Beginning college is exciting: new ideas to explore, new challenges to be met and many decisions to be made; your future begins here.
However, you will find college life is different from your previous school environment. Many of us can be easily defeated by the details of running a well-balanced life. While some of us may have the know-how, I guess there are more of us who can benefit from learning about the experiences of others who have walked the college halls before you.
The following you may find useful about life on campus:
·Plan well. There are so many new things to do at a new college or university. Give yourself time to make new friends and became familiar with the campus, but don’t forget why you are there. Give some time for social activities and manage your time wisely.
·If you don’t have a “system” for planning your time now (like a day timer, a computer data book), get one. Most of all, don’t depend on your memory.
·Don’t miss the guidelines. The restrictions, rules and regulations of all kinds can usually be found in your student’s handbook. Consider them well-balanced food for thought. What dates are important? What pieces of paper need to be handed in? What can / can’t you do in your student residence(住处)? Who has the right for what? What do you need to complete to graduate?
·Write the word “STUDY” on the walls of your bedroom and bathroom, and maybe it will help to write it on a piece of paper and stick it on the telephone, TV and the kitchen table. Consider this — you are paying thousands of dollars for your course. You pay every time you have to repeat or replace a course.
·Build your identity. This is the time for you to decide what to do and what not to do. Take as much time as you need to explore new ideas. Do not be afraid of the beyond. This is learning to make good choices.
(From http://www.iamnext.com/academics/frosh10tips.html)What is the main purpose of the passage?
A.To offer advice on college life. |
B.To explain why college life is exciting. |
C.To describe the importance of college life. |
D.To persuade you to go to college. |
According to the passage, why is it exciting to begin college life?
A.Because you will have more freedom at college. |
B.Because you will no longer be afraid of the beyond |
C.Because you prepare for your future career and life there. |
D.Because professors there will provide you with many new ideas. |
The underlined word “know-how” refers to _____.
A.An understanding of how things are going at college |
B.Practical knowledge about how to learn well at college |
C.College halls where rules and regulations are presented |
D.An environment completely different from the one you’re used to |
According to the passage, college students _______.
A.needn’t learn from those who went to college before them |
B.spend as much time as possible on social activities |
C.should know what they have fight for on campus |
D.are supposed to repeat or replace at least one course |
One potential problem with allowances is that children’s responsible behavior can become about earning the allowance rather than the intrinsic(固有的)value of their family responsibilities. For example, if you pay your children for taking out the rubbish, they see this chore (家务事) as a job that they should be rewarded for instead of a responsibility they must fulfill as part of the family. But giving children an allowance for weekly chores is not necessarily bad. You are rewarding them for fulfilling their family responsibilities, but it is not for a specific act. It is an appreciation of their commitment to your family values. You are also conveying another important message that their actions have consequences: if they do good things, good things happen. They also learn a lesson about the market economy, namely that work is rewarded.
Allowances can also be used as punishment and to teach children lessons about family values. For example, if your children join a group of kids smashing (砸碎) pumpkins on Halloween, a part of a reasonable punishment might be to require them to pay the families out of their allowance to replace the pumpkins. Thus, your children learn that bad behavior has financial consequences. Meanwhile, by relating the punishment to the misdeed, you ensure that your children see the connection and learn the value lesson.
How much allowance should you pay your children? The precise amount depends on your family’s financial situation, the cost of living and your children’s needs. Children can start to earn a weekly allowance as early as 5 years of age. An increase of $ 1 per week for each year of your children’s lives is realistic until they reach their mid-teens. When they begin to drive and date, you can calculate their expenses and establish a reasonable allowance that covers their needs.The first paragraph mainly tells us that giving allowance to children may____________.
A.lead to children’s preference for money rather than anything else |
B.lead to children’s preference for earning money on their own |
C.cause the problem that children value money more than responsibilities |
D.cause children to earn money instead of going to school |
When your children join a group of kids smashing pumpkins on Halloween, ___________.
A.you should give them some allowances to pay for the pumpkins |
B.they should be rid of their opportunity to celebrate Halloween |
C.you should ensure your children see the connection with their lessons |
D.they should face the consequence of losing their own money |
It can be inferred from the passage that_____________.
A.the author doesn’t want to give any tips on the allowance amount |
B.allowances given to children of different ages may vary |
C.children under 6 can’t be given any allowance |
D.the allowance amount grows depending on the amount other children receive |
These days everyone is worried about the size of their carbon footprint. In order to reduce global warming we need to make our carbon footprints smaller. But how much CO2 are we responsible for?
A new book by Mike Berners Lee, an expert, might be able to help. The carbon footprint looks at the different things we do and buy, and calculates the amount of CO2 all of the following created: the ingredients, the electricity, the equipment, the travel and commuting of the beer, and the packaging. It’s amazing how many different things need to be included in each calculation. And it’s frightening how much carbon dioxide everything produces.
This can help us decide which beer to drink. From Berners Lee’s calculations, it’s clear that a pint (568ml) of locally brewed beer has a smaller carbon footprint than a bottle of imported beer. This is because the imported beer has been transported from far away, and it uses more packaging. The local beer only produces 300g of CO2, but the imported beer produces 900g! So, one pint of local beer is better for the environment.
Berners Lee has even calculated the carbon footprint of cycling to work. Nothing is more environmentally friendly than riding a bike, surely? Well, it depends on what you’ve had to eat before. To ride a bike we need energy and for energy we need food. So if we eat a banana and then ride a kilometer, our footprint is 65g of CO2. However, if we eat bacon before the ride, it’s 200g. In fact, bananas are good because they don’t need packaging, they can be transported by boat and they grow in natural sunlight.
So, does this mean that cycling is bad for the environment? Absolutely not, for a start, if you cycle, you don’t use your car, and the fewer cars on the road, the fewer traffic jams. And cars in traffic jams produce three times more CO2 than cars traveling at speed. Cycling also makes you healthy and less likely to go to hospital. So maybe it’s time for us all to start making some changes. Pass me a banana and a pint of local beer, please.Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage?
A.Everything produces carbon dioxide equally. |
B.The imported beer is much better than the local beer in quality. |
C.Actually bananas are good in general because they produce less CO2. |
D.To make our carbon footprints smaller, we should often drink more beer. |
The underlined word “brew” in Paragraph 3 most probably means “___________”.
A.make | B.put | C.look after | D.take place |
What’s the main purpose of writing this passage?
A.To tell the differences among bikes, beer and bananas. |
B.To call on us to take action to make carbon footprint smaller. |
C.To introduce what CO2 really is in our life. |
D.To remind us to start healthy eating habits. |
Where can we probably read this passage?
A.In a science fiction story. | B.In a newspaper advertisement. |
C.In a science research report. | D.In a travel magazine. |
As the semester(学期) ended, students had a chance to turn the tables on their teachers.
They got to grade me anonymously(匿名地), assessing the ability of my thinking, my organizational skills and the depth of my knowledge. Such evaluations keep me alert to what works and what doesn’t. Students reflect my performance back to me, and I’m glad to learn what they think of my teaching so that I might try to improve.
This system reflects many aspects of my work. There is, of course, nothing wrong with it. But this system assumes that what students need is the same as what they want. Reading my evaluations every semester has taught me otherwise. Actually many students’ expectations for their courses have already changed, reflecting, in part, the business model many universities are following: classes are considered services, and parents are eager to get their money’s worth from their children’s education. Students feel pressure from their parents to get practical use from their courses.
This could make sense for an engineering course, but in my field, creative writing, which rarely trains up excellent 21-year-old writers, it is more difficult to provide the results that the career-minded students desire. Then I tried some teaching techniques to change the criticism of those unhappy students to the opposite and improve my student evaluations. My record would accurately reflect a smart, attentive, encouraging teacher. However, I would admit that they loved me simply because I agreed writing should be easy.
I know other teachers have done the same thing: teach your heart out to the teachable but be sure to please the unteachable; keep your ratings high, like a politician trying to improve his poll(民意调查) results. I believe in the struggle. But I still can’t help wincing(退缩) when I read, “The instructor is mean.” “Marcus is not committed to my work.” “This class sucks.” The business model has taught me that customers are always right. And maybe a few more dissatisfied customers would mean a better learning experience.What can we know from the underlined phrase “turn the tables on their teachers”?
A.Students get a chance to have dinner with their teachers. |
B.Students judge and grade their teachers. |
C.Students begin to criticize and punish their teachers. |
D.Students take action to praise their teachers. |
Why have the students’ expectations for their courses changed?
A.Because students want to improve other abilities. |
B.Because students feel great pressure from universities. |
C.Because students have to satisfy their parents. |
D.Because the business model has changed. |
What can we infer from the passage?
A.Parents don’t care about their money spent on their children’s education. |
B.The writer adopted some teaching methods so that he improved his student evaluations. |
C.Similar to other teachers, the writer struggled to work as politicians. |
D.The students intended to punish their teachers by giving comments. |
What is the author’s attitude towards being graded by his students?
A.Positive. | B.Negative. | C.Satisfied. | D.Scared. |
He was a hero that saved two children from the jaws of a cougar(美洲狮). Standing barely 1.7 meters, the 22-year-old with black-frame glasses might pass more for a Chinese Harry Potter. Yet Shen Huigang is now getting recognition for his bravery in fighting off a cougar on Vancouver Island, Canada, during a family outing. Shen, also known as Ian, was then an exchange student. With him was a friend, Myles Hagar, and Hagar’s two grandchildren. Silently and suddenly a cougar appeared out of nowhere. By the time they spotted the cat, it already had the head of 18-month-old Julien in its mouth.
“At first, my brain was nothing but blank,” Shen recalled. “But I believed I could get the child back.” He gestured as if he were ready for a fight, and tried to scare the beast off with his bag. Hearing the noise Shen made, the animal dropped the baby and Hagar rushed to grab his grandson. But the animal didn’t run, instead turned toward 3-year-old Iris standing beside Shen. “Had Ian not been there, shouting at the cougar, remaining calm and standing firm, it would certainly have attacked Iris.” Hagar recalled.
They chased the animal back into the woods. “We moved slowly to our vehicle as we waved our fists and bags, pretending to wrestle it,” Shen said. “The vehicle wasn’t far away but it felt like it took us a century to travel the short journey.” As Hagar drove for help, Shen held the heavily-bleeding boy in the passenger seat and calmly kept him awake by hugging and kissing him in case he would go into a coma(昏迷). The boy was flown to a hospital nearby. Doctors later said his little skull had been punctured(刺穿) through to his brain in two places. Luckily, Julien made a full recovery.
“Any hesitation, even a second delay, would have resulted in certain death for Julien, but Ian was there…” Hagar said. Following the incident, the story appeared on Canadian TV networks in every city, and in many small town newspapers---plus many US Internet news sites. The Royal Canadian Humane Association planned to give Shen a Canada Bravery Award, but it couldn’t reach him because he had returned to China.Why did the cougar drop the baby?
A.Because it was scared by the noise made by Ian’s shouting. |
B.Because Hagar rushed to grab the baby from its jaws. |
C.Because it wanted to attack Iris and took her away. |
D.Because Hagar and Ian were chasing it back into the woods. |
Which of the following statements about Shen Huigang is TRUE?
A.He was called Chinese Harry Potter because he was very brave. |
B.His deed was spread both in Canada and the US. |
C.He was better at fighting and wrestling compared with Hagar. |
D.He was too shocked to move to the vehicle in the incident. |
What did Ian do in the car to keep the baby awake?
A.He held, hugged and kissed the baby in the passenger seat. |
B.He drove the car as quickly as possible to find a hospital. |
C.He encouraged the baby telling him to be awake. |
D.He held the heavily- bleeding wound of the baby. |
Which of the following can be the best title for this passage?
A.Saving Lives From the Jaws of Death |
B.Experiencing a Family Outing |
C.Taking Care of Two Children |
D.Interviewing a Clever Young Student |
It is difficult for doctors to help a person with a damaged brain. Without enough blood, the brain lives for only three to five minutes. More often the doctors can’t fix the damage. Sometimes they are afraid to try something to help because it is dangerous to work on the brain. The doctors might make the person worse if he operates on the brain.
Dr. Robert White, a famous professor and doctor, thinks he knows a way to help. He thinks doctors should make the brain very cold. If it is very cold, the brain can live without blood for 30 minutes. This gives the doctor a longer time to do something for the brain.
Dr. White tried his idea on 13 monkeys. First he taught them to do different jobs, then he operated on them. He made the monkeys’ blood go through a machine. The machine cooled the blood. Then the machine sent the blood back to the monkeys’ brains. When the brain’s temperature was 10°C, Dr. White stopped the blood to the brain. After 30 minutes he turned the blood back on. He warmed the blood again. After their operations the monkeys were like they had been before. They were healthy and busy. Each one could still do the jobs the doctor had taught them.The biggest difficulty in operating on the damaged brain is that _______.
A.the time is too short for doctors |
B.the patients are often too nervous |
C.the damage is extremely hard to fix |
D.the blood-cooling machine might break down |
The brain operation was made possible mainly by _______.
A.taking the blood out of the brain |
B.trying the operation on monkeys first |
C.having the blood go through a machine |
D.lowering the brain’s temperature |
With Dr. White’s new idea, the operation on the damaged brain _______.
A.can last as long as 30 minutes |
B.can keep the brain’s blood warm |
C.can keep the patient’s brain healthy |
D.can help monkeys do different jobs |
What is the right order of the steps in the operation?
a. send the cooled blood back to the brain
b. stop the blood to the brain
c. have the blood cooled down
d. operate on the brain
A.a, b, c, d | B.c, a, b, d | C.c, b, d, a | D.b, c, d, a |