题目列表(包括答案和解析)
Nora, a 17-year-old American, notices that when she has to do a paper for school and researches it on the Internet, she rarely reads a whole page and does deep reading. “I’ll read the beginning of a paragraph and then I'll skip(跳过) the rest,” she says.
While Nora's mother, Martha, loves sitting down with a good book and reading carefully, her daughter may be the wave of the future.
“Deep reading”, or slow reading, is a process in which people think carefully while they read. With most, that means slowing down --- even stopping and rereading a page or paragraph to really understand what the author is trying to say.
Last summer, Google CEO Eric Schmidt said he was concerned about what he sees as a decline(衰退)in slow reading. Instant messages and 140-character tweets(微博)appear to be reducing out ability to concentrate on a single idea or theme of a book, he told Foreign Policy Magazine.
It's easy to forget the benefits of deep reading in an age when anything worth doing is done fast. Experts warn that without deep reading, it is impossible to be an educated person of the world, a knowledgeable voter or even an imaginative thinker.
“If you want to have a deep relationship with a text and understand a complex idea, then slow reading is a preferred style. It is good for pleasure, too. It is not a rushed experience and you can lose yourself in a text,” said Canadian writer John Miedema, the author of the book Slow Reading.
US' Ohlone College English professor Cynthia Lee Katona says reading is a highly social activity that builds the mind and social connections. If you read, she says, you simply know more and have more to talk about with friends, partners and people you know.
Deep reading can also take a reader on a trip around the world even if they are sitting in a living room armchair, Katona says. Also, deep reading helps people develop thinking, writing and conversation skills.
“If you like beautiful things, authors put words together that are really beautiful and expressive,” she says. “If you want to write well--- and there are lots of reasons to express yourself clearly --- you should read.”
【小题1】The comparison(对比)between Nora and her mother's reading habits _______.
A.introduces the wave of future |
B.adds a lot of fun for readers |
C.explains what deep reading is |
D.calls attention to deep reading |
A.The fast pace of modern society. |
B.The lack of desire for knowledge |
C.The weakening ability to concentrate. |
D.The wide use of instant messages and tweets. |
A.A deep relationship. | B.A complex idea. |
C.Slow reading. | D.A preferred style. |
A.it makes sure you a better paid job |
B.it makes you a better writer |
C.it is better than travelling |
D.it helps build better family relationship |
A.The importance of deep reading. |
B.How to improve reading skills. |
C.The benefits of different reading styles. |
D.The secrets of a knowledgeable person |
Nora, a 17-year-old American, notices that when she has to do a paper for school and researches it on the Internet, she rarely reads a whole page and does deep reading. “I’ll read the beginning of a paragraph and then I'll skip(跳过) the rest,” she says.
While Nora's mother, Martha, loves sitting down with a good book and reading carefully, her daughter may be the wave of the future.
“Deep reading”, or slow reading, is a process in which people think carefully while they read. With most, that means slowing down --- even stopping and rereading a page or paragraph to really understand what the author is trying to say.
Last summer, Google CEO Eric Schmidt said he was concerned about what he sees as a decline(衰退)in slow reading. Instant messages and 140-character tweets(微博)appear to be reducing out ability to concentrate on a single idea or theme of a book, he told Foreign Policy Magazine.
It's easy to forget the benefits of deep reading in an age when anything worth doing is done fast. Experts warn that without deep reading, it is impossible to be an educated person of the world, a knowledgeable voter or even an imaginative thinker.
“If you want to have a deep relationship with a text and understand a complex idea, then slow reading is a preferred style. It is good for pleasure, too. It is not a rushed experience and you can lose yourself in a text,” said Canadian writer John Miedema, the author of the book Slow Reading.
US' Ohlone College English professor Cynthia Lee Katona says reading is a highly social activity that builds the mind and social connections. If you read, she says, you simply know more and have more to talk about with friends, partners and people you know.
Deep reading can also take a reader on a trip around the world even if they are sitting in a living room armchair, Katona says. Also, deep reading helps people develop thinking, writing and conversation skills.
“If you like beautiful things, authors put words together that are really beautiful and expressive,” she says. “If you want to write well--- and there are lots of reasons to express yourself clearly --- you should read.”
1.The comparison(对比)between Nora and her mother's reading habits _______.
A. introduces the wave of future
B. adds a lot of fun for readers
C. explains what deep reading is
D. calls attention to deep reading
2.What leads to the decline of deep reading, according to Eric Schemidt?
A. The fast pace of modern society.
B. The lack of desire for knowledge
C. The weakening ability to concentrate.
D. The wide use of instant messages and tweets.
3.What does the underlined word “it ” refer to in paragraph 6?
A. A deep relationship. B. A complex idea.
C. Slow reading. D. A preferred style.
4.According to the article, Cynthia Lee Katona's opinion of deep reading is that _______.
A. it makes sure you a better paid job
B. it makes you a better writer
C. it is better than travelling
D. it helps build better family relationship
5.What is the main point of the article?
A. The importance of deep reading.
B. How to improve reading skills.
C. The benefits of different reading styles.
D. The secrets of a knowledgeable person
“Using the Internet, doctors can answer more questions from more patients in a shorter time,” writes Dr. Dada Pal, a famous doctor in Manchester, UK.
According to Pal, nearly forty percent of American patients say they have used e-mail to communicate with a doctor.
He notes, however, that although patients have such interest, only up to two percent of doctors in the united States offer e-mail service.
Using e-mail, doctors can make sure of their advice and point, patient to patient information materials and other resources on the Internet. It's said that more than ten thousand healthoriented websites already exist now.
However, some people worry that widespread use of medical e-mail might set up two kinds of care—one for Internet“haves” and another for the “have-nots”
But Pal points out that“ by the year 2000 nearly every library will offer (Internet and e-mail) services in the United States, allowing even low-income patients to use such means.” Pal also talks about other possible barriers to the acceptance of medical e-mail.
“Doctors may be unwilling to offer e-mail services for fear of increasing workload and uncertainty about payment for the time they spent,” he explains, and patients may worry that their medical information might be read by others.“But these problems can all be solved,” he adds.
E-mail may well help us a lot in health care, Pal concludes. “Patients can get in normal clinics,” he points out, “and they might find communication on the information superhighway less fearful, than face-to-face dialogues with their doctors.”
( )(1). The article introduces a new way of patient-doctor communication __________.
A. by e-mail B. by visiting
C. by searching the Internet D. by using the computer
( ) (2). According to the passage, some people worry that __________.
A. it might have to serve both who have access to the Internet and those who don't
B. it might meet double doubts from those who have access to the Internet and those who don't
C. it might make trouble between those who can use the Internet and those who can't
D. it might make trouble between those who have Internet experiences and those who haven't
( ) (3). All the following points are advantages of using medical e-mail except __________.
A. it is more reliable
B. it is less frightening
C. it troubles patients and doctors to understand each other better
D. it provides patients more choices of treatment
( )(4). What does the word “barriers” mean?
A.可能 B. 危险 C. 障碍 D.秘密
( ) (5). Which of the following is true about e-mail in the United States?
A. Every patient cannot use it.
B. Only doctors can use it.
C. Patients needn't pay for their treatment by using e-mail.
D. No others can read the information sent by e-mail.
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