下列表格反映的是上周你对某中学500名学生的睡眠状况的调查表。请你用英文为某报写一份调查报告,反映该中学学生的睡眠状况,分析其原因并提出相应的对策。

  项 目

内                  容

  日平均

睡眠量

80%的学生日平均睡眠不足7小时,10%的学生甚至不足6小时,大大低于8小时的睡眠标准。

  原 因

许多学生忙于做作业;少数学生沉迷于电脑游戏

  对 策

合理安排学习时间;停止玩电脑游戏;学生的身心健康需要得到更多关心。

 [写作内容]

1.根据调查报告显示,大多数的中学生睡眠不足,这会给学生的健康和学习都带来有害的结果。

2.睡眠不足的情况与原因。

3. 提出对策。

[写作要求]

只能使用5个句子表达全部内容。文章的开头已经给出,不计入句子数。

[评分标准]

句子结构准确,信息内容完整,篇章结构连贯。书写与卷面也作为评分参考。

Last week I did a survey on students’ average sleep hours among 500 students in a middle school.

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阅读下面短文,从短文后所给各题的四个选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。

Many years ago, whites ruled South Africa. Apartheid(种族隔离制度)was the   16  of the land. One evening, two middle-aged blacks met in a “whites only” section of Johannesburg. One of them had a permit to work in the area, the other did not, which   17  he could be put behind bars(关押)for staying in this zone.   18  they saw a policeman coming towards them, and   19 .

“Run!” whispered the man with the permit to his friend, “I’ll   20  .” They started running and the policeman began chasing them, shouting “stop, stop”. Finally he caught the second man.

“Did you think you could outrun me!” he snarled. “Show me your   21 !”

The man, playing for time, began reaching in his pocket and finally took out his permit. The policeman was surprised and realized that he had been   22 . The man without the permit was now too far away to be caught.

“When you had a permit why did you run!” he shouted   23 .

“Doctor’s   24 ,” said the man. “He has asked me to run a mile every evening.”

“Oh, yes? ” Sneered the policeman. “Then why was your friend   25 ?”

“His doctor has also ordered him to run,” said the man.

The policeman became   26  with anger. “You think you’re very   27 , don’t you?” he snarled. “But tell me, if you were running   28  for your health why didn’t you stop when you saw me running after you? And don’t tell me you didn’t see me chasing you. I know you did!”

“Of course I   29  you were running after me,” said the man.

“Then why didn’t you stop?” asked the policeman.

“It was   30 of me,” said the man, “but I thought you too had been ordered to run by your doctor.”

1.                A.property        B.mistake         C.law  D.custom

 

2.                A.meant          B.showed         C.replied   D.imagined

 

3.                A.Happily         B.Suddenly        C.Finally    D.Generally

 

4.                A.hid            B.fell            C.cried D.froze

 

5.                A.fight           B.explain         C.follow    D.walk

 

6.                A.invitation       B.permit          C.pocket   D.ticket

 

7.                A.fooled         B.hurt           C.blamed   D.abandoned

 

8.                A.nervously       B.sadly           C.carefully  D.angrily

 

9.                A.attitudes        B.methods        C.orders   D.hopes

 

10.               A.stopping        B.missing         C.staying    D.running

 

11.               A.shy            B.strict           C.red   D.serious

 

12.               A.brave          B.healthy         C.native D.smart

 

13.               A.only           B.also           C.never D.often

 

14.               A.remembered    B.knew          C.believed   D.agreed

 

15.               A.stupid          B.rude           C.kind  D.wise

 

 

As a teenager in 1972, Bill Gates boasted that he would be a millionaire by the time he was 20. While he did not quite achieve that goal, only 15 years later, he was a millionaire. And by 1992, as head of the Microsoft company, he became the richest man in America with assets(资产)of nearly US $ 6.3 billion.

Born in Seattle, Washington on 28, October, 1956, Gates was named William Henry after his father and grandfather. From the beginning, he was an extremely energetic and intelligent child. He had read the entire world book encyclopedia(百科全书)by the age of nine. His favorite subjects at school were science and math and his favorite pastime was "thinking".

Gates first started to play with computers at the age of 13. Before long he became an expert at working the school's computer. After his graduation from secondary school, Gates was accepted by the three top universities in the USA-Princeton, Harvard and Yale. He chose Harvard and began classes there the next autunm, majoring maths. But he was still obsessed(占据心里)with computers and spent as much time in the computer laboratories as he did in the lecture halls.

By 1975, Gates and a partner, Paul Allen, had developed a software program called BASIC. This was not the first program ever created, but its inventors were the first to decide that people who wanted to use it should pay for it.

BASIC was a success because until it came along, there had been no efficient way of getting computers to carry out instructions. Although he had not completed his degree, Gates left university and went to work full time for the new company he had formed called Microsoft.

His next project was the software program that made him famous and very rich. It was called DOS, short for Disk Operating System, and it was purchased by IBM in 1980. Today it is the operating system used in more than 14 million personal computers around the world.

As chief executive officer(首席行政长官)of Microsoft, Gates is known as a bright man, but one who is not easily satisfied. He is quick to criticize his staff and hates to be questioned about decisions he has made. He was regarded as a loner and unfashionable boring computer nut until his marriage to Microsoft manager Melinda French on New Year's Day 1994. Yet to many people now, Gates, is a person who is, in spite of his great wealth, humble(谦恭)and ordinary. He spends his money carefully. He eats in fast food restaurants and flies economy class. And when praised for Microsoft's great success, he has been heard to say, "All we do is put software in a box and if people see it in the stores and like it, they buy it."

1.When he was a teenager, Bill Gates wanted to be a ______.

A.teacher           B.doctor            C.businessman       D.professor

2.When Gates went to Harvard, he ______.

A.was only interested in maths

B.spent most of his time in computer laboratories

C.developed the first computer software program

D.divided his time between his maths studies and the computer laboratories

3.Before the development of BASIC, ______.

A.no one was interested in computer software

B.software programs were not considered commercial projects

C.software programs were very expensive

D.no one wanted to pay for computer software

4.When the writer says "He was regarded as a loner and unfashionable boring computer nut", he means ______.

A.Bill was so strong-minded that no one could change his mind

B.The only thing that could interest Bill in his life was computer

C.Bill was such a boring young man that nobody would like to talk to him

D.Bill couldn't work out the boring computer programs

5.Most people think that Bill Gates is ______.

A.a crazy person                         B.a person obsessed with making money

C.someone who spends money freely         D.a quite common, normal person

 

People often hear each others' voices without ever seeing the faces they belong to. "Nowadays we are talking away on the phone without meeting people," says Seung-Jae Moon. And from business conference calls to chat lines, people often imagine they would recognize the speaker if they saw him or her. Seung-Jae Moon, a linguist of Korea found that, under certain conditions, they're actually right.

Moon decided to see just how close those mental pictures match up with reality and if there was any relation to how people speak rather than what they are saying. He recorded 16 Koreans, half men and half women, reading the same passage, and took a full-body photo and head shot of each speaker. Then he played the tapes for 361 Koreans and 173 Americans who did not speak Korean and asked his subjects to match up voice and picture. The Korean participants viewing full-body photos were quite perceptive. A majority linked 6 of the 8 women to the correct voice and did so for 5 of the 8 men. With the Korean group shown only faces, accuracy plummeted, but more than 20 percent of the subjects selected the same incorrect picture. The Americans showed no accuracy in matching the foreign voices to photos, but they too were consistent in their errors. That disconnection reveals conflicting ideas of physical and vocal beauty. Moon asked people to pick a favorite face and voice. Seventy percent of the Koreans picked one voice, but there was no agreement on a face. Americans didn' t agree on either count. And over 65 percent of both Koreans and Americans did not match their favorite face with their favorite voice.

Moon hopes to use software to break voices into components like pitch and hoarseness to narrow down which elements trigger certain mental pictures. "If we can map which characteristics of the voice triggers what kind of linage, and it doesn't matter whether that image is the right or wrong one of the actual speaker, then we can create an image through voice,' he says. That capacity could help to create computer-synthesized voices tailored to conjure up specific associations — audio books for children that inspire motherly visages, or warning alerts that bring to mind a stern police officer.

1.People often think that they would ______ the speaker when they saw the speaker.

A.understand        B.recognize         C.like              D.surprise

2.Moon decided to do the experiment to ______.

A.see how close mental pictures match up with reality

B.how people speak

C.see if there was any relation to how people speak rather than what they are saying

D.both A and C

3.He asked ______ Korean women to speak and recorded their voices.

A.12               B.16               C.8                D.10

4.______ were more perceptive in recognizing full-body photos.

A.The Koreans                           B.The American women

C.The Korean women                      D.The Americans

5.______ percent of Koreans and Americans matched their favorite face with their favorite voice.

A.Less than 65       B.Less than 35       C.Over 65           D.About 20

 

A small town in Tasmania, an island off the south coast of mainland Australia, is making itself an environmental role model by becoming the country's first plastic bag-free town.

Since April 28, Coles Bay's population of 175 and its tourist shoppers have been using reusable paper or cloth bags to carry their shopping.

Ben Keamey, a local businessman who supports the bag ban, said it would cut  the amount of waste and prevent damage to native wildlife that try to eat the plastic.

"Most businesses here come from the tourism and that's all based on the environment, so people were pretty supportive," he said.

Every year Australians use more than six billion plastic bags. More than half of these come from the supermarket. Since it takes years for the bags to biodegrade(生物递减分解), tens of millions end up polluting the environment. They kill about 100,000 sea-birds and animals, which mistake bags for food, every year.

Only in the past few months have major Australian supermarkets begun cutting on their use of plastic bags. Environmental groups are pushing for a plastic bag fee like that in Ireland. There, since plastic bags cost 10 pence (about 1 yuan) each, their use has been cut by 90 per cent.

Pollution caused by plastic bags is a big headache for countries all over the world. As early as 1999, Beijing said that only plastic bags of certain thickness could be used. This was to encourage them to be used again and again, since an average of six million plastic bags are used there every there every single day.

1.Which might be the best title for this passage?

A.Deadly Plastic Bags                      B.The End of Plastic Bags

C.How to Reuse Plastic Bags                 D.The Present Situation of Plastic Bags

2.Plastic bags will not be used by the native people of Coles Bay because they ______.

A.cause the environmental pollution          B.are not easy to be reused

C.are not as good as cloth bags               D.are not strong enough

3.Which of the following statements is NOT true?

A.Plastic bags kill many animals in Australia each year.

B.Most Australian supermarkets have begun cutting on their use of plastic bags.

C.People at Coles Bay think poor environment may affect their tourism.

D.You have to pay for the plastic bags if you go shopping in Ireland.

4.The example of Coles Bay is to show that ______.

A.people take serious actions to deal with the plastic bag problem

B.people begin to realise the harm of using plastic bags

C.Australia is the first country in solving the plastic bag problem

D.Australians are aware of the importance of protecting the small town

5.Which of the following measures on plastic bags is NOT mentioned in the passage?

A.To forbid to use them by law.

B.to charge fee for plastic bags.

C.To make them thick enough to be reuseable.

D.To make them environmentally friendly.

 

首先,请阅读下列应用文:

A. TV 3  5.:30 pm. An hour-long children's programme presented by Terri Reene. Today's programme includes a documentary on Eastern Europe plus a look at one of the world's great orchestras in rehearsal. Also a new competition for children at secondary school.

B. TV 1  7:20 pm. Find out more about Australia's animal life. This film was made last year by one of Australia's best-known cameramen, Dougie Bond. He spent over 200 hours filming the birds, animals and fish that inhabit this beautiful continent and for the first time brings some of these unusual animals to our TV screens.

C. TV 3  9.00 pm. The popular science programme is back with the latest in technology and medicine. This week, cars that run on sunlight and the story of one baby's fight to live.

D. TV 1  5:15 pm. Busy parents? Bored children? Do you want something educational to entertain your children while you do something else? This popular magazine programme is for the under-fives. More music, fun, songs and games with Carla and Larry.

E. TV 3  6:45 pm. If you've always wanted to cook, now's your chance to learn. In the studio are two chefs who will take you through some simple recipes step by step. This is a repeat of the popular series shown last year, and a recipe book to accompany the series is available from most good bookshops.

F. TV 3  7:40 pm. The latest music. Pete Hogg looks at the best of the current rap, ragga and new jack swing plus new video releases. This is the programme that tells you all about what's happening on the music scene and brings you interviews with tomorrow's young artists.

从以上选项选择出最适合以下人物的节目:

1.Although Rob leads a quiet life in a small village, that doesn't stop him from wanting to find out about the latest scientific developments.

2.Bella enjoys eating out but can't afford to spend very much at the moment as she is saving for a holiday. She has never learnt how to cook, so now might be quite a good time to find out!

3.Dan is interested in taking wildlife photographs and enjoys any kind of programme which gives him a chance to see a professional photographer at work.

4.Gina is a music teacher. Although she prefers classical music she likes to follow the kind of music that interests the teenagers she teaches.

5.Ron's wife is in hospital. He wants to find a programme suitable for his three-year-old son while he gets on with the housework and prepares a meal.

 

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