Beyond the Factory: Child Labor in the Cities
At the beginning of the nineteenth century, factory owners faced few restrictions on the way they employed their children workers, who were between the age of 7 and 12. Gradually laws came into being.
The first child-labor laws were passed at the state level in America and usually focused on both required education and a minimum age for employment. And added rules limited the length of the workday for children. Pennsylvania, for example, limited the workday to 10 hours for children under 12. However, government officials cared little whether businesses followed the law. In fact one group of children was left entirely unprotected by labor laws -- the children of immigrant families.
By the beginning of the twentieth century, piecework appeared, for which people were paid by the piece. Significant numbers of women sewed baby dresses or men's neckties and made the artificial flowers used to decorate hats. Piecework turned homes into factories that were free from the law, and countless children worked long hours alongside their mothers and old sisters.
Manufactures exploited the system shamelessly and paid the lowest wages they could. Embroidering (刺绣) a silk dress, which was a 10-day job, might generate a five-dollar payment. In the case of "willowing", workers needed to add more strands to ostrich feathers used on hats to make them longer and more graceful. The first willowers were paid 15 cents per inch, but a few months later, the pay was reduced to 13 cents. Within three years, willowers were earning only three cents per inch.
In order to survive under these circumstances, pieceworkers had even their youngest children help them. In one Italian neighborhood, a three-year-old girl helped her mother sew clothes. In another case, a child of eight who had lived in New York for three years had never been to school at all and could speak almost no English. Slowly child labor laws brought these abuses to an end.
31. The first child-labor laws required ______.
A. workplace safety and conditions
B. minimum payment and age
C. education and working time
D. minimum payment and schooling
32. Manufactures who hired women to do piecework ______.
A. were kind and concerned employers
B. were sometimes called "willowers"
C. usually paid the lowest salary
D. forced children to turn home into factories
33. "Willowing" was a kind of ______.
A. handwork activity B. workplace
C. payment requirement D. workers
34. By raising the example of the three-year-old girl's experience in the last paragraph, the author intended to ______.
A. show how poor the situations were for children workers
B. blame those adult pieceworkers for allowing children to work
C. attract attention to protect young children
D. emphasize the importance of educating young children
35. Which of the following sentences best summarizes the passage?
A. The first child-labor laws were limited due to working at the state level.
B. Early child-labor laws offered no protection to children who worked at home.
C. Some immigrant children did not learn English because of their piecework.
D. Child-labor laws should have come into being before children became workers.
| HORSE RACING YEAR ROUND 3pm, every Sunday City Stadium No children allowed |
100 YEARS OF PICTURES THEN AND NOW(Photo Show) February 1~April 30 City Art Museum at 750 High Street 10 am~5pm, Tuesday to Sunday |
| WEEKEND SALES 2pm~6pm, this Sunday EVERYTHING 20%~50% OFF Visit us at Block G, Grandview Mall |
DANCE PARTY Celebrate an important day Brings your friends 7 pm~10pm, Sunday night Country Club ¥10, an adult; ¥2, a child |
Jane can go to to celebrate her birthday with her friends.
| A.City Stadium | B.Country Club |
| C.Grandview Mall | D.City Art Museum |
All people can be allowed to watch the horse races except .
| A.adults | B.women |
| C.children | D.old men |
When will you not be able to see the photo show?
| A.March 8th | B.April 10th |
| C.February 1st | D.May 1st |
What can you do if you only have time between 5 pm to 6 pm on Sunday?
| A.Go to the weekend sales. |
| B.Go to see the photo show. |
| C.Go to the dance party. |
| D.Go to watch the horse racing. |
How much will Mr. Smith pay if he takes his two daughters to the dance party?
| A.¥12 | B.¥14 |
| C.¥30 | D.¥6 |
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. |
If you live in the United States, you can’t have a full-time job until you are 16 years old. At 14 or 15, you work part-time after school or on weekends, and during summer vacation you can work 40 hours each week. Does all that mean that if you are younger than 14, you can’t make your own money? Of course not! Kids from 10-13 years of age can make money by doing lots of things.
Valerie, 11, told us that she made money by cleaning up other people’s yards. Lena, 13, makes money by knitting(织) dog sweaters and selling them to her neighbors. Reisa said she had started taking art classes and showing her works to people. People ask her to draw pictures for them and they pay her for them. Jasmine, 13, writes articles for different magazines!
Kids can learn lots of things from making money. By working to make your own money, you are learning the skills you will need in life. These skills can include things like how to get along with others, how to use technology and how to use your time wisely. Some people think that asking for money is a lot easier than making it; however, if you can make your own money, you don’t have to depend on anyone else. The five dollars that you make will probably make you feel a lot better than the twenty dollars you ask for.Kids can have full-time jobs at the age of______ in the USA.
A. 17 B.15 C. 14 D. 13If you are 15 years old, you can’t work part-time______.
| A.after school | B.on weekends |
| C.during school time | D.during summer vacation |
Reisa makes money by_______.
| A.cleaning up other people’s yard |
| B.drawing pictures for others |
| C.writing articles for different magazines |
| D.knitting dog sweaters. |
According to the passage, which of the following is NOT true?
| A.The writer thinks kids from 10-13 years of age can make money too. |
| B.Kids can learn how to use their time wisely by making money. |
| C.Kids don’t need to get along with others when making money. |
| D.Kids can learn skills if they try to make money on their own. |
Welcome to our school. You can do a lot of things here. Come and join us.
| Timetable |
|
| Sunday 8:30---11:30 Personal Inventions You can see many inventions by the students; you may also bring your own inventions. |
Monday 19:00---21:00 Space and Man Dr. Thomas West If you want to know more about the universe. |
| Wednesday 19:30---21:00 Modern Medicine Mrs. Lucy Green Would you like to know medical science? |
Friday 18:30---21:00 Computer Science Mr. Harry Morison from Harvard University Learn to use Windows XP. |
You may have a chance to introduce your inventions on ___.
| A.Sunday | B.Monday |
| C.Wednesday | D.Friday |
The person who teaches Computer Science is from______.
| A.Canada | B.Australia |
| C.New Zealand | D.America |
You may learn something about a disease called TB from ___.
| A.Dr. West | B.Mr. Morison |
| C.Mrs. Green | D.Mr. Thomas |
If you want to learn something about satellites, you can go to the class from______.
| A.8:30 to 11:30 on Sunday | B.19:00 to 21:00 on Monday |
| C.19:30 to 21:00 on Wednesday | D.18:30 to 21:00 on Friday |
Once an Englishman named Larry Belmont went to Russia for a holiday. After he got back, some of his friends came. “I had a very dangerous trip while I was in Russia,” Larry said. “I went to see a friend in the country when the sun went down, I was still traveling through a forest in a sleigh(雪橇). It was a long way from my friend’s house when about twenty wolves began to follow my sleigh.”
“It was very dark in the forest. There was thick snow on the ground. First I heard the wolves. The noise was terrible! Then I saw long, grey forms among the trees, and soon the wolves were near me. They were running very fast, and they didn’t seem to get tired like the horses.”
“What did you do?” one of Larry’s friends asked.
“When the wolves got very near,” Larry answered, “I put up my gun and shot the first wolf dead. Then all the other wolves stopped and ate it, so my sleigh got away from them for a few minutes. Then they finished their meal, and I heard them coming again. The moon was shining brightly on the snow now, and after a few minutes I saw them running among the trees once more. They came nearer again, and then I shot another one of them, and the others stopped once more to eat it. The same thing happened again, and my horses became more and more tired and ran slower and slower until, after two hours, only one wolf was still alive and following me.”
“Wasn’t it too fat to run?” one of Larry’s friends asked.The purpose of this passage is to_______.
| A.amuse readers |
| B.tell an exciting adventure |
| C.praise Larry Belmont’s bravery |
| D.show the danger of traveling through a forest |
Larry told his friends what happened to him when he was ______.
| A.in Russia one winter morning |
| B.in England one winter evening |
| C.in Russia one winter evening |
| D.in America one winter morning |
According to what Larry said, the last wolf ______.
| A.was the strongest of all |
| B.had eaten up all the other wolves |
| C.ran much faster than the other wolves |
| D.was very fat and couldn’t run fast enough |
From what Larry’s friend asked in the end we know that_______,
| A.Larry’s trip was really dangerous |
| B.the last wolf was too fat to run |
| C.all the wolves had been shot by Larry |
| D.the friend did not believe what Larry had said |