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[主观题]

回答下列各题 Its difficult to estimate the number of youngsters involved in home schoolin

g, where children are notsent to school and receive their formal education from one or both parents.26__________and court decisionshave made it legally possible in most states for parents to educate their children at home, and each yearmore people take advantage of that opportunity. Some states require parents or a home tutor to meetteacher certification standards, and many require parents to complete legal forms to verify that their children are receiving 27__________in state-approved curricula. Supporters of home education claim that its less expensive and far more 28__________ than mass publiceducation. Moreover, they cite several advantages: alleviation of school overcrowding, strengthenedfaintly relationships, lower 29_________ rates, the fact that students are allowed to learn at their own rate,increased 30 _________, higher standardized test scores, and reduced 31_________ problems. Critics of the home schooling movement 32_________ that it creates as many problem as it solves. Theyacknowledge tha|, in a few cases, home schooling offers educational opportunities superior to those foundin most public schools, but few parents can provide such educational advantages. Some parents whowithdraw their children from the schools 33_________ home schooling have an inadequate educationalbackground and insufficient formal training to provide a satisfactory education for their children.Typically, parents have fewer technological resources 34_________than do schools. However, the relativelyinexpensive computer techoology that is readily available today is causing some to challenge the notionthat home schooling is in any way 35_________ more highly structured classroom education. 第(26)题__________

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更多“回答下列各题 Its difficult to estimate the number of youngsters involved in home schoolin”相关的问题

第1题

听音频,回答下面各题。 Old friends, they finish your sentences, they remember the cat that r
an away when you were twelve, and they tell you the truth when youve had a bad 26 But mostly, they are always there for you--whether its in person or via late night phone calls--through good times and bad times. But as the years pass, it becomes 27 difficult to see each other and to 28. Fortunately, my high school girl friends and I 29 long ago not to let this happen. A few months ago, we met up for a three-day weekend in the American Southwest. We grew up together in Maine and have said for years that we should have an 30 event, yet its often postponed or canceled due to schedule 31 Not this year. Four of us--two from San Francisco, one from Boston, one from Seattle--boarded planes 32 Santa Fe, the capital of the New Mexico, where one of the gang lives an 33 life and works for an art gallery. Two years ago, she moved there--escaped, rather--from the film industry in New York City, where she led a life that felt too fast, too unfulfilling. The artist in her longed for lively 34 and starry moonlit skies. She wanted to drive a truck on dusty roads, a trusty dog at her side, riding shotgun. She got all that. She is happy. We were no longer girls 35 adults, no longer post-college grads. Yes, we are different, but we are also the same. The years of our youth say so. 请回答(26)题__________.

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第2题

根据下列短文,回答下列各题。 Whats hot for 2007 among the very rich? A $7.3 million diamo
nd ring. A trip to Tanzania to hunt wild animals. Oh, and income inequality. Sure, some leftish billionaires like George Soros have been railing against income inequality for years. But increasingly, centrist and right-wing billionaires are starting to worry about income inequality and the fate of the middle class. In December, Mortimer Zuckerman wrote a column in U.S. News & World Report, which he owns. "Our nations core bargain with the middle class is disintegrating," lamented (哀叹) the 117th-richest man in America."Most of our economic gains have gone to people at the very top of the income ladder. Average income for a household of people of working age, by contrast, has fallen five years in a row." He noted that "Tens of millions of Americans live in fear that a major health problem can reduce them to bankruptcy." Wilbur Ross Jr. has echoed Zuckermans anger over the bitter struggles faced by middle-class Americans. "Its an outrage that any Americans life expectancy should be shortened simply because the company they worked for went bankrupt and ended health-care coverage," said the former chairman of the International Steel Group. Whats happening? The very rich are just as trendy as you and I, and can be so when it comes to politics and policy. Given the recent change of control in Congress, the popularity of measures like increasing the minimum wage, and efforts by Californias governor to offer universal health care, these guys dont need their own personal weathermen to know which way the wind blows. Its possible that plutocrats (有钱有势的人) are expressing solidarity with the struggling middle class as part of an effort to insulate themselves from confiscatory (没收性的) tax policies. But the prospect that income inequality will lead to higher taxes on the wealthy doesnt keep plutocrats up at night. They can live with that. No, what they fear was that the political challenges of sustaining support for global economic integration will be more difficult in the United States because of what has happened to the distribution of income and economic insecurity. In other words, if middle-class Americans continue to struggle financially as the ultrawealthy grow ever wealthier, it will be increasingly difficult to maintain political support for the free flow of goods, services, and capital across borders. And when the United States places obstacles in the way of foreign investors and foreign goods, its likely to encourage reciprocal action abroad. For people who buy and sell companies, or who allocate capital to markets all around the world, thats the real nightmare. What is the current topic of common interest among the very rich in America?

A.The fate of the ultrawealthy people.

B.The disintegration of the middle class.

C.The inequality in the distribution of wealth.

D.The conflict between the left and the right wing.

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第3题

根据以上内容,回答下列各题。 New research shows girls who regularly have family meals are m
uch less 36 to adopt all kinds of extreme weight control 37 , such as vomiting(催吐), using laxatives (泻药) or diet pills. A study surveying more than 2,500 American high school students found that gifts who ate five or more family meals a week had a much healthier relationship with food in later life. The research, published in international journal Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, polled students aged 13 to 17 in 1999 who were 38 up five years later. Regular family meals were found to have a protective effect 39 of the girls age, weight, socio-economic status, dieting 40 or relationship with her family. Experts say doctors should encourage families to have dinner at the table instead of on the couch in front of the television to 41 against serious eating disorders. Belinda Dalton, director of eating disorders clinic The Oak House, said eating with family helped "nomnalise (正常化) " young peoples relationship with food. " When adolescents are feeling that theyre not coping they turn to something that they can control and food is something 42 and accessible for them to control. Clearly, if theyre sitting with their family on a regular basis then their family can be more in control of their eating," Ms Dalton said. "Its about, young people feeling connected with their family and that builds self-esteem and sense of worth and that can 43 very actively against someone developing an eating disorder. " An eating disorders expert, Kirsty Greenwood, said meal times were often difficult for sufferers. "It is 44 that they feel very ashamed of their eating habits and often wont eat with other people. Perhaps its becausee they havent 45 the importance of the family meal in their growing up," she said.

A.available

B.behaviors

C.examined

D.experienced

E.favorable

F.followed

G.habits

H.likely

potential

prohibit

protect

regardless

tendencies

typical

0. work

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第4题

根据以下资料,回答下列各题: Directions: There are 20 blanks in the following passage. For e
ach blank there are four choices marked A.B.C.and D.on the right side of the paper. You should choose the ONE that best fits into the passage. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre. It has always been difficult for me to decide whether "popular music" means music written for the people or is simply music that the people like. The same problem of definition 67 with jazz. So many different 68 of "music have been called jazz at one time or another that it is 69 to say what it really is. Jazz has always been 70 to be black music but when I first 71 an interest in it, I used to hear white bands playing music that was like Louis Armstrongs in the 1920s. I found out 72 that they learnt to do this by playing his records 73 until their style. was close enough to his for them to 74 him. Since then white singers 75 Bob Dylan have rediscovered their own folk 76 , instead of borrowing from black roots. But the main changes 77 1960 have been social and technical. One is that young people have more money to spend on 78 at an earlier age than they 79 , so Tin Pan Alley, the "pop" music industry, 80 at teenage audience. 81 is that electronic equipment has developed to such an 82 that technicians are now capable of mixing sound to produce recordings that are quite different from a 83 performance. But the real problem with "pop" music is that Tin Pan Alley has always worked against its being a 84 music of the people. It 85 everything original and natural out of it and 86 it with cheap commercial imitations. As the American folk singer, Woody Guthrie, said: "Theyve always preferred the second rate songs. Theyve never wanted to play the good ones. " A.takes

A.exists

B.starts

C.correlates

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第5题

根据听力,回答下列各题: Complaining aboulic faulty goods or bad service is never easy.If s
omething you have bought is faulty,you are actually not 26 to get it。put fight.It is the shopkeeper’s responsibility to take the complaint seriously and to 27 or repair a faulty article,because he is the person with whom you have 28 . On the other hand.the manufacturer may have a.part to play but that comes later.Complaints should be made to a 29 person.Go back to that,shop,taking with you any 30 you may have.Ask to see the buyer in a large store.In a small store,the 31 may also be the owner,so you can complain direct.In a chain store ask:to see the manager.If you telephone,ask the name of the person who 32 your inquiry.Otherwise,you may never find out who dealt with the complaint later.Even the bravest person finds it difficult to stand up in a group of people to complain.Write a letter and 33 when you dont want to do it in person.At this stage you should give any receipt numbers,but you should not need to give receipts or other papers to 34 you bought the article.If you are not satisfied with the answer you get,or if you do not get a __35__ ,write to the director.Be sure to keep copies of your own letters and any that you receive. 26.__________

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第6题

回答下列各题 Adults are getting smarter about how smart babies are. Not long ago, researc
hers learned that4-day-old could understand 26______and subtraction. Now, British research psychologist Graham Schaferhas discovered that infants can learn words for uncommon things long before they can speak. He foundthat 9-month-old infants could be taught, through repeated show-and-tell, to 27______the names of objectsthat were foreign to them, a result that 28______in some ways the received wisdom that, apart from learningto29______ things common to their dally lives, children dont begin to build vocabulary until well into theirsecond year. "Its no 30______that children learn words, but the words they tend to know are words linkedto 31______situations in the home," explains Schafer. "This is the first demonstration that we can choosewhat words the children will learn and that they can respond to them with an unfamiliar voice 32______in anunfamiliar setting. " Figuring out how humans acquire language may 33______why some children learn to read and writelater than others, Schafer says, and could lead to better treatments for developmental problems. Whatsmore, the study of language 34______offers direct insight into how humans learn. "Language is a test casefor human cognitive development," says Schafer. But parents eager to teach their infants should takenote : even without being taught new words, a control group 35______the other infants within a few months."This is not about advancing development," he says. "Its just about what children can do at an earlierage than what educators have often thought. 第(26)题__________

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第7题

根据下面内容,回答下列各题。 The increase in the margin rate (保证金率)from 50% to 70% was

根据下面内容,回答下列各题。 The increase in the margin rate (保证金率)from 50% to 70% was not an attempt to stem any rampant (猛烈的)speculation on the part of the public-actually the market seemed technically quite strong, with public participation essentially dignified-but rather an attempt by the Federal Reserve Board to preserve the sound underpinnings that existed in the market. Naturally, such a move had a____36____chilling effect upon prices but if the FRB had been preoccupied with undue speculation, the increase might have been to the 80% or even 90% level. Such increases in the margin rate is a____37____of a strong stock market and since 1989, such increases have resulted in interim market highs over twelve months later. Obviously, there could be no____38____that this would once again be the case, but if history is any guideline-and if business and corporate earnings were to continue on the same course-continued optimism over the outlook for the stock market would seem more____39____than pessimism. The margin increase ____40____the good rise that stocks had enjoyed for the previous year-and the fact that a 50% rate was maintained as long as it was pointed up the fact that the rise was mainly conservative in that it was concentrated in the blue chips for the most part. In past Investment Letters we have____41____the thought that speciality stocks could outperform. the general market from this point. We continue to believe that this could be the case. For example, steel stocks tend to sell at a certain fixed price/earnings ratio. Below a certain ratio they are considered good value-above a certain ratio,____42____. If a company produces a unique product, it is far more difficult for market analysis to place a numerical ratio upon the companys earnings. We have also contended in the past Letters that the stock market reflects mass psychology as well as the business outlook. When investors-both the public and the institutions-are nervous and____43____they definitely hesitate to buy stocks: they seek low price/earnings multiples and high____44____. These same investors-when they are in an optimistic frame. of mind--become far less____45____ with yields and more willing to pay a premium(high p/e multiples)for accelerated growth. If the publics attitude towards the auto industry is any measure, then this period seems to have been one of optimism.

A.confirmation

B.guarantee

C.intelligible

D.invariably

E.momentarily

F.overpriced

G.pessimistic

H.preoccupied

prudent

representation

speculate

underscored

vicinity

voiced

yields 第36题答案为()

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第8题

回答下列各题: A.learnsB.tendsC.refersD.leads

回答下列各题:

A.learns

B.tends

C.refers

D.leads

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第9题

根据以下内容,回答下列各题。 A.leadsB.comesC.goesD.means

根据以下内容,回答下列各题。

A.leads

B.comes

C.goes

D.means

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