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根据内容回答题。 Early or Later Day CareThe British psychoanalyst John Bowlby maintains t

根据内容回答题。

Early or Later Day Care

The British psychoanalyst John Bowlby maintains that separation from the parents during the sensitive "attachment" period from birth to three may scar a child&39;s personality and predispose to emotional problems in later life. Some people have drawn the conclusion from Bowlby&39;s work that children should not be subjected to day care before the age of three because of the parental sepa- ration it entails, and many people do believe this. But there are also arguments against such a strong conclusion.

Firstly, anthropologists point out that the insulated love affair between children and parents found in modem societies does not usually exist in traditional societies. For example, in some tribal societies, such as the Ngoni, the father and mother of a child did not rear their infant a- lone far from it. Secondly, common sense tells us that day care would not be so widespread to- day if parents, care-takers found children had problems with it. Statistical studies of this kind have not yet been carried out, and even if they were, the results would be certain to be complicat- ed and controversial. Thirdly, in the last decade there have been a number of careful American studies of children in day care, and they have uniformly reported that day care had a neural or slightly positive effect on children&39;s development. But tests that have had to be used to measure this development are not widely enough accepted to settle the issue.

But Bowlby&39;s analysis raises the possibility that early day care has delayed effects. The possi- bility that such care might lead to, say, more mental illness or crime 15 or 20 years later can only be explored by the use of statistics. Whatever the long-term effects, parents sometimes find the immediate effects difficult to deal with. Children under three are likely to protest at leaving their parents and show unhappiness. At the age of three or three and a half almost all children find the transition to nursery easy, and this is undoubtedly why more and more parents make use of child care at this time. The matter, then, is far from clear-cut, though experience and available evi- dence indicate that early care is reasonable for infants.

Which of the following statements would Bowlby support? 查看材料

A.Children under three get used to the life at nursery schools more readily than children over three.

B.The first three years of one"s life is extremely important to the later development of personality.

C.Early day care can delay the occurrence of mental illness in children.

D.Statistical studies should be carried out to assess the positive effect of day care for children at the age of three or older.

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更多“根据内容回答题。 Early or Later Day CareThe British psychoanalyst John Bowlby maintains t”相关的问题

第1题

请根据短文内容,回答题。 Saving a City"s Public ArtAvoiding traffic jams in Los Angele

请根据短文内容,回答题。

Saving a City"s Public Art

Avoiding traffic jams in Los Angeles may be impossible, but the city&39;s colorful freeway murals (壁画 ) can brighten even the worst commute. Paintings that depict (描述) famous people and historical scenes cover office buildings and freeway walls all access the city. With a collection of more than 2,000 murals, Los Angeles is the unofficial mural capital of the world.<br>

But the combination of graffiti (涂鸦), pollution, and hot sun has left many L.A. murals in terrible condition. __________ (46) in the past, experts say, little attention was given to caring for public art. Artists were even expected to maintain their own works, not an easy task with cars racing by along the freeway.<br>

__________ (47) The work started in 2003. So far,16 walls have been selected and more may be added later. Until about 1960, public murals in Los Angeles were rare. But in the 1960s and 1970s, young L.A. artists began to study early 20th-century Mexican mural painting. __________ (48)<br>

The most famous mural in the city is Judith Baca&39;s "The Great Wall", a 13-foot-high(4-meter-high) painting that runs for half a mile (0.8 kilometer) in North Hollywood.__________ (49) it took eight years to complete--400 underprivileged teenagers painted the designs--and is probably the longest mural in the world.<br>

One of the murals that will be restored now is Kent Twitchell&39;s "Seventh Street Altarpiece" which he painted for the Los Angeles Olympics in 1984. __________ (50) Twitchell said, "it was meant as a kind of gateway through which the traveler to L.A. must drive. The open hands represent peace."<br>

Artists often call murals the people&39;s art. Along a busy freeway or hidden in a quiet neighborhood, murals can teach people who would never pay money to see fine art in a museum," Murals give a voice to the silent majority," said one artist.

第46题___________ 查看材料

A.The city trying to stop the spread of graffiti, has painted over some of the murals complete.

B.This striking work depicts two people facing each other on opposite sides of the freeway near downtown Los Angeles.

C.Artists like murals because they like the work of Mexican artitsts.

D.Now the city is beginning a huge project to restore the city"s murals.

E.The mural represents the history of ethnic proups in California.

F.Soon their murals became a symbol of the city"s cultural expressions and a showcase for LA"s cultural diversity.

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第2题

根据下面短文内容,回答题。 An Early Form. of Jazz MusicMusic comes in many forms; most cou

根据下面短文内容,回答题。

An Early Form. of Jazz Music

Music comes in many forms; most countries have a style. of their own. At the turn of the last century, __________ (1) jazz was born. America had no prominent __________ (2) of its own. No one knows exactly when was invented or by whom. But it began to be__________(3) in the early 1890s. Jazz is America&39;s contribution to __________ (4) music. In contrast to classical music, which__________(5) formal European traditions, jazz is spontaneous (自发的) and free in form. It bubbles(充满)with energy, __________(6) the moods, interests, and emotions of the people. In the&39; 1920s jazz __________ (7) like America. And so it does today. The__________(8) of the music are as interesting as the music itself. American Negroes, or blacks, as they are called today, were the jazz pioneers. They were brought to the Southern states __________ (9) slaves. They were sold to plantation owners and forced to work long hours. When a Negro died his friends and relatives__________(10) a procession(队列,队伍)to carry to body to the cemetery. In New Orleans, a band often accompanied the__________(11). On the way to the cemetery the band played slow, solemn music, suited to the occasion. (12) on the way home the mood changed. Spirits lifted.

Death had removed one of their members, but the living were glad to be __________ (13). The band played __________ (14) music, improvising (即兴) on both the harmony and the melody of the tunes__________(15) at the funeral. This music made everyone want to dance. It was an early form. of jazz.

____________ 查看材料

A.while

B.when

C.since

D.as

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第3题

请根据短文内容,回答题。 Sunspots (太阳黑子)It&39;s not surprising that sunspots were observ

请根据短文内容,回答题。

Sunspots (太阳黑子)

It&39;s not surprising that sunspots were observed by ancient astronomers (天文学家) . The largest sunspots on the sun can be seen without a telescope. It was not until the invention of the telescope (望远镜) in the early 17th century, however, that systematic studies of sunspots could be undertaken. The great astronomer Galileo was among the first to make telescopic observations of sunspots.<br>

Sunspots are regions of extremely strong magnetic fields (磁场) found on the sun&39;s surface. A sunspot has a dark central core known as the umbra. The umbra is surrounded by a dark ring called the penumbra, where the magnetic field spreads outward. Sunspots appear dark because they are giving off less radiation. They are cooler than the rest of the sun&39;s surface.<br>

Sunspots are frequently observed in pairs or in paired groups. The members of a spot pair are identified as the leading spot and the following spot. They are identified by their position in the pair in terms of the direction in which the sun rotates (旋转) .<br>

The number of sunspots at any one time varies. A large spot group may consist of as many as 10 groups and 300 spots across the sun. The number of spots changes in a fairly regular pattern called the sunspot cycle. The largest number occurs about every 11 years. At sunspot minimum, there are at most just a few small spots.<br>

The average lifetime of an individual spot group is roughly one solar rotation, which is about25 days. The most persistent large spots, however, can survive for two to three months.

Careful observations and systematic studies of sunspots __________. 查看材料

A.were made by ancient astronomers

B.started in the early 17th century

C.were made by Galileo only

D.could be made without a telescope

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第4题

请根据短文的内容,回答题。 Development in Newspaper OrganizationOne of the most important d

请根据短文的内容,回答题。

Development in Newspaper Organization

One of the most important developments in newspaper organization during the first part of the twentieth century ___________(46), which are known as wire services. Wire-service companies employed reporters, who covered stories all over the world. Their news reports were sent to papers throughout the country by telegraph. The papers paid an annual fee for this service. Wire services continue ___________ (47). Today the major wire services are the Associated Press (AP) and United Press International (UPI). You will frequently find AP or UPI at the beginning of a news story.<br>

Newspaper chains and mergers began to appear in the early 1900s. A chain consists of two or more newspapers ___________(48). A merger involves combining two or more papers into one.<br>

During the nineteenth century many cities had more than one competitive independent paper. Today in most cities there are only one or two newspapers, and ___________(49). Often newspapers in several cities belong to one chain. Papers have combined .(50). Chains and mergers have cut down production costs and brought the advantages of big-business methods to the newspaper industry.

第46题__________ 查看材料

A.to play an important role in newspaper operations

B.was the growth of telegraph services

C.and they usually enjoy great prestige

D.they are usually operated by a single owner

E.in order to survive under the pressure of rising costs

F.owned by a single person or organization

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第5题

请根据短文的内容,回答题。 The Development of BalletBallet is a dance form. that has a lon

请根据短文的内容,回答题。

The Development of Ballet

Ballet is a dance form. that has a long history. The fact that it survives to this day shows that it has adjusted as times have changed.

Ballet began in the royal courts during the Renaissance. At that time it became common for kings and queens, as well as other nobility, to participate in pageants that included music, poetry and dance. As these entertainments moved from the Italian courts to the French ones, court ladies began participating in them. Though their long dresses prevented much movement, they were able to perform. elaborate walking patterns. It was not until the 1600s that women dancers shortened their skirts, changed to fiat shoes, and began doing some of the leaps and turns performed by men.

It was also in the 1600s that professional ballet began..King Louis XIV of France, himself a devoted dancer, founded the Royal Academy of Dance. The five basic feet positions from which all ballet steps begin were finalized. In the late 1700s another important change occurred. Ballet began tell a story on its own. It was no longer simply dance to be performed between acts of plays.

Elaborate wigs and costumes were eliminated. By the early 1800s dancers learned to rise on their toes to make it appear that they were floating.

Classical ballet as we know it today was influenced primarily by Russian dancing. The Russians remained interested in ballet when it declined in other European countries in the mid-1800s. One of the most influential figures of the early 20th century was Sergei Diaghilev. His dance company, the Ballets Russes, brought a new energy and excitement to ballet. One of his chief assistants, George Balanchine, went on to found the New York City Ballet in 1948 and to influence new generations of dancers.

This passage deals mainly with__________. 查看材料

A.famous names in ballet

B.French versus Russian ballet

C.the way ballet developed

D.why ballet is no longer popular

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第6题

根据下面内容,回答题: Salt,shells or metals are still used as money in out of- he w

根据下面内容,回答题:

Salt,shells or metals are still used as money in out of- he way parts of the world today.Salt may seem rather a strange(19)_______to use as money,(20)_______in countries where the food of the people is mainly vegetable,it is often an(21)_______necessity.Cakesb of salt,stamped to show their(22)_______,were used as money in some countries until recent(23)_______ ,and cakes of salt(24)_______buy goods in Borneo and parts of Africa.

Sea shells(25)_______as money at some time(26)_______another over the greater part of the Old world.These were(27)_______mainly from the beaches of the Maldives Islands in the

Indian Ocean,and were traded to India and China.In Africa,shells were traded tight acrossthe(28)_______from East to West.

Metal,valued by weight,(29)_______ coins in many parts of the world.Iron,in lumps,bars or rings,is still used in many countries(30)_______paper money.It Can either be exchanged(31)_______goods,or made into tools,weapons,or ornaments.The early money of China,apart from shells,was of bronze,(32) _______in flat,round pieces with a hole in the middle,called“cash”.The(33) _______of these are between three thousand and four thousand years old older than the earliest coins of the eastern Mediterranean.

Nowadays,coins and notes have replaced nearly all the more picturesque forms of money,and while in one or two of the more remote countries people still hold it for future use on ceremonial occasions such as weddings and funerals,examples of primitive money will soon be found only in museums.

材料题请点击右侧查看材料问题 查看材料

A.object

B.article

C.substance

D.category

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第7题

请根据短文的内容,回答题。 Help Your Child Become a ReaderEncouraging early reading skills c

请根据短文的内容,回答题。

Help Your Child Become a Reader

Encouraging early reading skills can build a path to a lifelong (终身的 ) love of reading and can help your child get a head start in school. While reading to your child is still the most important thing you can do to build reading skills, there are many techniques that can help.<br>

Make reading fun. Play games with your child as you read. Many traditional children&39;s games can be adapted to encourage reading skills.<br>

While reading or during play, tell your child, "I spy with my little eye, something that begins with the letter b." Help the child find something on the page or in the room that begins with that letter. For example, "I see a barn." This can also be used to teach beginning letter sounds. "I spy with my little eye.<br>

Something that begins with the sounds." Help the child find a word that begins with the "s" sound.<br>

In this variation on the popular game, instruct the child that, "Simon says, &39;point to something that starts with the letter n&39;." The child can then find an object in the room or a body part, such as the nose,that starts with the letter presented. This can also be used to teach beginning sounds.<br>

Make a game out of rhyming (押韵) words by making up silly words to rhyme with the child&39;s name or favorite toys. This sets the stage for rhyming real words by showing the child the similarities of sounds. As the child masters making up the words, begin rhyming real words to one another.<br>

Tips to raise a successful reader:<br>

Put books in places where the child plays. If books are easily accessible, children are more likely to pick them up.<br>

Let children "read to you" by looking at pictures. Making up stories to go along with illustrations helps children discover how words relate to pictures.<br>

Take books along on trips or even short visits to the doctor&39;s office or grocery store.<br>

Have children help you shop. Reading grocery lists and looking for specific items help build sight vocabulary.

A good reading habit can help your child do well at school. 查看材料

A.Right

B.Wrong

C.Not mentioned

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第8题

请根据短文内容,回答题。 Kicking the HabitWhat is a bad habit? The most definition is that

请根据短文内容,回答题。

Kicking the Habit

What is a bad habit? The most definition is that it is something that we do regularly, almost without thinking about it, and which has some sort of negative consequence. This consequence could affect those around us, or it could affect us personally. Those who deny having bad habits are probably lying. Bad habits are part of what makes us human.<br>

Many early habits, like sucking out thumb, are broken when we are very young. We are either told to stop doing it by our parents, or we consciously or subconsciously observe that others do not have the same habit, and we gradually grow out of it. It is when we intentionally or unintentionally pick up new habits in our later childhood or early adulthood that it becomes a problem. Unless we can break that habit early on, it becomes a part of our life, and becomes "programmed" into our brain.<br>

A recent study of human memory suggests that no matter how hard we try to change out habits,it is the old ways that tend to win, especially in situations where we are rushed, stressed or overworked. Habits that we thought we had got rid of can suddenly come back. During the study program, the researchers showed a group of volunteers several pictures, and gave them words to associate with them. They then showed the volunteers the same picture again, and gave them new words to associate with them.<br>

A few days later, the volunteers were given a test. The researchers showed them the pictures,and told them to respond with one of the words they had been given for each one. It came as no surprise that their answers were split between the first set of words and second. Two weeks later,they were given the same test again. This time, most of them only gave the first set of words. They appeared to have completely forgotten the second set.<br>

The study confirms that theresponses we learn first are those that remain strongest over time.<br>

We may try to change out ways, but after a while, the response that comes to mind first is usually the first one we learned. The more that response is used, the more automatic it becomes and the harder it becomes to respond in any other way.<br>

The study therefore suggests that over time, our bad habits also become automatic, learned behavior. This is not good news for people who pick up bad habits early in life and now want to change or break them. Even when we try to put new, good intentions into practice, those previous learned habits remain stronger in more automatic, unconscious forms of memory.

Boys usually develop bad habits when they are very young. 查看材料

A.Right

B.Wrong

C.Not mentioned

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第9题

根据内容回答题。Ludwig Van BeethovenLudwig Van Beethoven, a major composer of the nineteen

根据内容回答题。

Ludwig Van Beethoven

Ludwig Van Beethoven, a major composer of the nineteenth century, overcame many personal problems to achieve artistic greatness.

Born in Bonn, Germany, in 1770, he first studied music with the court organist, Gilles van der Eeden. His father was excessively strict and given to heavy drinking. _______(46) Appoint- ed deputy court organist to Christian Gottlob Neefe at a surprisingly early age in 1782, Beethoven also played the harpsichord and the viola. In 1792 he was sent to Vienna by his patron, Count Ferdinand Waldstein, to study music under Haydn.

Beethoven remained unmarried. _______(47) Continually plagued by ill health, he devel- oped an ear infection which led to his tragic deafness in 1819.

_______(48) He completed mature masterpieces of great musical depth: three piano sona- tas, four string quartets, the Missa Solemnis, and the 9th Symphony. He died in 1827._______(49)

Noting that Beethoven often flew into fits of rage, Goethe once said of him, "I am astonished by his talent, but he is unfortunately an altogether untamed personality. " _______(50)

A.Today his music is still being played all over the world.

B.Although Beethoven"s personality may have been untamed, his music shows great discipline and control, and this is how we remember him best.

C.When his mother died,Beethoven,then a young man, was named guardian of his two younger brothers.

D.His life was marked by a passionate dedication to independence.

E.Because of irregular payments from his publishers and erratic support from his patrons,he was troubled by financial worries throughout his adult life.

F.In spited of this handicap,however, he continued to write music.

__________.

查看材料

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第10题

根据下面短文内容,回答题。 Public Relations __________

根据下面短文内容,回答题。

Public Relations

__________ 查看材料

A.matter

B.form

C.system

D.direction

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