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Before a Master relieves a Pilot of the conn,the ().
A . Master should foresee any danger to the vessel on the present course
B . vessel must be in extremis
C . Master should agree to sign a release of liability form
D . Master must first request the Pilot to take corrective actio
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With a good command of reading skills, most students can manage to read()as they could the year before.
A . as twice fast
B . as fast as twice
C . as twice as fast
D . twice as fast
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Before the final examination, some students have shown()of tension. They even have trouble in sleeping.
A . anxiety
B . marks
C . signs
D . remark
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Before the sludge in a purifier is ejected,()
A、the oil feeding is stopped and replaced by admitting flushing water.
B、the flushing water feeding is stopped and replaced by admitting oil.
C、the feeding of dirty oil and flushing water is stopped.
D、the feeding of dirty oil and flushing water is admitted
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1 Brad is a student.
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Many a student ___that mistake before.
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Many of our students are beginners who have never done painting before and are looking to develop their ______ interest.
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Who is a new student here?
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The students expected there ______ more reviewing classes before the final test.
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Revising can take __________rounds, so students need to be prepared to write a second and a third draft before they submit the final draft.
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Before a speech, a speaker should consider audience
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The daughter was a student.
A.Right.
B.Wrong.
C.Doesn't say.
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I teach economics at UCLA. Last Monday in class, I【36】asked my students how their weekend had been. One young man said that it had not been so good. Then he proceeded to ask me why I always seemed to be so cheerful. His question【37】me of something I'd read somewhere before: "Every morning when you get up, you have a【38】about how you want to approach life that day," I said. "I choose to be cheerful." Then I told them a story.
One day I was【39】to the college I taught in at Henderson, 17 miles away from where I lived. When a quarter mile was left down the road to the college, my car died. I tried to start it again, but the engine wouldn't【40】So I walked to the college. My secretary asked me what had happened. "This is my lucky day," I replied, smiling. "Your car breaks down and today is your lucky day?" She was【41】. "What do you mean?" "I live 17 miles from here." I replied. "My car could have broken down anywhere along the freeway. It didn't.【42】it broke down in the perfect place: off the freeway,within walking distance of the college. I'm still able to teach my class and get help from the tow truck. If my car was meant to break down today, it couldn't have been in a more convenient way." The secretary's eyes opened【43】and then she smiled.
I scanned the sixty faces before me.【44】it was a big crowd, no one made any noise. Somehow, my story had【45】them. In fact, it had all started with a student's observation that I was cheerful.
(36)
A.nervously
B.carefully
C.cheerfully
D.eagerly
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Before high school teacher Kimberly Rugh got down to business at the start of a recent school week, she joked with her students about how she'd had to clean cake out of the corners of her house after her 2-year-old son's birthday party. This friendly combination of chitchat took place not in front of a blackboard but in an, E-mail message that Rugh sent to the 145 students she's teaching at the Florida Virtual School, one of the nation's leading online high schools. The school's motto is "any time, any place, any path, any pace."
Florida's E-school attracts many students who need flexible scheduling, from young tennis stars and young musicians to brothers Tobias and Tyler Heeb, who take turns working on the computer while helping out. with their family's clam-farming business on Pine Island, off Florida's southwest coast. Home-schoolers also are well represented. Most students live in Florida, but 55 hail from West Virginia, where a severe teacher shortage makes it hard for many students to take advanced classes. Seven kids from Texas and four from Shanghai round out the student body.
The great majority of Florida Virtual Schoolers—80 percent—are enrolled in regular Florida public or private high schools. Some are busy overachievers. Others are retaking classes they barely passed the first time. The school's biggest challenge is making sure that students aren't left to sink or swim on their own. After the school experienced a disappointing course completion rate of just 50 percent in its early years,Executive Director Julie Young made a priority out of what she calls "relationship-building," asking teachers to stay in frequent E-mail and phone contact with their students. That personal touch has helped. The completion rate is now 80 percent.
Critics of online classes say that while they may have a limited place, they are a poor substitute for the face-to-face contact and socialization that take place in brick-and-mortar classrooms. Despite opportunities for online chats, some virtual students say they'd prefer to have more interaction with their peers.
Students and parents are quick to acknowledge that virtual schooling isn't for everyone. "If your child's not focused and motivated, I can only imagine it would be a nightmare," says Patricia Haygood of Orlando, whose two daughters are thriving at the Florida school. For those who have what it takes, however, virtual learning fills an important niche. "I can work at my own pace, on my own time," says Hackney. "It's the ultimate in student responsibility."
Kimberly Rugh Talked about her son's birthday party ______ .
A.with her friends
B.with her colleagues
C.in the classroom
D.in an E-mail massage sent to her students
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If American students do not hand in their assignments before the deadline, they willface the risk of getting low or even no grades for their work.
查看材料
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What does the student usually have to do before taking the advanced sketching course?
A.Write a book.
B.Attend an afternoon meeting.
C.Enroll in another class.
D.Go to the art museum.
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UN officials pledged Thursday to bridge the world's digital divide, bringing computers and Internet training to Poorer countries before they fall further behind in technology and wealth. The Digital Service Corps initiative expands on a University of Pennsylvania pilot that sent three professors and 27 students to the West African country of Mall last spring. Four countries will be selected for visits in December.
In partnering with the private Global Technology Organization, the UN Office for Projects Services wants to reduce the gap separating nations with good technology from those without. "There are more Web sites originating here in New York than in all of Africa," said Reinhart Helmke, executive director of the UN agency. "There are more Web sites originating in Finland than in all of Latin America and the Caribbean." Helmke said the digital divide would be better described as a digital chasm. He said the global economy cannot be sustained if some countries are left out.
Neysan Rassekh, founder and president of Global Technology Organization, vowed to tackle the problem "country by country, town by town, citizen by citizen." The initiative carries no funding, however. The UN projects office, as a self-financing agency with a limited budget, will provide only management know-how. Rassekh's group, which organized the University of Pennsylvania group, plans to solicit(恳求) cash and equipment donations. For the Mali project, the university paid airfare and other expenses through fees that students pay to receive academic credit.
Eliminating the global divide won't be easy. Persuading foreign governments to buy computers instead of food can be tough, even though technology can reduce poverty and hunger in the long run, said Hafidh Chaibi, who promotes global access through the World of Knowledge Foundation in Orlando, Fla. Ernest Wilson, an international development specialist at the University of Maryland, said his research found information technology growing by 18 percent a year in developing countries, compared with 23 percent in industrialized nations. That means the gap continues to grow despite improvements through programs from the United Nations, the World Bank, the Markle Foundation and other organizations.
The UN announcement came as world leaders met at the UN Millennium Summit to discuss such challenges as peace, disarmament and access to new technology. Over four weeks in May and June, the University of Pennsylvania volunteers set up four computer centers in Mall and trained 120 residents, mostly students and educators who could then teach others. Organizers are also setting up a Web site to help residents obtain information on education and health. The UN agency and its private partner plan to replicate that effort in 10 to 12 countries a year.
The "digital divide" as is used in the first passage refers to ______.
A.the gap in technology and wealth between poor and rich countries
B.inadequate training which technicians in poorer countries have received
C.the availability of computer and Internet technologies to different nations
D.the difference in the number of Web sites created to poor and rich countries
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We have ____ in our class as we had last week.
A.students as a third many B.a third as many students
C.a third students as many D.students a third as many
选哪个呢
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by while-reading, we mean activities that students do before they read the text in detail.()
是
否
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a word can not be learned by only being presented to the students, often it has to be encountered at least seven times in different context/tasks before it can learned by the students.()
是
否
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Are you a student?
A.Yes, we can.
B.Yes, we do.
C.Yes, we aren’t
D.Yes, we ar
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You cn’t borrow books from the school librry ______ you get your student crd.beforeB.ifC.whileYou cn’t borrow books from the school librry ______ you get your student crd.before B.if C.while D.s
A.before
B.if
C.while
D.as
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Community service is an important component of education here at our university. We encourage all students to volunteer for at least one community activity before they graduate. A new community program called "One On One" helps elementary students who've fallen behind. Your education majors might be especially interested in it because it offers the opportunity to do some teaching, that is, tutoring in math and English.
You'd have to volunteer two hours a week for one semester. You can choose to help a child with math, English, or both. Half-hour lessons are fine, so you could do a half hour of each subject two days a week.
Professor Dodge will act as a mentor to the tutors---he'll be available to help you with lesson plans or to offer suggestions for activities. He has office hours every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon. You can sign up for the program with him and begin the tutoring next week.
I'm sure you'll enjoy this community service…and you'll gain valuable experience at the same time. It looks good on your resume, too, showing that you've had experience with children and that you care about your community. If you'd like to sign up, or if you have any questions, stop by Professor Dodge's office this week.
1.What is the purpose of the talk? ____________
A、To explain a new requirement for graduation.
B、To interest students in a new community program.
C、To discuss the problems of elementary school students.
D、To recruit elementary school teachers for a special program.
2.What is the purpose of the program that the dean describes? __________
A、To find jobs for graduating students.
B、To help education majors prepare for final exams.
C、To offer tutorials to elementary school students.
D、To provide funding for a community service project.
3.What does Professor Dodge do? ____________
A、He advises students to participate in the special program.
B、He teaches part-time in an elementary school.
C、He observes elementary school students in the classroom
D、He helps students prepare their resumes.
4.What should students interested in the tutorials do? __________
A、Contact the elementary school.
B、Sign up for a special class.
C、Submit a resume to the dean.
D、Talk to Professor Dodge.
5.Whom do you think the speaker addresses to? _________
A、Faculty
B、Students
C、Freshman
D、Graduating students of the university.
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What is the best way to study ? This is a very important question. Some Chinese students often (1) very hard (2) long hours. This is a (3) habit (习惯), but it is not a better way to study . A good student must (4) enough sleep, enough food and enough rest. Every (5) you (6) to take a walk or play basketball or ping-pong or sing a song. When you (7) to your studies, you’ll find yourself (8) than before and you’ll learn more.
Perhaps we can (9) that learning English is like taking Chinese medicine, we mean that like Chinese medicine, the effects(效果) of your study (10) slowly but surely. Learn every day and effects will come just like Chinese medicine.
(1)A.playB.studyC.sleepD.think
(2)A.atB.inC.forD.with
(3)A.bestB.betterC.goodD.bad
(4)A.haveB.doC.wantD.make
(5)A.monthB.weekC.hourD.day
(6)A.wantB.hopeC.needD.wish
(7)A.beginB.returnC.goD.are
(8)A.strongerB.weakerC.strongD.week
(9)A.sayB.guessC.talkD.know
(10)A.returnB.comeC.giveD.get