While success is surely sweeter than failure, it seems failure is a far better teacher, and organizations that fail miserably often flourish (繁荣) more in the long run, according to a new study by Vinit Desai, assistant professor of management at the University of Colorado Denver Business School. Researchers have found that people missing their goals perform much better in the long run. That is because they gain more knowledge from their failures than their successes and the lessons are more likely to stay longer in their minds.
“We found that the knowledge gained from success was often fleeting while knowledge from failure stuck around for years,” said professor Desai, who led the study. “But companies often ignore failure. Managers may fire people or turn over the whole workforce while they should treat the failure as a learning opportunity.”
Prof Desai compared the flights of the space shuttle Atlantis and the Challenger. During the Atlantis flight last year, a piece of insulation (绝缘体) broke off and damaged the left solid rocket booster (助推火箭) but didn’t influence the program. There was little investigation. The Challenger was launched next and another piece of insulation broke off. This time the shuttle and its seven–person crew were destroyed. The disaster led to a major investigation resulting in 29 changes to prevent future disasters.
The difference in response in the two cases came down to this: Atlantis was considered a success and the Challenger a failure.
“Despite crowded skies, airlines are extremely reliable,” he said. “The number of failures is extremely small. And past researches have shown that older airlines, those with more experience in failure, have a lower number of accidents.”
Prof Desai doesn’t recommend finding out failure in order to learn. Instead, he advises organizations to analyze small failures to collect useful information rather than wait for major failures. Why did experts pay little attention to the problem of Atlantis?
| A.Because it worked perfectly. |
| B.Because the right booster was still OK. |
| C.Because nothing serious happened then. |
| D.Because fewer people died in the flight. |
Fewer accidents happen to older airlines in that ________.
| A.their planes couldn’t fly high in the sky |
| B.they gained much from experience in failure |
| C.their planes were often checked by the experts |
| D.they were unpopular among passengers |
The passage is written mainly to ________.
| A.show failure is a better teacher than success |
| B.explain why Challenger failed |
| C.introduce something about Prof Desai |
| D.tell managers how to achieve success |
Which writing strategy is NOT used in developing the passage?
| A.Giving definitions. |
| B.Making comparisons. |
| C.Analyzing causes. |
| D.Providing different examples. |
An 18-year-old high school student who had just learned to swim in the last summer vacation saved the life of a drowning Ohio boy on Friday
afternoon.
Tom Erickson was credited with (因......而受赞扬
)saving the life of Jason Pryor,10, in Mill Creek (小河) Park. Young Jason Pryor, from Chillicothe, was visiting relatives from Anchor Point when he fell into Mill Creek.
The Pryor boy had no business playing near the edge of the river, but he had no idea of the danger.
The creek, with much more water than usual for the recent spring rains, flowed fast and carried the boy around a bend and out of sight from his parents, who took Jason out there and said they had not even witnessed the incident.
Luckily for Jason, one of the most unselfish students from Brentwood’s Central High School was taking a walk alone through the park.
As soon as he found the boy struggling in the water, Erickson jumped into the creek and managed to pull the drowning boy out of the water. And it was reported that Erickson had never received any life-saving instruction before.
“I wasn’t sure I could do it,” Erickson said. “I didn’t know if I could swim through the river by myself, not to mention getting another person out with me.”
This incident should be a lesson to young children who do not know how to swim. Stay away from dangerous bodies of water. Young Jason Pryor lives at _______.
| A.Anchor Point | B.Chillicothe, Ohio | C.Mill Creek | D.Brentwood |
Which of the following sentences is true according to the passage?
| A.Life-saving instruction helped a lot in the incident. |
| B.Jason’s parents saw him fall into the creek but couldn’t help. |
| C.The creek flowed fast because it was very straight without any bends. |
| D.Erickson was not sure if he could save the boy when jumping into the creek. |
What’s the possible meaning of the underlined sentence “The Pryor boy had no business playing near the edge of the river,” in the third paragraph?
| A.The accident was none of the boy’s business. |
| B.The boy had no friends to play with him. |
| C.The boy shouldn’t have played near the creek. |
| D.The boy was very busy and had no time to play. |
What would be the best title for the passage?
| A.Did You Know the Danger of Water | B.Be Responsible Parents |
| C.The Fast Running Mill Creek | D.Beginning Swimmer Saved Drowning Boy |
Geena David knew she wanted to be a movie star when she was very young. She was not sure what gave her the idea, but she wanted to look like a movie star. “I have a lot of pictures from my childhood of me wearing sunglasses,” she ways. “I used to wear them to watch TV.”
Early movie actors started wearing sunglasses not because they looked good, but because their eyes hurt. The lights used on movie sets were extremely bright and could cause a painful problem known as “Klieg eyes”. It was named after the Klieg brothers who invented the lights. Actors wore sunglasses to give their eyes a rest. But when movie stars began wearing their sunglasses in public, they quickly became a must.
Eventually actors started wearing sunglasses in their movies as well as on the street. Audrey Hepburn wore ultra-cool Ray-Ban sunglasses in the 1961 movie, Breakfast at Tiffany’s. As a result, Ray-Ban sunglasses started to appear more and more in the movies. In 1979, Ray-Ban “Wayfarers” were worn by Jake and Elwood in The Blue Brothers. Tom Cruise wore Ray-Ban “Aviator” sunglasses in the 1986 hit, Top Gun. Then in 1997, Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones made Ray-Ban “Predator” sunglasses famous in Men in Black.
Of course sunglasses aren’t just a fashion statement. The main reason to wear sunglasses is to protect our eyes against UV radiation. UV radiation can damage our eyes, so people now choose their sunglasses carefully. But you don’t have to give up style for safety. The choice of frames and lenses available these days is huge. So you can protect your eyes and still be the coolest person on the beach. What is mainly discussed in this passage?
| A.The use of sunglasses. | B.The history of sunglasses. |
| C.The sunglasses wearing. | D.Why movie stars like to wear sunglasses. |
Why did Geena David like to wear sunglasses?
| A.She was a movie star. | B.She wanted to follow a movie star. |
| C.Wearing sunglasses was good to her eyes. | D.It was good wear sunglasses when watching TV. |
Early actors’ eyes hurt because _______.
| A.they wore sunglasses. | B.they went out in the sun too much |
| C.the lights on movie sets were too bright | D.their scripts were written in very small writing |
We may know from this passage that _______.
| A.Audrey Hepburn was a famous film star |
| B.Ray-Ban is the name of sunglasses maker |
| C.sunglasses made Top Gun the hit in 1986 |
| D.Men in Black must be an advertisement of sunglasses |
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The manager expects to meet and talk with successful applicants in Paris in June and July.What is the purpose of the text?
| A.To introduce a language school in Japan. | B.To hire language teachers to work in Japan. |
| C.To describe working conditions in Japan. | D.To make clear the requirements for Japanese teachers. |
We know from the text that those who are going to Japan will _______.
| A.teach English only in Osaka | B.receive a degree from a university |
| C.have free accommodation | D.get trained for the job |
Before going to Japan, you need _______.
| A.to see the manager of NOVA France | B.to take some computer courses |
| C.to write a letter to Japan | D.to find a place to live |
If you want to work in Japan you should _______.
| A.have some working experience | B.know how to use computers |
| C.present good teaching plans | D.speak several languages |
The summer I was ten, my mother decided to bring us to the world of art. My brother and I were not very excited when we realized what my mother meant. What she meant was that we would have to spend one afternoon a week with her at the Fine Arts Museum. Before each visit to the museum, she made us read about artists and painting styles. It was almost as bad as being in school. Who wants to spend the summer thinking about artists when you could be with your friends at the swimming pool?
First we had to read about ancient Egyptians and their strange way of painting faces and then go to look at them at the museum. My 12-year-old brother thought this was so funny, but I was not interested. Later we had to learn about artists in the Middle Ages who painted people wearing strange long clothing. We had to look at pictures of fat babies with wings and curly (鬈曲的) hair and with no clothes on flying around the edges of paintings. I certainly couldn't see what was so great about art.
On our last visit to the museum, something happened when I saw a painting by a woman called Mary. In it, a woman was reading to a child. The colors were soft and gentle, and you could tell by the mother’s expression how happy she was just to be with the child. I couldn't stop looking at this painting! I wanted to see every painting Mary had ever made! It was really worth looking at so many paintings to find a painter who could interest me so much. The aim of the mother’s plan was to _______.
| A.take them to visit the museum | B.introduce them to the world of art |
| C.ask them to read about artists | D.show them different painting styles |
What was the writer’s experience in the museum before the last visit?
| A.She came to feel her mother’s love. | B.She liked many paintings. |
| C.She hardly enjoyed herself. | |
D.She could un derstand the pictures of fat babies. |
What made the writer go through a change that summer?
| A.One of Mary's paintings. | B.A strange way of painting. |
| C.Artists in the Middle Ages. | D.Her mother’s instruction. |
When someone says, “Well, I guess I'll have to go to face the music,” it doesn’t mean he is planning to go to a concert. It is something far less pleasant, like being called in your boss to explain why you did this and did that, and why you did not do this or that. Terrible music, indeed, but it has to be faced. At some time or another, every one of us has had to “face the music”, especially as children. We can remember father’s angry voice: “I want to talk to you!” And only because we did not obey him. What an unpleasant business it was!
The phrase “face the music” is known to every American, old and young. It is at least one hundred years old. Where did the expression come from?
The first explanation came from the American novelist James Fenimore Cooper. He said, in 1851, that expression was first used by actors while waiting in the wings (舞台的两侧) to go on stage. After they got their clue(暗示) to go on , they often said, “It’s time to go to face the music. ” And that is exactly what they did face the orchestra (乐队) which was just below the stage.
An actor might be frightened or nervous as he moved on to the stage in front of the audience(观众) that might be friendly, or perhaps unfriendly, especially if he forgot his lines. But he had to go out. If he did not, there would be no play. So “face the music” came to mean: having to go through something, no matter how unpleasant the experience might be, because you knew you had no choice. The expression “face the music” means ______.
A. plan to go to a concert |
| B.get one’s clue to do something |
| C.have to go through something far less pleasant |
| D.disobey what one's father says |
The passage tells us that the expression was first used by _____.
| A.children | B.novelists | C.actors | D.audience |
In the last paragraph the Chinese meaning of the word “line” is _______.
| A.老板 | B.同事 | C.角色 | D.台词 |