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For high school leavers starting out in the working world,it is very important to learn particular skills and practice how to behave in an interview or how to find all internship(实习).In some countries,schools have programs to help students onto the path to work.In the Unites States,however,such programs are still few and far between.
Research shows that if high schools provide career-related courses,students are likely to get higher earnings in later years.The students are more likely to stay in school,graduate and go on to higher education.
In Germany,students as young as 13 and 14 are expected to do internships.German companies work with schools to make sure that young people get the education they need for future employment.
But in America, education reform programs focus on how well students do in exams instead of bringing them into contact with the working world.Harvard Education school professor Robert Schwartz has criticized education reformers for trying to place all graduates directly on the four-year college track.Schwartz argued that this approach leaves the country’s most vulnerable(易受影响的)kids with no jobs and no skills.
Schwartz believed that the best career programs encourage kids to go for higher education while also teaching them valuable practical skills at high school.James Madison High School in New York,for example,encourages students to choose classes on career—based courses.The school then helps them gain on—the-job experience in those fields while they’re still at high school.
However,even for teens whose schools encourage them to connect with work,the job market is daunting.In the US,unemployment rates for 16-to 19-year-olds are above 20 percent for the third summer in a row.
“The risk is that if teenagers miss out on the Summer job experience,they become part of this generation of teens who had trouble in landing a job,”said Michael,a researcher in the US.
【小题1】In the author’s opinion, American high school leavers__________.
| A.have enough career-related courses |
| B.need more career advice from their schools |
| C.perform better in exams than German students |
| D.can get higher earnings in later years |
| A.there is no need for kids to go for higher education in the US |
| B.students should get contact with the working world at high school |
| C.education reform should focus on students’ performance in exams |
| D.teenagers in the US can’t miss out on the summer job experience |
| A.Unemployment rates for US teenagers remain high at the moment. |
| B.Students with career—based courses never have problems finding a job. |
| C.US companies work with schools to prepare young people for future employment. |
| D.High school leavers with no practical skills can’t find a job absolutely |
| A.Arguments about recent US education reform. |
| B.Tips on finding jobs for high school leavers. |
| C.The lack of career—based courses in US high schools. |
| D.Advice for American high school leavers. |
| A.discouraging | B.interesting |
| C.creative | D.unbearable |
A healthy amount of sunshine may be the secret to staying young. British scientists have discovered.
Vitamin D is produced naturally by the skin in response to(对…的反应) sunlight and may help to slow the ageing process and protect against heart disease, according to the study.
Researchers from King’s College London studied 2,160 women aged between 18 and 79, looking at their telomeres--- a biological marker of ageing found in DNA. As people get older, their telomeres get shorter and they become more susceptible(易受伤害的) to certain illnesses.
But the study found women with high levels of vitamin D had comparatively longer telomeres--- a sign of being biologically younger and healthier.
The study suggests vitamin D may help to slow down the ageing process of DNA, and therefore the ageing process as a whole.
Lead researcher Dr Brent Richards said, “These results are exciting because they show for the first time that people who have higher levels of vitamin D may age more slowly than people with lower levels of vitamin D.” This could help to explain how vitamin D has a protective effect on many ageing related diseases, such as heart disease and cancer.”
Professor Tim Spector, a co-author of the report, added, “Although it might sound absurd
(荒唐的), it’s possible that the same sunshine which may increase our risk of skin cancer may also have a healthy effect on the general ageing process.”
Vitamin D made by the action of sunlight on the skin accounts for 90 percent of the body’s supply, but lower levels can also be got through food such as fish, eggs and breakfast cereals(粥).
Other studies have suggested the vitamin plays a key role in protecting against cancer and heart disease.
【小题1】 A certain amount of sunshine helps people stay young because _____.
| A.people feel happy and energetic in the sun |
| B.sunshine protects people against heart disease |
| C.vitamin D makes one’s skin look young and healthy |
| D.vitamin D may help to slow the ageing process |
| A.sunlight causes skin cancer to people with high level of vitamin D |
| B.the study generally has a healthy effect on the general ageing process |
| C.vitamin D can only be got from fish, eggs and breakfast cereals |
| D.the higher levels of vitamin D people have, the more slowly people may age |
A. Telomeres are important signs of ageing of the DNA.
B. Sunlight can be dangerous as it causes skin cancer.
C. Sunlight does a great deal of good to our health.
D. Vitamin D can also be gained from food.
【小题4】 What is the best title of the passage?
| A.Secret of Staying Young |
| B.Vitamin D Helps Slow Ageing |
| C.Sunlight and Vitamin D |
| D.Sunlight and Health |
Global warming is causing more than 300,000 deaths and about $125 billion in economic losses each year, according to a report by the Global Humanitarian Forum, an organization led by Annan, the former United Nations secretary general.
The report, to be released Friday, analyzed data and existing studies of health, disaster, population and economic trends. It found that human-influenced climate change was raising the global death rates from illnesses including malnutrition (营养不良) and heat-related health problems.
But even before its release, the report drew criticism from some experts on climate and risk, who questioned its methods and conclusions.
Along with the deaths, the report said that the lives of 325 million people, primarily in poor countries, were being seriously affected by climate change. It projected that the number would double by 2030.
Roger Pielke Jr., a political scientist at the University of Colorado, Boulder, who studies disaster trends, said the Forum’s report was “a methodological embarrassment” because there was no way to distinguish deaths or economic losses related to human-driven global warming amid the much larger losses resulting from the growth in populations and economic development in vulnerable (易受伤害的) regions. Dr. Pielke said that “climate change is an important problem requiring our utmost (极度的) attention.” But the report, he said, “will harm the cause for action on both climate change and disasters because it is so deeply flawed (有瑕疵的).”
However, Soren Andreasen, a social scientist at Dalberg Global Development Partners who supervised the writing of the report, defended it, saying that it was clear that the numbers were rough estimates. He said the report was aimed at world leaders, who will meet in Copenhagen in December to negotiate a new international climate treaty.
In a press release describing the report, Mr. Annan stressed the need for the negotiations to focus on increasing the flow of money from rich to poor regions to help reduce their vulnerability(弱点) to climate hazards(危害)while still curbing (限制) the emissions of the heat-trapping gases. More than 90% of the human and economic losses from climate change are occurring in poor countries, according to the report.
【小题1】What is the finding of the Global Humanitarian Forum?
| A.Global temperatures affect the rate of economic development. |
| B.Rates of death from illnesses have risen due to global warming. |
| C.Malnutrition has caused serious health problems in poor countries. |
| D.Economic trends have to do with population and natural disasters. |
| A.It was challenged by some climate and risk experts. |
| B.It aroused a lot of interest in the scientific circles. |
| C.It was warmly received by environmentalists. |
| D.It caused a big stir in developing countries. |
| A.Its statistics look embarrassing. |
| B.It is invalid in terms of methodology. |
| C.It deserves our closest attention. |
| D.Its conclusion is purposely exaggerated. |
| A.Its conclusions are based on carefully collected data. |
| B.It is vulnerable to criticism if the statistics are closely examined. |
| C.It will give rise to heated discussions at the Copenhagen conference. |
| D.Its rough estimates are meant to draw the attention of world leaders. |
| A.How rich and poor regions can share responsibility in curbing global warming. |
| B.How human and economic losses from climate change can be reduced. |
| C.How emissions of heat-trapping gases can be reduced on a global scale. |
| D.How rich countries can better help poor regions reduce climate hazards. |
The world hash’t seen a pandemic(流行疾病)in 4 1 years,when the”Hong Kong”flu crossed the globe and killed about one million people worldwide.If H1N1 flu(甲型流感)reaches pandemic levels,what would happen next?
The outbreak of SA
RS in 2003 rang alarm bells as potential pandemics.Although it jumped the”animal-to·human”barrier,neither disease changed enough to enable human-to.Human infection.Strictly speaking,SARS did not become pandemics because it was too good at killing their hosts.For a pandemic,it needs to be able to maintain human-to.human contact without killing its host off.
”H1N1 flu is already a man-to-man disease,which makes it much more difficult to manage.
And H1N1 flu appears much more infectious than SARS.
But the WHO warns,it cannot say whether or not it will indeed cause a pandemic.According to experts,here’s what the world might see if there is another pandemic,based on past exp
erience.
The disease would skip from city to city over an 18-to-24 month period,infecting more than a third of the population.World health Organization officials believe as many as 1.5 billion people around the globe would seek medical care and nearly 30 million would seek hospitalization.Based on the last pandemic and current world population,as many as 7 million people could die.Hos
pitals will become overcrowded;scho
ols will close;businesses will close;airports will be empty.Business will become very bad,as people avoid as much social contact as possible.
Health facilities will become overrun with patients and there would be less-than-adequate staffing,as medical health professionals fall ill themselves and that would result in higher deaths.
The very young and very old will likely be the most susceptible(易受感染的)to the illness.Experts warn,much is still unknown about the current H1N1 flu virus and its severity and it is too early to say whether it will lead to a pandemic.Right now,the focus is on finding answers and controlling the spread.
【小题1】How many kinds of disease is mentioned in the passage?
| A.Two | B.Three | C.Four | D.Five |
| A.SARS didn’t change enough to enable sustained(持续的)human-to—human infection. |
| B.SARS was very good at killing its carriers. |
| C.A man with H1N1 flu can not infect another man easily. |
| D.Comparing SARS and H 1N 1 flu,SARS is not as infectious. |
| A.It spread all around the globe and killed lots of people. |
| B.It killed about millions of people. |
| C.It killed about one million people in Hong Kong. |
| D.Not the old but the young were susceptible to it and got killed. |
| A.The H1N1 flu will skip from city to city over an 18一to一24 month period. |
| B.Doctors and nurs |
| C.Every country is taking measures to stop the H1N1 flu from leading to a pandemic. |
| D.The WHO and experts have known much about the current H1N1 flu virus. |
You might think that “global warming” means nothing more than a rise in the world’s temperature But rising sea levels caused by it have resulted in the first evacuation(撤离)of an island nation—the citizens of Tuvalu will have to leave their homeland.
During the 20th century , sea level rose 8—12 inches. As a result ,Tuvalu has experienced lowland flooding of salt water which has polluted the country’s drinking water.
Paani Laupepa , a Tuvaluan government official ,reported to the Earth Policy Institute that the nation suffered an unusually high number of fierce storms in the past ten years .Many scientists connect higher surface water temperatures resulting from global warming to greater and more damaging storms.
Laupepa expressed dissatisfaction with the United States for refusing to sign the Kyoto Protocol, an international agreement calling for industrialized nations to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions(导致温室效应的气体排放),which are a main cause of global warming . “By refusing to sign the agreement ,the US has effectively taken away the freedom of future generations of Tuvaluans to live where their forefathers have lived for thousands of years,” Laupepa told the BBC.
Tuvalu has asked Australia and New Zealand to allow the gradual move of its people to both countries .
Tuvalu is not the only country that is vulnerable (易受影响的)to rising sea levels .Maumoon Gayoon ,president of the Maldives ,told the United Nations that global warming has made his country of 311,000 an “endangered nation”.
【小题1】The text is mainly about .
| A.rapid changes in earth’s temperature |
| B.bad effects of global warming |
| C.moving of a country to a new place |
| D.reasons for lowland flooding |
| A.greenhouse gas emissions in industrialized nations |
| B.higher surface water temperatures of the sea |
| C.continuous global warming |
| D.rising sea levels |
| A.agree to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions |
| B.sign an agreement with Tuvalu |
| C.allow Tuvaluans to move to the US |
| D.believe the problems facing Tuvalu were real |
| A.Australia | B.New Zealand | C.the Maldives | D.the United States |