LINDA MAYNARD
11 Windrift Circle
Methuen, MA
978 – 555 – 4539
JOB OBJECTIVE
Seek special education, primary school, or middle school math teaching position.
EDUCATION
Rivier College, Nashua, NH
Bachelor of Arts in Education – May, 2006
Major: Elementary Education
Have successfully completed PRAXIS I and PRAXIS II. Meet highly qualified testing requirements for Massachusetts and New Hampshire.
TEACHING EXPERIENCE
November, 2005 – January, 2006
Wilkins Elementary School, Amherst, NH
Student Teacher
· Developed and completed student – centered lessons in all subject areas for various groups of fifth grade special
and regular education students.
·Adapted lessons to meet students’ needs by reviewing their backgrounds and learning needs through IEPs.
·Communicated with parents on a regular basis via newsletters, daily or weekly progress reports, phone calls, and email, resulting in increased parental participation at home.
September, 2005 – November, 2005
Charlotte Avenue Elementary Scho
ol, Nashua, NH
Student Teacher
·Taught reading and writing through Language Experience Approach methods.
·Introduced a Writer’s Workshop appropriate for first grade students to help them to develop their writing skills.
·Developed learning stations in reading and science, enabling students to be more independent learners.
Spring, 2005
Wilkins Elementary School, Amherst, NH
Designed and taught a unit on Insects and Spiders, based on New Hampshire Standards to 23 self -contained, third and fourth grade students with disabilities.
Fall, 2004
Amherst Street Elementary School, Nashua, NH
Taught a class of 24 third grade students with a wide range of abilities.
ADDITIONAL EXPERIENCE
·After-Scho
ol Aid, Amherst School District, Amherst, NH (2004 – 2005)
·Summer Camp advisor, YMCA, Nashua, NH (Summers, 2002 and 2003)
·Big Brother / Big Sister Volunteer, Nashua, NH (2002 – 2005)
49.What kind of job does Linda want to get?
A.A Big Brother / Big Sister Volunteer.
B.A middle school math teacher.
C.A special educatio
n advisor.
D.A summer camp advisor.
50.Linda has worked for the following schools EXCEPT .
A.Rivier College, Nashua, NH
B.Wilkins Elementary School, Amherst, NH C.Charlotte Avenue Elementary School, Nashua, NH
D.Amherst Street Elementary School, Nashua, NH
51.What can we know about Linda accord
ing to the passage?
A.She was merely interested in developing student’s math abilities.
B.She was not active in participating in after – school activities.
C.She is permitted to teach in any high school of New York.
D.She has plenty of experience in teaching.
52.Which of the following is NOT included in the ways Linda used to communicate with the______ students’ parents?
A.Newsletters. B.Phone calls.
C.Face-to-face talks. D.Daily or weekly progress reports.
When Steve Jobs was born on Febuary24, 1955, in San Francisco , California, his unmarried mother decided to put him for adoption(收养) because she wanted a girl. So in the middle of the night, his mother called a lawyer named Paul Jobs and said, “We have an unexpected baby boy; do you want him?” But his mother told his future parents to promise that they would send Jobs to college. After Steve Jobs graduated from high school, he went to college but decided to drop out because it was so expensive that he had to sleep on the floor in his friends’ rooms.
At 20, he and a friend(Steve Wozniak) started a company in a garage on April 1, 1976. Jobs named their company ----Apple in memory of a happy summer he had spent as an orchard (果园) in Oregon.
After 10 years of hard time and failures, starting from two kids working in a garage, Apple computer eventually grew into a big company with over 4000 employees.
At 30, Jobs, however, was fired from the company he co-founded. But after he had to leave the company, Apple was under heavy pressure from rival (对手) Microsoft and in 1996 posted billions of dollars in losses. Apple needed Steve Jobs and he was appointed as Apple’ CEO in1997. Under his leadership, Apple returned to profitability(赢利) and introduced new products such as the iPhone and the iPad.
Steve Jobs once said, “Sometimes life hits you in the head with a brick. Don’t lose faith. I’m sure that the only thing that kept me going was that I loved what I did. You’ve got to find what you love. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking.”
Steve Jobs didn’t finish his college education because he _____
A.wanted to start a company. |
B.had financial problems. |
C.took no interest in his major. |
D.hated to share rooms with his friends. |
From the passage, we can know that Steve Job___________
A.joined Microsoft in 1987 |
B.give Apple a second life |
C.set up another company |
D.invented the iPhone |
What can we learn from what Steve Jobs said?
A.Interest is key to success. |
B.Hope helps us succeed. |
C.Attitude is everything. |
D.Courage goes with confidence. |
Having friends may well keep you healthier and help you deal with stress better. Some studies show that people with close friends have a greater ability to fight disease than people who are alone.
Make friendship a priority(优先). Find the time to be with friends even if it means letting the lawn go unmowed(未割草) or the dishes unwashed for a while. When you can’ t get together, use the phone to keep in touch.
Open up to close friends. Keeping a deep friendship requires a level of heartfelt intimacy(亲密). Don’t be afraid to express your inner fears and disappointments. Listen to your friends when they have problems, but offer advice only when it’s wanted. Help raise friends’ self-esteem when they are sad by a job loss, or other such events.
Have different friends for different activities, such as going to the movies, singing in a choir(合唱), and joining in a bowling league.
Don’t wait for a friend to ask a favor. When a friend has the flu, offer to go to the store or drive his or her children to their after-school activities.
Never take a friendship for granted. Like a good marriage, friendship needs care and patience. Become a joiner. Find a group that matches your interests.
Talk to strangers. Conversations started in museums, laundry rooms, or bookstores can lead to firm friendship.
Enroll in an adult-education course. A classroom is an ideal place to meet others with similar interests.
What should we do to have friends according to the author?
A.Make friendship a priority. |
B.Open up to close friends. |
C.Never take a friendship for granted |
D.All the above. |
Which of the statements is TRUE according to the passage?
A.You should have different friends for the same activities. |
B.You should wait for a friend to ask a favor. |
C.You should avoid talking with stranger in museums, laundry rooms of bookstores. |
D.You should never take a friendship for granted. |
The underlined word “enroll” in the last paragraph means _____.
A.give | B.join | C.get | D.catch |
On the way to California, my family stopped for lunch. As we walked toward the entrance to the restaurant, a man with a dirty face jumped up from a chair, opened the door for us and greeted us in a friendly way.
Once inside, my daughters said in a low voice, “Mom, he smells.” After we ordered our lunch, I explained, telling the kids to look beyond the dirt. Seeing this rudeness truly upset me, I wanted to set a good example to my children, but sometimes being a good example was difficult. When our meal arrived, I realized I had left the car-sick pills in the truck. With the windiest trip ahead, the kids needed them, so Iwent back to the car for them.
Just then, the “doorman” was opening the door for me, I said a loud “thank you” to him as I exited.
When I returned, we talked a bit. He said he was not allowed inside unless he bought food. I went back and told my family his situation. Then I asked our waitress to add one soup and sandwich. The kids looked puzzled, but when I said the order was for the “doorman”, they smiled. When it was time to continue our trip, I noticed the “doorman” enjoying his meal. Upon seeing me, he stood up and thanked me heartily. He then lifted his hand for a handshake and I gratefully accepted. I suddenly noticed the tears in his eyes-tears of gratitude (感恩). What happened next drew great astonishment: I gave the “doorman” a hug.
Back in truck, I fell into deep thought. While we can’t choose many things in life, we can choose when to show gratitude. I said thanks to a man who had simply helped open a door for me, and also said thanks for that opportunity to teach my children by example.What attitude did the children show to the doorman at first?
A.dislike | B.surprise |
C.puzzle | D.interest |
The author returned to the car for car-sick pills because ________.
A.seeing the doorman made her sick |
B.she wanted the doorman to open the door for her |
C.the kids needed them for the windiest trip ahead |
D.the kids were concerned about the restaurant’s meal |
For what purpose did the author say a loud “thank you” to the doorman?
A.She wanted to give the children a lesson of gratitude. |
B.She showed her real love for him. |
C.She wanted to give the doorman a hand. |
D.She just showed her polite manner. |
It can be learned from the passage that the doorman _________.
A.refused to accept the offer |
B.took the offer for nothing |
C.gave the author a thankful hug |
D.was moved to tears for the kind help |
What can we infer from the last paragraph?
A.We should learn to show gratitude. |
B.Life is difficult for those in trouble. |
C.Don’t judge a man by what he wears. |
D.We should be polite to others. |
Our children grew up on peanut butter and jelly (果冻) sandwiches. Even my husband and I sometimes ate one secretly at late night with a glass of milk. It was too delicious and tasty. My mother-in-law was the jelly maker in this family. The jelly was made of either grape or blackberry. The only job I did to the jelly making was to save baby food jars (罐子), which my mother-in-law would fill with the tasty gel (凝胶体), pack them up and send back to our home. For the past 22 years of my married life, whenever I wanted to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich for ourselves, all I had to do was reach for one of those little jars of jelly. It was always there.
This past December, my mother-in-law passed away. Among the things in the house to be divided by her children were the remaining canned goods in the pantry (食品储藏室). When my husband brought his jars home, we carefully put them away in our pantry.
The other day I reached in there to get jelly for a quick sandwich, and there it was. Sitting all alone on the far side of the shelf was a small jar of grape jelly. As I picked up the jar, I suddenly realized something that I had failed to see earlier-this was the last jar we would ever have from my mother-in-law. Although she had been dead for nearly a year, so much of her had remained with us. Our children had never known a day without their grandmother’s jelly. It seems like such a small thing, and most days it was something that was ignored. But today it seemed a great treasure.
No longer was it just a jar of jelly. It was the end of a family tradition. I believed that as long as it was there, a part of my mother-in-law would always live on.Why did the couple eat the jelly secretly at late night?
A.Because it was very delicious and nice. |
B.Because it was only made for children. |
C.Because it was made by mother-in-law. |
D.Because it was good to health. |
What can we know about the author in making jelly?
A.She could make baby food by herself. |
B.She could only collect baby food jars. |
C.She helped her mother fill the jars with the tasty gel. |
D.She sent the jelly jars home with her husband. |
What did the mother-in-law leave to the author?
A.The skills to make jelly. |
B.Some baby food in the house. |
C.Some canned jars filled with jelly. |
D.A lot of money. |
What does the underlined word “it” in Paragraph 3 refer to?
A.a quick sandwich | B.the shelf |
C.grape | D.jelly |
What’s the author’s purpose in writing the passage?
A.To miss her mother-in-law. |
B.To introduce the skills of making jelly. |
C.To remember the family tradition. |
D.To warn people to be nice to the old. |
Born with easy-broken bone disease, Zhang Yonghong is only half a meter tall and must use a wheelchair. His thin arms and legs can hardly support any weight, and he is unable to take care of himself. However, his hands are able to produce fine paper-cuts, which will free his daughter from the same disease.
To support himself, he learned how to make paper-cut art from his mother. He sold his artwork and taught his techniques in Xi’an for eight years before discovering his young daughter inherited the disease from him, leading Zhang to move his family to Beijing for his daughter’s better treatment five years ago.
The daughter’s treatment costs about 30,000 yuan a year. The family’s savings was used up in two years, and Zhang was forced to start to sell his work in underground passages with his healthy wife, who soon left him because of the hard life.
With a little help from government, he was lucky to meet some kindhearted people in Beijing. A Hong Kong businessman gave 60,000 yuan to him last year to treat the girl and start a small shop on Qiangulouyuan, which is known as a famous hutong that attracts lots of tourists over holidays. Zhang Rui, a university graduate, spends most of her time helping Zhang sell the paper-cuts, translating the stories of the paper-cuts into English and selling the works on the roadside of Nanluoguxiang.
However, the artist still lives beyond his income (收入) and struggles to continue his small business. “Selling paper-cuts is his only source of income. Without this, he can’t support the family and treat his daughter,” says Zhang Rui, who hopes more people will help Zhang.Why did Zhang grow only half a meter tall?
A.His easy-broken bone disease affected him. |
B.His parents also had the same disease. |
C.His poor family couldn’t provide him with rich food. |
D.An unexpected accident caused him to grow slowly. |
What does the underlined word “inherited” probably mean in Paragraph 2?
A.get around | B.take away |
C.pass on | D.go over |
Why did his wife leave him?
A.Because she was afraid of losing the daughter. |
B.Because she was tired of him and her children. |
C.Because she lost hope for her daughter. |
D.Because the life was too hard for them. |
With the help of a Hong Kong businessman, Zhang Yonghong _________.
A.could support the daily life of his family |
B.ran a shop of his own in Beijing |
C.hired a girl to sell his artworks |
D.could start a translation room |
What can we conclude from the last paragraph?
A.Zhang still needs more people to help him. |
B.Zhang manages his business very well. |
C.Zhang’s business needs to be developed. |
D.Zhang needs to look for a wife to help him. |