Mother stayed at home cooking and cleaning while Father left for work. Two or more children took the bus to school. In the evening, all the family members got together at home again. This is what a traditional family was like twenty years ago. But now great changes have happened in British families.
As many as 2 out of 3 marriages now end in divorce(离婚), and many children have to live with one parent and only see the other at weekends or during holidays.
There has been a great increase in the number of working women with children. Many women have to work to support themselves and their children. Even in the family where there is no divorce, both parents have to work in order to survive.
Also women are no longer happy to stay at home taking care of children. Many of them have jobs and some of them can even make more money than men, the traditional breadwinners.
What’s more, the increasing number of single-parent families have caused an increase in the crime rate (犯罪率) among children in a way. It is thought that if a child doesn’t have a father, he or she will be harmed.
However the changes may be good for some people. For women it’s now much easier to have well-paid jobs. Although it is difficult to be a working mother, it is no longer seen as a bad thing for children.
As for some children, they learn how to solve problems by themselves at an early age.Which of the following statements is TRUE about a traditional family in Britain twenty years ago?
A.Both the mother and the father had to work to support the family. |
B.The father stayed at home taking care of the children. |
C.The mother didn’t need to work. |
D.A family had only one child. |
Which of the following things is NOT mentioned in the passage ?
A.The increasing number of divorces. |
B.The increasing number of fathers who stay at home. |
C.The increasing number of working mothers. |
D.The increasing crime rate among children. |
According to the passage, a “breadwinner” refers to a person who ________.
A.has got some bread |
B.is good at making bread |
C.stays at home raising children |
D.works to support the family |
From the passage we can learn that ________.
A.In a family where the parents are not divorced in Britain,the mother doesn’t have to work. |
B.Children whose parents are divorced have to start working early. |
C.The father is very important to a child’s growth. |
D.The changes in British families do no goo |
Exercise seems to be good for the human brain, with many recent studies suggesting that regular exercise improves memory and thinking skills. But an interesting new study asks whether the apparent cognitive benefits from exercise are real or just a placebo effect — that is, if we think we will be “smarter” after exercise, do our brains respond accordingly? The answer has significant implications for any of us hoping to use exercise to keep our minds sharp throughout our lives.
While many studies suggest that exercise may have cognitive benefits, recently some scientists have begun to question whether the apparently beneficial effects of exercise on thinking might be a placebo effect. So researchers at Florida State University in Tallahassee and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign decided to focus on expectations, on what people anticipate that exercise will do for thinking. If people’s expectations jibe (吻合) closely with the actual benefits, then at least some of those improvements are probably a result of the placebo effect and not of exercise.
For the new study, which was published last month in PLOS One, the researchers recruited 171 people through an online survey system, they asked half of these volunteers to estimate by how much a stretching and toning regimens (拉伸运动) performed three times a week might improve various measures of thinking. The other volunteers were asked the same questions, but about a regular walking program.
In actual experiments, stretching and toning program generally have little if any impact on people’s cognitive skills. Walking, on the other hand, seems to substantially improve thinking ability.
But the survey respondents believed the opposite, estimating that the stretching and toning program would be more beneficial for the mind than walking. The estimates of benefits from walking were lower.
These data, while they do not involve any actual exercise, are good news for people who do exercise. “The results from our study suggest that the benefits of aerobic exercise are not a placebo effect,” said Cary Stothart, a graduate student in cognitive psychology at Florida State University, who led the study.
If expectations had been driving the improvements in cognition seen in studies after exercise, Mr. Stothart said, then people should have expected walking to be more beneficial for thinking than stretching. They didn’t, implying that the changes in the brain and thinking after exercise are physiologically genuine.
The findings are strong enough to suggest that exercise really does change the brain and may, in the process, improve thinking, Mr. Stothart said. That conclusion should encourage scientists to look even more closely into how, at a molecular level, exercise remodels the human brain, he said. It also should encourage the rest of us to move, since the benefits are, it seems, not imaginary, even if they are in our head.Which of the following about the placebo effect is TRUE according to the passage?
A.It occurs during exercise. |
B.It has cognitive benefits. |
C.It is just a mental reaction. |
D.It is a physiological response. |
Why did the researchers at the two universities conduct the research?
A.To discover the placebo effect in the exercise. |
B.To prove the previous studies have a big drawback. |
C.To test whether exercise can really improve cognition. |
D.To encourage more scientists to get involved in the research. |
What can we know about the research Cary Stothart and his team carried out?
A.They employed 171 people to take part in the actual exercise. |
B.The result of the research removed the recent doubt of some scientists. |
C.The participants thought walking had a greater impact on thinking ability. |
D.Their conclusion drives scientists to do research on the placebo effect. |
What might be the best title for the passage?
A.Is it necessary for us to take exercise? |
B.How should people exercise properly? |
C.What makes us smarter during exercise? |
D.Does exercise really make us smarter? |
According to figures released by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), the U.K. has about 7.7 million families with dependent children, of which 3.7 million have just one child, compared to 3 million with two and 1.1 million with three children or more. The number of families today with just one dependent child is now 47 percent and will likely rise to more than 50 percent in a decade. As the ONS confirms, “It appears that families are getting smaller.”
One obvious reason for this could be that women are putting off having children until they have established careers when they are bound to be less fertile. But it could just as well be a matter of choice. Parents must consider the rising cost of living, combined with economic uncertainty and an increasingly difficult job market. And this trend may continue growing as having an only child becomes more normal, which seems to be the mood on the mothers’ online forum Mumsnet, where one member announced that she “just wanted to start a positive thread about how fab it is to have an only child”.
She had received 231 replies, overwhelmingly in the same upbeat spirit. Parents of only children insist there are plenty of benefits. Nicola Kelly, a writer and lecturer who grew up as an only child and is now a married mother of one, says her 15-year-old son seems more grown-up in many ways than his contemporaries.
Not all products of single-child families are as keen to repeat the experience. In a moving recent account journalist Janice Turner wrote about her own keenness to “squeeze out two sons just 22 months apart” as a reaction to her only-child upbringing.
She was placed on a pedestal by her doting parents, whom she punished with a “brattish, wilful” rejection of everything they stood for. Desperate for a close friend she was repeatedly shattered by rejection and refers to her childhood as being “misery”.
Writer and clinician Dr. Dorothy Rowe, a member of the British Psychological Society, says that we all interpret events in our own individual way and there are some children who no matter what their circumstances feel slighted, while other children see the advantages of their situation.
However, the one part of life that is unlikely to get any easier for only children is when they grow up and find themselves looking after their own parents as they become older.The passage is written with the purpose of ________.
A.illustrating the strength and weakness of having an only child |
B.analyzing the reasons why having an only child becomes popular |
C.presenting us with different opinions about having an only child |
D.guiding people to look at the same issue from different perspectives |
What does the underlined sentence in Paragraph 4 mean?
A.Nearly half of families intend to have just one child. |
B.All people don’t stand for the idea of having an only child. |
C.Some people fail to recognize the advantage of having an only child. |
D.People brought up in an only child family resist downsizing the family. |
From what Dr. Dorothy Rowe said, we know that ________.
A.journalist Janice Turner experienced a miserable childhood |
B.she has a positive attitude towards Janice Turner’s reaction |
C.it’s necessary for us to look at the event from our own angle |
D.some are unable to make an objective assessment of their conditions |
What can be inferred from the passage?
A.It’s normal to see the imperfection in character in only children. |
B.Mumsnet is an online forum which promotes having an only child. |
C.Economic development plays a determining role in the family size. |
D.Only children will have difficulty in attending to their parents. |
Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage?
A.The voyage through the wormhole is a considerable challenge. |
B.A team of crime-fighters uncovers a criminal plot in Big Hero. |
C.President Coin pushes Katniss to protest Peeta. |
D.Penguins have to wrestle with problems in District 13. |
The similarity that exists in the four films is that ________.
A.each of them is a branch of film series |
B.all of them are concerned with positive energy |
C.they all have the best actors and actresses in the world |
D.the four films all have something to do with exploration |
Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
A consumercomplaint or customer complaint isan expression of dissatisfaction on a consumer’s behalf to a responsible party. It can also be described in a positive sense as a report from a consumer providing documentation about problems with a product or service.
So what are the common reasons for customer complaints? The most common complaints about retail(零售) storesfall into several aspects. First, they have to circle the filled parking lot endlessly, which is a waste of time and a test for their patience. They also can’t stand clutteredshelves, over-loaded racks, out-of-stock items and long check-out lines. Worst of all, sometimes some salespeople are rude, turning their mood into a bad one.
In fact, some modern business consultants urge businesses to view customer complaints as a gift but not a trouble.Some retailers, however,ignore complaints or deal with them dishonestly, which can cause a chain of events like bad reputation, leave theirbusiness with fewer and fewer customers. The resulting “snowball effect” can be disastrous to retailers.In the most severe cases, it can even cause companies to shut down.
Increasing competition is forcing companies to take more effective measures to satisfycustomers and better their customer service.During peak shopping hours, some moonlighting(业余兼职的) local police have been employed as parking attendants bysome retailers to solve the parking problems. Some hire flag wavers to direct customers to parking spaces that are empty. This guidance can avoid confrontation between those eyeing the same parking space.Retailers can relieve the headache by redesigning store layouts, pre-stocking sales items, hiring the cashiers with much experience, and having sales representatives on hand to answer questions.Most importantly, salespeople should be trained to deal with angry customerswith politeness.Try their best to resolve the problem if they can.
Quickly and properly solving customer complaints can help retailers smooth over issues and their business can grow and prosper.
How many times a day do you check your email? When you wake up? Before bed? A dozen times in between? The technology that was supposed to simplify our lives has become the vital time-suck: the average teen spends more than seven hours a day using technological devices, plus an additional hour just text-messaging friends.
The advantage of technological devices is connectedness: email lets us respond on the go, and we are in touch with more people during more hours of the day than at any other time in history. But is it possible we’re more lonely than ever, too? That’s what MIT professor Sherry Turkle observes in her new book, Alone Together, a fascinating portrait of our changing relationship with technology. Turkle details the ways technology has redefined our comprehension of closeness and loneliness—and warns us of the danger of accepting such virtual(虚拟的) relationships in place of lasting emotional connections.
For Turkle, the biggest worry is the effect all these shallow connections have on our development. Is technology offering us the lives we want to live? “We’re texting people at a distance,” says Turkle, “We’re using lifeless objects to convince ourselves that even when we’re alone, we feel together. And then when we’re with each other, we put ourselves in situations where we are alone—constantly on our mobile devices. It’s what I call a perfect storm of confusion about what’s important in our human connections.”
What can’t be denied is that technology, whatever its faults, makes life a whole lot easier. It allows us to communicate with more people in less time and makes conversation simple. But it can also be seductive(具有诱惑性的), providing more stimulation than our natural lives. There are usually some unhealthy videos online which remove teenagers’ attention from their schoolwork. Besides, some online activities make people addicted, which occupied their daily life and affected their ability to form real-world relationships.“Technology can be more immediately satisfying than the labor of building an intimate relationship,” said one highschool student, “Every time I text, I start to have some happy feelings.”
But are any of those feelings equal to the kind we feel when engaged in real, face-to-face communication? Online, you can neglect others’ feelings. In a text message, you can avoid eye contact. A number of studies have found that this generation of teens is less sympathetic than ever. That doesn’t spell disaster, says Turkle—but,From the first paragraph we can infer that_________.
A.email checking helps people wake up early |
B.technological device production has been simplified |
C.using technological devices costs teens much time |
D.people communicate mainly by text-messaging now |
Turkle’s new book mainly discussed________.
A.ways to draw a fascinating portrait |
B.how technology influences human relationships |
C.the dangers of accepting emotional connections |
D.the advantages of technology |
What worries Turkle most is that more and more people are_________.
A.starting to accept emotional connections in place of virtual connections |
B.convincing themselves by using fewer lifeless objects in connections |
C.dropping the use of technological devices for connection with each other |
D.being affected by the shallow connections through the mobile devices |
Which of the following is True according to the passage?
A.Others’ feelings can be ignored in online communication. |
B.No stimulation is provided in natural life connections. |
C.People always send text messages to avoid eye contact. |
D.It may be a disaster that teens are less sympathetic than ever. |
What is the main purpose of the passage?
A.To instruct people how to do with emails. |
B.To stress the importance of technology. |
C.To promote a wider use of technological devices. |
D.To lead us to consider what’s important in human connections. |