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Baby girls make their way directly for dolls as soon as they can crawl, while boys will head for the toy cars,  a study has shown. The findings, the first to show differences in very young babies, suggest there is a biological basis to their preferences.
Psychologists Dr Brenda Todd from City University London carried out an experiment involving 90 infants aged nine months to 36 months. The babies were allowed to choose from seven toys. Some were stereotypically boys' toys - a car, a digger, a ball and a blue teddy.  The rest were girls’ toys: a pink teddy, a doll and a cooking set. They were placed a meter away from the toys, and could pick whichever toy they liked. Their choice and the amount of time they spent playing with each toy were recorded.
Of the youngest children (nine to 14 months), girls spent significantly longer playing with the doll than boys, and boys spent much more time with the car and ball than the girls did. Among the two-and three-year-olds, girls spent 50 percent of the time playing with the doll while only two boys briefly touched it. The boys spent almost 90 percent of their time playing with cars, which the girls barely touched. There was no link between the parents’ view on which toys were more appropriate for boys or girls, and the children’s choice.
Dr Brenda Todd said: “Children of this age are already exposed to much socialization. Boys may be given ‘toys that go’ while girls get toys they can care for, which may help shape their preference. But these findings agree with the former idea that children show natural interests in particular kinds of toys. There could be a biological basis for their choices. Males through evolution have been adapted to prefer moving objects, probably through hunting instincts(本能), while girls prefer warmer colors such as pink, the color of a newborn baby.”
小題1:Baby boys and girls have different toy preferences probably because         .
A.baby boys are much more active
B.baby girls like bright colors more
C.their parents treat them differently
D.there is a natural difference between them
小題2:What can we infer from Paragraph 3 ?
A.Nine-month-old baby boys don’t play with dolls at all.
B.Two-year-old baby girls sometimes play with cars and balls.
C.The older the babies are, the more obvious their preference is.
D.Parents should teach their babies to share each other’s toys.
小題3:What conclusion did Dr. Brenda Todd draw from the results of the study?
A.Adults purposely influence their babies preference.
B.Babies’ preference isn’t affected by social surroundings.
C.Baby boys preferring to moving toys will be good at hunting.
D.Baby girls preferring warmer colors will be warm-hearted.
小題4:We may read this article in a        section of a newspaper.
A.scienceB.healthC.educationD.entertainment

小題1:D
小題2:C
小題3:B
小題4:A

小題1:細節(jié)理解題,根據文中語句“The findings, the first to show differences in very young babies, suggest there is a biological basis to their preferences.”理解可知。
小題2:理解歸納題,根據文中第三自然段的語句理解歸納可知。
小題3:細節(jié)理解題,根據文中語句“Dr Brenda Todd said
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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解


Franz Kafka wrote that “a book must be the ax (斧子) for the frozen sea inside us. ”I once shared this sentence with a class of seventh graders, and it didn’t seem to require any explanation.
We’d just finished John Steinbeck’s novel Of Mice and Men. When we read the end together out loud in class, my toughest boy, a star basketball player, wept a little, and so did I. “Are you crying?” one girl asked, as she got out of her chair to take a closer look. “I am,” I told her, “and the funny thing is I’ve read it many times.”
But they understood. When George shoots Lennie, the tragedy is that we realize it was always going to happen. In my 14 years of teaching in a New York City public middle school, I’ve taught kids with imprisoned parents, abusive parents, irresponsible parents; kids who are parents themselves; kids who are homeless; kids who grew up in violent neighborhoods. They understand, more than I ever will, the novel’s terrible logic—the giving way of dreams to fate (命運).
For the last seven years, I have worked as a reading enrichment teacher, reading classic works of literature with small groups of students from grades six to eight. I originally proposed this idea to my headmaster after learning that a former excellent student of mine had transferred out of a selective high school—one that often attracts the literary-minded children of Manhattan’s upper classes—into a less competitive setting. The daughter of immigrants, with a father in prison, she perhaps felt uncomfortable with her new classmates. I thought additional “cultural capital” could help students like her develop better in high school, where they would unavoidably meet, perhaps for the first time, students who came from homes lined with bookshelves, whose parents had earned Ph. D.’s.
Along with Of Mice and Men, my groups read: Sounder, The Red Pony, Lord of the Flies, Romeo and Juliet and Macbeth. The students didn’t always read from the expected point of view. About The Red Pony, one student said, “it’s about being a man, it’s about manliness. ”I had never before seen the parallels between Scarface and Macbeth, nor had I heard Lady Macbeth’s soliloquies (獨白) read as raps (說唱), but both made sense; the interpretations were playful, but serious. Once introduced to Steinbeck’s writing, one boy went on to read The Grapes of Wrath and told me repeatedly how amazing it was that “all these people hate each other, and they’re all white.” His historical view was broadening, his sense of his own country deepening. Year after year, former students visited and told me how prepared they had felt in their first year in college as a result of the classes.
Year after year, however, we are increasing the number of practice tests. We are trying to teach students to read increasingly complex texts, not for emotional punch (碰撞) but for text complexity. Yet, we cannot enrich (充實) the minds of our students by testing them on texts that ignore their hearts. We are teaching them that words do not amaze but confuse. We may succeed in raising test scores, but we will fail to teach them that reading can be transformative and that it belongs to them.
小題1:The underlined words in Paragraph 1 probably mean that a book helps to __________.
A.realize our dreamsB.give support to our life
C.smooth away difficultiesD.awake our emotions
小題2:Why were the students able to understand the novel Of Mice and Men?
A.Because they spent much time reading it.
B.Because they had read the novel before.
C.Because they came from a public school.
D.Because they had similar life experiences.
小題3:The girl left the selective high school possibly because__________.
A.she was a literary-minded girlB.her parents were immigrants
C.she couldn’t fit in with her classD.her father was then in prison
小題4:To the author’s surprise, the students read the novels__________.
A.creativelyB.passivelyC.repeatedlyD.carelessly
小題5:The author writes the passage mainly to__________.
A.introduce classic works of literature
B.advocate teaching literature to touch the heart
C.argue for equality among high school students
D.defend the current testing system

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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解


   Animals can move from place to place, but plants cannot. When an animal is under attack, it can run away or fight back. Plants certainly cannot run away, and they lack teeth and claws. But plants can defend (保護) themselves by using both physical and chemical means.
  Some plants have their own ways to keep animals away. For example, the leaves of the holly plant have sharp spines (刺) that discourage grass-eating animals. Holly leaves on lower branches have more spines than leaves on upper branches. This is because the lower leaves are easier for most animals to reach.
  Some plants, such as the oak tree, have thick and hard leaves that are difficult for animals to eat. Some grasses may contain a sandy material; eating such grasses wears down the animal's teeth.
  Many plants also have chemical defenses. Some plants produce chemicals that taste bitter or cause an unpleasant reaction. Some plants may fight against an attack by increasing the production of these chemicals. When a caterpillar (毛蟲) bites a tobacco leaf, the leaf produces a chemical messenger. This messenger sends to the roots the information to produce more nicotine. The higher levels of nicotine discourage the caterpillar.
Many plants depend on both physical and chemical defenses. A certain plant in China, for instance, has prickly (多刺的) leaves, and each prickle contains poisonous venom (毒液) A single experience with this kind of plant will teach an animal to stay away from it in the future. 
小題1:To defend themselves, oak trees use________.
A.chemical means B.physical means
C.bitter chemicals D.sandy materials
小題2:How does tobacco protect itself against an attack from a caterpillar?
A.Its leaves fight against the attack by physical means.
B.Its roots send a messenger to discourage the caterpillar.
C.Its roots increase the production of nicotine when it is attacked.
D.Its leaves produce poisonous sand to drive the caterpillar away.
小題3:What would be the best title for this passage?
A.Plants and Animals
B.How Plants Defend Themselves
C.Attacks and Defenses
D.How Animals Eat Plant Leaves

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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解


Animal experts in Croatia say a bear has learned how to trick people to let him in by knocking at the door.
They believe the 220- kilogram brown bear probably learned the trick while nudging (輕推) a door to get it to open.
Experts have a guess that the nudging was mistaken by the owners for knocking and that the bear, pleased by the result, repeated the trick.
The Loknar family from Gerovo in western Croatia said the bear had knocked at their door three times and they were now refusing to answer the door.
‘We jumped out of the window as he came in through the door and went into the kitchen to take some food for the first time.” Mum Nevenka Loknar told a reporter from a local newspaper. “I opened the door and saw him standing there and I didn’t believe my eyes at first, then I ran for it as he walked in as if it was the most normal- thing in the world.”
Bears are a common thing in the woods around here, but no one has ever heard of a bear that knocks at the door.
Mum Nevenka Loknar said, “The bear is so intelligent. It’s incredible. We’ve tried to put up lots of obstacles to stop him coming in, like a wire fence but he still gets through. I wouldn’t be surprised if he knew how to use wire cutters (鋼絲剪).”
小題1:According to experts in Croatia, how did the bear learn the trick?
A.By knocking at the door several times.B.By accident.
C.By learning from the owner of a family.D.By imitation.
小題2:What does the underlined word “it” in paragraph 5 refer to?
A.Eating at the kitchen.B.Knocking at the door.
C.Walking into the house.D.Answering the door.
小題3:It is ________ in Gerovo that a bear knocks at the door.
A.unusualB.a troubling problem
C.commonD.an exciting experience
小題4:Mum Nevenka Loknar was surprised that the bear ________.
A.didn’t attack her family
B.knew how to use wire cutters
C.jumped across her wire fence three times
D.was clever at getting through the obstacles

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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

It’s our hope that the calculator will promote action, awareness and empowerment by showing you that one person can make a difference and help stop global warming.
There are many simple things you can do in your daily life—what you eat, what you drive, how you build your home—that can have an effect on your immediate surroundings, and on places as far away as Antarctica. Here is a list of things that you can do to make a difference.
Use Compact Fluorescent Bulbs
Replace 3 frequently used light bulbs with compact fluorescent bulbs. Save 300lbs (pounds) of carbon dioxide and $60 per year.
Use Recycled Paper
Make sure your printer paper is 100% post consumer recycled paper. Save 5lbs of carbon dioxide per ream of paper.
Take Shorter Showers
Showers account for 2/3 of all water heating costs. Save 350 lbs of carbon dioxide and $99 per year.
Buy Products Locally
Buy locally and reduce the amount of energy required to drive your products to your home.
Carpool When You Can
Own a big vehicle?Carpooling with friends and co-workers saves fuel. Save 790 lbs of carbon dioxide and hundreds of dollars per year.
Don’t Idle in Your Car
Idling wastes money and gas, and generates pollution and global warming causing emissions. Except when in traffic, turn your engine off in you must wait for more than 30 seconds.
Buy Organic food
The chemicals used in modern agriculture pollute the water supply, and require energy to produce.
Turn Off Your Computer
Shut off your computer when not in use, and save 200 lbs of carbon dioxide. Conserve energy by using your computer’s “sleep mode” instead of a screensaver.
With a Stop Global Warming calculator which costs you only $50 in hand, you will find what you do does count.
小題1: The Stop Global Warming calculator can serve the following purposes EXCEPT __________.
A.introducing the ways of saving carbon dioxide
B.Telling how to save money in your daily life
C.promoting action, awareness and empowerment and helping stop global warming
D.introducing how global warming is formed
小題2: How many tips are related to cars?__________.
A.1B.2C.3D.4
小題3: Which of the following is NOT true according to the list of tips? ___________.
A.Using a screensaver instead of the computer’s “sleep mode”
B.Buying products in the neighborhood
C.Using recycled printer paper
D.Replacing frequently used light bulbs with compact fluorescent bulbs
小題4:What does the underlined word “carpooling” mean according to the passage?____.
A.Changing your big vehicle into a small one with your friends and co-workers
to save fuel
B.Going to the pool with your friends and co-workers by car
C.Trying to share a big vehicle with your friends to save fuel
D.Washing the car in a pool by yourself instead of having it washed by your
friends and co-workers
小題5:  What is the purpose of the author writing this passage?___________.
A.Giving people tips on how to save money in life
B.Telling people how to be environment-friendly
C.Promoting the product “Stop Global Warming calculator”
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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

The popular college rankings focus primarily on prestige as measured by the SAT scores of incoming students and how many applicants are turned away. An initiative(措施)started last fall by the Obama administration could help families go beyond these limited, and far too easily exploited, indexes to learn quickly and easily how a college is compared with its competitors nationally on important criteria like graduation rates, what a degree actually costs and how much debt a student can expect to run up by graduation day.
If the federal government makes it legally necessary to disclose this information in a clear and consistent(一貫的)way, as it should, families will be better able to make informed college choices. And this will help put pressure on colleges that perform poorly to improve.
Critics may regard this initiative as an example of government overreach. But given that the federal government spends nearly $190 billion a year on higher education aid to students, it has a legitimate interest in making sure that the money flows to the schools that best meet their responsibilities to families and students.
Congress has taken some steps to require greater transparency(透明)from colleges. The 1990 Student Right to Know Act, for example, required colleges and universities that receive federal aid to disclose graduation rates. And the 2008 Higher Education Opportunity Act required schools to offer a way for consumers to determine actual costs after student aid is taken into account.
But many colleges have done a poor job of obeying federal disclosure rules, and much of the available information is not in one place. The administration’s new efforts would enforce reporting requirements and provide some new tools.
President Obama wants to expand campus-based aid to about $10 billion from the current $2.7 billion. He has proposed moving money away from colleges that fail to control tuition increases or provide good value to others that do a better job. That is a worthy idea in principle, but he will need strong data-based evidence to determine how colleges are doing.
The transparency initiatives are a good place to start and should be embraced by both parties in Congress. If students and families, facing higher tuition and rising debt, are to make sound choices, they need more and better information.
小題1:Why did the Obama administration start the initiative last fall?
A.To require colleges to make their graduation rates known to the public.
B.To help colleges perform better in the future.
C.To help parents and students make better choices of colleges.
D.To put more pressure on colleges that are not doing well enough.
小題2:Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the passage?
A.Critics agree that the government should require colleges to obey the disclosure rules.
B.Congress has approved and made the transparency initiatives a law.
C.SAT scores alone do not determine one’s choice of college.
D.Students and families find it very difficult to choose their ideal colleges now.
小題3:A most suitable title for the passage could be______.
A.Congress To Require Greater Transparency
B.What College Parents and Students Need to Know
C.What a Good College Is Measured By
D.Parents and Students Need to Make Wise Choices
小題4:What attitude does the author hold towards the transparency initiative?
A.supportiveB.criticalC.indifferentD.not stated

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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解


You are here: Experts > Science > Science/Nature for Kids > Science for Kids > Life Science for teens<>
Expert: Science Adviser - <>3/21/2011
QUESTION: Dear Marie,
Do you have some good suggestions of biology: plant, animal, human science experiments that would work well with teenagers? Scientific methods must go with the experiments. Thanks! <
Donna
ANSWER: Dear Donna,
Marie is not online and I’ll help you instead of him. There are a lot of little things that can be done, but do you mean lab experiment or statistical analysis, etc.? Let us know what can be suitable for you teens, and we will do our best to send you some experiments to do.
Best,
Gloria
Expert: Science Adviser - 3/23/2011
QUESTION: Dear Gloria,
I need lab experiments. The teenage students and I will use data from these experiments to make charts, graphs, tables, etc. and to provide claims and evidence to explain more about the results. Thank you very much.
Donna
ANSWER:
Hi there,
Your best and easiest way is to do some chemistry experiments. Those are very easy and most probably you can do it in the lab and have charts, etc. for you. I do not have any particular one at the top of my head because I do cancer research and it is a bit more difficult than research for teenagers. I think you can look through these and see if you find something useful for you. http://www.siraze.net/chemistry/sezennur/experiments.htm
If not, get back to me and Marie, and we’ll look more. The good thing about this site is that it has the procedures that you can follow.
Good luck,
Gloria
小題1:How many Science Advisers are there working for this website?
A.Only one.B.At least two.C.About three.D.Over five.
小題2:According to Donna, she and the teenage students need ___________.
A.experiments in the labB.statistical analysis
C.chemistry experimentsD.charts and evidence
小題3:Who is this text for?
A.Teenagers.B.Teachers.C.Parents.D.Experts.
小題4:According to Gloria, Donna and the teenage students should __________.
A.turn to others for helpB.do cancer researches
C.look through a websiteD.tell who will be helped

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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:完形填空

完形填空(共20小題;每小題1.5分,滿分30分)
閱讀下面短文,從短文后所給題的四個選項(A 、B、C 、和D)中,選出可以填入空白處的最佳選項,并在答題卡上將該項涂黑。
A philosophy professor loved to teach students about important theories of the subject.Once, while his 21  was about to begin, he just closed the book and  22  stood before his class with some items on the table in front of him. Students were curious but the professor without looking at them 23  a very large and empty jar.And then he started to 24  it with small rocks.25 the jar appeared full, the professor asked his students whether the jar was full
The entire class 26   that jar was indeed full.Next, the professor picked up some  27   and began pouring them into the jar.The moment pouring was 28  , he shook the jar lightly.As a result of that, all the small rocks 29 the open areas between the rocks comfortably. 
Professor again asked the students if the jar is full.Same  30   from the class like before.Professor  31   a bit but silently, and this time he picked up a box of sand.He poured the box into the jar and sand filled the entire 32  spaces.At the same time, professor 33  his question to the class, if the jar was full? Yes again.
Professor now  34 towards the class and said, this jar  35  your life.All the things in the jar I poured mean some important lessons.The rocks are the most important things,  36  is family, your partner, health and your  37 .Even if everything else in your life goes away but the rocks remains there, your life would still be full  38  the most important things are still present in your life.Pebbles represent other significant things like car, house and job etc.And the sand is the small stuff or everything else.
If your time and 39 is spent on small stuff then there is no 40 for the pebbles or the rocks or in other words, most important things of your life.
小題1:
A.lectureB.talkC.speechD.letter
小題2:
A.thoughB.besidesC.otherwisD.instead e
小題3:
A.pointed toB.picked upC.took outD.sent up
小題4:
A.fillB.fixC.putD.turn
小題5:
A.SoonB.Instantly C.LuckilyD.Hopefully
小題6:
A.arguedB.told C.suggestedD.agreed
小題7:
A.rocksB.stonesC.sandD.water
小題8:
A.understandableB.completeC.reliableD.adjustable
小題9:A rolled into      B..fell out     C.mixed with        D.turned up
小題10:
A.response B.commentC.order D.content
小題11:
A.spokeB.criedC.scoldedD.smiled
小題12:
A.left B.availableC.gettingD.remaining
小題13:
A.askedB.answeredC.repeatedD.discussed
小題14:
A.turnedB.lookedC.walkedD.moved
小題15:
A.meansB.representsC.competesD.matches
小題16:
A.whichB.that C.whatD.it
小題17:
A.wealthB.businessC.childrenD.friends
小題18:
A.becauseB.ifC.onceD.while
小題19:
A.energyB.moneyC.powerD.strength
小題20:
A.hopeB.needC.room D.doubt

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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

In order to know a foreign language thoroughly (完全地),four things are necessary. First, we must understand the language when we hear it spoken. Secondly, we must be able to speak it ourselves, correctly with confidence(自信) and without hesitation (猶豫). Thirdly, we must be able to write it. We must be able to make sentences that are correct in grammar.
There is no short way to succeed in language learning. A good memory is a great help, but it is not enough only to memorize the rules from a grammar book. It is no much use learning by heart long lists of words and their meanings, studying the dictionary and so on. We must learn by using the language. If we are pleased with a few rules we have memorized, we are not really learning the language. We must “Learn through use”. Practice is important. We must practise speaking and writing the language whenever we can.
小題1:The most important things to learn a foreign language are      .
A.understanding and speakingB.hearing, speaking, reading and writing
C.writing and understandingD.memorizing and listening
小題2:Which of the following is the most important in learning a foreign language?
A.A good memory.B.Speaking.C.Practice.D.Writing.
小題3:“Learn through use” means       .
A.we use a language in order to learn it
B.we learn foreign language in order to use it
C.we can learn a language well while we are using it
D.both B and C

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