题目内容

Kindergarten outside? Yes, indeed. It’s part of a growing worldwide trend toward outdoor education. The schools are called forest kindergartens.

The numbers are small so far in the U.S., but the idea is well established in Europe, with schools in Scotland, England, and Switzerland. By far the most such schools are in Germany, which has more than 400 forest kindergartens.

Some schools feature several hours of outdoor schooling. This is certainly the case with the Waldorf School of Saratoga Springs. Children there will be venturing out on the nearby Hemlock Trail to learn more about the natural world. Some lessons are focused on nature; others are academic topics delivered in a natural setting. In all cases, students are active-not sitting at desks or on mats on the floor but walking, running, jumping, solving problems like how to get the mud off the bottoms of their shoes before their parents find out.

Seriously, the focus is on activity at these schools. Studies have shown that children’s immune systems actually get stronger after all of the outdoor activity, and that graduates of forest kindergartens show a higher ability to learn when they progress through their academic careers.

Other schools are all outdoors, all the time. This is the case with the Cedar Song Nature School, on Vashon Island, Washington. Students at this school spend their whole three–hour day outdoors, in a private five-acre forest, doing all kinds of physical activities.

At these forest kindergartens, students learn science by observing and doing it, learn math by applying it to the natural world around them, learn letters and words by putting them together using sights and sounds. These students learn how to get along with one another, individually and in a group. They also develop healthy levels of self-confidence.

Nowadays many children become obese(肥胖的) because of sedentary(久坐的) activities like watching television and playing video games. These outdoor schools give children chances to learn just as much, if not more, from opening their eyes to the real world around them.

1.What do we know about forest kindergartens?

A.The first one was created in England.        B.They are very popular in Germany.

C.There are 400 all over the world.           D.Their number is huge in the U.S.

2.What is special about forest kindergartens?

A.Kids learn more than those at ordinary kindergartens.

B.Students go outside when weather permits.

C.They value activity very much.

D.They are situated in forests.

3.The main difference between the Waldorf School and Cedar Song Nature School lies in______.

A.the subjects                           B.the activities

C.the outdoor time                        D.the teaching methods

4.Which of the following would be the best title for the text?

A.Get close to nature                      B.A new trend of education

C.Forest kindergartens are popular           D.Outdoor education benefits kids a lot

 

【答案】

1.B

2.C

3.C

4.D

【解析】

试题分析:本文主要讨论的是子啊欧洲出现的新型的幼儿园的话题,这些幼儿园里学生主要是在户外活动的,学到很多自然方面的知识。

1.B 细节题。根据第二段最后2行By far the most such schools are in Germany, which has more than 400 forest kindergartens.说明在德国这样的幼儿园最流行,故B正确。

2.C 细节题。根据文章3,4,5段第一句Some schools feature several hours of outdoor schooling.和Seriously, the focus is on activity at these schools.以及Other schools are all outdoors, all the time. 都说明在这样的幼儿园里,户外活动是最看重的,故C正确。。

3.细节题。根据3,4段第一句Some schools feature several hours of outdoor schooling. This is certainly the case with the Waldorf School 和Other schools are all outdoors, all the time. This is the case with the Cedar Song Nature School, 说明the Waldorf School只有几个小时的时间,而在the Cedar Song Nature School则是都在外面,故时间上的差别是最主要的,故C正确。

4.主旨大意题。本文主要讨论的是子啊欧洲出现的新型的幼儿园的话题,这些幼儿园里学生主要是在户外活动的,学到很多自然方面的知识,故D正确。

考点:考查教育类短文阅读

点评:本文讲述的是在欧洲出现的新型的幼儿园的情况介绍,本文考查细节题为主,细节题可以在文章中直接找到与答案有关的信息?或是其变体。搜查信息在阅读中非常重要它包括理解作者在叙述某事时使用的具体事实、数据、图表等细节信息。在一篇短文里大部分篇幅都属于这类围绕主体展开的细节。做这类题一般采用寻读法?即先读题?然后带着问题快速阅读短文?找出与问题有关的词语或句子?再对相关部分进行分析对比?找出答案。

 

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完形填空(共20小题;每小题1分,满分20分)

In the doorway of my home, I looked closely at my 23-year-old son, Daniel.In a few hours he would be flying to France to   26   a different life.It was a transitional(过渡的) time in Daniel’s life.I wanted to   27   him some words of significance.But nothing came from my lips, and this was not the   28   time I had let such moments pass.

    When Daniel was five, I took him to the bus stop on his first day of kindergarten.He asked, “What is it going to be like, Dad? Can I do it?” Then he walked     29     the steps of the bus and disappeared inside.The bus drove away and I said nothing.A decade later, a similar   30   played itself out.I drove him to college.As I started to leave, I tried to think of something to say to give him  31    and confidence as he started this new stage of life.Again, words   32   me.

    Now, as I stood before him, I thought of those    33   opportunities.How many times have I let such moments   34   ? I don't find a quiet moment to tell him what they have   35   to me.Or what he might want to face in the years   36  .Maybe I thought it was not necessary to say anything.

    What does it matter in the course of a lifetime if a father never tells a son what he really thinks of him?   37   as I stood before Daniel, I knew that it did matter.My father and I loved each other.Yet, I always   38   never hearing him put his    39   into words.Now I could feel my palms sweat and my throat tighten.Why is it so   40   to tell a son something from the heart?

    My mouth turned dry, and I knew I would be able to get out only a few words clearly.“Daniel,” I said, “If I could have picked, I would have picked you.” That's all I could say.He hugged me.For a moment, the world   41   , and there were just Daniel and me.He was saying something, but tears misted my eyes, and I couldn't understand what he was saying.All I was   42   of was the stubble(短须) on his chin as his face pressed    43    mine.What I had said to Daniel was   44   .It was nothing.And yet, it was    45     .

A.experience     B.spend        C.enjoy    D.shape

A.show        B.give         C.leave   D.instruct

A.last       B.first    C.very     D.next

A.upward          B.into         C.down    D.up

A.sign            B.scene            C.scenery      D.sight

A.interest        B.instruction          C.courage      D.direction

A.failed          B.discouraged     C.struck       D.troubled

A.future     B.embarrassing    C.obvious      D.lost

A.last       B.fly         C.pass         D.remain

A.counted    B.meant        C.valued       D.eared

A.forward    B.before      C.ago          D.ahead

A.But         B.And              C.Instead     D.So

A.wondered   B.regretted    C.minded       D.tried

A.views       B.actions          C.feelings         D.attitudes

A.important   B.essential        C.complex      D.hard

A.disappeared B.changed          C.progressed       D.advanced

A.sensitive       B.convinced        C.aware        D.tired

A.by          B.against         C.on       D.with

A.clumsy     B.gentle       C.amusing      D.moving

A.none            B.all     C.anything         D.everything

       “My kids really understand solar and earth-heat energy,” says a second-grade teacher in Saugus, California. “Some of them are building solar collectors for their energy course.” These young scientists are part of City Building Educational Program (CBEP), a particular program for kindergarten through twelfth grade that uses the stages of city planning to teach basic reading, writing and math skills, and more.

        The children don’t just plan any city. They map and analyze(分析)the housing, energy, and transportation requirements of their own district and foretell its needs in 100 years. With the aid of an architect(建筑师)who visits the classroom once a week, they invent new ways to meet these needs and build models of their creations. “Designing building of the future gives children a lot of freedom,” says the teacher who developed this program. “They are able to use their own rich imagination and inventions without fear of blame, because there are no wrong answers in a future context. In fact, as the class enters the final model-building stage of the program, an elected ‘official’ and ‘planning group’ make all the design decisions for the model city, and the teacher steps back and becomes an adviser.”

        CBEP is a test of activities, games and imitations that teach the basic steps necessary for problem-solving: observing, analyzing, working out possible answers, and judging them based on the children’s own standards.

63. The Program is designed ______________.

   A. to direct kids to build solar collectors               

  B. to train young scientists for city planning

   C. to develop children’s problem-solving abilities

   D. to help young architects know more about designing

64. An architect pays a weekly visit to the classroom ____________.

   A. to find out kids’ creative ideas                          B. to discuss with the teacher

   C. to give children lectures                                          D. to help kids with their program

65. Who is the designer of the program?

   A. An official.      B. An architect.         C. A teacher.      D. A scientist.

66. The children feel free in the program because ______________.

   A. they can design future buildings themselves

   B. they have new ideas and rich imagination

   C. they are given enough time to design models

   D. they need not worry about making mistakes

About 30 years ago, I left Cuba for the United States with my son. After getting settled finally in Brunswick, New Jersey, I enrolled(注册) my son in kindergarten. Several weeks later, my son’s teacher asked me to meet him at his office.

In the teacher’s office, and exchange of greetings was followed by his questions: “ Is your son mentally retarded(弱智的)? Does he suffer from any kind of mental disability?”

Was he talking about my wonderful Scola? No, no, it can’t be. What a helpless, lonely moment! I told him that Scola was a quiet, sweet little boy, instead. I asked him why he was asking me all these questions.

My son could not follow the teacher’s directions, he told me, and thus, Scola was disrupting the class. Didn’t he know my son did not speak English yet?

He was angry: “ Why hasn’t your son been taught to speak English? Don’t you speak English at home?”

No, I didn’t speak English at home, I replied. I was sure my son would learn English in a couple of months, and I didn’t want him to forget his native language. Well, wrong answer! What kind of person would not speak in English to her son at home and at all times? “ Are you one of those people who come to this country to save dollars and sent them back to their country, never wanting to be a part of this society?”

Needless to say, I tried to tell him I was not one of “ those people.” Then he told me the meeting was over, and I left.

As I had expected, my son learned to speak English fluently before the school year was over. He went on to graduate from college and got a job, earning close to six figures. He travels widely and leads a well-adjusted, contented life. And he has benefited from being bilingual(双语的)。

Speaking more than one language allows people to communicate with others; it teaches people about other cultures and other places- something very basic and obviously lacking in the “educator” I met in New Jersey.

1.The teacher asked the author to his office________.

A.to work out a study plan for Scola

B.to get Scola enrolled in kindergarten

C.to discuss Scola’s in-class performance

D.to find a language partner for Scola

2.What does the underlined word “disrupting” in Paragraph 4 probably  mean?

A.Attending         B.Disturbing         C.Breaking          D.Following

3.The author’s attitude towards being bilingual may best be described as __________.

A.positive           B.critical            C.casual            D.passive

4.This text is likely to be selected from a book of __________.

A.geography         B.medicine          C.history            D.education

 

When you make a mistake, big or small, cherish (珍视) it like it’s the most precious thing in the world, because in some ways, it is.

Most of us feel bad when we make mistakes, beat ourselves up about it, feel like failures, get mad at ourselves.

And that’s only natural. Most of us have been taught from a young age that mistakes are bad, and we should try to avoid mistakes. We’ve been scolded when we make mistakes—at home, school and work. Maybe not always, but probably enough times to make feeling bad about mistakes an unconscious(无意识的)reaction.

Yet without mistakes, we could not learn or grow. If you think about it that way, mistakes should be cherished and celebrated for being one of the most amazing things in the world. They make learning possible; they make growth and improvement possible.

By trial and error—trying things, making mistakes, and learning from those mistakes—we have figured out how to make electric light, to paint the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, to fly.

Mistakes make walking possible for the smallest toddler, make speech possible, and make works of genius possible.

Think about how we learn:We don’t just consume information about something and instantly know it or know how to do it. You don’t just read about painting,or writing,or computer programming,or baking, or playing the piano, and know how to do them right away. Instead, you get information about something, from reading or from another person or from observing usually...then you construct a model in your mind...then you test it out by trying it in the real world...then you make mistakes...then you revise the model based on the results of your real world experimentation...and repeat, making mistakes, learning from those mistakes, until you’ve pretty much learned how to do something. That’s how we learn as babies and toddlers, and how we learn as adults. Mistakes are how we learn to do something new—because if you succeed at something, it’s probably something you already knew how to do. You haven’t really grown much from that success—at most it’s the last step on your journey, not the whole journey. Most of the journey is made up of mistakes, if it’s a good journey.

So if you value learning,if you value growing and improving,then you should value mistakes. They are amazing things that make a world of brilliance possible.

1.Why do most of us feel bad about making mistakes?

A.Because mistakes make us suffer a lot.

B.Because it’s a natural part in our life.

C.Because we’ve been taught so from a young age.

D.Because mistakes have ruined many people’s careers.

2.According to the passage, what is the right attitude to mistakes?

A.We should try to avoid making mistakes.

B.We should owe great inventions mainly to mistakes.

C.We should treat mistakes as good chances to learn.

D.We should make feeling bad about mistakes an unconscious reaction.

3.The underlined word “toddler” in Paragraph 6 probably means ________.

A.a small child learning to walk

B.a kindergarten child learning to draw

C.a primary pupil learning to read

D.a school teenager learning to write

4.We can learn from the passage that ________.

A.most of us can really grow from success

B.growing and improving are based on mistakes

C.we learn to make mistakes by trial and error

D.we read about something and know how to do it right away

5.What is the best title of this passage?

A.Value Mistakes

B.Mistakes Make Things Possible

C.Try to Avoid Mistakes

D.Life is a Journey Full of Mistakes

 

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