题目内容
But I had already come to my lonely decision. To wake up in the morning with a sense of fear, to force a hasty breakfast down an unwilling throat and then to set off for work with pounding heart and frozen face had become habitual, and I had turned to tranquilizers(镇定剂) to help me along.
It hadn't always been as bad as this. Ten years before I had managed quite well.
I, in common with most other teachers, am rather selfcritical, and I knew now I was no longer “managing”.My classes were noisy, the children were not learning very much, and my attempts to cope with changing teaching methods produced very little effect. At one time my very presence in the doorway would be enough to ensure a partial silence. Now they give a vague(含糊的) “Hello, Miss”, and carry on. I had run out of enjoyment and enthusiasm. It was time to stop.
Was it all my own failure? In fairness to myself, I don't think it was. I had plenty of ideas, I loved my subject, and I liked children.
I had been idealistic. But the reality I faced was bored children, overstimulated(刺激)by videowatching the night before and tired out by a late bedtime. They were given the wrong food at the wrong time, who came without breakfast to school and then stuffed themselves with gum and chocolates bought on the way; who were “high” with hunger in class and talked restlessly as the cooking smell from the school kitchen came drifting (漂) to all floors.
I had been trying to create the basic conditions in which teaching becomes possible, but I had failed, and no longer had the stomach for the job.
- 1.
The reason why the writer decided to give up her job was probably that .
- A.teaching children wasn't challenging
- B.she took no pride in her work
- C.teaching had become too much for her
- D.she disliked the new teaching method
- A.
- 2.
“My very presence in the doorway would be enough to ensure a partial silence” means“ ”.
- A.I'd very well make some students stop talking simply by standing in the doorway
- B.when I came to the doorway, the class would immediately quiet down
- C.all the students would become silent on my turning up in the doorway
- D.my appearance in the doorway could at least comfort the class
- A.
- 3.
The following are all reasons that children couldn't concentrate in class EXCEPT .
- A.they were tired out because they went to bed too late
- B.they were burdened with too much homework
- C.they were not properly fed by their parents
- D.they were over excited by videowatching the night before
- A.
- 4.
We can infer from the passage that the writer .
- A.had no love for children at all
- B.never truly enjoyed teaching
- C.found it difficult to give up her job
- D.felt extremely nervous about each coming day
- A.
Recently a Beijing father sent in a question at an Internet forum (论坛) asking what "PK" meant.
"My family has been watching the 'Super Girl' singing competition TV program. My little daughter asked me what 'PK' meant, but I had no idea," explained the puzzled father.
To a lot of Chinese young people who have been playing games online, it is impossible not to know this term. In such Internet games, "PK" is short for "Player Kill", in which two players fight until one ends the life of the other.
In the case of the "Super Girl" singing competition, "PK" was used to refer to the stage where two singers have to compete with each other for only one chance to go up in competition ranking.
Like this father, Chinese teachers at high schools have also been finding their students' compositions using Internet words which are difficult to understand. A high school teacher from Tianjin asked her students to write compositions with simple language, but they came up with a lot of Internet words that she didn't understand.
"My 'GG' came back this summer from college. He told me I've grown up to be a 'PLMM'. I loved to 'FB' with him together; he always took me to the 'KPM'," went one composition.
"GG" means Ge Ge (Chinese pinyin for brother). "PLMM" refers to Piao Liang Mei Mei (beautiful girl). "FB" means Fu Bai (corruption). "KPM" is short for KFC, Pizza Hut and McDonald's.
Some specialists welcome Internet words as a new development in language.
If you do not even know what a Kong Long (dinosaur, referring to an ugly looking female) or a Qing Wa (frog, referring to an ugly looking male) is, you will possibly be regarded as a Cai Niao!
【小题1】By writing the article, the writer tries to ________ .
| A.explain some Internet language | B.suggest common Internet language |
| C.laugh at the Beijing father | D.draw our attention to Internet language |
| A.Fathers can't possibly know it. | B.The daughter should understand it. |
| C.Online game players may know it. | D."Super Girl" shouldn't have used it. |
| A.are used not only online | B.can be understood very well |
| C.are welcomed by all the people | D.cause trouble to our mother tongue |
| A.A puzzled father | B.Do you speak Internetish? |
| C.Keep away from Internetish | D.Kong Long or Qing Wa? |