In our class, when the bell rang and the teacher came in, it was a _____ for every student to stand up.

A. signal
B. chance
C. sign
D. command
A
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科目:高中英語 來源:期中題 題型:單選題

In our class, when the bell rang and the teacher came in, it was a _____ for every student to stand up.
[     ]
A. signal
B. chance
C. sign
D. command

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科目:高中英語 來源:天津月考題 題型:閱讀理解

閱讀理解。
                                                                  Lowood School
   There were about eighty girls in the schoolroom, divided into four classes. The oldest girls were in the fourth class, and the youngest were in the first class. I was in the first class.
   All four classes had their lessons in the same large and very cold schoolroom. We had to sit there quietly, not saying a word, until the teachers came into the room together. The lessons-Math, History,French-were not at all interesting, and always followed the same pattern. First, we read some pages in a book and
then our teacher asked us questions. I tried to listen, but I soon got bored .
   After four hours, there was a lunch break, and we all went outside. Because it was winter, it was very
cold. Very soon, a bell rang, and lessons started again.
   Three weeks passed. One afternoon, the head teacher, whose name was Miss Temple, came into the
schoolroom. Mr. Brocklehurst was with her, and we all stood up as they entered. I stood behind an older
girl because I did not want Mr. Brocklehurst to see me.
   Mr. Brocklehurst walked slowly round the room. Everybody was very quiet. I closed my eyes and
wished he would leave. My hands started to shake, and I dropped my book.
   Mr. Brocklehurst stopped walking and looked straight at me.
   "Ah! The new girl," he said. "Come here, Jane Eyre!" Then he pointed at two of the older girls. "You two girls-put Jane Eyre on that high chair!" he said.
   "Look at Jane Eyre, everybody!" Mr. Brocklehurst said. "This child is bad. She will be punished! Miss
Temple! Teachers! Girls Do not talk to this child."
   Then he spoke to me again. "Jane Eyre, you must stand on that chair for two hours," he said. "You are a bad girl!"
   That evening, as I cried and cried alone, Miss Temple saw me. She came to me and held my hand. She was very kind.
   "You are a good pupil, Jane," she said. "And you are not a bad girl. I am your friend."
   "Thank you, Miss Temple," I said.
1. What were the lessons at the school like?
A. Short    
B. Expensive.  
C. Boring.    
D. Interesting
2. How did Jane try to hide from Mr. Brocklehurst?
A. She left the room.      
B. She stood behind another girl.
C. She covered her face.  
D. She went to the back of the class.
3. Why did Jane drop her book?
A. Another girl pushed her.  
B. Mr. Brocklehurst shouted at her.
C. She felt very nervous.
D. She was very tired.
4. Who put Jane on the chair?
A. Mr. Brocklehurst.    
B. Two other girls.  
C. Miss Temple.      
D. A teacher.
5. When did Miss Temple try to comfort Jane?
A. That evening.  
B. After Mr. Brocklehurst left.  
C. That afternoon.  
D. That morning.

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科目:高中英語 來源:2013-2014學年福建省福州市高三第四次質(zhì)量檢測英語試卷(解析版) 題型:閱讀理解

Many of us have heard stories about teachers who can “see” into a student’s future. Even if a student is not performing well, they can predict success. We are convinced that this ability, this gift, is evidence that they were “called to teach.” If the gift of sight is evidence, how greater must be the gift of touch. I have a story.

I grew up in the fifties in a poor African American neighborhood in Stockton, California, that had neither sidewalks nor an elementary school. Each day, always in groups at our parents’ insistence, my friends and I would leave home early enough to walk eight blocks to school and be in our seats when the bell rang. For four blocks, we walked on dusty roads. By the fifth block, we walked on sidewalks that led to lovely homes and to Fair Oaks Elementary School. It was at Fair Oaks, in a sixth grade English class, that I met Ms. Victoria Hunter, a teacher who had a huge influence on my life.

During reading periods, she would walk around the room, stop at our desks, stand over us for a second or two, and then touch us. Without saying anything to us (nothing could break the silence of reading periods), she would place two fingers lightly on our throats and hold them there for seconds. I learned many years later when I was a student at Stanford University that teachers touch the throat of students to check for sub-vocalization (默讀), which slows down the reading speed. I did not know at the time why Ms. Hunter was touching our throats, but I was a serious and respectful student and so, during silent reading period, I did what Ms. Hunter told us to do. I kept my eyes on the material I was reading and waited for her to place her fingers lightly on my throat.

One day, out of curiosity, I raised my head from my book — though not high — so that I could see Ms. Hunter, a white woman from Canada, moving up and down the rows, stopping at the desks of my classmates. I wanted to see how they reacted when she touched their throats. She walked past them. I was confused. Did she pass them by because they were model students? What did we, the students who were touched, not do right? I sat up straighter in my chair, thinking that my way of sitting might be the problem. I was confused. Several days later, I watched again, this time raising my head a little higher. Nothing changed. Ms. Hunter touched the same students. Always, she touched me.

She touched me with her hands. She also touched me with her belief in my ability to achieve. She motivated me by demanding the best from me and by letting teachers I would meet in junior high school know that I should be challenged, that I would be serious about my work. I am convinced that she touched me because she could “see” me in the future. That was true of all of us at Fair Oaks who sat still and silent as Ms. Hunter placed her fingers lightly on our throats. We left Fair Oaks as “best students,” entered John Marshall Junior High School, finished at the top of our high school class, and went on to earn graduate degrees in various subjects. Ms. Hunter saw us achieving and she touched us to make certain that we would.

I was not surprised that she came to my graduation ceremony at Edison High School in Stockton or that she talked to me about finishing college and earning a Ph. D. She expected that of me. She gave me a beautifully wrapped box. Inside was a gift, the beauty of which multiplies even as it touches me: a necklace to which I can add charms for each stage of my life.

1.According to the writer, what is a special ability many good teachers possess?

A. The ability to make all students behave well.

B. The ability to treat different students in the same way.

C. The ability to discover a students potential to succeed.

D. The ability to predict the near future of a poor student.

2.When she saw Ms. Hunter walk past some students without touching their throats, the writer felt ______.

A. disturbed????????????? B. puzzled????????????? C. ashamed????????????? D. annoyed

3.What does the writer mean by “a necklace to which I can add charms for each stage of my life” (paragraph 6)?

A. A gift which encourages me to do well on the journey of my life.

B. A gift which becomes more and more valuable as time goes by.

C. A necklace which I wear on all important occasions in my life.

D. A necklace which suits me and adds to my charm.

4.Which of the following serves as the best title for the story?

A. Ms. Hunter’s Surprise????????????? B. Ms. Hunter’s Challenge

C. A Teacher’s Touch? ????????????? D. A Teacher’s Memory

 

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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

Public schools are supposed to remove barriers so people can succeed. For some, the system does remove barriers and provide a solid base for achievement. For others, the system replaces one set of barriers with another. For example, creativity is killed by pressuring students to accept the current situation, by establishing a fear to be different and a fear of failure. Independent thinking is replaced by dependency. In some cases, pressure to succeed academically kills morality, faithfulness motivation, and skills needed for success in the real world. People who have a dream, motivating them can overcome all barriers on the whole.

My story begins in Summit, NJ, at the age of sixteen, where I am sitting in a classroom staring out of the window. Out of the first window I could see myself exploring the jungles of South America searching for gold, I could see myself going down the Amazon River on a boat, I could see monkeys swinging through the trees, I could see myself as Tarzan swinging on a climbing plant. Through the next window, I could see…

    Then BANG! The teacher's yardstick hitting my desk brought me back to the real world where subjects did not relate to my interest. In a loud voice the teacher said, "You are a failure! If you don't pay attention, you will continue to be a failure!"

    When the bell rang, instead of going to the next class I walked out of school never to return. I was tired of being called a failure. Right or wrong, I took charge of my future. When I left school, I carried the single most important basic factor for success---A DREAM. During the next twenty years, every one of my teenage dreams came true.

    You may be asking, "How does one make their dreams come true?" There are three basic factors:

    First, we must have a dream that motivates us. No one has ever achieved anything without a dream attached to a burning desire.

    Second, we must learn how-to-learn. In school, we learn how to memorize or be taught. Learning how to learn frees our dependency on others for knowledge.

    Third, we must learn from failure and learn how to bounce back from failure. No one has ever succeeded without failure. In the classroom, failure is a no-no.

26. What is the main idea of Paragraph 1?

A. Public schools should make it easier for students to succeed.

B. Some public schools have no barriers at all.

C. There are a lot of barriers in all public schools.

D. Barriers have been replaced by new ones in most public schools.

27. Which of the following is TRUE according to Paragraph 2?

A. The author left school because of his dream.

B. The author slept and had a dream.

C. The author didn’t listen carefully to the teacher.

D. The author made a plan for the future

28. The author intended to show that ___________.

A. he was bored in class

B. it is not necessary to receive an education

C. he was considered to be a failure at school

D. people sticking to their dreams can succeed

29. According to the passage, _________ is the most important factor of success.

A. having a dream                      B. knowing how-to-learn

C. overcoming failure                   D. having a good education

30. On the whole, the author’s attitude towards America’s public schools is ___________.

A. agreeable          B. unsatisfied        C. arbitrary       D. unknown

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科目:高中英語 來源:黃岡題庫練考新課堂 高一英語 題型:054

完形填空

  My husband had just bought a new washing machine for me. I decided to use it the 1 day and I washed a lot of things. Everything worked well, but I couldn’t find 2 of my husband’s socks though I had looked everywhere for it.

  The next morning. I 3 for school as usual. When the bell rang, the students came in. I greeted them and 4 them 5 we were going to do that day. When I turned around 6 on the black board, the class 7 a roar(大笑). They laughed and laughed. They laughed 8 much 9 I was afraid the headmaster would be in 10 all this.

  I asked the class to stop, but 11 I talked, the more they laughed. So I thought I’d better 12 any attention and I continued to write on the blackboard. When I did this, they 13 even more. Before long the teacher 14 in the classroom next 15 came to see 16 all the laughter(大笑)was about. When he came in, he started laughing too.

  “Good heavens!”I said,“Will someone please tell me what is so funny?”“Oh, Good,”said the teacher.“You have a green sock sticking to (粘住)the back of your 17 .”So that’s 18 I found my husband’s 19 sock.“Oh, well,”I said to 20 .“Let’s just say you have had an unforgetable(不易忘記 的)lesson about static electricity(靜電).”

1.

[  ]

A.very
B.just
C.only
D.proper

2.

[  ]

A.one
B.a(chǎn)ll
C.each
D.neither

3.

[  ]

A.got
B.got ready
C.went
D.a(chǎn)rrived

4.

[  ]

A.said
B.spoke
C.talked
D.told

5.

[  ]

A.that
B.this
C.what
D.which

6.

[  ]

A.to write
B.writing
C.pointing
D.to point

7.

[  ]

A.broken in
B.broke out
C.broke away
D.broke through

8.

[  ]

A.very
B.too
C.such
D.so

9.

[  ]

A.that is
B.a(chǎn)t the beginning
C.in fact
D.a(chǎn)t the end

10.

[  ]

A.saw
B.to see
C.find
D.to notice

11.

[  ]

A.when
B.a(chǎn)s
C.though
D.the more

12.

[  ]

A.not pay
B.not to pay
C.giving
D.not to give

13.

[  ]

A.stopped
B.laughed
C.cried
D.talked

14.

[  ]

A.whom taught
B.who was giving a lesson
C.taught
D.that teaching

15.

[  ]

A.to our
B.ours
C.to mine
D.whose

16.

[  ]

A.why
B.that
C.which
D.what

17.

[  ]

A.shoes
B.shirt
C.head
D.hands

18.

[  ]

A.what
B.how
C.why
D.because

19.

[  ]

A.losing
B.missing
C.missed
D.gone

20.

[  ]

A.myself
B.the teacher
C.the class
D.the sock

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