题目内容
When I was strolling in the park one day, I passed some children selling hot chocolate. One girl asked, "Would you like to help support our park? It's only 50 rents a cup." Of course, I couldn't help being extraordinarily that kids showed great interest in their community. They were having great pouring hot chocolate and feeling proud that they were helping a local cause. It that they grasped a basic idea about helping others:It feels .
Teaching our children to help others benefits them a great deal. brings them peace of mind. Serving those in need also helps children learn to make a -that they have the to make a positive impact. This a sense of control, helping them feel less frightened. It also reassures them that help would be if they were ever in danger.
Another important is that we are all dependent on each other. When children serve others, they learn to someone else's greater need and to other people.
There are many other of making charity a part of your family's life. You f II meet new friends and develop relationships. Running a bake sale will give your kids a chance to practice such as fundraising, money management, and teamwork. Self-exploration and discovery will through their choice of activities.
If a child can become a cheerful, charitable giver, he or she must try different volunteer efforts. When you see them enjoying the of them, encourage them to .
on my own experience, I can say developing the good of charitable giving will become to your best family memories and celebrations.
1.A. worried B. impressed C. doubtful D. grateful
2.A. organizing B. cleaning C. improving D. controlling
3.A. difficulty B. success C. advantage D. fun
4.A. already B. seldom C. never D. often
5.A. boring B. strange C. great D. relaxing
6.A. Teaching B. Giving C. Thinking D. Learning
7.A. choice B. promise C. mistake D. difference
8.A. ability B. right C. freedom D. time
9.A. promotes B. reduces C. reflects D. protects
10.A. impossible B. flexible C. available D. reasonable
11.A. example B. lesson C. question D. secret
12.A. take over B. search for C. relate to D. give up
13.A. believe in B. look for C. turn to D. care about
14.A. disadvantages B. benefits C. contributions D. methods
15.A. activities B. moves C. skills D. behaviors
16.A. stay B. miss C. come D. get
17.A. equality B. fruit C. effect D. independence
18.A. continue B. explain C. observe D. communicate
19.A. aspect B. meaning C. habit D. way
20.A. hard B. central C. obvious D. serious
Book 1 | The Moustache Grower’s Guide Written by Lucien Edwards This guide, with tons of pictures and tips from professional competitors, will help men everywhere achieve the moustache of their dreams. Included are instructions for how to grow and keep 30 classic and modern moustaches. Crustache or Pyramid looks sharp with skinny jeans and glasses. |
Book 2 | Moonwalking with Einstein Written by Joshua Foer As a science reporter covering the US Memory Championship, Foer became attracted by the secrets of the competitors, like the present world memory champion, Ben Pridmore. With the help of experts, Foer learned how to transform the kinds of memories he forgot into the kind his brain remembered naturally. The skills he mastered made it easier to remember information, and Foer’s story shows that the tricks of the masters can be mastered by anyone. |
Book 3 | Vaclav and Lena Written by Haley Yanner It introduces us to Vaclav and Lena, two Russian kids who, even as teenagers, recognize that they’re in love with each other. The pair dreams of performing a magic show on the Coney Island, but just as they’re set to make their first performance, Lena disappears. In the years that follow, Vaclav never stops wondering where Lena could be. Then on her seventeenth birthday, the truth is uncovered. |
Book 4 | The Art of Instruction Written by Katrien Van Wall charts were fundamental tools of classroom instruction throughout Europe in the mid-nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Collected here for the first item in one book are over 100 of these wonderful educational posters in the history of science, art, and design. |
Book 5 | The Hunger Games Written by Suzanne Collins In the ruins of a place once known as North America lies the nation of Panem, a shining Capitol surrounded by twelve outlying districts. Longago the districts started war on the Capitol and were defeated. And each district had to send one boy and one girl to appear in an annual televised event called The Hunger Games, a fight to the death on live TV. Sixteen–year-old Katniss Everdeen, who lives with her mother and younger sister, regards it as a death sentence when she is forced to represent her district in the Games. The rules and level of audience participation may change but one thing is sure to continue: kill or be killed. |
1.According to the passage, Crustache and Pyramid are _____.
A. the names of two men
B. two types of moustaches
C. two clothing brands
D. two professional competitors
2.What can we know from the text?
A. Book 3 introduces the first successful magic show of a young couple.
B. Ben Pridmore suffers greatly from his poor memory.
C. Joshua Foer is the present world memory champion.
D. There are a great many pictures in Book 1 and Book 4.
3.Which of the following words best describes Katniss Everdeen’s feeling?
A. Ashamed B. Hopeless
C. Regretful D. Relieved