dr Gunes will outline how HRI works. She says it has to be believable in order to be effective. That means robots’ appearance is very important. This is what has driven the development of humanoid robots with arms and aspects of a human face which can behave in a human-like way, for instance, moving their arms, legs and eyes. However, more important than appearance is their behaviour and emotional expressivity. Dr Gunes refers to the way we relate to Disney’s animated characters. “People believe in them because they can portray emotion,” she says. (4)
      To achieve expressivity requires an understanding of how human emotions are portrayed and triggered. Scientists have been working on artificial emotional intelligence which enables new technology such as embodied agents and robots to both express and detect emotions, understanding non-verbal cues. Dr Gunes cites the work of Charles Darwin on the visual nature of emotions and how they can be mapped to various changes in facial expressions. (5)
      Her research investigates how humanoids can be programmed not only to extract and respond to facial clues to emotions, but also to understand the context in which those emotions are expressed. That means they will be able to offer a response that is sensitive to specific contexts. (6)
      Will robots ever be able to have emotions themselves though? Dr Gunes says there is no reason why not and questions what emotions are. The process of working with robots on artificial emotional intelligence unpicks the nature of our emotions, showing them to be a layering of different goals, experiences and stimuli. (7)
       Another area which scientists are looking at in their quest to improve humanoids’ believability is personality. Dr Gunes has done a lot of work on personality in telepresence robotics, robots controlled remotely by a human—a kind of 3D avatar. These can be used in many ways, for instance, by medical staff to offer remote home care. The medical person can be based anywhere and operate the robot through a virtual headset. Dr Gunes is interested in how people react to the teleoperator (the human controlling the robot remotely) who is present in robot form. Once again, both the robot’s physical appearance and behaviour are important and research shows that their personality needs to be task dependent. (8)
      Dr Gunes says there remain some big challenges for scientists working on HRI, including how to process and combine all the different data they are gathering, how to modify their appearance and behaviour dynamically, and how to keep their power going 24/7. The major challenges, however, are to do with breaking down some of the myths and fears people have about humanoids. (9)
       Part of this is because they don’t understand the benefits humanoid robots can bring and why, for instance, they need to take on a human form and understand emotions. She says humanoids can be positive in terms of increasing trust and engagement among certain groups, such as the elderly; that humans tends to anthropomorphise technology in any event; and that robots can be programmed to be limited to positive emotions that promote altruism. (10)
      “People tend to love or hate robots, but they don’t really know a lot abou

    A.To enable robots to serve humans.
    B.To decrease humans fear about robots.
    C.To make robots more human-like.
    D.To equip robots with human emotions.

    答案:C
    解析:
    本题考查的是推理判断。
    【关键词】anthropomorphise;Paragraph 10
    【主题句】第10自然段She says humanoids can be positive in terms of increasing trust and engagement among certain groups, such as the elderly; that humans tends to anthropomorphise technology in any event; and that robots can be programmed to be limited to positive emotions that promote altruism. (10) 她说,类人机器人在增进某些群体(如老年人)之间的信任和参与度方面发挥积极作用;在任何情况下,人类都倾向于将技术拟人化;机器人可以被程式限制在促进利他主义的积极情绪中。
    【解析】本题问的是“anthropomorphise一词在第10段中是什么意思?”选项A意为“让机器人为人类服务”。选项B意为“减少人类对机器人的恐惧”。选项C意为“让机器人更像人类”。选项D意为“用人类的情感武装机器人”。根据句子意思可以推断出“anthropomorphise”一词意为“拟人格化;赋予人性”。

  • 第11题:

    资料:From: Peter Manx pmanx@bettertraining.co.au
    To: John Morgan jmorgan@ISB.co.au
    Date: March 23
    Subject: Better Training Ltd.

    Dear Mr. Morgan,

    As a leading human resource specialist, Better Training Ltd. is uniquely able to respond to your current training needs. Please take the time to review the attached brochure. I am confident that you will find courses of immediate relevance to ISB International Ltd.

    Our standard curriculum covers topics such as managerial development, technical training, sales, marketing, and more. Our instructors-professionals and leaders in their fields-conduct engaging seminars while maintaining the quality for which we are known. In addition to our regular courses, we can deliver individually tailored programs at the location of your choice.

    I am certain that your organization will benefit from our services Contact us today to see how we can help your employees increase their technical and professional expertise.

    Sincerely,

    Peter Manx
    President

    What does Peter Manx hope to arrange?

    A.business relationship with ISB International.
    B.Assistance with an advertising campaign.
    C.Revisions of a company brochure.
    D.Technical support for Better Training staff.

    答案:A
    解析:
    本题考查的是细节理解。
    【关键词】 Peter Manx hope to arrange
    【主题句】第3自然段I am certain that your organization will benefit from our services.我确信您的公司将从我们的服务中获益。Contact us today to see how we can help your employees increase their technical and professional expertise.请今天就与我们联系,看看我们能如何帮助您的雇员增进技术和专业技能。
    【解析】本题的问题是“Peter Manx希望如何安排”。A选项“与ISB国际建立商业联系”,B选项“为广告活动提供援助”,C选项“校订公司宣传册”,D选项“为Better Training的员工提供技术支持”。根据主题句可知,Peter Manx是Better Training的董事长,希望为ISB国际提供商业服务。

  • 第12题:

    单选题
    A survey was recently given to all high school students in a certain town to measure the effect of environmental factors on attitudes and behavior, and the results indicated that students who play a minimum of two hours per day of violent video games are more likely to engage in violent behavior in school and at home. Therefore, playing violent video games encourages violence among teens.  Which of the following, if true, would most weaken the argument above?
    A

    The same survey was conducted in a neighboring town with similar results.

    B

    Playing violent video games keeps violent teenagers at home and prevents them from engaging in publicly aggressive behavior.

    C

    The survey used a standard question format that did not allow students to produce responses that could not be interpreted incorrectly.

    D

    Students who play violent video games often have a history of behavioral issues leading back to early childhood.

    E

    The survey was given over a period of days to ensure that all students attending the high school would participate.


    正确答案: D
    解析:
    文段的推理认为电子游戏导致了学生中的暴力活动,忽略了其他引起暴力活动的因素,故D项提出了引起暴力活动的其他原因,削弱了原文假设,故本题选D项。

  • 第13题:

    If your idea of a good day at work includes falling from a tall building or rolling a brand-new car, you may want to consider a career as a stuntperson.We’ve all seen movies __________ (1) actors seem to risk life and limb, whether they’re leaping from planes, dodging explosions or being set on fire.Actors __________ (2) stuntpeople to take care of these death-defying feats.Stunt work is ________ (3) to the production of most modern movies.Filmmakers are constantly looking to increase the sense of danger and spectacle in their movies.To do this, they often need to make their stars appear to be ___________ (4), whether it’s engaging in fist fights or driving cars off bridges.The key to producing these types of visuals is to cast a stunt professional to _________ (5) of their stars at the dangerous moments.

    1.

    A、in that

    B、that

    C、which

    D、in which

    2.

    A、rely on

    B、depend

    C、are dependable on

    D、rely

    3.

    A、vital

    B、a problem

    C、troublesome

    D、difficult

    4.

    A、strong-minded

    B、dangerous

    C、in harm’s way

    D、calm

    5.

    A、take place

    B、replace

    C、take the place

    D、instead


    参考答案:DAACC

  • 第14题:

    Businesses have also been engaging in a type of electronic commerce , ( )occurs when one business transmits computer-readable data in a standard format to another business.

    A.EFT B.EDI C.ERP D.CRM


    正确答案:B

  • 第15题:

    请阅读Passaqe l,完成第小题。
    Passage 1
    Among the throngs of Americans prowling the malls and trawling e-commerce sites, many are looking out for themselves. Retail-research firm NPD Group said, thus far, about one third of consumers have engaged in what is called self-gifting. That's up from 12 percent in a typical pre-recession year, and up from the 19 percent who said they planned to do so last year. The National Retail Federation, the dispenser of all holiday-related data, said in 2012, nearly 60 percent of shoppers would do so.
    The latest step in the evolution of our burgeoning culture of narcissism? Yes. Self-gifting makes psychological and economic sense given what Americans have endured these years.
    THE POST-BUST(破产) era has been a long, hard, heroic slog of balance-sheet improvement.
    Americans have labored to save money and hack away at the huge mountain of debt they accumulated during the credit boom. According to the New York Federal Reserve, consumers have knocked down their aggregate debt load from $12.67 trillion in the third quarter of 2008 to $11.31 trillion in the third quarter of 2012; credit-card debt is off $192 billion from the peak. Americans have cut their load by spending more carefully and engaging in that most un-American of traits:
    self-abnegation.
    After living frugally for so much of the year and for so many years who can blame a parent at an Apple Store for buying herself a new iPad? Indeed, self-gifting may actually be a function of the new abstemiousness. Let's say you've been holding off on replacing your old television. Why not buy it around November or December when insane promotions and free shipping are available?
    Besides, it's not like self-gifters are solely interested in self-pleasure. An NRF survey said that the typical self-gifter would spend about $140 on himself this year. For comparison's sake, the survey said the typical shopper would spent about $750 in all.
    After a long period of economic madness(remember the housing bubble and the dotcom mess),self-gifting is a sign of much-needed economic rationality. Shopping for others involves a certain amount of wrong guesswork with negative financial consequence. This year, for example, CEB TowerGroup claims that Americans will load $110 billion onto gift cards and give them as presents.
    But the market-research firm says that about 1.6 percent of that total, about $1.7 billion, will go unused. Meanwhile, a large percentage of gifts wind up getting returned. Adults surveyed by BIG insight in November 2012 found that 35 percent of people reported returning at least some of their gifts. Returns induce guilt and raise the specter of uncomfortable conversations about what happened to that giant striped sweater. But more significant, returns are bad for the environment.
    They lead to more trips to the mall, higher shipping costs, and the unnecessary use of packaging materials.
    These days, the rise of e-commerce means shopping is now antiseptic: sit and click. With the charm gone, we have to come up with other ways to make the experience pleasurable.
    As the song goes, "Have yourself a merry little Christmas".

    What does the underlined word "aggregate" in PARAGRAPH 3 most probably
    mean?
    查看材料

    A.Gigantic.
    B.Heavy.
    C.Total.
    D.Maximum.

    答案:C
    解析:
    aggregate意为“合计的”。划线词所在句子意思是“到2012年第三季度,用户已经将他们的总债从2008年第三季度的12.67万亿减少到11.31万亿”。选项中只有total“整个的”与aggregate意思相近,故选C。

  • 第16题:

    _______may be defined as any kind of engaging with the language on the part of the learners, usually under the teacher supervision, whose primary objective is to consolidate learning.

    A.Presentation
    B.Practice
    C.Production
    D.Preparation

    答案:B
    解析:
    考查3P教学法。A项是“新课展示”,是对新课内容进行教学的,B项是“练习”,练习是针对所学内容进行训练与巩固的,C项是“产出”,产出是指在熟练掌握所学内容的基础之上进行提高的部分,D项是“准备,通常是指在课前进行准备”。故选B。

  • 第17题:

    __________ may be defined as any kind of engaging with the language on the part of the learners. usually under the teacher's supervision, whose primary objective is to consolidate learning.

    A.Presentation
    B.Practice
    C.Production
    D.Preparation

    答案:B
    解析:
    考查3P教学法。新课展示(Presentation)是对新课内容进行教学的;练习(Practice)是针对所学内容进行训练与巩固的;产出(Production)是指在熟练掌握所学内容的基础上进行提高的部分:准备(Preparation)通常是指在课前进行准备。故选B。

  • 第18题:

    根据下面资料,回答题
    One of my children is spinning in a circle, creating a narrative about a princess as she twirls.?The other is building a rocket ship out of a discarded box, attaching propellers made of cardboard?and jumping in and out of her makeshift launcher. It is a snow day, and I've decided to let them?design their own activities as I dean up and prepare a meal. My toddler becomes the spinning?princess, imagining her character's feelings and reactions. What seems like a simple story involves?sequencing, character development, and empathy for the brave princess stuck in her tower. The?rocket ship my first grader is working on needs a pilot and someone to devise the dimensions and?scale of its frame; it also needs a story to go with it. She switches between roles and perspectives,?between modes of thinking and tinkering.?
    This kind of experiential learning, in which children acquire knowledge by doing and via?reflection on their experiences, is full of movement, imagination, and self-directed play. Yet such?learning is increasingly rare in early-childhood classrooms in the U.S, where many young children?spend their days sitting at tables and completing worksheets. Kindergarten and preschool in the U.S.?have become more and more academic, rigorously structuring kids' time, emphasizing assessment,?drawing a firm line between "work" and "play"--and restricting kids' physical movement. A study?from the University of Virginia released earlier this year found that, compared to 1998, children?today are spending far less time on self-directed learning--moving freely and doing activities that?they themselves chose--and measurably more time in a passive learning environment.?
    With so few years under their belts, my 3- and 6-year-old daughters are still learning to inhabit?their bodies. They are learning how to maneuver themselves physically, how to orient themselves in?space. As Vanessa Durand, a pediatrician at St. Christopher' s Hospital for Children in Philadelphia,?says, freedom of movement is necessary for children to meet their developmental milestones:?"Children learn by experiencing their world using all of their senses. The restriction of movement,?especially at a young age, impedes the experiential learning process."?
    Movement allows children to connect concepts to action and to learn through trial and error. "If?you walk into a good kindergarten class, everyone is moving. The teacher is moving. There are?structured activities, but generally it is about" purposeful movement," comments Nancy?Carlsson-Paige, a professor emerita of early-childhood education at Lesley University and the author?of Taking Back Childhood, describing the ideal classroom setup. In the classroom culture she?advocates for,"[Kids] are getting materials for an activity, they are going back and deciding what?else they need for what they want to create, seeing how the shape of a block in relation to another?block works, whether they need more, does it balance, does it need to be higher, is it symmetrical.?All of these math concepts are unfolding while kids are actively building and moving."?
    Research has shown time and again that children need opportunities-to move in class. Memory?and movement are linked, and the body is a tool of learning, not a roadblock to or a detour away?from it. Any parent who has brought home a kindergartener after school, bursting with untapped?energy yet often carrying homework to complete after a seven-hour day, can reasonably deduce why?children today have trouble keeping still in their seats. Many children are getting 20-minute breaks,?or none at all On Florida, parents whose children have no recess have been campaigning to legislate?recess into the curriculum.) Recess, now a more frequent topic of research studies, has been found to?have "important educational and developmental implications." Schools that have sought to integrate?more movement and free play, such as short 15-minute recess periods throughout the day, have seen?gains in student attention span and instructional time. As Carlsson-Paige points out, "Recess is not a?separate thing in early-childhood education."?
    Ben Mardell, a professor of early-childhood education at Lesley University and the project?director of the Pedagogy of Play initiative at Harvard's Project Zero observes that even when adults?do incorporate play into learning, they often do so in a way that restricts free movement and agency.?"The idea that there should be formal instruction makes it no longer play," says Mardell. ?"In play?the player is choosing to participate, choosing a goal, and directing and formulating the rules. When?there is an adult telling the kids, ?'This is what we are supposed to do,' many of the important?developmental benefits of play get lost."?
    The role of play has been established not just as a part of learning, but as a foundation for?healthy social and emotional function. The National Association for the Education of Young?Children has published widely circulated position papers on the need for developmentally?appropriate teaching practices and for reversing the "unacceptable trends in kindergarten entry and?placement" that have been prompted largely by policy makers' demand for more stringent?educational standards and more testing. Some teachers are enacting changes, seeking ways to bring?movement back into the classroom. Lani Rosen-Gallagher, a former first-grade teacher for New?York City public schools and now a children's yoga instructor, explains the shift in thinking: "I?would have [my students] get out of their seats every 15 minutes and take a Warrior Pose or Lion' s?Breath, and then I could get 15 more minutes of work out of them." This kind of movement, she?said, also gives children space to develop self-awareness and self-regulation, to get to know?themselves as thinking individuals by connecting with the body.?
    Play-based preschools and progressive schools (often with open room plans, mixed-age groups,?and an emphasis on creativity and independence) are seeing increased popularity. Enrichment programs engaging children in movement with intention (yoga, meditation, martial arts) are also gaining traction.?
    These kinds of methods seek to give children back some of the agency their young minds and bodies crave, as less play and mobility lead to an uptick in anxiety in ever-younger students and even, according to Durand, a growing number of cases of children who need to see occupational therapists. Mindfulness practices such as guided breath and yoga can help mitigate the core symptoms of ADHD in children, ?(an increasingly common diagnosis), while the arts encourage?self-expression and motor-skill development.?
    Emily Cross, a professor in the School of Psychology at the United Kingdom's Bangor?University, explains the impact of movement on memory and learning: New neuroscience research,?she said in an email, shows that active leaming--"where the learner is doing, moving, acting, and?interacting"--can change the way the brain works and can accelerate kids' learning process. While?passive learning may be easier to administer, she added, it doesn't favor brain activity. Cross, whose?research focuses on pre-teens and young adults, said she's found ?"very clear evidence that when?learners are actively engaged with moving their own bodies to music, in time with avatars on the?screen, their performance is vastly superior to when they're asked to engage in passive learning ...?[There are] striking changes in brain activity when we combine dance and music in the learning?context." In other words, people absorb a newly acquired skill-set better while doing, engaging their?bodies rather than simply observing.?
    These research findings echo the observations and methodologies of educators who promote?active learning. As Sara Gannon, the director and teacher at Bethesda Nursery School, a highly?regarded play-based preschool in New Haven, Connecticut, that favors experiential learning over?direct instruction, in an email notes: ?"Unfortunately, there has been so much focus on forcing the?academics, and young children are being asked to do what they are just not ready to do ... of course,?we do teach letters and sounds, numbers and quantities--but through experiences and within a?context. That means, hands-on: counting the number of acorns a child found on the playground,?building with unit blocks, sounding out a child's name as they learn to write it, looking at traffic?signs on a walk." Yet while such developmentally oriented programs may benefit children, for now?they're unlikely to become widespread given the current focus on assessment and school readiness,?particularly in underserved communities.?
    As my girls continued creating their own activity stations and imaginary worlds, the contrast?between how children operate versus what is often expected of them was apparent. It would be?unwise and impractical to pretend that children do not need any structure, or that academic skills are?unimportant in school. Yet it is necessary to recognize that the early-childhood classroom has been?significantly altered by increasingly rigorous academic standards in ways that rarely align with how?young children learn.?
    ?
    ??What′ s the author′ s altitude towards the importance of academic skills?查看材料

    A.Unconcerned.
    B..Objective.
    C.Critical.
    D.Tolerant

    答案:B
    解析:
    态度题。最后一段中的"It would be unwise and impractical to pretend that children do not need any structure, or that academic skills are unimportant in school. Yet it is necessary to recognize that the early-childhood classroom has been significantly altered by increasingly rigorous academic standards in ways that rarely align with how young children learn."意思是“假装儿童不需要任何结构化学习或认为学术技能在学校不重要,是愚蠢和不切实际的想法。但是也必须认识到,幼儿教育的课堂已经明显被那些日益严格的学术标准改变了,而这些标准并不符合低龄儿童的学习特点”。由此可见作者认识到了学术技能的两面性,态度是客观的,故选B。

  • 第19题:

    The journalist was probing into several financial scandals.

    A:exploring
    B:disputing
    C:involving
    D:solving

    答案:A
    解析:
    本句意思是:记者正在调查几个金融丑闻。probe意为“探查,调查”,例如:The doctor will probe your stomach with a camera.医生会用带摄像头的胃镜检查你的胃。 explore意为“探究”,例如:Let us explore the possibilities for improvement.让我们探索改善的可能性。dispute意为“争论”,例如: The couple disputed where to spend the holiday.夫妻俩为去哪里度假而发生争论。involve意为“包括”,例如:A letter of credit will involve unnecessary extra charges.信用证包含有不必要的额外开支。solve意为“解决”,例如:We have to be patient to solve the problem.我们要解决问题就得有耐心。只有选项A同句中画线词含义接近。

  • 第20题:

    The year 2000 will bring big changes in communication.Cell phones will be small enough to carry in your pocket.Videophones will let you see the person you are talking to on the phone.Tiny hand size computers will know your favorite subjects.The Internet and email will be everywhere.Technologists believe 2000 will be the year of video messaging.You will be able to see whom you're talking to.
    Also in the near future small wireless boxes will pick up information from satellites.In 5 years,computers won't need to be connected through wires.
    All of this will be good for rural areas and countries that don't have cable or telephone now.
    In 20 years you may only need to think about something and the computer will do it.
    Constance Hale is the author of Sin and Syntax,"I believe that email has been an incredible boon to communication.People are writing today where they would have been telephoning yesterday.So people are engaging with words more than they have for the last couple generations."
    If people use email and the Internet more,it could make people better readers and writers.Some people think the most important part of communication is to make people understand each other better.Will technology make that easier?
    The translator also comes in handy in medical emergencies.Tam Dinh says,"Where people are injured it's always important to get as much information as quickly as possible."
    Bob Parks is an Associate Editor of Wired Magazine,"Bob's morning begins at about 6:45 am.and Bob is kind of mad,because Bob usually gets up at around 7:15 and likes to cut it close with his morning commute,but I look at my radio and it says that there's a traffic jam on 101 South and I'm gonna need an extra 1/2 hour.And so my radio has got a net connection,wireless net connection as well as a good old power cord to the wall and it has received notice that there's a traffic jam and it has calculated an extra 1/2 hour commute time."
    Some day everything may be connected to the Internet.Your refrigerator will add milk to your Internet grocery list when the date on the carton has passed.Light bulbs will be ordered before they burn out.
    It's fun to try to guess the future.Usually the predictions are wrong.The one thing we know for sure is that we can't imagine how technology will change.

    What is the best title for the passage?

    A.The Best Way to Get News
    B.The Changes of Media
    C.Make Your Own Newspaper
    D.The Future of Newspaper

    答案:D
    解析:
    暂无解析

  • 第21题:

    Unlike so-called basic emotions such as sadness,fear,and anger,guilt emerges a little later,in conjunction with a child’s growing grasp of social and moral norms.Children aren’t born knowing how to say“I’m sorry”;rather,they learn over time that such statements appease parents and friends-and their own consciences.This is why researchers generally regard so-called moral guilt,in the right amount,to be a good thing:A child who claims responsibility for knocking over a tower and tries to rebuild it is engaging in behavior that’s not only reparative but also prosocial.In the popular imagination,of course,guilt still gets a bad rap.It evokes Freud’s ideas and religious hang-ups.More important,guilt is deeply uncomfortable-it’s the emotional equivalent of wearing a jacket weighted with stones.Who would inflict it upon a child?Yet this understanding is outdated.“There has been a kind of revival or a rethinking about what guilt is and what role guilt can serve,”Vaish says,adding that this revival is part of a larger recognition that emotions aren’t binary-feelings that may be advantageous in one context may be harmful in another.Jealousy and anger,for example,may have evolved to alert us to important inequalities.Too much happiness(think mania)can be destructive.And guilt,by prompting us to think more deeply about our goodness,can encourage humans to atone for errors and fix relationships.Guilt,in other words,can help hold a cooperative species together.It is a kind of social glue.Viewed in this light,guilt is an opportunity.Work by Tina Malti,a psychology professor at the University of Toronto,suggests that guilt may compensate for an emotional deficiency.In a number of studies,Malti and others have shown that guilt and sympathy(and its close cousin empathy)may represent different pathways to cooperation and sharing.Some kids who are low in sympathy may make up for that shortfall by experiencing more guilt,which can rein in their nastier impulses.And vice versa:High sympathy can substitute for low guilt.In a 2014 study,for example,Malti and a colleague looked at 244 children,ages 4,8,and 12.Using caregiver assessments and the children’s self-observations,they rated each child’s overall sympathy level and his or her tendency to feel negative emotions(like guilt and sadness)after moral transgressions.Then the kids were handed stickers and chocolate coins,and given a chance to share them with an anonymous child.For the low-sympathy kids,how much they shared appeared to turn on how inclined they were to feel guilty.The guilt-prone ones shared more,even though they hadn’t magically become more sympathetic to the other child’s deprivation.“That’s good news,”Malti says.“We can be prosocial because of our empathetic proclivity,or because we caused harm and we feel regret.”
    Researchers think that guilt can be a good thing because it may help__________.

    A.regulate a child’s basic emotions
    B.improve a child’s intellectual ability
    C.intensify a child’s positive feelings
    D.foster a child’s moral development

    答案:A
    解析:
    本题目为因果关系题,考察因果关系对应关系。根据题干关键词guilt can be a good thing定位到第一段最后一句。因果关系题找到原因定位句,根据最后一句this is why……可得知应该是题点的上一句,即第一段倒数第二句“Children aren't born knowing how to say“I am sorry”;rather,they learn over time that such statements appease parents and friends--and their own consciences.”,这句的意思是孩子不是生来就知道如何说“对不起”,而是随着时间而学习到的,这种说法可以安慰一下他的父母朋友,以及他们自己的道德心(良心)。但是这句话实际是个例子,所以我们可以进一步往前看一句,就是第一段第一句的后半句主句,“guilt emerges a little later,in conjunction with a child’s growing grasp of social and moral norms.内疚出现的稍晚一点,伴随着孩子对于社会和道德准则的理解的逐渐增多”这句就可以得出答案A,foster a child’s moral development培养了孩子的道德发展是a child’s growing grasp of social and moral norms这句的同义改写。干扰项B的regulate a child's basic emotions原文提及到基本情感,但并未提及regulate管理,干扰项C.improve a child's intellectual ability和D.intensity a child’s positive feelings都为提及。

  • 第22题:

    资料:Demystifying how social and human-like robots work is vital so that we can understand and shape how they will affect our future, Dr Hatice Gunes will tell the Hay Festival next week. (1)
      Fear mongering and myth-making about human-like and social robots is stopping us from engaging with the technology behind them and having an input into how they—and we—evolve, says Hatice Gunes, Associate Professor at University of Cambridge's Computer Laboratory. (2)
      Dr Gunes will be speaking about her research at the Hay Festival on 1st June and says we need to move beyond sensationalist portrayals of human-like robot. Her Hay talk will centre on human robot interaction [ HRI] and how it can be used for our benefit, for instance, for helping children with autism learn how to read expressions and to stimulate the senses of elderly people in care. (3)
      Dr Gunes will outline how HRI works. She says it has to be believable in order to be effective. That means robots’ appearance is very important. This is what has driven the development of humanoid robots with arms and aspects of a human face which can behave in a human-like way, for instance, moving their arms, legs and eyes. However, more important than appearance is their behaviour and emotional expressivity. Dr Gunes refers to the way we relate to Disney’s animated characters. “People believe in them because they can portray emotion,” she says. (4)
      To achieve expressivity requires an understanding of how human emotions are portrayed and triggered. Scientists have been working on artificial emotional intelligence which enables new technology such as embodied agents and robots to both express and detect emotions, understanding non-verbal cues. Dr Gunes cites the work of Charles Darwin on the visual nature of emotions and how they can be mapped to various changes in facial expressions. (5)
      Her research investigates how humanoids can be programmed not only to extract and respond to facial clues to emotions, but also to understand the context in which those emotions are expressed. That means they will be able to offer a response that is sensitive to specific contexts. (6)
      Will robots ever be able to have emotions themselves though? Dr Gunes says there is no reason why not and questions what emotions are. The process of working with robots on artificial emotional intelligence unpicks the nature of our emotions, showing them to be a layering of different goals, experiences and stimuli. (7)
       Another area which scientists are looking at in their quest to improve humanoids’ believability is personality. Dr Gunes has done a lot of work on personality in telepresence robotics, robots controlled remotely by a human—a kind of 3D avatar. These can be used in many ways, for instance, by medical staff to offer remote home care. The medical person can be based anywhere and operate the robot through a virtual headset. Dr Gunes is interested in how people react to the teleoperator (the human controlling the robot remotely) who is present in robot form. Once again, both the robot’s physical appearance and behaviour are important and research shows that their personality needs to be task dependent. (8)
      Dr Gunes says there remain some big challenges for scientists working on HRI, including how to process and combine all the different data they are gathering, how to modify their appearance and behaviour dynamically, and how to keep their power going 24/7. The major challenges, however, are to do with breaking down some of the myths and fears people have about humanoids. (9)
       Part of this is because they don’t understand the benefits humanoid robots can bring and why, for instance, they need to take on a human form and understand emotions. She says humanoids can be positive in terms of increasing trust and engagement among certain groups, such as the elderly; that humans tends to anthropomorphise technology in any event; and that robots can be programmed to be limited to positive emotions that promote altruism. (10)
      “People tend to love or hate robots, but they don’t really know a lot abou

    A.Neutral
    B.Positive
    C.Negative
    D.Critical

    答案:B
    解析:
    本题考查的是主旨大意。
    【关键词】tone
    【主题句】第12自然段She adds: “Understanding robots will empower people so they can help to shape them to do good.她补充道:“了解机器人会使人类拥有强大的力量,这样人类就可以帮助改造它们来做有益的事。”
    【解析】本题问的是“哪个词最能形容本文的基调?”选项A意为“”中性。选项B意为“积极”。选项C意为“消极”。选项D意为“批评”。文章整体都在描述机器人有利于人类发展,人类不应该害怕机器人,因此本文的基调是积极的。

  • 第23题:

    A customer has requested the most cost-effective p5 solution allowing for growth.  Which of the following should the pSeries technical specialist consider doing when configuring each p5 system using eConfig?()

    • A、Implementing CoD
    • B、Using Express Configurations with processor upgrades
    • C、Meeting the minimum Value Pak rules
    • D、Engaging the pSeries representative to identify appropriate discounts

    正确答案:C