It had been a difficult move. I’d left my family and friends in Indiana, the beloved state where I’d lived most of my life. My new home in Florida was thousands of miles away from anything I knew. It was hot—all the time. Jobs were hard to come by, but I was up for almost any challenge.
At last, I taught in a special school where students have severe learning and behavioral difficulties.
Another teacher and I had spent weeks teaching the children appropriate behavior for public outings. Unexpectedly, only a few students, including Kyle, had not earned the privilege of going. He was determined to make his disappointment known.
In the corridor(走廊) between classrooms, he began screaming, cursing, spitting, and swinging at anything within striking distance. Once his outburst died down, he did what he’d done when he was angry at all his other schools, at home, even once at a juvenile detention(拘留)center. He ran.
People watched in disbelief as Kyle dashed straight into the heavy morning traffic in front of the school.
I heard someone shout, “Call the police!”
But I ran after him.
Kyle was at least a foot taller than me. And he was fast. His older brothers were track stars at the nearby high school. But I could run long distances without tiring. I would at least be able to keep him in my sight and know he was alive.
After several blocks of running directly into oncoming traffic, Kyle slowed his pace.
He took a sharp left. Standing next to a trash bin, Kyle bent over with his hands on his knees. I must have looked ridiculous. But his was not a look of fear. I saw his body relax. He did not attempt to run again. Kyle stood still and watched me approach. I had no idea what I was going to say or do, but I kept walking closer.
He opened his mouth to speak when a police car pulled up, abruptly filling the space between Kyle and me. The school principal and an officer got out. They spoke calmly to Kyle, who willingly climbed into the back of the vehicle. I couldn’t hear what was said, but I didn’t take my eyes off Kyle’s face, even as they drove away.
I couldn’t help but feel that I had failed him, that I should have done or said more, that I should have fixed the situation.
I shared my feelings with a speech therapist who was familiar with Kyle’s history. “No one ever ran after him before, Rachel,” she said. “No one. They just let him go.”
Things changed the day he ran and I ran after him, even though I didn’t have the right words, even though I wasn’t able to save him from the mess he was in. It was the day I didn’t throw my hands in the air and decide he was too fast, a waste of time and effort , a lost cause. It was the day my mere presence was enough to make a profound difference.From the passage we know that _____.
A.the author left her family to Florida because jobs were hard to come by in Indiana. |
B.students were allowed to go out after they passed some specific tests. |
C.the author worked in a school where students were excellent. |
D.no teacher had ever run after Kyle before except the author . |
Which of the following description about Kyle is not true?
A.He had some behavioral difficulties and once moved from one detention to another. |
B.He used to run out to let out his anger when he was in school,home or juvenile detention. |
C.Different from his brothers, he learned in a special school while not a normal high school. |
D.He was moved by his teacher who treated him with more patience and understanding. |
Which is the correct order of the trace?
①He burst out when he knew he couldn’t go out. ②I decided to run after him.
③Kyle stoppped beside a trash bin. ④A police car came and Kyle left with it.
⑤He rushed into the heavy morning traffic. ⑥Kyle slowed his pace.
⑦I walked toward Kyle.
A.①⑤②⑥③⑦④ | B.①⑤②④⑥⑦③ |
C.⑤④②⑥③⑦① | D.①②⑥⑦③④⑤ |
What is the best title of the passage?
A.Kyle, a Boy with Learning and Behavior Difficulties. |
B.The Teacher Who Ran. |
C.A School with Special Students. |
D.A Terrible Conflict. |
In today’s world of cellphones,mini laptops and MP3 players, most people have at least one time-telling tool with them. Since these devices are so common,is time running out for the 500yearold watch?According to some consumers,yes. New Jersey teenager Charlie Wollman says a watch is “an extra piece of equipment with no necessary function”.Many young adults agree—and use their cellphones to tell time. Louis Galie, a senior vice president at Timex,said that fewer young people wear watches today than five years ago. As a result, some people claim that the watch industry is at a crossroads.
However, watchmakers optimistically say that watches regain popularity when consumers reach their 20s and 30s.By then,they are willing to spend money on a quality timepiece that doesn’t just keep good time. Fifty years ago,watchmakers boasted about their products’ accuracy. But in recent years, the watch industry has transformed itself into an accessory business. And for many today, the image a watch communicates has become more important than the time it tells.
“Complications”—features that go beyond simple timekeeping—are an important part of a watch’s image. Today’s watches offer a lot of features that suit almost any personality. These features include altitude trackers, compasses,lunar calendars, USB drives, and even devices that measure the effectiveness of golf swings!
Creativity is also a key element in today’s watches. For example,Japanese watchmaker Tokyoflash makes watches that don’t even look like watches. The company’s popular Shinshoku model uses different color lights to tell time. It looks more like a futuristic(未来主义的)bracelet than a watch. Another Japanese watchmaker, EleeNo, makes a “handless” watch. Using a ring of circles to keep time, this watch makes an excellent conversation piece.
Whether a watch communicates fashion sense, creative talent or a love of sports, consumers want their timepieces to stand out. Nowadays,everyone has the same kind of gadget (小玩意儿)in their bags,so people want to make a statement with what’s on their wrists. Will this interesting wrist fashion last?Only time will tell!Why aren’t watches popular with young people as before?
A.Because watches cannot keep good time as cellphones, mini laptops and MP3 players. |
B.Because watches are featured by the disadvantages of simple function. |
C.Because watches are too expensive to afford. |
D.Because watches don’t have beautiful appearance as other modern timetelling tools. |
What does the underlined sentence in Paragraph 1 mean?
A.Watchmaking is facing a survival crisis challenge. |
B.Watchmaking is faced with the developing opportunity. |
C.Watchmaking becomes the sunrise industry. |
D.Watchmaking has a specific development target. |
It can be implied that ________.
A.people will gradually lose interest in watches as they grow older |
B.watchmakers scarcely change the development strategy for watches |
C.today’s watches are better than those in the past in quality |
D.customers used to be more concerned with the quality of a watch than with its image |
What’s the best title of the passage?
A.Watches and Teenagers | B.The History of Watches |
C.The Accuracy of Watches | D.Watches Tell More than Time |
As an American artist and writer of children’s books, Tasha Tudor’s art and nineteenth-century
lifestyle have fascinated adults and children for decades. She received many awards and honors for her contributions to children’s literature. When people talk about her creativity in artwork, she said, “I do it to support my dogs and my four children.” Her great publishing record, the number of magazine stories that have been written about her over the years, and her admirers have no effects on her at all.
Much of Tasha’s artwork and her reading are done in the wintertime. “I love winter. It’s delightful,” she says. “I don’t have to go anywhere because I work at home. If I’m snowed in, I can stay this way for months.” She hopes for early, deep snow to protect her garden from the hardship of the New England winter, and when it comes she puts on snowshoes when she needs to get down the mile-long dirt path that leads to the road.
Given her enjoyment of winter and her fantasy(梦幻)way of life, it’s not surprising that Tasha’s Christmas is a storybook holiday. She hangs flowers over the front door. Her tree comes from the woods, and it goes up on Christmas Eve, lit by homemade candles and decorated with her great- grandmother’s collection that dates from 1850. In a place of honor on the tree are large cookies cut into the shapes of her animals.
The grandchildren and friends get presents from Tasha’s old dolls; so do the animals and they have their own Christmas tree. “Of course, it’s a known fact that all the animals talk on Christmas Eve,” she has written. Small, handmade gifts fill a big wooden box.
At the end of each year, Tasha can look back and know that her life is perfect, that she has again ignored the twentieth century, and that the magic continues. And for the rest of us,here’s a bit of advice, Tasha style: “Nowadays, people are so restless. If they took some tea and spent more time rocking on the porch(门廊) in the evening listening to light music, they might enjoy life more.”Tasha loved winter because it allowed her to ________.
A.read stories to her grandchildren |
B.show her DIY snowshoes to kids |
C.stay indoors working during reading |
D.enjoy bicycle tiding along the path |
From the passage, we can learn that Tasha’s life is ________.
A.modern and fashionable |
B.simple and fantastic |
C.lonely and hard |
D.adventurous and inspiring |
Which of the following is TRUE about Tasha?
A.She cared little about fame. |
B.She created an animal fund. |
C.She wrote many stories for magazines. |
D.She bought presents for her relatives. |
In which section of a paper can you probably read the article?
A.Travel. | B.Sports. | C.Economy. | D.People. |
Girls who play with Barbie dolls tend to see fewer career options available to them, compared with the options available to boys, according to a new study by researchers at Oregon State University and the University of California (UC), Santa Cruz.
The study’s authors, psychology professors, Aurora Sherman of Oregon State University and Eileen Zurbriggen at UC Santa Cruz, describe their findings as significant. “This is one of the first studies to investigate how playing with sexualized dolls affects young girls, and also one of the first to look at the impact of such play on achievement or career aspirations (愿望), rather than body image,” said Zurbriggen. Sherman suggests that Barbie and similar dolls are part of the burden of early and inappropriate sexuality placed on girls.
Sherman and Zurbriggen used girls’ doll play to study the impact of fender role socialization, a process through which children learn to follow cultural norms and which encourages gender stereotypical(约定俗成的) behavior.
Thirty-seven girls from the age of four to seven from an Oregon college town were randomly arranged to play for five minutes with either a sexualized Doctor Barbie or Fashion Barbie doll, or with a more neutral (中性的) Mrs. Potato Head doll. The girls were then shown photographs of ten occupations and asked how many they themselves or boys could do in the future.
The girls who played with a Barbie doll saw themselves in fewer occupations, compared with boys. Those girls who played with Mrs. Potato Head reported nearly as many career options available for themselves as for boys.
The two Barbie dolls were the same except for clothing, with unrealistic bodies, extremely youthful and attractive faces, and long full hair. The researchers believe that the doll itself has more of an effect on girls than the role or career aspirations suggested by its costume.
“It’s significant that a few minutes of play with a Barbie doll had an immediate impact on the number of careers that girls saw as possible for themselves,” Zurbriggen said. “And it didn’t matter whether the Barbie doll was dressed as a model or as a doctor, suggesting that the doll’s sexualized shape and appearance might have more of an effect than whatever accessories (装饰品) are packaged with her.”Which of the following is TRUE?
A.Playing with dolls affects the academic performance of young children. |
B.Body image has a big influence on girls’ career options. |
C.Researchers used doll play to study the impact of gender role socialization on girls. |
D.Boys who played with a Fashion Barbie doll found more career options than girls. |
What is stressed in the second paragraph?
A.The method adopted by the study. |
B.The significance of the study. |
C.The purpose of the study. |
D.The process of the study. |
What is the passage mainly about?
A.Why Barbie dolls are the world’s best-selling dolls. |
B.That playing with Barbie dolls could limit girls’ career choices. |
C.What negative effects Barbie dolls have on young girls in the long term. |
D.That Barbie dolls make girls want to be thin. |
Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa is perhaps the most famous portrait in the world, but now some suspect that the woman with the mysterious smile may not be a woman after all. They are suggesting that the Mona Lisa may be a self-portrait, da Vinci in drag (女装).
Italy’s National Committee for Cultural Heritage (INCCH) is carrying out the research. They think the artist, who died in 1519, was buried at a French castle and they plan to dig up his body. Using CSI-style technology, they want to rebuild da Vinci’s face. Jason Rosenfeld, a member of INCCH, says, “ It shows the reason why we preserved Einstein’s brain or King Tut’s mummy (木乃伊), which throws light on the problem we are working on.”
“Now we want to get the body of Leonardo. We want to see what he died of, we want to see his DNA, we want to see the size of his head, and what his facial feature were like, so we can know whether this was a self-portrait.”
The Mona Lisa was painted around 500 years ago. Beyond that, we know almost nothing about the painting that is now on display at the Louvre in Paris.
But will the exhumation (发掘) discover the truth behind the Mona Lisa? Not likely, according to Rosenfeld. “If the French government really wants to help find out what this is about, what they should do is allow us to clean the Mona Lisa. We will learn much more from it and understand it better if we are allowed to clean the painting than by digging up a body.”What can be learnt from the text?
A.The French government will be in charge of digging up da Vinci’s body. |
B.The INCCH will learn more if allowed to clean the Mona Lisa painting. |
C.The exhumation will help uncover the truth behind the Mona Lisa. |
D.The French government wants to help find out the truth. |
Which of the following is TRUE about the Mona Lisa?
A.It is now preserved in France. |
B.It is a self-portrait of da Vinci in drag. |
C.It has the same long history as King Tut’s mummy. |
D.It was painted in 1519. |
What’s the question that the INCCH is researching on?
A.What da Vinci died of. |
B.Whether da Vinci liked dressing in drag. |
C.Whether the Mona Lisa was painted by da Vinci. |
D.Whether the Mona Lisa is da Vinci’s self-portrait. |
What the underlined phrase, “ throws light on”, in the second paragraph mean?
A.Pays attention to. |
B.Makes people feel confident. |
C.Makes it possible for people to know. |
D.Draws people’s attention. |
12-year-old Robert Looks Twice appears to be the typical all-American boy. He is the quarterback of his school’s football team, student council president and one of the top students in his class.
But he hasn’t forgotten his Lakota Sioux root. Unlike most children on the reservation (居留地), he keeps his hair long, a symbol of strength, and he performs at powwows (祈祷仪式), traditionally known as wacipis, where he is a champion of the traditional Lakota dance. Robert was inspired to start dancing by his grandfather, John Tail, who had a small role in the famous film about Indian Amercans, Dances with Wolves. Six years ago, John passed away, and Robert wears little wolves on his clothes in his memory.
We are told that his last name, “ Looks Twice”, came about because his ancestors were cautious and always took a second look.
Robert lives in a trailer (拖车) with his grandmother, uncle and eight other cousins. When he gives us a tour, the trailer is falling apart. “ It is getting ready to cave in (坍塌),” says Robert about the kitchen floor. The family also put trash bags on the ceiling, because it’s leaking. “ When it rains it gets all my shirts wet,” he says of another leak in his bedroom. Often the electricity goes off and the family have to use the burners on the stove to heat the house.
This kind of poverty is typical of the reservation. The reservation is the third poorest county in America, and Robert’s community, Manderson, is known for its high crime rate. But despite all the temptations (诱惑) of drugs and alcohol around him, Robert remain focused on being the first person in his family to go to college and then a very big dream.
“ I want to be the first Native American President,” Robert said. “ I want to build better houses and clean up the reservation, because it’s bad. Get people off the drugs and alcohol and spend that money on their children. Build a better school and playground. Try to get a mall down here to help people get work.”What can we learn from Robert’s experience?
A.Everyone should persist in chasing their dreams. |
B.The poor can get more help from others. |
C.It is never too late to study. |
D.It is necessary for everyone to go to college. |
Unlike Robert, what do most children on the reservation do?
A.They dance like their ancestors. |
B.They don’t worship their grandfather. |
C.They keep their hair short. |
D.They have Lakota Sioux roots. |
What does Robert do, even though he is living in terrible conditions?
A.He helps people get off drugs and alcohol. |
B.He helps people get work by getting a mall. |
C.He keeps working toward his dream. |
D.He is beginning to build a better house. |
Why is Robert said to be a typical American boy?
A.He like traveling. |
B.He has a higher position in his family. |
C.He wants to be the first Native American President. |
D.He is excellent in all respects. |