51搜题 >学历教育 >外语类 >试题详情
题目

Once our attention has been ensnared, we still need to be sufficiently intrigued to read the story.



A.detracted B.drawn C.removed D.buffed

提示:未搜索到的试题可在搜索页快速提交,您可在会员中心"提交的题"快速查看答案。
答案
查看答案
相关试题

Questions 9 to 12 are based on the passage you have just heard.



A.They try hard to avoid getting off on the wrong foot. B.They spend too much time anticipating their defeat. C.They take too many irrelevant factors into account. D.They make careful preparations beforehand.
问题2:
A.Mental images often interfere with athletes’ performance. B.Golfers usually have positive mental images of themselves. C.Thinking has the same effect on the nervous system as doing. D.A person’s nervous system is more complicated than imagined.
问题3:
A.Anticipate possible problems. B.Make a list of do’s and don’ts. C.Try to appear more professional. D.Picture themselves succeeding.
问题4:
A.She won her first jury trial. B.She wore a designer dress. C.She presented moving pictures. D.She did not speak loud enough.

Luis Figueroa lives down the street from UC Merced, the newest campus in the University of California system. So it’s not surprising that the 21 years old studies from the comfort of his own home. But he’s not enrolled at Merced: from his living-room computer, Figueroa is earning his bachelor’s degree in business administration at Columbia College in Missouri, some 2,000 miles away. At $630 per course—about $1,800 per semester—his online degree will cost far less than even in-state tuition at UC. Not only that, Figueroa is able to continue working full time in a management-training job with AT&T in Merced, a job he feels lucky to have in the current economic climate. “Once I realized I had time constraints, I knew the traditional classroom wouldn’t work,” he says. “Courses online are open 24 hours a day, and I’m able to go there any time I want.”That convenience is one of the main reasons nearly 4 million American students took at least one online course in the 2007-2008 school year, according to a study by the Sloan Foundation. The same study found that online enrollment is growing at a rate more than 10 times that of the higher-education population at large—12.9 percent vs.1.2 percent for traditional in seat students. Nowhere is the growth faster than among younger students like Figueroa who are opting for online learning, even when the traditional classroom is—in his case—right outside the front door. “This is a generation that lives online,” says Vicky Phillips, founder and CEO of Geteducated.com, a service that ranks online learning institutions. “Everything is instant, accelerated, and accessible, and they expect their education to be that way too. For them there is no clear line between the virtual world and the actual world.”Once targeted at older, working adults, distance learning has moved into the education mainstream at stunning speed over the past couple of years, as technology allows ever-richer, more -interactive learning experience online—and as college costs continue to rise and classrooms are packed to capacity. For traditional brick-and-mortar institutions, that has meant a scramble to enter a lucrative market that used to be the exclusive territory of for-profit institutions such as the University of Phoenix and Kaplan University. Established brand-name educators—including Stanford, Cornell, Penn State, and MIT, which has placed its entire curriculum online through its Open Courseware program—now offer extensive online learning options and are competing with the for-profits for students. “The stigma is gone,” says Phillips. “Online learning has reached mass cultural acceptance. It’s no longer the ugly stepsister of the higher-education world.”Online offerings these days can sometimes even surpass the classroom experience. Aaron Walsh, a professor at Boston College and a former videogame designer, has pioneered Immersive Education, a method of teaching through virtual worlds. Meeting in Second Life instead of a physical classroom, says Walsh, allows for some feats that gravity renders impossible, like having art-history students fly to the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel or biology majors to take a Magic School bus-like trip through the human body. Using videos, podcasts, live chats, Webcams, and wikis, educators increasingly see online learning as a way to engage the videogame generation with pedagogy that feels more like entertainment than drudgery. Students in the new homeland-security master’s degree program at the University of Connecticut this fall, for example, will have coursework that resembles Grand Theft Auto: dwelling in a cyber-city called San Luis Rey plagued with suicide bombers, biochemical attacks, and other disasters. At Arizona State, students in an Introduction to Parenting class raise a “virtual child”. They have to post the progress of their online charge through all the phases of childhood. “The classes are so much more interactive, and I can log on when I’m most ready to learn,” says Jaquelyn Holleran, a junior majoring in family and human development at ASU. “I like that s

The Experimental Psychology Society tries to improve scientific communications among experimental psychologists and those working in ______ fields.



A.cognate B.congenial C.congenital D.cognitive

The kind of thing I was doing was, ______ applicable to a great number of tests. However, whether it works or not, I do not know.



A.in truth B.in principle C.in fact D.in practice

The question of whether war is inevitable is one which has concerned many of the world’s great writers. Before considering this question, (1) will be useful to introduce some (2) concepts. Conflict, (3) as opposition among social entities directed against one another, is (4) from competition, (5) means opposition among social units (6) seeking to obtain something which is (7) inadequate supply. Competitors may not know about one another, which those who (8) in a conflict do. Conflict and competition are both (9) of opposition. The meaning of opposition has been stated as a process by which social units function in the disservice of one another. Opposition is (10) contrasted to cooperation, a (11) by which social units function in the service of one another. These (12) are necessary because it is important to emphasize that competition between individuals or groups is inevitable in a world of limited (13) , but conflict is not. Conflict, nevertheless, is very (14) to occur and is probably an essential and desirable element of human societies.Many authors have based their arguments that war cannot be avoided on the idea (15) in the struggle for existence among groups of animals, only those which are best adapted remain (16) . In general, however, this struggle (17) is competition, not conflict. Those who fail in this competition (18) starve to death or are killed by other types of animals. This struggle for existence is not (19) human war, but is (20) the competition of individuals for jobs, markets, and materials. The most important quality of this struggle is the competition for the necessities of life that are not enough to satisfy all.



A.it B.that C.what D.this
问题2:
A.related B.relating C.relative D.relation
问题3:
A.specified B.remarked C.defined D.claimed
问题4:
A.variable B.distinguished C.various D.isolated
问题5:
A.it B.this C.that D.which
问题6:
A.critically B.approximately C.independently D.costly
问题7:
A.on B.for C.with D.in
问题8:
A.enter B.participate C.fall D.involve
问题9:
A.formations B.classes C.terms D.reactions
问题10:
A.nevertheless B.however C.thus D.maybe
问题11:
A.procession B.standard C.process D.measurement
问题12:
A.accounts B.definitions C.descriptions D.explanations
问题13:
A.resources B.origins C.sources D.materials
问题14:
A.likely B.probably C.necessarily D.possibly
问题15:
A.which B.while C.when D.that
问题16:
A.lived B.living C.alive D.life
问题17:
A.on the contrary B.at length C.in particular D.in nature
问题18:
A.not only B.either C.neither D.both
问题19:
A.similar to B.same as C.resembled D.imitated
问题20:
A.equal B.alike C.like D.unlike
联系我们 会员中心
返回顶部